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Who will lead Palestinian Authority after Abbas?/Bibi goes to Washington

Mar 9, 2018

Who will lead Palestinian Authority after Abbas?/Bibi goes to Washington

Update from AIJAC

 

Update 03/18 #02

Amid reports that 82-year-old Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas is seriously ill, today’s Update looks at potential successors. There is much reported activity going on behind the scenes, with Pinhas Inbari reporting that Fatah’s various military warlords are rearming to strengthen their positions in case of violence breaking out. Plus, we include analysis of Israeli PM Binyamin Netanyahu’s Washington visit to address the annual America-Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) conference and meeting with US President Donald Trump, which included further talk of moving the US embassy to Jerusalem in May and the Iran nuclear threat.

First up, veteran Israeli journalist Shlomi Eldar looks at the manoeuvering going on by Abbas and the Fatah movement over potential leadership candidates. Names touted include chief Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat, Second Intifada terror leader Marwan Barghouti – currently serving several life sentences in an Israeli prison – and former Fatah official Mohammed Dahlan, who is a bitter rival of Abbas and living in exile. To read this article,  CLICK HERE.

Next, Foundation for Defence of Democracies analyst and Abbas biographer Grant Rumley, profiles Mahmoud al-Aloul who is Fatah’s vice president and will fill in for Abbas should he become incapacitated before elections can be held. A low-profile figure, Aloul, 68, is a veteran PLO operative, with a track record that includes terror campaigns against Israel. According to Rumley, who has interviewed Aloul, the latter supports peace with Israel, but also strongly backs pushing for a one-state outcome, seeing it at the very least as a way of pressuring Israel into accepting a two-state solution. [Analyst Yoni Ben Menachem has a good piece on the Israeli perspective of Aloul here]. To read Rumley’s article, CLICK HERE

Finally, ignoring his legal challenges back home, in a rousing speech to 18,000 AIPAC conference goers, Israeli PM Netanyahu promised to stop Iran’s nuclear weapons program. The star turn however was US Ambassador to the UN Nikki Haley’s address. At a follow up meeting with Haley, Netanyahu praised her as a “tsunami of fresh air” at the UN. According to Times of Israel editor David Horowitz, Netanyahu’s speech showed him as “a national leader at the very top of his game… inspiring and commanding,” but this may not mean anything if legal authorities can make their case against him. To read this Israeli take on the speech, CLICK HERE.

Readers may also be interested in…

  • Israel’s Opposition Leader in the Knesset Isaac Herzog argues for moral leadership in the face of Syrian atrocities.
  • Yediot Ahronoth‘s veteran columnist Nahum Barnea opines that, despite sensational headlines suggesting otherwise, the corruption allegations against PM Netanyahu are far from airtight.
  • AIJAC’s Associate Director of Public Affairs Joel Burnie features prominently in Moment Magazine‘s on-the-scene report from last week’s AIPAC conference.
  • US lawmakers demand a Department of Justice investigation into al-Jazeera.
  • ASPI senior analyst Anthony Bergin on Australia-Israel counter-terrorism cooperation.
  • As International Women’s Day was observed on March 8, Ynet reports that Israel has a lot to be proud about, but still has room for improvement in promoting gender equality.
  • Also, the World Economic Forum’s latest Global Gender Gap Report ranked Israel 44th out of 144 countries on Gender Equality, slightly behind Australia (35) but ahead of both the USA (49) and the global average.
  • The dangers posed by Iran and its proxy Hezbollah feature prominently in the Worldwide Threat Assessment issued this week by US Director of National Intelligence Daniel R. Coats.
  • Some examples from the many stories and comments now appearing at AIJAC’s daily “Fresh AIR” blog:
    • Marking International Women’s Day, Naomi Levin highlights the challenges for and achievements of Israeli women.
    • Watch AIJAC guest Dr Daniel Pipes interviewed on ABC TV  “Matter of Fact” with Stan Grant, Sky News “Outsiders” and Sky News “Credlin” .

Stakes rise as battle over Abbas’ successor heats up

Shlomi Eldar
Al-Monitor, March 7, 2018.
 

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The Next Palestinian President?

 

Grant Rumley

The National Interest, March 7 2018

Mahmoud al-Aloul is Fatah’s first vice president. Does that make him the next Palestinian leader?

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With inspiring performance at AIPAC, Netanyahu seeks to show he’s indispensable

David Horowitz

Times of Israel, March 6 2018

WASHINGTON — In a little more than half an hour at the AIPAC policy conference here on Tuesday morning, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu demonstrated all his formidable public speaking skills in a bravura performance that underlined he has no remote competitor when extolling Israel’s virtues. Underlining his stellar display was his desire, too, to assert his indispensability in steering Israel to ever-greater economic growth, global diplomatic acceptance, and long-term security.

The prime minister left nobody in any doubt that he intends to be helming Israel for a long time to come. “I will not let that happen,” Netanyahu promised when discussing Iran’s ongoing efforts to establish a permanent presence in Syria and Lebanon from which to target Israel — a personal commitment.

And the whoops, cheers, and applause that met his every confident, uplifting announcement of Israeli prowess confirmed that, for most of this crowd, the words “Benjamin Netanyahu” and “prime minister of Israel” are and should remain synonymous.
“We love you Bibi,” a female voice in the crowd assured him at one point, in case there was any question. “That’s very kind of you. I love you too,” Netanyahu responded — much like the US Ambassador to the UN Nikki Haley had replied to similar sentiments the previous evening. Except that Netanyahu had the disarming presence of mind to ask lightly: “Who planted her?!”

Ambassador Haley is also quite the speaker, and particularly beloved by an AIPAC overjoyed by the robust response she has been leading against years of anti-Israel bias at the United Nations. She was the undisputed star of this policy conference last year, and she garnered ecstatic reviews on Monday evening too. But Netanyahu’s presentation was of an entirely more spectacular order, and his reception was in another league.

Nobody would have been too surprised that he began by referencing his meeting Monday with US President Donald Trump. The pro-Israel American audience is always going to be happy to be reminded that Israel’s prime minister now has an open door at the White House. He also had a slightly predictable if cute early line thanking thousands of students for “cutting class to be here,” and telling them to see him afterwards if they needed a note for their teachers.

But few would have expected to find Netanyahu then referencing Clint Eastwood’s spaghetti Western “The Good, the Bad and the Ugly” and building his entire speech around an amended title: “The Good, The Bad and the Beautiful.” The Good, of course, being the wonders of Israel; The Bad, its enemies — specifically Iran; and The Beautiful, the “eternal” alliance between Israel and the United States of America.

Netanyahu has delivered similar speeches to this one at various forums of late — including to major public events and to small groups he invites into the Prime Minister’s Office. It features a slideshow presentation to illustrate his key themes, including Israeli innovation, the flourishing economy, the Jewish state’s widening circle of allies worldwide, and Iran’s rapacious territorial progress.

But delivered at the vast Washington Convention Center, on giant screens, the effect was particularly powerful. And Netanyahu smartly bolstered the impact, early on, by abandoning his center-stage podium and going walkabout, back and forth across the stage. Hinting that there might be security concerns about such a move, Netanyahu first told his rapt audience that he didn’t really want to stand behind the lectern, and then, as if it was a spur of the moment decision, declared “What the heck, I’m the prime minister,” and set off to make closer contact with the crowd. Cue gleeful applause.

Utterly comfortable in his surroundings, Netanyahu was polished, clear, and cogent  — in the starkest of contrasts to the latest would-be prime minister to speak here, Labor’s Avi Gabbay, who gave a perfectly reasonable speech on Sunday… for a non-native English-speaker finding himself at an unusually vast event.

For the Israelis in the hall, it was doubtless a pleasure listening to Netanyahu explain how the era of innovation has “unleashed the spark of genius embedded in our people.” For Israel’s supporters here in America, it was surely inspiring

If the presentation was skilled, the content of Netanyahu’s address was still more impressive. Even when he veered briefly into jargon, he made a virtue of it. Challenging his audience to understand how modern technology is revolutionizing old industries and creating new ones, with Israel at the emphatic forefront, he prepared them for what he said would be a complex explanation: It was, he said, all about “the confluence of big data, connectivity, and artificial intelligence.” Duly warned, the room stayed with him, and applauded when he illustrated that concept with an example from Israeli agriculture of sophisticated drones, coordinating with sensors, in turn activating irrigation, so that water is delivered “to the individual plant” according to its needs. Israeli agriculture, he concluded, is now “precision agriculture.” Seldom could a description of crop-growing have been met with such awed delight by an audience of non-farmers.

For the Israelis in the hall, it was doubtless a pleasure listening to Netanyahu hail Israel’s soldiers in all their black, white, gay, straight diversity; hearing him explain how the era of innovation has “unleashed the spark of genius embedded in our people”; watching him illustrate that the world is “turning blue” in forging diplomatic ties with our tiny state, and declaring that while Israel used to be isolated, “pretty soon, the countries that don’t have relations with us — they’re going to be isolated,” and that “those who talk about boycotting Israel — we’ll boycott them.” For the Americans, it was surely inspiring.

By the time Netanyahu moved from “The Good” to “The Bad,” a room that was always going to be receptive was adulatory. He now reminded them of his bona fides in having opposed the Iran nuclear deal from the get-go. He claimed grim vindication in Iran’s increasingly aggressive behavior region-wide, its escalated threat across the northern border, and its unceasing quest for the bomb. He asserted recognition in that Trump, by contrast to the unmentioned predecessor who signed the accord, shares his own determination to fix it or nix it. And when he gave that personal pledge to stop Iran, there would have been few in the audience inclined to argue that perhaps a different Israeli prime minister might handle things better.

Even on Iran, Netanyahu tempered his firm anti-regime posture with empathy for the people. Israel, in the Netanyahu narrative, must and will defend itself, but it knows how to distinguish between its enemies and their victims. “We stand with those in Iran who stand for freedom,” he declared, predicting the eventual fall of the ayatollahs, and an era of friendship and peace.

Similarly, Netanyahu asserted that Israel seeks peace with all its neighbors, certainly including the Palestinians. If only Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas would stop spending what the prime minister claimed is about 10% of the PA budget on salaries for terrorists and their families, there would be money for schools, hospitals, factories. “Stop paying terrorists,” he urged Abbas, because the message those payments send to Palestinian children is “murder Jews and get rich.” Netanyahu skillfully involved the audience here, urging them to “raise your hands high if you think President Abbas should stop paying terrorists to murder Jews.”

Netanyahu’s “The Beautiful” ending was brief but calmly effective, noting the shared values that animate the US-Israel partnership and are today “writing a new chapter in our common story.”

And then, with a call to God to bless Israel, America and their alliance, he was waving his farewell.

Few would have noticed, in the euphoria of their response to so rousing an address, that, as with his legal troubles, there was no mention either of some of this audience’s hot-button issues — the frozen Western Wall prayer agreement, concerns over conversion, dismay in some quarters at Israel’s stance on tens of thousands of African asylum-seekers.

And if they did notice, few would have complained. They had gathered because they care about Israel, because they want Israel to be safe, and because they want to feel good about Israel.

In meeting those needs, Netanyahu proved himself peerless. If the 18,000 people who cheered him here voted in Israeli elections, he wouldn’t have a political care in the world. Indeed, as things stand, our polls suggest that enough Israeli voters feel much the same way about him.

A national leader at the very top of his game, the prime minister did everything to show himself not merely inspiring and commanding, but irreplaceable. But it’s not AIPAC that will determine his fate. As things stand, it’s not Israeli voters either. It’s Israel’s law enforcement authorities.

His supporters would say they should have been watching.

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