Israeli MP says Livni attending Madonna gig illegal

Jerusalem, Sep. 10 (ANI): Likud politician Danny Danon has filed a complaint with the Knesset Ethics Committee against opposition leader Tzipi Livni for accepting an invitation from Madonna to sit in a VIP section at the singer’s recent concert in Tel Aviv.

According to the Jerusalem Post, Livni was invited by Madonna to sit in a special section next to the ‘Queen of Pop’s family as a special guest when the two had dinner on the eve of the first show last week.

According to Danon, Livni paid 490 shekels, the price for a regular spot, and therefore, the acceptance of Madonna’s invitation violated the prohibition against MKs receiving gifts.

“The fact that she received a present violates ethics laws,” Danon told Israel Radio on Thursday. “I expect a swift response from the Knesset Ethics Committee.”

The diva dined with the Kadima leader last Monday, at Madonna’s request, Livni spokesman Gil Messing said last week.

Livni “was very impressed with Madonna and found her to be a very interesting person,” said Messing, adding that the two decided to keep the content of their conversation private. (ANI)

Ex-Mossad head says ‘Netanyahu agreed to Golan pullout’

Jerusalem, Sep.10 (ANI): Former Mossad head Danny Yatom has claimed that Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu agreed to withdraw Israeli troops from the entire Golan Heights during his first term in exchange for a peace deal with Syria and the normalization of ties between Jerusalem and Damascus. Yatom told Israel Radio that the proof for his claim was a document that appears in his new book, in which Ron Lauder, Netanyahu’s special envoy for talks with Syria at the time, reported the prime minister’s agreement to then-US president Bill Clinton.

The former Mossad chief said that although Netanyahu’s agreement didn’t bind him now, 11 years later, “he has to admit” that he did agree to withdraw from the territory.

Environmental Protection Minister Gilad Erdan (Likud), however, told the radio station that the prime minister had not agreed to such a pullout and had repeated it on numerous occasions.

According to the Jerusalem Post, Yatom also told Army Radio on Wednesday night that only a military strike would stop Iran from attaining nuclear arms status. (ANI)

Netanyahu, Obama aim to foster trust

Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu landed in Washington on Sunday ahead of what is widely considered a critical first meeting with US President Barack Obama on Monday, that may go a long way toward setting the tone of US-Israel relations for years to come.

While Iran and the Palestinian track are expected to dominate the talks, diplomatic officials said that what was even more crucial to establish in this first meeting between the two new leaders was trust and confidence in one another.

The White House has cleared a considerable amount of Obama’s Monday schedule for the talks, which will begin in the late morning, run through lunch and continue on into the afternoon.

Senior Obama administration officials said on Saturday that the pair had already established a good personal working relationship, but they also related to differences in the two leaders’ outlooks.

Netanyahu has refused to specifically endorse the vision of a “two-state solution” to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. His Likud ministerial colleague Yisrael Katz said on Saturday night that the prime minister would push for a joint American-Israeli partnership to launch a fresh “diplomatic initiative for the Middle East” in place of the Arab League initiative and previous negotiating tracks.

Katz also said Netanyahu would not be bound to the kind of “shelf” agreement on two states that former prime minister Ehud Olmert had sought to finalize with Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas.

The Washington officials, by contrast, stressed on Saturday that Obama had been committed from day one of his presidency to pursuing comprehensive Middle East peace, which would include a secure Jewish state of Israel alongside an independent, viable Palestinian state.

Obama has also welcomed the Arab League initiative as constructive and indicated it could serve as a basis for progress.

Netanyahu’s aides have spoken in recent days of the prime minister’s support for “natural growth” in the West Bank settlements – another area of possible contention, with some reports suggesting Obama wants to see a settlement freeze.

The administration officials would not directly answer questions about Obama’s stance on Saturday, beyond saying that all parties had responsibilities and obligations to give the US a chance to be successful. Israel, they said, had responsibilities on settlements and outposts, and the Palestinians had responsibilities on security and terrorism.

Tellingly, however, they referred reporters to US Vice President Joe Biden’s address earlier this month to AIPAC’s policy conference, at which he urged Israel “to work for a two-state solution… not build more settlements, dismantle existing outposts and allow Palestinians freedom of movement.”

Jordan’s King Abdullah gave Netanyahu much the same message when the two met in Amman on Thursday.

The Washington officials also said Obama saw an opportunity to energize the Israel-Syria and Israel-Lebanon tracks, and that this would certainly be discussed on Monday.

They noted that senior Obama officials have already made two trips to Syria, and there have been talks, too, with Syria’s ambassador in Washington – the first such contacts since 2005.

Netanyahu is expected to huddle with top advisers throughout the day in advance of his meeting with the president. He is scheduled to arrive back in Israel on Wednesday, before Jerusalem Day celebrations begin.

He was accompanied on the flight by Israel’s new Ambassador to the US Michael Oren and US Ambassador James Cunningham.

In addition to meeting Obama, Netanyahu is also scheduled to meet with Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, Defense Secretary Robert Gates, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, National Security Adviser Gen. (ret.) James Jones, and congressional leaders from both parties.

He is also expected to meet with Jewish organization leaders, as well as select members of the US media.

Obama’s meeting with Netanyahu is just one of a series of meetings the US president will hold with key Mideast players before unveiling, probably some time in June, a US policy for the Middle East.

Obama will see Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak on May 26, and Abbas on May 28.

He is also scheduled to fly to Egypt in early June and give a long-awaited speech dealing with the US’s relations with the Muslim world.

This process of dialogue, the Washington officials said on Saturday, would produce a determination by the president as to the best way to move forward.

Netanyahu’s spokesman, Mark Regev, said that the prime minister was “looking forward to the meetings in Washington, and building a close and collaborative relationship with President Obama and his team.”

White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said earlier this week that Obama was looking forward to “welcoming key partners in the effort to achieve a comprehensive peace in the Middle East.”

He said Obama would discuss ways with Netanyahu, Mubarak and Abbas to “strengthen and deepen our partnerships, as well as the steps all parties should take to help achieve peace between Israelis and Palestinians and between Israel and the Arab states.”

Gibbs’s emphasis on a comprehensive approach was not coincidental, and reflected one of two pillars of the new administration’s policy: a wider regional component, as well as a two-state solution.

Both US and Israeli officials have said in recent days that even though Netanyahu has not come out and backed a two-state solution, while administration officials are advocating for it constantly, it was expected that a formula could be found to bridge the gap between Obama’s interest in seeing two full states, and Netanyahu’s policy of a three-pronged approach to an agreement that would include political negotiations, enhanced economic development and security cooperation.

Sources close to Netanyahu have said the prime minister does not object to a Palestinians state somewhere down the line, as long as it does not include elements of statehood – such as the ability to muster an army or enter into treaties – that could eventually threaten Israel.

This position is widely seen as one that could be a starting point for negotiations with the Americans, and eventually with the Palestinians.

A Rafi Smith survey published on Ynet on Thursday, meanwhile, indicated that 58 percent of the country’s Jews believe that “two states for two peoples” was the basis of any agreement with the Palestinians.

Thirty-seven percent of the respondents did not agree with the notion, and five percent did not know.

The poll showed a wide gap between religious and secular Jews on the issue, with 73% of the secular population in favor of the idea, while 70% of the national-religious and haredi population opposed.

There was also a wide difference depending on age groups, with 53% of the respondents under 30 being opposed to the idea, and 63% of those over 50 agreeing with it.

The telephone poll was conducted Monday and Tuesday among a representative sample of 500 respondents, and had a 4.5% margin of error.

Even more than the Palestinian issue and the two-state solution, the White House talks are expected to be dominated by Iran, with the leaders expected to sound each other out about the range of options that exist for stopping the Iranian nuclear program.

Diplomatic officials said that Netanyahu will look for clarity as to where Obama’s policy of engagement is headed and how long the US president would be willing to speak to the Iranians without seeing any concrete results or moving to the “next step.”

The “next step” itself is also expected to be discussed.

The Washington officials said the administration would certainly not talk for talking’s sake with Iran, and said the president recognized the urgency of the issue as it related to American interests and Israeli and other friends’ interests.

Obama’s policy on Iran, they stressed, was formulated in the context of the US’s unshakeable commitment to Israel’s security, and the US was involved in a very intensive dialogue with Israel on the issues.

If the Iranians failed to utilize the opportunity provided by US engagement, said one, the US would be strengthened internationally and Iran would have succeeded in isolating itself.

While Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman told The Jerusalem Post in a recent interview that thwarting Iran’s nuclear drive was crucial for any substantive progress with the Palestinians, and Netanyahu’s aides have said much the same, the senior administration officials said on Saturday night that progress was needed on both.

The Middle East, said one, featured relationships where things were not dealt with in isolation from each other.

Beyond these issues, however, what was important for both sides was to create a relationship of trust, officials in the US and Israel have said over recent days.

Israeli officials said it was clear that Netanyahu learned from his first meeting as prime minister in 1996 with then-president Bill Clinton, a meeting which Dennis Ross, a key Mideast adviser for Clinton, said was not successful.

That meeting set the tone for Netanyahu-Clinton relations, which have been described as “rocky.”

“In the meeting with President Clinton, Netanyahu was nearly insufferable, lecturing and telling us how to deal with the Arabs,” Ross wrote in his book The Missing Peace.

“After Netanyahu was gone, President Clinton observed, ‘He thinks he is the superpower and we are here to do whatever he requires.’”

Ross also wrote that at that time Netanyahu “wanted no advance preparation: he and no one else was going to set the agenda for his initial meeting with President Clinton.”

Netanyahu has significantly altered that approach, with meetings between top US and Israeli officials having taken place for weeks, both in Jerusalem and Washington, in preparation for the meeting.

The atmosphere between Netanyahu and Obama, who have met – albeit in different roles – in the past, is also significantly different than it was in 1996 between Netanyahu and Clinton.

For one thing, Obama did not actively promote Netanyahu’s rival, Tzipi Livni, before the elections here in February, as Clinton was widely perceived to have done for Netanyahu’s rival, Shimon Peres, in the 1996 elections.

And, secondly, Netanyahu has no illusions, as he did in 1996, during the peak of Clinton’s problems with a Republican-led Congress, that he can override the president on Capitol Hill.

Israel sees no reason to sign ‘ineffective’ NPT

Jerusalem, May 7 (ANI): Israel has said that it has the capability to deter and defend itself against any threat or possible combination of threats.

Israel’s policy of ambiguity with regard to its undeclared nuclear capability is not likely to change in the near future.

In April 2006, Dan Meridor, then a former justice minister and today a Likud minister in charge of intelligence agencies, presented a written version of Israel’s defense doctrine to the government and the IDF.

Together with a panel of a couple of dozen former military and intelligence officers, Meridor had been asked by Sharon to formulate Israel’s defense doctrine for the first time since the establishment of the state. One of the first recommendations was not to change the policy of nuclear ambiguity, reports the Jerusalem Post.
The Nuclear Non-Proliferation-Treaty (NPT), which Israel was asked to sign on Tuesday by the assistant secretary of state, has for a long time been interpreted in Israel as a failure.

Established to stop the Germans from obtaining a nuclear weapon after World War II, the NPT was effective in South Africa’s case – when the country abandoned its nuclear capability and signed the treaty – but has since, according to Israel, proven to be ineffective, particularly in two cases – Syria and Iran.

“What the Americans are doing is rude,” said Major General (resigned) Ya’acov Amidror, who was a member of the Meridor panel that authored the defense doctrine. (ANI)

Abbas calls on Netanyahu to cooperate in search for peace

Jerusalem – Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas telephoned new Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu Sunday, and urged him to work with the Palestinian Authority in search of peace. A statement issued by Netanyahu’s office said the Palestinian leader had called the premier to congratulate him on the occasion of the Passover holiday.

Netanyahu, the statement said, told Abbas he intended resuming the cooperation they had in the past.

Netanyahu, leader of the hawkish Likud Party, was sworn in as premier on March 31.

Although he has said he wants a “comprehensive peace” with Arab states, he as so far refrained from explicitly endorsing a Palestinian state, which the Palestinians insist be the end result of the peace process. (dpa)

Netanyahu wants to present Israeli government next week

Tel Aviv – Israeli Prime Minister-designate Benjamin Netanyahu plans to present his government early next week, following a vote by the centre-left Labour Party to join his Likud-led government.

In a dramatic and tumultuous meeting of the Labour Party Convention in Tel Aviv late Tuesday, 680 delegates voted for and 507 against party leader Ehud Barak’s proposal to join the Netanyahu government.

Netanyahu and Barak drafted a coalition agreement, which was signed after 24 hours of marathon negotiations, just before it was presented to the convention.

Netanyahu has already signed up the ultra-nationalist Israel Beiteinu party of Moldovan-born immigrant Avigdor Lieberman, as well as the ultra-Orthodox Shas party. Additionally, he resumed negotiations with another ultra-Orthodox faction – United Torah Judaism (UTJ) on Wednesday morning.

With the Likud, Lieberman, Labour and Shas, he already has a majority of 66 lawmakers in the 120-seat Knesset, the Israeli parliament. With the UTJ, the majority would grow to 71. It is unclear whether he will still plans to include two more nationalist, pro-settler factions, the Jewish Home, with three seats, and the National Union, with four.

Emotions ran high at the Labour Party Convention, with Barak’s opponents slamming him for his push to join the Netanyahu government and unleashing a host of accusations at him.

Those ranged from charges of Barak seeking personal gain to others that he was destroying the party’s chances of rehabilitating itself from the opposition benches after its term in the current government. Others, however, defended his choice, saying he was serving Israel’s best interests.

Israel Beiteinu’s controversial leader Lieberman would be foreign minister, while Barak would serve as defence minister, the position he holds in the current administration. The Labour Party will get four other ministerial posts.

Outgoing Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni also criticized Barak for joining the Netanyahu government and said her centrist Kadima party would serve in the opposition as an alternative.

“If I had wanted to, I could also have been in the government,” she told Israel Army Radio Wednesday.

Livni had demanded that Netanyahu explicitly express support for the establishment of a Palestinian state, a move he did not make. To Barak, Netanyahu promised to uphold interim peace agreements signed by previous governments and to work toward “regional” peace, but went no further. (dpa)

URGENT: Report: Labour votes to join Netanyahu coalition

Tel Aviv – The Israeli Labour Party voted Tuesday to join prime minister-designate Benjamin Netanyahu’s coalition, Israel’s Channel 1 television reported.

The vote by party delegates would enable Netanyahu’s conservative coalition to have a majority of 66 seats in the 120-member Israeli parliament, the Knesset.

Netanyahu, of the hardline Likud, and outgoing Defence Minister Ehud Barak, of the left-to-centre Labour Party, had earlier in the day drafted a coalition deal, just in time for the crucial vote by the Labour Party Convention. (dpa)

Netanyahu-Livni meeting ends without success

Jerusalem, Feb. 28 (ANI): In a bid to form a national unity government in Israel, Prime Minister-designate Binyamin Netanyahu met Kadima leader Tzipi Livni. The meeting, however, collapsed without tangible results.

Insisting that she would head the opposition in the Israeli Parliament, Livni said Netanyahu failed to make a commitment that the government’s platform would include pursuing an Israeli-Palestinian two-state solution.

“I came for a second meeting with the Likud leader to hear his vision and the way he believes is correct. Israel is facing challenges and I told him that Kadima would support the correct moves made by the government,” the Jerusalem Post quoted Livni, as saying.

“But to deal with the challenges, I wanted three basic principles that you know of. Two states for two peoples is not an empty slogan. It is the only way Israel can remain Jewish and fight terror. It’s a fundamental issue,” she told reporters after her meeting in Tel Aviv.

Livni said that Netanyahu failed to build a consensus on plans for a two-state solution, changes to the electoral system and other Interior Ministry reforms.

“This meeting has ended without agreements on issues that I see as essential. There could be a government that advances these issues. At the moment, based on the discussions I held in the adjacent room, that government won’t be Netanyahu’s,” she said.

However, Netanyahu blamed Livni for not having any “willingness for unity”, despite her pre-and post-election promises.

“I didn’t find that Livni had the willingness for unity. Unity requires compromise and I was prepared to go in that direction. I also offered an equal number of ministries, including two out of the top three, I said I intended to move peace negotiations forward, and that we would act to advance civil unions and to introduce electoral reforms,” he said.

“If there’s a will, there’s a way; and if there is a will there is unity. In my opinion, the gaps can be bridged, but I was met with total rejection and a refusal to even agree to set up dialogue teams in order to strike a partnership,” he added.

Likud chief negotiator MK Gideon Sa’ar said the Kadima head had “stubbornly held onto her refusal” to join such a coalition, and claimed that her motives were personal.

“She didn’t even agree to setting up special negotiating teams. For unity, compromise is required, but Livni’s motives to sabotage unity are personal,” he said. (ANI)

Q+A – What is happening in Israeli coalition talks?

Benjamin Netanyahu met Roni Bar-On, finance minister in the outgoing Israeli government and a member of the centrist Kadima party, on Tuesday.

The right-wing Likud leader, nominated to be prime minister after a Feb. 10 parliamentary election, was continuing efforts to build a broad coalition government despite an initial rejection from Kadima leader Tzipi Livni.

Here are some questions on the challenges Netanyahu faces in forming a government:

WHAT ARE NETANYAHU’S CHANCES?

On paper, the Likud leader has the support of 65 legislators from right-wing and Jewish religious parties in the 120-member parliament. So Netanyahu, asked by President Shimon Peres on Feb. 20 to try to form a government, might be able to do so well within the 42-day period mandated by law. But a narrow, rightist coalition could put Netanyahu on a collision course with the Obama administration in Washington, which has pledged swift pursuit of Palestinian statehood, because of the smaller parties’ opposition to concessions to the Palestinians. Netanyahu is therefore seeking a broad, middle-of-the-road coalition: a unity government that would include the Kadima and centre-left Labour, which are the core of the outgoing administration.

IS A UNITY GOVERNMENT POSSIBLE?

That’s still unclear. Netanyahu held talks on Sunday with Livni, who said there were still “substantial differences” between her party and Likud. But she agreed to meet again. Much could depend on whether she comes under pressure from within Kadima, many of whose leaders, like Livni, once belonged to Likud, to agree to a political alliance. As Israel’s chief negotiator with the Palestinians, Livni has been pursuing a land-for-peace deal. Netanyahu wants to shift the focus of talks to economic matters. As for the Labour party, its leader, Defence Minister Ehud Barak, met Netanyahu on Monday. Barak reaffirmed that Labour would go into opposition, but said he and Netanyahu were likely to hold further discussions.

WHAT ABOUT A NETANYAHU-LIVNI “ROTATION” ARRANGEMENT?

Netanyahu has publicly rejected the idea of sharing the prime minister’s post with Livni, whose party finished one seat ahead of Likud in the inconclusive Feb. 10 election. But Israeli politics produces strange bedfellows — as in 1984, after a similarly inconclusive election, when Peres, Labour leader at the time, served as prime minister for two years before “rotating” with Likud’s hardliner, Yitzhak Shamir.

WHAT’S NEXT?

A lot of coalition negotiating, in public and in back rooms. In Israel, the bargaining over cabinet posts and government policy usually goes down to the wire. Netanyahu has until April 3 to put together a government.

AND IF HE FAILS?

Then Peres asks another legislator to try for a period of up to 28 days. If he or she fails, Peres, acting on a written request from a majority of legislators, assigns someone else to the task, which would need to be completed within 14 days. If that fails, a parliamentary election is held within 90 days.

Netanyahu meets Livni for unity government in Israel

Jerusalem, Feb 23 (DPA) Israel’s prime minister-designate Benjamin Netanyahu met outgoing Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni Sunday night in an attempt to bring her Kadima party into the government he is attempting to form.

It is the first meeting between the two since the Feb 10 elections, in which the centrist Kadima won 28 of the 120 Knesset seats at stake, one more than that won by Netanyahu’s hardline Likud Party.

Israeli President Shimon Peres tapped Netanyahu Friday to form the next government, after consultations the president had with other Knesset factions revealed that the Likud leader had the best chance to form a government.

Livni rejected a last-minute plea by Peres Friday to join with Netanyahu in a unity coalition, and on Sunday evening she told the Kadima Knesset caucus that Kadima would be betraying its voters if it compromised its principles to sit in a government with Netanyahu.

Israeli media however speculated Sunday that Netanyahu would offer Kadima a ‘full partnership’ in government, including two of the top three cabinet portfolios – defence, foreign affairs or finance.

Netanyahu has up to six weeks to form a government. He can set up a 65-legislator coalition with right-wing and ultra-orthodox parties, but has said he hopes to form a wall-to-wall unity coalition.
DPA

Israeli President asks Netanyahu to form new government

Jerusalem, (DPA) Israel’s President Shimon Peres tasked Benjamin Netanyahu Friday with forming a new government, ending speculation which had persisted since Israel’s inconclusive general election last week.

Although Netanyahu’s hardline Likud Party had won only 27 of the 120 Knesset seats (Israeli parliament) at stake in the election, one fewer than won by the centrist Kadima party of Tzipi Livni, he is seen as having the best chances of forming a governing coalition.

Consultations Peres had held with Knesset factions after the Feb 10 elections revealed that Netanyahu was recommended for the premiership by parties with a total of 65 legislators.

Livni, on the other hand, was endorsed only by the 28 Kadima legislators, after left-wing and Arab-Israeli factions told Peres they were not recommending anyone for the premiership.

Under Israeli law, Netanyahu has 28 days in which to form a coalition, although he can ask the president for a 14-day extension if needed.

Netanyahu has earlier said he was ready to form a coalition with the centrist Kadima party of his main rival Tzipi Livni.

Netanyahu was speaking after a meeting with Peres in an effort to build a grand coalition. Peres also met Friday with Livni, who was quoted by Haaretz newspaper as saying she did not rule out joining a Netanyahu-led coalition.
DPA

Netanyahu asked to form Israel’s next government

Right-wing leader Benjamin Netanyahu on Friday accepted a mandate to form Israel’s next government and immediately called for a broad, national unity coalition with centrist and left-wing partners.

There is no indication they are ready to accept, however.

Netanyahu, 59, leads the hawkish Likud party. He was prime minister in the 1990s and now has six weeks to put together a parliamentary majority for a second turn at the helm.

Likud more than doubled its seats in the election 10 days ago in which the security of the Jewish state was the paramount issue, after a 2006 conflict with Hezbollah Islamists in Lebanon and a war with Islamist Palestinian Hamas in Gaza last month.

But there was no clear winner.

With 27 seats in the 120-seat Knesset, Netanyahu ended up one seat behind the centrist Kadima party of Tzipi Livni, the dominant partner in the outgoing coalition.

The electorate’s rightward drift, however, gave him a better chance of achieving a majority with like-minded parties.

But his nomination by President Shimon Peres on Friday was a break with Israeli tradition, which has always given a governing mandate to the leader of the first-placed party.

Netanyahu urged his opponents to close ranks for the sake of the country and join his government:

“I call on Kadima chairwoman Tzipi Livni and Labour Party chairman Ehud Barak and I say to them — let’s unite to secure the future of the State of Israel.

“I ask to meet with you first to discuss with you a broad national unity government for the good of the people and the state.”

COOL RESPONSE EXPECTED

Livni has so far shown no interest in joining a Netanyahu coalition.

After a last-ditch meeting with Peres on Friday failed to persuade them both to form a unity government, Livni hinted after that her position had not changed — she is not prepared to serve under Likud leadership.

It would be “a coalition that doesn’t allow me to pursue my path, the path of Kadima as we promised the voters”, she said.

“A large government has no value if it does not have a path. The decision is now in the president’s hands.”

Asked if she was ready to go into opposition she said: “If necessary, certainly.”

Netanyahu’s rivals to the left favour pursuing talks with a pragmatic Palestinian leadership, with the backing of U.S. President Barack Obama, and to hand back most of the occupied West Bank for the creation of a Palestinian state in return for peace.

U.S.-educated Netanyahu, who had poor relations with the Clinton administration during his previous term as premier, says that Israel’s unilateral ceding of occupied Arab land has backfired, inspiring Islamist enemies.

He advocates a longer-term, “bottom-up” approach to peace with the Palestinians built on economic development of the West Bank and a gradual handover to Palestinian security forces.

In remarks familiar from his campaign, Netanyahu repeated that he saw Israel facing a particular threat from Iran. Like other Israeli leaders, he believes the Islamic Republic is using a nuclear energy programme to develop atomic weapons that, he says, would pose a threat to Israel’s existence.

Netanyahu given six weeks to form new Israeli government

Jerusalem, Feb.20 (ANI): Israeli President Shimon Peres has chosen hardline Likud leader Benjamin Netanyahu to form a new Israeli government.

Netanyahu now has six weeks to put together a ruling coalition, the Jerusalem Post reports.

The question is whether Netanyahu will form a narrow hardline coalition or a broad government along with his centrist rival, Kadima leader Tzipi Livni.

So far, attempts to convince Livni to support a unity government have failed.

A statement released by Peres’s spokesman said that Netanyahu would be invited to Beit Hanassi on Friday afternoon in order to receive the president’s official letter of appointment.

Earlier, after emerging from a meeting with Peres, Livni announced that she had no intention of joining a broad coalition under Netanyahu, despite the Likud chairman’s assertion that he was willing to “go to great lengths” in order to induce Kadima to join his government.

“It appears that the coalition which has been forming in recent days lacks a diplomatic vision,” Livni said after the meeting.

The Kadima leader rejected the president’s plea that she reconsider joining a coalition comprised of the three largest parties – Kadima, Likud and Israeli Beiteinu – and asserted that a “broad coalition is worthless if it is not governed by values.” (ANI)

Peres may ask Livni to join Israel national unity government

Jerusalem, Feb.20 (ANI): Israeli President Shimon Peres is expected persuade Kadima leader Tzipi Livni to join a national unity government headed by Likud Chairman Binyamin Netanyahu.

Netanhayu said Israel is facing a difficult situation, and there is a need for a broad-based government.

“A wide national-unity government is especially necessary in light of the major challenges Israel is facing from Iran, terror and the international economic crisis,” The Jerusalem Post quoted Netanhayu, as saying.

Netanhayu’s attempts have not persuaded Livni or Ehud Barak’s Labor party to join on one platform.

Livni, who is Israel’s Foreign Minister, has sent out a text message to some 80,000 Kadima workers last week in which she said : “The path of such a government is not our own and we have nothing to look for there. You didn’t vote for us in order to provide a kosher certificate for a right-wing government, and we need to provide an alternative of hope from the opposition.”

According to sources Livni is in no mood to backtrack from her stance.

“She knows that only the Prime Minister decides things in this country and she isn’t willing to be a bumper, a stain remover or a whitener for a Bibi-Lieberman government that her voters didn’t want her to join,” a close-aide of Livni said. (ANI)

Peres may ask Livni to join Israel national unity government

Jerusalem, Feb.20 (ANI): Israeli President Shimon Peres is expected persuade Kadima leader Tzipi Livni to join a national unity government headed by Likud Chairman Binyamin Netanyahu.

Netanhayu said Israel is facing a difficult situation, and there is a need for a broad-based government.

“A wide national-unity government is especially necessary in light of the major challenges Israel is facing from Iran, terror and the international economic crisis,” The Jerusalem Post quoted Netanhayu, as saying.

Netanhayu’s attempts have not persuaded Livni or Ehud Barak’s Labor party to join on one platform.

Livni, who is Israel’s Foreign Minister, has sent out a text message to some 80,000 Kadima workers last week in which she said : “The path of such a government is not our own and we have nothing to look for there. You didn’t vote for us in order to provide a kosher certificate for a right-wing government, and we need to provide an alternative of hope from the opposition.”

According to sources Livni is in no mood to backtrack from her stance.

“She knows that only the Prime Minister decides things in this country and she isn’t willing to be a bumper, a stain remover or a whitener for a Bibi-Lieberman government that her voters didn’t want her to join,” a close-aide of Livni said. (ANI)

Three in five Israelis want Kadima-Likud unity government

Jerusalem, Feb.17 (ANI): Three out of every five Israelis want a unity government in the country, The Jerusalem Post quotes a survey, as saying.

The survey was conducted among 498 Israelis who voted in last week’s general election and ahead of the “Forming a Government” gathering to be held on Tuesday in ZOA House in Tel Aviv.

According to the survey, 47 percent of the people questioned thought a day after the elections that Likud leader Binyamin Netanyahu should form the next government, while 39 percent thought Kadima leader Tzipi Livni should.

Sixty-five percent said they would like to see Kadima and Likud in a unity government and 54 percent of them, most of whom were Netanyahu supporters, said it should not be a rotation government.

More than half of those surveyed said Labor should stay in the opposition, but 55 percent said they wanted its chairman Ehud Barak to keep the Defense portfolio.

“The survey proves that most people don’t think they erred in the way they voted and therefore another general election in the near future is not necessary,” said Yigal Tzahor, the director of The Ideological and Educational Center of Berl Katznelson Fund, who initiated the survey and will host the convention in Tel Aviv. (ANI)

Netanyahu, Livni likely to form next Israeli Government

Jerusalem, Feb 12 (ANI): The Likud and Kadima parties will be able to form the new Israeli government together under the leadership of Likud chairman Binyamin Netanyahu.

A day after Kadima leader Tzipi Livni and Netanyahu declared victory separately in Tuesday’s election, they both began a race against time to form a coalition on paper before President Shimon Peres started the process of appointing one of them to build a government next week, the Jerusalem Post reported.

Netanyahu and Livni both met with the leader of the third largest party, Israel Beiteinu’s Avigdor Lieberman, in an attempt to woo him. But Lieberman raised several demands that either prime ministerial candidate would have a hard time accepting.

Livni appointed a coalition negotiating team of five top Kadima ministers and the party will continue with its political horse-trading in an effort to persuade Peres to let Livni form a government.

Senior Kadima officials said they were well aware that Peres would ask Netanyahu to form a government because of the Right bloc’s 65-55 advantage over the Left, and that if Likud offered Kadima a sweet deal, they should take it.

Netanyahu’s associates revealed that he would be willing to give Kadima the same number of ministries as the Likud, including two of the top four cabinet positions.

Likud would get the premiership and the Treasury, while Kadima could be given the Foreign and Defense ministries.

Likud leader Binyamin Netanyahu would reportedly offer Kadima leader Tzipi Livni two out of the top four ministries to join his government.

“We’re ready to be very generous to Kadima in plum portfolios and power, to lock them into our government. You have to pay a price to get that kind of stability, and I think he would be willing to pay a heavy price,” a source close to Netanyahu said. (ANI)

Right-wingers Israelis outnumber Leftists by 2:1

Jerusalem, Feb 12 (ANI): Right-wing Israelis outnumber those on the left by at least two-to-one, according to a poll conducted by the Rafi Smith Institute.

Rafi Smith said 20 percent of the voters chose their parties on the Election Day and another nine percent made up their mind in the days just before they headed to the polls, the Jerusalem Post reported.

The numbers were significantly higher among those who wound up voting for Kadima – 27 percent decided to vote for the party on the Election Day and 13 percent made up their minds in the days leading up to the election, Smith said.

One-third of Labor voters in 2006 chose Kadima this time around. Similarly, 35-40 percent of those who voted for Meretz in 2006 opted for Kadima in 2009. Thirty percent of those who voted for the Pensioners Party in 2006 turned to Kadima on Tuesday.

Most of those who left Kadima after having voted for it in 2006 moved rightward; 20 percent voted Likud and 6 percent voted for Israel Beiteinu, while 11 percent voted for Labor.

Smith found that more women voted for Kadima than did men. For the Likud it was just the opposite. (ANI)

Controversial Lieberman rides wave of Gaza violence

Controversial Lieberman rides wave of Gaza violence Tel Aviv – The Israel Beiteinu (Israel Our Home) party is the surprise package of Tuesday’s election, a development due mainly to its leader Avigdor Lieberman.

The belligerent hawk has been riding a wave of rising support since a six-month truce in Gaza collapsed in early November, rocket attacks from the strip at southern Israeli towns and villages resumed, and Israel consequently launched a 22-day offensive in Gaza which ended little more than three weeks ago.

The ultra-nationalist party is largely a one-man show, with other candidates keeping mostly in the background, letting Lieberman take centre stage to explain the party’s often controversial policies, which he does in slow, Russian-accented Hebrew.

The 50-year-old immigrant from the former Soviet Union has focused his campaign almost exclusively on what he calls the “radicalization” of Israel’s Arab minority, saying Arab Israelis should be stripped of their citizenship if they show no “loyalty” to Israel.

That has earned him the wrath of Arab legislators, who have called him a “fascist,” a “racist,” and “worse” than extreme-right French leader Jean-Marie Le Pen and Austria’s late Joerg Haider.

“No loyalty, no citizenship!” trumpets Lieberman’s campaign slogan and television ad.

“Our problem is not with the Palestinians. Our problem is with Arab Israelis,” says the voice-over in the television spot.

Lieberman wants to stop social security hand-outs to the families of Arab Israelis and Palestinian residents of East Jerusalem, who carried out or aided militants attacks in Israel, such as that of the gunman who killed eight Jewish students in a West Jerusalem yeshiva (religious school) in March 2008.

He wants Israel to stop paying the pension of an Arab-Israeli lawmaker who fled Israel on suspicion of committing “treason” by allegedly aiding Hezbollah during Israel’s
2006 second Lebanon war with the radical Shiite movement. And he wants Arab Israelis who do not serve in the army to carry out civic service.

Lieberman, a married father of three with a BA in Social Sciences from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, was born in the Moldovan capital of Kishinev and immigrated to Israel in 1978, around the age of 20.

He served as infrastructure and transportation minister in Likud- led governments of former Israeli premier Ariel Sharon between 2002 and 2004.

The burly, bearded and thick-set politician joined the centrist Kadima-led government of outgoing Israeli premier Ehud Olmert after the second Lebanon war, but quit last January in protest of Olmert’s renewal of peace negotiations with moderate Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas.

He was deputy prime minister and minister of strategic affairs, a post designed by Olmert to allow him to join the coalition and to take charge of the “Iran file” – Israel regards Iran’s nuclear programme as its biggest existential threat.

Israel Beitenu is the fifth largest party in the outgoing Knesset, with 11 mandates in the 120-seat parliament. But according to opinion polls, it could now for the first time ever become the third-largest party with as many as 18 or 19 seats, ahead even of the Labour Party. At the very least, it seems, it can count on coming in fourth.

Lieberman’s rise is part of a general strengthening of the right- wing bloc in Israeli politics, from which also front-runner Benjamin Netanyahu of the more mainstream hardline Likud has profited.

Israelis have explained the rise of the right by pointing to concerns over security, with many saying they want a “strong” leader well-suited to deal decisively with such threats as Iran and the radical Islamist Hamas movement ruling Gaza.

The core of Lieberman’s support comes from Russian immigrants and hardliners who seek a robust response to the threats they see facing their country, but are fed up with mainstream parties whose candidates they say have taken turns at the premiership in the past and failed to deal with Israel’s problems.

Another key – and controversial – point in Lieberman’s platform is his plan for “territorial exchange,” which calls for transferring heavily-populated Arab areas of Israel to Palestinian sovereignty in exchange for Israel retaining control of Jewish settlements in the West Bank. (dpa)

Tzipi Livni’s meteoric rise from obscurity

Tzipi Livni's meteoric rise from obscurityTel Aviv – Ten years ago Tzipi Livni was a novice legislator, entering parliament for the first time. Now, three general elections later, she finds herself within grasping distance of the prime minister’s chair at the centre of the horseshoe-shaped cabinet table in the centre of the Knesset.

By Israeli standards, it has been a meteoric rise. While her two main opponents in Tuesday’s election, Benjamin Netanyahu and Ehud

Barak, have also enjoyed similar fast-tracks to the top, the former entered politics after several high-profile public service jobs, while the latter “parachuted” into politics (to use the Israeli term) directly from a distinguished military career.

Livni’s rise to the top is in no small part due to a shift in her ideological thinking, which has seen her abandon the hawkish, hardline ideology of the Likud Party, in favour of the political centre.

In an interview with The New York Times in June, she said she was raised on two key values, which she later found contradictory – “that the whole (Biblical) land of Israel was our heritage,” and “the need to respect others, not to control others’ lives.”

“I reached my own conclusion, that there is a need to divide the land,” she said. “I still believe in our right to the whole land, but felt it was more important to make a compromise.”

Livni was one of the first to follow former premier Ariel Sharon when he broke away from the Likud to form the Kadima party in late 2005.

When Sharon was felled by a massive hemorrhagic stroke several weeks before the March 2006 elections, she was briefly touted as a possible replacement at the head of the centrist party, but when Ehud Olmert was chosen, she was quick to declare her support for him.

Her reward was the foreign ministry, and when Israel renewed negotiations with the Palestinians at the end of 2007, she was appointed head of the Israeli negotiating team, even though her relations with Olmert had by then soured dramatically.

She won the leadership of Kadima after Olmert, besieged by investigations into his alleged corruption, quit the party leadership, and she won by emphasizing that she represented a new, cleaner style of politics, in contrast to her unpopular predecessor.

This was to have been the fulcrum of her election campaign, but events, in the form of Israel’s three-week-long offensive in the Gaza Strip, intervened.

The offensive was a boon to Netanyahu, who had for months been demanding that Israel take tough measures against Hamas and other militant groups in the enclave.

The offensive, launched after repeated rocket barrages on Israel from the salient, was popular among the Israeli public, and Livni, mindful of losing votes to Netanyahu, who for months had been advocating a harsh Israeli response to the rockets, began adopting an increasingly belligerent tone.

She has thus urged a harsh response to continued rocket attacks from Gaza, and even spoke of a new offensive in the enclave if necessary.

But at the same time, she has been careful not to alienate the more moderate among her supporters, letting it be known, for example, that she had been in favour of an early end to the offensive in the Strip.

These seemingly contradictory attitudes provide ammunition to her detractors, who say is a sphinx, liked by many not because they know who she is, but because they do not know.

Other critics also say she at times appears cold and shows no emotion, while supporters stress her integrity, authenticity and her analytical and decision-making abilities.

She prefers to call herself a pragmatist.

Livni was born in Tel Aviv on July 5, 1958. Her roots are in the “aristocracy” of Israeli right wing politics. Both her parents were in the pre-State armed group Irgun. Her father Eitan served as the group’s operations officer and, after being captured by the British mandate authorities, led a daring breakout from Acre jail in 1947. He served three terms in parliament after Israel was founded in 1948.

Livni graduated in law at Bar Ilan University, near Tel Aviv, served as a lieutenant in the Israeli army and was an agent in the Mossad intelligence organization.

Her public life began when she was appointed Director General of the Government Companies Authority, placed in charge privatizing government companies and monopolies.

She entered parliament in 1999, on behalf of the Likud, and quickly caught the eye of then-Likud leader Ariel Sharon. When Sharon was elected premier in 2001, Livni found herself in the cabinet, holding a succession of portfolios, culminating in her appointment as foreign minister.

Livni, who plays the drums for relaxation , says she prefers jeans to a suit and sneakers to high heels, has been a vegetarian since age 12. She is married to a Tel Aviv attorney, and is the mother of two sons. (dpa)