Benjamin Netanyahu is embroiled in numerous scandals, all of his own making, and may soon be ousted from the office he has held longer than any prior Israeli Prime Minister outside of David Ben Gurion. But Bibi, as he is known by friend and foe alike, is no stranger to controversy. For many in Israel and elsewhere, he is an embarrassment, a threat to democracy, even a precursor to Donald Trump. He nevertheless continues to dominate Israeli public life — and he may yet survive his current crises, the most challenging of his career. How can we explain Netanyahu's rise, his hold on Israeli politics, and his outsized role on the world's stage?
In Bibi, the Haaretz journalist Anshel Pfeffer argues that we must view Netanyahu as representing the triumph of the underdogs in the Zionist enterprise. Born in 1949, one year after the state of Israel itself, Netanyahu came of age in a nation dominated by liberal, secular Zionists. Yet Netanyahu's grandfather and father bequeathed to him a brand of Zionism integrating Jewish nationalism and religious traditionalism, and he identified with the groups at the margins of Israeli society: right-wing Revisionists, orthodox, Mizrahi Jews, and small-time professionals living in the new towns and cities dotting the Israeli landscape. Netanyahu cultivated each faction individually and then fused them into a coalition that has frequently proven unstoppable in Israeli politics.
Netanyahu is also a child of America, where he spent many years as a young man, and where he learned the techniques of modern political campaigns as well as the necessity of controlling the media cycle. The product of the affluent East Coast Jewish community and the Reagan era, Netanyahu's politics and worldview were formed as much by American Cold War conservatism as by his family's hardline right-wing Zionism.
As Pfeffer demonstrates in this penetrating biography, Netanyahu's influence will endure even if his career soon comes to an end. The Israel he has helped make is a hybrid of ancient phobia and high-tech hope, tribalism and globalism — just like the man himself.
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Release date
May 1, 2018 -
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Kindle Book
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- ISBN: 9780465097838
- File size: 9453 KB
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- ISBN: 9780465097838
- File size: 9457 KB
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Languages
- English
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Reviews
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Kirkus
March 15, 2018
An unsparing examination of the Israeli prime minister's rise to power.Journalist Pfeffer, Israeli correspondent for the Economist and senior correspondent for Haaretz, makes his literary debut with a biting portrait of Benjamin "Bibi" Netanyahu (b. 1949), an ambitious politician whose racist, right-wing views have shaped "a deeply fractured Israeli society, living behind walls." The son of historian Benzion Netanyahu and brother of fallen soldier Jonathan, Bibi embraced the "family mythology" that "constantly tried to place itself at the center of the Zionist narrative." The author stresses the importance of Bibi's American experience, which began in high school, when his father took an academic position in Pennsylvania. Although disdaining "the liberal-leaning, Democrat-voting American Jews" he met, he appreciated American capitalism and the style of American political campaigns. In 1981, as deputy chief of mission at Israel's Washington embassy, Netanyahu set out to become a media personality. "Ever a perfectionist," Pfeffer writes, "he worked assiduously on his televisual skills, taking lessons from professional coaches" and rehearsing his delivery "of terse and soundbite-heavy sentences." Three years later, he was appointed ambassador to the U.N., where he "became a star of the air waves." In 1996, with no political experience, he won a slim victory over Shimon Peres by inflaming Israel's fear of its Arab neighbors. Besides coveting power, Netanyahu acquired a taste for luxury, extravagances that led to financial scandals later in his career. As he examines his subject's fraught relationships with Israeli politicians and U.S. presidents, Pfeffer portrays Bibi as an arrogant, polarizing figure, incapable of compromise and, like Donald Trump, "lacking in introspection." Netanyahu has never wavered in his bleak view of history, in which the Jewish homeland was threatened by "the genocidal urge of the Arab nations to destroy the Jewish presence." He opposed any move to relinquish control of the West Bank and Golan Heights, conceding only "limited autonomy" to Palestinians living in those areas.A perceptive history of a beleaguered nation and one deeply flawed leader.COPYRIGHT(2018) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
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Formats
- Kindle Book
- OverDrive Read
- EPUB ebook
Languages
- English
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