Benjamin Netanyahu
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| Benjamin Netanyahu בנימין נתניהו | |
| 9th Prime Minister of Israel
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| In office June, 1996 – July, 1999 | |
| Preceded by | Shimon Peres |
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| Succeeded by | Ehud Barak |
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| Born | October 21, 1949 Tel Aviv, Israel |
| Political party | Likud |
Benjamin Netanyahu (Hebrew: בִּנְיָמִין נְתַנְיָהוּ (without niqqud: בנימין נתניהו), Hebrew transliteration written in English: Binyamin Netanyahu, nicknamed Bibi) (born October 21, 1949, Tel Aviv) was the 9th Prime Minister of Israel and is a leading figure in the Likud party.
As leader of the conservative Likud party, he was Prime Minister from June, 1996 to July, 1999. He is the first (and to date only) Prime Minister of Israel to be born after the State of Israel's foundation. He was Finance Minister of Israel until August 9, 2005, when his resignation letter came into force. He resigned in protest at the Gaza Disengagement Plan advocated by Prime Minister Ariel Sharon. Netanyahu retook the Likud leadership on December 20, 2005. As of May 4, 2006, he is the official leader of the Opposition in the Knesset.
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[edit] Family and personal background
Netanyahu was born in Tel Aviv, to Zila and Ben-Zion Netanyahu (original name Milikowsky). Netanyahu's relatives were Jews from Lithuania. Netanyahu's father is a professor of Jewish history, a former editor of the Hebrew Encyclopedia, and a former senior aide to Zeev Jabotinsky. His elder brother Yonatan was killed during Operation Entebbe in 1976. His younger brother Iddo is a radiologist and writer. All three brothers served in the elite Sayeret Matkal reconnaissance unit. When Binyamin Netanyahu was 14 years old, his family moved to the United States and settled in Cheltenham Township, Pennsylvania, a Philadelphia suburb, where he graduated from Cheltenham High School. He earned an S.B. degree in Architecture from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1975, and an S.M. degree from the MIT Sloan School of Management in 1976 [1], and has studied political science at Harvard and MIT. After graduate school, Netanyahu worked at The Boston Consulting Group in Boston, and eventually returned to Israel. Netanyahu has a daughter, Noa, from his first marriage to Micki Weizman. Netanyahu's second marriage was to Fleur Cates, who converted to Judaism for his sake since only her father was a Jew. He is now married to his third wife, Sarah, with whom he has two children - Yair and Avner.
After a brief career in business, Netanyahu was appointed Deputy Chief of Mission at the Israeli Embassy in Washington, D.C. in 1982. Subsequently, he became Israel's Ambassador to the United Nations, serving from 1984 to 1988. He was elected to the Knesset in 1988 and served in the governments led by Yitzhak Shamir from 1988 to 1992. Shamir retired from politics shortly after Likud's defeat in the 1992 elections. In 1993, for the first time, the party held a primary election to select its leader, and Netanyahu was victorious, defeating Binyamin Ze'ev Begin, son of the late Prime Minister Menachem Begin, and veteran politician David Levy. (Ariel Sharon initially sought the Likud leadership as well, but quickly withdrew when it was evident that he was attracting minimal support.)
[edit] Prime minister (1996-1999)
In 1996, for the first time, Israelis elected their Prime Minister directly. Netanyahu was elected in 1996 after a wave of suicide bombings against Israelis. On March 3 and 4, 1996, Palestinians carried out two suicide bombings, killing 32 Israelis. Those attacks were the main catalyst in the downfall of Peres, who eventually lost the election due to his inability to stop attacks against Israelis although early opinion polls during the campaign had appeared favourable. Unlike Peres, Netanyahu did not trust Yasser Arafat and conditioned any progress at the peace process on the Palestinian Authority fulfilling its obligations - mainly fighting terrorism. His campaign slogan was "Netanyahu - making a safe peace".
Netanyahu hired American Republican political operative Arthur Finkelstein to run his campaign. Although the American style of sound bites and sharp attacks elicited harsh criticism from inside Israel, it proved effective and Netanyahu's Likud Party took control. In 1999, Ehud Barak would choose a similar style to challenge Netanyahu by bringing in Bill Clinton's former campaign manager, James Carville, as well as American consultant Bob Shrum and pollster Stanley Greenberg.
As Prime Minister, Netanyahu negotiated with Yasser Arafat in the form of the Wye River Accords (1998). No progress was made in peace talks with the Palestinians, and Netanyahu failed to implement the agreed steps of the Oslo Accords. In 1996, Netanyahu and Jerusalem's mayor Ehud Olmert decided to open an exit for the Western Wall Tunnel. This sparked three days of riots by Palestinians, resulting in both Israelis and Palestinians being killed.
Netanyahu was opposed by the political left wing in Israel and also lost support from the right because of his concessions to the Palestinians in Hebron and elsewhere and due to his negotiations with Arafat generally. After a long chain of scandals (including gossip regarding his marriage) and an investigation opened against him on charges of corruption (later acquitted), Netanyahu lost favor with the Israeli public.
After being defeated by Ehud Barak in the 1999 Israeli general elections, Netanyahu temporarily retired from politics.
[edit] Political activity after 2000
In 2002, after the Israeli Labor party left power and vacated the position of foreign minister, Prime Minister Ariel Sharon appointed Netanyahu as Foreign Minister. Netanyahu challenged Sharon for the leadership of the Likud party, but failed to oust Sharon. After the 2003 elections, Netanyahu accepted the post of Finance Minister in a newly formed Sharon coalition. Netanyahu did not support the concept of a future Palestinian state, though on two occasions in 2001, he indicated willingness to consider the idea [2].
As Finance Minister, Netanyahu undertook an economic plan in order to restore Israel's economy from its low point during the al-Aqsa Intifada. The plan involved a move toward more liberalized markets, although it had been seen by many opponents as controversial. Netanyahu succeeded to pass several long-in-the-queue reforms, including an important reform in the banking system that followed with a significant increase in the GDP growth rate.
Netanyahu threatened to resign in 2004 unless the Gaza pullout plan was put to a referendum, but later lifted the ultimatum. He submitted his resignation letter on August 7, 2005, shortly before the Israeli cabinet voted 17 to 5 to approve the initial phase of withdrawals of the Gaza Disengagement Plan. Netanyahu's resignation went into effect August 9, 2005, two days after he submitted his letter. Shortly thereafter he revealed he had rejected an invitation to serve as Italy's finance minister, allegedly extended to him by Italian billionaire businessman Carlo De Benedetti, who later said it was a joke.
Following the withdrawal of Ariel Sharon from the Likud, Netanyahu was one of several candidates who vied for the Likud leadership. His most recent attempt prior to this was in September 2005 when he tried to hold early primaries for the position of the head of the Likud party, while the party held the office of Prime Minister - thus effectively pushing Ariel Sharon out of office. The party rejected this initiative. Netanyahu retook the leadership on December 20, 2005, with 47% of the primary vote. In the March 2006 Knesset elections Likud shared the third and the fourth places with Shas, behind Kadima and Labor.
[edit] Controversies
In July 2006, Israelis including Binyamin Netanyahu attended a 60th anniversary celebration, organized by the Menachem Begin Centre, of the King David Hotel bombing. The British Ambassador in Tel Aviv and the Consul-General in Jerusalem complained, saying "We do not think that it is right for an act of terrorism, which led to the loss of many lives, to be commemorated."<ref> Ned Parker and Stephen Farrell,"British anger at terror celebration", The Times, July 20 2006</ref> They also protested against an Israeli plaque that read "For reasons known only to the British, the hotel was not evacuated.”According to Begin, the British had been warned of the bombing three times but refused to evacuate the building because "We don't take orders from the Jews." <ref> James Taranto, "Best of the Web Today", Wall Street Journal, February 4 2004</ref> According to Shmuel Katz, the British did not take the warnings seriously because they didn't believe Etzel could infiltrate their HQ that was guarded so well (Katz, Days of Fire, 1966:94).
In an interview with Glenn Beck on CNN in November 2006, Netanyahu called militant Islam "the most primitive creed on Earth," during an interview in which he condemned Iran's pursuit of WMD.
[edit] Books and articles
Books:
- A Durable Peace: Israel and Its Place Among the Nations (Warner Books, 2000) ISBN 0-446-52306-2
- Fighting Terrorism: How Democracies Can Defeat Domestic And International Terrorism (Diane Pub Co, 1995) ISBN 0-7881-5514-8
- A Place Among the Nations (Bantam, 1993) ISBN 0-553-08974-9
- Terrorism: How the West Can Win (Farrar Straus & Giroux, 1986) ISBN 0-374-27342-1
Articles:
[edit] References
- [1] Ned Parker and Stephen Farrell,"British anger at terror celebration", The Times, July 20 2006
- [2] James Taranto, "Best of the Web Today", Wall Street Journal, February 4 2004
- Clinton, Bill (2005). My Life. Vintage. ISBN 1-4000-3003-X.
- Katz, Shmuel (1966). Days of Fire.
[edit] External links
- Biography of Benjamin Netanyahu at Zionism and Israel Information Center Biography Section
- Website of supporters of Benjamin Netanyahu: Hebrew English
- Benjamin Netanyahu on the definition of terror (BBC)(5 min.)
- Benjamin Netanyahu Profile on Israeli Lexicon (Ynetnews | Yedioth Aharonoth)
- Netanyahu: Pullout will worsen Israel's security The Jerusalem Post, August 5, 2005
- Cheltenham High School Hall of Fame Biography
| Preceded by: Yitzhak Shamir | Leader of the Likud Party 1993–1999 | Succeeded by: Ariel Sharon |
| Preceded by: Shimon Peres | Prime Minister of Israel June 1996 – July 1999 | Succeeded by: Ehud Barak |
| Preceded by: Shimon Peres | Foreign Minister of Israel 2002–2003 | Succeeded by: Silvan Shalom |
| Preceded by: Silvan Shalom | Finance Minister of Israel 2003–2005 | Succeeded by: Ehud Olmert |
| Preceded by: Ariel Sharon | Leader of the Likud Party (2nd Time) 2005–Present | Succeeded by: Incumbent |
| Prime Ministers of Israel
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| David Ben-Gurion • Moshe Sharett • David Ben-Gurion • Levi Eshkol • Golda Meir • Yitzhak Rabin • Menachem Begin • Yitzhak Shamir • Shimon Peres • Yitzhak Shamir • Yitzhak Rabin • Shimon Peres • Benjamin Netanyahu • Ehud Barak • Ariel Sharon • Ehud Olmert |
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Categories: Prime Ministers of Israel | Israeli party leaders | Israeli diplomats | Harvard University alumni | Massachusetts Institute of Technology alumni | MIT Sloan School of Management alumni | Jewish politicians | 1949 births | Living people | Former Israeli Ambassadors to the United Nations | Members of the Knesset | Israeli politicians

