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Lapid, not Bennett, is the Israeli leader to watch in Washington
As Israelis and Palestinians political landscape, much of the attention is naturally focused on the new prime minister, Naftali Bennett.
But when it comes to the growing debate within the Democratic party over USÌýsupport for Israel's apartheid policies and denial of Palestinian rights, it is the alternate prime minister and foreign minister, Yair Lapid,Ìýwho merits our scrutiny.
Bennett is not likely to change Israel's policies in any substantive way. Nor is it likely that Lapid will have fundamental differences with Bennett regarding the Palestinians or Iran. These Israeli policies are not consistent with those of the United States, will work to pursue their goals with more care for the relationship with both the Democratic Party and the American Jewish community than Netanyahu did.
"Lapid's highest priority is to get the mainstream of the Democratic party back to its traditional position of unquestioning support of Israel"
On Sunday, Lapid and USÌýSecretary of State Antony Blinken had their since each assumed their new offices. Prior to the meeting, Lapid that, "In the past few years, mistakes were made. Israel's bipartisan standing [in the United States]Ìýwas hurt. We will fix those mistakes together."
He went on to repeat common talking points, but the meaning was inescapable. Lapid's highest priority is to get the mainstream of the Democratic party back to its traditional position of unquestioning support of Israel.
In a thinly veiled shot at Netanyahu's belligerent attitude toward Barack Obama regarding the Iran nuclear deal, Lapid made it clear that Bennett's government would take the same stance but use different tactics. "Israel has some serious reservations about the Iran nuclear deal that is being put together in Vienna," he said. "We believe the way to discuss those disagreements is through direct and professional conversation, not in press conferences."
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Bennett knows very well that his right-wing orientation is not well-suited to healing the partisan breach Netanyahu created. He is therefore pleased to let Lapid be Israel's face to Democrats, while he courts the Israeli right's traditional Republican and evangelical Christian allies.
Bennett, of course, got his congratulatory phone call with President Joe Biden after his government was sworn in, but discussions of substance have been left to Lapid. That, as he would rather not be drawn once again into the Israel-Palestine issue.
In a recent phone call, that they would not try to resolve Israel's occupation. Rather, they would work to "improve Israeli-Palestinian relations in practical ways." This echoes Bennett's goal of maintaining the status quo but "" around the occupation.
"Bennett is pleased to let Lapid be Israel's face to Democrats, while he courts the Israeli right's traditional Republican and evangelical Christian allies"
Biden and many Democrats are vague in what they mean by a two-state solution, that this is the only acceptable resolution to the conflict. Given Israeli claims to all of Jerusalem, its opposition to any recognition of the rights of Palestinian refugees, and its massive and, in many areas, irreversible settlement expansion, to reconcile that notion with the facts on the ground. But Lapid has been much clearer.
, a future Palestinian state must allow Israel to enter any time on the pretext of "terrorist plots;" must not include the crucial Jordan Valley, some 30 percent of West Bank territory; and, reflecting a virtual consensus of Israel's mainstream leaders, allowsÌýIsrael to keepÌýall of Jerusalem, ignoring Palestinian refugees. This would amount to a fragmented, tiny, resource-poor state without its capital and, in the most important sense, would not enjoy full sovereignty.
The two-state mantra, when paired with the USÌýand Israel agreeing that of that or any solution in practice, will be understood, correctly, by many progressives as a way of maintaining the status quo and continuing to deny Palestinians their rights.
But it will certainly be embraced by centrist Democrats, and likely by some ostensible "progressives" as well. That allows for support of some Palestinian causes, like the recent US of Palestinian families in the Jerusalem neighbourhood of Sheikh Jarrah, while not fundamentally challenging Israel's apartheid regime.
Lapid is well positioned to shore up that support, and Bennett knows it. From Bennett's point of view, it gives him the best of both worlds. He can appeal to his right-wing base by complaining about the pressure he is under from Washington, while Lapid works to rebuild Democratic support and to marginalize the sort of during Israel's .
Lapid's discussions with Blinken are only the beginning. While they affirmed the connection between Lapid and the conservative wing of the Democratic leadership, equally important was Lapid's discussion with the so-called "Democratic Majority for Israel."
DMFI, which has two board members who recently for extreme anti-Palestinian and Islamophobic tweets, has been to counter the growing sympathy for Palestinian rights among both progressive and some moderate Democratic voters.
That sympathy last week which found that nearly half of Democratic voters felt that the Biden administration had not done enough for the Palestinians.
While his talk with DMFI leadership was off the record, that, "Foreign Minister Lapid made clear that a strong US-Israel relationship benefits both countries, is a core strategic asset for Israel, and requires a bipartisan approach, working with both Democrats and Republicans. He noted reinvigorating Israel's relationship with Democrats is one of his central objectives."
Lapid knows well that the current Israeli government is not built to last. He is already acknowledged in Israel as the man who finally brought an end to the cycle of elections and wishes to position himself as well as the man who repairs the damage Netanyahu did to Israel's relations with the United States.
But that damage also opened the space for real debate on USÌýpolicy in the region and on Palestinian rights. For that space to remain open, let alone widen, supporters of Palestinian rights must make sure Lapid cannot recapture the narrative on this issue.Ìý
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Mitchell Plitnick is a political analyst and writer. He is the former vice president of the Foundation for Middle East Peace and former director of the US Office of B'Tselem.
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Opinions expressed in this article remain those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of °®Âþµº, its editorial board or staff, or the author's employer.
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