July 16, 2016, Tikun Olam-תיקון עולם http://www.richardsilverstein.com (USA)
Winston
Churchill said after one of the earliest Allied victories during WWII: this is
not the end, not even the beginning of the end. Rather it’s the end of
the beginning. I think we’re more advanced in the case of Netanyahu.
We may have just entered the beginning of the end of his seemingly
endless reign over Israeli politics.
Israeli social
media has lit up with news of a new investigation of Bibi Netanyahu, his son
Yair, and the PMO’s former chief of staff, Ari Harow. This story has not yet been reported
by an Israeli mainstream publication and
I don’t have an inside reliable source
to confirm it, as I usually do when I post these stories.
So what
I’m reporting is based on what readers are sending me and what’s posted at
Israeli social media sites. Despite not being able to affirm with
certainty the reliability of the reports, they are important enough, and
repeated enough for me to believe that there is a “there” there, to paraphrase
Gertrude Stein.
Netanyahu,
according to this account, requested the Mossad provide his son with a
false passport so that his security would be protected on overseas trips.
But an account in the fictitious name of his passport was identified
among the Panama Papers. Lots of money passed through this account.
I’ve heard figures from $500,000 up to several million dollars. On
the strength of the funds in this account, Yair is suspected of money
laundering, possibly in order to avoid taxes or for another motive.
According to one source, the guiding light behind the plan was Sara
Netanyahu.
Ari Harow’s
case has been reported: when he was the chief fundraiser for American Friends
of the Likud, he met a New York pediatrician named Victor Deutsch. Harow sold his political consulting company, 3GH Global, to
Deutsch for $3-million. The new buyer was supposed to make regular
payments as part of the purchase agreement. He made a few payments then,
according to Harow he stopped. At that point, Harow claims he took back
his company from the purchaser. Investigators are trying to track those
payments, whether there were others that weren’t recorded, and where all the
money went. Some are speculating it went into Bibi’s pocket or into
funding the Likud’s last election campaign. It also seems odd that a
medical doctor would buy a political consulting company, and the price paid
also seems suspiciously high considering Harow’s company had very few clients.
On the
corporate website, it mentions only two clients: the former rightist Spanish prime minister,
Jose Anzar and Paraguay’s newly elected president. Harow pimped for the Friends of Israel (FOI) initiative. This is a
propaganda project involving Aznar, Richard Kemp, David Trimble, John Bolton
& other well-paid pro-Israel advocates. Among other things, they
promoted Israel’s killing machine in Gaza after the Mavi Marmara incident.
Harow’s contract to promote their work further cements the reputation of
FOI as a creature of official Israeli hasbara.
Times of
Israel reports that
investigators are considering offering Harow immunity if he will testify
against his former boss, the prime minister. That would be quite a sight!
I also
continue to hear rumors reported by several Israeli bloggers that the Likud engineered a massive electoral fraud which involved 300,000 excess “voters”
casting ballots in the final two hours of the 2015 national election, which
added 8 seats to Likud’s tally and made the difference between a Likud-led
coalition and a Labor-led coalition. As Likud campaign manager during the
past two elections, Harow may have some interesting stories to tell.
The State
attorney general, Avichai Mandelblit and the special corruption unit of the
national police are deep into a complex investigation of these matters.
At this point, one can’t say whether all this will blow over as it always
has for Netanyahu in the past when he’s faced similar charges; or whether this
will transform itself into a career-threatening scandal. I recall a
similar process which brought down Ehud Olmert, a few years ago. There
were rumors of his past corrupt dealings which gradually morphed into
full-scale investigations. No sooner did one scandal appear to fade than
a new one rose to take its place. Soon, the drumbeat of corrupt deals and
pay-offs grew into a roar that could no longer be avoided. It took quite
some time, I recall around two years, before Olmert was finally forced to resign.
Now he sits in prison. I have little doubt that’s where Bibi will
sit one day, a forlorn, badly dressed convict, as Olmert now is. But this
won’t happen overnight.
The same
pattern is repeating itself. The scandals come in rapid succession.
They grow increasingly serious. The cries of consternation from
political allies and average Israelis grow stronger with each new one.
The thought that Bibi could resign turns from a distant-possibility to a
near certainty. All this happened in Olmert’s case as well.
As I’ve
written here before, no one should fool themselves that Bibi’s demise will
change anything fundamentally in Israeli politics. Corruption will remain
endemic. The Likud will remain in power. The next prime minister
may have a better smile, he may be slightly more upright or careful, or may
have more rapport with the people. But his policies will be little
different than Netanyahu’s. So don’t make the mistake of thinking with
Bibi finally gone Israel can turn a page and start afresh. This book will
never end until someone from outside Israel takes it upon themselves to bring
it to a close. And that will not happen any time soon.
*Richard
Silverstein: “The day is
short, the task is great, the master is insistent. It is not your duty to
complete the task, but neither are you free to desist from it….” — Pirkei Avot, 2:21.
I’ve been
writing Tikun
Olam, one of the earliest progressive Jewish blogs, since
February, 2003. It focuses on exposing the excesses of the Israeli
national security state.
I wrote a
chapter for the Independent Jewish Voices essay collection, A Time to Speak Out (Verso) and will contribute a chapter
to the upcoming, Israel and Palestine: Alternate Perspectives on
Statehood (Rowman & Littlefield). I currently
contribute regularly to Middle East Eye and Mint Press News. In the past, I’ve contributed to
Truthout, Haaretz, Christian Science Monitor, Jewish Forward, Los
Angeles Times, Comment Is Free and Al Jazeera English. My work has
also been in the Seattle Times, American Conservative Magazine, Beliefnet and
Tikkun Magazine. The NY Times featured my reporting about the Shamai
Leibowitz FBI tapes on its front page.
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