by Mati Tuchfeld, Efrat Forsher and Nitzi Yakov
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu tells Israel Hayom that it is "mistaken" to assume he will win the election, says his job is to lead in a sober manner • PM: The people who supported Oslo haven't sobered up yet and still believe their own delusions.
Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu speaks at Park Hotel in Netanya on Wednesday
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Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is signaling
to right-wing voters that there is a real danger that he and his Likud
Party could lose the leadership of Israel to Zionist Union leaders Isaac
Herzog and Tzipi Livni in the national election next week.
In a conversation with Israel Hayom, Netanyahu
said that "some right-wing voters mistakenly believed that I will be
elected no matter what, so they decided to support other parties. But we
can't afford [to think this way] in this election. The danger that
Tzipi and Herzog will rise to power with the help of [Yesh Atid
Chairman] Yair Lapid and the Joint Arab List is more tangible than
ever."
"The only way to ensure that the next
government is headed by the national camp is to vote for Likud," he
added. Touching on the Israeli practice where the head of every party
makes a recommendation as to who they feel should assemble the coalition
and lead the government, Netanyahu stressed that "[Kulanu Chairman
Moshe] Kahlon and [Yisrael Beytenu Chairman Avigdor] Lieberman have not
pledged to recommend me. Moreover, Kahlon's No. 2 Yoav Galant,
specifically said he would recommend Herzog. So if you want me as prime
minister, you have to vote for Likud."
The prime minister declared that his famous
address at Bar-Ilan University in 2009, in which he first called for a
two-state solution for the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, was no longer
relevant. "The reality has shifted. Today, every territory that we
evacuate will be taken over by radical Islamists under the auspices of
Iran. That is what happened when we pulled out of Lebanon and it is what
happened when we evacuated Gaza, and we must not allow it to happen in
Judea and Samaria as well. That is why there will not be any
evacuations."
Netanyahu declared that his next government
will neither release Palestinian prisoners nor freeze construction in
the settlements.
Netanyahu also lashed out at former Mossad
chief Meir Dagan, who criticized him at an anti-Netanyahu rally last
Saturday. "I don't understand how Dagan, who cursed me and insulted me,
asked twice to serve as Mossad director under me. I approved his first
request, and rejected his second, and perhaps as a result of that he is
coming after me for personal reasons. Of course I don't agree with his
left-wing agenda. He was wrong when he forecast that the Muslim
Brotherhood would not seek the leadership of Egypt. In the end, not only
did they seek it, they succeeded in achieving it. My job as prime
minister is to lead the country in a sober manner. People who supported
Oslo haven't sobered up yet and still believe their own delusions.
Security cannot be founded on delusions."
On Wednesday, Netanyahu told supporters in
Netanya that "I am telling our friends in the national camp that anyone
who wants to vote for another right-wing party is actually increasing
that risk. Because the fewer votes Likud gets, and the wider the gap
[between Likud and the Zionist Union] grows, so does the danger that
Tzipi and Herzog will assemble the next coalition. That is why it is
imperative not to vote for other parties."
At the start of his address, Netanyahu
remarked on the choice of the Park Hotel in Netanya as the venue. In
2002, 30 Israelis were murdered at the same hotel in a Passover eve
suicide bombing. "We remember those days and we are determined to make
sure that they never return. Over the last six years we have undergone
the kind of enormous upheaval that we haven't seen here in almost a
hundred years -- one regional earthquake that created upheaval and is
now affecting all the countries in the region. Nations are collapsing,
and radical Islam is insinuating itself into the cracks that emerge and
washing over the entire region. It is sending its deadly tentacles in
the direction of our borders in the north and the south. We are fighting
it, and unlike other countries we have managed to maintain security. We
are fighting against the biggest patron of terrorism -- Iran."
Netanyahu remarked that "in the past, the border was
right here, in the suburbs of Netanya. Astoundingly, there are people
who want the restore that border to where it was. No us. Not me. I won't
allow that to happen. We are looking out for [Israel's] security. We
don't want terrorists to be able to get here. We know that if we are not
there, they will be here. It takes standing up to the efforts to
restore the pre-1967 borders and the efforts to divide Jerusalem. I will
never divide Jerusalem, the same way I will never want to go back to
pre-1967 borders."
Mati Tuchfeld, Efrat Forsher and Nitzi Yakov
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_article.php?id=24103
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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