Israel’s chattering classes had a field day in early July savaging Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu over his four-day, four-nation African tour. With an entourage filling four jumbo jets, a price tag some put at $7.3 million (the prime minister’s office said it was just $3.25 million), plus more pomp and circumstance than a Viennese operetta, it was one of the costliest junkets ever by an Israeli leader.
Expensive travel is one of Netanyahu’s most criticized peccadillos. His longest-running legal headache is a decade-long expense-padding investigation tellingly dubbed Bibitours. The Africa trip simply confirms the critics’ image of Netanyahu as a self-indulgent braggart who’s in constant motion to avoid going anywhere.
By any objective standard, though, the Africa trip, July 4 to 8, was a major diplomatic success. Even some of Netanyahu’s harshest critics admit privately that the trip — the first sub-Saharan Africa visit by an Israeli leader since 1987 — capped a string of diplomatic successes. Taken together, they’re transforming Israel’s international standing.
Admittedly, it’s a triumph with an asterisk. One of the main effects of Netanyahu’s successes is to blunt international pressure for compromise with the Palestinians. Given the widely-held belief, at least among Israel’s security leadership and much of its foreign policy establishment, that inaction is leading Israel inexorably toward a single Israeli-Palestinian state, either non-Jewish or...read more at Forward