Axulus
Veteran Member
That Mr. Herzog is in the running so close to election day speaks volumes about the changing values in the Jewish state. This is not his father’s or his grandfather’s Israel.
...
Mr. Herzog took a page from his rabbi grandfather’s book. “I am always looking for the middle path, like Maimonides,” he told the interviewer. “I am a social democrat who wants both a free market and a just state. I am a pragmatist who tries to act fairly.”
“My role as a leader,” he said this past Sunday, “is to unite everyone, bring them together to a common denominator, give them a sense of purpose and hope.”
...
When it comes to possibly evacuating Israeli settlements on the West Bank as part of a peace agreement with the Palestinians, Mr. Herzog says he’s prepared for that, too.
“If the moment should come when settlements must be removed, I will do so. But I will do so only as [Menachem] Begin did: by agreement and after dialogue with the settlers themselves.”
Mr. Herzog laid out his views on establishing a Palestinian state in a September, 2011, article in Foreign Affairs. Surprisingly, he said that Israel should not try to stop the Palestinian bid for United Nations recognition as a state. In fact, he wrote, Israel should vote in favour of the idea.
More recently, he said that, to get the Palestinians back to the negotiating table, he would be willing to freeze all settlement-building on the West Bank except in major settlement blocs that are vital to Israel’s security.
Both these notions have been dismissed as capitulation by the Netanyahu administration.
To which Mr. Herzog replies: Look where the Netanyahu tough approach has gotten us: “He is damaging basic principles of Israeli statesmanship. He is endangering the Jewish democratic state. He is wearing down the most important strategic asset we possess: our alliance with the United States.”
Even the Netanyahu idea of building new housing, Mr. Herzog says, is to build another settlement.
“Likud has been hijacked by a group of extremist settlers,” he concludes.
For a guy with so many alleged shortcomings Mr. Herzog is supremely confident.
“In less than a year after I become prime minister, Israel will be a different country: calm, soothed, sane.”
Mr. Herzog has said he would focus on three things if elected: solving the country’s housing crisis, healing strained relations with the United States and reigniting peace talks with the Palestinians that burned out under Mr. Netanyahu.
“If necessary, I will go to Ramallah,” said Mr. Herzog, “and I will present to the Palestinian parliament a vision of hope.
“And I will make a gesture to [Israel’s] Arab population,” he added.
“Maybe I will appoint an Arab minister. I will show that the time of disunity and internal rift is over, and that a time of healing and reconciliation has begun.”
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news...eals-israels-changing-values/article23401074/
Election is this Monday. Latest poll results are here:
http://www.haaretz.com/st/c/prod/eng/2015/elections/center/