Will Binyamin Netanyahu’s vow to annex part of the West Bank work?
Israel’s prime minister is trying to sway voters ahead of an election
BY NOW IT is something of an Israeli ritual. As an election looms, Binyamin Netanyahu digs deep for ways to scare or thrill his hawkish supporters. He says unkind things about Israel’s Arab minority. He warns of voter fraud. He invites nervous conservatives to imagine a cabinet minister named Ahmed. On September 10th he offered a carrot: if re-elected, Mr Netanyahu said, he would annex the occupied Jordan Valley in the West Bank. Such a move—indeed, any discussion of it even—would be reviled abroad, including by Israel’s allies. But foreign criticism worries him far less than the threat of defeat at home.
This article appeared in the Middle East & Africa section of the print edition under the headline “The magician’s latest trick”
Middle East & Africa September 14th 2019
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