When it comes to Attorney General Avichai Mandelblit, there is little consensus.
The man who now holds Benjamin Netanyahu’s fate in his hands is so full of contradictions that just about any decision he makes in the months to come — regarding the police recommendations to indict the Prime Minister on charges of bribery, fraud and breach of trust in three separate corruption cases — will not surprise.
There are those who are convinced that the former Major General is a patsy of Mr Netanyahu’s because he served as his cabinet secretary for two years, and the agonisingly slow and ponderous process by which he is examining the police findings is proof that he ultimately intends to dilute them.
Mr Mandelblit’s defenders are of the opposite opinion. They cite sources close to the Prime Minister who say that he actually had preferred a different candidate for attorney general and say the fact that Mr Mandelblit directed the police to question Mr Netanyahu as a suspect so many times is proof enough. They ascribe the lengthy process to Mr Mandelblit’s meticulousness.