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Anshel Pfeffer

ByAnshel Pfeffer, Anshel Pfeffer

Analysis

With a survival plan in action, Benjamin Netanyahu is staging a remarkable turnaround

Israel's prime minister, mired in multiple allegations of corruption, has shown how two months is enough time to reverse a trend

May 24, 2018 12:07
F180516YS55
5 min read

The last time I spoke to Benjamin Netanyahu was six months ago, in a small conference room at the Savoy in London. He asked me how my biography of him was going and, upon hearing it was coming out in May, said that he had no plans to pay for a copy. Though he expected to get one.

The Israeli Prime Minister is always more accessible when outside Israel. Back in Jerusalem, months or sometimes years can go by without him giving an interview to the Israeli media. Things are different when he’s abroad. Mr Netanyahu feels freer, more in his element as global statesman, released from the constant political pressures of maintaining a fractious coalition.

Over the past year, these frequent trips have become a respite from the never-ending stream of leaks from multiple police investigations into allegations of corruption. So, at some point on most trips, the Israeli journalists are summoned to the hotel for the kind of relaxed briefing that rarely takes place at home.

What ensues is a good-natured tug of war: the Prime Minister wants to focus on his “very important” meetings and how he urged a much tougher line on Iran; the reporters are much more eager to press him on the latest revelations in the police and judicial investigations against him. On this occasion in London, however, Mr Netanyahu had an interesting tidbit on the investigations to offer.