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Anshel Pfeffer

ByAnshel Pfeffer, Jerusalem

Opinion

King Bibi has done the impossible: united Israel against him

From Meretz MKs to fomer Likud ministers; all sides joined the protests against Benjamin Netanyahu's judicial reforms

February 16, 2023 14:59
Anti-Government Protests In Israel Continue Amid Judicial Standoff GettyImages-1247123609
5 min read

Backstage at Monday’s rally outside the Knesset against the Netanyahu government’s legal overhaul there were enough retired generals and senior spooks to launch at least three military coups. At one point I counted there four former IDF Chiefs of General Staff, two Mossad bosses and one Shin Bet director. I asked Lieutenant-General Gadi Eisenkott, now a Knesset member of Benny Gantz’s National Unity Party, the one who was most recently in uniform if he and his colleagues were planning a takeover. He laughed and said “we’re waiting for the sergeants first.” But the heavy presence of ex-military figures, not just senior offices, but thousands of civilians marching in the protests, with T-shirts identifying themselves as miluimniks – active reservists and in groups representing their former units, was a heavily nuanced and loaded message.

On the surface, the protesters who are emphasising their military records are trying to contrast their movement with Benjamin Netanyahu’s coalition partners, the leaders of the ultra-Orthodox parties who as yeshiva students were exempted from service and Jewish Power leader Itamar Ben-Gvir who was not even allowed to enlist in the IDF because of the Shin Bet’s objections due to his membership of the illegal Kach movement, which was disbanded in 1994. In more blunt terms, as many of the protesters were saying – “we serve in the army, our children serve, we pay the most taxes, we won’t let those who don’t take away Israel’s democracy.”

The more subtle message is that the opposition is trying to play the “patriot card,” not an easy move when facing an ultra-nationalist government and politicians like Mr Netanyahu who have spent years successfully branding all those who oppose them as traitorous “leftists.” That was the coalition’s attitude towards the protests when they were just starting out six weeks ago, when Justice Minister Yariv Levin first presented the government’s plan.