WSJ : Netanyahu’s Chief Rival Quits Israeli Government to Try to Topple It

Netanyahu’s Chief Rival Quits Israeli Government to Try to Topple It
Move by Benny Gantz is aimed at forcing early elections but could complicate U.S. diplomatic effort to end war in Gaza

A centrist member of Israel’s war cabinet quit the government on Sunday over Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s handling of the war in Gaza, after a daring Israeli commando mission to rescue four hostages threatened to trip up efforts to end the conflict and free the remaining captives.

Benny Gantz, who leads the National Unity party and was one of three war cabinet members, said he was leaving the government due to a lack of long-term strategy for the war in Gaza, among other reasons.

“Fateful strategic decisions are stuck due to hesitancy and procrastination out of political considerations,” Gantz said, in televised remarks.

The Israeli government shake-up comes as U.S. and Israeli officials are set to renew a push to strike a deal with Hamas to free hostages and halt the war. But after the Israeli military rescue operation on Saturday, Israel’s strategic position in Gaza remains little changed, while the fallout may give both sides reason to harden their positions.

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken is slated to sweep through the Middle East this week to invigorate efforts for a cease-fire and a broader deal with Saudi Arabia that would reduce Israel’s isolation and put the Palestinians on a path to their own state.

“By far the most effective, certain and right way to get all of the hostages out is to get a comprehensive cease-fire and hostage deal that President Biden described in public a few days ago,” U.S. national security adviser Jake Sullivan told CBS’s “Face the Nation” on Sunday.

Gantz’s move was aimed at toppling Netanyahu’s religious and right-wing coalition. But the strategy risked backfiring by empowering hawkish lawmakers less aligned with the Biden administration as Washington makes a renewed push to end the war in Gaza and free hostages held there.

In a response, Netanyahu called on Gantz to remain in the government.

“This isn’t the time to abandon the battle—it’s the time to unify forces,” Netanyahu wrote in a social-media post.

Gantz, a former head of the Israeli military, took his party into the government from the opposition shortly after Hamas’s Oct. 7 attacks. With Israelis mired in domestic unrest before the attack, the move was done to unify the country as it entered into a war. It also gave the Biden administration a like-minded moderate in the war cabinet who communicated often with officials from Washington.

Gantz’s departure from the government signifies that Israel’s unity at the start of the war has passed. The move is expected to fuel antigovernment protests and demands for early elections. Elections could happen as early as this summer, but more realistically early next year, if at all, analysts say. Gantz, in his speech on Sunday, called on Netanyahu to set an election date in the fall.

How Gantz’s strategy will affect Israel’s handling of the war is unclear.

Netanyahu could replace Gantz with hard-line lawmakers currently in the opposition or coalition partners who oppose the U.S.-backed Israeli proposal to end the war and free Israel’s hostages. He could also dissolve the war cabinet, bringing decision-making back to the regular security cabinet where his far-right coalition allies could have more sway. This could heighten divisions within the coalition itself as internal disagreements eventually become public.

Gantz and Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant have both publicly complained their seats at the war cabinet table haven’t given them much influence over the war’s management.

Netanyahu, analysts say, along with the army’s top brass, is tightly in control of the war’s direction as well as the negotiations to free the hostages and end the war.

On Sunday, Israeli Foreign Minister Israel Katz said that Israel’s policy hadn’t changed and that it would continue to press Hamas militarily and pursue any avenue to free hostages while also pursuing a diplomatic solution to achieve its aims.

“Without military pressure, there won’t be any deal,” said Katz in an interview with Israel’s public broadcaster Kan.

The operation, said Yohanan Plesner, president of the Jerusalem-based Israel Democracy Institute think tank, could fuel demands in Israel for the government to agree to the deal on the table because it demonstrated that some of the hostages are still alive and how much their freedom means to Israelis. But overall, he said, there wasn’t likely to be any immediate change.

The rescue operation “has no strategic implications in terms of the grand scheme of things,” he said.

On Saturday night, thousands of demonstrators marched in Tel Aviv, protesting the way the government is conducting the war in Gaza and chanting “Now!” for a cease-fire deal.

Plesner said Saturday’s rescue operation could also strengthen those resolved to free hostages and defeat Hamas purely through military means.

The operation, wrote Israel’s hard-line National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir in social-media posts, “shows there’s hope and it’s possible to defeat our enemies and return the hostages without giving in.”

Israel’s military doesn’t share that point of view.

“We know we cannot do operations to rescue all of them,” said Israeli military spokesman Rear Adm. Daniel Hagari to reporters on Saturday. “This is why we need to do everything possible to make it happen that the hostages come back home.”

Blinken is set to arrive Monday in the region, where he is expected to discuss the rescue operation and push for a cease-fire, according to an Israeli official. He will find that the country is facing many challenges beyond the war in Gaza, including a potential war with Lebanon and increasing international isolation, as well as political instability.

“Alongside the justified joy we must remember that all of the challenges Israel was dealing with…still remain,” Gantz said Saturday.

On Sunday, he said he would support the government if it backs the current Israeli proposal to free the hostages and potentially end the war.

For Hamas, the rescue operation could reinforce its request for guarantees that Israel will cease its operations in Gaza.

Yahya Sinwar, Hamas’s leader in Gaza, has said the current proposal to release hostages—broached by President Biden himself in a news conference a week ago—is unacceptable for Hamas because, in the group’s eyes, it doesn’t guarantee an end to the war.

Netanyahu has criticized the way the proposal has been characterized by Biden, arguing the outline allows for Israel to renew the war if it believes later-stage negotiations to reach a cease-fire are proving futile.