Benjamin Netanyahu’s Lethal Legacy
Revisionism, neoconservatism, big money and corruption
by Dan
Steinbock | Dec
19, 2025 |
https://original.antiwar.com/Dan_Steinbock/2025/12/18/benjamin-netanyahus-lethal-legacy/
Since early 2023, hundreds of thousands of Israelis
have demonstrated against Prime Minister Benjamin “Bibi” Netanyahu and his
cabinet, due to its proposed judicial reforms, the handling of the Israeli
hostages held by Hamas and the Gaza genocide. So, why is he still in power?
Recently, Israel’s prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu
doubled down on his request to President Isaac Herzog for a pardon amid his
ongoing criminal trial, saying “there is no case there.”
Indeed, Netanyahu is very much in the game of Israeli
politics as he was in early 2023 when the huge Israeli mass demonstrations
started against his far-right cabinet’s proposed “judicial reforms,” which seek to transform the secular democracy into
a Jewish autocracy, and against the genocidal atrocities in Gaza, including the escalating ethnic cleansing in the
West Bank.
The mass protests garnered hundreds of thousands of
protesters, but could not fully halt the reforms. Little by little, Israeli
democracy, which serves primarily its Jewish population, is crumbling.
To avoid prosecution for corruption, Netanyahu needs
to hang onto power and keep the war activities going. How is this status quo
even possible? The simple answer is: revisionist Zionism, U.S.-style
neoconservatism, hard right politics, Big Money, dark donors and of course –
corruption.
Revisionist Zionism
Born in Israel but growing up in Philadelphia,
Benjamin “Bibi” Netanyahu (1949–) is the longest-serving prime minister in
Israel’s history. He sees himself as an activist of Zion, like his grandfather
Nathan Mileikowsky. While Netanyahu’s grandfather and father had a role in
revisionist Zionism, he put himself into its center.
Mileikowsky, the Russian-born rabbi and early Zionist
champion, was known for his advocacy against socialist Zionism and
anti-Zionists. After migration to Israel, he raised funds abroad for the
Yishuv, or the pre-state Israel, and cooperated with rabbi Abraham Isaac Kook,
the founding father of Religious Zionism. In turn, the rebbe’s son, rabbi Zvi
Yehuda Kook, is the revered spiritual father of Israel’s violent settlers and
the Messianic far-right.
One of Mileikowsky’s sons was Benzion Mileikowsky (who
later adopted his father’s pen name as his last name), a medieval historian and
onetime deputy assistant to Ze’ev Jabotinsky, the pioneer of revisionist
Zionism.
Benzion (“the son of Zion” in Hebrew) befriended
extremist revisionists such as Abba Ahimeir, who wanted to create a fascist
state in Palestine, promoted “Il Duce” salutes and was one of the likely
assassins of the Zionist labor leader Haim Arlosoroff.
But instead of a revisionist Zionist revolution,
Benzion eventually opted for an academic career in America, returning to Israel
only in the ’70s.
Building on his master treatise, Origins of
the Inquisition in 15th Century Spain, Benzion saw Jewish
history as a series of holocausts. He shunned the long period of Spanish
history of Convivencia (Spanish, “living together”) from the
Muslim Umayyad conquest of Hispania in the early 8th century
until the expulsion of the Jews in 1492. In the Moorish Iberian kingdoms, the
Muslims, Christians and Jews lived in relative peace.
This period of religious diversity and tolerance –
captured wonderfully by Maria Rosa Menocal in The Ornament of the
World: How Muslims, Jews and Christians Created a Culture of Tolerance in
Medieval Spain (2002) – differed drastically from the subsequent
Spanish and Portuguese history when Catholicism became the sole religion in the
Iberian Peninsula, following expulsions and forced conversions.
Benzion Netanyahu fully shared Jabotinsky’s insistence
on the creation of an “Iron Wall” between Israel and its Arab neighbors. The
Oslo Accords, Netanyahu’s aging father complained, were “the beginning of the
end of the Jewish state.” So, after Israel’s disengagement from Gaza, he
supported its reinvasion, “even if it brings us years of war.” And to the end
of his long life, he stuck to the European orientalist bias:
The tendency to conflict is the essence of the Arab.
He is an enemy by essence… His existence is one of perpetual war.
Benjamin Netanyahu, his son, is the product of both
American and Jewish worlds. But unlike the father, he had little interest in
academic dreams. He saw himself as a revolutionary. He wanted to overthrow the
Labor Zionists to realize a Greater Israel.
Israel didn’t need bleeding-heart socialists. Eretz
Israel needed tough Jews. The country needed him.
Hard Right
Benjamin “Bibi” Netanyahu is his own man, but he was
heavily influenced by his father. Like his older brother Yonatan who lost his
life in the 1976 Entebbe raid to release Jewish hostages, Bibi served with
distinction in Sayeret Matkal, an elite reconnaissance unit of the Israeli
military.
After studies at the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology (MIT) and working as a consultant for the Boston Consulting Group
(BCG), his political career took off in the late 1980s, when he served as
Israel’s permanent UN representative, at which time I met him in mid-Manhattan.
These were the formative years of the U.S.
neoconservative movement, many of whose ideas he shared. Israel’s ambassador to
the U.S., Moshe Arens, a scientist, veteran Likud politician and ex-Irgun
operative, paved Netanyahu’s path to the corridors of power in Washington.
Seemingly unassuming, shrewd, fast and smart, and
well-trained in American-style communications, Netanyahu was a natural to
succeed Likud’s old guard; Menahem Begin, the former leader of the terrorist
Irgun group, and Yitzhak Shamir, the ex-head of the terrorist Stern group.
With a giant ego and penchant for self-aggrandizement,
he knew his moment had come, even if he would first have to overcome Likud
dinosaurs like Shamir, and the Likud princelings: “The dinosaurs are dying out
and the princes are too blue-blooded to fight for the crown. I’ll get there.”
Netanyahu’s leadership in Likud started in the
aftermath of Rabin’s assassination, thanks in part to the incendiary political
climate his campaign permitted to fester in 1995. Vocal critics of the Oslo
Accords, Netanyahu and his party had participated in demonstrations where
effigies of Rabin were displayed in Nazi uniforms and burned.
When Rabin was buried, his wife Leah was glad to meet
PLO’s Yasser Arafat, but she kept a cold distance toward Netanyahu. She accused
the young and ambitious opposition leader and his Likud party of the climate of
incitement.
Setting aside the extreme political climate, there was
also another reason to Netanyahu’s election win. He hired Arthur Finkelstein to
run his campaign. The legendary Republican political operative had sold
presidents Nixon and Reagan to America. He was known for his repetitive,
hard-edged campaigns, which idolized his candidates by tarnishing their
adversaries.
Like in the U.S., the scaremongering worked well in
Israel.
Big money and US-Israeli neoconservatism
In Israel, Irving Moskowitz was among the major U.S.
billionaires funding Jewish settlements in the occupied territories, Messianic
religious schools and universities, Jewish far-right groups and paramilitary
activities.
Moskowitz was not only Netanyahu’s donor and one of
the many in his “millionaire list.” He was also an associate of the right-wing
Ariel Center for Policy Research, a hardline advocacy group espousing the Likud
line on Israeli security. In the United States, he was among the funders of
major neoconservative think tanks promoting the War on Terror and hardline
Israel-centric Middle East policies, including the Hudson Institute, the
neoconservative American Enterprise Institute (AEI), and the Jewish Institute
for National Security Affairs (JINSA).
Along with other pivotal financiers, Moskowitz
contributed to the rise of neoconservatism in America, and the movement’s many
Jewish leaders who shared the ideas of revisionist Zionism, including Paul
Wolfowitz, Richard Perle, Robert Kagan, William Kristol, and so on.
Led by Kristol and Kagan, neoconservatives founded
their think tank, Project for the New American Century (PNAC)
with a view to sustaining America’s unipolar moment for decades to come.
Whatever was in the interest of Israel, according to Netanyahu’s Likud, was in
the national interest of America.
Other donors followed, including the casino tycoon
Sheldon Adelson. For some two decades until his death in 2021, when Forbes
estimated his net worth at $35 billion, Adelson was a major sponsor of
Netanyahu and kingmaker among the Republicans who helped fund Trump’s drive to
the White House.
Israeli neocon manifesto
Thanks to their commonalities, the neoconservatives in
the U.S. and the Israeli hard-right Likud party cooperated in a policy
document, A Clean Break: A New Strategy for Securing the Realm,
described as “a kind of U.S.-Israeli neoconservative manifesto.”
Published in 1996, the report called for a muscular
U.S. Middle East policy to defend Israeli interests, including the removal of
Saddam Hussein from power in Iraq (which ensued in 2003), a proxy war in Syria
(which followed in 2011), rejection of any Israeli-Palestinian solution that
would include a Palestinian state (one of the Trump administration’s motives
for pursuing the 2020 Abraham Accords), among other things.
Membership in the neoconservative club had its
benefits: it made Netanyahu rich. Despite his lofty legal fees, estimates of
Netanyahu’s wealth amounted to some $50 million, already a decade ago. But
precise, verifiable sources are lacking, due to his political office, dark
donors and extraordinarily opaque financial disclosures.
In the past decade, it is precisely this contested
past that has been haunting him.
Bribery, fraud, and breach of trust
From the start, Netanyahu’s career has been
overshadowed by dark money controversies. The corruption charges began in 1997,
when police recommended his indictment on corruption charges for
influence-peddling. Investigations into the murky dealings began in 2016,
following a dozen debacles, three attorney generals and two state comptrollers.
After a three-year investigation, he was indicted. In
2020, trial started with 333 prosecution witnesses. The long list excludes many
debacles by his wife Sara, infamous for her vocal temper and penchant for
luxury, and his son Yair, who excels in far-right podcast populism.
In his position as PM in 2009–2016, Netanyahu made
decisions that had significant implications for national security, yet without
orderly decision-making process. These decisions allegedly enriched him. One
involved the purchase of submarines and vessels from German shipbuilder
Thyssenkrupp in a deal valued at $2 billion.
The problems went further. Since the start of his
career, Netanyahu’s select aides had to be approved by his wife Sara, according
to their loyalty rather than expertise. The highly controversial practice was
later extended to some appointments involving even military and intelligence
authorities.
In Netanyahu’s world, meritocracy is nice, but loyalty
is everything.
The legal process began anew in December 2024 and
remains ongoing. Netanyahu faces charges in three separate cases, including
bribery, fraud, and breach of trust. He has consistently denied all wrongdoing,
calling the prosecution a “witch-hunt”.
What next?
On November 30, 2025, Netanyahu submitted an official
request to President Isaac Herzog for a pardon, asking that the trial be halted
for the sake of “national unity”. This is an extraordinary request as pardons
are typically granted only after conviction and an admission of guilt.
President Herzog could offer a conditional pardon,
potentially requiring a form of admission and an agreement to retire from
politics, but Netanyahu has refused to commit to leaving politics. If any form
of pardon is granted, it is highly likely that petitions will be filed against
the High Court against the decision. Given the remaining stages of the trial
and potential appeals, proceedings are expected to continue for several more
years if the pardon is not granted.
As of late 2025, Netanyahu’s personal approval ratings
are low, hovering around 40-45% favorability/trust, while most Israelis express
dissatisfaction with his government’s performance. Most Israelis do not trust
their government.
Does it follow that the PM’s political career is over?
Not necessarily.
Netanyahu’s political scenarios
Despite his numerous controversies, some polls place
Netanyahu ahead of rivals like Yair Lapid, the head of the centrist opposition,
and former war cabinet member Benny Gantz, a center-right conservative
ex-military chief. But setting aside real and perceived rivals, there are
several scenarios for Netanyahu’s political future.
PM deja vu. Netanyahu remains Prime Minister in a new
coalition by leveraging perceived military or diplomatic successes, such as new
normalization agreements with Arab states.
Opposition hits a home run. Netanyahu is ousted as the opposition forms a
cohesive majority government without relying on him or his hard-right Likud.
Political paralysis by repeat elections. If no single bloc by Netanyahu or the opposition
can form a governing majority, Israel could face a period of political
paralysis. That could mean repeat elections with Netanyahu as an interim PM.
Voluntary retirement. Given his age (76) in the 2026 election,
recurring health issues and the immense pressure from ongoing corruption
trials, intense public protests, and the political fallout of the October 7
attacks, Netanyahu health could eventually fail him.
So, what accounts for Netanyahu’s staying power?
In the long view, Israel’s shift to the right since
the late 1970s, the Messianic doctrines seeking to legitimize occupation, the
hardening of political divides after Rabin’s assassination and the subsequent
crumbling of the peace process, Likud’s longstanding cooptation of Jews of
Middle Eastern ancestry and religious Jews, and perhaps most importantly,
Netanyahu’s longstanding cooperation with America’s leading neoconservatives
and his ultra-rich political sponsors in the U.S. ranging from the late Las Vegas
casino tycoon Sheldon Adelson to the Falic family, owners of a chain of 180
Duty Free Americas stores, Irving Moskowitz and many others in his “millionaire
list.”
Those who believe that Netanyahu is about to disappear from Israel’s political map engage in wishful fantasies. He is determined to change Israel. And he is almost there.
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