Living, as he does, on Biblical soil, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu ought to know the Golden Rule. Or at least the version of the Rule that applies to Israeli politics: Never make the Jewish state a partisan player in an American election.
During the campaign season, Netanyahu all but endorsed Mitt Romney. “He inserted himself into the election by presenting himself essentially as a GOP politician,” says Gershom Gorenberg, an Israeli journalist and the author of The Unmaking of Israel. In July, Romney visited Israel and received a gushing welcome from Netanyahu, who hosted a private dinner at his home for the Republican challenger. Pro-Romney Super PAC donor Sheldon Adelson is a close friend of Netanyahu.
The prime minister’s office was reportedly stunned by President Obama’s victory, and the left quickly criticized Netanyahu for possibly damaging the country’s most important strategic relationship. The PM scrambled to repair the alliance, calling in the American ambassador for a warm hug; congratulating the re-elected president; emphasizing that the U.S.-Israel relationship remains “rock solid.”
It is no secret in either Israel or the United States that the two leaders are not mutual fans. The president declined the Israeli PM’s request to meet when Netanyahu visited the United States in September; Netanyahu, in turn, has called Obama aides Rahm Emmanuel and David Axelrod “self-hating Jews.”
While in office, even the Master Networker Bill Clinton had a tense relationship with Netanyahu—he reportedly emerged from their first meeting saying, “Who’s the f***ing superpower here?” But the former president had a genuinely close relationship with former Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin, who was assassinated in 1995. Clinton wrote in his memoirs that he had “rarely loved another man” as much as Rabin.









