Benjamin Netanyahu is a man in a hurry. The Israeli prime minister faces a corruption trial and a third parliamentary election in less than a year that he hopes will put off his legal Judgment Day.
Securing extra support after two tight and inconclusive polls is of the essence. The U.S. and Russia looked to be obliging this week.
A beaming Netanyahu stood next to Donald Trump in Washington as the U.S. president laid out a Middle East peace plan that heavily favors Israel. He then traveled to Moscow where President Vladimir Putin gifted him the release from prison of Israeli-American backpacker Naama Issachar, having previously snubbed multiple pleas to pardon her on drug-smuggling charges.
So far, though, polls aren't showing the back-to-back diplomatic coups helping Netanyahu all that much.
He had barely left the stage with Trump when he announced his cabinet would vote on Sunday to annex West Bank land on which Jewish settlements stand. But then an aide said technical issues would delay that vote, and senior White House official Jared Kushner urged Israel not to act until after its March 2 election.
While Netanyahu's Likud party got a boost in opinion polls, so did its main rival, former military chief Benny Gantz's Blue and White. Both gained by cannibalizing votes from potential allies and neither has an easy path to forming a government.
If an Israel-tilted U.S. peace plan and the freeing of Issachar, whose fate became a cause celebre at home, can't get Netanyahu over the line, then what would?
— Amy Teibel
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