Having won an election last week, conservative former prime
minister Benjamin Netanyahu's most powerful likely coalition
ally is Religious Zionism, a party led by ultranationalist
Jewish settlers in the occupied West Bank.
One of them, Itamar Ben-Gvir, has received intense scrutiny in
Israel and abroad due to to past actions including membership in
the outlawed militant group Kach, a criminal conviction for
anti-Arab incitement, and the heckling of Gay Pride parades.
"I've grown up, I've moderated and I've come to understand that
life is more complicated," Ben-Gvir, 46, said in a front-page
article in the biggest-circulation Israel Hayom newspaper.
The overture came a day after the Religious Zionism co-head drew
centre-left ire by suggesting the state had a hand in the 1995
assassination of Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin by a Jewish zealot
bent on stopping territorial handovers to Palestinians.
Rightists were correct to protest Rabin's policies, Bezalel
Smotrich said at a memorial ceremony in parliament. He said
security services had "used irresponsible manipulation, which to
this day has not been fully exposed, to encourage the murderer".
He appeared to be alluding to the Shin Bet domestic intelligence
agency's running of an agent provocateur among far-rightists in
the run-up to the assassination - a matter addressed by a state
commission of inquiry and court trials.
In his article, titled "A Letter to My Brethren on the Left",
Ben-Gvir said nothing about U.S.-sponsored Israeli talks on
Palestinian statehood, which stalled in 1994 and which the Biden
administration said on Saturday that it wants to revive.
Religious Zionism, like other Israeli parties on the right,
opposes Palestinian statehood. Ben-Gvir has further called for
dismantling the interim Palestinian Authority which governs in
parts of the West Bank, a move that would effectively return
Palestinians to open-ended Israeli rule without national rights.
Focussing on internal issues, Ben-Gvir, who wants to become
police minister, wrote that he would tackle crime racking
Israel's Arabs - a minority whose expulsion he once advocated.
Asserting that he and liberals "agree on 90% of issues", he said
he would not seek to impose religious law nor curb freedom of
dissent, "and even if I'm not keen on the (Gay Pride) parade, I
will ensure utmost protection for the men and women marching".
(Writing by Dan Williams, Editing by Angus MacSwan)
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