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Who's sick of Rabin's legacy?

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bemildred Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Nov-09-11 11:38 AM
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Who's sick of Rabin's legacy?
At one time it was nice to be thought of as a successor to the legacy of Yitzhak Rabin. In the Israel of the early 1990s, without a protest movement, a change in national priorities took place. The first budget of Rabin's government provided for a halt to the construction of 15,000 housing units in Jewish settlements in the territories, making possible the shift of 3 or 4 billion shekels for spending on education and infrastructure. Over four years, the education budget grew from NIS 8 billion to NIS 14 billion, a real increase of 70 percent. Rapid growth made possible passage the national health care bill, as well as the academic upgrading of the country's colleges, funding of higher education in outlying areas of the country, paving of roads and highway interchanges (yes, in the territories, too ) and approval of plans for the Route 6 toll road and the new terminal at Ben-Gurion International Airport.

The Rabin government also made it possible for government research budgets to be increased and for funding of child allowance payments and development budgets for the Arab population of the country to be brought into line with what the Jewish population received. It also gained passage of a law benefiting demobilized soldiers and instituted revolutionary changes in funding for local governments. Unemployment declined from 11.5 percent to 6.5 percent. The defense budget, however, did not go up!

What followed is unfortunately well-known. The Oslo accords, the peace agreement with Jordan, prosperity and growth were threatened by waves of Palestinian terrorism. Political incitement and Rabin's murder brought about profound changes to the country. It sometimes seems to me that a political eternity has elapsed since, but that's not so. Three individuals who are currently leading Israel were also dominant in Israeli politics 16 years ago, when Rabin was killed.

One of them, Benjamin Netanyahu, was one of the leading figures who incited animosity vis-a-vis Rabin. Two others, Ehud Barak and Shimon Peres, pledged to continue in the path of Yitzhak Rabin, and to be steadfast to his legacy and to his thinking in the areas of defense and social policy. "What would Rabin have done?" it used to be asked. On the assumption that they weren't simply pretending, it would be interesting to know when they broke free of the burden of that legacy. When did they escape its intellectual constraints?

Was it on the eve of the last election that the political alliance was concocted between Ehud Barak and the man who marched in front of the coffin at the Ra'anana junction, and who looked on from the balcony at the protest at Jerusalem's Zion Square, as posters depicting Rabin in an S.S. uniform were set on fire to chants of "Rabin is a traitor"? And maybe the process of taking leave of Rabin's heavy burden began with the establishment of the Netanyahu-Barak-Lieberman government, with the encouragement of President Shimon Peres?

http://www.haaretz.com/print-edition/opinion/who-s-sick-of-rabin-s-legacy-1.394469
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