Bibigate Has Little Affect D LARRY DERFNER ISRAEL CORRESPONDENT Likud's Netanyahu admits to cheating on his wife but David Levy takes the heat for allegedly trying to blackmail him. .4111110, id you have intimate relations with another woman (other than your wife)," the inter- viewer asked Binyamin "Bibi" Netanyahu on the nightly news one day last week. "It happened, but it ended a few months ago," Mr. Netanyahu replied. So began the scandal that has been dubbed "Bibigate." Mr. Netanyahu has been the odds-on favorite in the race for the leadership of the Likud, which will be decided in the party's March 25 primaries. His revelation about his affair appears not to have hurt his chances. If anything, it may have helped him. Appearing composed as ever, Mr. Netanyahu went on to explain that he was go- ing public to foil an attempt at political blackmail. The previous evening, he said, an anonymous caller told his wife Sarah that unless Mr. Netanyahu dropped out of the Likud race, pictures and tapes of him having sex with another woman would be released to the public. "I know who is behind it," Mr. Netanyahu declared. "It is someone very high up in the Likud, someone sur- rounded by a group of criminals." He did not identify anyone on TV, but his associates, speaking off the record, pointed the finger at Mr. Netanyahu's main rival, former Foreign Minister David Levy. Mr. Levy's people called the accusations a Netanyahu campaign "gimmick," and challenged him repeatedly to openly name his suspect. Last Sunday, Mr. Netanyahu filed a complaint with the police, and the Yediot Aharonot newspaper reported that the complaint identified two leading fig- ures in Mr. Levy's cam- paign. The newspaper story, however, did not name the accused pair. In the complaint, Mr. Netanyahu claimed that before the telephone blackmail attempt, he had been followed by private de- tectives; his office had been broken into and he had been secretly photographed and wiretapped. On TV, Mr. Netanyahu portrayed himself and his wife as vic- tims and said he was stan- ding up to the blackmailers to protect the Israeli polit- ical system. "This is not just my struggle, but a struggle over the kind of society we live in," he said. "(The blackmail) is an attempt to use Mafia-style methods to decide whom the public should elect. If this is not stopped I won't be the only tne. Every candidate will be a target for extortion —who- ever runs for president, army chief of staff, Supreme Court judge, newspaper editor." He pointedly refused to discuss his extramarital af- fair, saying it was a personal matter. "If I owe (an ex- planation), it's to my wife," Mr. Netanyahu said. Sarah Netanyahu, his third wife, would say nothing to the press, but Mr. Netanyahu admitted their relations were "in distress." The bottom line politically, he said, was that he was not dropping out of the race, and he trusted that voters would disregard his affair and judge him on his public record. The early returns in- dicated he was right. An overwhelming majority of Israelis on radio call-in 22 percent of those polled said they now supported Netanyahu even more. shows said Mr. Netanyahu's sex life was not the voters' business, and that the villain in the piece was the blackmailer. According to a survey of Likud supporters by promi- nent pollster Mina Tsemach, 68 percent said the extramarital affair would have no effect on whether or not they would vote for Mr. Netanyahu, 22 percent said their support for him had ac- tually been strengthened, and only 6 percent said they now felt less inclined to sup- port him. (The remaining 4 percent said they'd never heard of the matter.) The Binyamin Netanyahu irony of Bibigate is that the whole controversy — the private of life of public fig- ures, compromising photographs, television con- fessions —smacked of American-style politics, and Bibi Netanyahu is Israel's American-style politician. At 43, he has been compared to Bill Clinton for his youth and telegenic good looks, and for running on his per- sonal appeal rather than on experience. Now, of course, there was one more com- parison to be made with President Clinton. Bibigate is Israel's first major political sex scandal. Mr. Netanyahu is certainly not the first Israeli politician to have an extramarital af- fair, and there is constant gossip about other politi- cians and their women. But this was the first time a poli- tician's sex life had threatened his career. Extramarital affairs are not exactly unknown in Israeli society, and people just seem to assume that many politicians, with their big egos, their drive for power and their long absences from home, are apt to cheat on their spouses. Reporters have left the issue alone, even if they referred to it obliquely in newspaper features, and Israelis seem- ed to take it in stride. The private life of politi- cians was something to chuckle over, to be used as a conversation piece, but not something to take seriously when deciding who should run the country. Extramarital romance never hurt Moshe Dayan's military and political career. "He didn't deny it; he didn't lie about it," said his daughter, Knesset member Yael Dayan. "He would say, `If I was running for Father of the Year, or Husband of the Year, or for the Israel Prize for Married Life, then people could say, wait a minute, there's a contradic- tion here.' " Otherwise, she said, Mr. Dayan considered his pri- vate life off-limits. And, she added, unless Mr. Netanyahu was running on the issue of "family values," which he wasn't, then his af- fair "really doesn't concern anyone." The issues surrounding the affair concern the police, who have promised to in- vestigate Mr. Netanyahu's charges intensively. The whole controversy is of great concern to the Likud, which has been trying to overcome its image as a party whose rivals tear each other apart. The Levy and Netanyahu camps are now at sword's point with each other —if Mr. Netanyahu's accusa- tions are proven there will be prison terms and ruined political careers ahead. 1:1