Defense Minister Yitzhak Mordechai, left, faces Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu during a Cabinet meeting in Jerusalem Sunday. Foreign Minister Ariel Sharon is seated second from right. Netanyahu faces new hurdles with opposition from Mordechai. DAVID LANDAU Jewish Telegraphic Agency Jerusalem ro rime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu has come out swinging against his former defense minister, but behind the premier's confident veneer lurks a fear that Yitzhak Mordechai will be a formidable opponent in the race for prime minister. Two voting blocs led to Netayahu's 1996 defeat of former Prime Minister Shimon Peres: the Sephardi and Orthodox communities. He needs these voters to win in May. Enter Mordechai, who is heading a newly formed centrist party after he was fired by Netanyahu over the week- end. Born in Kurdistan, the religiously 1/29 1999 26 Detroit Jewish News traditional Mordechai is the first can- didate for prime minister in this year's crowded election field who seriously threatens to win over these twin sources of Netanyahu support. The threat is more likely, as centrist officials have suggested, because disen- chanted Likud voters can more easily switch their allegiance to a centrist than to a Labor Party candidate — particu- lary given the long history of antipathy for Labor among the large Moroccan community and other traditionally pro- Likud sectors in Israeli society. When it came to describing Mordechai and the other centrist party leaders, Netanyahu did not spare the vitriol this week, calling them a "bunch of losers motivated by nothing but personal ambition." The description, part of a bare- knuckled exchange of insults between Netanyahu and Mordechai in the wake of the firing, is important because it exposes two problems con- fronting Netanyahu: • He called them losers, but opinion polls show he would lose to their candi- date should a runoff vote be necessary • He called them ambitious, but events proved otherwise this week, when the leaders of the centrist group — Amnon Lipkin-Shahak, former army chief of staff; Dan Meridor, for- mer Likud finance minister; and Roni Milo, former mayor of Tel Aviv — set aside their individual prime ministerial ambitions to let Mordechai lead their quest to bring Netanyahu down. Netanyahu, who was easily re-elect- ed leader of his party in a nationwide Likud primary Monday against chal- lenger Moshe Arens, insists that he will win despite the setbacks and defections dogging his campaign. "The people are with us, regardless of the media," the premier said Monday "The peo- ple want a strong leader, a leader who decides — and acts." Despite his assured stance, Netanyahu can hardly brush off the vow Mordechai made this week: "I will do anything and everything I can to bring Netanyahu down." This vow, in fact, is what unites all the top officials in the still- unnamed centrist party. Three of the centrists — Mordechai, Meridor and Milo — are prominent former Likud figures Who know Netanyahu intimately and served under his leadership before bolt- ing the party. The fourth, Shahak, was chief of staff for much of Netanyahu's two-and-a-half years in office. The centrists now need to hammer out a credible platform that will be