Full Steam Ellin!, Barak takes the helm, supported by a broader-than-expected coalition. LARRY DERFNER Israel Correspondent He cut the powerful Shas (Sephardi Orthodox) party down to size, forcing it to accept his demands that party leader Aryeh Deri, a convicted felon, step down, and that it relinquish con- trol of the Interior Ministry, which exercises great power over secular-reli- gious matters. At the same time, he gave the most coveted ministry of all — Education — to the secular, left-wing Meretz party. Finally, Barak rejected the leading of since the days of David Ben-Gurion has an Israeli prime minister taken office with as much power as Ehud Barak did Tuesday. In a country thought hopelessly split between right and left, with nei- ther side capable of crafting a stable majority in the Knesset, Barak took office backed by a ruling coalition of 75 out of the Knesset's 120 members. His Likud-led opposition is weak to the point of vir- tual impotence. The 57-year-old Barak comes into office with a strong personal mandate — a 12 percent victory in the prime ministerial elec- tion, again defying the conventional wisdom that the right and left were locked in a virtual tie. Barak, vvho takes over the prime ministership only four years after \- retiring from the tary, has wrapped him- self in a mystique of near-invincibility. He has exceeded everyone's highest expectations — first in the election, now in the formation of his government, the nation's party of the right-wing, Likud, while 28th since its founding 50 years ago. co-opting the right-wing National As coalition negotiations began, it Religious Party and Natan Sharansky's seemed there were two options: a nar- Yisrael B'Aliya Parry into the coalition. row, secular, center-left government with Barak the politician, a lifelong warrior, ideological focus but not enough popu- showed he knows how to lar support to make divide and conquer. bold moves or a Taking office Tuesd ay, He did not prevail in broad, right-to-left, Israeli Prime Minis ter every point, however. His religious-and-secular Ehud Barak renewe d his own party's central commit- coalition unable to call for apermanen t peace tee rejected his nominee for agree on decisive with Arab neighbor' s. Knesset speaker, Shalom action. Simchon, choosing instead a Yet, after six Labor Party veteran, Avraham Burg. weeks of negotiations, Barak has In an emotional opening speech out- emerged with the best of both worlds. lining the government guidelines, Barak The coalition is very broad and homo- called on regional leaders to pursue geneous, but its heart is secular, cen- peace "on all fronts." Forging peace with ter-left — a reflection of the prime the Palestinians, Syria and Lebanon are minister's own politics. of equal importance to Israel, he said, in a statement generally seen as an attempt to quell Palestinian fears that he will give priority to making peace with Syria. Twice he used a construction favored by the Palestinians and by Syrian President Hafez Assad, calling ), for "a peace of the brave. The former army chief reiterated his campaign promise to pull Israeli troops out of southern Lebanon with- in a year. Barak also pledged to work z ‘.01 0 O Jordan's King Abdullah and, in the next week, with President Bill Clinton. One problem Palestinians will have with Barak that they didn't have with Netanyahu is the new prime minister's exceedingly close relationship with the Clinton administration. The U.S. dis- approved of Netanyahu's hard-line stance and often tilted somewhat in the direction of the Palestinian posi- tion during negotiations. Barak, by contrast, appears to truly accept the Ministerial Lineup Ehud Barak has named 18 ministers to his cabinet and will seek to expand the body by eight additional appointments. He will serve as Prime Minister, Defense Minister and Acting Agricultural Minister. The other One Israel Party appointees are Yossi Beilin, Justice; David Levy, Foreign Affairs; Shimon Peres, Regional Cooperation; Shlomo Ben-Arni, Internal Security; Haim Ramon, Minister in the Prime Minister's Office; Binyamin Ben-Eliezer, Communications; Dalia Itzik, Environment; Avraham Shohat Finance; and Yossi Sarid, Education. Shas Party ministers are Eli Yishai, Labor and Social Affairs; Shlomo Benizri, Health; Eli Suissa, National Infrastructure; and Yitzhak Cohen, Religious Affairs. Appointees from other political parties are: Meretz, Ran Cohen, Industry and Trade; Center Party, Yitzhak Mordechai, Transportation; Yisrael B'Aliya, Natan Sharansky, Interior; National Religious Party, Yitzhak Levy, Construction and Housing Additional deputy ministers are: Amnon Lipkin-Shahak, Tourisrn; Yuli Edelstein, Immigration and Absorption; Nissim Dahan, Interior; Shaul Yahalom, Educatkin; Haim Oron, Finance; Efraim Sneh, Defense. Lipkin-Shahak and Edelstein will become ministers if Barak expands the government. If" he does, Matan Vilna) would become a minister for Culture, Science and Sports and iVlichael ivIelchior would be Minister without Portfolio. with the Palestinian Authority to reach an agreement that would allow for "co-existence, freedom, prosperity and good neighborly relations." The Palestinian response was muted. Marwan Kanafani, who was spokesman for the Palestinian negotiating team at the Wye Plantation peace talks last fall, said Palestinians "are not going to judge [Barak] on the election, or on his state- ments, or on his formation of the gov- ernment, but rather on his handling of the peace negotiations." On Wednesday, the new prime min- ister plunged ahead, announcing he would meet Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak in Alexandria on Friday and Palestinian President Yasser Arafat on Sunday. Then he will meet with nece s sity of giving up territory to achieve peace with the Palestinians. Yet despite the breadth of his coali- tion, his strong U.S. support, and the wide perception of him as an uncanny winner, Barak will not have it easy achieving either peace or secular-reli- gious reconciliation. Peace with the Palestinians and the Syrians will almost certainly involve dismantling settlements in the West Bank, Gaza and Golan Heights, the kind of traumatic jolts that could shake his government to its core. Likewise, if Barak tries to cut into state benefits to the Orthodox, as he promised to do, the religious parties could bring him down. The departure of Shas alone with its 17 Knesset seats would deprive Barak of a majority. ❑ 7/9 1999 Detroit Jewish News 23