by Bradley Burston in Haaretz
In his eleventh-hour decision against
attending the funeral of Nelson Mandela, Benjamin Netanyahu proved that he is not
the smug, petty, vindictive, waffling, in-your-face insulting man he
seems. He's something worse. The problem is not so much that the prime minister
had first informed the South African government that he would, in fact, attend
the ceremony, alongside Presidents Obama, George W. Bush and Bill Clinton,
French President Francois Hollande, and scores of other world dignitaries,
among them Iranian President Hassan Rohani, in what is expected to be a world
gathering unprecedented in scope.
Nor is the basic problem the fact that the decision was made so abruptly
and with such lack of consultation, that the office of President Shimon Peres
was thrown for a loop, and it was unclear if arrangements could be made to have
Peres represent Israel in Netanyahu's stead. The problem is the reason Netanyahu
chose to give: Money. The trip would cost too much. The problem,
then, is the message Netanyahu has chosen to send: