Bibi My story

Binyamin Netanyahu

Book - 2022

"From their earliest days, Bibi and his close-knit brothers, Yoni and Iddo, were instilled with purpose. Born in the wake of the Holocaust at the dawn of Israel's independence and raised in a family with a prominent Zionist history, they understood that the Jewish state was a hard-won and still precarious gift. All three studied in American high schools--where they learned to appreciate the United States--before returning to their cherished homeland. The brothers joined an elite special forces outfit of the Israeli Defense Forces known as "the Unit." At twenty-two, Bibi was wounded while leading his team in the rescue of hostages from a hijacked plane. Four years later, in 1976, Yoni was killed in Entebbe, Uganda, while ...leading his men in one of the most daring hostage-rescue missions in modern times. Yoni became a legend; Bibi felt he would never recover from his grief. Yet, inspired by Yoni's legacy and guided by the wisdom of his visionary historian father, Bibi thrust himself into the international struggle against terrorism, ultimately becoming the longest-serving prime minister in Israel's history. In this memoir Bibi weaves together his gripping personal story with the dramatic history of Israel and the Jewish people." --

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Subjects
Genres
Autobiographies
Published
New York : Threshold Editions 2022.
Language
English
Main Author
Binyamin Netanyahu (author)
Edition
First Threshold Editions hardcover edition
Item Description
Map on lining papers.
Physical Description
vii, 724 pages, 32 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (chiefly color), maps ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9781668008447
  • Author's Note
  • Part I. Foothills
  • 1. Brothers 1972
  • 2. Roots 1949-1957
  • 3. America 1957-1959
  • 4. Back in Israel: Blissful Years 1959-1963
  • 5. America Again: Nerds and Jocks 1963-1967
  • 6. The Six-Day War 1967
  • 7. The Unit 1967-1968
  • 8. Combat 1968-1969
  • 9. Commander 1969-1972
  • 10. Farewell, Lebanon 1972
  • 11. MIT 1972-1976
  • 12. The Yom Kippur War 1973
  • 13. Hasbara 1973-1976
  • 14. Father
  • 15. "One Day It Will Help Your Country" 1976-1978
  • 16. Agony 1976
  • 17. Entebbe July 4, 1976
  • 18. Terrorism 1976-1980
  • 19. Business 1980-1982
  • 20. Diplomat 1982-1984
  • 21. Ambassador 1984-1988
  • 22. Politics 1988-1993
  • 23. Nathan
  • 24. Leader of the Opposition 1993-1996
  • Part II. Highlands
  • 25. Prime Minister 1996-1999
  • 26. First Reforms 1996-1999
  • 27. Sara
  • 28. King Hussein
  • 29. First Skirmish 1996
  • 30. Wye River 1998
  • 31. Wilderness 1999-2002
  • 32. Citizen Against Terror 2001-2002
  • 33. The Vision 2002
  • 34. Crisis 2003
  • 35. Fat Man, Thin Man 2003-2005
  • 36. "Don't Read the Press" 2003-2005
  • 3. "This Is Social Justice!" 2003-2005
  • 38. A Clash of Head and Heart 2005
  • 39. "This Is Your Life!" 2005-2009
  • Part III. Summit
  • 40. "Not One Brick!" 2009-2010
  • 41. "Lots of Daylight" 2009
  • 42. The Battle for Jerusalem 2010
  • 43. Firefighters 2010
  • 44. Marmara 2010
  • 45. The Lecture 2011
  • 46. "We'll Get You Out of There, Yoni" 2011
  • 47. Passing the Torch 2012
  • 48. The Red Line 2012
  • 49. "You're Next" 2012-2013
  • 50. "Nobody Likes Goliath" 2013
  • 51. "Come on a Clandestine Visit to Afghanistan" 2013
  • 52. "Bibi, Please Help Us" 2013
  • 53. Tunnel War 2014
  • 54. "Never Again" 2015
  • 55. Last-Minute Victory 2015
  • 56. Rising Power 2015-2020
  • 57. Walking Among the Giants 2016-2018
  • 58. Parting Shot 2016
  • 59. New Deal 2017
  • 60. Missions Accomplished 2017-2019
  • 61. "Bring Us Bibi's Head" 2009-2022
  • 62. New Path to Peace 2020
  • 63. Covid 2019-2021
  • 64. Roller Coaster 2019-2022
  • 65. My Story, Our Story
  • Acknowledgments
  • Endnotes
  • Index
  • Photograph Credits
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

This self-serving autobiography by former Israeli prime minister Netanyahu (A Durable Peace) begins with a flashback to his time in a special unit of the Israeli Defense Forces, recounting a 1972 raid on a plane held by Palestinian terrorists, then moves more or less chronologically through his life and career. Born in Israel in 1949, Netanyahu served in the military during the 1967 Six-Day War and the 1973 Yom Kippur War before completing his education at MIT. Recounting his two terms as prime minister (1996--1999 and 2009--2021), Netanyahu dismisses serious allegations out of hand, including the 2019 corruption charges that led to his indictment and for which he is currently on trial. He also rejects any responsibility for the violent rhetoric that contributed to then prime minister Yitzhak Rabin's assassination in 1995, claiming that those charges were ginned up by "my antagonists in the press and on the political left." Elsewhere, the amount of detail about Netanyahu's policies, including welfare reforms related to per-child allowances, is more than most non-Israelis will find interesting. There's little newsworthy here (Netanyahu alleges without evidence that President Obama gave Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas a "secret commitment to establish a full-fledged Palestinian state before he left office"), and readers looking for insights into Netanyahu's two marriages and other personal matters won't find them. This superficial account won't sway Netanyahu's critics. (Oct.)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

Long-winded memoir from the longest-serving prime minister in Israeli history. Two themes run throughout the monotonous narrative: Netanyahu's admiration for his older brother, Yoni, who was killed during the special operations raid to free hostages taken by terrorists at Entebbe Airport in 1976, and the constant necessity of Israel to defend itself against aggressors. Born in Tel Aviv in 1949 to secular Jews with deep Zionist family ties, Bibi, as he was called, lived in various places in the U.S., including a stint as a student of architecture at MIT, but the excitement over the Six-Day War in 1967 brought Bibi swiftly home to start his military training. Yoni's untimely death inspired his work in founding The Jonathan Institute, an organization against international terrorism, through which he would first meet many of the conservative intellectuals who supported his later political campaigns. From businessman to appointed "deputy chief of mission" in Israel's embassy in Washington, D.C., Bibi made his mark as a public communicator of Israel's point of view. "I tried to speak my mind, speak my heart, and above all speak plainly," he writes in characteristically flat fashion. After a few years as a U.N. ambassador, the author ascended the ladder in the Likud Party, and he narrowly beat Shimon Peres for the position of prime minister in 1996, when he was just 46. Beginning in 2003, when he became finance minister, his "free market revolution"--privatization, cutting welfare, and crushing unions--picked up steam. Reelected as prime minister in 2009, he doubled down against Iran's nuclear capabilities and in destroying terrorist networks, especially Hamas. He famously came to loggerheads with Barack Obama, while with Donald Trump, he was able to see several "missions accomplished"--e.g., normalized relations with the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain and the moving of the U.S. Embassy to Jerusalem. Now the leader of the opposition party again, Netanyahu seems to be scheming for a return to power. Hardly a charm offensive, this is a straightforward account and defense of the author's hard-line positions. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.