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Opinion Editorials, June 7, 2007 |
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On
Generals and
Admirals By Uri Avnery
Gush Shalom
"NOTHING
SUCCEEDS like success," says a typical American adage. The Israeli
version, also typical, is: "Nothing succeeds like failure." It
seems that no one has any chance of winning an election here until they have
proven, beyond any reasonable doubt, that they are a total failure. So it is
quite possible that in the next general elections there will be only two
candidates for the job of Prime Minister: Benjamin Netanyahu and Ehud Barak. To
recall: Netanyahu was elected Prime Minister in 1996. After serving barely
half his term of office, he was toppled. To replace him, a large majority
elected Ehud Barak. The whole country breathed an almost audible sigh of
relief, and masses of people saluted him in Tel-Aviv's Everybody
expects the Kadima party to disappear at the next elections as suddenly as
it appeared a year and a half ago - like the gourd in the Book of Jonah (4,
10) "which came up in a night and perished in a night." But if, by
a miracle, Ehud Olmert is also a candidate for Prime Minister, we shall have
the choice between three well documented failures. In
other democracies, such people disappear after elections, in SOME
CLEVER public relations hacks have found a substitute for the word
"failure". From now
on, don't say "failure"' say "experience". Netanyahu,
Barak and Olmert never tire of repeating this sentence: "I have learned
from experience." What
have they learned? That's a secret. But how pitiful are their rivals, who
have no experience! What do they have that they can learn from? What
experience do they have? These three have already been prime ministers. They
have experienced crises. True, they have made a mess of every one of them.
So what? That's all for the best. Next time they will not fail again. They
have a model to imitate. Yitzhak Rabin was elected Prime Minister in 1974.
He served for three years, until his government fell (because a squadron of
fighter planes given us by the When
he arrived at the Prime Minister's office for the second time, 14 years
later, he brought about one of the most profound changes in the history of
the state. He recognized the Palestinian Liberation Organization and was
responsible for the But
he was an exception. The rule was defined by Field Marshal Charles Francois
Dumouriez when, after the Restoration, he said about the courtiers of the
Bourbon kings: "They have forgotten nothing and learned nothing." LAST
WEEK, primary elections took place in the Labor Party, which calls itself
Social-Democratic and pretends, whenever it remembers, to be the
"Leader of the Peace Camp". Five
candidates competed for the leadership of the party, including: 1 former
Chief of Staff, 2 generals, 1 admiral, 2 former chiefs of the Secret
Services (1 of the Mossad, 1 of the Shin Bet), 1 Minister of Defense. (Some
have worn more than one hat.) Barak's
election slogan was: "Only I can conduct the next war!" In the
first round, he won a significant victory over his principal rival, Ami
Ayalon (36.6% to 30.6%). Next week, the two will face each other in the
second round. What
is the difference between them? Both were born in kibbutzim and left them
long ago. They have similar views about national and social issues. Is the
main difference between them that one is a general and the other an admiral
(a title stemming from the Arabic Amir al-Bakhar, Prince of the Sea)? FORTUNATELY,
I do not have to vote in these primaries. I am not, and have never been, a
member of the Labor Party in any of its many incarnations. But
that does not get me off the hook. I must ask myself: if I were a member of
this poor party, which of the two would I choose? I
would not be able to vote for Ehud Barak. Even if I wanted to, my hand would
not obey. I
once called him a "peace criminal", as distinct from a "war
criminal". A peace criminal is a person who commits a crime against
peace. I believe that Barak is responsible for the greatest crime against
Israeli-Palestinian peace ever committed, more grievous even than the sins
of David Ben-Gurion, Golda Meir, Yitzhak Shamir or Ariel Sharon. In
2000, Barak persuaded President Bill Clinton to convene a conference at Camp
David, and Yossi
Sarid, then a minister in Barak's government, confirmed this week what I
asserted then: Barak had brought with him an offer that he believed the
Palestinians would not be able to resist. But in fact it was far from the
minimum any Palestinian leader could possibly accept. To cover his shame,
Barak invented the pretext that his real aim all along had been to
"unmask" Arafat. Barak's
real crime was not his conduct during the conference, but what he did
afterwards. When he came home, he propagated a mantra consisting of five
sentences: "I made unprecedentedly generous offers / I turned every
stone to achieve peace / The Palestinians refused everything / There is
nobody to talk with / We have no partner for peace." This
mantra, repeated by the media thousands of times, is easy to absorb and
frees one from any obligation to make concessions or efforts. It destroyed,
in the hearts of the people, any belief in peace and caused terrible damage
to the Israeli peace camp. The peace camp was turned into an arid desert,
with only a few small oases left. This has not changed to this very day. To
this central crime, minor ones were added: the willful abandonment of the
peace negotiation with Syria a moment before final agreement could be
achieved; the lack of dialogue with Hizbullah and Syria on the eve of the
withdrawal from South Lebanon; the mass killings of Arab citizens by the
police in October 2000; the permission granted to Ariel Sharon to visit the
Temple Mount - the provocation that ignited the 2nd intifada. I
HAVE a story of my own, which I am telling here for the first time. It
throws some light, I believe, on the nature of Barak and his people. After
the failure of Camp David and the outbreak of the new intifada, a
general election again took place - Barak against On
election day, at about 4 p.m., my phone rang. The person at the other end
identified himself as Tal Silberstein, Barak's chief advisor, and said that
he was calling me on behalf of his boss. He told me that in the last few
hours a dramatic change in favor of Barak had taken place, and begged me to
use my influence to induce the leaders of the Arab community to call upon
the Arab citizens to go to the ballot boxes and vote for Barak. "That
is all we need to win," he said. (It was generally assumed that most of
the Arab citizens would abstain from voting, in protest at Barak's role in
the October killings.) I
called Knesset Member Azmi Bishara and told him about the conversation.
"One, it's too late, and two, I don't believe him," he answered.
And he was right: the "change" never happened, at that hour
Barak's overwhelming defeat was already assured. Barak's man just told me a
brazen lie, in order to make his defeat a little less complete. THE
QUESTION is, would I now vote for Ayalon? The
Prince of the Sea has some good points. Together with Sari Nusseibeh, in
2002 he published a declaration of principles for Israeli-Palestinian peace.
It was not as far-reaching as the later On
the contrary, more than once he declared that his heart was with the
settlers, that he understands and respects them, that they are today's real
pioneers, etc. Sure, that could be de Gaulle-like posturing, but who knows? Truth
is, nobody really knows about his views and his plans. We know only that he
has spent most of his life in the military complex. There his character and
world-view were formed. And it is also quite impossible to know whether he
succeeded or failed there. Ayalon
has already shown that his decisions are very, very unpredictable. He has
already contradicted himself several times. His opponents accuse him of
being a zigzagger. One thing only is sure about him: that nothing is sure. A
EUROPEAN saying goes: "Better the devil you know than the devil you
don't." Some of the wavering voters will act on this. As
a friend told me: "Barak is predictable. Ayalon is unpredictable. So
perhaps Barak is better." This
argument works both ways. It's certain that nothing good will come out of
Barak. Perhaps nothing good will come out of Ayalon either, but when a
person is unpredictable, you don’t know. He can surprise for the better.
And almost any surprise would be better than the present situation. Fortunately, I don't have to decide.
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