Olmert Escaping Forwards 
			By 
			Uri Avnery
			Gush Shalom, May 26, 2008
			
			 
			 
			Escaping Forwards
			 
			THE GERMANS call it "die Flucht nach vorne" - escaping forwards. 
			When the situation is desperate, attack! Instead of retreating, 
			advance!
			When there is no way out, storm ahead!
			 
			This method was successful in 1948. At the end of May, the Egyptian 
			army was advancing on Tel Aviv. We - a very, very thin line of 
			soldiers - were all that stood in its way. So we attacked. Again and 
			again and again. We suffered heavy losses. But we stopped the 
			Egyptian advance.
			 
			Now Ehud Olmert is applying the same method. His situation is 
			desperate. Most people in Israel do not doubt that he has received 
			large bribes in envelopes stuffed with dollars. The Attorney General 
			is liable to indict him any time, and this will compel him to 
			resign.
			 
			And lo and behold, at the most critical moment, just before the most 
			damning details come out, a joint statement is issued simultaneously 
			in Jerusalem, Damascus and Ankara, announcing the start of peace 
			negotiations between Israel and Syria, with Turkey acting as 
			mediator. The talks will be based on the principles of the 1991 
			Madrid Conference, meaning the return of the entire Golan Heights.
			Wow!!!
			IN THIS, too, Olmert is the worthy pupil 
			of his predecessor and mentor, Ariel Sharon.
			
			Sharon was up to his neck in corruption affairs. In one of them, the 
			so-called "Greek Island affair", the Israeli millionaire David Appel 
			paid huge sums to Sharon's son, a novice, for "advice". At the time, 
			too, it seemed that the Attorney General could not possibly avoid 
			issuing an indictment.
			
			Sharon's response was sheer genius: the Separation. Separation from 
			the Gaza Strip. Separation from the Attorney General.
			
			That was a gigantic operation. In a minutely orchestrated 
			melodramatic performance, the Gush Katif settlements were 
			dismantled. Together with several army divisions, all police forces 
			- the same police that was supposed to investigate the Sharon 
			family's business affairs - were deployed in a breath-taking 
			national endeavor. The peace camp supported, of course, the 
			evacuation of the settlements. The corruption affairs were all but 
			forgotten.
			
			The separation, which was carried out without any dialogue with the 
			Palestinians, has turned the whole of the Gaza Strip into a ticking 
			bomb, and now Ehud Olmert has to negotiate a cease-fire. For Sharon, 
			though, the entire exercise was a success. If he had not suffered a 
			stroke, he would still be Prime Minister today. 
			
			The lesson did not escape Olmert.
			
			AESTHETES MAY exclaim: Phooey! We should not countenance such a 
			dirty trick! We cannot agree to a peace conceived in sin!
			
			Maybe my aesthetic sense is blunted. Because I am ready to accept 
			peace even from a totally corrupt leader, even from Satan himself. 
			If the corruption of a politician causes him to do something that 
			will save the lives of hundreds and thousands of human beings on 
			both sides - that's OK with me. Didn't the philosopher Friedrich 
			Hegel talk about the "cunning of reason"?
			
			The Bible recounts that when the army of Damascus laid siege to 
			Samaria, the capital of the Kingdom of Israel, four leprous men 
			brought the news that the enemy had fled (2 Kings, 7). The Hebrew 
			poetess Rachel wrote, alluding to this story, that she was not 
			willing to receive good news from lepers. Well, I am.  
			
			Conventional wisdom has it that to make peace, one needs a strong 
			leader. Now it appears that the opposite also works: that a weak 
			leader, almost submerged in troubles, whose term in office could 
			come to a sudden end at any moment and whose coalition stands on 
			feet of clay, a leader who has nothing to lose - he too may risk all 
			to make peace.
			
			THE PLOT may move on from here in several possible directions. 
			
			The first possibility: it's all "spin" - an American term that has 
			become Olmert's middle name. He will just stretch the negotiations 
			out like bubble gum, as he has been doing with the Palestinians, and 
			wait for the storm to blow over.
			
			It will be difficult for him to do so, because Turkey is now a 
			partner in the game. Even Olmert understands that it will be sheer 
			folly to annoy the Turks, who are risking their national prestige 
			here. Turkey is a very important partner of our security 
			establishment.
			
			Whatever comes of it, Olmert's agreement to conduct negotiations 
			based on the return of all the Golan is an important step forward. 
			Coming on top of the previous undertakings by Yitzhak Rabin, 
			Binyamin Netanyahu and Ehud Barak, it defines a line of no return.
			
			The second possibility: Olmert really means it. For his own reasons, 
			he will conduct negotiations "in good faith", as he undertook this 
			week, and reach an agreement. In the country, a wild campaign of 
			incitement will be launched against him. The Knesset will fall 
			apart, new elections will be held, Olmert will again head the Kadima 
			list and win as a peacemaker.
			
			Alternatively: he will lose those elections. But he will leave the 
			scene in an honorable cause, not thrown out for his own corruption, 
			but sacrificing himself on the altar of peace.   
			 
			Alternatively: the Attorney General will indict him in spite of 
			everything, he will resign but go home with head held high as a 
			leader who has taken a historic step. The Attorney General will look 
			like a saboteur of peace and perhaps even the cause of another war.
			
			A PERTINENT question: if Olmert has indeed decided to "escape 
			forwards"' why escape forwards towards peace and not towards war? 
			This is what usually happens: leaders on the threshold of disaster 
			prefer to start a little (or sometimes big) war. There is nothing 
			like war to divert attention, and waging war is almost always more 
			popular, at least at the beginning, than making peace.
			
			Here there are also two possibilities:
			
			The first: like Paul, Olmert had a revelation, and has really become 
			a man of peace. The nationalist demagogue has matured and now 
			understands that the national interest demands peace. A cynic will 
			laugh out loud. But stranger things have happened on the road to 
			Damascus.
			
			The second: Olmert believes that the Israeli public prefers peace 
			with Syria to war with Syria, and hopes to gain some popularity as a 
			peace-maker. (I believe this to be true.)
			
			The third: Olmert knows that all the chiefs of the Security 
			Establishment (with the notable exception of the Mossad boss) 
			support peace with Syria out of cold strategic calculation. In the 
			eyes of the army General Staff, the loss of the Golan Heights is a 
			reasonable price to pay for breaking Syria loose from Iran and 
			lessening its support for Hizbullah and Hamas, especially if an 
			international force is stationed there after they revert to being 
			the "Syrian Heights".  
			
			Syria is a Sunni country, even if it is ruled by members of the 
			small Alawite sect, which is closer to the Shia. (The Alawis derive 
			their name from Ali, the son-in-law of the Prophet, who the Shi'is 
			consider his rightful heir.) The alliance between secular Sunni 
			Syria and orthodox Shi'i Iran is a marriage of convenience, without 
			an ideological basis. The alliance with Shi'i Hizbullah is also 
			based on interests: since Syria does not dare to attack Israel in 
			order to get the Golan back, it supports Hizbullah as a proxy.  
			
			ALL THIS happens without the US. This, too, has its precedents: the 
			Sadat initiative of 1977 matured behind the backs of the Americans 
			(as the American ambassador in Cairo at the time told me later). The 
			Oslo initiative also ripened without American participation.
			
			Until lately, the US has opposed any Israeli-Syrian thaw, and even 
			now looks at it askance. In George Bush's cowboy world vision, Syria 
			belongs to the "axis of evil" and must be isolated.
			
			That is grist to the mill for John Mearsheimer and Stephen Walt, the 
			two American professors who are due to visit Israel next month. 
			Their provocative book asserted that the Israel lobby totally 
			dominates US foreign policy. In this new development, it does indeed 
			seem that Jerusalem has bent Washington to its will.
			
			During his visit to Jerusalem a few days ago, Bush railed against 
			talking with enemies. This was understood to be a rebuke aimed at 
			Barack Obama, who has announced his willingness to speak with the 
			leaders of Iran. Perhaps Olmert is already betting on Obama's 
			entering the White House.
			
			But Bush is not finished yet. He has got eight more months to go, 
			and he, too, may come to the conclusion that he should "escape 
			forwards". In his case: by attacking Iran.
			
			HOW IS all this going to affect the mother of all problems, the core 
			of the Israeli-Arab conflict: the question of Palestine? 
			
			Menachem Begin made a separate peace with Egypt and gave back the 
			whole of the Sinai Peninsula in order to concentrate on the war with 
			the Palestinians. Undoubtedly, Begin was ready to do the same on the 
			Syrian front. According to the map used by Vladimir (Ze'ev) 
			Jabotinsky, which Olmert was brought up on, the Golan, like Sinai, 
			is not a part of Eretz Israel.
			
			A separate peace harbors great dangers for the Palestinians. If the 
			Israeli government reaches a peace agreement with Syria (and then 
			Lebanon), it will have peace with all the neighboring states. The 
			Palestinians will be isolated and the Israeli government will be 
			able to deal with them as it wishes.
			
			As against this danger, there is a positive prospect: that after the 
			evacuation of the Golan, there will be increased pressure, from 
			inside and outside, to reach peace with the Palestinians, too, at 
			long last.
			
			The Golan settlers are far more popular in Israel than their West 
			Bank counterparts. While the Ofra and Hebron settlers are viewed as 
			religious fanatics, whose crazy behavior is quite alien to the 
			Israeli character, the settlers of the Golan are seen as "people 
			like us". The more so, since they were sent there by the Labor 
			Party. If the Golan settlers are evacuated, it will be much easier 
			to deal with the "Judea and Samaria" crowd. 
			
			Being at peace with all Arab states, the Israeli public may feel 
			more secure, and therefore more willing to take risks in making 
			peace with the Palestinian people.
			
			The international atmosphere will also change. If the "axis of evil" 
			fantasy disappears together with George Bush, and a new American 
			leadership makes a serious effort to achieve peace, optimism will 
			again dare to raise its battered head. Some people dream about a 
			partnership of Barack Obama and Tzipi Livni.
			
			All this belongs to the future. In the meantime we have a weak 
			Olmert, who needs a powerful initiative. In the Biblical legend, the 
			hero Samson killed a young lion, and when he returned to it, 
			"behold, there was a swarm of bees and honey in the carcase." Samson 
			put forth a riddle unto the Philistines: "Out of the strong came 
			forth sweetness", and nobody was able to solve it (Judges, 14). 
			
			Now we can well ask: "Will the weak bring forth sweetness?"