Summing Up Israeli Politics: From Olmert to
Livni
By Uri Avnery
Gush Shalom, October 10, 2008
IN COLLOQUIAL Israeli Hebrew, when someone discovers something that
everybody else already knows, we say: "Good morning, Elijahu!"
Why Elijahu? I don't know. Now one could say: "Good morning, Ehud!"
That's what I said to myself when I read the sensational interview that
Ehud Olmert gave this week, on the eve of the Jewish New Year, to the
newspaper "Yediot Aharonot".
AT THE end of his political career, after resigning from the prime
ministership, while waiting for Tzipi Livni to set up a new government,
he said some astounding things - not astounding in themselves, but
certainly when they come from his mouth.
For those who missed it, here is what he said:
0 "We must reach an agreement with the Palestinians, the essence
of which is that we shall actually withdraw from almost all the
territories, if not from all the territories. We shall keep in our hands
a percentage of these territories, but we shall be compelled to give the
Palestinians a similar percentage, because without that there will be no
peace."
0 "
including Jerusalem. With special solutions, that I can
visualize, for the Temple Mount and the historical holy places
Anyone who wants to keep all the territory of the city will have to put
270 thousand Arabs behind fences within sovereign Israel. That won't
work."
0 "I was the first who wanted to impose Israeli sovereignty on all
the city. I admit
I was not ready to look into all the depths of
reality."
0 "Concerning Syria, what we need first of all is a decision. I
wonder if there is one single serious person in Israel who believes it
is possible to make peace with Syria without giving up the Golan Heights
in the end."
0 "The aim is to try and fix for the first time a precise border
between us and the Palestinians, a border that all the world [will
recognize]."
0 "Let's assume that in the next year or two a regional war will
break out and we shall have a military confrontation with Syria. I have
no doubt that we shall smite them hip and thigh [an allusion to Judges
15:8]
[But] what will happen when we win?
Why go to war with the
Syrians in order to achieve what we can get anyway without paying such a
high price?"
0 "What was the greatness of Menachem Begin? [He] sent Dayan to
meet with Tohami [Sadat's emissary] in Morocco, before he even met Sadat
and Dayan told Tohami, on behalf of Begin, that we were prepared to
withdraw from all of Sinai."
0 "Arik Sharon, Bibi Netanyahu, Ehud Barak and Rabin, his memory
be blessed
each one of them took a step that led us in the right
direction, but at some point in time, at some crossroads, when a
decision was needed, the decision did not come."
0 "A few days ago I sat in a discussion with the key people in
the decision-making process. At the end [I told them]: listening to you,
I understand why we have not made peace with the Palestinians and the
Syrians during the last 40 years."
0 " We can perhaps take a historic step in our relations with the
Palestinians, and a historic step in our relations with the Syrians. In
both cases the decision we must make is the decision we have refused to
face with open eyes for 40 years."
0 " When you sit on this chair you must ask yourself: where do you
direct the effort? To make peace or just to be stronger and stronger and
stronger in order to win the war
Our power is great enough to face any
danger. Now we must try and see how to use this infrastructure of power
in order to make peace and not to win wars."
0 "Iran is a very great power
The assumption that America and
Russia and China and Britain and Germany do not know how to handle the
Iranians, and we Israelis know and we shall do so, is an example of the
loss of all sense of proportion."
0 "I read the statements of our ex-generals and I say: how can it
be that they have learned nothing and forgotten nothing?"
MY FIRST reaction, as I said, was: Good morning, Ehud.
I am reminded of my late friend, the poet who went by the name of Yebi.
Some 32 years ago, after dozens of Arab Israeli citizens were killed
demonstrating against the expropriation of their lands, he came to me in
utter turmoil and exclaimed: we must do something. So we decided to lay
wreaths on the graves of the killed. There were three of us: Yebi, I and
the painter Dan Kedar, who died last week. The gesture aroused a storm
of hatred against us, the like of which I have not experienced before or
since.
Since then, whenever someone in Israel said something in favor of peace,
Yebi would burst out: "Where was he when we laid the wreaths?"
That is a natural question, but really quite irrelevant. Olmert, who
fought all his life against our views, is apparently adopting them now.
That is the main thing. Not "Good morning, Ehud" but "Welcome, Ehud".
True, we said this 40 years ago. But we were not an incumbent Prime
Minister.
True, too, that these things were said and spelled out in detail by many
good people, like those who wrote the Gush Shalom Draft Peace Treaty,
the Nusseibeh-Ayalon document or the Geneva initiative. But none of them
was an incumbent Prime Minister.
And that is the main thing.
IT SHOULD not be forgotten: In the period in which these ideas were
crystallizing in Olmert's mind, he was allowing the settlements to
expand, especially in East Jerusalem.
That gives rise to an unavoidable question: Does he really mean what he
says? Isn't he cheating, as is his wont? Isn't this some sort of
manipulation, as usual?
This time I tend to believe him. One can say: the words sound truthful.
Not only the words themselves are important, but also the music. The
whole thing sounds like the political testament of a person who is
resigned to the end of his political career. It has a philosophical ring
- the confession of a person who has spent two and a half years in the
highest decision-making office in the land, has absorbed the lessons and
drawn conclusions.
One can ask: Why do such people reach their conclusions only on
finishing their term of office, when they can no longer do much about
the wise things they are proposing? Why did Bill Clinton come to
formulate his proposals for Israeli-Palestinian peace during his last
days in office, after wasting eight years on irresponsible games in this
arena? And why, for that matter, did Lyndon Johnson admit that the
Vietnam War has been a terrible mistake right from the beginning only
after he himself had brought about the deaths of tens of thousands of
Americans and millions of Vietnamese?
The superficial answer lies in the character of political life. A Prime
Minister rushes from problem to problem, from crisis to crisis. He is
exposed to temptations and pressures from the outside and stress from
the inside, coalition squabbling and inner-party intrigues. He has
neither the time nor the detachment to draw conclusions.
The two and a half years of Olmert's term were full of crises, from the
Second Lebanon War, for which he was responsible, to the corruption
investigations which dogged him throughout. Only now has he got the
time, and perhaps the philosophical composure, to draw conclusions.
That is the importance of this interview: the speaker is a person who
stood for two and a half years at the center of national and
international decision making, a person who was exposed to the pressures
and the calculations, who had personal contact with the leaders of the
world and of the Palestinians. A normal person, not brilliant, not a
profound thinker by any means, a man of political practice, who "saw
things from there that cannot be seen from here".
He has delivered a kind of State of the Nation report to the public, a
summary of the reality of Israel after 60 years of the state and 120
years of the Zionist enterprise.
ONE CAN point out the huge gaps in this summary. There is no criticism
of Zionist policy over five generations - but that is something that one
cannot really expect from him. There is no empathy with the feelings,
the aspirations and the traumas of the Palestinian people. There is no
mention of the refugee problem (it is known that he is ready to take
back just a few thousand in the framework of "family reunion"). There is
no admission of guilt for the disastrous enlargement of the settlements.
And the list is long.
The primitive basis of his world view has not changed. That is made
clear by the following amazing statement: "Every grain of the area from
the Jordan to the sea that we will give up will burn our hearts
When
we dig in these areas, what do we find? Speeches by Arafat's
grandfather, or Arafat's great great great grandfather? We find there
the historical memories of the people of Israel!"
That is utter nonsense. It is totally unsupported by historical and
archeological research. The man is just repeating things he picked up in
his early youth, he is simply expressing his gut feelings. Anyone
sticking to this ideology will find it hard to dismantle settlements and
make peace.
All the same, what is in this testament?
It is an unequivocal and final divorce from "All of Eretz Israel" from a
person who grew up in a home over which hovered the Irgun emblem: the
map of Eretz Israel on both sides of the Jordan. For him, the Irgun
slogan "Only Thus" has turned into "Anything But Thus".
It gives unequivocal support to the partition of the country. This time,
his adherence to the principle of "Two States for Two Peoples" appears
much more genuine, not lip service or sleight of hand. His demand for
"fixing the final borders of the State of Israel" represents a
revolution in Zionist thought.
Olmert has already said in the past that the State of Israel is
"finished" if it does not agree to partition, because of the
"demographic danger". This time he does not invoke that demon. Now he
speaks as an Israeli who is thinking about the future of Israel as a
progressive, constructive, peaceful state.
All this is put forward not as a vision for the remote future, but as a
plan for the present. He demands that a decision be taken now. It almost
sounds like: Let me continue for another few months, and I shall do it.
The unstated assumption is that the Palestinians are ready for this
historic turning point.
And he has fixed an Israeli position from which there can be no going
back in any future negotiations.
THIS IS the testament of the Prime Minister, and it is obviously
intended for the next Prime Minister.
We don't know whether Tzipi Livni is ready to implement such a plan, or
what she thinks about this testament. True, she has lately voiced rather
similar ideas, but she is now entering the cauldron of the Prime
Minister's office. One cannot know what she will do.
I wish her one thing above all: that at the end of her days as Prime
Minister she will not have to sit down and give an interview, in which
she, too, will apologize for missing the historic opportunity for making
peace.
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