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7.1.06
He was
an Israeli Napoleon.
From early
youth, he was totally convinced that he was the only person in the world
who could save the State of Israel. That was an absolute certainty, free
of any doubt. He just knew that he must achieve supreme power, in order to
fulfill the mission that fate had entrusted him with.
This belief
led to a complete integration of personal egocentrism and national
egocentrism. For a person who believes he has such a mission, there is no
difference between the personal and the national interest. What is good
for him automatically becomes good for the nation, and vice versa.
This means that anyone who hinders him from attaining power is really
committing a crime against the State. And anyone helping him to come to
power, is really doing a patriotic deed.
This belief
directed all his actions for decades. It explains the dogged
determination, the tenacity, the unbending
perseverance that became his trade mark and earned him his nickname "the
bulldozer". This attracted admirers, who fell completely under his
influence.
It also
explains his attitude to money matters. It has been
said that he "does not stop at a red light", that "laws are
not for him". More than once he was accused of accepting millions from
rich Jews abroad. On the day before his fateful stroke, it came out that
the police had formally accused him of receiving a bribe of three million
dollars from a casino-owner. (It is quite possible that this raised his
blood pressure and helped to cause the massive stroke.) But not all these
millionaires expected a return. Some of them believed, as he did himself,
that by supporting him, they were actually supporting the State of Israel.
Can there be a more sacred duty than to provide an assured income to the
Israeli Napoleon, so that he can devote his entire energy to the
fulfillment of his historic mission?
On his long
journey, Sharon easily overcame such hurdles. They did not divert him from
his course. Personal tragedies and political defeats did not hold him up
for a moment. The accidents that killed his first wife and his oldest son,
his dismissal from office after being convicted by a board of inquiry of
"indirect responsibility" for the Sabra and
Shatila massacres, as well as the many other
setbacks, failures and disappointments that struck him throughout the
years did not deter him. They did not divert him for an instant from his
endeavor to achieve supreme power.
And now it
was all coming true. On Wednesday, January 4, 2006, he could be certain
that in three months time he would become the sole leader of Israel. He
had created a party that belonged to him alone and that was not only on
track to occupy a central position in the next Knesset, but also to cut
all other parties into pieces.
He was
determined to use this power to change the political landscape of Israel
altogether and introduce a presidential system, which would have given him
an all-powerful position, like that enjoyed by Juan Peron in his heyday in
Argentina. Then, at long last, he would be able to realize his historic
mission of laying the tracks on which Israel would run for generations, as
David Ben-Gurion had done before him.
And then,
just when it seemed that nothing could stop him anymore, with cruel
suddenness, his own body betrayed him.
What
happened resembles a central motif of the Jewish myth: the fate of Moses,
whom God punished for his pride by allowing him a glimpse of the Promised
Land from afar, but having him die before he could set foot on its
soil. On the threshold of absolute power, the
stroke hit Ariel Sharon.
While he
was still fighting for his life in hospital, the myth of "Sharon's
Legacy" was already beginning to form.
As has
happened with many leaders who did not leave a written testament, every
individual is free to imagine a Sharon of his own. Leftists, who only
yesterday had cursed Sharon as the murderer of Kibieh,
the butcher of Sabra and
Shatila and the man responsible for the plunder and slaughter in
the occupied Palestinian territories, began to admire him as the "Man of
Peace". Settlers, who had condemned him as a
traitor, remembered that it was he who had created the settlements and
kept on enlarging them to this day.
Only
yesterday he was one of the most hated people in Israel and the world.
Today, after the evacuation of Gush Katif, he
has become the darling of the public, almost from wall to wall. The
leaders of nations crowned him as the "great warrior who has turned into a
hero of peace".
Everybody
agrees that Sharon has changed completely, that he has gone from one
extreme to the other, the proverbial Ethiopian who has changed his skin,
the leopard who has changed his spots.
All these
analyses have only one thing in common: they have nothing to do with the
real Ariel Sharon. They are based on ignorance, illusion and
self-deception.
A look
at his long career (helped, I may add, by some personal
knowledge) show that he has not changed at all.
He stayed true to his fundamental approach, only adapting his slogans to
changing times and circumstances. His master-plan remained as it was at
the beginning.
Underlying
his world view is a simplistic, 19th century style nationalism, which
says: our people stands above all others, other people are inferior. The
rights of our nation are sacred, other nations
have no rights at all. The rules of morality apply only to relations
within the nation, not to relations between nations.
He absorbed
this conviction with his mother's milk. It governed
Kfar Malal, the cooperative village in
which he was born, as it also governed the whole world at the time. Among
Jews in particular it was reinforced by the horrors of the Holocaust. The
slogan "all the world is against us" is deeply anchored in the national
psyche, and is applied especially to Arabs.
On this
moral base the aim emerged: to establish a Jewish state, as large as
possible, free of non-Jews. That could lead to the conclusion that the
ethnic cleansing, begun by Ben-Gurion in 1948, when half the Palestinians
were deprived of their homes and land, must be completed. Sharon's career
began shortly after, when he was appointed to lead the undercover commando
Unit 101, whose murderous actions beyond the borders were designed mainly
to prevent the refugees from infiltrating back to their villages.
However,
Sharon became convinced quite early that another wholesale ethnic
cleansing was impossible in the foreseeable future (barring some
unforeseeable international event changing conditions altogether.)
In default
of this option, Sharon believed that Israel must annex all the areas
between the Mediterranean and the Jordan without a dense Palestinian
population. Already decades ago, he prepared a map that he showed proudly
to local and foreign personalities in order to convert them to his views.
According to
this map, Israel will annex the areas along the pre-1967 border as well as
the Jordan valley, up to the "back of the mountain" (an expression
particularly dear to Sharon). It will also annex several East-West strips
to connect the Jordan valley with the Green Line. In these territories
that are marked for annexation, Sharon created a dense net of settlements.
That was his principal endeavor throughout the last thirty years, in all
his diverse positions - Minister of Agriculture, Minister of Industry and
Trade, Minister of Defense, Minister of Housing, Foreign Minister,
Minister of Infrastructure, and Prime Minister - and this work is going on
at this minute.
The areas
with a dense Palestinian population, Sharon intended to hand over to
Palestinian self-government. He was determined to remove from them all the
settlements that were set up there without thinking. This way, eight or
nine Palestinian enclaves would have come into being, cut off from each
other, each one surrounded by settlers and Israeli army installations. He
did not care whether these would be called a "Palestinian state". His
recent use of this term is an example of his ability to adapt himself,
outwardly and verbally, to changing situations.
The Gaza
strip is one of these enclaves. That is the real significance of the
uprooting of the settlements and the withdrawal of the Israeli army. It is
the first stage in the realization of the map: this small area, with a
dense Palestinian population of a million and a quarter, was turned over
to the Palestinians. The Israeli land, sea and air forces surround the
strip almost completely. The very existence of its inhabitants depends at
all times on the mercy of Israel, which controls all entrances and exits
(except the Rafah crossing into Egypt, which
is monitored by Israel from afar.) Israel can cut off the water and
electricity supply at a moment's notice. Sharon intended to create the
same situation in Hebron, Ramallah,
Nablus, Jenin and
the other areas.
Is this
a "peace plan"?
Peace is
made between nations which agree to create a situation where all of them
can live in freedom, well-being and mutual respect and believe that that
is good for them. This is not what Sharon had in mind. As a military man,
he knows only truces. If peace had been handed to him on a platter, he
would not have recognized it.
He knew
perfectly well that no Palestinian leader could possibly agree to his map,
now or ever. That's why he did not intend to have any political
negotiations with the Palestinians. His slogan was "we have no partner".
He intended to realize all the stages of his plan "unilaterally", as he
did in Gaza - without dialogue with the Palestinians, without considering
their requirements and aspirations, and, of course, without seeking their
consent.
But Sharon
did indeed intend to make peace - peace with the United States. He
considered American consent as essential. He knew that Washington could
not give its consent to his whole plan. So he intended to obtain their
agreement phase by phase. Since President Bush has submitted to him
entirely, and no one knows who will succeed him, Sharon intended to
realize the main part of his plan within the next two or three years,
before the end of the President's term in office. That is one of the
reasons for his hurry. He had to come to absolute power now, immediately.
Only the stroke prevented this.
The eagerness with which so many good people on the left embraced the
"Sharon Legacy" does not show their grasp of his plans, but rather their
own longing for peace. They long with all their heart for a strong leader,
who has the will and the ability to end the conflict.
The
determination with which Sharon removed the settlers from Gush
Katif filled these leftists with enthusiasm.
Who would have believed that there was a leader capable of carrying it
out, without civil war, without bloodshed? And if this has happened in the
Gaza Strip, why can't it happen in the West Bank? Sharon will drive the
settlers out and make peace. All this, without the
Left having to lift a finger. The savior, like Deus, will
jump ex machina. As the Hebrew
proverb goes, "the work of the righteous is done by others", who may be
something quite other than righteous.
Sharon has
easily adapted himself to this longing of the
public. He has not changed his plan, but given it a new veneer, in the
spirit of the times. From now on, he appeared as the "Man of Peace". He
never cared which mask it was convenient to wear. But this mask reflects
the deepest wishes of the Israeli people.
From this
point of view, the imaginary "Sharon Legacy" can play a positive role.
When he created his new party, he took with him a lot of
Likud people, those who had come to the
conclusion that the goal of "The Whole of Eretz
Israel" has become impossible to attain. Many of these will remain in the Kadima party even after Sharon has left the
tribune. As a result of an ongoing, slow subterranean process,
Likud people, too, are ready to accept the
partition of the country. The whole system is moving in the direction of
peace.
The "Sharon
Legacy", even if imaginary, may become a blessing, if Sharon appears in it
in his latest incarnation: Sharon the uprooter
of settlements, Sharon who is ready to give up parts of
Eretz Israel, Sharon who agrees to a
Palestinian state.
True, this
was not Sharon's intention. But, as Sharon himself
might have said: It is not the intentions that matter, but the results on
the ground.
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