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A Drug for the Addict by
Uri Avnery
It
is no secret that the military party (the only really functioning party
in The army command was like an addict deprived of his drug. It was forbidden to carry out the action it wanted. It was just about to crush the intifada, victory was just around the corner, all that was needed was just one final decisive blow, and that would have been that. The
military was upset when it saw the new hope that took hold of the
Israeli public, the bullish mood of the stock exchange, the rise in
value of the shekel, the return of the masses to the entertainment
centers, the signs of optimism on both sides. In effect, it was a
spontaneous popular vote against the military policy. Ariel
Sharon realized that if this went on, reality would overturn his
long-term plans. Therefore, right at the beginning of the hudna, he
adopted three immediate goals: First,
to topple Abu-Mazen as soon as possible. Mahmud Abbas had become the
darling of George Bush, a welcome guest at the White House. The unique
standing of Second,
to wipe out the Road Map in its infancy. The Map obliged
Third,
to put an end to the hudna and give the army back its freedom of action
in all the Palestinian territories. The
question was how this could be achieved without a trace of suspicion
attaching itself to The
means for attaining this goal were selected with great care, taking into
account the simplistic world of Bush with its Good Guys and Bad Guys.
The Bad Guys are the terrorists. Therefore, it was advisable to kill
Hamas and Jihad militants. That would not upset Bush. In the eyes of the
President, to kill terrorists is a Good Thing.
And as a result, the Palestinians would be compelled to break the
hudna. This
is how it happened: On
August 8, Israeli soldiers killed two Hamas militants in This
time it was not even possible even to pin on the victim the appellation
“ticking bomb,” as is usual in such cases. The man was a well-known
political leader. Why was he of all people chosen for assassination? A
military correspondent on Israeli TV made a slip of the tongue: Abu-Shanab
was killed, he said, because he was “available.” Meaning, he was an
easy target because he did not go underground after the bus bombing, as
did the leaders of the military wing. This
time, at long last, the aim was achieved. The Palestinian organizations
announced that they were calling off the hudna. Sharon and Co. rejoiced.
Within hours the Israeli army had again penetrated into the centers of
the Palestinian towns, starting an orgy of arrests and house demolitions
(more than 40 in a single day). The
addict leapt for the drug. His crisis was over, the officers could do
all the things they had been prevented from doing for nine long weeks. But
the situation will not revert to the status quo ante intifada, so to
speak. The attacks and killings will be more numerous and more cruel.
The construction of the Wall deep in the Palestinian territories will be
accelerated, along with the building activity in the settlements. The
army propaganda machine is already preparing the public for the
“expulsion of Arafat.” “Expulsion” is a euphemism produced by
the “verbal laundry” section of the army, one of its most creative
departments. The intention is not to expel the leader from his Ramallah
compound, nor from And
the Americans? Never has the Bush administration looked so pathetic as
here and now. The unfortunate Colin Powell arouses compassion with his
stuttering and his emissary, John Wolf, a wolf without teeth, will go
the way of all his predecessors. After
the implosion of the new order in The
renewal of the cycle of violence will, of course, exacerbate the
economic depression in The
economy, too, is an addict who needs his drug: $9 billion in All
this is being done without consulting the Israeli public. There is no
open discussion, no debate in the tame media, the silent Knesset and the
cabinet of marionettes. That’s what makes it a putsch. To
sum up: The road Map is dead, because Sharon was against it from the
beginning, Bush saw it only as a photo opportunity on a nice background
and Abu-Mazen did not get from Israel and the US anything that he could
present as a Palestinian achievement. What
will happen now? After the shedding of yet more blood and many tears,
the two peoples will arrive once more at the conviction that it is
better to come to an agreement and make peace. Then they will be
compelled to learn the lesson of the last chapter: It must all start
from the end. Only after the picture of the final settlement clearly
emerges can one deal with the immediate problems. Anything else would be
a road map to the abyss. discuss this column in the forum Uri Avnery is a peace activist. |