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Thank You, Dubby by Uri Avnery
By
now, everybody has had a go at analyzing the interview with Dov (“Dubby”)
Weisglass, Ariel Sharon’s most intimate confidant. But there is
precious little to analyze. His statement is crystal clear: the
“redeployment plan” was designed to “freeze” the peace process
for decades, to put all peace plans “in formaldehyde,” to put an end
to the possibility of a Palestinian state, once and for all. A
dozen small settlements will be dismantled in order to keep practically
all the 250,000 Why
did “Dubby” disclose this plan? After all, the disclosure was like
spitting in the face of the Labor Party, exactly when The
answer is simple: Thereafter,
the two “leftist” parties, Labor and Yakhad (formerly Meretz)
announced that they were going to vote for the disengagement plan when Only
Weisglass himself may pay a price. It is difficult to believe that the
beautiful friendship between Dubby and Condy, between Weis and Rice,
will hold after Weisglass practically undressed her in public. But
that is not what is really important. After all, Weisglass did not
reveal anything new to those who know What
is really important is the Weltanschauung, the world-view of A
world where brute force, and only brute force, reigns supreme. This
is a world where there are no past and no future, no lessons of history
and no foreseeing of things to come. Whatever exists now will exist
forever. This
is a world without moral constraints, where the opinions of mankind do
not count. The world of Stalin, who once asked contemptuously: “How
many divisions has the pope?” His
world looks like this: The
only thing that counts is the interest of Their
interest is to take possession of all of the territory between the The
Palestinians are powerless. Hence, they are nothing more than an object
to be kicked around as much as one pleases. There
is only one real power in the world: The United States. They are the
“world management.” All
the power of the That’s
how it is now, and that’s how it is going stay in future. Therefore,
all we need is to maintain the power of the Israeli army and the
alliance with the White House. All the rest is nonsense, fantasies of
eggheads. The
Israeli army and the White House – that is the winning combination.
With it we shall take complete possession of the whole country. There is
no need for a peace process, indeed, there is no need for peace. The
Palestinians are a negligible factor. Let them vegetate for the time
being in their ghettos. In due course, they will disappear from the
country. This
is, in free translation, the world of On
the face of it, a realistic picture. Really?
Is this in truth the real picture? History shows that brute military
power is a blunt instrument that cannot solve complex problems. A leader
who puts his sole trust in it will discover that it is a broken reed
which wounds the hand that grasps it. What
Thomas Jefferson wrote in the American Declaration of Independence about
“a decent respect for the opinions of mankind,” was not just an
empty phrase. It was a realistic appraisal: World public opinion
influences in a thousand ways the behavior of nations and governments.
It can have far-reaching effects. “The pen is mightier than the
sword,” according to a British poet. And the pope does indeed have
divisions, even it they don’t march on the parade ground. Military
might is but one of the forces active in the world. Economic forces do
not have a smaller impact; as a matter of fact, their impact may be much
bigger in the long run. Moral forces are invisible, but their impact is
immense. One of the greatest military leaders in history, Napoleon, was
well aware of this. The
human craving for freedom is invincible, and so is the struggle of
oppressed nations for liberation. To ignore this is not realism, it is
blindness. Even
George W. Bush, himself no less primitive and brutal than The
world is not one-dimensional, even though one country has attained an
impressive military superiority. The world is a very complicated place;
numberless forces are at work, nothing stays in one place. “Everything
is in flux,” as the ancient Greek philosopher said. One
is tempted to paraphrase Hamlet: “There are more things in heaven and
earth, Arik, then are dreamt of in your philosophy.” The
world-view of And
to Dubby, who disclosed it, whatever his motives, many thanks. discuss this column in the forum Uri Avnery is a peace activist. |