Well looks like Barak aka Brugg may need a new PR man?   May need to
seek out city of refuge?   Next goes Blair hopefully........

So the writing is on the wall and it isn't even November

Why does Osama bin Laden smile - with a 5 million dollar price on his
head placed there by little Madelline Albright,  his people are loyal to
him ......why does Sadaam Hussein smile?
His people are loyal and maybe someone will step in an stop this stuff -
very simple, cut off all monies to Israel and stop talking peace while
preparing for the armageddon?

Think of domestic jews and moslems as say, the American Indian?   And
chickens coming home to roost in Holy Land and cui bono?

This hotel business can be very lucrative.....somehow I have feeling
arabs sincere about worshiping Allah and there are still those who
worship the golden calf or is that a red heifer?



   _______   ____   ______
  /  |/  /  /___/  / /_ //    M I D - E A S T   R E A L I T I E S
 / /|_/ /  /_/_   / /\\         Making Sense of the Middle East
/_/  /_/  /___/  /_/  \\©            http://www.MiddleEast.Org

                  PLEASE TELL YOUR FRIENDS ABOUT MER
     To receive MER regularly just email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]



                     UPCOMING TOMORROW FROM MER:
                        "The End of Israel?"
       Arafat Fears Label As Benedict Arnold Rather than George Washington



           THE ELECTION CAMPAIGN: THE WRITING IS ON THE WALL
                         by Hemi Shalev

[Ma'ariv - 21 January -Translated from Hebrew}:  The new Ma'ariv-Gallop poll
questioned a particularly large sample of 1,100 people, putting special emphasis
on the Arab population and new immigrants. Its principle conclusion is clear
and unequivocal: on February 6, Israel will have a new Prime Minister.

Chances are it will be Ariel Sharon. Only in theory is there a slight chance
it will actually be Shimon Peres. What is certain, unless there is a cataclysmic
event that changes the way the world works, Ehud Barak is going to lose these
elections, probably big time. Polls can be wrong, but not that wrong.

The incredible gap between Sharon and Barak remains stable, around 20 percent.
The election broadcasts have not helped; Barak's frequent media interviews have
made no difference, and the negative campaign against Sharon hasn't done a thing.
When that is the situation 18 days prior to elections, the expression "not taking
off" is the height of tactfulness.

The writing is clearly on the wall. The public simply does not like Barak. Full
stop. That is what the new poll shows. When you add to that the epileptic peace
process, the deteriorating security situation, and a widespread feeling, even
if not completely justified, of a worsening economy, you get a sure recipe for
certain knockout for the Prime Minister. Barak's decision to advance the elections
seems, in retrospect, one of the biggest slip-ups in the history of Israeli politics.

In military terms, Barak is reminiscent of the famous American General George
Custer, who became known as a brave commander who consciously led his soldiers,
against all reason and with impossible inferiority, to a fatal loss against the
Sioux Indians. The Americans dubbed the 1876 battle at Little Big Horn, Montana,
"Custer's last stand,". Custer and his soldiers became famed for their bravery,
but the bottom line is they were all massacred.

Now, in their time of distress, Barak's advisors are trying to shift the blame
to Peres. They claim Barak voters will continue to remain undecided as long as
Peres is a present-absentee candidate. They are forgetting that Barak's public
standing began to fall to hitherto unknown depths long before anyone even breathed
the name Shimon
Peres. The poll shows that even if Peres were to clearly leave the race with
determination, it would change nothing in terms of Barak.

Barak swore this week that he would not leave the arena. It will be very difficult
for him to release himself from this vow, and it is not so clear he would want
to. From his tone in private conversation, it is very possible Barak himself
would prefer to have Sharon as Prime Minister and not Peres. The way to ensure
that, for now, is to stay in the race to the very end. "Only Barak will bring
Sharon," a frustrated left-winger said this week, paraphrasing the Likud slogan.

At any rate, Peres is far from being a sure thing. Although the public has great
sympathy for him, the polls foresee a tie, and based on past experience, Peres
is a sure loser in tie situations. A lot will depend on organization and motivation,
and the Likud has an incredible advantage in both these. But at least Peres would
lose honorably. One cannot say even that about Barak.

                Head to Head

Q: If elections for the premiership were held today and the candidates were Ehud
Barak and Ariel Sharon, for whom would you vote?  Sharon - 51% (50% last week);
Barak- 31% (same as last week); Blank ballot/don't know - 18%

Q: Suppose Shimon Peres were running for the premiership instead of Ehud Barak,
for whom would you vote?
Sharon - 45% (44% last week); Peres - 44% (46% last week); Blank ballot/don't
know - 11%

Q: And if Shimon Peres were to make a final and unequivocal announcement that
he will not run for premier, for whom would you vote?  Sharon - 52%; Barak -
31%; Blank ballot/don't know - 17%…

                Gut Feeling

Those who support Barak do not understand why he deserves this. They can understand
the right wing, who is ideologically hell-bent against Barak, but not the center,
and certainly not the left. Especially, when it is against Sharon, the man who
until recently was considered decidedly unelectable.

Objectively, Barak indeed is not without achievement. He got the IDF out of Lebanon
and the economy out of recession, and went a long way in trying to reach a peace
agreement with the Palestinians. Outside observers , most of whom like Barak
a lot more than his public does, cannot fathom how incredibly behind he is in
the polls.

It is reasonable to believe that the central reason for Barak's inferior position
stems from the shaking of the public's feeling of security as a result of the
al-Aksa Intifada, and perhaps just as importantly, from the feeling of humiliation
and powerlessness in face of the situation that has arisen. But even that is
not enough to explain the force of Barak's fall.

Something basic went wrong in the relations between Barak and the public, between
the leader and his congregation. And that is a gut feeling, it does not come
from the head.

Barak, even those who oppose him will agree, is full of good intentions, but
they are not what led him to the image-hell he is in currently. His "conduct"
is what brought him here, fighting alone without any allies, with such supporters
as Peres and Yossi Sarid, who even in the televised broadcasts cannot hide their
aversion for the candidate they are endorsing.

This is reminiscent of the 1999 elections, but in reverse. Then it was Netanyahu
who had no chance, because everyone, with the exception of a core of supporters,
simply had had enough of him, in the government, in the Knesset, in the media
and among the public. Sometime, during his short term of office, Netanyahu passed
the point of no return, after which it would make no difference what he said
or did. The question was not whether he would be kicked out, but when. The public
wanted a divorce, at all costs. Now, they want the same from Barak.

Barak dug this hole with his own hands, with the help of mistaken advice from
some of his advisors and confidants. He brought himself to a political death
through continuous zigzagging, always doing so through some convoluted internal
reasoning clear only to him. Every time he changed direction, Barak lost another
group of
supporters, raised disappointment and even grudges. Now he is trying to convince
his public of the need to unite in view of the big danger of Ariel Sharon, but
the public is not ready to do so, neither to forget nor forgive. Even if there
are many people who will not vote for Ehud Barak and then regret it after February
6, they cannot overcome their desire to punish him, here and now.

A candidate who 57% of the public say they do not like, cannot win the elections
and this truth cannot be changed in the 18 days before the elections. In the
following "sympathy parade" Barak is way behind, closer to Yasser Arafat than
to Bill Clinton, as it were. His rival, Ariel Sharon, is liked by 48% of the
public, whereas Peres, as always, is the king of the polls…

The poll was conducted on Wednesday [17 January] and questioned 1,100 people
who form a representative sample of Israel's adult population.  The maximum margin
of error is 3%.




        MiD-EasT RealitieS  -  www.MiddleEast.Org
        Phone:  202 362-5266    Fax:  815 366-0800
                           Email:   [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To subscribe email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with subject SUBSCRIBE
To unsubscribe email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with subject UNSUBSCRIBE



Reply via email to