"I am proud to be a citizen of a country where the prime minister can be
investigated like an ordinary citizen,'' said Ehud Olmert on July 30,
announcing that he would resign as prime minister in September to defend
himself against corruption allegations. He should be even prouder: three of
Israel's last four prime ministers were under investigation for corruption
when they left office.

To be fair, it was a stroke, not the corruption charges he was facing, that
finally drove Ariel Sharon from office, and Binyamin Netanyahu subsequently
beat the charges against him after being forced out as prime minister.
Politics in Israel is a blood sport, and only the strong survive.

Not one of the country's last five prime ministers has managed to serve out
a full term of office.

What happens next is hard to predict. Tzipi Livni, the foreign minister, and
Shaul Mofaz, former army chief of staff and now transportation minister, are
the leading candidates to succeed Olmert as leader of the Kadima party, but
even if the succession struggle does not split Kadima and wreck the ruling
coalition, an election is probably no further away than the spring of 2009.
The likely winner of that election is Bibi Netanyahu, who is once again the
leader of the right-wing Likud party.

Indeed, the main thing that has kept Ehud Olmert in office for the past two
years, despite the disastrous miscalculation of his 2006 war against
Lebanon, has been the fear on the centre and left of Israeli politics that
the only alternative was a return to power by Netanyahu. And that, in turn,
is a reflection of the great division that paralyses Israeli politics:
between those who think the "demographic danger'' requires major compromises
on territory, and those who do not.

The demographic danger is that Israeli Jews will end up as a minority within
the territory ruled by Israel. It is almost a reality already: the 600,000
Jews who lived in Israel when it was founded in 1948 have grown to six
million, but despite the huge number of Palestinians who fled to surrounding
countries in the various wars, a higher birth rate means that there will
soon also be six million Arabs living in territory under Israeli control.
And then there will be seven million, and then eight million...

Only a little over a million Palestinian Arabs still live within Israel's
1948 borders and actually have Israeli citizenship, but the rest are not far
away, in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, which have been under Israeli
control for more than 40 years. If Israel does not find a way of turning
those territories into a separate Palestinian state, then sooner or later
they will shift from supporting the "two-state solution'' to demanding the
one-state solution.

Olmert was absolutely clear: if this single political space persists, and
the Palestinians become the majority population within it, they will stop
asking for their own state. They will just demand the vote - and Israel will
have to choose between granting them their demand and ceasing to be a Jewish
state, or rejecting it and ceasing to be a democracy.

That dilemma has been implicit ever since the Israeli conquests of 1967. It
is now explicit and imminent. In fact, it is already the position of the
Hamas movement, which controls the Gaza Strip. So Olmert wanted to make a
deal that gave the Palestinians their own state, in order to preserve an
Israel that was both Jewish and democratic.

He never even came close, partly because the Palestinians are now deeply
ambivalent about the two-state solution, but mainly because the Israeli
electorate has never been able to choose between the two options.

Too many Israelis want to hang onto the territories and preserve a Jewish
democracy, and do not accept that those goals are incompatible. Binyamin
Netanyahu was their standard-bearer in the late 1990s, deliberately
sabotaging the Oslo accords when he was prime minister, and he still is
today.

Olmert, for all his faults, backed the two-state option. Netanyahu does not,
although he says whatever is necessary to placate Washington, and he will
probably be back in power within a year. The long paralysis in Israeli
politics will continue. -Gwynne Dyer"

http://www.jordantimes.com/?news=9762


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