-Caveat Lector-

"The Bulldozer"

How Ariel Sharon plowed his way back onto the bloody stage of Mideast
politics.

http://www.salon.com/news/feature/2000/10/17/sharon/print.html
- - - - - - - - - - - -
By Flore de Pr�neuf

Oct. 17, 2000 | JERUSALEM -- As negotiators in the Middle East work furiously
to broker a cease-fire agreement to end the violence that has cost nearly 100
lives, the man many Palestinians blame for inciting the riots looms ominously
in the background.

Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak has threatened to bring Ariel Sharon,
Israel's famed and feared old warrior, into a national unity government if
the U.S.-brokered summit in Egypt fails or the violence continues. The move
would be a response to the scare tactics drummed up by Palestinian leader
Yasser Arafat, whose own inflammatory actions during the past two weeks
included releasing dozens of terrorists belonging to the Hamas organization
from Palestinian jails.

If Sharon enters Barak's government, "our deterrence will be better,"
believes Efraim Inbar, director of the Besa Center for Strategic Studies at
Bar-Ilan University. "In this region there's an advantage to being feared."

On paper, references to Sharon swallow up gallons of type in the indexes of
even the most basic books on the Middle East: Sharon and the War of
Independence; Sharon and the Six Day War; Sharon and the Yom Kippur War --
Sharon and every single Israeli-Arab conflict for that matter, up to the
present deadly clashes. Sharon as agriculture minister; defense minister;
housing minister; industry and trade minister; infrastructure minister;
foreign minister. Sharon and the Sabra and Shatila massacre, in which
hundreds of Palestinian refugees were slaughtered in cold blood by Lebanese
militiamen while the Israeli army -- under his leadership -- stood by and did
nothing.

So when Sharon set foot on the white pavement of the Noble Sanctuary, the
airy, tree-lined esplanade of Jerusalem's most precious mosques, for an early
morning stroll two weeks ago, his visit could hardly have gone by unnoticed.
Had Sharon not announced his visit days in advance, summoned the world's TV
cameras and mobilized hundreds of policemen in riot gear, the sound of his
footstep may still have sent shock waves crashing across the Middle East.

By now, his name has been bellowed and spat in heavy Arabic accents by
hundreds of thousands of protesters in Israel and the Palestinian
territories; in Lebanon, Syria, Jordan and Egypt; from Morocco, on the
Atlantic coast, to the gulf shores of Iraq. Even the U.N. Security Council,
from its Olympian cloud in New York, berated Sharon for his provocative
behavior, albeit without explicitly naming him, in a resolution 10 days ago.

Whether his visit alone unleashed the torrent of stone-throwing, death and
anger that is sweeping the region is questionable. Many claim the
Palestinians were looking for a pretext to drop out of a dead-end diplomatic
peace process and seized the prospect of war, unleashed by Sharon's visit, to
advance their political struggle.

Others, including Sharon himself, admit the point of the visit was to make a
bold, political statement: What Muslims call the Noble Sanctuary is revered
by Jews as the Temple Mount, the site of the biblical first and second
temples. As such, it is Jewish property, and a walk on the Mount is every
Jew's God-given right. (Granted, most rabbis rule that Jews should not set
foot on the Mount, precisely because of its sanctity -- but Sharon is a
big-picture man.)

By affirming Israel's exclusive sovereignty over the most coveted piece of
real estate in the annals of Palestinian-Israeli history, Sharon was asking
for trouble. But like a tragic hero, it was almost inevitable he would choose
to do so.

Since he entered politics a quarter-century ago, banking on his reputation as
a brilliant warrior, Sharon's actions have been motivated by one principle:
seizing the offense by creating what Israelis call "facts on the ground."

In the occupied territories, that has meant building fortified settlements
perched on hills like medieval city-states that dominate Palestinian towns
and give the Israeli heartland more security depth. Or buying property, smack
in the middle of the Jerusalem's Muslim quarter, to assert the right of Jews
to live wherever they please. No matter that U.N. Resolution 242 calls for
the withdrawal of Israel's troops from the territories it captured in 1967,
namely the West Bank (including East Jerusalem), Gaza and the Golan Heights.
The idea is to push forward, without bothering with the legalese, until the
reality of Jewish life in the biblical land of Judea and Samaria is too
strong to dislodge.

More than any other politician, Sharon has been the engine behind Israel's
thinly disguised annexation policy. Whatever ministerial portfolio fell into
his hands, Sharon made sure to direct massive state funds toward building
houses, roads and water pipes that would consolidate Israel's grip in the
occupied territories. Not for nothing have Israelis nicknamed Sharon "the
bulldozer."

No wonder, then, that Palestinians see red when Sharon's name crops up.
Thanks to Sharon's legendary drive, roughly 200,000 Israelis now live in
strategically key areas of the West Bank and Gaza, protected by military
outposts and connected to Israel proper with bypass roads. This heavy
infrastructure has reduced the Palestinian territorial gains, stipulated by
the 1993 Oslo accords, to isolated islands of small Bantustans, throttled by
military checkpoints.

Israel's insistence on keeping most of these settlements intact in any final
peace deal explains, in part, the Palestinian distaste for the diplomatic
game at hand. Settlements and the various security zones Israel has designed
to virtually strangle Palestinian towns also explain why there are so many
sites of Palestinian-Israeli violence in the current clashes. Around
settlements in Gaza, Hebron, Nablus and Ramallah, the Israeli army is still a
visible occupying force, an irritating fish bone stuck, seemingly forever, in
Palestinian throats.

It would be unfair, however, to pin the whole mess on Sharon. Settlement
expansion has been an Israeli policy under both dovish and hawkish
governments, from Menachem Begin's right-wing premiership to Barak's
left-wing tenure.

Although many consider Sharon a sort of gladiator for a "Greater Israel,"
some observers insist the man is not an ideologue, but a pragmatist whose
real aim is to increase his own power. They point to the fact that Sharon has
been in a handful of different political parties; and it was Sharon who
ordered the evacuation of the Sinai settlement of Yamit when Israel gave the
Sinai back to Egypt after the 1979 peace treaty.

"Sharon has a record of relative moderation when he has power, and of extreme
belligerence in the opposition," notes Yaron Ezrahi, an Israeli political
scientist.

"No matter what happens, he needs to be at the center of it," says Zeev
Chafets, a columnist at the New York Daily News who has known Sharon for 30
years. "He doesn't care so much about the shape of things. He wants to be
shaping things."

And, for most of his 72 years, Sharon has. In addition to shaping the map of
an embryonic Palestine to suit Israeli interests, Sharon also shaped today's
political landscape by creating the Likud, one of Israel's two main parties.
He helped elect the first right-wing government in 1977, and helped the
baby-faced hawkish Benjamin Netanyahu come to power in 1996. Most
significantly, he literally saved Israel during the Yom Kippur War of 1973,
by audaciously leading his outnumbered troops across the Suez Canal and
attacking the Egyptians from the rear.

The legendary warrior was born in 1928 on a rough farm cooperative near what
is now Tel Aviv, the son of Russian-Jewish pioneers in British-ruled
Palestine. According to a biography by Uzi Benziman entitled "An Israeli
Caesar," Ariel, known as "Arik," grew up carrying a club to keep away
marauding Arabs and punish neighbors who dared pick his father's fruit. At
14, he joined the Haganah, the Jewish underground that later became the
Israeli Defense Forces.

Stories about Sharon's ruthlessness, demonstrated in battle after battle, are
legion. There was the time in the 1950s when Sharon was head of the 101 unit,
a special force designed to fight Arab terrorism, and needed to launch a
reprisal raid against Syria. His men were staked out on a kibbutz near the
border, with orders not to move until provoked. According to the story,
Sharon came running in one afternoon, saying: "Great news! They just killed
the guard!"

Another telling anecdote places him in 1973, desperate to break the
cease-fire agreement between Egypt and Israel, ready to stage training
maneuvers to provoke an Egyptian reaction. The plan, which would have put his
troops at great risk, was foiled by the army's upper echelon; but, says
Chafets, "he was prepared to risk lots of lives just to get a fight going."

The Sabra and Shatila massacre of 1982 -- for which Sharon was found
"indirectly responsible" by an official Israeli investigative commission --
was his most memorable and disastrous blunder. He was stripped of his job as
defense minister and put in the political dog house. Sharon, who saw himself
as Israel's next prime minister, made the most out of the minor portfolios he
was given, continuing to push forward his settlement plan no matter what
title he held.

But over the years, as the war he hotly pursued in Lebanon festered on,
claiming more than 1,500 Israeli lives between the invasion of 1982 and last
May's long-overdue troop withdrawal, Sharon's mystique as the nation's savior
lost some of its shine.

But he's still here and, like the Energizer Bunny, he keeps marching on. With
the death of Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin in 1995 and the retirement of
President Ezer Weizman this summer, Sharon is one of the only original
Israeli statesmen still around.

Sharon's only total eclipse from public life occurred as the Oslo peace
accords were hammered out under the Rabin government. The election of
Netanyahu brought him back into the public light. When the U.S. pressured
Netanyahu to sign a new interim accord with the Palestinians at the Wye River
summit in 1998, he made Sharon his foreign minister to assuage the
disgruntled right. In the end, however, Sharon proved a reasonable sidekick,
and convinced Netanyahu to sign a peace deal he loathed on the dotted line.

Through his brilliant army career, Sharon has built friendships across the
ideological divide. (He is said to be close to the peace-loving Shimon Peres,
for example.) And his charm recently spun the head of a left-wing Israeli
filmmaker, Avi Mograbi, who created a documentary called "How I Learned to
Overcome Fear and Love Arik Sharon."

But as he approaches his twilight years, Sharon "doesn't look like a dashing
general anymore. He was a tough guy -- now he's just a fat slob," offers
Chafets.

Yet the time to write Sharon's political obituary has not come. As his Temple
Mount visit has shown, Sharon is willing to pay a high price not to be
written off politically. Analysts believe the PR stunt was aimed at
outflanking Netanyahu, his rival on the right, at a time when Netanyahu,
cleared of criminal charges, was about to make a political comeback.

Alluding to the Temple Mount as "the bedrock of our faith," Sharon the
non-kosher Jew, rallied the support of the religious right. The Palestinian
uproar that followed has broadened his appeal even more in Israel. The past
two weeks' brutal riots have made Sharon's black-and-white, us-vs.-them
vision of Palestinian-Israeli relations -- forged during Israel's many wars
-- fashionable again. Israelis too young to remember Sharon's martial feats
know at least one thing now: Sharon is tough with Arabs; Arabs understand
only force; therefore, Sharon is the one we need.

Sharon's clever maneuver, which has cost, indirectly, nearly 100 lives so
far, may well succeed. To pull the country through the crisis that Sharon in
large part provoked, Barak is thinking of forming a unity government in which
the old general, as head of the opposition Likud Party, would be asked to
play a significant role.

To Sharon, fighting the Arabs and staying in power is his life's calling. But
to the outside world, placing Sharon at center stage is akin to calling on a
pyromaniac to extinguish a fire.

The return of Sharon, the "Butcher of Sabra and Shatila" and the defiler of
Al-Aksa mosque, will be viewed as a catastrophic strike by most Palestinians.
According to Saeb Erekat, a chief Palestinian negotiator and one of the last
moderates in town, Sharon is a "death kiss to the peace process. If General
Sharon is going to be Barak's partner, we no longer have a partner in
Israel."

They'll have an old cowboy to contend with instead.


- - - - - - - - - - - -

About the writer
Flore de Preneuf covers the Middle East for Salon News.

<A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/">www.ctrl.org</A>
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance�not soap-boxing�please!  These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'�with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds�is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:
http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html
 <A HREF="http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html">Archives of
[EMAIL PROTECTED]</A>

http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
 <A HREF="http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/">ctrl</A>
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

Reply via email to