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Sep 11, 2007 22:11 | Updated Sep 11, 2007 22:11
 
'It's possible to correct the future'
By GREER FAY CASHMAN AND DAVID HOROVI

Notwithstanding the stream of revelations about alleged misdemeanors by public 
figures, growing internal violence and other negative aspects of life in 
Israel, President Shimon Peres continues to view the country from a thoroughly 
idealistic and upbeat perspective. 

 
Shimon Peres.
Photo: Ariel Jerozolimski [file]

Our Rosh Hashana interview took place just before he left for the first 
overseas state visit of his presidency, to Italy, and we asked Peres how he 
would present Israel to the Jewish community of Rome. Positively, was the 
essence of his response, and with immense enthusiasm and confidence. 

First of all, Peres took pains to assert that Israel is not corrupt, whatever 
embattled Accountant-General Yaron Zelekha might have to say. "A corrupt state 
is one which does not fight corruption," Peres said. 

He added that in most of the corruption cases involving well-known figures, no 
charges had been filed. "When I hear the commotion and see the outcome, there's 
a big discrepancy," he said. 

And he implied that the media might be exaggerating the purported blight. 
"There's a lot of publicity about crime, but we don't have more crime than 
anyone else," he declared. "Israel does not have an Italian Mafia." 

A Russian mafia, then? 

The president wouldn't hear of it. The aliya from the Former Soviet Union was 
an extraordinary blessing. Although Communism was not an intelligent movement, 
he said, "We got the most intelligent people." 

JUST A few weeks into this culminating position for Israel's elder-statesman, 
Shimon Peres seems thoroughly at home at Beit Hanassi, even though wife Sonia 
is resolutely not living here with him. 

His schedule is packed, and he couldn't be happier about it, rejoicing that 
along with routine presidential duties, the government calls on him to use his 
contacts and good offices to open doors and resolve crises. 

He has had the furniture rearranged in the presidential office - and conducts 
interviews from armchairs and sofas around a coffee table, rather than across 
the desk his predecessor favored. And he has replaced many of the paintings and 
the photographs that used to enjoy prominence. At the entrance to his offices 
are several black-and-white shots featuring first prime minister David 
Ben-Gurion in the company of the then-youthful protege Peres and others, and a 
color snap of Peres and his perpetual rival-partner, Yitzhak Rabin. These were 
not here in the Moshe Katsav era. 

Set back from the hustle and bustle of the Jerusalem streets outside, Beit 
Hanassi has always exuded a rarefied atmosphere of well-ordered calm - even 
when, as with his predecessor's final weeks, the incumbent's daily routine is 
anything but. With Peres ensconced here, the distance from day-to-day strains 
and complexities seems particularly wide: For this president, the extremists of 
Iran are bound to fail; peacemaking with the Palestinians really might work 
this time; and Israel has the unique brainpower and potential to serve as a 
light unto the nations in countering everything from terrorism to global 
warming. 

He speaks quietly, apparently conserving energy, but his mind darts rapidly 
from issue to issue, and on most subjects he has an anecdote, an aphorism, or 
both, to illustrate the point. 

"I don't say that Jews are the most talented people in the world, but Jews do 
have extraordinary talent," he enthused, apropos his vision of Israel as a 
global laboratory - what he called "a pilot plant" - for world technology in 
the realms of ecology, alternate energy, and countering water and air 
pollution. The foundations have already been laid, he reasoned, at the Volcani 
Agricultural Research Institute, the IDF and in the booming local hi-tech 
industry. 

Given how much constructive input the Jews have made down the generations, he 
then mused, it was plain illogical for Jews to be faulted by anti-Semites for 
the evils of the world. "We're just a small people. Why do they blame us?" 

And then he answered his own question, with a gentle smile: "Because we want to 
change the world," he said. "We've never been a satisfied people."
Excerpts: 

Last time we heard you speak, at the Jewish People Policy Planning Institute's 
recent conference, we came away with the impression that you weren't sure 
Iran's drive to a nuclear capability would be thwarted. 

I'm not sure that it is possible to prevent them from attaining nuclear 
weapons. But that doesn't mean they will prevail. Hitler also won, and broke 
his head... Whoever threatens the future of humanity has no future of his own. 

It's just a matter of time [until this Iranian regime] fails. It will fail for 
three simple reasons: It foments terrorism; it seeks nuclear weapons; and it 
takes extreme religious positions. And if those three come together, the world 
becomes ungovernable. So in the end, they will be brought down. There's no 
escaping this. I'm just not sure [the nuclear drive] can be prevented now, 
because of the divisions in the international community. 

But Israel is on the front line. If it takes too long... 

The world believes there are still two or three years. And it has started 
taking economic sanctions, which are pretty effective. And there are some 
things happening [in the right direction], such as the election of [French 
President Nicolas] Sarkozy. So now at the heart of Europe you have Sarkozy and 
[German Chancellor Angela] Merkel who have determined positions on this. That's 
good news. 

There have been several instances of nuclear weapons drives being prevented or 
removed. In the Ukraine, Kazakhstan and Belarus, for instance. In Libya with 
[Muammar] Gaddafi, there was a very subtle negotiation. South Africa was 
prevented - through a combination of sanctions and Nelson Mandela. And lately 
with North Korea. 

As in those cases, I believe Iran will create such circumstances as to 
galvanize a united position against it. I've spoken with [Russian President 
Vladimir] Putin about this. He, too, is adamant that he is not prepared to see 
Iran go nuclear. 

What do you make of the new effort at progress with the Palestinians? After all 
the years of a lack of Palestinian Authority action against terrorism, of [PA 
Chairman] Mahmoud Abbas's weakness, why should this time be different? 


First of all, I don't accept that Abu Mazen [Abbas] has proved not to be 
strong. He has demonstrated strength. Look at the starting point and where he 
is now. He wasn't outsmarted. But the Palestinians didn't demonstrate enough 
talent to establish a state - the talent to establish unity, the talent to 
establish a single army. 

There are two movements, one political, one religious. The first, Fatah, 
understands that in politics you make compromises, you make agreements. For the 
second, the religious, there can be no compromises. Quite the reverse. 

Why is Hamas firing Kassams from Gaza? We left Gaza. We took out the 
settlements. We took the army out. There is no Israeli presence. What do they 
want? What do they want to achieve? They don't want to achieve anything. They 
want to destroy. Their ideology is the ideology of destruction - to destroy 
everything modern and to establish religious hegemony in the Middle East. More 
than they are fighting for a Palestinian state, they are working for religious 
hegemony, for the hegemony of a single religion. 

But they have no chance, because they don't offer a future to anyone. Not even 
to their own people. And in Gaza you can now see people asking, "What does 
Hamas want from us?" You can't feed the children Kassams for breakfast. 

They thought that they'd fire [on Israel], the world would pay, and the 
Palestinian public would support them. But the world won't fund terrorism, and 
the Palestinians, even if they wanted to, can't live like this. 

So that leaves the [option of dealing with the Fatah] political movement. There 
is someone to talk to. Until now, Hamas had essentially prevented dialogue. 

How is this dialogue process with the Palestinians now playing out, and what's 
your role? 

The drive to peace must follow two tracks - political and economic. The 
political track must be bilateral, and only bilateral - between the Israeli 
leadership and the Palestinian leadership - because that negotiation has to be 
carried out simultaneously with the other side and at home. Olmert has to check 
each morning how far he can go without losing his majority. He can't only look 
at the other side. It has to be held in two directions. It's not simple. War 
unites people, but the price of peace divides them. 

And these [political] negotiations also have to be secret. There is an opening 
position and a fallback position. You can't bring an agreement to the people 
[for approval] until it is finalized. 

That does not apply to the economic track. Those talks should be open and 
transparent. 

There's been no important development in the world since World War II that has 
not been achieved through economic change. Economics does not recognize 
frontiers or distances, nor differences between men and women, or black, white 
and yellow. 

At the heart of this economic dialogue must be Jordan, the Palestinians and us. 
Global warming is coming at us all. Look at the Dead Sea erosion. Look at the 
water and air pollution. there's no choice but to work together. 

On this, as I've told the prime minister, there is a win-win solution. All 
three peoples agree [on the need for concerted action]. All the parties in 
Israel agree. 

So hold the diplomatic contacts on a secret channel, and present the results to 
the public when you reach agreement. And the economic negotiations hold 
globally - open to all. Bring global input and capital. 

This [economic progress] has political impact. People think that "peace" is a 
summit meeting, a photo opportunity. But the ordinary man feels nothing. 
Economics is felt; this is peace between people. If we establish two economic 
parks in the West Bank, for instance, people will find work. 

[In the past,] the Palestinian Authority got financial support, but ... they 
built an administration of 160,000 people, which created the sense of 
corruption, as a consequence of which Fatah lost out. You have to bolster 
economic growth without this being dependent on the political process. 

How is progress on the secret political track? 

I don't expect [ongoing reports] on the progress of the secret talks, because 
otherwise it becomes a media argument, a public relations argument, and this 
kind of negotiation doesn't need public relations. 

But my impression, to be very cautious, is that there is chemistry between Abu 
Mazen and Ehud Olmert. They are making progress. How far are they progressing? 
... In my opinion, there is a chance to reach a declaration of principles [with 
regard to a Palestinian state]. Because the distances [between the sides] are 
not so wide any more. The distances have narrowed so much since Oslo. 

Israel formally agrees to the solution of two states for two peoples. There is 
agreement to a Palestinian state. Both sides know full well that the right of 
return [for Palestinian refugees to Israel] is out of the question. There is 
not a single Israeli who would agree to absorb three million Arab refugees into 
Israel and transform Israel from a country with a Jewish majority to one with a 
Jewish minority. As for territory, the differences have been reduced to a 
matter of a few percent. 

And what of Jerusalem? 

What Clinton said: Jewish parts of Jerusalem for Israel, and the Arab parts for 
the Arabs. And there has to be an arrangement whereby all of the faiths can 
pray in the places that are holy to them. 

You mean some kind of non-sovereign arrangement in the Old City? 

I don't want to get into that 

Do you think this government, or any government, would have the capacity to 
remove or relocate settlers affected by such an agreement? 

The question is whether this is the only option. There could be relocation 
within Judea and Samaria... We'll have to see. 

Look, you can't correct the past. What is possible is to correct the future. I 
don't think the settlers are unaware of the problems that exist. 

Remember all the noise prior to the evacuation of the Gaza settlements. 

You mean that the pessimistic scenarios proved unfounded? 

Here, too, you have to work through agreement.
For instance, what happened to the Gaza evacuees has to be corrected, in terms 
of housing and compensation. 

You yourself established some of the settlements that would have to be 
dismantled under such an agreement. Was that a mistake? 

At the time of the establishment of Ofra, for instance, we were worried about 
the protection of Jerusalem. I couldn't think about the demographic issues 20 
years hence; I had to to think about how to protect Jerusalem there and then. 

You said when you took up this position that your partisan political career was 
over. How do you define inappropriate political activism for a president? Lots 
of people would argue that the nature of your peace efforts is partisan. 

[Laughs] To be in favor of peace is political? To be in favor of security is 
political? 

In principle, of course not. But define for us how you distinguish between the 
permissible and the forbidden for you as president. 

I, as, president am committed to respect all people, all opinions and all 
religions. But the president is neither empty-headed nor soulless. I want to be 
the president of everybody, not the president of nobody. How can I explain 
Israel [internationally] if I don't have a point of view? I look at the 
consensus ... I explain the view of the majority. 

Many people would argue that seeking an accommodation with Abbas is partisan, 
advancing the interest of only some of the people. 

It's the majority view, and you can say that there is a minority that thinks 
differently. It's the official Israeli position, approved by the Knesset. It's 
not my private position... 

If Abbas invited you to Ramallah, would you go? 

Do another interview if I get an invitation. 

Do you have contacts with other regional leaders? 

Yes. The government asks me to. There was just now a crisis with Turkey [over 
the definition of the Armenian Genocide]. The Foreign Ministry asked me to 
speak to the Turkish prime minister. I did, and the crisis passed. I don't do 
anything without government approval. 

And what of contacts with those who don't have relations with us? 

We wish that they did. 

What would you tell them, ahead of Rosh Hashana?


That relations are not merely rhetoric. They need to be expressed in deeds. I 
greatly respect what the Saudis have said [a presumed reference to the Saudi 
peace initiative], but this is music without an orchestra. 

The Syrians sometimes say some correct things. But they're sending weapons to 
Hizbullah; they are hosting Islamic extremist leaders; and they won't speak 
directly to us. What do they expect us to do? 

How worried are you by the sense that the positive momentum towards Israel's 
normalization in the Middle East - post-[the late Egyptian president] Anwar 
Sadat's visit to Jerusalem in 1997 - is being reversed by Iran? 

There's something in that concern. But as I said, those who don't believe in 
the future have no future. The Iranian regime is trying to return its people to 
the past. They can't just offer their own people nuclear arms... The world has 
changed. If they don't move forward, if they don't allow their own people to 
become educated, they will disappear from the world. 

The Stone Age didn't end because they ran out of stones. The age was over. 
What's important is that the era of openness [in Iran] arrives before the more 
dangerous [nuclear] era.



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