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WSWS : News
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East
Sharons bloody offensive plunges Israel into turmoil
By Chris Marsden
9 March 2002
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Israel has been dragged to the brink of disaster, after more
than a week in which Prime Minister Ariel Sharon has ratcheted
up the military offensive aimed at destroying the Palestinian
Authority (PA).
Friday March 8 saw the worst day of violence in the past seventeen
months of conflict, as the army raided Palestinian towns and refugee
camps killing around 40 people. Tanks prevented ambulances from
coming to the aid of the injured and dying. There have been 108
Palestinians and 36 Israelis killed in the past seven days, as
the Israeli Defence Force has made almost constant incursions
into the refugee camps.
Sharons aim, as so often in the past, has been to provoke
retaliatory action by the Islamic fundamentalist groups such as
Hamas, and whip up anti-Palestinian xenophobia, in order to counter
demands for some form of negotiated settlement. This time, however,
his plans appear to have backfired. Terror attacks against Israelis
have indeed escalated, but the impact has not been what Sharon
expected. International criticism of the Israeli government has
never been greaterwith even the United States being forced
to censure his government. Domestic reaction has also become polarised
to an unprecedented degree threatening the survival of the Likud-Labour
coalition government.
As far as the European powers are concerned, Sharon has for
some time been viewed as a political liability. They fear the
radicalising impact of over a thousand Palestinian deaths on the
Arab masses in the Middle East and have urged a return to negotiations.
Sharons latest escalation of the conflict was his response
to a proposal by Saudi Arabia to exchange Israeli withdrawal from
the Occupied Territories for Arab recognition of Israel. The Saudi
regime depends on its supposed role as defender of the Islamic
faith in order to mask its pro-imperialist role and has always
expressed verbal intransigence towards Israel. But it has faced
growing opposition from its own subjects for being too pro-American
and threats from the US for not doing enough to clamp down on
fundamentalist groups. The royal family has made known its belief
that it could not survive a wave of popular anger should the US
wage war on Iraq while it is supporting Israels slaughter
of the Palestinians. Therefore the Saudis took the unusual step
of spearheading what was to all intents and purposes a combined
Arab peace proposal. Israel would not have to accept a Palestinian
political and administrative presence in Jerusalem, or dismantle
all Israeli settlements in the Golan Heights, West Bank and Gaza.
The Arab regimes calculated that if Sharon refused to consider
such an offer, then he would be cast in his correct guise as the
villain of the piece by proving that his real aim was to permanently
annex the Occupied Territories.
The move was immediately backed by European Union foreign policy
supremo Javier Solana and Russia. With his back to the wall, Sharon
upped the ante. The first incursion into the refugee camps came
just hours after Saudi Arabia presented its new peace initiative
at the United Nations. Sharon proclaimed a policy of applying
continuous military pressure on the PA regime, insisting,
Only after they are beaten will we be able to hold talks...
The Palestinian Authority will not fight terror because they are
the terror.
The only succour offered to Sharon came from Washington, with
State Department spokesman Richard Boucher stating that the Bush
administration respected Israels right to defend itself,
while appealing for every effort to be made to
avoid harm to civilians. The same day, White House spokesman
Ari Fleischer blamed former President Clinton for the current
violence in the Middle East, because he had raised expectations
to such a high level that it turned to violence.
As the death toll has mounted, the US pro-Sharon position has
become untenable. First Secretary of State Colin Powell called
on Sharon to take a hard look at his policies... dont
think declaring war on Palestinians will work. Then Bush
announced that his Middle East envoy, Anthony Zinni, would visit
Israel next weekabandoning Washingtons previous insistence
on an end to armed resistance by the Palestinians before the resumption
of peace negotiations.
Domestically, Sharon now faces mounting opposition from the
left and the right.
Within Likud Binyamin Netanyahu is stepping up his hitherto
abortive leadership challenge by claiming that Sharon has made
too many concessions to the peace camp. Likud Minister
Dani Naveh, who represents the Netanyahu camp, said the government
had to take a decision to put an end to Arafats regime.
This position is echoed in the right wing media, a typical
example being the February 27 op-ed piece by Daniel Pipes in the
Jerusalem Post insisting, Victory consists of imposing
ones will on the enemy... History teaches that what appears
to be endless carnage does come to an end when one side gives
up. It appears increasingly likely that the Palestinians are approaching
that point, suggesting that if Israel persists in its present
policies it will get closer to victory.
The fascistic settler parties are clamouring for war. Reserve
Brigadier general Effie Eitam, a potential future leader of the
religious nationalist right, told Israel Radio that if the government
did not take a decision to destroy the PA, we will bring
a war upon ourselves.... More force, and more forceas much
force as we have was needed.
Criticism of Sharon on the grounds of his having failed to
act decisively finds no small degree of popular support. There
are reports of growing numbers of Israelis applying for private
gun licenses. But another hitherto inarticulate or suppressed
sentiment is also coming to the fore. For the first time since
Sharon came to power, he is facing widespread opposition from
broad sections of the Israeli population who are demanding an
end to the conflict.
Many people are now prepared to challenge Sharons transparent
provocations. Adam Keller, a spokesman for the Peace Block movement
told a World Socialist Web Site correspondent, During
Ariel Sharons year in power, whenever a peace initiative
dared rear its head, the government and the army were quick with
a major bloody provocationwhich never failed to precipitate
an also bloody retribution from the Palestinians side, which entailed
a new revenge and then a new cycle of revenge upon revenge upon
revenge, until the peace initiative is drowned in blood and forgotten.
Keller added, This week the Saudi Crown Prince suggested
having the whole Arab world recognise Israel in return for a complete
Israeli withdrawal from the Occupied Territories. Sharon responded
by sending two full infantry brigades, plus numerous tanks and
helicopter gunships, to invade and occupy two refugee camps, killing
more than 20 armed militants in two days and wounding
several hundred more... Many of the dead and wounded turned out,
on closer examination, to be unarmed civilians, among them children
and aged civilians.
The initial focus of the growing opposition to Sharons
war has been provided by the protest by more than 300 reserve
soldiers who have signed a petition first launched on January
25 saying they will not take part in missions of oppression
within the Occupied Territories. Polls show extraordinary levels
of supportbetween 15 and 33 percentfor an action that
has been denounced as treasonous.
Opposition to Sharon is highly confused and presently is not
politically distinguished from the positions being advanced by
section of the Israeli ruling class and supported by the European
Union and others. Many newspapers and even layers of the military
have warned that Sharon has gone too far and is in danger of unleashing
forces that may yet destroy the state of Israel. Some have called
on the government to resign. Nevertheless there is a pronounced
class-based element to the present movement, which began as a
rank-and-file rebellion against the official pro-war policies
of Labour and the capitulation to xenophobia of much of the old
peace movement.
Sharon has only been able to pursue his aggressive militaristic
agenda because of the political disorientation created in the
working class by the failure of the previous One Nation Labour-led
coalition to deliver on its popular mandate for peace. Instead
of opposing Sharon, Labour joined his coalition and took up key
positions such as Shimon Peres becoming foreign minister and party
leader Binyamin Ben-Eliezer as defence minister.
Even the opposition within Labour, led by Yossi Beilin who
is in favour of pulling out of the coalition, and the liberals
of Meretz and Peace Now are far to the right of popular sentiment.
At a recent pro-peace demonstration attended by 15,000-20,000
people, neither Beilin nor Meretz leader Yossi Sarid would take
a stand in defence of the reservists protest.
Fear of a sharp political polarisation within Israel is another
key concern motivating the European powers in pressing for the
United States to end its support for Sharon.
Labour has so far refused to heed calls for it to leave the
government, but this is being argued for strenuously by sections
of the Israeli and European media. The liberal Haaretz
called the partnership shameful, while the Financial
Times of London argued, A Labour return to opposition
would allow it to regroup and offer a more convincing alternative
vision for ending the conflict. Opinion polls suggest that Israelis
are confused. They need to examine carefully the option of negotiations.
Many Israelis back harsher measures against Palestinians while
also reacting positively to any peace initiative. Unless Labour
rebuilds its own approach, the alternative to Mr Sharon will be
Benjamin Netanyahu, the former prime minister with equally hardline
views. A stronger leftist opposition could have the added benefit
of influencing Washington.
The Financial Times stresses only the danger of a further
lurch to the right, but the discrediting of Labour as a viable
alternative to Likud and the Zionist right opens the way for a
major political realignment within Israel on the left involving
a unified offensive against war by Jewish and Arab workers.
See Also:
Protest by Israeli reservists
opens new chapter in the struggle against Zionism
[9 February 2002]
Israels war
measures and the legacy of Zionism
[16 October 2000]
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