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WSWS : News
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Israel: Sharon establishes new government with ultra-nationalist
and fascistic parties
By David Cohen
3 March 2003
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Less than a month after his victory in the national elections,
Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon has formed a coalition government
with an eight-seat majority based on his Likud party, the neo-liberal
and avowedly secular Shinui party, the National Religious Party
and the National Unity Party.
The National Religious Party (NRP) is headed by Efi Eitam,
who was a brigadier general in the Israeli Defence Forces. Eitam
is considered as one of the most radical right-wing politicians
and is an open supporter of ethnic cleansingexpelling or
killing the entire Palestinian leadership and reoccupying the
territories now under Palestinian control. The National Unity
Party, headed by Avigdor Liberman, is a fascistic formation that
calls on Sharon to bomb Palestinian cities and towns, expel the
Palestinians, and employ torture against Israeli leftist activists.
If it was not a Jewish government, we could have said
this was an anti-Semitic government with fascist elements,
was the comment of Yossi Sarid, the leader of the small social
democratic party Meretz, during the discussion in Israels
parliament, the Knesset.
Sharons new government was established after failed negotiations
with the Labour Party, intended to form a secular unity government
together with Shinui. Labour leader Amram Mitzna insisted that
the new government support the eventual formation of a Palestinian
state, the evacuation of the Zionist settlements, and the building
of a security fence between Israel and the Palestinian West Bank
and Gaza strip. Sharon told Mitzna that he was ready to adopt
a secret document of understandings with Labour, but in return
Mitzna would have to accept a government that included the National
Religious Party and National Unity.
Mitzna could not accept Sharons ultimatum, but reassured
him that Labour would support the governments policies towards
the Palestinians as long as they were coordinated with the US.
The Bush administration has, in recent weeks, made much of its
desire to see the eventual formation of a Palestinian state, in
order to secure the support of the Arab regimes for its planned
war against Iraq. Washington also favoured the resumption of a
coalition government between Likud and Labour, in order that Mitzna,
Shimon Peres and company could provide a political cover for Sharon
and a restraining influence, at least in the short term.
Likuds open bloc with the ethnic cleansers of the NRP
and National Unity has fatally undermined the pretense that Sharon
can be persuaded to secure a peaceful settlement with the Palestinians.
The New York Times concluded, With so many within
Mr. Sharons Likud opposed to creating a Palestinian state,
the prospects for diplomatic progress and implementation of President
Bushs vision of such a state by 2005 had receded. But with
the Labour Party ending coalition talks and reports that Mr. Sharon
is nearing agreement with the ultra-right National Union, whose
leader advocates expelling Palestinians from the Occupied Territories,
those chances have become even more bleak.
The new government will also seek to carry forward aggressive
austerity measures and attacks on the Israeli working class, in
line with Shinuis free market economic philosophy,
which rejects even the basic democratic right of workers to strike.
Sharons decision to create the most right-wing government
ever indicates his determination to finally implement his vision
of creating a Greater Israel through the permanent seizure of
the Occupied Territories, either driving out the Palestinians
altogether or confining them to a number of tiny cantons surrounded
by the Israeli military.
In his speech announcing the formation of the new government,
Sharon stressed that he intended to carry forward a political
process based on President George W. Bushs June 24, 2001
speech on the Middle East, which included a reference to an end
to the occupation and a two-state solution. Before there is any
progress on the diplomatic front, however, he insisted that there
would have to be an end to the Palestinian terror,
a change in the Palestinian leadership, and fundamental reform
of the Palestinian National Authority. The Palestinians would
have to give up the right of return for refugees if they wanted
to reach a comprehensive agreement with Israel, and concede that
Jerusalem remain a united city under Israeli sovereigntya
series of demands that exclude any possibility of a negotiated
settlement.
Sharon understands that Bushs vision for
the Palestinians is a variant of the type of regime-change
that was pioneered in Afghanistan through the installation of
a despotic puppet regime, and which Washington now plans for Iraq,
with Saddam Hussein replaced by a pro-American but no less undemocratic
government. He calculates that after the war against Iraq is concluded,
Arafat will share the fate of Saddam Hussein, and regime
change will follow in other Arab states, such as Syriathus
redrawing the political map of the Middle East in Israels
favour.
See Also:
Bush lays out his vision
for the Middle East
[28 February 2003]
Israel: Sharons victory
presages internal strife amidst escalating aggression
[31 January 2003]
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