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Recriminations erupt in Israel in aftermath of Lebanon ceasefire
By Rick Kelly
16 August 2006
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Bitter infighting has erupted within the Israeli ruling elite
following the implementation of the ceasefire in Lebanon on Monday.
The inability of the Israeli military to destroy Hezbollah despite
its ferocious month-long bombardment has been widely regarded
as a political and geo-strategic disaster. According to two different
opinion polls, a majority of the population does not believe that
Israel achieved its aims in Lebanon.
The governments insistence that the war was a success
because Hezbollah has been ordered to disarm has fallen flat,
especially after scenes were broadcast of defiant refugees returning
to their homes in southern Lebanon waving Hezbollah flags. Hezbollah
has indicated that it is unwilling to accept its disarmament and
removal from southern Lebanon.
The ensuing recriminations in Israel have threatened the collapse
of the Kadima-Labour coalition government. In a Knesset [parliament]
session on Monday, held just hours after the UN-sponsored ceasefire
resolution took effect, Prime Minister Ehud Olmert admitted shortcomings
in the way the war had been handled and said there should be a
period of reflection. We will have to review
ourselves in all the battles, he said, amid heckling from
opposition politicians. We wont sweep things under
the carpet... The overall responsibility for this operation lies
with me, the prime minister.
Despite Olmerts declaration of personal responsibility,
the search for a scapegoat is clearly on. Three separate inquiries
into the war have been announced. The Israeli military will conduct
an internal investigation, the state comptroller is to look into
domestic war preparations, and the Knesset Foreign Affairs and
Defence Committee will launch its own probe.
The Israeli Defence Forces (IDF) Chief of Staff Dan Halutz
has come under fire for his handling of the situation in Lebanon,
and is now embroiled in a scandal that could trigger his dismissal.
It has emerged that he sold personal shares on July 12, shortly
after Hezbollah captured two Israeli soldiers. Halutzs money
was safe as the stock market fell sharply following Israels
subsequent attack on Lebanon.
Defence Minister and Labour leader Amir Peretz is also under
fire from within the military and his own colleagues. Labour old
guard figures, or the generals and admirals faction
as Peretz supporters call them, never accepted Peretzs accession
to the party leadership over Shimon Peres last November. According
to Israeli press reports, former Prime Minister Ehud Barak is
considering a leadership challenge.
Whatever the fate of Halutz and Peretz, it is clear that the
survival of the entire government is at stake. Olmert is already
facing calls to resign from commentators in both the right wing
and liberal press.
Even before the ceasefire was approved in the UN, Haaretz
published a front-page comment, titled Olmert must go,
by influential journalist Ari Shavit. Chutzpah has its limits,
he wrote. You cannot lead an entire nation to war promising
victory, produce humiliating defeat and remain in power. You cannot
bury 120 Israelis in cemeteries, keep a million Israelis in shelters
for a month, wear down deterrent power, bring the next war very
close, and then sayoops, I made a mistake. That was not
the intention. Pass me a cigar, please.
From the right, Caroline Glick, the Jerusalem Posts
deputy managing editor, accused the government of delivering Israel
the worst defeat in its history. The Knesset must vote no
confidence in this government and new elections must be carried
out as soon as the law permits, she wrote Monday. If
the Knesset hesitates in taking this required step, then the people
of Israel must take to the streets in mass demonstrations and
demand that our representatives send Prime Minister Ehud Olmert,
Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni, Defence Minister Amir Peretz and
their comrades out to pasture.
Such calls have emboldened the right-wing parties. They announced
that with the ceasefire in place, the period of national
unity and cross-party support for the government was over.
Likud leader Benjamin Netanyahu has rejected an appeal from Kadimas
Knesset speaker Dalia Itzik to help form a national unity government.
The extreme right-wing Israel Our Home party similarly refused
to join.
Israel Our Home leader Avigdor Lieberman said that he would
not form government with Olmert unless he abandoned the realignment
plan for the West Bank, under which some of the more isolated
West Bank settlements will be closed and the residents moved to
other settlements behind the separation wall. Netanyahu similarly
declared that the doctrine of unilateral withdrawals had
proven to be a failure and blamed Israels withdrawal
from Lebanon in 2000 and Gaza last year for the crisis.
A fortnight into the Lebanon offensive, Olmert had sparked
uproar when he stated that the war would bolster his governments
plans for the West Bank. The right wing and religious parties
accused the prime minister of destroying national unity. Ten pro-settler
reservists announced that they would refuse orders to enter Lebanon.
Moshe Feiglin, the fascistic Likud leadership contender, called
on serving soldiers to return to Israel. Olmert was subsequently
forced to disavow any connection between the Lebanon war and the
West Bank settlements.
Opposition to the governments strategy in the West Bank
is a touchstone for all the right-wing and religious parties in
Israel, for which any attempt to delimit the states borders
is a betrayal of the Greater Israel dream. While Olmert
has staked his political credibility on the realignment
plan, it is unclear whether he has majority support for the strategy
within his government. A number of Kadima politicians have expressed
reservations, while Shas, one of the minor parties in the ruling
coalition, has always openly opposed the plan.
In the aftermath of the Lebanon crisis, Likud and the rightwing
have demanded the Israeli Defence Forces should be sent back in
to occupy Gaza and even southern Lebanon. Sections of the right-wing
political and media establishment are also calling for military
action against Syria and Iran.
The war in Lebanon has also exacerbated Israels social
crisis. The offensive is estimated to have cost $1.6 billion,
and the IDF is clamouring for large increases in annual military
spending. Military commanders complained of inadequate equipment
and supplies, and some reservists deployed to Lebanon reported
that Hezbollah fighters had superior weapons and armour.
The increased military costs will be borne by the Israeli working
class. Cuts have already been imposed on the education ministry,
and further reductions in social spending will inevitably follow.
The finance ministrys director-general, Yossi Bachar, has
already announced that no additional taxes will be imposed and
neither will the budget deficit be allowed to increase. This
is to send a message to the markets that we are consistent and
maintain our policy, he declared.
The governments measures will further worsen Israels
high unemployment and poverty rate and deepen social inequality.
The need to cut social spending will also further expose the fault
lines within the government. Coalition members, including Labour,
Shas, and the Pensioners Party, campaigned in last Januarys
general election on the basis of increasing social spending and
reversing previous pro-business reforms. Now these parties face
the prospect of helping implement policies directly opposed to
the demands of their constituents, further exacerbating sharp
tensions and divisions within the ruling coalition.
See Also:
On eve of Lebanon ceasefire deadline:
US, Israel face political debacle
[14 August 2006]
War now, peace later: Israels doves
line up behind war--Part two
[14 August 2006]
War now, peace later: Israel's doves
line up behind war--Part one
[12 August 2006]
The economic, social and political
disaster produced by the Zionist project
[29 March 2006]
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