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Analysis : Middle
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Israel: Olmert brings Liebermans far-right party into
government
By Jean Shaoul
13 November 2006
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Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert has brought Avigdor Lieberman,
the leader of the far-right Israel Beitenu (Israel is Our Home)
party, into his cabinet as deputy prime minister. Lieberman has
been given the specially created post of minister of strategic
affairs, dealing with threats against Israel, with a focus on
Iran.
As a member of the foreign and defence committees and other
security cabinets, and reporting directly to the prime
minister, Lieberman will be one of the inner circle making Israels
key decisions. He will be more powerful than either the defence
or foreign ministers, Amir Peretz and Zippi Livni, both of whom
are from the Labour Party.
Lieberman is an ultra-nationalist and notorious racist, who
in 2001 advocated using nuclear weapons against Tehran as well
as bombing Palestinian civilians and targeting Egypts Aswan
High Dam. He is in favour of the ethnic cleansing of Israeli Arabs.
His appointment signifies a major shift to the right within
the Israeli political establishment on both domestic and foreign
policy. This shift presages sharp class struggles in Israel and
new wars that will further destabilise the region.
Liebermans inclusion in the cabinet confirms that Israel
is opposed to any resolution of the Palestine conflict on terms
other than the establishment of a Greater Israel.
As Haaretz opined, The choice of the most
unrestrained and irresponsible man around for this job constitutes
a strategic threat in its own right.
Within days of Lieberman joining the government, Israel threatened
to invade Egypt to prevent Palestinian militants smuggling arms
into Gaza and launched a massive military offensive against Gaza,
the most extensive since last June, in order to stop the firing
of crude homemade Qassem rockets on towns and villages in the
south of Israel that rarely prove fatal.
In a weeklong operation starting on November 3, an
Israeli brigade encircled and laid siege to Beit Hanoun
in northern Gaza, killing 8 people and wounding 60. Troops blew
up 40 homes and damaged 400 more. The military rounded up and
interrogated thousands of men, detaining dozens.
In another operation, Israeli troops fired on a group of women
demonstrating in support of Palestinian militants besieged in
a mosque in Beit Hanoun, killing 2 women and injuring 10. They
turned their fire on the mosque and destroyed it.
In the most notorious incident, tanks bombarded a residential
area of Beit Hanoun, in the early hours of the morning on November
7, killing 19 people and injuring more than 50. More than 60 Palestinians
and an Israeli soldier have been killed in the weeklong offensive.
The US-based human rights group Physicians for Human Rights
has stated that of the 247 fatalities from Israeli fire in Gaza
between June 28 and October 27, nearly 63 percent of were civilians,
of which more than one third were children.
Liebermans appointment to the newly created post of strategic
affairs with a special focus on Iran also underscores the preparations
by Washington for further military adventures in pursuit of its
imperialist agenda in the Middle East, with Israel as Washingtons
main subcontractor.
The reaction from the West to his appointment is revealing.
The US ambassador to Israel called on Lieberman even before his
appointment had been officially confirmed by parliament. His visit
was followed one day later by European Union Commissioner Javier
Solana.
Just last week, the White House accused Syria, Iran, Hezbollah,
and their Lebanese supporters of trying to topple the elected
government of Lebanese Prime Minister Fuad Siniora. A spokesman
said any attempt to undermine Lebanons government would
violate the countrys sovereignty and United Nations resolutions.
Olmert turned to Lieberman and Israel Beitenu, the fifth-largest
party in the parliamentary elections last March, to shore up his
tottering government. The Kadima-Labour coalition faced collapse
in the wake of Israels defeat at the hands of Hezbollah
in Lebanon and the prospect of corruption and criminal charges
against Olmert and other members of his government. Now, with
Israel Beitenus 11 seats, the coalition has 78 votes in
the 120-seat Knesset, Israels parliament.
Lieberman founded Israel Beitenu in the aftermath of his acrimonious
split with Benyamin Netanyahus Likud Party in 1999. The
party draws its main support from the 1 million-strong Russian
immigrant community that came to Israel as conditions deteriorated
precipitously in the former Soviet Union.
He is best known for his espousal of ethnic cleansing via a
population exchange, a policy supported by other far-right
parties such as Moledet, Herut and Hayil. One million of Israels
6 million inhabitants are Arab. Under Liebermans plan, first
announced in 2001, one third of Israels Arab citizens who
live in the north of Israel would be stripped of their Israeli
citizenship to become citizens of the Palestinian Authority, while
Israel would keep the Zionist settlements in the West Bank.
He also advocates financial incentives to encourage Israeli
Arabs to leave Israel and the use of loyalty tests
to determine whether those Arabs who remain in Israel should continue
to hold Israeli citizenship.
Lieberman served twice in Sharons coalition governments.
He called, when a cabinet minister, for the bombing of Palestinian
gas stations, banks and commercial centres during Israels
assault on Jenin in April 2002. He was sacked in June 2004 for
opposing Sharons plans to dismantle the Israeli settlements
in Gaza.
Earlier this year, he demanded that Arab Israeli legislators
who met with Hamas officials or marked Israels Independence
Day as the Palestinian Nakba, or catastrophe day,
be charged with treason and executed, calling them Nazi supporters.
In return for shoring up Olmerts coalition, Lieberman
insisted upon a number of conditions:
* An inquiry into the conduct of the war against Lebanon.
* An end to Olmerts plan to settle Israels final
borders based upon the dismantling of a few isolated settlements
and the settler outposts, even though most of the Zionist settlements
in the West Bank would be included.
* Cabinet support for legislation to replace Israels
parliamentary system with a presidential system with enhanced
powers for the executive, whereby the president would appoint
the cabinet, whose members would not serve as legislators or be
dependent upon or answerable to parliament.
* An increase in the level of minimum voter support that a
party, under Israels system of proportional representation,
needs for representation in the Knesset, to prevent small parties
winning seats in parliament and thereby effectively disenfranchise
Israels Arab citizens.
Labour endorses Lieberman
Amir Peretz, Labours leader, and his Labour cabinet colleagues
endorsed Liebermans appointment and the coalition with Israel
Beitenu. All except one Labourite remained in their posts, arguing
that it was necessary to do so in order to forestall the fall
of the government and new elections.
Only Ophir Pines-Paz, the minister of culture, sport, science
and technology, opposed Liebermans appointment. He resigned
his cabinet position and announced he would run for leadership
of the Labour Party against Peretz next year.
Peretz, a founder of the Peace Now movement, assumed
the leadership of the party just 12 months ago on the basis of
an appeal to widespread popular sentiment for peace with the Palestinians
and social reform.
He took Labour out of Ariel Sharons Likud coalition government,
which Labour had propped up after Sharon lost the support of much
of his own party and the ultranationalist partiesfor whom
the pullout from Gaza was little short of treasonand the
ultra-religious parties whose social base includes some of the
most impoverished layers. Labours alliance with Likud had
become untenable, as the government waged an unremitting economic
war on the working class at home even as it waged a military war
against the Palestinians.
Peretzs election as Labour leader prompted Sharon, with
the support of Shimon Peres and other Labour members, to split
from Likud. He proclaimed the founding of a new centrist
party, Kadima, to take forward his expansionist agenda, and called
an early general election.
In May, following the March general election in which Kadima
became the largest party without an overall majority in the Knesset,
Peretz took Labour back into a coalition with Kadima, now led
by Olmert. He took up the defence portfolio, launching a brutal
military assault on the Palestinian Authority and Lebanon. In
so doing, Peretz and Labour have laid the basis for Kadimas
ongoing lurch to the right and a government that can now accommodate
a fascistic demagogue.
See Also:
Israel carries out deliberate massacre
in Gaza
[10 November 2006]
Israel used chemical weapons
in Lebanon and Gaza
[24 October 2006]
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