Israel’s Wayward Prime Ministers
Daniel Pipes is a keen analyst of the Middle East scene.
The article that follows is a good example. He discusses the promises
that Israeli prime minister made to their constituents in order to
get elected and how, quite blithely, they flip-flopped on those promises
once they were in office. That is also true of Mr. Sharon, the present
prime minister.
You may think that this is not too different from our
own politicians, who seldom fulfill their campaign promises. But it's
different in Israel, because the issues dealt with, the promises made
are existential for Israel — they affect its very survival.
Gerardo Joffe, President
by Daniel Pipes
New York Sun, June 29, 2004
Two patterns have shaped Israel's history since 1992 and
go far to explain Israel's predicament today. First, every elected prime
minister has broken his word on how he would deal with the Arabs. Second,
each one of them has adopted a unexpectedly concessionary approach.
Here
is one example of deception from each of the four prime ministers:
Yitzhak
Rabin promised the Israeli public immediately after winning office in
June 1992 that "with the PLO as an organization, I will not negotiate." A
year later, however, he did precisely that. Rabin defended dealing with
Yasir Arafat by saying he had found no other Palestinians to do business
with, so to "advance peace and find a solution," he had to
turn to the PLO.
Benjamin Netanyahu promised before his election
in 1996 that under his leadership, Israel "will never descend from
the Golan." In
1998, however, as I established in The New Republic and Bill
Clinton just confirmed in his memoirs, Netanyahu changed his mind and
planned
to offer Damascus the entire Golan in return for a peace treaty.
Ehud
Barak flat-out promised during his May 1999 campaign a "Jerusalem,
united and under our rule forever, period." In July 2000, however,
at the Camp David II summit, he offered much of eastern Jerusalem to
the Palestinian Authority.
Ariel Sharon won a landslide victory in January
2003 over his Labor opponent, Amram Mitzna, who called for "evacuating
the settlements from Gaza." Mr.
Sharon ridiculed this approach, saying that it "would bring the
terrorism centers closer to [Israel's] population centers." In December
2003, however, Mr. Sharon adopted Mitzna's unilateral withdrawal idea.
Prime ministers sometimes complain about other ones breaking their word.
Mr. Netanyahu, for example, pointed out in August 1995 that Rabin had "promised
in his election campaign not to talk with the PLO, not to give up territory
during this term of office, and not to establish a Palestinian state.
He is breaking all these promises one by one." Of course, when he
got to office, Mr. Netanyahu also broke his promises "one by one."
What
prompts each of Israel's recent prime ministers to renege on his resolute
intentions and instead adopt a policy of unilateral concessions?
In some
cases, it is a matter of expediency, notably for Mr. Netanyahu, who believed
his reelection chances improved via a deal with the Syrian
government. In other cases, there are elements of duplicity — specifically,
hiding planned concessions knowing their unpopularity with the voters.
Yossi Beilin, one of Mr. Barak's ministers, admitted during the Camp
David II summit that he and others in the government had earlier concealed
their willingness to divide Jerusalem. "We didn't speak about this
in the election campaign, because we knew that the public would not like
it."
But expediency and duplicity are just part of the story.
In addition, sincere aspirations inspire Israeli prime ministers to abandon
strong
policies for weak ones. Here we leave the political domain and enter
the psychological one. Being prime minister of Israel, a country surrounded
by enemies, is a weighty one. It is only too easy for the officeholder,
having been elected leader of his people, immodestly to believe that
he has a special talent to resolve his country's great, abiding, and
potentially fatal problem, that of Arab hostility.
Not for this great
man is it enough to plug away at the dull, slow, expensive, and passive
policy of deterrence, hoping some distant day to win Arab
acceptance. His impatience invariably leads in the same direction — to
move things faster, to develop solutions, and to "take chances for
peace."
If the prime minister's initiative succeeds, he wins international
acclaim and enters the Jewish history books. If it fails — well,
it was worth the try and his successors can clean up the mess.
Grandiosity
and egoism, ultimately, explain the prime ministerial pattern of going
soft. This brings to mind how, for centuries, French kings and
presidents have bequeathed grand construction projects in Paris as their
personal mark on history. In like spirit, Israeli prime ministers have
since 1992 dreamed of bequeathing a grand diplomatic project.
The problem
is, these are undemocratic impulses that betray the electorate, undermine
faith in government, and erode Israel's position. These negative
trends will continue until Israelis elect a modest prime minister.
Facts and Logic About the Middle East
P.O. Box 590359
San Francisco, CA 94159
Gerardo Joffe, President
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