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Re-electing the devil you know
Rime Allaf, January 2003
History is full of it - that is, full of the remorse and disbelief
some people feel when remembering how their ancestors acted in a
certain way at a specific point in time. Like them, future Israeli
generations will one day wonder how and why their parents and
grandparents elected Ariel Sharon twice in a row to lead their nation
into ever greater depression. Unless something dramatic happens before
Jan. 28, polls indicate that Likud, and therefore Sharon, is assured
of victory. And unless something dramatic happens, Israelis and
people affected by what happens in Israel will be paying the price
dearly.
Twenty-nine political parties reflect the division of Israeli society
on essential issues, but campaigning has bypassed concerns which
typically play a role in national elections. Sharon’s Israel is going
through the worst recession it has ever known, with a shattered
economy, rising double-digit unemployment and no damage-control
measures on the menu. With Sharon’s coaxing, however, these problems
have been ignored by candidates and electorate alike to focus on two
key issues: Palestinians, and Iraq.
President Bush’s depiction of Sharon as a man of peace has apparently
helped convince Israelis they should re-elect him. In the heat of the
moment, most are forgetting that he, precisely, is responsible for the
greatest escalation of violence the region has ever known. The present
government, to a much greater extent than previous ones, has violated
practically every international protocol on human rights, given
trigger-happy soldiers a green light to kill indiscriminately, razed
countless Palestinian homes, expropriated more Palestinian land to
build more settlements, and continued to bring Palestinians under
occupation to new lows of humiliation and despair. Oddly enough,
Israelis seem to believe this will bring them peace and internal
security, and their re-election of Sharon will give them more of the
same.
The
sounds of war drums from Washington have also given Sharon the benefit
of a supposed Iraqi threat, creating fantastic scenarios and pressing
unto ordinary Israelis the contrived need for a tough man at the helm.
The more Bush and his hawks shriek about Saddam’s invisible weapons of
mass destruction, the more Sharon milks the situation to his
advantage. Images of gas masks distributed in schools throughout
Israel have had the desired potent effect, as have timely
“revelations” about Arab states supposedly aiding and abetting Iraq’s
circumvention of UN Security Council resolutions, which apparently
only Israel can flout.
Imaginary dangers aside, Israelis have borne the physical consequences
of their government’s belligerence and savagery in the Occupied
Territories, consequences which continue to affect most aspects of
daily life.
Yet,
until recently, Israelis seemed mostly content with the “Bulldozer”
and were on the verge of giving him another landslide victory - until
tales of corruption and fraud surfaced. Suddenly, polls predicted
Likud would lose some 10 seats and Sharon’s position became shaky when
some Israelis objected to dirty politics.
For a
brief time, there seemed to be a glimmer of hope that Sharon would be
sidelined for his involvement. The Labor Party inferred that Sharon
and his sons were reminiscent of Mario Puzzo’s fictitious Don Corleone
and his notorious famiglia, hoping for Sharon’s dramatic exclusion
from politics. While that was entertaining, the godfather is no
Sharon, and the Bulldozer certainly surpasses the Mafioso in criminal
matters. Should Sharon be indicted on corruption charges, rather, he
would become a modern version of Al Capone. Like the recognized
criminal who was finally sent to Alcatraz on mere tax evasion charges,
Sharon would be brought to justice for financial and political
offenses while his greater crimes remained unpunished.
Should this happen, Israel’s electorate - which accepted being ruled
by a war criminal whose responsibility for massacres has been
ascertained by Israeli authorities themselves - would at least be
remembered as the generation which turned Israel around, albeit for
the wrong reasons.
Alas,
even that dim hope was short-lived. Whether because of sympathy voting
or because the opposition hasn’t properly managed these opportunities,
a man with whose criminal record few people - dead or alive - can
compete will ride smoothly to victory again.
The
few voters who had decided that a corrupt Israeli was not an
acceptable leader have not gone to Labor, but to smaller parties and
religious or secular extremists, and part of Sharon’s achievements
will have been to polarize Israeli society even more under his rule.
But while the Likud’s top echelons may have expressed frustration,
Sharon has little to lose.
Likud’s majority may not be as solid as it once was, but Sharon will
still command considerable clout and the power to steer coalition
partners into his own hazardous path. Far from bringing the usual
inconveniences of an alliance with extremes of either direction, a
Likud-Shas coalition (the most likely arrangement) could allow Sharon
to appear hand-tied in spite of his supposed desire for peace. Such a
right-wing alliance will contribute to the growing divide between
secular and ultra-religious poles, to Palestinian resentment, and
consequently to Israeli insecurity.
In
reality, this hard-line coalition would only be trying to enforce
Likud’s founding goal and mantra, reconfirmed at its May convention,
that Israeli sovereignty extend to the west of the river Jordan.
Where would the eventual Palestinian state then be?
Sharon has not even begun to shed light on the “painful concessions”
he would be willing to make for peace, promised in the last campaign
that brought him to power. His actions, however, have spoken loudly on
those he was unwilling to make, to which he recently added the
acceptance of the European Union as a peace maker. Finding Europe too
biased and the Quartet to be “nothing,” Sharon confers only on the US
the dubious honor of his blessing.
Assured of American support and fishing for a further “emergency” $12
billion aid package (thus also ensuring that the American taxpayer
continues to subsidize his crimes), Sharon has appealed to Israelis’
sense of fear. The more scared they get, the fewer alternatives they
see to Sharon. “Better the devil you know,” Israelis must be thinking
as they go to the polls in a few days, but they are demonstrating
remarkable shortsightedness. Only they still have the power to change
their own destiny and that of the next generation.
The thought of Sharon behind bars would delight
many of his victims and gratify human rights advocates, although it
would be a hollow victory to have him indicted on minor offenses
rather than for the horrific crimes against humanity he has repeatedly
committed. But while a corruption indictment may leave a bitter
aftertaste, there are times when it is better not to question the
means to an end.
Until
justice is served, a temporary relief would be Sharon’s defeat at the
polls, even if it is a consequence of his corruption. It is still
better to oust and confine Sharon à la Al Capone than to willingly
re-elect him to a position from which he will continue to destroy
Palestinians and bring Israelis to continued misfortune. Israelis
still have time to do the right thing. |