Killing
The Road Map
By Uri Avnery
25 August, 2003
It
was a putsch. Like any classic putsch, it was carried out by a group
of officers: Sharon, Mofaz, Ya'alon and the army top brass.
It is no secret
that the military party (the only really functioning party in Israel)
objected to the hudna (truce) from the first moment, much as it opposed
the Road Map. Its powerful propaganda apparatus, which includes all
the Israeli media, spread the message: "The hudna is a disaster!
Every day of the hudna is a bad day! The reduction of violence to almost
zero is a great misfortune: under cover of the truce, the terrorist
organizations are recovering and rearming! Every terrorist strike avoided
today will hit us much harder tomorrow!"
The army command
was like an addict deprived of his drug. It was forbidden to carry out
the action it wanted. It was just about to crush the intifada, victory
was just around the corner, all that was needed was just one final decisive
blow, and that would have been that.
The military was
upset when it saw the new hope that took hold of the Israeli public,
the bullish mood of the stock exchange, the rise in value of the shekel,
the return of the masses to the entertainment centres, the signs of
optimism on both sides. In effect, It was a spontaneous popular vote
against the military policy.
Ariel Sharon realized
that if this went on, reality would overturn his long-term plans. Therefore,
right at the beginning of the hudna, he adopted three immediate goals:
First, to topple
Abu Mazen as soon as possible. Mahmud Abbas had become the darling of
George Bush, a welcome guest at the White House. The unique standing
of Sharon in Washington was in danger. The pair Bush-Sharon, which was
mutating into a single Busharon unit, was in danger of becoming a triangle:
Bush-Sharon-Abbas. There is no greater danger to Sharon's plans.
Second, to wipe
out the Road Map in its infancy. The map obliged Sharon to remove immediately
about 80 settlement outposts, freeze all settlements, stop the building
of the wall and withdraw the army from all West Bank towns. Sharon never
dreamt of fulfilling even one of these obligations.
Third, to put an
end to the hudna and give the army back its freedom of action in all
the Palestinian territories.
The question was
how this could be achieved without a trace of suspicion attaching itself
to Sharon. The great majority of Israelis, who had greeted the hudna,
could not possibly be allowed to suspect that their own leaders were
responsible for extinguishing this glimmer of hope. Even more important,
it was imperative that no such pernicious idea should enter the innocent
head of the good George W. All the blame must fall on the Palestinians,
so that the affection for Abu Mazen would turn into contempt and hatred.
The means for attaining
this goal were selected with great care, taking into account the simplistic
world of Bush with its Good Guys and Bad Guys. The Bad Guys are the
terrorists. Therefore, it was advisable to kill Hamas and Jihad militants.
That would not upset Bush. In the eyes of the president, to kill terrorists
is a Good Thing. And as a result, the Palestinians would be compelled
to break the hudna.
This is how it happened:
On 8 August, Israeli
soldiers killed two Hamas militants in Nablus. But the retaliation was
restrained: on 12 August, a Hamas suicide bomber killed one Israeli
in Rosh-Ha'ayin and another bomber killed one person in the Ariel settlement.
Both suicide bombers came from Nablus. Hamas announced that the hudna
would continue. On 14 August, the Israeli army killed Muhammad Seeder,
head of the military wing of Hamas in Hebron. Five days later, on 19
August, a suicide bomber from Hebron blew himself up in a Jerusalem
bus, killing 20 men, women and children. Two days later, on 21 August,
the army assassinated Isma'il Abu Shanab, the fourth ranking leader
of Hamas.
This time it was
not even possible to pin on the victim the appellation "ticking
bomb", as is usual in such cases. The man was a well-known political
leader. Why was he of all people chosen for assassination? A military
correspondent on Israeli TV made a slip of the tongue: Abu Shanab was
killed, he said, because he was "available". Meaning, he was
an easy target because he did not go underground after the bus bombing,
as did the leaders of the military wing.
This time, at long
last, the aim was achieved. The Palestinian organizations announced
that they were calling off the hudna. Sharon and Co. rejoiced. Within
hours the Israeli army had again penetrated into the centres of the
Palestinian towns, starting an orgy of arrests and house demolitions
(more than 40 in a single day).
The addict leapt
for the drug. His crisis was over, the officers could do all the things
they had been prevented from doing for nine long weeks.
But the situation
will not revert to the status quo ante intifada, so to speak. The attacks
and killings will be more numerous and more cruel. The construction
of the wall deep in the Palestinian territories will be accelerated,
along with the building activity in the settlements.
The army propaganda
machine is already preparing the public for the "expulsion of Arafat".
"Expulsion" is a euphemism produced by the "verbal laundry"
section of the army, one of its most creative departments. The intention
is not to expel the leader from his Ramallah compound, nor from Palestine,
but from this world. The reaction of the Palestinians and the whole
Arab world can be predicted. It would be a historic point of no return,
perhaps eliminating the chances of peace for generations.
And the Americans?
Never has the Bush administration looked so pathetic as here and now.
The unfortunate Colin Powell arouses compassion with his stuttering
and his emissary, John Wolf, a wolf without teeth, will go the way of
all his predecessors.
After the implosion
of the new order in Afghanistan and the classic guerilla war now engulfing
the universally hated occupation regime in Iraq, the collapse of the
Road Map will put an end to any presidential pretensions. It is much
easier to have one's picture taken in the uniform of a glorious victor
with a background of army extras than to steer the ship of state.
The renewal of the
cycle of violence will, of course, exacerbate the economic depression
in Israel. The crisis will deepen. Together with the hudna and the Road
Map, tourism, foreign investment and the recovery will also die.
The economy, too,
is an addict who needs his drug: nine billion dollars in US government
loan guarantees are waiting for Sharon in Washington. That should be
enough for the political and military elite. Only the poor will become
poorer. But who cares?
All this is being
done without consulting the Israeli public. There is no open discussion,
no debate in the tame media, the silent Knesset and the cabinet of marionettes.
That's what makes it a putsch.
To sum up: The Road
Map is dead, because Sharon was against it from the beginning, Bush
saw it only as a photo opportunity on a nice background and Abu Mazen
did not get from Israel and the US anything that he could present as
a Palestinian achievement.
What will happen
now? After the shedding of yet more blood and many tears, the two peoples
will arrive once more at the conviction that it is better to come to
an agreement and make peace. Then they will be compelled to learn the
lesson of the last chapter: It must all start from the end. Only after
the picture of the final settlement clearly emerges can one deal with
the immediate problems. Anything else would be a road map to the abyss.
Uri Avnery is an
Israeli journalist, writer and peace activist.