25.12.04
A Wreath For Blair
“The curious incident is the barking of the dog,” Sherlock Holmes remarked.
“But
the dog did not bark!” exclaimed Dr. Watson.
“That is the curious incident!”
This week’s curious incident concerns the wreath of Tony Blair. The wreath that he did not lay on the grave of Yasser Arafat.
Elementary, dear Watson.
Blair did go to the graveside. But he omitted the natural and customary thing:
laying a wreath. Neither did he bow. He just tilted his head a few centimeters
and hastened to get away.
In my imagination, I can hear the frantic consultations before the
event. Blair’s advisors are discussing
it: To lay a wreath? No, no, that will make President Bush angry. To bow? Ariel
But how much? Ten centimeters? Too much. Two? Not enough. Five, then? That should do it.
I
see Blair practicing in front of a mirror. And, indeed, he did it exactly as
planned. To the millimeter.
I
had stood at the same place 24 hours earlier, on the 40th day of mourning, a day of special significance in Muslim tradition.
The leaders of the Palestinian authority and foreign representatives, including
those of the President of
“Every
Palestinian loves Arafat,” a young man standing there told me, “And each one
loves him in his own way.”
Blair must have thought that he was doing the Palestinians a great favor
by going to the grave at all. But his behavior, that of a person fulfilling an
unpleasant duty, was a terrible mistake. In Arab civilization, gestures are
more important than words. Not laying a wreath was an insult to the father of
the Palestinian nation. After all, compared to Arafat, what is Blair but a
political dwarf?
Why did he come at all?
There
is much talk of a “window of opportunity” in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. The
world’s political celebrities – from Blair to Italy’s ex-fascist foreign
minister - are swooping down, like birds of prey, to snatch a piece of the
peacemaker’s glory. It looks rather repulsive, and quite ridiculous, too,
because there is no window and no opportunity, not as long as
Blair
had reasons of his own for the visit. He dragged the
That’s
how the idea was born: A big international peace conference will convene in
But
when he hurried over to
Blair leapt
off the horse as quickly as he had mounted it. Peace is Out.
Must not be mentioned. There will be just a conference,
without peace.
So what is it for? To teach the Palestinians how to be deserving of peace. How to fight terrorism, how to make democracy, how to institute reforms. Britain, which just now is infested with sex and bribery scandals, will teach the Palestinians how to behave.
Blair
also tried to float the balloon of an Israeli-Syrian peace, but he gave that up
quickly, too. Bush does not want Israeli-Syrian peace,
and Sharon likes the idea even less. Bush wants to keep open the option of
attacking
So that
leaves only Palestinian. Standing next to the massive
Until 44
days ago, there was a convenient pretext: Yasser Arafat is the obstacle to
peace. Now, with Arafat no longer around,
With
this load he arrived in Ramallah, in order to offer Abu Mazen the
The
anger Blair aroused among the Palestinians was expressed the next day by Prime
Minister Abu
I hope
that Abu Mazen will not lay a wreath in