Sharon is the right man for the job
Gilad Atzmon
From its very early days, Zionist thought has been divided into two
major schools. First, the heavy-handed school, which adopts military
solutions to regional disagreements and conflicts. This school was
initiated by the revisionist leader Ze'ev Jabotinsky. In 1923 Jabotinsky
published two articles headed 'Iron Wall'. In the papers Jabotinsky
argues that the Arabs would never accept the existence of a Jewish
state, hence, the Jews must 'erect an iron wall of Jewish military
force'. According to this philosophy, Zionism must enjoy an
overwhelmingly superior power base to reduce any Arabic tendency to resist.
The other school is the school of reconciliation presented by moderate
Zionists such as Moshe Sharet. This school tends to believe that all the
regimes and political forces in the region are capable of accepting the
existence of the Jewish state. Therefore, according to Sharet, all
available diplomatic efforts should be made in order to achieve
reconciliation with the Arab world.
Soon after the declaration of the state of Israel these two conflicting
ideologies turned into a harsh political debate. In practice, Ben
Gurion, the first Israeli PM, clearly adopted Jabotinsky's 'Iron Wall'
philosophy. On the surface, this appears to have been a bizarre
political move since Jabotinsky's philosophy was very much in contrast
with the political thoughts of Ben Gurion's party. An analysis of the
Israeli maneuvers and mode of operation in the 1948 war provide us with
a clear picture of the Israeli endorsement of a military option
alongside a denial of any diplomatic solution.
In order to implement the military option that derived from the 'Iron
Wall' philosophy, Ben Gurion instructed the IDF to adopt an offensive
military doctrine, a doctrine which would provide the region with a
mighty display of Israel's overwhelming military superiority. The
doctrine was based on two basic presuppositions:
1. Any confrontation between Arabs and Israelis had to take place
over Arab land. In other words, the Israeli offensive had to take the
battle to the Arab territories before the battle even started.
2. Because of Israel's relatively limited financial means, any
confrontation had to bring victorious results in the shortest possible
time. In other words, the Israeli army had to impose the most
devastating damage on its Arab enemies.
The Israeli military and political leaders were soon to define a
criterion which measured the success of the Israeli armed forces'
implementation of the offensive doctrine. This criterion was defined as
the IDF's 'force of deterrence'. It was a scale that determined the
Arabs unwillingness to fight. The less the Arabs were encouraged to
fight, the higher the score on the scale.
For Ben Gurion and his followers it was necessary to demonstrate to the
Arab world a clear Israeli determination for a military solution. Any
given battle had to end with a clear-cut Israeli victory. Moreover, the
Arabs had to regard any confrontation as futile. The success of the
Israeli offensive mode was dependent on the reduction of the Arabs'
willingness to fight. This mode of Israeli military pattern was evident
from the early stages of 1948 war, a war in which Israel subjected the
Palestinian civilian population to a clear violation of any human code.
The war ended with more than 700,000 Palestinian refugees and an
armistice between Israel and its neighbors that was regarded by the
Arabs as a clear military defeat.
Already in the early fifties Israel had managed to take the offensive
doctrine one stage further. I am referring here to the retaliation mode
that was characterized by a severe lack of proportion. According to Ben
Gurion, any loss of Jewish life had to be paid for heavily. Arabs had to
learn that the value of Jewish blood was far higher than that of their
own. In order to achieve the best possible results, a young, assertive,
aggressive and ambitious commander named Ariel Sharon was called for
action. He was asked to form a small special commando unit that would
present the Arab enemy (innocent civilians usually) with the full force
of Israeli conviction and determination to win under any circumstances.
In 1953, following a murderous attack of a mother and her two children
by Palestinian infiltrators who passed the Israeli border near to the
Jordanian village of Quibya, Sharon and his commando unit, now named
'the 101', were called for action. Sharon was ordered to penetrate the
village of Quibya, to blow up as many houses and to inflict as many
casualties on its inhabitants as possible. Sharon was the right man for
the job. The raid was a complete success. Quibya was reduced to pile of
rubble. More than 50 houses were destroyed. Sixty-one civilians, most of
them women and children, had been killed. A UN observer who visited the
site came to a clear conclusion that the villagers had been forced to
stay in their houses while they were blown up. The Quibya massacre
provoked international condemnation including an anti-Israeli resolution
by the UN Security Council. In a debate within the Israeli government
Moshe Sharet, the moderate foreign minister, called for the issue of an
official statement expressing regret over the action. Ben Gurion, the
PM, had a different idea. In a radio broadcast the following day, he
denied IDF involvement in the raid, he lied and blamed the action on
Israeli villagers who retaliated beyond measure. As we know, Sharon's
military career was not at all harmed, as a matter of fact, very much
the opposite. Sharon and 'the 101' came to represent the new Hebraic
military man: a murderous soldier who attacks beyond the enemy line, a
soldier who goes far beyond orders even if it means divorcing himself
from any familiar concept of mercy and humanity. Not only was Sharon's
career not adversely affected, but he was now seen as the most promising
young Israeli officer. In military terms he became a shining meteor, his
promotion within the army ranks was the fastest possible. It wouldn't be
irrational to assume that this sort of swift promotion encouraged other
young officers to follow the murderous example provided by Sharon and
'the 101'. The Quibya massacre was the first in a chain of retaliation
raids conducted by the Israeli army. These raids shaped the Israeli
offensive philosophy into a new form of murderous art: a pattern of
thought that led to an endless confrontation with the Arab world but,
furthermore, which contributed toward an ongoing transformation of the
Israelis into an ignorant society, a society that is concerned solely
with its own interest while denying that of others.
When we scrutinize Israeli political history, we can clearly see that
from the perspective of Israel's internal politics, the offensive
doctrine has two major advantages. First, it communicates with the Arabs
in the only language the Arabs understand, i.e. violence. Second, it
provokes strong condemnation from the international community, something
that is translated within Israel into an immediate political gain.
With regard to the first of these advantages, incredibly the vast
majority of Israeli people do believe that the Arabs understand violence
only. Therefore, throughout the history of Israel there is little
evidence of diplomatic efforts towards a peaceful solution for the
Arab-Israeli conflict. Even the Oslo negotiation was taking place within
very specific historical circumstances in which the PLO was in ruin
politically and financially (following the support of Sadam Hussein in
the Gulf War). If this was not enough, it was clear that from the very
first stages of the Oslo implementations the Israelis used the military
threat to exert pressure against the Palestinian authority and
Palestinian people. When we examine the personal biographies of the
Israeli cabinet members, both past and present, we discover that the
vast majority of them are ex-military men. It is clear that only a state
which decides to live by the sword and deeply believes in military
solutions can put so many generals into ministerial and prime
ministerial seats.
Consideration of the second advantage might be a bit embarrassing.
Evidently, Israeli prime ministers love to be condemned by the
international community. It is obvious that Israeli leaderships have
learned how to transform foreign condemnation into clear political gain.
Undoubtedly, in Israel, any foreign criticism of Israel is conditionally
interpreted as 'gentile pathological anti-Semitic behavior'. Every
leading Israeli politician learns how to use this tool during his first
days in office. The main pattern was delivered by Ben Gurion: 'It
doesn't't matter what the gentile says, what matters is what the Jews
are doing.' With this ignorant statement the legendary Israeli PM
managed to provide his voters with an instant reminder of the history of
Jewish persecution, pushing the Jewish people deeper into their safe
haven of complete segregation that leads toward the denial of the outer
world. Moreover, since in Hebrew the word gentile (goy) is a devastating
derogative, Ben Gurion's call to ignore the gentile clearly leads
Israelis to celebrate their superiority over the rest of humankind. Ben
Gurion's statement was a call for Israelis to unite behind their
leadership and to reject any sort of foreign criticism. To conclude this
point I would claim that in the case of Israel, the offensive doctrine
leaves the international community completely helpless. On the one hand,
lack of criticism is taken by the Israeli public as an approval or a
sign of weakness. On the other hand, any international condemnation
leads eventually to a growth of public support toward the political
leadership. This fact might explain the continuous shift to the right
within Israeli politics. Further, it explains the international
community's impotence against Israeli oppression and atrocities.
If we review Sharon's military and political career we discover that he
has followed his mentor, Ben Gurion, religiously. Clearly, Sharon
single-mindedly adopted the offensive doctrine in both his political and
military life. As mentioned before, Sharon was the leading figure in
forming and shaping the Israeli retaliation raids and commando form of
attack. This strategy led to Israel's deep commando penetration into the
Sinai desert in the 'Suez Operation' (1956). Following Colonel Sharon's
plans, Israeli paratroopers landed in the 'Mitle Pass' at the heart of
the Sinai desert aiming to cause heavy losses to the Egyptian army. In
practice, the battle cost too many Israeli lives. Thanks to some severe
international pressure Israel had to pull back its forces. In military
terms, the operation was regarded as a waste of human life. In the 1973
war, General Sharon led his brigade across the Suez Canal. Again, the
battle cost too many Israeli lives. During the battle Sharon refused to
allow his higher command to show restraint. Sharon believed that Israeli
soldiers on the western bank of the Suez would bring the Egyptians to
their knees. In practice it prompted heavy international pressure. Soon
Israel had to withdraw its forces. Furthermore, the ceasefire talks led
to peace talks (1977) which resulted in Israel 'losing' Sinai forever.
Before the Lebanese war (1982), Sharon, then minister of defense, led
the cabinet to believe that the Palestinian issue could be grounded
forever by a military assault against the PLO in Lebanon. Clearly, he
was determined to generate a light conflict, a mini war, with the
Syrians in order to remove their forces from southern Lebanon. As we
already know, the Israeli offensive doctrine does not differentiate
between Arabs. According to the 'Iron Wall' philosophy, Arabs are all
the same, you kill as many as you can.
>From very early on in the Lebanese campaign it was evident that Israel
had been drawn into a vicious civil war between the different Lebanese
ethnic and religious groups. As predicted by some Israeli intelligence
experts, within a short time of the invasion of Lebanon the most
terrible massacre of Palestinian refugees in Sabra and Shatila took
place. The devastating massacre was carried out by Christian militias
who got the approval to enter the refugee camps from the Israeli high
command. While Israeli forces were not involved directly in the massacre
itself, Israel was clearly considered responsible for the atrocities
taking place within the invaded territory. As expected, the massacre was
strongly condemned by the international community. In Israel, the
left-wing movement 'Peace Now' managed to bring thousands of people to
the street to demonstrate against the government. In a speech to the
Israeli parliament, reflecting upon the left's opposition to the
Lebanese campaign, Menachem Begin, the PM at the time, complained that
'gentiles kill gentiles and the Jews are blaming each other'. Again we
confront the same Israeli right-wing pattern: a clear abuse of the
outraged international reaction in order to delegitimate the Israeli
left. In other words, Menachem Begin blamed the Israeli left for
collaboration with the anti-Semitic 'gentiles' against the 'Jewish'
Sharon. Again we can see an Israeli offense that generated outrage in
the international community being turned within Israel into a political
weapon against any opposition from the left or humanitarian voices. It
is important to mention that following the international condemnation as
well as the left's campaign, Menachem Begin eventually agreed to appoint
a commission for inquiries under the supreme court justice, Yitzchak
Kahan. The commission found Sharon indirectly responsible for the
massacre and recommended his removal from the ministry of defense. While
in the short term this was regarded as a victory for the moderate school
of thought, in the long term, in the eyes of the right wing, it proved
Sharon's devotion to the 'Iron Wall' philosophy. In other words, it
prepared him for his later role as Israeli prime minister.
The results of the Lebanese war are not yet clear since the war is not
completely over. What we can say for sure is that it took the Israeli
forces almost 20 years to get out of Lebanon. Undoubtedly, while in
Lebanon, the Israeli army has managed to lose its 'power of deterrence'.
The Israeli army, the most equipped army in the Middle East, found
itself completely defeated by the Hizbulah, a small devoted group of
guerrilla fighters. In the shades of the growing Israeli defeat in
Lebanon, the Palestinian people within the occupied territories started
to redevelop their nationalistic aspirations. Eventually in 1987 these
aspirations had matured into a Palestinian uprising, the first Intifada.
Since the second week of the Lebanese war the Israeli 'power of
deterrence' has deteriorated continuously. Clearly, the IDF never
managed to establish successful fighting skills with which to confront
the Lebanese civil resistance. Furthermore, following the Oslo accord
Israeli civilians faced a growing threat of terror within Israel. For
the first time in Israel's history, the Israeli civilian population
found itself within a war zone. This fact is of crucial importance.
According to Israel's self-image, it is the Arab civilians who are
supposed to die, definitely not the Israeli ones. In Israeli eyes,
Jewish civilians are not supposed to die in any conflict for two main
reasons: 1. It reminds them of the holocaust in which Jews were dying
simply because they were Jews. 2. It is very much against the idea of an
'offensive doctrine'. Israel had got used to the fact that any
confrontation with the Arab world was to take place over Arab land.
Suddenly, the confrontations had started to take place in the center of
Israeli cities. This fact was regarded by most Israelis as a catastrophe
and completely unacceptable. In the light of the Palestinian terror, a
very strong right-wing slogan was introduced - 'Let the IDF win' - which
meant - let us raise the 'power of deterrence' - let us get back into
our offensive doctrine - let us move the war from our city centers into
Palestinian towns - let us make sure that we destroy the Palestinian
will to fight - let us get out of control, let us get mad - let us
re-erect the 'Iron Wall'. Who was the right man for the job? No doubt,
Mr Ariel Sharon. The master of offensive doctrine. Israel's most
celebrated war criminal. Arik, who had proved himself to be the man who
knows no mercy. We have to admit the Israelis were right: it took
Sharon, as prime minister, just about a year in office to commit the
great massacre in Jenin.
It is necessary to scrutinize the events in Jenin from the perspective
of the offensive doctrine. The operation in the refugee camp was, 'more
or less', the embodiment of what offensive doctrine is all about. It
took place on, more or less, enemy land. It was, more or less, very fast
and it was, more or less, a 'clear-cut' victory. Apparently, the 'more
or less' is crucial. Jenin is not really an enemy land. It is an Israeli
invaded territory. Strangely enough, it appears as if the Israeli
colonial forces are the first colonialists to have demolished their own
colonies. Clearly, it took the Israelis a bit too long to confess that
the battle in Jenin was over. Evidently, the might of the Israeli armed
forces was not enough to break the spirit of the very few determined
Palestinian freedom fighters. Last but not least, if it was a clear
victory, it is very unclear who the winner was. Was it the Israelis? I
would doubt it very much. As T. Larsen, the UN envoy to the Middle East,
put it: 'in Jenin Israel has lost its moral ground'. As a result of this
statement, Mr Larsen became a persona non grata in the Jewish state. As
a result of this statement, Israel demanded that Mr Larsen not
participate in the UN inquiry into the events in Jenin. As a result of
this statement the UN Secretary General, Kofi Annan, has become an
anti-Semite in Israeli eyes and the entire investigation has been
jeopardized by Israel. If anything, it is clear that after Jenin, after
presenting the Israelis with real fierce fighting, the Palestinians are
determined to fight beyond what it would take to achieve their liberation.
I will try to describe the Jenin battle and to analyze the Israeli
decision-making process in the light of the offensive paradigm. On the
morning of April 3rd Israeli ground forces entered into the Jenin
refugee camp. From very early on it was clear that this time they would
encounter some fierce Palestinian fighting. The Israeli high command
naturally provided extra support. More tanks and helicopter gunships
were sent to support the battling ground forces. At this point it is
important to mention that it is very unusual to use tanks and helicopter
gunships in highly populated areas, however, within the IDF offensive
doctrine, the end (victory) is far more important than the means (war
crimes). In the meantime, Israeli commanders on the ground were under
severe pressure to complete their mission. They began to use far heavier
weaponry (air-to-ground missiles as well as tank shells), they cared
less and less about who was getting killed as long as they were Arabs.
Clearly, as a result, more civilians were hit. The scene on the ground
started to look a bit unaesthetic. The Israeli high command decided to
seal the area. Press and rescue forces were not allowed in. Now the
forces on the ground were working against time. They had to provide a
clear-cut conclusion. Naturally, they decided to wipe out the entire
center of the camp that was suspected of being a 'pocket of resistance'.
In doing so they killed many civilians, mainly old and disabled people
who could not run away. When the battle was over Jenin had become a
slaughter house, the streets were the most horrifying sight imaginable.
Civilian bodies were all over the place, many Palestinians were wounded,
bleeding to death. Still, the Israelis showed no mercy, the Red Cross
and other rescue forces were not allowed in. The Israelis had to decide
whether to show some mercy, to be human and to save those who could be
saved or whether to try to conceal the evidence of an unacceptable,
shocking and inhuman crime. Naturally, following Sharon's overwhelming
history of crimes against humanity, the decision was fairly simple. The
Israelis decided to bulldoze the center of the Jenin refugee camp. They
turned the Jenin camp into a 'Palestinian Ground Zero'. Occupied houses
were destroyed over their habitants. Sharon had committed a crime
comparable to the Quibya massacre of 50 years earlier. Although the
similarities are very obvious, there are slight differences that should
be identified. In Quibya Sharon was a platoon commander, in Jenin he had
become an elected prime minister and had committed his crime in the name
of all Israeli people. As expected, as soon as international criticism
was heard, Sharon defined the current battle as the 'existential war of
the all Jewish nation'. According to Sharon, then, the massacre in Jenin
was done not only in the name of the Israelis but in the name of all
Jewish people. If this was not enough, Sharon declared that very much
like G. Bush he was conducting a holy war against terror. We must
remember that this kind of approach is aimed at the American population,
Sharon becomes American messenger or at least American platoon
commander. As we can see, both world Jewry and the American
administration have avoided public criticism of Sharon, hence, we can
conclude that Sharon has committed his war crimes in the name of the
Jewish people and the American nation. Unless major Rabbis stand up and
firmly denounce Sharon's atrocities, unless the American administration
decides to stop supporting the Jewish state, we will be able to force
that Sharon has indeed been acting in the name of the Jews and the
American nation.
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