I loathe Binyamin Netanyahu, and therefore I hoped that he would be elected leader of theLikud. I am sorry that Sharon won the primary election instead.
How’s that? After all, Netanyahu presented himself as a man of the extreme right and demandedto “expel” (the code-word for “kill”) Yasser Arafat. He is ready to fight to the last drop of(our) blood against the creation of a Palestinian state. Unlike Sharon, who says that he isready to accept a Palestinian state and does not talk anymore about expelling Arafat.
So why did I prefer Netanyahu?
Because Netanyahu is an unprincipled politician, ready to change his positions any time. Hereminds me of Groucho Marx, who once declared: “These are my views. If you don’t like them, Ihave others, too.” He could easily exchange his rightist slogan for leftist ones.
Sharon is very different: he has a rigid outlook, which he has not changed for decades. Heresembles an IDF bulldozer in Jenin, destroying walls on his way and demolishing houses on topof their inhabitants. His aim in life is to destroy the Palestinian entity and imprison thePalestinians in isolated enclaves, until the time is ripe for their expulsion from thecountry altogether. Nowadays he hides his unwavering attachment to this plan behind the maskof a benevolent, moderate grandfather, who has settled down and wants nothing more than tocrown his career by making peace.
I prefer at the head of the Likud an unprincipled politician to a disguised true believer. Hewould have been easier for Mitzna to defeat.
In the competition for the Likud leadership, Netanyahu was a sheep in wolf’s clothing, whileSharon was a wolf in sheep’s clothing. The Likud members preferred the clothing of the sheep tothat of the wolf. And that is significant.
Netanyahu did not understand that the mood of the Likud members has changed. He made a bigmistake – one of many – when he decided, in the middle of the campaign, to adopt ultra-rightpositions, demanding Arafat’s expulsion and coming out against a Palestinian state. Itappears that most of the Likud members do not believe anymore that that is practical – aconclusion confirmed the next day by a public opinion poll that showed that half of the Likudmembers accept a Palestinian state and agree to evacuate settlements.
Sharon, on the other hand, knows how to read maps. He pretends to accept a Palestinian state andto make “concessions that hurt”. This, of course, is a mere make-believe. He made hisacceptance of the Palestinian state dependent on so many impossible “ifs” that it has beenemptied of any content. Sharon remains the same Sharon and will never be anything but the sameSharon. The leopard will not change his spots*, but he understands that he has to hide them. Tothe trusting public he presented himself as a moderate, as against the extreme Netanyahu.And, wonder of wonders, the Likud, the party of the extreme right, preferred the candidateposing as a moderate to the candidate posing as an extremist.
This is not the only miracle: a few days before, something very similar happened in the Laborparty, when Binjamin Ben-Eliezer was trounced by Amram Mitzna.
There is some similarity between the two Binyamins: Ben-Eliezer, like Netanyahu, is a manwithout principles, who is ready to change his views like socks. Mitzna, on the other side, is aman of clear principles.
Mitzna is a declared dove. As against the right-wing line of Ben-Eliezer, he presents to thevoters a clear, left-wing alternative: negotiations with Arafat, evacuation of mostsettlements, immediate withdrawal from the whole Gaza strip, compromise over Jerusalem, aPalestinian state. Yet by an overwhelming majority, the Labor party voters chose him overBen-Eliezer.
Let there be no mistake: Mitzna is not a Gush Shalom member. Some of his slogans are anathema tome. But he is firmly located on the left of the political arena. If one does not grasp thesignificance of his election as Labor leader, one does not understand what’s happening underthe surface of Israeli society.
One miracle can be accidental. Two testify to a tendency. If in both the big parties – Likud andLabor – the candidates with the more “leftist” program defeats the candidates with a more”rightist” one, it proves that new public currents are at work.
One may add the happenings in the National Religious party. Once upon a time, this was a verymoderate party. In the 50s, when the moderate Moshe Sharett was struggling against theextremist line of David Ben-Gurion, it generally supported Sharett. Since then it has – likealmost the whole religious camp – moved steadily to the extreme right. A year ago it crowned asits leader Effi Eytam, compared to whom Haider and Le Pen look like bleeding-heart liberals.Yet lo and behold: this week, when choosing its candidates for the Knesset elections, itturned against its new leader and filled the most coveted spots on the list with people who are(comparatively) more moderate.
If one puts all these facts together, what do they say? They say that the whole system is slowlymoving to the left. The public is fed up with the war, the unceasing bloodshed, the economiccrisis and the social breakdown. People want a solution. They are looking for compromise.They are ready to pay for it.
This gives Mitzna a chance. It will be very difficult for him to win, but it is definitelypossible. And even if he does not succeed this time, he can do it the next time, which may be in ayear or so. Provided, of course, he does not fall into the trap of a National Unity government.
Something is changing in the country. People are speaking again about things which hadseemingly died: the Green Line, evacuation of (most) settlements, exchange of territory,speaking with Arafat, the Taba and Clinton plans, international monitors.
Ahead of us the tunnel is still dark. But after two years of anguish and despair, it seems that atleast a small light has appeared at the end of the tunnel.
To quote Winston Churchill once more: “This is not the end. It is not even the beginning of theend. But it is, perhaps, the end of the beginning.”
- Jeremia, 13, 23.