It all reminds one of the athlete in ancient Greece, who recounted that in far-away Rhodes hehad jumped to a height unparalleled even by the greatest Olympic champions. Many peoplewitnessed the event, he asserted, and if one of them would pass by chance he would certainlyconfirm it.
His countrymen, however, new him as an inveterate bragger and were not impressed. There was noneed for witnesses, they told him, just repeat this feat now. “Here is Rhodes, here jump!” theysaid (and in the Latin version of the old Greek saying, “Hic Rhodus, hic salta!”)
Ehud Barak starts to resemble this athlete. I am a hero, he tells us, I can dismantle thesettlements in a jiffy. When the “permanent status” agreement will be achieved, I shalldismantle many dozens of settlements, leaving only some “settlement blocs”. In return forpeace with Assad I shall give up all the settlements on the Golan. That’s what I am like. A hero.
But unlike Aesop’s athlete some 2600 years ago, Barak uses the distance of time instead of thedistance of place. I don’t want to jump now, he says. I shall jump only at a certain point in timein the future. Then you will be amazed by my jumping. It will pit all Olympic feats to shame.
Very well, but we want to be amazed right now. No need for an Olympic, Rhodes-style jump. Just alittle one is enough, just a weeny, tiny one. Not the dismantling of dozens of settlements.Just two. Maybe less. Show us how you dismantle one sole settlement. Hic Rhodus.
A few days ago Barak made all the preparations for the fateful jump. He flexed his muscles inview of the whole world. He described the wonderful jump we were going to witness any minutenow. He would dismantle, oh yes, really dismantle. Well, not the settlements themselves. Butthe hilltop outposts that were set up after the Wye agreement. Well, not all 42 of them, but 15.And if not 15, then seven for sure. Hic Rhodus.
The great moment arrived – and what happened? Alas, no Rhodus, no salta. Just a “dialogue” withthe settlers. Dialogue by day, dialogue by night. End result: nothing. A few mobile houseswill be moved from hill A to hill B. Some empty containers will be sent back to where they camefrom.
No shouts of admiration from enthusiastic spectators. Just the hissing of air leaving aninflated balloon.
But what happened this week – or, rather, what did not happen – resounds throughout the region.The world saw, so did Assad, so did Arafat, so did we all. The obvious lesson is: If Barak isafraid to move some mobile homes that were put up as a provocation only a few weeks ago, wherewill he find the courage to remove dozens of honest-to-goodness settlements, not to mentionthe whole lot of them? If he cannot jump now to the height of twenty centimeters, how will hereach Olympic heights? Now that he has shown amazing weakness, all the saboteurs of peace willrise again, like a dog smelling the cowardice of his opponent.
Many Palestinians are asking themselves now: What is the sense of entering “permanentstatus” negotiations, if Barak does not really mean to dismantle settlements? And if he willundertake to do it, how can we believe that will he implement the undertaking? If he is afraidnow of the hooligans who call themselves “the young settlers”, will he not be frightenedtomorrow when he has to confront the whole settlement movement? If he is afraid now ofpolitical scarecrows like Sharansky and the Mafdal party hacks, who were soundly beaten atthe last elections, will he not be afraid of the massed right-wing?
Assad, too, probably tells himself: Just a minute, what’s going on? If Barak cannot removesome outposts, what is the sense in talking with him about the evacuation of all the Golan?What’s the sense of starting negotiations at all, if the only result will be my humiliation?
Many people were ready to forgive Barak many things – the ongoing bribing of the religiousparties, the lack of any economic plan, the cold indifference to social problems. All for thepromise of the great jump at Rhodes. Peace above everything else. But there can be no peacewithout the massive removal of the settlements. If he is unable to produce that, what remains?
Perhaps Barak has lost his meeting with history this week. Perhaps we should remember not onlythe ancient Greek parable, but also the Aramaic graffiti of the same time: “Mene, Mene, Tekel,Upharsin”.