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ISRAEL AFTER SHARON
by Caroline Glick
THE JERUSALEM POST- Jan. 5, 2006
Wednesday night ushered in a new era in Israel's political history. As we watch and worry as Prime
Minister Ariel Sharon dangles between life and death, one thing is absolutely clear. Sharon's massive
cerebral hemorrhage on Wednesday night spelled the end of his political career. Sharon will never
return to lead the State of Israel. He will never make a full recovery.
Whatever one's views of Sharon's policies and the quality of his leadership, no Israeli can feel
anything but sorrow at Sharon's abrupt demise. A nation's sudden and dramatic separation from its
leader is never a good thing. It is all the more debilitating when the leader in question is as popular
and powerful as Sharon.
There will come a proper time to inquire into the reports we received about Sharon's health in the
three weeks that passed since the premier suffered his initial stroke. Those questions will no doubt
focus on statements by his spin doctors attesting to his good health and on the media's refusal to ask
hard questions about Sharon's ability to continue in office after that first stroke. But now, as we enter
the post-Sharon era, those questions are beside the point. The task that now besets our political
leadership and the Israeli people as a whole is to focus on the country's present challenges -- for they
suffer no delay.
Without a doubt, the greatest challenge facing the State of Israel today is Iran's nuclear weapons
program.
Until Wednesday night, the rumor-mill running between Jerusalem, Washington and the capital
cities of Europe was full of reports that Sharon planned to order an Israeli attack against Iran's
nuclear installations just before our general elections at the end of March. There was nothing new
in these rumors. Similar ones have been making the rounds for over a year now. In autumn 2004 for
instance, it was whispered that Sharon would order such an attack on the day of the US presidential
elections in November 2004. This past spring it was claimed that Sharon would give the order during
the IDF's withdrawal from Gaza and northern Samaria. And now, for the past two months or so,
rumors have circulated that Sharon was planning a strike to destroy Iran's nuclear installations just
ahead of the elections on March 28.
There can be no room for doubt. The need to conduct a military strike against Iran's nuclear program
increases with each passing day. The threat that Iran's nuclear weapons program constitutes for Israel
is the most egregious example since the Holocaust of what happens when states and societies where
anti-Semitism is of a genocidal nature are allowed to acquire the means to attack the Jews.
Israel's experience, like the experience of the Jewish people throughout its history, has taught that
such anti-Semites seek out opportunities to use their acquired means to kill Jews. And now, against
the increasingly tangible threat that Iran will soon acquire nuclear capabilities, Israel finds itself in
an election season marked by political uncertainty and instability.
Even in the absence of domestic political chaos, any Israeli plan to attack Iran's nuclear facilities is
today hampered by two things. First, the anti-Semitism that is endemic in the Iranian regime is
equally endemic throughout the entire Muslim and Arab world. Were Iran to carry out tomorrow
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's promise to complete Hitler's work, such an act would no doubt
be met with glee throughout the Arab and Muslim world.
As well, Iran has been able to advance its nuclear weapons program in large part due to the vast
increase in anti-Semitic sentiments throughout the Western world. Over the past five years, the
notion that there is something acceptable about murdering Jews and seeking to destroy Israel has met
with increasing acceptance among large swathes of European society and the ranks of the
international Left. Today, as Israel enters the post-Sharon era, it is hindered by unprecedented
diplomatic weakness, largely as a result of the prevalence of Western anti-Semitism and its
concomitant demand that Israel do all it can to appease its enemies.
For Israel to be capable of carrying out an attack against Iran's nuclear installations it will need to
receive US and NATO backing for the move. The majority of international security analysts agree
that Israeli fighter bombers en route to Iran will need to fly over Iraqi airspace and may even need
to refuel in Iraq. Turkish bases may also be necessary. Given this, Israel is today in dire need of
leadership capable of handling some of the most sensitive and monumental diplomacy in its history -
even if such leadership were only able to convince others to carry out the attacks in our place.
The genocidal anti-Semitism that lies at the root of Iran's quest to destroy Israel with nuclear
weapons is also the source of Palestinian-led terror war against Israel. Yet, unlike the case of Iran,
whose wherewithal to match its desire to destroy Israel with actual military capabilities has been
uninfluenced by Israeli actions, the Palestinians' terror capabilities have been vastly expanded as a
direct result of Israeli policies.
Today, as the Palestinian Authority has ceased to operate in any coherent manner; as the Egyptian
border with Gaza has been open for terror traffic for three months; and as Hamas has emerged as the
most prevalent force in Palestinian politics and society, it is impossible to deny that Sharon's
decision to withdraw Israeli forces from Gaza and northern Samaria has vastly empowered
Palestinian terrorists. Today the Gaza Strip has become one of the most active and dangerous bases
for jihadi terrorism in the world.
And yet, the rapid transformation of Gaza into the most active terror base in the Arab world has not
led to calls by the international community, led by Washington for Israel to take the military
measures necessary to destroy the emerging threat. To the contrary: The international community,
led by the Bush Administration, has greeted Gaza's mutation into what Palestinians refer to as a new
Somalia, and what for Israelis and Westerners in general is more comparable to Taliban ruled
Afghanistan, with ever more strident demands for continued Israeli appeasement of Palestinian
terrorists. The latest testimony to Israel's unprecedented diplomatic weakness in Washington came
with President George W. Bush's demand this week that Israel allow Arab residents of Jerusalem to
vote in the upcoming Palestinian elections - elections in which Hamas is expected to receive a
plurality, if not a majority of votes.
Amid the threat now constituted by Gaza and the rising chaos in Palestinian society generally, three
weeks before the Palestinian elections Israel's defense and diplomatic establishments have no
answers to give. Israel has no coherent policy to speak of for dealing with the acquisition of Strella
anti-aircraft missiles or Katyusha missiles by Palestinian terrorists in Gaza. It has no policy for
contending with the fact that Al Qaida has now become an actor in the Palestinian areas and in south
Lebanon. It has no effective policy for dealing with the repeated attacks against its vital
infrastructures in Ashkelon or with assumption that the Palestinians will soon transfer their
newfound capabilities from Gaza to Judea and Samaria. Israel's security brass has no policy for
contending with the manifest links between the Iranian regime and Palestinian terror groups.
Our leadership's befuddlement was perhaps most sharply manifested on Wednesday by Defense
Minister Shaul Mofaz, who in a public statement laid out Israel's conditions for opening a dialogue
with Hamas.
Mofaz's statement was not merely ill-advised. It was completely irrational. Hamas, like the Iranian
ayatollahs, is a terror group totally committed to the eradication of Israel. This fact was brought
home clearly in an Egyptian television interview given by Mariam Farahat, aka Umm Nidal, the
mother of three dead Hamas terrorists on December 21. Farahat is considered a moderate Hamas
member and is a Hamas candidate in the Palestinian elections.
In a transcript published by MEMRI, Farahat, who justified the murder of all Israelis everywhere as
a legitimate means of jihad, spelled out what "peace" with the Jews means for Hamas. For her,
"Peace means the liberation of all of Palestine, from the [Jordan] river to the [Mediterranean] Sea.
When this is accomplished - if they want peace, we will be ready. They may live under the banner
of the Islamic state. That is the future of Palestine that we are striving towards."
This is Israel's current reality. Our main security challenge on all fronts is to destroy our enemies'
ability to match their genocidal anti-Semitism with the means to kill us. And the carrying out of this
task can only be accomplished by a leadership that truly understands that we are not to blame for our
enemies' hatred and that we can do nothing to mitigate it.
The fact that Arab and Islamic anti-Semitism is met by and large by indifference from the West,
which itself is suffering from a milder yet increasingly widespread form of Jew hatred, makes clear
the third challenge facing Israel today: ensuring our economic independence. In the history of
nations, there has scarcely been a case where the side with the weaker economy prevailed over its
enemy in a war of attrition. Israel must ensure its economic vitality and independence in order to
guarantee that our defense industries can continue to operate and that our military forces are properly
equipped and trained. As well, in light of the rampant anti-Semitism in Western Europe, Israel must
be capable of absorbing waves of Jewish immigration from Europe.
Today Israel is in the midst of a painful but successful process of economic liberalization and
growth. The political instability that Sharon's departure has induced can threaten this process which
is so vital to the future of the country.
In light of the critical challenges that Israel faces today, our current political instability places us in
a difficult position. The fact of the matter is that Sharon's Kadima party without Sharon is nothing
more than a patchwork of politicians who diverge on so many issues it is impossible to see it
fashioning coherent policies. This is a cause for alarm. As well, the fractiousness of the nationalist
camp that has been manifested by the Likud ministers' unjustifiable opposition to Binyamin
Netanyahu's party leadership, is an additional cause for Israeli weakness at this critical juncture.
One of Sharon's greatest strengths was his ability to form coalitions of people from disparate
backgrounds and political camps and move them forward to achieve goals that appeared impossible
to attain. Now, with Sharon no longer leading the country, our political leaders must find a way to
act in a similar manner. The future of the state depends on their success.
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