Israel Palestine Infos
Uri Avnery
June 26, 2010
Shalit, For Example
I AM composing these
lines while looking through the window at the blue waters of the
Can Gilad Shalit look out
on the same sea through his window? Does he even have a window? How is he? How
is he being treated?
He has been in captivity
for four years and one day today, with no end in sight.
Gilad Shalit has become a
living symbol – a symbol of Israeli reality, of the inability of our leaders to
make decisions, of their moral and political cowardice, of their inability to
analyze a situation and draw conclusions.
IF THERE had been an
opportunity to free Shalit through military action, the Israeli government would
have seized it eagerly.
So much is obvious,
because the Israeli public always prefers solving a problem by force than doing
anything that might be interpreted as weakness. The rescue of the hostages at
In other cases, though,
the gamble did not succeed. Not in
If there had been any
chance of freeing Shalit by force, they would have risked his life, and probably
lost. Fortunately for him, there has been no such chance. So far.
Actually, this is quite
remarkable. Our security services have hundreds of secret collaborators in the
How has Hamas succeeded
in this? Among other measures, by not allowing any contact with the captive – no
meetings with the International Red Cross or foreign dignitaries, just two short
videos, almost no letters. They simply cannot be pressurized. They refuse all
requests of this nature.
This problem could
possibly be overcome if our government had been ready to give assurances that no
attempt would be made to free him by force, in return for a Hamas undertaking to
let him meet with the Red Cross. To be credible, such an undertaking would
probably need a guarantee by a third party, such as the
Absent such an
arrangement, all the sanctimonious speeches by foreign statesmen about “letting
the Red Cross meet with the soldier” are just so many empty words.
NO LESS hypocritical are
the demands of foreign personalities to “free the kidnapped soldier”.
Such demands are music to
the Israeli ear, but completely disregard the fact that the subject has to be an
exchange of prisoners.
Gilad Shalit is alive and
breathing, a young man whose fate arouses strong human emotions. But so are the
Palestinian prisoners. They are alive and breathing, and their fate, too,
arouses strong human emotions. They include young people, whose lives are being
wasted in prison. They include political leaders, who are being punished for
simply belonging to one or another organization. They include people who, in
Israeli parlance, “have blood on their hands”, and who, in Palestinian parlance,
are national heroes who have sacrificed their own freedom for their people’s
liberation.
The price demanded by
Hamas may seem exorbitant – a thousand for one. But
The thousand Palestinian
prisoners have families – fathers, mothers, husbands, wives and children,
brothers and sisters. Exactly like Gilad Shalit. They, too, cry out, demand,
exert pressure. Hamas cannot ignore them.
THE WHOLE affair is
shocking evidence of the inability of our government – both the previous and the
present one – to take decisions and even to think logically.
Hamas already fixed the
price four years ago, according to past precedents. Their demand has not changed
since then.
From the first moment,
there was a need to make a decision.
No doubt, such an
agreement would strengthen Hamas. It would underline its legitimacy as an
important Palestinian factor. It would be seen as confirming the mantra that “
Therefore, it comes down
to a simple question: Yes or No?
Yes
means a blow to Mahmoud Abbas, whose conciliatory ways have not led to the
release of one single important Palestinian prisoner. (The
NO
means life-imprisonment for Shalit, with perpetual danger to his life.
For four years now, our
leaders have been unable to decide, much as they are unable to decide upon any
other important matter concerning our future. (For example: Two states or one
apartheid state? Peace or settlements? Making a peace agreement with Abbas or
negotiating with Hamas?)
IN ORDER to wriggle out
of the necessity to make a decision, various tricks have been employed. Among
others, the assertion that the purpose of the
That was from the
beginning a mendacious pretext. The blockade was imposed in order to compel the
Now the blockade has been
partially lifted. That is a huge victory for the aid flotilla – a victory the
planners of the flotilla did not dare to hope for in their wildest dreams. As a
result of the stupid decision to attack the Turkish ship, international pressure
made this step unavoidable.
Among other pretexts, the
government declared that “anyhow the blockade did not help in freeing Shalit”.
Shalit’s parents cried
out. They really believed that there was a connection between the blockade and
the fate of their son. But it is obvious that, when deciding to give in to
international pressure and lift the blockade partially, Binyamin Netanyahu and
Ehud Barak did not even think about Shalit.
I stress the word
“partially”. True, it is a huge victory for all those of us who said from the
beginning that the blockade was immoral, illegal and unwise. The decision to let
everything into the Strip except arms constitutes a big change.
But the main problem in
Anyhow, this does not
concern the fate of Shalit.
THE SHALIT family is in
terrible distress. One can understand them, but sympathy does not prohibit
disagreement.
They are wrong when they
object to the lifting of the blockade. They are wrong when they demand that
Hamas prisoners in
One cannot have it both
ways. When Noam Shalit, the father, demands that a thousand Hamas prisoners be
released to free his son – he cannot at the same time take part in persecuting
Hamas prisoners. He cannot demand humane treatment for his son – and at the same
time justify the inhumane treatment of the
The message must be
simple, clear and straightforward, and addressed to Binyamin Netanyahu: to make
the decision to implement the prisoner swap at once. Gilad will return home, and
all Israelis will be jubilant. The Palestinian prisoners will also return to
their homes, and there, too, everyone will be jubilant.
THE INABILITY of
Netanyahu to make decisions and stand behind them reveals the full extent of his
incompetence as a leader.
Instead, we have a
specialist in marketing (which happens to be his original profession), a person
who wakes up in the morning with polls and goes to sleep at night with polls.
The pollsters tell him that freeing Gilad Shalit would be popular in
That is frightening. If
he cannot make a straightforward decision about the fate of Shalit, how can he
make decisions about the problems that affect the fate of all of us, not for one
year but for generations to come?