Uri Avnery
18.8.07
Miss C.
INTRODUCING Miss
Calculatsia, that fashionable foreigner, the new star in Israeli discourse.
To a Hebrew
ear, she sounds like a young beauty, like "Miss Israel". But
Miss-Calculatsia, the Hebrew version of "miscalculation", is neither
young nor beautiful, nor even female: just another pretentious foreign word taking
the place of a perfectly good Hebrew one.
(In Latin,
"calculus" is a small stone. These were built into the abacus, which
was used by the Romans long before they ever dreamed of computers.)
The
miscalculation spoken of is not a beauty queen, but a queen of ugliness: a war
between Israel and Syria that may break out any minute - not because Israel
wants it, nor the Syrians, but because one side misjudges a provocative act
that will push the other into war.
Like all wars,
it will be a campaign of death and destruction, with bereavement and refugees,
suffering and misery for both sides. And nobody can foresee how it will end.
ALMOST EVERY
day the Prime Minister, the Minister of Defense and their minions declare that
Israel is not interested in war. Not at all. Perish the thought.
It rather reminds
one of Hamlet's comment about his unfaithful mother: "The lady doth
protest too much, methinks." The more so as Ehud Barak makes his
professions of peace while standing on the occupied Golan Heights, against a background
of noisy tanks advancing in a war-like maneuver.
The Israeli
army intelligence chiefs report that, according to their evaluation, Syria does
not intend to start a war. According to them, war does not serve any Syrian
interests at this time.
To complete the
round, this week Hassan Nasrallah declared at a Beirut mass rally that
Hizbullah, too, has no desire for war.
From
"below" there is also no pressure for war. The Israeli public is
afraid of it, and so, it seems, is the Syrian people.
So where does
the daily talk about war come from? If nobody wants it, why is there so much
talk about it? Why do the media, in Israel and throughout the world, report
"tension on the Northern border of Israel"? Why is the Israeli army
frantically conducting maneuvers on the Golan? Why are there reports about a
rapid upgrading of Syrian weaponry and the hectic building of fortifications
against Israel? Why is the Turkish government offering urgent mediation between
Israel and Syria?
All very
mysterious.
IT SEEMS that
the key to this mystery is not to be found in Jerusalem or Damascus, but in
Washington.
When Ehud
Olmert refuses to respond to the serenades of Bashar al-Assad, he hints that
President Bush is forbidding any contact with the Syrians. Last year, America
pushed Israel into the war in Lebanon, obstructed an early cease-fire and, so
it seemed, was interested in extending the war into Syria.
Syria belongs,
of course, to the "Axis of Evil" that exists in Bush's mind. His Arab
allies tell him, to no avail, that this is a mistake: Sunni Syria is no natural
ally of the Iranian Shiites. It needs them only because the US is isolating it.
Damascus uses the Shiite Hizbullah, so they explain, only to exert pressure on Beirut
and on Jerusalem. Logic says that it is in the interest of the US to help make
peace between Israel and Syria in order to pry Syria loose from the Iranian
embrace. But Bush does not listen.
Perhaps he is
pushing Olmert towards war with Syria in order to divert attention from his own
Iraqi fiasco, which is worsening daily. Or perhaps he is interested only in some
artificial tension, in order to bring about the fall of the Assad regime. The
main thing is to set up another Arab democracy, on the lines of Egypt, Jordan or
Saudi Arabia.
The question
is: why is Israel taking part in this game?
THE CENTRAL
figure in this play is Ehud Barak. His connection with Syria didn't start
yesterday. Eight years ago, during his short and calamitous term as Prime
Minister, he played with the idea of making peace with Syria. He negotiated
with Hafez al-Assad and - surprise, surprise - the parties arrived at the
threshold of an historic peace agreement. The Golan would have been restored to
Syria, the settlers removed, another important Arab country would live in peace
with Israel.
And then the
whole thing fell apart. The pretext was that the old Assad wanted to dip his
long feet in the waters of the Sea of Tiberias, instead of stopping a few
hundred yards away from it. But the real reason concerned the feet of Barak
himself: they got cold. He escaped at the very last minute, and started the
irresponsible adventure of Camp David.
I called him,
at the time, a "peace criminal" - a serial political offender against
peace. After failing at Camp David - because of his overweening arrogance and appalling
contempt for Arabs - he invented the mantra: "We have no partner". So it was not he who failed, and not the
conference which he initiated without proper preparation.
No. It is the
partner that has failed. There can be no peace with the Palestinians, just as
there can be no peace with the Syrians. In the immortal saying of the
ultra-ultra-rightist, Yitzhak Shamir: "The sea is the same sea, and the
Arabs are the same Arabs".
"We have
no partner". That mantra destroyed the Israeli peace movement and caused
damage that, it seems, can hardly be repaired.
EHUD OLMERT is
keeping Barak out of the play he is now engaged in with Mahmoud Abbas. Why present
a gift to a competitor? In revenge, Barak dismisses the idea of peace with the
Palestinians with a wave of the hand. He announces that the idea of peace is a
non-starter, because the Palestinian state would shower Israel with missiles.
What is happening today to Sderot would happen tomorrow to Ben Gurion airport, which
is only a few miles away from the Green Line.
This means
that peace can be made only when Israel has a system that will provide an
impenetrable defense against short-range missiles. When will that happen? In a
few years. (But by then, the Palestinians will probably have more advanced
missiles, and we shall need more advanced defense systems.)
Peace in three
years, or in thirty, or in three hundred?
IN THE
meantime, Olmert continues with his games. Almost every day a colorful new balloon
goes up: peace proposals, "principles" for a peace that may come
about at some indefinite time, a theoretical "peace agreement". All
these plans have one thing in common: they don't touch reality, here and now.
They belong to a distant rosy future, while very bad things are happening now on
the ground.
It is
President Bush, again, who is pushing Olmert in this direction. As much as he
wants tension between Israel and the Syrians, he desires positive news about his
"vision" of a "peace process" between Israel and the
Palestinians. Let them float virtual "peace processes", discuss
documents for the time the Messiah will come, smile at each other, embrace. All
to prove that Bush is winning after all, his "vision" is taking
shape. That is good for Bush, good for Olmert, good for Abbas.
For whom is it
not good? For the Palestinians, who are collapsing under the yoke of the
occupation. The misery in the Gaza Strip deepens every day, as the plan unfolds
to bring about a total collapse, anarchy and the fall of Hamas. The situation
of the West Bank population is not much better. The roadblocks are staying
where they are, and so are the settlements and outposts. The road network
"for Israelis only" is getting longer, the construction of the wall is
in full swing.
The most
grievous expression of the situation in the occupied territories under Olmert
and Barak is the daily killing. Almost no day passes without a new atrocity. A
pupil is run over, his injuries are critical, he is kept at the roadblock over
an hour until he dies. The army issues a laconic statement: he was on the list
of those "forbidden to enter Israel". Five soldiers seize a boy
waiting at a bus stop and beat him to death. A sick woman arrives at a
roadblock and is detained there for no apparent reason until she dies.
Such stories
have become routine and no longer cause a ripple. Two or three journalists do
still get upset and report them, the rest just ignore them. Senses have been
blunted. It's not news.
IT MIGHT have
been expected that somebody would get angry at the empty games of the
"peace process". After all, every thinking person knows that if Abbas
achieves no political results, Hamas will drive him out of the West Bank as
they did in Gaza, and that is supposed to frighten Israelis.
They are not
frightened. Hamas will take over? So what! All-Arabs-are-the-same.
Syria has
missiles that can reach every point in Israel. Including Tel-Aviv. Including Dimona.
A war with Syria will be no joy-ride.
So what?
People don't get upset. Barak says that there will be no war, but that perhaps there
will be war. But that would be just a slight mis-calculatsia..