THE REAL REASON BEHIND ISRAEL’S BLITZKRIEG ON GAZA

‘Kiss of death’ for Palestine

It has nothing to do with Hamas… nothing to do with rocket attacks in Southern Israel….. the truth is, it’s all about scoring points (and votes) for the upcoming Israeli election…. not a thing more, not a thing less.

Gaza War Role Is Political Lift for Ex-Premier

JERUSALEM — A few weeks ago, Defense Minister Ehud Barak was considered a dead man walking in Israeli politics. Members of his Labor Party were plotting to replace him after elections on Feb. 10, if not before. Under his leadership, the storied party of David Ben-Gurion and Golda Meir had sunk so low in the polls that there was serious talk it might disappear.

No one is talking like that now. Twelve days into a punishing war that he is leading against Hamas in Gaza, Labor’s poll numbers are spiking. Mr. Barak is everywhere, in sunglasses and leather jacket, striding among his military commanders, talking strategy, calculating the next move.

“The respect I get when I go into schools since the war is amazing, and it is all about Barak,” remarked Daniel Ben-Simon, a Labor Party candidate for Parliament. “Israel’s MacArthur is back.”

There is, however, much irony — and uncertainty — in this political upheaval. Although Mr. Barak has gained from the war, he was opposed to it for far longer than any of the other top leaders and has been the most eager of them for a cease-fire since it began. Many abroad recall Mr. Barak as the prime minister who in 2000 went further than any Israeli leader in peace offers to the Palestinians, only to see the deal fail and explode in a violent Palestinian uprising that drove him from power.

If the current war goes on for long and kills many young Israeli men on the battlefield — so far casualties have been few and his shock-and-awe approach of the first days has been widely admired in Israel — Mr. Barak’s gains may again disappear. But his caution has gained him renewed support from the left.

On Wednesday, at a meeting of the country’s security cabinet, he helped persuade his fellow ministers to hold off on expanding the ground war to give diplomats a chance to stop Hamas from rearming through its smuggling routes under the Egyptian Sinai. The focus of the discussions, involving Egypt, France, Britain and the United States, is on using an international force of experts and troops at the southern Gaza border.

“Barak is very cautious,” noted Isaac Herzog, Israel’s minister of social welfare and a fellow Labor Party member who was at the meeting. “He is a cool-headed manager of this campaign but wants to exhaust diplomatic avenues.”

Voters seem aware of the risk to their soldiers of deepening the Gaza invasion, so the relative pause should not be politically problematic. But the truth is that the public wanted this war more than Mr. Barak did. With elections coming, he felt it would be difficult to hold off any longer, especially when Hamas increased its rocket fire to some 60 rockets a day, several who know him believe.

Furious and frightened after thousands of projectiles had rained down on the south over several years, Israelis yearned for a traditional Zionist warrior to rally around and send a harsh message to Hamas. For months, Mr. Barak, the natural candidate for that warrior role, declined.

At 66, Mr. Barak is the country’s most decorated soldier, famous for having foiled an airplane hijacking years ago while disguised in a mechanic’s uniform and for leading a revenge killing operation against Palestinian guerrillas in Lebanon while dressed as a woman. A skilled pianist famed for a steel-trap mind, he has also been the military chief of staff.

But he never took Hamas as seriously as many others, considering it a relatively small strategic challenge whose rockets and arms buildup could be tolerated for a while to allow bigger problems to be handled.

“His eyes are focused on Iran,” noted Gilead Sher, who was his chief of staff when he was prime minister a decade ago. “Hamas and Hezbollah largely worry him in relation to Iran.”

This, too, is an irony of Mr. Barak’s renewed popularity from the war, because his failure to grasp how average Israelis viewed the rockets is part of a larger political failure on his part. He lacks the kind of easy direct contact with the public that makes for a successful political leader.

In fact, only days before beginning the war, Mr. Barak was berated at an internal Labor Party meeting over his lack of response to the rockets.

“Members were asking aloud what had happened to him, whether he had lost it,” a party member who was present recalled. “One member, a minister, said, ‘I’m embarrassed to walk in the street and hear people talk about you as a big nothing. I get text messages from my cousins in the south asking what’s going on. Why aren’t we attacking?’ ”

Mr. Barak, the party member said, flew into a rage, saying he had seen more blood than anyone in the room, that he had witnessed things so horrible they would faint just hearing of them, that he would not be lectured to on the need to be tough.

At that time, Labor was polling about 8 seats in the 120-seat Parliament, with the opposition Likud, headed by Benjamin Netanyahu, at 30 and the centrist Kadima, led by Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni, in the mid-20s. Today polls show Labor around 16 to 18; some are fantasizing about squeezing past Kadima for second place.

There is a long history in Israel of warriors becoming peacemakers, and Mr. Barak seemed to fit that pattern a decade ago. But he was always something of a hybrid, and returned to politics after a long hiatus in 2007, when he was elected the leader of the Labor Party. Now it remains to be seen whether he can again turn his comfort in the military arena into a platform for political success.

One reason he might not do so is his political tin ear. After he left politics at the start of this decade he went into business and got rich, buying an apartment on the 31st floor of Tel Aviv’s exclusive Akirov Towers. In recent months he tried to sell it for $11 million. For a leader of Israel’s social democratic party that seeks to speak for the working man, this was clearly a misstep.

In an interview with Ari Shavit, a writer for the newspaper Haaretz, about 10 days before the war began, Mr. Barak described the purchase as a mistake.

“I admit I did not take into account that an apartment like this would become a symbol,” he said.

But he argued that the contest for national leadership should not be a popularity contest.

“When a plane has to be landed in a storm, you don’t ask if there is someone nice here,” he said. “Nor do you ask whether there is someone who looks like a pilot or talks like a pilot or once stood next to a pilot during a flight. You ask if there is a real pilot here, not a nice guy, not a back-slapper.”

That sales pitch was adopted by the party, with advertisements showing an unsmiling Mr. Barak and the words “not friendly, not trendy and not nice.” It is seen as a surprisingly successful approach.

Most analysts say that whether the election victor is Likud or Kadima, Mr. Barak could well remain in his post as defense minister, where the public is comfortable seeing him. Mr. Netanyahu has told others that if he becomes prime minister he will seek to bring Labor in by keeping Mr. Barak as defense minister.

At the same time, some on Israel’s left seem to be looking again at Mr. Barak as the man to vote for precisely because he has shown caution in going to war.

“Many see Barak as the old Israel, the one that won the ’67 war brilliantly and overwhelmingly after hesitating for a month,” Mr. Shavit of Haaretz said. “This is his pattern. Don’t rush in. Try to avoid it. But if you start the war, win the war. It is exactly the opposite of Olmert of ’06, which was to rush in and lose it. If the war doesn’t turn into a disaster, there is feeling of relief that we are back to being the old Israelis in the sense of thinking a bit before we act.”

Isabel Kershner contributed reporting.

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11 Comments

  1. Don Miller said,

    January 8, 2009 at 18:45

    I’m convinced Israel is waging this campaign to divert attention away from the Billions of US dollars that have been funneled into Israeli banks by Madoff and his buddies. With all the government elite showing duel US/Israeli citizenship and friends of Madoff and Abrahms, I feel Gaza is being sacrificed to mask the reports and on going investigations onto Wall Street crimes. We’ve been duped, robbed, and raped by these people and the worst is yet to surface. “God Speed USA”

  2. erich kronberger said,

    January 8, 2009 at 22:32

    All life is priceless. Let all those on all sides that want WAR go to the front lines and kill each other (hand to hand,knifes, small arms et cetera ) let them pay the price for their hate ..send them and war will be a thing of the past., diplomacy will be king. Let us build a world that we all want for the ones we love..End the insanity or it well end us. Thanks

  3. January 8, 2009 at 22:35

    […] THE REAL REASON BEHIND ISRAEL’S BLITZKRIEG ON GAZA January 8, 2009 Posted by verteta in Israel, PALESTINE. trackback Full Link : HERE […]

  4. profnasty said,

    January 9, 2009 at 00:37

    Don’t be stupid man! In these last days of the BushMonkey administration Israel is taking a stab at forcing an Iran/america war. By torturing the children of Palestine in front of the whole world, only one nation has the courage and heart to react. That nation is Iran. But will Iran be goaded into the war? I think not. Muslims, and all the people of the world who love justice and the God of Creation will wait until Israel/america reaches a period of weakness. Then the fun will begin. Hopefully the people who committ the atrocities we see now will suffer the same. Praise God, Praise Allah, Pray to Jesus the Messiah.

  5. Rich Rowland said,

    January 9, 2009 at 00:39

    Just another prime example of Zionist ass kissing..How typical
    All you sheeple have to do is google jewish blood ritual murder
    to see exactly whats wrong with the above picture.The primary
    Evil in America and around the planet is the Central bank….
    The Central bank in the U.S. called the federal reserve extracts interest/usery
    on it’s users and in turn privately officecates the wealth of the people.
    printing only the principle and not the interest,one person wins and another
    loses….

  6. cook said,

    January 9, 2009 at 02:20

    this is going to get alot worse people,what happens if israhell attacks the iranian aid ship that is on it’s way to gaza with medical and food aid.this is not the dignity (boat) i am talking about. the iranian ship has already passed through the suez canal. me thinks mad times ahead.

  7. Salim said,

    January 9, 2009 at 06:08

    I disagree that this “war” was waged because of the upcoming elections.This was nothing more than a pre planned campaign to annex more Palestinian territory and put fear into the hearts of the surroundong Arab nations.The ultimate aim here is the complete expulsion of Palestinians through the most savage means.It is naive to think that the the “leadership” i.e public faces are driving this agenda.As in the case of the large “democracies” of this world the true ruling elite are pushing forward with their agenda and that takes precedence over the desire and whims of the puppets such as Ehud Barak and his ilk to be relected.Regardless of which party or Head of State is elected we will continue to witness the illusion that is demcracy.

  8. Steve said,

    January 9, 2009 at 08:17

    Its a show of power. They are proving that they can do as they please and there is nothing the World can do about it.

  9. Ray O Hope said,

    January 10, 2009 at 01:38

    GREAT PICTURE, THE WHORE OF WAR KISSING THE DEVIL.

  10. michael mazur said,

    January 10, 2009 at 06:23

    `especially when Hamas increased its rocket fire to some 60 rockets a day`.

    Hamas is controlled by Israeli intel; hence what MK Gilad Erdan said late November that Hamas rockets fall on vacant land – which should have an open air prison built on it to contain Palestinian prisoners, proves Israeli control, as do pics of smiling unconcerned Israeli tourists watching the war from near the Gaza border as they know they are safe even from random Hamas rockets, said to be notoriously inaccurate.

    If fired at all at other times the firing is clearly suspended when tourists are watching, with mirth, from a safe distance what would have to be shredding by bombs dropped by F-16s.

    Because Hamas is not what we are led to believe, the claim that Israeli civilians in the south have been killed at all is a Israeli psyops fabrication as for a death to be reported by Israeli controlled media does not mean that the death actually occurred -TV visuals trickery takes care of that.

    A casus belli has to be manufactured, else Israel would be accused of doing the very thing the Nazis did on 1Sept1939 – commit naked criminal aggression.

  11. grace said,

    January 10, 2009 at 07:38

    the kiss of death nice comment and well said lol