An empty car arrived at the Defense Ministry, and Amir
Peretz stepped out of the car, to paraphrase Winston
Churchill's jibe at Clement Atlee. Even the harshest
critics of Peretz have to acknowledge the important
contribution he has made: He has demonstrated that the
position of defense minister is completely superfluous. It
is possible to go to war, withdraw forces, pulverize Gaza,
deploy vis-a-vis Iran, and even control the West Bank
without a defense minister. It suddenly becomes apparent
that an answering machine at the defense minister's office
is sufficient. Fact: Peretz has faded away, yet all of
these things occurred.
It is possible to be an outstanding
citizen, a labor leader who emerged from a remote town,
who throughout his life fought and paid the price for his
dovish views - without a ranch, without military ranks,
without rich friends and cigars - and then become a
defense minister responsible for a policy that is even
more brutal and militaristic than that of all the generals
who preceded him. Fact: The initial months of Peretz's
tenure as defense minister have been among the most
horrifying in the history of the conflict, with Israel
routinely killing a shocking number of Palestinian and
Lebanese civilians, including many women and children. Not
only has Uncle Peretz failed to soar, but he has become an
identical twin of Shaul Mofaz, who was perhaps the most
brutal of defense ministers. However, soon we will begin
to long for Mofaz: At least with him we had no
expectations that he would act wisely and humanely.
On April 2, just after the elections, I
wrote here: "Defense Minister Amir Peretz. Are we ready
for this juxtaposition of words, which seems
semi-imaginary? Is Peretz brave enough to take up the
gauntlet? And is Olmert? This will be the first test of
these two and of all of us, in fact." And indeed, with a
quivering hand, it can be written: This test has
apparently ended in abject failure, with implications that
are much more grievous than the fate of Peretz and Olmert.
Apparently? Because Peretz has one small and absolutely
last chance.
He began his term on the wrong foot. His first decision
was to approve a worthless liquidation operation in Gaza
in which five members of the Popular Resistance Committees
were killed. This was the signal that heralded hundreds of
killings. At the time, he still felt somewhat obliged to
instruct the commanders "not to harm innocent people." As
confused as it was, this directive was also drenched in a
sea of liquidations that were subsequently carried out by
the Israel Defense Forces in Gaza. More than 300
Palestinians have been killed since Gilad Shalit was
captured.
It seems that Peretz's position is
determined by where he is sitting. Now, he is already
responsible for all of the failures, from the war in
Lebanon through the futile, bloody operations in Gaza. He
is responsible for this bloodshed. Not a shred or trace of
his previous worldview, not even the rhetoric. The West
Bank is groaning, Gaza is crushed, no one talks about
peace or negotiations, we say "no" to the Syrians and
boycott Hamas, while the settlements flourish. Gaza is
wallowing in darkness due to the criminal and stupid
bombing of the electricity plant (Who gave the order?).
Dozens of children are crippled and have lost limbs as a
result of the types of appalling armament the IDF deploys
in Gaza and Lebanon, where people are still being injured
every day by the thousands of cluster bombs the IDF left
behind. And who is orchestrating all of this? A former
Peace Now activist.
Why did he struggle for all those years
if this is the way he acts when the golden opportunity
comes his way to make a change in direction? Only to reach
an "accord" with the settlers on a ridiculous evacuation
of several "illegal" outposts? Mofaz would have been
enough for this. We did not need Peretz if this was only
to try to allow olives to be harvested in the West Bank.
Peretz has crashed. He dissolved between
the chief of staff, who ignores his existence, and a prime
minister who belittles and scorns him. Even Yitzhak Rabin
as prime minister did not show such scorn for then-defense
minister Shimon Peres, whom he despised. And the "rebels"
in his own party ridicule and hound him.
True, it is not easy to maneuver between
all of them. But a true leader should have known how to
navigate among Olmert, Dan Halutz and Avishay Braverman.
What can Peretz say now to those who set their hopes on
him? The intellectuals, those seeking peace and social
justice, the workers and Arabs, who believed for a moment
that his election was a ray of new hope - that a civilian
could manage the defense system, that someone from a
development town could be a seeker of peace, and that a
Mizrahi does not necessarily hate Arabs. What will he say
now? That his hand was not in the till? That all of the
subversive types above and below him are to blame? The
greater the expectation, the greater the disappointment -
and this will remain with us for many long years to come.
However, there is still a small chance.
Peretz no longer has anything to lose. Therefore, it is
hard to understand what he fears. If he still believes in
the courageous views he once held, why doesn't he act to
implement them? Why doesn't he take some bold moves to
save himself and us from hopelessness?
Peretz wants to advance an accord with
the Palestinians? Why doesn't he meet with Ismail Haniyeh,
or at least with Mahmoud Abbas? He is in favor of
negotiations with Syria? Why doesn't he say so? He
realizes how brutal the occupation is? Why doesn't he act
to loosen its grip? After all, he is the defense minister,
right? He is the No. 2 in the government and despite the
treachery of his party colleagues, he still wields
considerable political power. It looks like these are his
final days on the job. He can still make his swan song
resound from above. Arise from your slumber, Peretz, as
the Internationale exhorts - if you still remember the
words.