By P. David Hornik on 3.7.05 @ 12:07AM
This supposed optimist is also the consummate Middle East realist and should be heeded as such.
JERUSALEM -- Last week Israel's minister for Diaspora affairs,
Natan Sharansky, sent an urgent letter to Prime Minister Ariel
Sharon requesting that he demand that the Palestinian Authority
stop executions of suspected "collaborators" with Israel. Such
"collaborators" are generally Palestinians who were "convicted" by
the PA's controversial "state security" courts of tipping off
Israel about impending terror attacks, or about the whereabouts of
terrorists who were planning them. In other words, their "crime" is
to assist Israel in preventing the mass murder of civilians.
Sharansky's letter to Sharon pointed to a contradiction in
Palestinian behavior: "It is unacceptable that the PA demands the
release of terrorists from our jails, and we respond affirmatively
because of the hope for an opening to peace, while at the very same
time the PA is about to commit state executions of people accused
of helping Israel thwart terror.... It is impossible to build a
peace process based on blood."
Last February 16, PA chairman Mahmoud Abbas already ratified
death sentences against three "collaborators." And last week, the
PA's chief mufti Sheikh Akrima Sabri announced that he was
reviewing fifteen more death sentences at Abbas's request -- about
half of the cases involving alleged "collaborators." Reports say
the mufti has already recommended that five of the prisoners be
executed, though whether they were "collaborators" is not yet
clear.
These days Sharansky's name is associated with an exuberant
optimism about the Middle East, and about all peoples' ability to
create well-functioning democracies if given a chance. President
Bush has sung the praises of his book The Case for
Democracy and declared it to be part of his "presidential
DNA." Events like the Iraqi people's insistence on voting despite a
threat of terror, and the Lebanese people's agitation against the
Syrian occupation of their country, are dramatic and hope-inspiring
and seem to bear out Sharansky's -- and Bush's -- message.
What can get lost in the excitement, though, is that Sharansky
is not an uncritical optimist -- far from it. If his overall
message has not had much resonance in Israel itself, it's because
Israelis have lived in the Middle East a long time and are harder
to persuade that it's changing for the better. And Sharansky
himself, despite his own optimism on the philosophical level, is
actually -- a side of him much less known in America and the West
-- among the more cautious and realistic Israelis when it comes to
the facts on the ground.
INDEED, WHILE ABBAS'S election as PA chairman last January is
commonly mentioned in the same breath with the Iraqi elections and,
now, the Lebanese struggle (as well as President Mubarak's -- as
yet untested -- promise of genuine multicandidate elections next
September), the party over Abbas's "election" was one Sharansky did
not join. Telling the Jerusalem Post last January 10 that
this election was not "truly free," he explained: "Free elections
can only take place in societies in which people are free to
express their opinions without fear. This is not the case in the
Palestinian Authority....there was no other candidate [than
Abbas]..."
He went on to say it was a "shame" that, as Post
reporter Herb Keinon paraphrased him, "the world uses the same
words for completely different types of processes in different
governmental systems, thereby making moral equivalencies that don't
exist." Sharansky added in his own words: "This election can be the
beginning of the democratic process only if we don't have illusions
that democracy is already there, and that all we have to do now is
give them independence. If that is what we do, then we will find
that we have given independence not to a democratic state, but to a
terrorist state."
Sharansky's unflinching scrutiny of the Palestinian Authority
continued on January 25 when he drew attention to a detailed report
on its promotion of anti-Semitism and genocide in its official
media. Compiled by Palestinian Media Watch and called "Kill a Jew
-- Go to Heaven," Sharansky summarized the study to reporters: "As
in Nazi Germany, there is an entire 'culture of hatred' in
Palestinian society today, from textbooks to crossword puzzles,
from day camps to music videos. Calling for the murder of Jews, as
Jews, is the end result."
(As shown by the Palestinian media's lionization of the recent
suicide bomber at a Tel Aviv club, any improvement since then is
still very partial. See also a report by Israel's Intelligence and Terrorism
Information Center.)
ANOTHER ISSUE WHERE Sharansky dissents from the prevalent --
including the Bush administration's -- perception is Israel's
disengagement plan. Last February 20 when the Israeli cabinet (over
one-third of which is now members of the dovish Labor Party) voted
17-5 in favor of the plan, Sharansky was one of those five nays.
Indeed, if President Bush wanted to learn Sharansky's view on this
subject, he didn't need to look far; on page 262 of The Case
for Democracy, Sharansky writes:
"I...opposed...Sharon's disengagement plan because I did not
accept the premise that there was no potential Palestinian partner
and no hope for peace.... In my view, one-sided Israeli concessions
would only strengthen the forces of terror and fear within
Palestinian society, making it even more difficult to promote
positive change and decreasing the chances of a viable partner for
peace emerging in the future."
And just a few pages earlier, Bush presumably read criticisms by
Sharansky that would have hit still closer to home, since they
concerned Bush's own Road Map:
"The Road Map was the voice of Bush but the hands of Oslo....
The Road Map was effectively calling for a quick game of musical
chairs among the Palestinian leadership, turning reform efforts
into a farce.... In hindsight, the Bush administration's support
for the Road Map seems even more shocking.... when it came to the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict, the rhetoric and the policy of his
administration diverged.... the Road Map will not bring to fruition
the ideas the present articulated on June 24 [2002]. It will not
bring genuine freedom to the Palestinians, and therefore will not
bring genuine peace."
There is a disconnect, it seems, between the Sharansky whom
President Bush and many of his fervent supporters have adopted as a
sort of standard-bearer, and the Sharansky who is much more
reserved and cautious when it comes to the details of reaching
democracy and peace, but who seems to be a victim of neglect. Some
would say Sharansky himself is partially to blame for this in
promoting an overly sanguine message in places far from the harsh
sands of the Middle East. If genuine elections in Iraq and genuine
popular agitation in Lebanon justify a measured optimism, phony
elections in the PA followed by continued incitement and terrorism
do not, and are reason to rethink political plans rather than
accelerate them.
Perhaps the "other Sharansky" needs to make himself better seen
and heard, even if it means detracting from the more cheerful
image.
topics:
Books, Iraq, Israel