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http://www.opendemocracy.net/forum/document_details.asp?CatID=127&DocID=1225

18 April 2002

Israel: the generals’ grand design
Tanya Reinhart

[Tanya Reinhart, is professor of linguistics and cultural studies at Tel Aviv
University and the University of Utrecht in the Netherlands. Her political
writings appear regularly in Yediot Aharonot. ]

Sharon’s present strategy of fighting the Palestinians to the last and
imposing a new regional order follows the long-term vision of Israel’s
political generals. For them, the failure of the Oslo peace process was not
just inevitable, but a goal.

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(excerpt)

In conventional political discourse, Israel’s recent attacks on Palestinian
civilians, villages, and governmental institutions are described as
“retaliatory acts”. They are justified as a “response” to the latest wave
of terror attacks on Israeli civilians. In fact, these “retaliatory
measures” are part of a systematic assault on the Palestinian Authority that
was carefully prepared long before the current “war on terrorism.” As far
back as October 2000, at the outset of the Palestinian uprising and before
the terror attacks had started, military circles in Israel had prepared
detailed operative plans to topple Arafat and the Palestinian Authority.

In a statement published in Israel’s major newspaper, Ha’aretz, on 18
October 2001, Prime Minister Ariel Sharon declared, “Oslo [the peace accord]
is not continuing; there won’t be Oslo; Oslo is over.” Oslo is now widely
considered in Israel to be “an historical mistake.” Since March of 2001, the
Israeli media has openly discussed plans to re-establish full military
control of the territories.

Alex Fishman, the senior security correspondent for Yediot Aharonot, has
explained that, after the Oslo accords, “The IDF (The Israeli Defence Force,
or Israeli army) regarded the occupied territories as if they were one
territorial cell,” and that this placed some constraints on the IDF and
enabled a certain amount of freedom for the Palestinian Authority and the
Palestinian population.

Now, however, the army has returned to a concept of military administration
that prevailed in the pre-Oslo years. They planned to divide the occupied
territories into sixty-four isolated cells, each of which will be assigned a
special military force, and “the local commander will have freedom to use his
discretion” as to when and whom to shoot – the aim being to isolate
Palestinian communities from each other, in preparation for a full takeover.

The apparent change in the official Israeli position on Oslo did not occur as
a result of Palestinian terrorism. The first Palestinian attack on Israeli
civilians in the current uprising did not occur until 3 November 2000, in a
Jerusalem market. Yet a month earlier, on 15 October, 2000, a document
prepared by the security services at the request of then-Prime Minister Ehud
Barak stated that “Arafat, the person, is a severe threat to the security of
the state [of Israel] and the damage which will result from his disappearance
is less than the damage caused by his existence” (details of this document
were published in Ma’ariv on 6 July, 2001).

The operative plan to topple Arafat, known as “Fields of Thorns,” had been
prepared as far back as 1996, and was then updated in early 2000 once the
Intifada began, as reported by Amir Oren in Ha’aretz on 23 November, 2001.
The “Field of Thorns” plan includes everything that Israel is currently
executing and more. (For details of the “Field of Thorns” plan see Anthony
Cordesman, “Peace and War: Israel versus the Palestinians. A second
Intifada?” Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), December
2000, and its summary in Shraga Eilam, “Peace With Violence or Transfer” in
Between The Lines, December 2000.)

Starting in the Autumn of 2000, politicians and functionaries in then Prime
Minister Barak’s circles worked on preparing public opinion for the eventual
toppling of Arafat. A key step in that propaganda war occurred on 20 November
2000, when Nahman Shai, then public-affairs coordinator of the Barak
government, released a sixty-page document prepared by Barak’s aide, Danny
Yatom, titled “Palestinian Authority non-compliance… A record of bad faith
and misconduct.” Informally referred to as the “White Book,” this document
argued that Arafat’s present crime – “orchestrating the Intifada” – was
just the latest in a long chain of evidence that showed, it alleged, that
Arafat had never deserted the “option of violence and struggle.”

Here is an example of the sort of evidence the “White Book” cites: “As early
as Arafat’s own speech on the White House lawn, on13 September, 1993, there
were indications that for him, the D.O.P. [declaration of principles] did not
necessarily signify an end to the conflict. He did not, at any point,
relinquish his uniform, symbolic of his status as a revolutionary commander”
(Section 2). It’s true that Arafat wore the uniform on that occasion. This
uniform, however, is the only “evidence” that the report can cite of
Arafat’s hidden war-like intentions on an occasion that readers will recall
was part of the Camp David peace process.

A large section of the “White Book” is devoted to establishing Arafat’s
“ambivalence and compliance” regarding terror. Here’s an example: “In March
1997 there was once again more than a hint of a ‘Green Light’ from Arafat to
the Hamas, prior to the bombing in Tel Aviv… This is implicit in the
statement made by a Hamas-affiliated member of Arafat’s Cabinet, Imad Faluji,
to an American paper (Miami Herald, April 5, 1997).” No further “hints” are
provided to link Arafat to this bombing.

One wonders what history would look like if every statement by an opposition
member of the Israeli Cabinet were taken to reflect the views of the Israeli
Prime Minister. (Because of the nature of its coalition governments almost
all Israeli Cabinets contain members from parties in contention with the
Prime Minister of the day.) Yet these kinds of accusations – particularly
that Arafat has given the “green light to terror” – succeeded in becoming
the mantra for mainstream Israeli propaganda: “Arafat is still a terrorist
and is personally responsible for the acts of all groups, from Hamas and the
Islamic Jihad to Hizbollah.”

>From Barak to Sharon

If the Barak administration paved the propaganda path, the plans to oust
Arafat grew more detailed under Ariel Sharon. The Foreign Report of 12 July,
2001 disclosed that the Israeli army had updated its plans for an “all-out
assault to smash the Palestinian authority, force out leader Yasser Arafat
and kill or detain its army.”

Entitled, “The Destruction of the Palestinian Authority and Disarmament of
All Armed Forces,” this plan was formally presented to the Israeli government
by chief of staff Shaul Mofaz on 8 July 2001. In this plan, the Israeli
assault on Arafat would be launched, at the government’s discretion, after a
big suicide bomb attack in Israel had caused widespread deaths and injuries;
the bomb attack would be cited as the justification for the Israeli attack.

Many in Israel suspect that the assassination of the Hamas terrorist Mahmoud
Abu Hanoud in November 2001 was designed to create the appropriate “bloodshed
justification.” The timing, in any case, is deeply suspect.

First, Abu Hanoud was assassinated just when the Hamas was upholding its
two-month-old agreement with Arafat not to attack targets inside of Israel.
Second, the assassination took place on the eve of Sharon’s visit to the
United States. Few in the Israeli government would not have been aware that
the assassination would almost certainly result in a terrorist response.
Indeed, Alex Fishman reported this publicly when he observed: “Whoever
decided upon the liquidation of Abu Hanoud knew in advance that [a terrorist
attack inside of Israel] would be the price. The subject was extensively
discussed both by Israel’s military echelon and its political one, before it
was decided to carry out the liquidation” (Yediot Aharonot, 25 November,
2001).

So Israel’s recent moves to destroy the Palestinian Authority, as described
among others by Paul Rogers in last week’s openDemocracy, cannot be viewed as
spontaneous “acts of retaliation.” They should be seen as part of a
calculated plan, long in the making. This plan first required a propaganda
war against Arafat, which was begun under Barak. The next step was to weaken
the resistance of the Palestinians, which Israel has been doing
systematically since October 2000 through bombarding their infrastructure,
imprisoning people in their hometowns, and bringing them close to starvation.
All Israel needed to complete the plan was for international conditions to
“ripen,” permitting Israel to act without effective disapproval from the
United States and various world bodies.

By December 2001, conditions seem to have “ripened” thanks to the
power-drunk political atmosphere in the United States. If, at first, it
seemed that the United States would try to keep the Arab world on its side by
moderating the Israel-Palestine conflict as it did during the Gulf War in
1993, it now appears that it couldn’t care less. US policy is no longer based
on building coalitions or investing in persuasion, but on sheer force. The
smashing “victory” in Afghanistan has sent a clear message to the Third
World that nothing can stop the United States from ruining any nation it
targets. From now on, fear should be the sufficient condition for obedience.

The US hawks who are pushing to expand the war on terrorism to Iraq – and
further – view Israel as an asset. There are few regimes in the world like
Israel, so eager to risk the life of their citizens for some new regional
war. As Prof. Alain Joxe, head of the French CIRPES (Centre for Peace and
Strategic studies) put it in Le Monde, “the American leadership is presently
shaped by dangerous right-wing Southern extremists, who seek to use Israel as
an offensive tool to destabilize the whole Middle East area” (17 December,
2001). The same hawks are also talking about expanding the future war zone to
targets on Israel’s agenda, like Hezbollah and Syria.

Under these circumstances, Sharon got his green light in Washington. The
Israeli media chorus incessantly reinforces this in a way that also feeds
back into US politics: “Bush is fed up with this character [Arafat]”;
“Powell said that Arafat must stop with his lies” (Barnea and Schiffer,
Yediot Aharonot).

But since December Arafat has been – for all practical purposes – under
house arrest, surrounded by Israeli tanks. Even so, he has tried to appease
the Israelis: to no avail. On 17 December, from his bunker, Arafat issued a
televised call to all organizations to refrain from any terror or armed
activities. The various Palestinian organizations complied, understanding the
gravity of the situation, and a relative calm was maintained. Sharon,
apparently needed a further “bloodshed justification” to advance his
re-occupation plan. He ordered the assassination of another Palestinian
leader on 14 January – Raed Karmi, head of a Tul Karem militia belonging to
the mainstream Fatah organization. The horrible revenge taken by Palestinian
militants – the bombing of a bat mitzvah celebration in Hadera – did not
take long to follow.

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(please see site for end of article)

Copyright © Tanya Reinhart, 2002. Published by openDemocracy. Permission is
granted to reproduce articles for personal and educational use only.
Commercial copying, hiring and lending is prohibited without permission. If
this has been sent to you by a friend and you like it, you are welcome to
join the openDemocracy network.

Tanya Reinhart, is professor of linguistics and cultural studies at Tel Aviv
University and the University of Utrecht in the Netherlands. Her political
writings appear regularly in Yediot Aharonot.

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