The government's response to the new peace
initiative, attributed to Yossi Beilin and Yasser
Abed Rabbo, and to the terrible bombing at
Haifa's Maxim restaurant, prove the validity of the
expression that whoever holds the hammer
tends to see every problem as a nail.
The proposed plan, details of
which have not yet been made
public, resulted in an
instinctive response by Prime
Minister Ariel Sharon: he
attacked it and accused the
Israeli initiators of
cooperating with the
Palestinian enemy. In other
words, Sharon rejects even the
attempt to present the public with an
alternative to his policy toward the
Palestinians. The prime minister automatically
rejects a diplomatic solution and thus
manifests his view that the only way of ending
the conflict is through military victory.
Sharon is realizing his approach from the
beginning of his tenure. He has led a forceful,
intense approach against the murderous
Palestinian terrorism, by far more powerful and
extensive than his predecessor, Ehud Barak. He
has enjoyed broad public support for his
policy: it is viewed as beyond reproach and as
the proper response to Palestinian violence.
Sharon's stance has led to the reoccupation of
the West Bank cities, to curfews and sieges, to
air attacks and assassinations, whose legality
is questionable and whose implementation
raises ethical objections. The Israel Defense Forces
has made use of nearly every form of violence
in order to block Palestinian terrorism, but
the prime minister's policy has failed if we
judge its results: Sharon has been in power for
nearly three years and the situation in the
country, in general, and in the confrontation
with the Palestinians, in particular, is worse
than when he was elected.
Haaretz