By Hillel Fendel
(IsraelNN.com) Minister of Strategic Affairs Avigdor Lieberman and his
Yisrael Beiteinu party have taken the unique step of releasing a "party
platform" in between national elections - in what some see as not only
a promotional endeavor, but also a well-timed political ploy.
Named the party's "vision," the paper begins by terming itself a
"sincere and genuine effort to present Yisrael Beiteinu's outlook,
without using worn out phrases or vague terminology that leave room for
misunderstandings."
The paper deals with issues such as the clash between Islam and the
West, personal and national security for Israelis, the expulsion and
unilateral withdrawal from Gaza, Israeli economics, education, the
Jewish character of the State, and more.
Released as Prime Minister Ehud Olmert is negotiating with Fatah chief
Mahmoud Abbas the terms of an Israeli withdrawal from nearly all of
Judea and Samaria, the paper appears to be an attempt by Yisrael
Beiteinu to curb Olmert politically. However, the party only has two
ministers in the Cabinet, and will therefore not be able to vote down
Olmert's proposals.
In addition, Yisrael Beiteinu's 11 Knesset Members are not a critical
force in the coalition. The current Kadima-led coalition has five
parties and a total of 77 MKs; the loss of 11 would still leave the
coalition with a comfortable majority of the Knesset's 120 members.
Pressure to leave the coalition is being brought to bear upon the
11-member Shas party as well. However, Shas appears to have no plans
to vote against the coalition at this point.
Among the main points of the Yisrael Beiteinu document is that the
"principle of 'land for peace' is mistaken and misleading... and will
lead to certain failure."
"The assumption that the root of Israeli-Arab dispute is territorial,"
the report continues, "stems from the hope that an era of peace can
finally be brought about via Israeli territorial concessions. This
conception does not jibe with our accumulated experience, however... as
can be seen from the two latest instances in which we ceded territory
down to the last grain of sand - in Lebanon and Gaza. Not only do
territorial concessions not bring peace, they actually lead directly to
an escalation of terrorism."
This mistaken conception, writes Yisrael Beiteinu leader Avigdor
Lieberman, the Minister for Strategic Affairs, leads to basic errors in
Israel's foreign policy. "Israel must explain its positions on an
intellectual level, and not with Messianic slogans such as 'Not one
inch.' Israel must explain [for instance] that the anti-Israeli
positions led by the leaders of Israel, and which are prevalent in many
Western circles as well, are a direct carry-over from classic
anti-Semitism."
"Israel must explain that the demand for the establishment of an
independent Palestinian state and the 'right of return' are a
camouflage of the attempt by extremist Islam to destroy the State of
Israel. It must explain that their demand for self-definition is just a
way of prettifying this, and that 'two states for two peoples' does not
mean one and a half states for one people [the Arabs] and half a state
for the other."
Yisrael Beiteinu has long favored an exchange of territory assigning
Israeli-Arab population centers to a Palestinian state to solve the
Israeli-Arab dispute. The document cites Cyprus and the exchange of
populations there as an example: "In the early 70's, the intermingling
of Turks and Greeks created constant friction that developed in time
into a dispute saturated with blood and suffering. But since 1974,
when the two nations were separated, with the Turks being concentrated
on one side of the island and the Greeks on the other, life has
returned to normal. True, there is no peace agreement, but there is
security, stability, and growth. If we, too, would have that - it
would be sufficient."
Lieberman repeats the frequently-repeated position that the Arabs'
dispute with Israel is not the main expression of Islam's struggle
against the West.
What should be done about the incessant firing of Kassam rockets at
Sderot and the western Negev? Lieberman has an answer: Israel should
"hit" Rimal, a wealthy neighborhood in Gaza, every time Sderot is
rocketed, "at least to the same extent that Sderot is hit." He also
implies that Israel should stop supplying electricity, water, fuel,
port services and other resources to Gaza.
Original
Source
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