Remembering Ariel Sharon
“More than any other single figure in Israel,” Shavit concludes, “Sharon led the transformation of a relatively modest and ascetic state into an occupying bully”. So how was it possible to understand his about-face? What stood out most in his conversations with Sharon, Shavit writes, was his emotional consistency, his fixed beliefs. Even when he was absorbed in the work of uprooting settlements, he spoke emotionally about their value. His policy changed dramatically, but his inner self did not change at all.
In 2006, after Sharon suffered the stroke, Shavit went home to review the tape-recorded conversations. “All night”, Shavit writes, “I sat in my study, listening to his voice and thinking about what he had left as a political legacy and as a direction for the future”. Israelis voted for Sharon, Shavit writes, “because they felt that he knew that their world, like the world of the Balkans, was about a tribal war. In the midst of this conflict, Sharon, unlike his younger self, tried to calm tempers and reassure his people. And the great majority of Israelis endorsed this”.
Sharon was the least messianic of all of Israel’s Prime Ministers…. Under his governance, Israel was weaned of the hope for an ideal end. It even came to realize that there would be no absolute peace or victory. Fundamentally, Sharon was a man of process. If he has left a legacy, it is the need for time—lots of time—because there is no way to reach peace with one abrupt act.
In his cumbersome way, he said to the Israelis: I will withdraw. But he also said, I will withdraw very slowly. Shweiyeh shweiyeh, without haste, as an Arabic phrase used in Hebrew slang has it. And I’ll rip them to shreds if they understand my withdrawal incorrectly and abuse it. Because I am not a liberal romantic. I am from here, and I will not be Mahmoud Abbas’s sucker or Kofi Annan’s sucker. I will do only what is good for us. And, just as in the nineteen-forties, fifties, and sixties I conquered land for us, now I will withdraw for us. And, just as in the nineteen-seventies, eighties, and nineties I settled the territories on our behalf, now I will evacuate for us.
“Israel was somehow fortunate”, Shavit suggests, “to have the person who made the mess try to clean it up”. “The General” is available, in its entirety, in our archive.