GUSH SHALOM pob 3322,
Tel-Aviv 61033 www.gush-shalom.org
International release
November 17, 2003
[The Yediot interview, with four former Shabak heads who sharply spoke out against the way our
government handles the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, attracted worldwide
attention. But so far the interview was only quoted. The following full
translation was distributed on the discussion list "Alef"
by Amy Mina <amymina@link.net>.]
Jerusalem
Friday November 14, 2003
We are Seriously Concerned About the Fate of the State of Israel Yedioth Ahronoth (p. B4) by Alex
Fishman and Sima Kadmon --
When the meeting is almost over, we ask Avraham
Shalom (Bendor) if he thinks we are on the brink of
an abyss. We are on our way, he says, because all the steps that we have taken
are steps that are contrary to the aspiration for peace. If we do not turn away
from this path, of adhering to the entire Land of Israel, and if we do not also
begin to understand the other side, dammit, we will
not get anywhere. We must, once and for all, admit that there is an other side,
that it has feelings and that it is suffering, and that we are behaving
disgracefully. Yes, there is no other word for it. Disgracefully.
Q.What do you mean disgracefully, we ask,
disgracefully at the roadblocks?
All of it, says Shalom, all of it.
Q. What is disgraceful, we ask, do we behave disgracefully in the refugee
camps?
Everything, everything, Shalom says. It is all disgraceful. We debase the
Palestinian man individual to all and sundry. And nobody can take this.
We too would not take it if it were done to us. And neither do they take it,
why should they suffer? And we are incapable of taking even a small step to
correct this. Shimon Peres once tried to take this small step, he at least talked
about it when I was GSS director, and then nothing was done.
Q: What did he talk about?
That the music should be changed, says Shalom. The tone that makes the music.
And Peres truly tried to change the overbearing and arrogant attitude of the
Jews. And after all, this entire behavior is a result of the occupation. We
have turned into a people of petty fighters using the wrong tools. And if we
don’t change this, there will be nothing here.
This was the blunt, direct manner of the former GSS director, Shalom, to
explain the sense of urgency that led him, this week, to a unique meeting, the
first of its kind, of four directors of the General Security Service to send a
message, a warning, an alert, an alarm. To put a red alert sign in right in the
face of Israeli society.
Together they have a total of 20 years in the GSS. The four—Avraham
Shalom, Yaakov Peri, Carmi Gillon and Ami Ayalon—under
different governments and in different periods, headed the organization that
knows better than any other organization the innards of both societies, the
Israeli and the Palestinian.
From the sewage of the
Khan Yunis refugee camp to the offices of the
presidents of both societies.
Not only is the message harsh. The meeting itself wasn’t simple. These are
people who do not always live in peace among themselves. Only Carmi Gillon’s willingness to join such a meeting with Yaakov Peri, after a long period
of estrangement, proves how much the matter burns in their bones. What
ultimately led them to put their old enmity aside, to overcome the natural
embarrassment of being prophets of doom, and to give up the comfortable
addiction they each have to their present occupation, was the deep sense that
something very bad is going on here. And each of them summarized this sense in
his own language and style.
Wallowing in the Mud
In my opinion, Ayalon said, we are taking very sure
and measured steps to a point where the State of Israel will not be a democracy
or a home for the Jewish people. Everything else is commentary.
I completely agree with this phrasing, said Gillon.
That is also what brought me here. I am very concerned about our future.
I look at my daughters, who are still young, and it is clear to me that we are
heading for a crash. And we are the second generation that began the revival,
and I would very much like the coming generations to live in a Jewish and
democratic state the way my parents wanted.
And I, said Yaakov Peri, do
not foresee any breakthroughs being made by deliberate decisions. I am one of
those who believe in the phenomenon of cycles. And whether there are seven or
70 bad years, there are always seven or 70 good years. I think that a large
part of the miracles that happened to the Jewish people did not take place
because a government or someone decided on them and planned them, but because
something unexpected and unforeseeable happened.
And I believe that something of this sort will happen in the not-distant
future, because otherwise, we really are bent on doom.
But I can say that from whatever aspect you look at it, whether the economic,
political, security, or social aspect, in each of these aspects we are going in
the direction of decline, nearly a catastrophe. And that is why, if
something doesn’t happen here, we will continue to live by the sword, we will
continue to wallow in the mud and we will continue to destroy ourselves.
Look, said Gillon, the reason that we are here, is because of Ami Ayalon’s document. But with all modesty, although I
am part of it, I think that this is the first time, perhaps the last, that it
will be possible to take four GSS directors, to put them together for two hours
and have them talk about—I don’t know, the most minor description I can find
is: the serious concern for the condition of the State of Israel. This is the
statement of the event. I personally had a great many doubts about coming to
this meeting. I deliberated until this afternoon.
Q. What were your doubts, we asked.
It doesn’t matter, said Gillon in his cautious way. I
had doubts. It appears a bit too dramatic to me, and it is actually dramatic.
Because if four GSS directors get together who know the situation, and who live
among their people and not only the GSS, but are also involved in other
social spheres – and they convene and want to convey a message, it is
important that this be the main message, and not if Arafat is relevant or
irrelevant.
Look What They Did to Us
Ami Ayalon is short-tempered, tense, almost
emotional. He came to the meeting with the avowed goal of promoting the document
of principles he authored with Sari Nusseibeh. He
hopes that the support of three other former GSS directors will have a dramatic
effect. One of his achievements from this meeting was the willingness of his
colleagues to sign his document. Ayalon’s pleasure
over this was touching. True, the signature campaign among the Israeli and
Palestinian publics goes on, but the number of signatories is still far from
constituting public pressure on the political establishment.
You know what the paradox is? He asks. I go places all day. I meet with
thousands of people. In the Katamon neighborhood, in Sderot, in Kiryat Shmona, everywhere in the country. There is no argument
over our document. The argument is not over the paper. The argument is over our
rights and obligations as citizens. Can we have an effect, is it right for us
to have an effect, if our call, our cry, our signature, will do anything. The
argument is over what is democracy in Israeli society at the beginning of the
21st century.
And what you see, says Peri, is apathy, repression, a
lack of desire to think deeply. Look what has been going on over the last three
years: there are no demonstrations, no rallies, almost no protest. Those who do
bother to come out strongly against the government of Israel or against the
leadership, put an ad in the newspaper at their own expense. There is almost
nothing organized. Look what they’ve managed to do to us.
And I think, says Peri, that this interview, this
historic meeting, can achieve its goal if we use it to appeal to the Israeli
public. There is a natural resistance on the part of an incumbent
administration to any initiative that it does not make itself. But I think that
a government with any self-respect, a leadership with any self-respect, must at
last hold a debate on such an initiative. Afterwards it can throw the document
away, reject it, say it is unacceptable. But what we have here is complete
disregard. This is true for both the Ayalon-Nusseibeh
document as well as the Geneva document.
I think this is a mistake, because there is a desire on the part of the public,
there is a new sense of openness. In my opinion, the Ayalon-Nusseibeh
document balances, in a more than reasonable way, between what I call “the
national aspirations and identity of Israel as a Jewish democratic state,” and
the national aspirations of the Palestinian people. Its drawback is that its
implementation is dependent on an anarchist society, and who knows how many
years it will take for it to recover. But to come and say that this document or
its principles cannot be implemented because of the condition of Palestinian
society—that would be a mistake.
As of today, says Carmi Gillon, the only political
agenda formally on the table is the road map. The problem is that all of the
plans in the last ten years were plans of stages. The stages were created in
order to build trust between the sides. And in these ten years, this failed, it
didn’t work. And that is why I think that the change that Ayalon
and Nusseibeh bring, as does Yossi
Beilin, is that they are coming and saying: okay,
this way failed. We tried it for ten years, and no trust was built. Now,
instead of building trust, let us build agreements. This is a different way of
tackling the conflict. Instead of trying to build trust and then agreements, we
make the agreements now, and then roll the carpet back and begin to deal with
the stages until reached an agreement.
As of today, says Gillon, we are preoccupied with
preventing terror. Why? Because this is the condition for making political
progress. And this is a mistake.
You are wrong if you think
that this is a mistake, says Shalom it is not a mistake. It is an excuse. An
excuse for doing nothing.
We remind Shalom that Sharon
accepted the road map.
Yes, Gillon answers in Shalom’s
place, but he made a condition to the road map, that turned the issue of terror
into the be all and end all. You can’t see the road map from behind the terror.
The only person in the Likud who was honest in this matter, says Shalom, was
Yitzhak Shamir. He said: I’ll draw the matter out for
ten years, and then another ten years.
One thing is clear, says Gillon, and that is without
an agreement we are down for the count. And only one thing interests me: how to
have a Jewish democratic state here in the Land of Israel. And after years in
which I believed that we had to move stage by stage, and after we paid the
entire territorial price with Egypt and Jordan, and from a strategic and
security aspect this only benefited us, then I think that if we don’t resolve
the present situation and we continue our conflict with the Palestinians, this
country will go from bad to worse.
The question, says Ayalon, is what do we want. After all, for years, our
leaders did not know what to do about the security zone in southern Lebanon.
And in the end, we left there for one reason—because the public said:
Gentlemen, we are leaving Lebanon and stop driving us crazy.
That is why, Ayalon says, I contend that
in the coming years we will comprehend more and more the necessity—not
the desire, but the necessity—of organizing and creating coalitions from the
outside.
What do you mean, we ask, popular movements like the Four Mothers?
This brew, which was concocted by the Four Mothers, says Ayalon,
is a magic potion. We don’t exactly know how to recreate it. I know some of the
founders of the movement and I don’t know if they planned what they did
in detail. If you ask, is the process of creating a public movement with a
clear goal of what it wants to accomplish with the details being left for the
political echelon the right thing to do, then yes. I think this is the correct
process.
That’s not what happened with the Four Mothers, says Gillon.
I want to remind you that we left Beirut, we left Lebanon before we left the
security zone. There was a political upheaval in Israel that advocated
withdrawing from Lebanon, and then Rabin came up with the withdrawal plan.
This, precisely, was where the GSS had a lot of influence, says Shalom. We were
the first to say that we must leave there back in 1982. We said that it was too
big for us, but the army didn’t want to hear about it.
But the possibility of civil war, we ask, does that not scare you?
Very much, says Shalom. And Gillon says: But this is
the idea and there is nothing else, except for conflict.
The Founder – and the Dismantler
Interestingly enough, the word “conflict” came up in the course of this
meeting in only one context: the conflict with the settlers. We asked Ami
Ayalon, since one of the sections of his plan refers
to evacuating all the settlements, how he plans to do this.
Describe for us, we said, how you evacuate Elon Moreh.
I want to preface by saying, Ayalon says, that here
too I begin with the political echelon. After all, we erred in the public
discourse and in the lexicon we created in the last ten or 30 years. Were we to
go to the settlers and tell them: you have been the pioneers of the State of
Israel for the last 30 years, it was because of you that we were able to reach
a situation in which an agreement with the Arab world is possible, but you are
also the ones who will pay the very painful price of the agreement. And that is
why we, Israeli society, have to make sure you have houses, jobs, that we bring
you home. Were this to be the language of public discourse, we could, in
my opinion, neutralize between 75- 85% of the settlements. I think
that such a situation was almost created in a rare opportunity in the summer of
2000, when the level of anticipated resistance to removing settlements was
extremely marginal, because ultimately, these pioneers realized that the public
wanted something else.
Q. Do you really believe, we asked him, that the manner of public discourse
will change the positions of a large group of fanatical extremists, which to
this day dictates our national agenda?
You don’t understand. At issue are 15% or even 10% of the settlers, he says,
and we have to be capable of facing such a number.
We wondered how Ayalon thinks that it is possible to
face 10-15% of the settlement residents, when we are unable to evacuate even
one illegal outpost. After all, with every evacuation another settlement is
immediately established. And Yaakov Peri says: I think that Ami is saying smart things, but
their time has passed. I contend that that today 85-90% of the settlers, with a
simple economic plan, would simply get up and go home. There is no problem with
them. There are 10%, perhaps 12%, of the ideological core with whom we will
have to clash. And I believe that Arik Sharon is
perhaps the only person who can do this. As a founder of the settlements he can
also be the one to dismantle them.
The problem, says Peri, is that to this day no leader
has ever gotten up in the State of Israel, pounded on the table and said, “we
are going home, because that is what an agreement entails.” Sharon has often
talked about the fact that we will be required to make painful compromises, and
there are no painful compromises except for evacuating settlements. I am sure
that Sharon understands this and that it is difficult for him, ideologically,
morally, socially, but the person who was able to bring about a deal such
as the prisoner exchange deal and who could be that determined, can also get
other things passed, such as evacuating settlements.
If Peri
is the sober one, and Gillon the cautious and
reserved one, and Ami Ayalon the dreamer—then Avraham Shalom, the man who resigned as director of the GSS
in wake of the no. 300 bus affair, is the cynical version of the little boy
from the tale The Emperor’s New Clothes. I don’t believe that these 10%, whom Peri mentions, are all that brave, he says. I definitely
don’t think so. Not long ago, at an internal meeting, after I heard that the
“hilltop youth” were like Hamas, I talked to some of
them. They told me that there are 100 activists and another 400 who follow them
and 1,000 supporters. Let’s say that these numbers are correct. So I said: if
they were Arabs, would you know how to solve the problem? Yes, they told me. So
I said: so let’s resolve the problem as if they were Arabs. Take 15 of them,
put them under administrative detention, and see how all the rest do nothing.
And I said something else. I said: you say they are like Hamas?
That they are willing to be killed? The answer was an explicit no. So I am more
optimistic in this matter. When we leave them out there alone, they’ll come.
And how they’ll come.
A silence settled on the room, and only Peri
said: I would like, how should I put it, to soften this, without Avrum’s permission.
But Avrum Shalom says: I didn’t say we should have a
civil war.
I, says Peri, think that perhaps we can expect a
clash and it could be a painful clash, and if I could avoid it, of course I
would. But I don’t think there is any way to avoid it. There will always be
some groups, or some individuals, for whom the Land of Israel nestles among the
hills of Nablus and inside Hebron, and we will have
to clash with them.
If someone can show me a different way, says Peri, I
am willing to accept it. But if there is ever, and I hope that in the foreseeable
future, there will be peace with the Palestinians—then I don’t see how the
State of Israel can be responsible for the safety of its citizens living in
Hebron. I don’t know how to do it, and I don’t think anyone else knows.
And that is the real problem. And I’m not making light of the fact that Hebron
is the city of the forefathers, but it must return to the Palestinians, and
those who live there today will have to leave, sooner or later.
All of us here, says Ayalon, speak of something that
is the consensus, that is not just confined to this room, but is common to all
Israeli society: we want a country that is a democracy and a home for the
Jewish people. And that is why I will state in clear words: in the life of
every country or nation, there is more than one Altalena.
The political leadership of the State of Israel has made difficult decisions in
the past when it was clear what the alternative was, and a future political
leadership will have to make difficult decisions when the alternative is clear.
A very narrow square
There is something surprising, unexpected, about hearing the GSS people, who
are responsible one day for targeted killings and assassinations and closures
and roadblocks, and the next day, when they are released, they present a
worldview that is very far from this policy, one that it is easy to call left
wing.
Interestingly enough, they firmly reject their definition as leftists, and are
almost offended by it. But Peri says:
This sociological phenomenon should be studied one day. Why is it that everyone—GSS
directors, chiefs of staff, former security personnel—after a long service in
security organizations, become the advocates of reconciliation with the
Palestinians. Why? Because they come from there. Because they
were there. We know the material, the people, the field, and surprisingly
enough, both sides. And once you come from there, you know the scents and
can characterize and diagnose them.
Do you mean to say, we
asked, that the present GSS Director Avi Dichter, with his positions on tightening closures and
increasing roadblocks, could be released tomorrow from the GSS and present
positions that are identical to yours?
Certainly, they say, without a doubt. I worked with three prime
ministers, says Shalom, and had a different effect on each of them, without
wanting to. The same words that I said echoed on different walls: One
green, one blue and one yellow. That’s the way it is. And I have to
admit: Each time I was hit by the ricocheting paint. But the effect was
great. And you have to remember that as a GSS director, you have to be
non-partisan. You have no political influence, and it should not interest
you either. If you cannot serve under a certain government, resign.
But if you can live with the guidelines of the war against terror, then you do
it to the best of your ability, with all the means at your disposal. And
the statements you make to the prime ministers constitute an influence, in the
absence of anyone else to do it.
The GSS has a critical effect, because it is the only one that is familiar with
the material. There is no one else. That is why I don’t buy the
definitions that are directed at Dichter: What
happened to him. Nothing happened to him. The State of Israel is
what happened to him that is what happened to him.
Excuse us, we said, but there is still a debate here with the chief of staff,
who argues that the blockades, the closures and the treatment of the
Palestinian population create a problem of expanding the circles of terror.
The strategy today, says Gillon, is how to prevent
the next terror attack. Period. And it is Dichter’s
duty to come and say how best to prevent the next terror attack. So it is true
that the chief of staff is justified in saying that it is better to think in
broader terms, and to ask how to prevent the coming terror attacks and not just
the next terror attack. But I think that the problem, as of today, is
that the political agenda has become solely a security agenda.
A tactical-operative agenda,
amends Shalom.
Yes, says Gillon, and it only deals with the question
of how to prevent the next terror attack, not the question how it is at all
possible to pull ourselves out of the mess that we are in today.
The existing gap is at the political echelon, says Ayalon,
and it lies in the fact that there is no balance to operative thinking.
We have built a strategy of immediate prevention. I want to give an
example that may surprise you. When Bibi
Netanyahu came back from Wye Plantation, the GSS’s position was against withdrawing from the territory,
because it appeared to us as a withdrawal with the intention of
returning. It was not a real process, at least according to my
understanding of the security cabinet and the Palestinian Authority at the time.
And there were definitely situations when I, with my opinions as you know them,
when I was in my position—thought that it was wrong to withdraw from the
territory.
And I have another example, said Gillon. The
withdrawal from seven cities in the West Bank. The withdrawal was set
with a predetermined timetable, and I, as GSS director at the time, thought
that this was wrong, and that conditions should be posed and fulfilled in
advance, and only then should we withdraw from the next city. Eventually,
the political echelon, which was the late Yitzhak Rabin, sat down and made the
decision.
The problem, says Peri, is not the differences of
opinion between the army and the GSS, nor if someone changed his opinion.
The problem is that when there is no political direction, senior position
holders such as the chief of staff or GSS director may—and I am not saying that
this is happening—lose their path, or become confused or vague. If the
State of Israel, the government of Israel, the narrow kitchenette, the security
cabinet, were to step forward and say: This is where the State of Israel
intends to go over the coming years, this is where we want to go, it would be a
different story. But when there is no political direction—a senior
position holder is ultimately forced to stick to his very square framework,
where he does not share the responsibility, since the GSS’s
role is to thwart terror, period. And it is the IDF’s
role to provide internal and external security to the State of Israel,
period. And this square, in the reality that exists today, is very
narrow. It is not strategic. It remains at a tactical level.
And I have to tell you, that we should doff our hats to the security
establishment, who succeed in doing what they do within this limited framework.
In this context, says Gillon, remember that in the
days of the Rabin and Peres governments, there was a very clear policy: That we
should fight terror as though there were no peace process, and continue the
peace process as though there were no terror. That is precisely the
direction that the GSS should be given.
When you talk about a political direction, we ask, did Barak’s
government supply such a direction?
Barak’s government, in my opinion, said Peri, did not signal in any political direction. Can
anyone here tell me which direction Barak was going
in, aside from the well known statement in the last hour of Camp David?
Yes, guffawed Shalom, that there is no one to talk to.
I think, said Peri, that all of the Israeli governments after Rabin, for
the past seven years, did not signal and did not tell the Israeli public or the
security forces, where they wanted to reach. And that is the reason that
we have gathered here today, after extra-parliamentary initiatives have arisen
as a result of personal acquaintance, as a result of familiarity with the
material, and these initiatives enter into the vacuum created by political
deficiency.
Mistaken attitude towards Abu Mazen
Ayalon: Yaakov Peri says that one of the great errors of the political
leadership today is that fact that most of the debate revolves around the
question whether we do or do not have a partner. And I think that this is
indeed an error. In this terrible situation, where civilians are
slaughtered in restaurants and buses, in my opinion there is no other way but
to take unilateral steps. And I believe that if the State of Israel were
to get up tomorrow morning—or three years ago, as far as I am concerned—and
leave the Gaza Strip and Gush Katif, and really and
truly begin to dismantle illegal settlements, then I tend to believe, based on
long standing acquaintance with our future dialogue partners—that the
Palestinians would come to the negotiating table.
We asked Shalom if he agrees with Peri. Yes, he
says, one hundred percent.
Gillon and Ayalon also
agree with him.
Therefore, continues Peri, it is an error of the
first order that most of the things we hear on the news and in the press
consist of the question whether Arafat is relevant or irrelevant, or whether we
should expel Arafat or not expel him, or whether we do or do not have a
partner. And I accept that the State of Israel erred in its attitude
towards Abu Mazen’s cabinet on many topics.
Q: Was it also an error to destroy the PA’s security services in the three
years of combat?
Yes, says Peri. And I think that what we did
with Jibril Rajoub was an
error.
Yes, says Shalom, grave
damage. And the preoccupation with Arafat is primarily an anachronism,
because we will not determine who is relevant and who isn’t. I believe it
was the mother of all errors with regard to Arafat. Just as it is not
dictated to us that Bibi will be after Sharon or
Sharon after Bibi, by the same token we cannot
determine who will have the greatest influence over there. So let us look
at the Palestinians’ political map, and it is a fact that nothing can happen
without Arafat.
What you are saying, we said, is that it doesn’t bother you for Arafat to be a
partner.
Nothing bothers me in politics, if I can gain from it. Arafat or no
Arafat, one fine day he will be gone, and someone else will replace him.
But in the meantime the Palestinians are living in steadily worsening
conditions.
I think that Arafat is a great obstacle, says Gillon.
Over the past ten years we have tried all types of governments. We have
had hawkish governments, and we have had dovish governments, and we have made
compromises. On the Palestinian side, the same Arafat remained in
place. And without handing out grades to the Israeli side, there is no
doubt that Arafat deserves a failing grade. I don’t believe in Arafat,
but I believe in the document of principles. Because it is good for the
Jews. It is good for a Jewish and democratic state. It is good for
Israel, period. And I want us to determine our agenda, not Arafat.
And when we say that Arafat is an obstacle to peace, it is precisely like
placing terror before everything else. Why shouldn’t we come and say:
Wait a minute, this is what is best to preserve this state for our
children. This is what assures us peace and security. The best
thing now is to convince and create public opinion that will come and say: This
is what we want. We want to withdraw from the territories. We are
willing to compromise on Jerusalem, we are willing to do all of this because it
is best for our security.
And I think, says Peri,
that the State of Israel has made every possible error in the matter of Arafat,
including the latest decision to expel him, thereby putting him on the stage
after he had already sunk into the abyss. And they tried to sell it to us
by implying that there is some kind of trick here, some kind of maneuver that
we mortals do not understand what is behind it. And what was behind it
was an unwise decision by the Israeli government. I think that Arafat is
interfering, and therefore we have two paths: The extra-parliamentary path, for
the sake of which we have gathered here, and the unilateral path. To stop
talking about a partner already, and do what is good for us. And what is
good for us is to be able to protect ourselves in the most effective
manner. Not to have to waste too many troops in Gaza. To waste
fewer troops on guarding hilltops and settlements and three goats and eight
cowboys. And ultimately, we will build a fence. The route can be
discussed, and that is already a different story. But we will build a
fence. A fence is necessary, at least to demarcate our ability to defend
ourselves.
The red lines are in fact the borders of the historical State of Israel, says Gillon. We returned to the Green Line in the
agreement with Egypt. In Jordan. In Lebanon. The tradeoff
that the Rabin government and Netanyahu conducted, was also on the Green
Line. Therefore, it is clear to me that our borders in Judea and Samaria,
and certainly in the Gaza Strip, run along the Green Line. The separation
fence is becoming irrelevant. It is a fence that is not a fence, that
follows borders
that are not borders.
I am also troubled by the
fence, says Shalom. A fence succeeds on two conditions: That no one ever
passes in either direction, and that the discipline of those who guard the
fence is at the level of the Germans. And that will not happen. Today’s
fence is creating a political and security reality that will become a
problem. Why? Because it creates hatred, it expropriates land, and
annexes hundreds of thousands of Palestinians to the State of Israel.
This is contrary to our interests, according to which we view the State of
Israel as the home of the Jewish people.
The result, says Shalom, is that the fence achieves the exact opposite of what
was intended. Instead of creating a reality of separation and maintaining
a window of opportunity for “two states for two peoples,” a situation has been
created where this window of opportunity is gradually closing. The Palestinians
are arguing: You wanted two states, and instead you are closing us up in a
South African reality. Therefore, the more we support the fence, they
lose their dream and hope for an independent Palestinian state.
Lost honor
Shalom later says that until we understand that we have come to the Arab world
in the Middle East, rather than the Arabs having come to the Jewish world,
until we really understand that—nothing will happen here. Because our
education is at least as flawed as the Palestinians, who say that there is no
State of Israel, that we should be thrown into the sea. Our attitude on
the issue of Arab honor is catastrophic, he says. I have no harsher words
to use. But it is also due to the fact that we are also like that to one
another, and if we have not succeeded in being nice between Jews, how can it be
demanded that we be nice to the Arabs?
And I mean that they should stop knocking around the Arab population. The
fact that we do not allow them to leave through this door, but only through
that door. And this one with his car, and that one without his car.
And that is not the GSS’s role, says Peri, this policy. There is a prime minister, there
is a defense minister. Imagine that Avi Dichter would come tomorrow and say that we should drop an
atom bomb on Gaza. So because it is a recommendation of the most critical
echelon, it would be done? There is a leadership in the State of
Israel. Excuse me, there should be a leadership.
All right, we said, let’s set aside the matter of the closures and bypass
roads. The measure known as targeted killing was also not invented today,
but it seems that it is being used differently today.
Excuse me, says Ayalon, once it was an operative
consideration. It did not become a political strategy. Today it is
not the GSS that carries out targeted killings. It is the State of Israel
that does so today as a policy.
And I say, added Shalom,
that it has become an excuse. And this is something that cannot be
explained to someone who does not understand about thwarting terror.
Because terror is not thwarted with bombs or helicopters, but rather
quietly. And the less we talk about it, the better. Believe me, if
we were quieter, there would be fewer terror attacks.
Once thwarting terror was a
surgical operation, says Gillon. Today it is an
HMO. The business has become cheapened.
And why does this increase terror, says Shalom, because it is overt, because it
carries an element of vindictiveness.
Thwarting terror in and of itself, says Ayalon, cannot
be government policy. It must be GSS policy. Then thwarting terror
will also be more effective, and the level of security will be higher, if
alongside the thwarting of terror there is a political process, a political
vision and faith. And I am talking about the Palestinian side at the
moment. For at the end of the day, they will reach a Palestinian state.
Take Advantage of the Wind
The gloomy feeling that pervaded this meeting cannot be overstated. It appeared
that the four GSS directors had decided to speak because of the belief that
what they say could lead to a turning point. Or perhaps they thought that the
very act of holding this dramatic meeting would also be its strength. That it
could shake up old conceptions and rock the apathetic and despaired
public. Peri was the first to discern the mood of
despondency that was liable to hover over their remarks.
There are four GSS directors
sitting here, he said, and this is liable to be perceived as if we were writing
a requiem for the country. And it is not so. We came after long and exhausting
political service, as volunteers and contributors, because we are worried and
because we are pained. Unlike Avrum, I don’t think
that I can call what is happening in the territories “disgraceful.” I think that
many things must be corrected. I think our massive and non-specific behavior,
what was previously called “an HMO instead of surgery,” is where the affliction
lies. This totality. And you cannot convey to a soldier at a roadblock or to a
woman soldier checking [Arab] women at a roadblock, the precise spirit of the
commander. Sometimes the fear, the lack of experience, the lack of intelligence
or just a lousy commander, are what dictate events. To this day I don’t
understand why a tank driving through the streets of Ramallah
has to also crush the cars parked on the side of the road.
And it appears to me, says Peri, that a call must
come out from this room, that says that when they are sincere initiatives that
try to find a solution to the situation, they must be addressed, by the public
as well. And I call on the leadership to address this in an open and
businesslike fashion.
And I, says Ayalon, want to relate to the most
terrible thing that has happened to us. And I am not referring to everything
that has been said here, which I do not belittle and which I think is
terrible. I think that much of what we are doing today in Judea, Samaria
and Gaza is immoral, some of it patently immoral. And I think that over time,
they pose a very big question mark on where we will be in another 20-30 years.
But I think that what has happened to us—and this is even worse than the
fact that we’ve moved from surgery to the HMO waiting room—is the loss of
hope. And I’m speaking of both sides. Almost everything that we do to them and
that they do to us, were we able to put it into a context of time and to say
that this is just a stage on the way to something better, would be tolerable.
The problem is that today, neither us nor they see any better future, and this
is the consequence of what we are doing today. And that is the most terrible
thing. And for this reason, in my opinion, it is imperative to begin to create
hope. Because if the captain doesn’t decide where he wants to go, there is no
wind in the world that can take him.
Yes guys, says, Ayalon, that is correct. The sea is
always stormy. And you can’t take advantage of the wind if you don’t know where
you want it to take you.
The Participants:
Avraham Shalom (Bendor).
Shalom was GSS director between December 1980 and September 1986. At his
request, he ended his term in September 1986 in wake of the commission of
inquiry that investigated the no. 300 bus affair. Avraham
Shalom is one of the group of top GSS officials granted clemency by the
president. When he ended his term, he became an independent businessman, mainly
overseas. Among other things, he has served as a consultant to international
companies.
Yaakov Peri. He served as
GSS director from April 1, 1988 to March 1, 1995. He was GSS director
during the first Intifada. Today he is chairman of Hamizrahi Bank and chairman of the Lipman
Company. In the past he was president of Cellcom and
the prime minister’s adviser on POWs and MIAs.
Carmi Gillon. He served as GSS director from March 1,
1995 until February 18, 1996. He asked to end his service after the
assassination of Yitzhak Rabin. He was recently elected chairman of the Mevasseret Tziyon Local Council.
Prior to that he was Israeli ambassador to Denmark.
Maj. Gen. (res.) Ami Ayalon. He was the first GSS director
to come from outside the GSS. He served as GSS director from February 18, 1996
until May 14, 2000. In the past he was the commander of the Navy. Today he is
chairman of the Netafim irrigation systems company
and heads the “National Consensus-Signing an End to the Conflict” initiative
together with Prof. Sari Nusseibeh.
END