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now"</title></head><body>
<div><font color="#000000">An interesting thing about Israel is how it
handles not having the kind of power the U.S. does -- so whereas
Israel at least has to figure out how to evade peace initiatives, the
U.S. generally just pretends that they don't exist. One partial
exception to this was Syria's recent call to abolish all nuclear,
chemical and biological weapons in the Middle East. Colin Powell at
least had to respond to it, which he did by simply saying "Now
is not the time." Left unexplained was why exactly this is not
the time, and when the time might possibly be.</font></div>
<div><font color="#000000"><br></font></div>
<div><font color="#000000">Oh, how we wish it were possible to
eliminate these dangerous weapons from the Mideast! No one desires
that more than us here in America. But sadly, now is not the time.
However, whenever the time comes, perhaps as early as within the next
two thousand years, you better believe the U.S. will be leading the
charge.</font></div>
<div><font color="#000000"><br></font></div>
<div><font
color="#000000">http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/pages/ShArt.<span
></span>jhtml?itemNo=293335&contrassID=2&subContr<span
></span>assID=14&sbSubContrassID=0&listSrc=Y</font></div>
<div><font color="#000000"><br></font></div>
<div><font color="#000000">'Yes, but not now'<br>
By</font><font color="#0000FF"><u> Doron Rosenblum</u></font><font
color="#000000"><br>
<br>
Like a gloriously feathered bird that spreads its huge, multicolored
wings, Israel spews forth plumes of stalling: it's the same artistic
masterwork, sometimes bordering on genius. It covers decades,
generations. Israel's leaders have always placed this art on a
pedestal, taken pride in their contribution to it and competed with
one another for top marks in the ability to delay - delay for its own
sake - any process: to cause time itself to hover in the air like a
ball on the nose of a seal. The point of departure is that "time
is on our side," especially when we do nothing, and that there
is no point pursuing opportunities, as it's preferable to wait for
the Arabs to miss them. The underlying logic is: Why shake things up,
as long as there is no total catastrophe? Why defy fate? Say thank
you, Jews, for the fact that we are alive at all.<br>
<br>
Our tradition has always taken a forgiving, sometimes winking,
attitude toward delay and deferral: from the "SHT" and
"PET" ("Shabbat today," "Pesach today")
pretexts, by means of which our forefathers avoided worshiping King
Ahasuerus, to "every delay is for the good," and the dire
warnings against hastening the end. And who are the paragons of
leadership in this sphere if not Yitzhak Shamir and Golda Meir -
giants who told the passing moment to stop dead in its tracks.<br>
<br>
Yet all this was perhaps no more than a prologue. It's possible that
only now we are entering the true golden age of stalling. Because
Ariel Sharon, unlike his predecessors, is not huffing and puffing in
order to stay in the same spot while the Earth keeps spinning on its
axis. For the great master of deception, craftiness and indirection,
stalling is pure pleasure and game: for him, deferral, delay and
torpedoing are a dynamic challenge, endlessly fascinating and
amusing.<br>
<br>
Strengthened from outside by an enemy who, like him, has wracked up
decades of winking, bluff and sleight of hand; free of internal
public pressure to do something; backed by the inertia addicts known
as "senior defense figures," Sharon has achieved in the
craft of stalling what Beethoven attained in his late piano sonatas:
pure art, unvarnished creativity that eludes an attempt at definition
and analysis. Humbly and reverently, we can only point to a few
virtuoso chords, without purporting to decrypt them completely.<br>
<br>
`We're not talking about a serious proposal'<br>
<br>
The recent Syrian proposal to enter into negotiations was rebuffed
like the rapid return of a racket ball on the beach, in a single
pauseless follow-through. Bringing into play the same instinctive gut
response, in the past two and a half years, Sharon has rebuffed the
Egyptian-Jordanian plan, the Saudi plan, the road map, the Dan
Meridor plans, the initiative of Ephraim Halevy, the hudna idea, the
cease-fire proposal and all the ideas and proposals in between: the
missions of Zini, Powell, Bush ... So what's a Syrian initiative for
us? This reflex action - to kill any movement - characterizes all the
right-wing governments since Menachem Begin, and not only them; but
in the period of Sharon - the supreme stand-up comic, possessor of a
subtle, almost private sense of humor - this conditioned reflex has
assumed a comic, almost baroque twist. Sharon's shtick is to say that
all the advocates of the initiatives and the plans, including those
he himself appointed, are "not serious."</font></div>
<div><font color="#000000"><br>
Meaning: not serious like him. No more than pranksters, a bunch of
clowns. Because if they were serious, they would behave according to
his plan, which is: not to present a plan at all. And besides, the
lack of seriousness of every one of these plans is obvious from the
fact that not one of them says anything about "thickening"
the settlements.<br>
<br>
`Typical Syrian maneuver'<br>
<br>
We readied ourselves for "painful concessions" - truly
painful - and we also declared solemnly that this time we would not
let any historic opportunity slip by. And what did we get in return?
A "typical Syrian maneuver" (as sources in the Prime
Minister's Bureau put it) calling for peace in return for the Golan
Heights. Something like the typical Egyptian maneuver that called for
peace in return for all of Sinai. Or the typical Palestinian ploy,
which called for the establishment of a Palestinian state within the
1967 borders. But no - they aren't going to pull the wool over our
eyes. Our hand outstretched in peace will rebuff this scheme once
again, by means of a typical Israeli maneuver.<br>
<br>
`Yes, but without prior conditions'<br>
<br>
Again the Syrian craftily announced his readiness to sit and talk
"without prior conditions." But what a pity that by taking
this step he violated the terms of the dialogue. Because the first
condition as far as we are concerned is that there must be no prior
conditions for dialogue. Whereas the Syrians did not declare in
advance that they were renouncing our withdrawal to the 1967 lines
unconditionally. In other words, a condition exists. So what a pity.
Really. The only thing left to do is cluck our tongue. And no, don't
call us; we'll call you.<br>
<br>
On this subject, it is instructive to quote the great Zen master of
stalling, Yitzhak Shamir, who on the eve of the Madrid Conference
asserted his adherence to the principles of not one inch of land,
unwillingness to talk to the Palestinians and his readiness "to
sit and talk." Asked what there was to talk about, in the
absence of readiness to talk about borders, pullbacks, changes,
Palestinians or concessions, Shamir replied, with a large flourish of
his arm, "We will sit and talk about everything in the world!
Everything in the world!"<br>
<br>
`OK, then, in another month'<br>
<br>
Following the outright rejection of the Syrian proposal, the prime
minister and his foreign minister stated that, nevertheless, Israel
would discuss it "in the coming period." And after further
thought added, "in another month."<br>
<br>
Why "in another month," exactly? Perhaps because in the
Jewish tradition "in another month" is the ordained time in
which, as the old story goes, either the feudal lord or the dog will
die, and if not, the Jew won't feel so good. Another possibility,
which arises from a glance at the calendar, is that the Shavuot
holiday falls "in another month," and then it will be
possible to delay everything until "after the holidays."<br>
<br>
`Yes, but not peace for generations'<br>
<br>
American and European mediators visit these parts and talk with us
about negotiating processes aimed at peace. Sharon, for his part,
nods his head enthusiastically. He says "yes" to every
American move and talks about "painful concessions" in
interviews. But who among the clients takes note of the fine print,
in which every concession, even of one outpost, is conditional, from
Sharon's point of view, on "true peace" or "peace for
generations"? It sounds logical. But how will we know whether
the peace is really "for generations"? Simple: We'll wait a
few generations, and only then, when we're sure that the wool is not
being pulled over our eyes, will it be possible to start talking.<br>
<br>
`Fine, but the other side is not yet ripe for this'<br>
<br>
The desire for painful concessions - including the ceding of Elkana
and Shilo - seethes within us like the juice of a ripe peach; what a
pity, then, that the other side is not yet ripe enough to receive
them. Nu, fine. So maybe some other time, eh?<br>
<br>
`Definitely, but we can't work in two channels simultaneously'<br>
<br>
A week ago, when all the other excuses ran out rapidly, "the
defense establishment and the close surroundings of Mofaz"
whipped out one of the most beloved classics of the art of stalling:
"Israel is not in a position to conduct two political campaigns
in parallel, and therefore this is not the time for a peace
initiative vis-a-vis Syria." "In parallel," meaning at
the same time that the "political campaign with the
Palestinians" is under way, even if it has been delayed for all
the reasons cited above.</font></div>
<div><font color="#000000"><br>
Our declared inability "to work in two channels" should not
be construed as an admission that we are as clumsy as President
Gerald Ford, of whom the foul-mouthed Texan president, Lyndon
Johnson, said that he couldn't fart and chew gum at the same time. On
the contrary! We don't want to work in two tracks simultaneously
precisely because we are so interested in focusing on each
negotiation separately; or, more accurately, on the reasons for
deferring it.<br>
<br>
The "two-channel pretext" is thus the "Toccata and
Fugue" of the art of stalling: a summit that is a challenge for
every virtuoso. And who better illustrated this than Ehud Barak? Only
someone with a well-developed sense of counterpoint was capable of
juggling time itself so spectacularly: to wreck the negotiations with
the Palestinians on the pretext that they were interfering with the
negotiations with the Syrians, and to wreck the negotiations with the
Syrians on the pretext that they were interfering with the
negotiations with the Palestinians; and thus to drop all the balls at
once but take a bow and expect a thunderous ovation.</font><br>
<font color="#000000"></font></div>
<div><font color="#000000">But that's nothing compared to the
virtuosity of Ariel Sharon. Only a juggler like him is capable of
leaving all the balls in the air without having thrown even
one.</font></div>
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