2006-08-29- Ceasefire Interlude |
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jewishsightseeing.com, August 29, 2006 |
By Ira Sharkansky
JERUSALEM—Fighting a war is messy
and unsatisfying. Figuring out what went wrong is also likely to be
messy and unsatisfying.
Widespread is the feeling that Israel's military did
not perform well enough in what is being called Lebanon 2. Also
problematic was the performance of military and civilian personnel
with responsibility for the home front. Residents of the northern
region suffered more than a month of bombardment without well planned
or executed efforts to evacuate them to safe areas, and to care for
the basic needs of those who remained.
What to do now that it is over, or least while there is
a pause until the next round of fighting?
There are two principal options available in Israeli
law and practice. One is a Commission of Inquiry authorized by the
government, whose members are appointed by the Chief Justice of the
Supreme Court, chaired by a justice, and with wide ranging powers of
inquiry. Another is a Committee also authorized by the government, but
with members, a focus, and powers defined by the government.
The first option has the advantage of being selected by
a distinguished figure who is not himself the target of inquiry. Its
disadvantage is that its focus is likely to be legalistic (i.e., to
what extent participants followed the rules). Past practice is that
such an inquiry will take a while, perhaps a year or longer, and will
cause the people being investigated to spend the time with their
lawyers, defending themselves, and perhaps accusing others. In the
present setting, the greatest danger is that such an inquiry will work
against the changes necessary in the military.
The second option of a committee appointed by the
government is likely to be quicker, more substantive in its focus than
legalistic, with a greater concern to find problems and suggest how
they might be fixed, rather than assign blame. The prime disadvantage
is that it is appointed by the officials who are among the targets of
the inquiry. It may have limited powers of inquiry. It is subject to
the charge that it will produce the solutions desired by those who
appointed it, and whitewashing the politicians who had a role in the
problems being investigated.
The context for the present choice includes several
groups of reservists who came home and set up protest organizations,
along with a good government movement that has jumped on a bandwagon
that looks promising. So far these noise-makers have not trigged a
mass movement. A number of them insist on the instant resignation of
prime minister, defense minister, and the highest ranking general.
There is a smell of soldiers coming back from the battlefield and
wanting to change the government. So far no sergeant or colonel has
emerged to offer himself as the next national leader, and that is not
likely here. If there is something that unites these movements, as
well as opposition members of the Knesset, is a demand for a
Commission of Inquiry appointed by the chief justice, capable of
criticizing ranking politicians and military people, and deciding that
some or all must resign.
As soon as the fighting ended, the defense minister
established a committee to investigate the military, but not himself.
He selected as its chairman a former military commander who was one of
his advisors during the war. The criticism of this effort was
widespread, and the committee disbanded itself after about 36 hours.
Now the prime minister has offered a cadre of
committees, with distinguished figures to investigate the military,
and the government. He is asking the State Comptroller to investigate
the care of the home front. This is a more impressive assemblage than
that chosen by the defense minister; its mandate is wider; and the
prime minister can produce a majority in the cabinet to approve his
selections.
The prime minister would be on sturdier ground if he
had not announced his program12 hours after being named in a State
Comptroller's report for a transparent kind of political patronage,
perhaps involving criminal offense, during a previous incarnation when
he was minister of trade and industry. This was not the first time
that a State Comptroller had targeted Ehud Olmert for impropriety.
Also in his background is a lead article in Ha’aretz weekend
magazine during the recent election campaign. It spread over 12 pages,
was headlined, “Prime Minister of Lack of Evidence,” and detailed
numerous cases where Olmert was accused and investigated, but ended
with no charges brought, the case closed, or dismissed for lack of
evidence. The article described Olmert’s “friends” among
individuals on the fringes of politics, business, law, and organized
crime.
After the election, it was not thought wise, and in
retrospect even less wise, for Olmert to appoint Amir Peretz as
defense minister. Peretz had no significant military expertise, and
Israel was not in a period of peace when the army's principal task was
parading and polishing its equipment. But naming Peretz as defense
minister was politically convenient. The appointment added to the
impression that Olmert's skill is playing according to what is
politically convenient, close to but perhaps not over the boundaries
of the improper.
Olmert and Peretz, and Dan Halutz, the chief of the
general staff, did not produce a disaster in this war. They brought
the fighting to Hezbollah, ended it with a relatively small number of
Israeli casualties, and produced enough damage in Lebanon and among
Hezbollah as to bring that organization to a point of significant
weakness. Somewhat out of the media spotlight, they have been managing
a severe response to Hamas and other violent organizations in Gaza and
the West Bank. In recent days, leading figures of both Hezbollah and
Hamas have articulated something other than dramatic proclamations of
victory. They note that they erred in their most recent attacks on
Israel, and that Israel's response rendered their own aggression not
worthwhile ways of attaining their objectives.
There are, and will be loud squawks among those who
want Israeli heads to roll. The less than heroic victory, and a number
of detailed problems apparent in the management of the fighting and
the defense of the home front provide attractive causes of protest.
Among the problems was a dithering of what to do, militarily. It seems
to have been associated with the lack of military experience of both
the prime minister and the defense minister. One hears convincing
criticism that they did not ask the right questions, or decide clearly
when they were getting different recommendations from military and
intelligence sources.
One of the committees now appointed seems likely to
propose a beefed up national security staff, to help the government
decide in the face of uncertainty.
This sounds like a good idea, but it hides an irony.
Thirty years ago the inquiry after the Yom Kippur War decided that the
government had been misled by too much unity in sources of
intelligence. Better to have multiple organizations, each capable of
reaching its own recommendations. Now we may get another organ to help
the government deal with ambiguities coming from separate sources of
advice. This will add to the decision time, and will be unlikely to
produce clarity in situations that seem destined to be unclear and
uncertain. It seems better to recognize the ambiguities and
ambivalences that come from the grey area of military intelligence,
and to assure that either the prime minister or the defense minister
has enough professional experience to probe the sources, ask
appropriate questions, and make choices in the time frames required by
circumstances.
The clock is ticking. Some commentators count the votes
in the cabinet in favor of Olmert's committees, and say that it is a
done deal. Others say that it is crafted to protect Olmert and other
key players, and will not survive the criticism.
Sharkansky is an emeritus member of the political science department at Hebrew University in Jerusalem |
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