Israel's daily newsmagazine
   Israel's daily newsmagazine
| home | security | politics | diplomacy | anti-semitism | culture | travel | views | Shmooze! | today's weblog  
 
Diplomacy > Winograd

   



 
Sign up for free!

E-mail
 
         
       
         












Micah D. Halpern is a social and political commentator.
JCommMicah@aol.com
Previous views
A Calculus: Will Israel strike Iran?
Making deals with the devil
Where have you gone, Ali Reza Azkari?
The challenge over history
A future for Syria and Israel
Adolf Eichmann and Saddam Hussein
Palestinian Civil War Is Not Coming -- It's Here
The Butcher, The Baker, The Candlestick Maker
The Pimp and the Whore
The Winner with the Biggest Gun
Ahmadinejad is barbaric and should be banned
Terror Threat for 8/22: Back to the Future
Khaibar: a missile's name signals Iran's genocidal intentions
Finders Keepers at Rafah Crossing
Olmert: Take it One Year at a Time
Justice In Time
Hamas: Can't live with 'em, Can't sell enough to 'em
Hamas Should Not Be Running
Israel will survive

Olmert and cronies unimpressed by protest, vow to ignore calls to quit
Views: The Olmert team hasn't learned, and won't
Views: Prime Minister Livni? Have we gone crazy?
Views: Olmert, go home!
150,000 Israelis tell Olmert to go home -- or "we'll throw you out"
Opposition leader Netanyahu calls for Olmert's resignation at Knesset
Views: Musical chairs or real change?
Livni to Olmert: Resign! Olmert to Livni: if you subvert, you're out!
Ferment in Labor: Peretz resignation? Not.

 
Nasrallah's imperfect appreciation of Israeli democracy
By Micah D. Halpern   May 9, 2007


 Bookmark to del.icio.us

Know thine enemy, the phrase goes. Good advice, but easier said than done.

Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah, the undisputed leader of Hezbollah, recently gave us a glimpse of his thinking, a peek into his mind, an opportunity to see the wheels turn, to understand how his decisions are made and how his conclusions are determined.

This enemy of the West and Israel, and of everyone and everything outside his own religious domain, regularly speaks to his adherents by television and radio. Nasrallah is most often seen and heard on Hezbollah stations, but sometimes, when he has an important message intended for greater audiences, he ventures out of home court and finds a larger arena through which to speak his mind.

The round-faced cleric with the steely eyes is most often heard delivering sermons. He is a Sheikh and he is a leader and his chosen method of delivery is religiously motivated but with a modern twist. His sermons always, inevitably, deal with political and practical issues. Never are his sermons strictly theological, they are always grounded in the here and now.

I listen very carefully to most of the comments of Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah. I paid even closer attention to his spoken observations on the occasion of the release of the Winograd Commission, the partial report issued by Israel devoted to an analysis of the process that went into decision making this past summer in their war with Hezbollah. He began by describing to his audience what the Commission was and why it was indeed named the Winograd Report. And then he applied his own logic to the report.

Speaking on Iranian television, in his own, translated, words, Nasrallah said: "Winograd is the Israeli leader appointed chairman of the commission established following the failures of the last war, as the Israelis put it."

He went on: "The commission has determined once and for all the issue of victory and defeat. There are those in Israel who say that they won and those who say they lost. The commission has determined they lost. There are over 100 occurrences of the word defeat in the report. That is the result."

He had more to say on the issue. This time for his forum Nasrallah chose the opening of a book fair in Southern Beirut that was held on a lot that had been leveled by Israel during the summer war. Nasrallah continued his theme. "I will not gloat," he said. But "it is worthy of respect that an investigative commission appointed by Olmert condemns him."

He was, of course, gloating. And he continued: "The first important outcome of this commission is that it has finally and officially decided the issue of victory and defeat ... This commission spoke about a very big defeat."

The Sheikh then teased Israel's Defense Minister Amir Peretz, the man who had dared to taunt Hassan Nasrallah during the first week of the war saying that the leader of Hezbollah will never forget the name "Amir Peretz."

Nasrallah said: "I stand here today not in order to attack Peretz. Peretz said that 'Nasrallah will never forget the name Amir Peretz.' I tell him, you are right, I will never forget that name."

Nasrallah has never complimented Israel -- not about anything, certainly not about performance during war. These statements were intended to be perceived as a jab at Israel. Nasrallah wanted to show the Arab world the foibles of Israel. But he showed the rest of the world, the Western world, something else. Nasrallah showed us that he has a deeper understanding of democracy and a higher respect for committees of inquiry than we had ever suspected of him. Most importantly, Nasrallah showed that he monitors Israeli news very carefully and that his own policy is determined by what he sees and perceives as going on in Israeli society and government.

His perceptions, however, are not always on target. Whatever understanding of democracy Nasrallah showed was shattered by his personal conspiracy theory -- a theory that the United States forced the hand of Israel during the war. The Arab world is rife with conspiracies. This one is blatantly false.

The reality is that the United States did not force Israel at all into this war with Hezbollah. The United States took a step backwards giving Israel a free hand. The ultimate irony is that had Israel listened to the United States, the war would have taken an entirely different form and there never would have been a Winograd Commission. The urging of the United States to Israel during this war was to take off the kid gloves and forge ahead.

Nasrallah and the Arab world celebrated the Winograd Report without really understanding the Winograd Report. Democracies gain their power through voting. Commissions and rallies and protests can help sway governments and formulate policy -- but nothing is more important than the voice of the people as heard on election day.

And that is something that Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah and the enemies of democracy and the West have never experienced and will never know.

Views expressed by the author do not necessarily reflect those of israelinsider.


 Talk Back! Respond to this view



Click on the blue headline to read a Talkback comment and respond to it. Click on the icon to send a private email to the talkback writer. The icon appears only if the writer has decided to be contacted. If no popup window appears, please make sure your popup blocker allows israelinsider.com.

 
  | about |   partners |   sponsor |   donate |   news |   subscribe |   contact |