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The
Rabin Assassination, The Appointment of Gillon and the
Pardon of Har Shefi: Israel in Darkness
In
the July 24 Jerusalem Post, almost the entire
editorial page was dedicated to President Katsav's
pardon of Margalit Har-Shefi. The following day Ha'aretz
featured its own op ed on the subject. All
of this was after a barrage of coverage the
previous week. What in the world does this have to do
with the flack over Carmi Gillon's appointment as
Israel's ambassador to Denmark? Who really
knows, but we might suggest a starting place for the
real questions.
The
following are some pertinent facts:
[1]
Former Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and his
bitter political rival Shimon Peres join forces to go
to Oslo in 1993, and on their way home (so to
speak) they collect the Nobel Peace Prize with Yasir
Arafat. Peres is known as the intellectual
architect of the peace process and Rabin the strategic
master.
[2]
Peres is known as one of the most powerful politicians
in Israel's history, hand-picked by Ben Gurion, who
couldn't win an election even against himself.
Rabin controlled Labor politics.
[3]
Peres believes that history is no guide to human
behavior and that he and other like-minded socialists
can actually will the Middle East into a peaceful
co-existence, what he called in his book by the same
title, "the New Middle East." Citing
elevator sound bites like the "technological
revolution," the "communication age," and
"the global village," Peres gives speeches
and writes that he is convinced that the peace
process is an inevitable salvation for the people of
the region and any one who opposes it is fighting an
evolutionary process that cannot be stopped.
[4]
Rabin publicly ridicules Peres' ideological bent and
argues that the peace process is a strategic move
forced on an Israel with no alternatives. Rabin
is constantly fighting with Peres: Peres moving the
process at break-neck speed as Rabin's foreign
minister and globetrotter and Rabin very much the
general trying to marshal forces, keep his coalition
together and survive the angry protests calling
for his ouster.
[5] In
November 1995 as Jews are being slaughtered
relentlessly by Arab terrorists, protests against
Rabin's policy take on a very personal character.
Rabin, who authorized the transfer of weapons to the
PA for their "police force," is viewed as
literally giving the enemy weapons to kill Jews. Rabin
retorts to such accusations that the minute the PA
uses the weapons against an Israeli the army would go
into the PA territory and dismantle it.
Protestors don't believe him since he has refused to
do so as Palestinians infiltrate into Israel with
bombs -- blowing up busses and marketplaces, and of
course, creating in Rabin's words, "sacrifices
for peace."
[6] On
November 4, Rabin is assassinated by Yigal Amir, a
member of the religious Zionist camp. He
believes Rabin a traitor and deserving of death and
that he was fulfilling the biblical command to take
the law into one's own hands to be zealous in the case
of an immediate threat to Jewish lives.
[7]
Rabin's death allowed Peres, who could never have
gained the premiership while Rabin was alive, to take
control of the Labor Party and the government.
[8]
Terrorism explodes. Jews die.
[9]
Benjamin (Bibi) Netanyahu of Likud wins the first
direct election for prime minister.
[10]
As a result, Peres' loses to Ehud Barak in Labor power
struggle.
[11]
Later, during a One Israel (Labor) government headed
up by Barak, Peres even loses a presidential race
(voted upon by members of the Israeli parliament, the
Knesset, which his party controlled, against a
politically meek opposition candidate from Likud,
Moshe Katsav. Peres has cemented his reputation
as the most unelectable power politician in Israel's
history.
[12]
Barak pushes Peres aside. Peres focuses on his Peres
Center for Peace, which is able to generate millions
in contributions.
[13]
Carmi Gillon was the head of the Shin-Bet, Israel's CIA/FBI
during the period preceding the Rabin assassination
and the period of the assassination itself.
After the assassination Gillon is highly criticized
for the poor security and protection given Rabin.
Questions begin to be asked that intimate dark and
sinister relationships.
[14 ]
It is uncovered that a Shin-Bet operative, Avishai
Raviv, who operated as an agent provocateur,
promoting Jewish undergrounds and revenge attacks, and
who posed in the media as a right ring Jewish
militant, had intimate knowledge of Yigal Amir's plans
for assassinating Rabin well in advance of November 4.
At the moment the information is to be broadcast
publicly, the highest legal officers of the state, the
attorney general and the state prosecutor, stamp the
information top secret. The information is leaked over
the Internet but it remains top secret in Israel.
The question has yet to be answered: how much did
Gillon know about his operative's involvement with
Amir leading up to the assassination and how much of
the events leading right up to the assassination were
yet another attempt to discredit the political right
and silence their opposition to Oslo?
[15]
Other questions have been raised. Questions so dark
and sinister as to frighten even the most hardened
Israeli. Why was Rabin so unprotected? When did
Peres learn of the assasination? Was this whole
thing an operation out of control or one very much in
control? These questions continue to be asked.
[16]
A young, attractive religious women barely out of
her teens, had been courted by Amir for some time.
Amir told her of his plans to kill Rabin because he
was killing Jews by betraying the Jewish state.
Margalit Har-Shefi dismisses Amir, but at one point,
does in fact ask a local rabbi if such a thing would
be acceptable under Jewish law and would she be
required to report such a thing in advance. The rabbi
answered no to both questions. Har-Shefi goes on with
her life. Amir kills the Prime Minister.
[17]
Soon thereafter after a national witch hunt for anyone
who said or heard anything derogatory about Rabin,
Har-Shefi is charged with the crime of
"knowing" or "having reasonable
belief" that such a crime was to take place and
not informing the police. In other words,
Har-Shefi's very soul is investigated and found guilty
of having a belief notwithstanding the fact that she
insisted that she never believed that Amir would
actually carry out such a heinous crime. Nine
months in prison. The left is outraged over the
short sentence, but is happy the state has
penetrated her heart so profoundly to root out this
evil. Nine months.
[18]
The political left hails the legal system's ability to
penetrate a person's mind. The political right is
still stunned by the accusations that it participated
in the assassination via incitement and silence and
little is said in Har-Shefi's defense.
[19]
Avishai Raviv, the Shin-Bet's agent, becomes a focus
of attention. How is it that Har-Shefi is charged,
tried and convicted before Avishai Raviv, who is
suspected by everyone of at the very least knowing of
Amir's plans, if not actually promoting it.
Forces seemed to be at work to keep Raviv under wraps.
[20 ]
Finally charged after public pressure from the right
and certain respected politicians like Micki Eitan,
Raviv's trial is postponed several times. No evidence
has yet to be taken. No one has a clue when the
process might begin. Silence continues.
[21]
Har-Shefi wins a presidential pardon after serving 6
of 9 months in prison. The left is outraged over
the pardon.
[22]
In the aftermath of the Rabin assassination, Gillon resigns
as head of the Shin-Bet. He is severely
criticized for the lax security arrangements to
protect Rabin in light of the real and perceived
threat from Arab terrorists and the Jewish underground
elements.
[23 ]
Peres appoints Gillon to run his Peace Center. Gillon
is reported to have received a hefty salary.
[24]
After Barak's failed attempt to give the Palestinians
90% of their demands at Camp David II, Likud's Ariel
Sharon wins the premiership in a landslide victory.
Barak is humiliated and announces that he is leaving
One Israel (Labor) leadership and politics.
Peres takes advantage of the vacuum and supports a
unity government with Sharon. The deal is made
and Peres becomes the number two man in charge of the
foreign ministry again.
[25]
Peres promotes his man Gillon to be Israel's
ambassador to Denmark. Gillon is reported to
have said that sometimes mild torture is necessary
when dealing with terrorists to extract life saving
information. The Danes erupt. The Danish justice
minister is reported to have said that Gillon will be
arrested if he reports to his post in Denmark.
[26]
Peres is everywhere demanding Gillon's posting and
calling Gillon an honorable
and peaceful man. Peres will not stand by to witness a
character assassination.
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