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Last update - 01:54 10/02/2009
Border Control / Washington vs. Bibi II
By Akiva Eldar
If Gilad were home
It's hard to know how Gilad Shalit would be voting today, had he come home in
time. It is doubtful that he would be casting has ballot for any of the
politicians who have been in on the secret of the contacts with the enemy
concerning the Shalit deal. Upon hearing the true story, it is quite possible
that Shalit would in fact be voting for the Green Movement-Meimad, of which one
of the founders is Gershon Baskin.
For the past two years and more, the co-CEO of the Israel/Palestine Center for
Research and Information has put his energy and his connections with some of the
heads of Hamas at the disposal of the Shalit family.
"Two weeks before the war," relates Baskin, "I passed along to the prime
minister, the defense minister and the foreign minister a proposal that I had
received from it to open a direct and secret channel with Hamas. The proposal
was aimed at advancing agreement with regard to renewing the cease-fire for a
long period, opening the crossing points, including Rafah, and Shalit's release
in return for the release of Palestinian prisoners. None of them responded. Two
days before the ground operation began I transmitted the proposal to them again,
and again I was not granted a response."
Since then, Baskin has been living with the feeling that the Gaza war was not
really a war of no choice aimed at protecting the inhabitants of the south. He
is not the only one. Very senior people in the professional echelons who were in
on the secrets of the process of the decision to attack Gaza are prepared to
tell a commission of inquiry that the government did not make any real effort to
renew the cease-fire. And that is putting it mildly.
Making the trespassers pay
Last week the Defense Ministry made public an agreement with the Yesha Council,
the body that represents the Jewish settlers in the territories, to the effect
that the settlers in the Migron outpost in the West Bank will be moving to 50
houses that will be built for them in a new community to go up within the
municipal boundaries of the settlement of Adam. At Defense Minister Ehud Barak's
bureau, they are promising that this time the trespassers, who have become
accustomed to free housing, will have to pay both for the land and for the
construction. Anyone who refuses to participate in this arrangement within a few
months will be evacuated by force along with his mobile home.
Insiders confirm that by law they can authorize only the complete plan that
consists of 1,400 housing units, but this is just a formality. They promise that
the Defense Ministry will not approve more than 50 units.
It's possible that this very night, once all the votes have been counted, these
lines will no longer be relevant. The West Bank is sown with settlements on the
basis of plans that one government authorized "just as a formality." Sooner or
later the government of Israel will explain that it is just implementing a plan
that had been approved by a person who was once the leader of the Labor Party.