
.
.Menachem
BEGIN
Menachem Begin
(16 August 1913 – 9 March 1992) was
an Israeli politician and the sixth Prime Minister of the State of
Israel. Before independence, he was the leader of the Zionist
militant Irgun, the Revisionist breakaway from the larger Jewish
paramilitary organization Haganah. He proclaimed a revolt, on
February 1, 1944, against the British mandatory government, which
was opposed by the Jewish Agency. He played a significant role in
Jewish resistance against the British control in the waning years
of the mandate, leading the more militant faction within Zionism.
Begin was elected to the first
Knesset, as head of Herut, the party he founded, and was at first
on the political fringe, embodying the opposition to the Mapai-led
government and Israeli establishment. He remained in opposition in
the eight consecutive elections (except for a national unity
government around the Six-Day War), but became more acceptable to
the political center. His 1977 electoral victory and premiership
ended three decades of Labour Party political dominance.
Begin’s most significant
achievement as prime minister was the signing of a peace treaty
with Egypt in 1979, for which he and Anwar Sadat shared the Nobel
Prize for Peace. In the wake of the Camp David Accords, the Israel
Defense Forces withdrew from the Sinai Peninsula, which was
captured from Egypt in the Six-Day War. Later, Begin’s government
promoted the construction of Israeli settlements in the West Bank
and the Gaza Strip. Begin authorized the bombing of the Osirak
nuclear plant in Iraq and the invasion of Lebanon in 1982 to fight
PLO strongholds there, igniting the 1982 Lebanon War. As Israeli
military involvement in Lebanon deepened, and the Sabra and
Shatila massacre, carried out by Christian Phalangist militia
allies of the Israelis, shocked world public opinion, Begin grew
increasingly isolated. As IDF forces remained mired in Lebanon and
the economy suffered from hyperinflation, the public pressure on Begin mounted.
Depressed by the death of his wife Aliza in November 1982, he
gradually withdrew from public life, until his resignation in
October 1983.
Early life
Begin was born to Zeev Dov and
Hassia Biegun in Brest-Litovsk, (Brest), a town then part of the
Russian Empire which was known for its Talmudic scholars. He was
the youngest of three children. On his mother's side he was
descended from distinguished rabbis. His father, a timber
merchant, was a community leader, a passionate Zionist, and an
admirer of Theodor Herzl. The midwife who attended his birth was
the grandmother of Ariel Sharon.
After a year of a traditional
cheder education Begin started studying at a "Tachkemoni" school,
associated with the religious Zionist movement. At 12, he joined
the Zionist Socialist youth movement Hashomer Hatzair, but soon
switched to Betar. At 14, he was sent to a Polish government
school, where he received a solid grounding in classical
literature, and gained a lifelong love of classical works, which
he was able to read in Latin.
Begin began studying law at the
University of Warsaw where he learned the oratory and rhetoric
skills that became his trademark as a politician, and viewed as
Demagogy by his critics. He graduated in 1935, but never practiced
law. In these same years he became a key disciple of Vladimir
"Ze'ev" Jabotinsky, the founder of the militant, nationalist
Revisionist Zionism movement and its Betar youth wing. His rise
within Betar was rapid: in the same year he graduated, at age 22,
he shared the dais with his mentor during Betar's World Congress
in Krakow. In 1937 he was the active head of Betar in
Czechoslovakia and Poland, leaving just prior to the 1939
invasion.
Exile to
the Soviet Camp
In September 1939, after Nazi
Germany invaded Poland, Begin escaped to Wilno, then located in
eastern Poland. The town was shortly to be occupied by the Soviet
Union, but from 28 October 1939, it was the capital of the
Republic of Lithuania. Wilno was a predominately Polish and Jewish
town; an estimated 40 percent of the population was Jewish, with
the YIVO institute was located there. On 15 June 1940 the Soviet
Union invaded Lithuania, ushering in mass persecution of Poles and
Jews. An estimated 120,000 people were arrested by the NKVD and
deported to Siberia. Thousands were executed with or without
trial.
On 20 September 1940 Begin was arrested by the NKVD and
detained in the
Lukiškės Prison. He was accused of being an "agent of
British
imperialism" and sentenced to eight years in the Soviet gulag
camps. On 1 June 1941 he was sent to the
Pechora
labor camps in the northern part of European Russia, where he
stayed until May 1942. Much later in life, Begin would record and
reflect upon his experiences in the interrogations and life in the
camp in his memoir "White Nights".
In June 1941, just after Germany
attacked the Soviet Union, and following his release under the
Sikorski-Mayski Agreement, Begin joined the Polish Army of Anders.
He was later sent with the army to Palestine via the Persian
Corridor. Upon arrival in August 1942, he received a proposal to
take over a position in the Irgun, as Betar's Commissioner. He
declined the invitation because he felt himself honour-bound to
abide by his oath as a soldier and not to desert the Polish army,
where he worked as an English translator. Begin was subsequently released from the
Polish Army after the Irgun intervened unofficially on his behalf
with senior Polish army officers. He then joined the Jewish national movement
in the
British Mandate of Palestine.
During the Holocaust, Begin's father was among the 5,000 Brest
Jews rounded up by the Nazis at the end of June 1941. Instead of
being sent to a forced labor camp, they were shot or drowned in
the river. His mother and older brother Herzl also died in the
Holocaust.
Begin was married to
Aliza Arnold. They had three children:
Binyamin, Leah and Hassia.
Jewish
underground
Begin quickly made a name for himself, both as a fierce critic
of dominant Zionist
leadership for being too cooperative with British ‘colonialism’,
and as a proponent of
guerrilla tactics against the British, which he saw as a
necessary means to achieve independence. In 1942 he joined the Irgun
(Etzel), an underground Zionist group which had split from
the main Jewish military organization, the
Haganah, in 1931.
In 1944 Begin assumed the organization's leadership, determined to
force the British government to remove its troops entirely from
Palestine. Giving as reasons that the British had reneged on the
promises given in the
Balfour Declaration and that the
White Paper of 1939 restricting Jewish immigration was an
escalation of their pro-Arab policy, he decided to break with the
Haganah. Soon after he assumed command, a formal 'Declaration of
Revolt' was publicized, and armed attacks against British forces
were initiated.
Begin issued a call to arms and from 1944–48 the Irgun launched
an all-out armed rebellion, perpetrating many attacks against
British installations and posts. Begin financed these operations
by
extorting money from Zionist businessmen, and running bogus
robbery scams in the local
diamond industry, which enabled the victims to get back their
losses from insurance companies.
For several months in 1945–46, the Irgun’s
activities were coordinated within the framework of the
Hebrew Resistance Movement, but this fragile partnership
collapsed following the Irgun’s bombing of the British
administrative and military headquarters at the
King David Hotel in
Jerusalem, which was conducted as part of a joint response to
the British
Operation Agatha, during which many Jews were arrested,
weapons were seized and the Jewish Agency, from which many
documents were removed, was raided. 91 people, British, Arab and
Jewish, were killed. Contrary to instructions, the bombing was
carried out during the busiest part of the day at the hotel.
Warnings to evacuate had been sent, but were ineffective. Under
Begin’s leadership, the Irgun continued to carry out operations
such as
breaking into
Acre Prison, and the
kidnapping and hanging of two British sergeants in order to
prevent and then in retaliation to the execution of several Irgun
members by the British. Growing numbers of British soldiers and
policemen were deployed to quell the Jewish uprising, yet Begin
managed to elude captivity, at times disguised as a rabbi. MI5
placed a 'dead-or-alive' bounty of
£10,000 on his head after Irgun threatened 'a campaign of
terror against British officials', saying they would kill Sir
John Shaw, Britain's Chief Secretary in Palestine.
The Jewish Agency, headed by
David
Ben-Gurion, opposed the Irgun’s independent agenda, which it
saw as a challenge to its authority as the representative body of
the Jewish community in Palestine. Ben-Gurion openly denounced the
Irgun as the “enemy of the Jewish People”, accusing it of
sabotaging the political campaign to create a Jewish state. In
1944, the Haganah actively pursued and handed over Irgun members
to the British authorities in what became known as The Hunting
Season; Begin’s instruction to his men to refrain from violent
resistance prevented this from deteriorating into an armed
intra-Jewish conflict. In November 1947, the UN General Assembly
passed a resolution recommending a Partition Plan for Palestine
and Britain announced its plans to fully withdraw from Palestine
by May 1948. Begin, once again remained in opposition to the
mainstream Zionist leadership. In the years following the
establishment of the State of Israel, the Irgun’s contribution to
precipitating British withdrawal became a hotly contested debate
as different factions vied for control over the emerging narrative
of Israeli independence.
Begin resented his being portrayed as a belligerent dissident.
Altalena and the 1948 Arab–Israeli War
As the 1948 Arab–Israeli War
broke, Irgun fighters joined forces with the Haganah and Lehi
militia in fighting the Arab forces. Notable operations in which
they took part were the battles of Jaffa and the Jordanian siege
on the Jewish Quarter in the Old City of Jerusalem. One such
operation was the Deir Yassin Massacre of Palestinian villagers in
April 1948. The day after the Declaration of the Establishment of
the State of Israel on 14 May 1948, Begin broadcast a speech on
radio declaring that the Irgun was finally moving out of its
underground status. On June 1 Begin signed an agreement with the
provisional government headed by David Ben Gurion, where the Irgun
agreed to formally disband and to integrate its force with the
newly formed Israel Defense Forces (IDF).
However, tensions with the IDF
persisted, culminating in the confrontation over the Altalena
cargo ship, which secretly delivered weapons to the Irgun in June
1948. The government demanded that all the weapons be handed over
to it unconditionally, in accordance with the agreement regarding
the integration of the Irgun into the IDF. However Begin refused
to comply. Rather than negotiating, Ben-Gurion was determined to
exercise the state’s authority over military affairs. A violent
confrontation between the IDF and members of the Irgun occurred
and Ben Gurion eventually ordered the IDF to take the ship by
gunfire, and it burnt off the shore of Tel Aviv. Begin was on
board as the ship was being shelled. In a speech later he ordered
his men not to retaliate in an attempt to prevent the crisis from
spiraling into a civil war. For years later Begin saw the Altalena Affair as a
defining moment and viewed the government actions against the
Irgun as a great injustice.
Political career
Herut
opposition years
In August 1948, Begin and members
of the Irgun High Command emerged from the underground and formed
the right-wing political party Herut ("Freedom") party. The move
countered the weakening attraction for the earlier revisionist
party, Hatzohar, founded by his late mentor Vladimir Jabotinsky.
Revisionist 'purists' alleged nonetheless that Begin was out to
steal Jabotinsky's mantle and ran against him with the old party.
The Herut party can be seen as the forerunner of today's Likud.
In November 1948, Begin visited the US on a campaigning trip.
During his visit,
a letter signed by
Albert Einstein,
Sidney Hook,
Hannah Arendt, and other prominent Americans and several
rabbis was published which described Begin's Herut party as
closely akin in its organization, methods, political
philosophy and social appeal to the Nazi and Fascist parties
and accused his group (along with the smaller, militant,
Stern Gang) of having inaugurated a reign of terror in the
Palestine Jewish community.
In the
first elections in 1949, Herut, with 11.5 percent of the vote,
won 14 seats, while Hatzohar failed to break the threshold and
disbanded shortly thereafter. This provided Begin with legitimacy
as the leader of the Revisionist stream of Zionism.
Between 1948 and 1977, under
Begin, Herut and the alliances it formed (Gahal in 1965 and Likud
in 1973) formed the main opposition to the dominant Mapai and
later the Alignment (the forerunners of today's Labour Party) in
the Knesset; Herut adopted a radical nationalistic agenda
committed to the irredentist idea of Greater Israel. During those
years, Begin was systematically delegitimized by the ruling party,
and was often personally derided by
David
Ben-Gurion who refused to either speak to or refer to him by
name. Ben-Gurion famously coined the phrase 'without Herut and
Maki' (Maki was the communist party), referring to his refusal to consider them
for coalition, effectively pushing both parties and their voters
beyond the margins of political consensus.
The personal animosity between
Ben-Gurion and Begin, going back to the hostilities over the
Altalena Affair, underpinned the political dichotomy between Mapai
and Herut. Begin was a keen critic of Mapai, accusing it of
coercive Bolshevism and deep-rooted institutional corruption.
Drawing on his training as a lawyer in Poland, he preferred
wearing a formal suit and tie and evincing the dry demeanor of a
legislator to the socialist informality of Mapai, as a means of accentuating
their differences.
One of the fiercest confrontations
between Begin and Ben-Gurion revolved around the Reparations
Agreement between Israel and West Germany, signed in 1952. Begin
vehemently opposed the agreement, claiming that it was tantamount
to a pardon of Nazi crimes against the Jewish people. While the
agreement was debated in the Knesset in January 1952, he led a
passionate demonstration in Jerusalem in which he attacked the government, calling for a
violent overthrow of the elected government.
Incited by his speech, the crowd marched towards the Knesset (then
at the Frumin Building on King George Street), throwing stones and
injuring dozens of policemen and several Knesset members. Many
held Begin personally responsible for the violence, and he was
consequently barred from the Knesset for several months. His
behavior was strongly condemned in mainstream public discourse,
reinforcing his image as a provocateur. The vehemence of
Revisionist opposition was deep; in March 1952, during the ongoing
reparations negotiations, a parcel bomb addressed to
Konrad Adenauer,
the sitting West German Chancellor, was intercepted at a German post office. While
being defused, the bomb exploded, killing one and injuring two
others; five Israeli, all former members of Irgun, were later
arrested in Paris for involvement. Chancellor Adenauer decided to
keep secret the involvement of the Israeli opposition in the plot,
thus avoiding Israeli embarrassment and a likely backlash. The
five Irgun conspirators were later extradited from both France and
Germany, without being charged, and subsequently sent to Israel.
Forty years after the assassination attempt, after Begin died in
1992, he was implicated in organising the assassination attempt by
a memoir written by one of the alleged conspirators, Elieser
Sudit.
Begin's impassioned rhetoric, laden with pathos and evocations
of the
Holocaust, appealed to many, but was deemed inflammatory and
demagoguery by others.
Gahal
and unity government
In the following years, Begin
failed to gain electoral momentum, and Herut remained far behind
Labor with a total of 17 seats until 1961. In 1965, Herut and the
Liberal Party united to form the Gahal party under Begin’s
leadership, but failed again to win more seats in the election
that year. In 1966, during Herut's party convention, he was
challenged by the young Ehud Olmert, who called for his
resignation. Begin announced that he would retire from party
leadership, but soon reversed his decision when the crowd pleaded
with him to stay. The day the Six-Day War started in June 1967,
Gahal joined the national unity government under Prime Minister
Levi Eshkol of the Alignment, resulting in Begin serving in
the cabinet for the first time, as a Minister without Portfolio.
Rafi also joined the unity government at that time, with Moshe
Dayan becoming Defense Minister. Gahal's arrangement lasted until
August 1970, when Begin and Gahal quit the government, then led by
Golda Meir due to disagreements over the Rogers Plan and its
"in place" cease-fire with Egypt along the Suez Canal, Other
sources, including William B. Quandt, note that the Labor party,
by formally accepting UN 242 in mid-1970, had accepted "peace for withdrawal" on all
fronts, and because of this Begin had left the unity government.
On August 5, Begin explained before the Knesset why he was
resigning from the cabinet. He said, "As far as we are concerned,
what do the words 'withdrawal from territories administered since
1967 by Israel' mean other than Judea and Samaria. Not all the
territories; but by all opinion, most of them."
Likud
chairmanship
In 1973, Begin agreed to a plan by
Ariel Sharon to form a larger bloc of opposition parties, made up
from Gahal, the Free Centre, and other smaller groups. They came
through with a tenuous alliance called the Likud
("Consolidation"). In the elections held later that year, two
months after the Yom Kippur War, the Likud won a considerable share of the
votes, though with 39 seats still remained in opposition.
Yet the aftermath of the Yom
Kippur War saw ensuing public disenchantment with the Alignment.
Voices of criticism about the government's misconduct of the war
gave rise to growing public resentment. Personifying the
antithesis to the Alignment's socialist ethos, Begin appealed to
many Mizrahi Israelis, mostly first and second generation Jewish
immigrants from Arab countries, who felt they were continuously
being treated by the establishment as second-class citizens. His
open embrace of Judaism stood in stark contrast to the Alignment's
secularism, which alienated Mizrahi voters and drew many of them
to support Begin, becoming his burgeoning political base. In the
years 1974-1977
Yitzhak Rabin's government suffered from instability due to
infighting within the labor party (Rabin and Shimon Peres) and the
shift to the right by the National
Religious Party, as well as numerous corruption scandals. All
these weakened the labor camp and allowed Begin to finally capture
the center stage of Israeli politics.
Prime
Minister of Israel
1977
electoral victory
On 17 May 1977 the Likud, headed by Begin, won the
Knesset elections by a landslide, becoming the biggest party
in the
Knesset. Popularly known as the Mahapakh ("upheaval"),
the election results had seismic ramifications as for the first
time in Israeli history a party other than the Alignment/Mapai was
in a position to form a government, effectively ending the left's
hitherto unrivalled domination over Israeli politics. Likud's
electoral victory signified a fundamental restructuring of Israeli
society in which the founding socialist Ashkenazi elite was being
replaced by a coalition representing marginalized
Mizrahi and Jewish-religious communities, promoting a socially
conservative and
economically liberal agenda.
The Likud campaign leading up to
the election centered on Begin's personality. Demonized by the
Alignment as totalitarian and extremist, his self-portrayal as a
humble and pious leader struck a chord with many who felt
abandoned by the ruling party's ideology. In the predominantly
Jewish Mizrahi working class urban neighborhoods and peripheral
towns, the Likud won overwhelming majorities, while
disillusionment with the Alignment's corruption prompted many
middle and upper class voters to support the newly founded
centrist Democratic Movement for Change ("Dash") headed by Yigael
Yadin. Dash won 15 seats out of 120, largely at the expense of the
Alignment, which was led by Shimon Peres and had shrunk from 51 to
32 seats. Well aware of his momentous achievement and employing
his trademark sense for drama, when speaking that night in the
Likud headquarters Begin quoted from the Gettysburg Address and
the Torah,
referring to his victory as a 'turning point in the history of the
Jewish people'.
With 43 seats, the Likud still
required the support of other parties in order to reach a
parliamentary majority that would enable it to form a government
under Israel's proportionate representation parliamentary system.
Though able to form a narrow coalition with smaller Jewish
religious and ultra-orthodox parties, Begin also sought support
from centrist elements in the Knesset to provide his government
with greater public legitimacy. He controversially offered the
foreign affairs portfolio to Moshe Dayan, a former IDF Chief of
Staff and Defense Minister, and a prominent Alignment politician
identified with the old establishment. Begin was sworn in as Prime
Minister of Israel on 20 June 1977. Dash eventually
joined his government several months later, thus providing it with
the broad support of almost two thirds of the Knesset.
Camp David
accords
In 1978 Begin, aided by Foreign
Minister Moshe Dayan and Defense Minister Ezer Weizman, negotiated
the Camp David Accords, and in 1979 signed the Israel-Egypt Peace
Treaty with Egyptian President, Anwar Sadat. Under the terms of
the treaty, brokered by US President,
Jimmy Carter, Israel was to hand over the Sinai Peninsula in
its entirety to Egypt. The peace treaty with Egypt was a watershed
moment in Middle Eastern history, as it was the first time an Arab
state recognized Israel’s legitimacy whereas Israel effectively
accepted the land for peace principle as blueprint for resolving
the Arab-Israeli conflict. Given Egypt’s prominent position within
the Arab World, especially as Israel’s biggest and most powerful
enemy, the treaty had far reaching strategic and geopolitical
implications.
Almost overnight, Begin’s public image of an irresponsible
nationalist radical was transformed into that of a statesman of
historic proportions. This image was reinforced by international
recognition which culminated with him being awarded, together with
Sadat, the
Nobel Peace Prize in 1978.
Yet while establishing Begin as a
leader with broad public appeal, the peace treaty with Egypt was
met with fierce criticism within his own Likud party. His devout
followers found it difficult to reconcile Begin’s history as a
keen promoter of the Greater Israel agenda with his willingness to
relinquish occupied territory. Agreeing to the removal of Israeli
settlements from the Sinai was perceived by many as a clear
departure from Likud’s Revisionist ideology. Several prominent
Likud members, most notably Yitzhak Shamir, objected to the treaty and abstained when it
was ratified with an overwhelming majority in the Knesset,
achieved only thanks to support from the opposition. A small group
of hardliners within Likud, associated with
Gush Emunim Jewish settlement movement, eventually decided to
split and form the
Tehiya party in 1979. They led the Movement for Stopping
the Withdrawal from Sinai, violently clashing with IDF
soldiers during the forceful eviction of Yamit
settlement in April 1982. Despite the traumatic scenes from Yamit,
political support for the treaty did not diminish and the Sinai
was handed over to Egypt in 1982.
Begin was far less resolute in
implementing the section of the Camp David Accord, which defined a
framework for establishing autonomous Palestinian self-rule in the
West Bank and Gaza Strip. He appointed Agriculture Minister Ariel
Sharon to implement a large scale expansion of Jewish settlements
in the Israeli-occupied territories, a policy intended to make
future territorial concessions in these areas effectively
impossible. Begin refocused Israeli settlement strategy from
populating peripheral areas in accordance with the Allon Plan, to
building Jewish settlements in areas of Biblical and historic
significance. When the settlement of Elon Moreh was established on
the outskirts of Nablus in 1979, following years of campaigning by
Gush Emunim, Begin declared that there are "many more Elon Morehs
to come". Indeed during his term as Prime Minister dozens of new
settlements were built, and Jewish population in the West Bank and
Gaza more than quadrupled.
Bombing Iraqi nuclear reactor
Begin took
Saddam Hussein's anti-Zionist threats very seriously and
therefore took aim at Iraq. Israel attempted to negotiate with
France so as not to provide Iraq with the nuclear reactor named
Osirak or Tammuz 1, but to no avail. On June 7, 1981, Begin
ordered the bombing and destruction of Osirak by the Israeli Air
Force in a successful long-range operation called
Operation Opera. Soon after, Begin enunciated what came to
be known as the
Begin doctrine: "On no account shall we permit an enemy to develop
weapons of mass destruction (WMD) against the people of Israel."
Many foreign governments, including the United States, condemned
the operation, and the United Nations Security Council passed a
unanimous resolution 487 condemning it. The Israeli left-wing opposition criticized it also at the time, but
mainly for its timing relative to elections only three weeks
later.
Lebanon invasion
On 6 June 1982, Begin’s government
authorized the Israel Defense Forces' invasion of Lebanon, in
response to the attempted assassination of the Israeli ambassador
to the United Kingdom, Shlomo Argov. Operation Peace for Galilee’s stated
objective was to force the
PLO out of rocket range of Israel's northern border. Begin was
hoping for a short and limited Israeli involvement that would
destroy the PLO’s political and military infrastructure in
southern
Lebanon, effectively reshaping the balance of Lebanese power
in favor of the Christian Militias who were allied with Israel.
Nevertheless, fighting soon escalated into war with Palestinian
and Lebanese militias, as well as the Syrian
military, and the IDF progressed as far as
Beirut, well beyond the 40 km limit initially authorized by
the government. Israeli forces were successful in driving the PLO
out of Lebanon and forcing its leadership to relocate to
Tunisia, but the war ultimately failed in achieving security
to Israel’s northern border, as well as imposing stability in
Lebanon. Israeli entanglement in Lebanon intensified throughout
Begin’s term, leading to a partial unilateral withdrawal in 1985,
and finally ending in 2000.
Like Begin, the Israeli public was expecting quick and decisive
victory. Yet as this failed to arrive, disillusionment with the
war, and concomitantly with his government, was growing. Begin
continuously referred to the invasion as an inevitable act of
survival, often comparing
Yasser Arafat to
Hitler,
but its image as a war of necessity was gradually eroding. Within
a matter of weeks into the war it emerged that for the first time
in Israeli history there was no consensus over the IDF’s activity.
Public criticism reached its peak following the Sabra and Shatila
Massacre in September 1982, when tens of thousands gathered to
protest in Tel Aviv in what was one of the biggest public
demonstrations in Israeli history. The Kahan Commission, appointed
to investigate the events, found the government indirectly
responsible for the massacre, accusing Defense Minister Ariel
Sharon of gross negligence. The commission’s report,
published in February 1983, severely damaged Begin’s government,
forcing Sharon to resign. As the Israeli quagmire in Lebanon
seemed to grow deeper, public pressure on Begin to resign
increased.
Begin’s disoriented appearance on
national television while visiting the Beaufort battle site raised
concerns that he was being misinformed about the war’s progress.
Asking Sharon whether PLO fighters had ‘machine guns’, Begin
seemed out of touch with the nature and scale of the military
campaign he had authorized. Almost a decade later, Haaretz
reporter Uzi Benziman published a series of articles accusing
Sharon of intentionally deceiving Begin about the operation’s
initial objectives, and continuously misleading him as the war
progressed. Sharon sued both the newspaper and Benziman for libel
in 1991. The trial lasted 11 years, with one of the highlights
being the deposition of Begin's son, Benny, in favor of the defendants. Sharon lost the case.
Retirement from public life
Begin himself retired from
politics in August 1983 and handed over the reins of the office of
Prime Minister to his old friend-in-arms Yitzhak Shamir, who had
been the leader of the Lehi resistance to the British. Begin had
become deeply disappointed by the war in Lebanon because he had
hoped to establish peace with Bashir Gemayel, who was
assassinated. Instead, there were mounting Israeli casualties. The
death of his wife Aliza in Israel while he was away on an official
visit to Washington DC, added to his own mounting depression.
After his wife's death, Begin would rarely leave his apartment,
and then usually to visit her grave-site to say the traditional
Kaddish prayer for the departed. His seclusion was watched over by his
children and his lifetime personal secretary Yechiel Kadishai, who
monitored all official requests for meetings.
Death
Begin died in Tel Aviv in 1992,
followed by a simple ceremony and burial on the Mount of Olives.
He asked to be buried there instead of Mount Herzl, where most
Israeli leaders are laid to rest, because he wanted to be buried
beside Meir Feinstein of Irgun and Moshe Barazani of Lehi, who
committed suicide in jail while awaiting execution by the British.
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