
.
.Ariel
SHARON
Ariel
Sharon (also known by his
diminutive Arik, born Ariel Scheinermann on 26
February 1928) is an Israeli politician and retired general, who
served as Israel’s 11th Prime Minister. He is currently in a
persistent vegetative state after suffering a stroke on 4 January 2006.
A commander in the Israeli Army
since its inception in 1948, Sharon participated in the 1948 War
of Independence, 1956 Suez War, Six-Day War of 1967, and the
Yom-Kippur War of 1973. After retiring from the army, Sharon
joined the right-wing Likud party, and served in a number of ministerial posts in Likud-led
governments in 1977-1992 and 1996-1999. He became the leader of
the Likud in 2000, and served as Israel’s Prime Minister from 2001
to 2006.
During his long military and
political career, Sharon was considered a controversial and
polarizing figure. In 1983 a commission established by the Israeli
Government found that as Minister of Defense during the 1982
Lebanon War Sharon bore personal, but indirect, responsibility for
the massacre by Lebanese militias of Palestinian civilians in the
refugee camps of Sabra and Shatila. In 1970s, 1980s and 1990s
Sharon championed construction of Israeli settlements in the West
Bank and Gaza Strip. However, as Prime Minister, in 2004-2005
Sharon orchestrated Israel's unilateral disengagement from the
Gaza Strip. Facing stiff opposition to this policy within the
Likud, in November 2005 he left Likud to form a new Kadima party.
In January 2006 Sharon suffered a major stroke that left him in a
persistent vegetative state. In March 2006 elections, Kadima, led
by Ehud Olmert following Sharon's stroke, went on to win plurality
of Knesset seats, becoming the senior coalition partner in
Israel's 31st government.
Early life
Sharon was born in Kfar Malal,
then in the British Mandate of Palestine, to a family of
Lithuanian Jews - Shmuel Sheinerman, of Brest-Litovsk (now Brest,
Belarus) and Dvora (formerly Vera), of Mogilev. His father was
studying agronomy at the university of Tbilisi, Georgia (Georgian
SSR) and his mother had just started her fourth year of medical
studies when the couple married. They immigrated to the British
Mandate Palestine from Russia, fleeing the Red Army during the
Bolshevik Revolution. Apart from Hebrew, Sharon's father spoke
Yiddish and his mother spoke Russian; their son also learned to
speak Russian as a young boy.
The family arrived in the Second
Aliyah and settled in a socialist, secular community where,
despite being Mapai supporters, they were known to be contrarians
against the prevailing community consensus:
The Scheinermans' eventual
ostracism... followed the 1933 Arlozorov murder when Dvora and
Shmuel refused to endorse the Labor movement's anti-Revisionist
calumny and participate in Bolshevic-style public revilement
rallies, then the order of the day. Retribution was quick to
come. They were expelled from the local health-fund clinic and
village synagogue. The cooperative's truck wouldn't make
deliveries to their farm nor collect produce.
Four years after their arrival at
Kfar Malal, the Sheinermans had a daughter, Yehudit (Dita), and
two years after, they had a son, Ariel. At age 10, Sharon entered
the Zionist youth movement Hassadeh. In 1942 at the age of 14,
Sharon joined the Gadna, a paramilitary youth battalion, and later
the Haganah, the underground paramilitary force and the Jewish
military precursor to the Israel Defense Forces (IDF).
Military career
From
1948 War to Suez Crisis
At the creation of Israel (and
Haganah's transformation into the Israel Defense Forces), Sharon
became a platoon commander in the Alexandroni Brigade. He was
severely wounded in the groin by the Jordanian Arab Legion in the
first Battle of Latrun, an unsuccessful attempt to relieve the
besieged Jewish community of Jerusalem. In September 1949, Sharon
was promoted to company commander (of the Golani Brigade's
reconnaissance unit) and in 1950 to intelligence officer for
Central Command. He then took leave to begin studies in history
and Middle Eastern culture at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.
A year and a half later, he was asked to return to active service
in the rank of major and as the leader of the new Unit 101,
Israel's first special forces unit.
Unit 101 undertook a series of
military raids against Palestinians and neighboring Arab states
that helped bolster Israeli morale and fortify its deterrent
image. The unit was known for raids against Arab civilians and
military, notably in the widely condemned Qibya massacre in the
fall of 1953, in which 69 Palestinian civilians, some of them
children, were killed by Sharon's troops in a reprisal attack on
their West Bank village. In the documentary Israel and the Arabs: 50 Year War, Sharon
recalls what happened after the raid, which was heavily condemned
by many Western nations, including the U.S.:
I was summoned to see
Ben-Gurion. It was the first time I met him, and right from
the start Ben-Gurion said to me: "Let me first tell you one
thing: it doesn't matter what the world says about Israel, it
doesn't matter what they say about us anywhere else. The only
thing that matters is that we can exist here on the land of our
forefathers. And unless we show the Arabs that there is a high
price to pay for murdering Jews, we won't survive."
A few months after its founding, Unit 101 was merged with the
890 Paratroopers Battalion to create the
Paratroopers Brigade (Sharon eventually became the latter's
commander). It continued to attack military, culminating with the
attack on the
Qalqilyah police station in the autumn of 1956.
In 1952-53, Sharon attended the
Hebrew University of Jerusalem, taking History and
Oriental studies.
Sharon was widowed twice. Shortly
after becoming a military instructor, he married Margalit, with
whom he had a son, Gur. Margalit died in a car accident in May
1962. Their son, Gur, died in October 1967 after a friend shot him
while they were playing with a rifle. After Margalit's death,
Sharon married her younger sister, Lily. They had two sons, Omri
and Gil'ad. Lily Sharon died of cancer in 2000.
From 1958 to 1962, Sharon served as commander of an infantry
brigade and studied law at
Tel Aviv University.
Mitla incident
In the 1956 Suez War (the British
"Operation Musketeer"), Sharon commanded Unit 202 (the
Paratroopers Brigade), and was responsible for taking ground east
of the Sinai's Mitla Pass and eventually taking the pass itself.
Having successfully carried out the first part of his mission
(joining a battalion parachuted near Mitla with the rest of the
brigade moving on ground), Sharon's unit was deployed near the
pass. Neither reconnaissance aircraft nor scouts reported enemy forces inside the Mitla Pass. Sharon,
whose forces were initially heading east, away from the pass,
reported to his superiors that he was increasingly concerned with
the possibility of an enemy thrust through the pass, which could
attack his brigade from the flank or the rear.
Sharon asked for permission to attack the pass several times,
but his requests were denied, though he was allowed to check its
status so that if the pass was empty, he could receive permission
to take it later. Sharon sent a small scout force, which was met
with heavy fire and became bogged down due to vehicle
malfunction in the middle of the pass. Sharon ordered the rest
of his troops to attack in order to aid their comrades. In the
ensuing successful battle to capture the pass, 38 Israeli soldiers
were killed. Sharon was criticized by his superiors and he was
damaged by allegations several years later made by several former
subordinates, who claimed that Sharon tried to provoke the
Egyptians and sent out the scouts in bad faith, ensuring that
a battle would ensue.
Six-Day War and Yom Kippur War
The Mitla incident hindered
Sharon's military career for several years. In the meantime, he
occupied the position of an infantry brigade commander and
received a law degree from Tel Aviv University. However, when
Yitzhak Rabin became Chief of Staff in 1964, Sharon began
again to rise rapidly in the ranks, occupying the positions of
Infantry School Commander and Head of Army Training Branch,
eventually achieving the rank of Aluf (Major General). In the 1967
Six-Day War, Sharon commanded the most powerful armored division
on the Sinai front which made a breakthrough in the
Kusseima-Abu-Ageila fortified area (see Battle of Abu-Ageila). In
1969, he was appointed the Head of IDF's Southern Command. He had
no further promotions before retiring in August 1973. Soon after,
he joined the Likud ("Unity") political party.
At the start of the Yom Kippur War
on 6 October 1973, Sharon was called back to active duty along
with his assigned reserve armored division. His forces did not
engage the Egyptian Army immediately, despite his requests. Under
cover of darkness Sharon's forces moved to a point on the Suez
Canal that had been prepared before the war. Bridging equipment
was thrown across the canal on 17 October. The bridgehead was
between two Egyptian Armies. He then headed north towards
Ismailia, intent on cutting the Egyptian second army's supply
lines, but his division was halted south of the Fresh Water Canal.
Abraham Adan's division (Bren) passed
over the bridgehead into Africa advancing to within 101 kilometers
of Cairo. His division managed to encircle Suez, cutting off and
encircling the Third Army, but did not force its surrender before
the ceasefire. Tensions between the two generals followed Sharon's
decision, but a military tribunal later found his action was militarily
effective. This move was regarded by many Israelis as the turning
point of the war in the Sinai front. Thus, Sharon is widely viewed
as a war hero who saved Israel from defeat in Sinai. A photo of
Sharon wearing a head bandage on the Suez Canal became a famous
symbol of Israeli military prowess.
Sharon's political positions were controversial and he was
relieved of duty in February 1974.
Early
political career
Beginnings of political career
In the 1940s and 1950s, Sharon
seemed to be personally devoted to the ideals of Mapai, the
predecessor of the modern Labor Party. However, after retiring
from military service, he was instrumental in establishing Likud
in July 1973 by a merger of Herut, the Liberal Party and
independent elements. Sharon became chairman of the campaign staff
for that year's elections, which were scheduled for November. Two
and a half weeks after the start of the election campaign, the Yom
Kippur War erupted and Sharon was called back to reserve
service. In the elections Sharon won a seat, but a year later he
resigned.
From June 1975 to March 1976,
Sharon was a special aide to Prime Minister
Yitzhak Rabin. He planned his return to politics for the 1977
elections; first he tried to return to the Likud and replace
Menachem Begin at the head of the party. He suggested to Simha
Erlich, who headed the Liberal Party bloc in the Likud, that he
was more fitting than Begin to win an election victory; he was
rejected, however. He then tried to join the Labor Party and the
centrist Democratic Movement for Change, but was rejected by those
parties too. Only then did he form his own list, Shlomtzion, which
won two Knesset seats in the subsequent elections. Immediately
after the elections he merged Shlomtzion with the Likud and became
Minister of Agriculture.
When Sharon joined Begin's
government he had relatively little political experience. During
this period, Sharon supported the Gush Emunim settlements movement
and was viewed as the patron of the settlers' movement. He used
his position to encourage the establishment of a network of
Israeli settlements in the occupied territories to prevent the
possibility of Palestinian Arabs' return of these territories.
Sharon doubled the number of Jewish settlements on the West Bank
and Gaza Strip during his tenure.
On his settlement policy, Sharon said while addressing a
meeting of the
Tzomet party: "Everybody has to move, run and grab as many
(Judean) hilltops as they can to enlarge the (Jewish) settlements
because everything we take now will stay ours... Everything we
don't grab will go to them."
After the 1981 elections, Begin rewarded Sharon for his
important contribution to Likud's narrow win, by appointing him
Minister of Defense. On 16 January 1982 US President
Ronald Reagan, in his diary, said that Sharon was "the bad guy
who seemingly looks forward to a war."
Sabra
and Shatila massacre
During the 1982 Lebanon War, while Sharon was Defense Minister,
the Sabra and Shatila massacre occurred between September 16 and
18. Between 800 and 3,500 Palestinian civilians in the Sabra and
Shatila refugee camps were killed by the Phalanges—Lebanese
Maronite Christian militias. The Security Chief of the Phalange
militia, Elie Hobeika, was the ground commander of the militiamen
who entered the Palestinian camps and killed the Palestinians. The
Phalange had been sent into the camps to clear out PLO fighters
while Israeli forces surrounded the camps, blocking camp exits and
providing logistical support. The killings led some to label
Sharon "the Butcher of Beirut".
The
Kahan Commission found the
Israeli Defence Forces indirectly responsible for the massacre
and charged Sharon with "personal responsibility." It recommended
in early 1983 the removal of Sharon from his post as Defense
minister. In their recommendations and closing remarks, the
Commission determined that the massacre at Sabra and Shatilla was
carried out by a Phalangist unit, acting on its own but its entry
was known to Israel. It found that no Israeli was directly
responsible for the events which occurred in the camps, asserted
that Israel had indirect responsibility for the massacre since the
I.D.F. held the area. Mr.
Begin was found responsible for not
exercising greater involvement and awareness in the matter of
introducing the Phalangists into the camps. Mr. Sharon was found
responsible for ignoring the danger of bloodshed and revenge when
he approved the entry of the Phalangists into the camps as well as
not taking appropriate measures to prevent bloodshed. In relation to Sharon, the Commission
stated:
- We have found...that the Minister of Defense [Ariel
Sharon] bears personal responsibility. In our opinion, it is
fitting that the Minister of Defense draw the appropriate
personal conclusions arising out of the defects revealed with
regard to the manner in which he discharged the duties of his
office — and if necessary, that the
Prime Minister consider whether he should exercise his
authority...to... remove [him] from office."
Sharon initially refused to resign as Defense Minister and
Prime Minister
Menachem Begin
did not fire him. After a grenade was tossed into a dispersing
crowd of an Israeli Peace Now march, killing Emil Grunzweig and
injuring 10 others, a compromise was reached: Sharon agreed to
forfeit the post of Defense Minister but stayed in the cabinet as
a Minister without Portfolio.
Sharon's removal as Defense Minister is listed as one of the
important events of the Tenth Knesset.
In its 21 February 1983 issue,
Time published a story implying Sharon was directly
responsible for the massacres. Sharon
sued Time for
libel in American and Israeli courts.
Although the jury concluded that the Time story included
false allegations, they found that Time had not acted with
"actual malice" and so was not guilty of libel.
Political downturn and recovery
After his dismissal from the
Defense Ministry post, Sharon remained in successive governments
as a Minister without Portfolio (1983—1984), Minister for Trade
and Industry (1984—1990), and Minister of Housing Construction
(1990—1992). In the Knesset, he was member of the Foreign Affairs
and Defence committee from (1990–1992) and Chairman of the
committee overseeing Jewish immigration from the Soviet Union.
During this period he was a rival to then prime minister
Yitzhak Shamir,
but failed in various bids to replace him as chairman of Likud.
Their rivalry reached a head in February 1990, when Sharon snapped
the microphone from Shamir, who was addressing the Likud central
committee, and famously exclaimed: "Who's for wiping out
terrorism?" The incident was widely viewed as an apparent coup
attempt against Shamir's leadership of the party.
In
Benjamin Netanyahu's
1996–1999 government, Sharon was Minister of National
Infrastructure (1996—1998), and Foreign Minister (1998—1999). Upon
the election of the
Barak Labor government, Sharon became leader of the Likud
party.
Prime minister
After the collapse of Barak's government, Sharon was elected
Prime Minister in February 2001.
On 20 July 2004, Sharon called on
French Jews to emigrate from France to Israel immediately, in
light of an increase in French anti-Semitism (94 anti-Semitic
assaults reported in the first six months of 2004 compared to 47
in 2003). France has the fourth largest Jewish population (about
600,000 people), after the United States, Israel, and Russia.
Sharon observed that an "unfettered anti-Semitism" reigned in
France. The French government responded by describing his comments
as "unacceptable", as did the French representative Jewish
organization CRIF, which denied Sharon's claim of intense
anti-Semitism in French society. An Israeli spokesperson later
claimed that Sharon had been misunderstood. France then postponed
a visit by Sharon. Upon his visit, both Sharon and French
President
Jacques Chirac were described as showing a willingness to put
the issue behind them.
Unilateral
disengagement
In May 2003, Sharon endorsed the
Road Map for Peace put forth by the United States, European Union,
and Russia, which opened a dialogue with Mahmud Abbas, and announced his commitment to the creation of
a Palestinian state in the future.
He has embarked on a course of
unilateral withdrawal from the Gaza Strip, while maintaining
control of its coastline and airspace. Sharon's plan has been
welcomed by both the Palestinian Authority and Israel's left wing
as a step towards a final peace settlement. However, it has been
greeted with opposition from within his own Likud party and from
other right wing Israelis, on national security, military, and religious grounds.
Disengagement from Gaza
On 1 December 2004, Sharon
dismissed five ministers from the Shinui party for voting against
the government's 2005 budget. In January 2005 Sharon formed a
national unity government that included representatives of Likud,
Labor, and Meimad and Degel HaTorah as "out-of-government"
supporters without any seats in the government (United Torah
Judaism parties usually reject having ministerial offices as a
policy). Between 16 and 30 August 2005, Sharon controversially
expelled 9,480 Jewish settlers from 21 settlements in Gaza and
four settlements in the northern West Bank. Once it became clear
that the evictions were definitely going ahead a group of
conservative Rabbis, led by Rabbi Yosef Dayan, placed an ancient
curse on him known as the Pulsa diNura, calling on the Angel of
Death to intervene and kill him. After Israeli soldiers bulldozed
every settlement structure except for several former synagogues,
Israeli soldiers formally left Gaza on 11 September 2005 and
closed the border fence at Kissufim. While his decision to
withdraw from Gaza sparked bitter protests from members of the
Likud party and the settler movement, opinion polls showed that it
was a popular move among most of the Israeli electorate with more
than 80% of Israelis backing the plans. On 27 September 2005,
Sharon narrowly defeated a leadership challenge by a 52-48 percent
vote. The move was initiated within the central committee of the
governing Likud party by Sharon's main rival,
Binyamin Netanyahu, who had left the cabinet to protest
Sharon's withdrawal from Gaza. The measure was an attempt by
Netanyahu to call an early primary in November 2005 to choose the
party's leader.
Founding of
Kadima
On 21 November 2005, Sharon resigned as head of Likud, and
dissolved parliament to form a new
centrist party called
Kadima ("Forward"). November polls indicated that Sharon was
likely to be returned to the prime ministership. On 20 December
2005, Sharon's longtime rival Benjamin Netanyahu was elected his
successor as leader of Likud.
Following Sharon's incapacitation, Ehud Olmert replaced Sharon as
Kadima's leader, for the nearing general elections. Netanyahu,
along with
Labor's
Amir Peretz, were Kadima's chief rivals in the
March 2006 elections.
In the elections, which saw Israel's lowest-ever voter turnout
of 64%
(the number usually averages on the high 70%), Kadima, headed by
Olmert, received the most Knesset seats, followed by Labor. The
new governing coalition installed in May 2006 included Kadima,
with Olmert as Prime Minister, Labor (including Peretz as Defense
Minister), the Gil (Pensioner's) Party, the Shas religious party,
and
Yisrael Beiteinu.
Incapacitation and end of political career
Stroke of
December 2005
On 18 December 2005 Sharon was
sent to Hadassah Medical Center after suffering a mild stroke,
specifically a relatively unusual type called a paradoxical
embolism, in which a clot from the venous circulation crosses over
into the arterial circulation through a hole between the right and
left atrium called an atrial septal defect (or a patent foramen ovale) and goes to
the brain, causing a transient speech and motor disturbance.
Sharon often joked about his own weight; in October 2004 when
asked why he did not wear a
ballistic vest despite frequent death threats, Sharon smiled
and replied, "There is none that fits my size".
On his way to the hospital he lost
consciousness but regained it shortly thereafter. He
reportedly wanted to leave the hospital the evening after his
arrival but the hospital wanted him to stay another day. He spent
two days in the hospital and was to have had the small hole in his
heart repaired by a
cardiac catheterization procedure in early January.
Stroke of
January 2006
On 4 January 2006, in the evening
before his catheterization, Sharon suffered a second, far more
serious stroke at his Sycamore Ranch in the Negev region. A
"massive cerebral haemorrhage" led to bleeding in his brain which
doctors eventually brought under control the following morning
after performing two separate operations. After the first
operation, lasting seven hours, Hadassah Director Shlomo Mor-Yosef
reported Sharon's bleeding had stopped and his brain was
functioning without artificial support. After a second, 14-hour
surgery, Sharon was placed on a ventilator and some reports
suggested that he was suffering from paralysis in his lower body,
while others said he was still fighting for his life. He was
placed in an induced coma and his Prime Ministerial duties were
handed over to his deputy, Ehud Olmert. On Friday, 6 January,
Sharon was brought back into the operating theatre after doctors
reviewed the results of a brain scan. Hospital officials declined to comment on these
reports.
On the night of Sharon's stroke,
in the wake of his serious illness and following consultations
between Government Secretary Israel Maimon and Attorney General
Menachem Mazuz, Sharon was declared "temporarily incapable of
discharging his powers." As a result, Ehud Olmert, the Deputy
Prime Minister, was officially confirmed as the Acting Prime
Minister of Israel. Olmert and the Cabinet announced that the
elections would take place on 28 March as scheduled.
On 9 January,
Haaretz reported that while performing tests on Sharon
while treating his second stroke, doctors had discovered he was
suffering from undiagnosed
cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA), a brain disorder which, in
conjunction with
anticoagulant medication prescribed after his first stroke,
greatly increased his risk of cerebral hemorrhage. Although some
have insinuated that this news represents a failure on Hadassah's
part to provide adequate care for Sharon, CAA can be very
difficult to diagnose accurately, and is often discovered only
after an individual suffers a brain hemorrhage. The following day,
newspapers reported that Sharon's CAA had actually been diagnosed
following his first stroke in December. This was confirmed by
hospital director Mor-Yosef who commented "Hadassah physicians
were aware of the brain diagnosis, and no new diagnosis has been
made during the current hospitalization." Mor-Yosef declined to
respond to criticism of the combination of blood thinners and a
CAA diagnosis, though Haaretz quoted some doctors as saying
the medication led to the second stroke and that it would never
have been given if doctors had known about his brain condition.
Sharon underwent subsequent surgeries the following month. On
11 February 2006, doctors performed emergency surgery to remove
50 cm of his
large intestine that had become
necrotic, probably because of a blood clot.
On 22 February, he underwent an additional procedure to drain
excess fluid from his stomach, discovered during a
CT scan.
Replacement by Ehud Olmert
According to Israeli law, an Acting Prime Minister can remain
in office 100 days after the Prime Minister has become
incapacitated. After 100 days, the Israeli President must appoint
a new Prime Minister. At the time of his stroke, Sharon enjoyed
considerable support from the general public in Israel. The new
centrist political party that he founded, Kadima, won the largest
number of seats in the Knesset elections held on 28 March 2006. (Since Sharon was
unable to sign a nomination form, he was not a candidate and
therefore ceased to be a Knesset member.)
On 6 April, President of Israel
Moshe Katsav formally asked Ehud Olmert to form a government,
making him Prime Minister-Designate. Olmert had an initial period
of 28 days to form a governing coalition, with a possible two-week
extension. On 11 April 2006, the Israeli Cabinet deemed that
Sharon was incapacitated. Although Sharon's replacement was to be
named within 100 days of his becoming incapacitated, the
replacement deadline was extended due to the Jewish festival of
Passover. A provision was made that, should Sharon's condition
improve between 11 April and 14 April, the declaration would not
take effect. Therefore, the official declaration took effect on 14
April, formally ending Sharon's term as Prime Minister and making
Ehud Olmert the country's new Prime Minister.
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