Posted on 08/17/2006 2:17:54 AM PDT by goldstategop
It would be funny if it were not so sad
Turning a golden calf into a sacred cow
As the combat has trailed off in Lebanon, it can now be said that whatever Israels losses, it has discovered a great comedic genius: Prime Minister Ehud Olmerta man who sent his army to war, but only after tying its shoelaces together.
In fact, Olmert is more than a performing comedic artist but also a director of a war cabinet that encompasses a veritable Shakespearean company performing a seemingly endless comedy of errors.
Olmerts defense minister, Amir Peretz, offered to make peace with Syria scarcely hours after a ceasefire in a war promoted by Syrian rockets and propaganda. Only a few hours later, Syrian president Bashar Assad was so impressed by the peace offer that he again threatened to go to war directly against Israel.
"Every war creates opportunities for a broadened political process ... We must establish talks with Lebanon and prepare the conditions for a dialogue with Syria," Peretz said.
A day later Defense Minister Peretz charged that Israels top army commanders had kept him in the dark about the real situation in Lebanon before the war, because they never told him that Hizballah had so many rockets.
Peretz named his own advisor to examine charges by hundreds of Israeli reserve soldiers that they were also kept in the darknot given night-vision equipment, battle vests, laser-finders and even foodbefore going to Lebanon.
But Peretz was not the only associate in Olmerts inner circle who continues his comic antics.
Olmerts army chief of staff, Lt. Gen. Dan Halutz, it was discovered, called his stock broker and sold off all his stock portfolio only minutes after Israel secretly decided to go to war. And when much of the country gasped at this seeming insensitivity and possible violation of insider trading, the general lectured the country on his ethics.
But it would only be fair to acknowledge that these men are inspired by Olmert himself.
The cigar-smoking Olmert exhibits a wit that is a cross between Winston Churchill and Groucho Marx, a sense of timing and history that is a blend of Jimmy Carter and Woody Allen, and a slap-stick approach to his army and cabinet that recalls The Three Stooges.
When the UN decided last week that the Israel-Hezbollah ceasefire would begin at 05:00 Monday GMT, Olmert and his colleagues forgot London summer time and GMT are not the same, stopping Israeli fire an hour early.
But this was nothing compared to Olmerts command performance: starting the full land war a month late, a month after the kidnapping of two Israeli soldiers and the launching of 4000-5,000 rockets and mortars against Israeli cities.
On July 16, a red-faced Olmert told Israels parliament, the Knesset, We will seek out every terrorist base, and we will strike at every terrorist, but then he did exactly the opposite, approving only limited air attacks.
Throughout the war, Olmert kept a tremendous comedic tension, steadfastly refusing to call the combat situation a war. That would have been too easy. In fact, Olmert, faced with hundreds of thousands of dislocated Israelis, refused the easy applause line of calling the situation an emergency and sending aid to people whose houses were destroyed by Hezbollah rockets.
Olmert then complained (Aug. 8) that the army had not presented him with any real operative combat plans. That night Olmert allowed his cabinet to approve a slightly larger military operation, but reversed himself the following day, saying he was delaying its implementation.
But Olmerts comedic approach is more than just a matter of timing, encompassing breath-taking identity switches, sometimes turning a golden calf into a sacred cow.
We are a stiff-necked people, bragged Olmert, apparently oblivious to the fact that he was re-writing Gods rebuke of the Children of Israel (for worshiping a golden calf) into a blessing and even a planned chart of his own future conduct.
It was a bold effort for Olmert who had avoided the Israeli public and the press, according to the advice of his top press handlers.
He will talk to the people when he has something to say, observed Tal Zilberstein, an Olmert advisor.
In a speech to the public on July 31, Olmert promised we will not stop fighting until there is peace in our land. He promised that Israel would refuse to live under a menacing cloud of missiles.
Just when the audience thought Olmert was trying to recall the blood and sweat and tears of Churchill exhorting his countrymen to weeks and months of travail under the Nazi rocket menace, Israels prime minister morphed into something else.
The next day, Israels top stand-up comedian decided he had no need for more weeks and months because the war had been won overnight: today, the State of Israel is succeeding in the campaign and making impressive gains, which may be unprecedented.
Olmert then redefined the meaning of success, unprecedented success.
Not for one moment, from the first day, did the Minister of Defense, I, the Government of Israel nor - it must be said in its favor - the Defense Forces promise the people of Israel that, at the end of this campaign, there would not be any missiles in firing range of the State of Israel. declared Olmert, Israels number-one comedian.
No one can promise such a thing when there are missiles with a range of over 250 kilometers, wryly observed Israels leader, after apparently reviewing his rocket notes.
It was probably the best rendition of the hold-me-back and Ill-show-him-whos boss routines since Woody Allens nebbish-nerd in Play It Again Sam of 1972:
I snapped my chin down onto some guy's fist and hit another one in the knee with my nose.
To be fair, Olmerts performance has been consistently more sophisticated than Woody Allens, involving a full range of emotions and artistic technique.
As one watches and listens to Olmert, one is impressed with his modesty and the way he has been graciously trying to share his success and the stage with Israeli Defense Minister Amir Peretz and Israeli Army (IDF) Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Dan Halutz.
Like other great comedians, Olmert is both an actor and a director, and as a director, Olmert made several wonderful comedic decisions in casting.
Olmert brought us Foreign Minister Tzippy Livni, who can barely speak in English, and whose idea of bold Israeli public relations is to toss her blond hair in the direction of a visiting European diplomat and to regale listeners with tales of her close ties to Condoleeza Rice.
Livni said that the UN ceasefire resolution was a tremendous victory for Israel, especially because UN troopswhich were so successful in stopping genocide in Rwanda and the Balkanswill now protect Israels northern border.
Livni does not live in Haifa, Tiberias, Safed, Nahariya, Qiryat Shmona or any other town or village that has been pockmarked by Hezbollah rockets. That could be why she said she was not particularly worried that the UN resolution did not mention disarming Hezbollah.
Still, as a casting decision, Olmert outdid himself when he cast as Defense Minister, Amir Peretza Charlie Chaplin-like figure whose outsize mustache and spastic hand motions often look like Chaplins film impression of The Great Dictator, a film parody of Hitler.
I will show Nasserallah who Peretz is, exclaimed Peretz as the war began, strutting around and bragging, barely able to control the jerky movements of his elebows.
Many in Israel say that Olmerts discovery of Peretz has been a stroke of inventive genius, taking Peretz, a labor leader with no government experience whatsoever and virtually no security background and giving him the most important ministry in his government.
However, there are some who feel that Olmert has not always delivered his lines well.
Olmerts critics exclaim that the Israeli prime minister was more than a tad wrong in claiming unprecedented success in fighting the forces of evilIran and Hizballahand rescuing kidnapped Israeli soldiers.
There is at least one other example of similareven award-winningsuccess: US President Jimmy Carter, who was rejected by the American audience but who won international acclaim and a Nobel Peace Prize 25 years after he left office.
It is worth recalling Jimmy Carters success with the Iranian ayatollahs in the 1970s:
*--First undermining the Shah of Iran, with concern for human rights, and then bringing to power Ruhollah Khomeini and the other Iranian human rights activists.
*--Then failing to use massive force or threats to get the release of 400 Americans taken hostage by the Iranian human rights activists and protesters.
*--And finally, micro-managing and totally botching the military rescue raid to free the American hostages.
Moreover, President Carter has gone on to become an expert certifier of would-be democratic leaders such as Yasser Arafat and Fidel Castro, and one is not likely to see Olmert achieve such comedic heights.
But as great as Carters achievements have been, experts here believe that Ehud Olmert will surpass Carter as a comical chief executive.
This week, after 160 Israelis were killed and a third of the country was badly damaged, Olmert has been pressed to agree to a commission of inquiry into his handling of the war. It was then that Olmert came up with his finest comedy:
There have been some problems, but we will investigate them ourselves.
Israelis are laughing themselves to death.
(No more Olmert! No more Kadima! No more Oslo!)
In the long run this debacle is a painful but good thing for Israel. Weak leadership and poor tactics would be a lot more costly later if the Iranian situation goes critical.
July 30th I posted: "It won't end for a while yet but it looks to me like Hezballah wins this round. The Israelis pulled their punches and even so the world is ready to rein them in. The Israeli PM was sold on an air campaign by his Air Force and that doesn't defeat guerillas."
Don't overfocus on the PM. The high command screwed this up every bit as much as the political leadership did. Fifty years of military institutional memory disregarded.
The silver lining though is Israel will have a thorough shakeout of the high command now. Israel is a state that learns from its mistakes, and perhaps just in time.
Israel is now run by a gang of Jimmy Carters. Intelligent Jews should start making plans to get out. I hope the US has a liberal immigration policy for Israelis. That's my big hope now. I don't have high hopes for the survival of Israel. Not with a gang of Peanuts in charge.
This is what happens when a nation lets its guard down.
One has to ask - what would the outcome have been if Sharon were in power?
'The Israelis pulled their punches and even so the world is ready to rein them in.'
I don't have a clue to the meaning of:'the world wants to rein them in'
The newscasters kept repeating this like a mantra, but do you have any evidence that anything but Olmert himself wanted a ceasefire.
Why did hezbolla stop with the rockets? Only to bring his soldiers down from the north and wait until he's TOTALLY ready for the big finale. I've heard that he was planning to launch 30,000 at one time. In June 60,000 Iranian 'tourists' entered Lebanon.
I totally agree with you that this was a gift to Israel, to wake up and smell the hoummus.
Ya know, at first glance it seemed like israel accomplished it's goals and got what it wanted.......but, after reviewing all the stuff coming out, it looks like this guy is israel's jimmy carter...............too damn bad, but GWB and his gang wrote the damn deal that has emblodened the muzzies even more, what the hell is going on?
(No more Olmert! No more Kadima! No more Oslo!)
I think the Israelis are about as intelligent as the average American. Mr. Peanut was followed by Ronald Reagan. The Israelis will find their Reagan. Hopefully very quickly.
Surely all the rifles had IRON sights. You must mean few had RED DOTS or low-powered combat OPTICAL sights.
Yes.
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