http://www.haaretz.com/
Sat., August 12, 2006 Av 18, 5766
Ehud Olmert may decide to accept the French proposal for a cease-fire
and unconditional surrender to Hezbollah. That is his privilege. Olmert
is a prime minister whom journalists invented, journalists protected, and
whose rule journalists preserved. Now the journalists are saying run away.
That's legitimate. Unwise, but legitimate.
However, one thing should be clear: If Olmert runs away now from the
war he initiated, he will not be able to remain prime minister for even
one more day. Chutzpah has its limits. You cannot lead an entire nation
to war promising victory, produce humiliating defeat and remain in power.
You cannot bury 120 Israelis in cemeteries, keep a million Israelis in
shelters for a month, wear down deterrent power, bring the next war very
close, and then say - oops, I made a mistake. That was not the intention.
Pass me a cigar, please.
There is no mistake Ehud Olmert did not make this past month. He went
to war hastily, without properly gauging the outcome. He blindly followed
the military without asking the necessary questions. He mistakenly gambled
on air operations, was strangely late with the ground operation, and failed
to implement the army's original plan, much more daring and sophisticated
than that which was implemented. And after arrogantly and hastily bursting
into war, Olmert managed it hesitantly, unfocused and limp. He neglected
the home front and abandoned the residents of the north. He also failed
shamefully on the diplomatic front.
Still, if Olmert had come to his senses as Golda Meir did during the
Yom Kippur War, if he had become a leader, established a war cabinet and
called the nation to a supreme effort that would change the face of the
battle, a penetrating discussion of his failures could be postponed. But
in blinking first over the past 24 hours, he has become an incorrigible
political personality. Therefore, the day Nasrallah comes out of his bunker
and declares victory to the whole world, Olmert must not be in the prime
minister's office. Post-war battered and bleeding Israel needs a new start
and a new leader. It needs a real prime minister.
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