Nissan Ratzlav-Katz and Hillel Fendel
In a special session, the Knesset voted its approval on Monday evening of Prime Minister Ehud Olmert's announced political decisions in the wake of the Winograd Committee's report on the Second Lebanon War. Fifty-nine MKs voted to accept the speech, while 53 voted against it - including six coalition MKs - and one Kesset Member abstained. In his Knesset speech, Olmert declared that he takes full responsibility for the Second Lebanon War and its failures: "I carry the supreme responsibility for all of the failures. I said that the day the fighting ended and I have never tried to escape from it or repudiate it." At the same time, Olmert said that he would not leave office despite what he characterized as the "harsh findings" of the Winograd Committee. Instead, he explained, he plans to remain in office in order to fix the problems revealed during the war and the subsequent investigation.
Towards the end of the Prime Minister's address to the Knesset plenum, a man in the visitors' gallery whose son fell in battle in the 2006 war interjected, calling Olmert's words "insolent" and yelling, "You are not my prime minister!" When the man was asked to leave the Knesset hall, several other bereaved parents and Knesset Members provocatively left with him.
MK Aryeh Eldad (National Union) was one of those who left the Knesset plenum with the parents, calling out, "It's impossible to sit here and continue to listening to Olmert's lies." He said that at the "head of our government is a slippery, cynical lawyer who is prepared to do anything in order to save his client, Ehud Olmert. The other citizens of Israel don't interest him at all."
Reserve soldiers who attended the Knesset session as a group were required to sit in a special section of the visitors' gallery walled off by bulletproof glass, while others were seated in open sections. The off-duty soldiers expressed anger at their placement, saying, "We're good enough to fight and be killed in Lebanon, but in the Knesset's eyes we are dangerous and must sit behind reinforced glass." MK Zevulun Orlev (National Union-National Religious Party), as a sign of solidarity, left his seat among the legislators and joined the reservists.
'The Entire Government Approved Unanimously'
Even as he took responsibility for wartime decisions, Prime Minister Olmert also noted that the entire government was privy to IDF assessments ahead of the Lebanon campaign regarding the dangers to the homefront. "The government approved unanimously and unconditionally to authorize the committee of seven, under my leadership, to direct the IDF operations," he said.
The operational goals of the war were carefully and precisely defined, Olmert said, with the primary objective being the rescue of the kidnapped soldiers Eldad Regev and Ehud Goldwasser. "We were not able to achieve that goal," Olmert said, but added that he knew that the chances of success were not high.
Olmert called UN Resolution 1701, which ended the fighting in Lebanon on terms agreed to by Israel and by the Hizbullah, "a great achievement for the State of Israel. The quiet, peace and prosperity that have been the lot of the north since the war are a great achievement for the State of Israel."
MKs Don't Agree
Olmert was not given an easy time by many of the Knesset Members. Zahava Gal'on of Meretz said Olmert was a "disgrace" and must resign immediately, while MK Eitan Cabel of the coalition's Labor Party also said that the time had come for Olmert to quit.
Opposition Leader Binyamin Netanyahu said that Olmert's "cynicism" must be replaced with "Zionism."
Likud MK Gideon Saar added that Olmert's aides and political allies had distorted the Winograd Report by claiming that it did not condemn Olmert. "Even the members of the Winograd Commision are yelling, 'Read the report! That’s not what we wrote!'" Addressing Olmert directly, Saar said, "This grave report describes the grave failure in the way this war was run, and your attitude towards the report is brazen, and itself explains why you must not continue to be the Prime Minister."
MK Uri Ariel (National Union) was one of those who left the plenum in protest, saying, "The Prime Minister continues to try and deceive the public, and refuses to accept that the nation - and especially the bereaved parents and reserve soldiers - don't want him any longer. Is there even one Israeli who would want Olmert to lead Israel if another war breaks out?"
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