Saturday, April 05, 2008

Fighting is what they do best

Nahum Barnea

There have always been quarrels at the Labor Party, even during its prime years. The greatness is now gone, the party is gone, and all that are left are the personal feuds, in remembrance of the destruction.


"You have an obsession to be prime minister, but you have no agenda," former Labor Chairman Amir Peretz lashed out at the party's current Chairman Ehud Barak this week. "I have given up competing with you in being pathetic," Barak responded. Let’s take a break for a minute and try to analyze these remarks, not from the aspects of entertainment or malicious joy, but from the aspect of their content. Is Barak obsessive in his desire to be prime minister? Yes, if we’re referring to the late 1990s, when he served as minister in the Rabin and Peres governments. In the Olmert government he acts as if he already is the prime minister.


A person who seriously aims to obtain the prime minister's crown should have acted in a completely different manner than Barak did: First of all, do his best for the current government's success, otherwise the voters will remain home; second, expand the common denominator between Labor and Kadima. Without the support of both parties he has no chance of being elected. Third, strengthen his image as a national leader and as the defense minister; fourth, propose a vision for the future, a plan, an idea, a slogan, something people can hold on to; fifth, revive his party and stabilize it.


Barak didn’t bother. At the most, one can say that he is lightly obsessive.


Is it true that Barak has no economic, social and diplomatic agenda? No. He has an agenda, but in terms of economy, society and the Palestinian issue, it is located to the right of the Labor Party's proclaimed views. Like Rabin at the time, he refuses to say 'Amen' to his party's bon ton. There is nothing wrong with that.


Fuad can babysit
Barak's problem is not a lack of agenda but a lack of direction, a lack of decision. He does well in analyzing what others are doing, but finds it difficult to decide what he should do. The result is a zigzag in every field he touches, from the question of what to do in Gaza to the question of what to do with Olmert. We have a zigzagging Barak.


During his renewed political career, Barak adopted the Ecclesiastes approach: Nonsense, everything is sheer nonsense. He examines the political arena not like a candidate seeking to be elected or a leader seeking support, but like a researcher examining microbes with a microscope: He is so big. They are so small.


Is Amir Peretz pathetic? Yes, if we look back at his monthsat the Defense Ministry. Peretz had a golden opportunity, an Obama opportunity, to reach national leadership, and he missed it. Does Barak not have a chance to compete with him? I'm not sure.


The person we should wonder about is not Peretz, nor is it Barak. The person we should wonder about is Benjamin Netanyahu. His political rivals are giving him every chance in the world to sit back and enjoy himself. Why does he prefer to arrange dubious trips to Paris or London, wander from one luxury hotel to another, waste his time delivering speeches on the wonders of the State and then be ridiculed in the media, while here, in Israel, in the parliament house, he is being offered all the fun in the world, free of charge.


To the next Labor Party faction meetings he can send the children. If they are bored, uncle Fuad (Minister Binyamin Ben-Eliezer) will always be happy to babysit.

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