Thursday, April 23, 2009

The ‘New, Moderate Lieberman’


Tzvi Ben Gedalyahu The ‘New, Moderate Lieberman’

Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman, depicted by most media as a firebrand anti-Arab inciter, displayed a new and moderate image in a lengthy interview on Voice of Israel government radio Thursday. However, he insisted that there will be “no giving without taking” in negotiations with the Palestinian Authority. His responses to questioning by "It’s All Talk" host Ayala Hasson were moderate both in tone and in content, and he sidestepped answering questions that invited a provocative response. Asked if he apologizes for his remark in the Knesset last October that Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak “can go to hell” if he continues to refuse to visit Jerusalem, the Foreign Minister responded, “I look ahead and not behind. We have common interests with Egypt, and this is an opportunity for cooperation.”

He also sidestepped the issue of whether he is for or against the creation of a new Palestinian Authority state on the land of Judea, Samaria and Gaza. Foreign Minister Lieberman instead stated that the security of Israel and economic and social stability for the PA are necessary before relating to the question.

The interview was the first he has granted a radio station since he took office less than a month ago. He previously refused to be interviewed by Yaron Dekel, Voice of Israel’s usual “It’s All Talk" host who is a respected and moderately toned journalist who often harshly questions center right political leaders. He recently asked “soft’ questions in an interview with former Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni, unquestioningly allowing her to harshly criticize her successor.

Critical of Media

His most critical statements were aimed at the media. The Foreign Minister asserted that negative reports about the chances of staging Wednesday night’s meeting with Egyptian intelligence chief Omar Suleiman were the result “of journalists who need to make a living.” He revealed that the two men had previously agreed on the meeting despite media reports up until Wednesday morning that the Egyptian official would refuse to meet him.

Foreign Minister Lieberman said he enjoyed the discussion with and likes Suleiman’s way of working. “We discussed issues that concern both of us, and neither country threatens the other,” he added.

However, he refused to comment on media reports that Suleiman invited him to visit Cairo. “We do not have to report everything," he explained. “When the invitation will come, we will say so.” Egypt confirmed Thursday afternoon that Suleiman invited Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu to visit - without Lieberman.

Lieberman, who heads the Yisrael Beiteinu (Israel is our Home) party, made it clear that he will not continue policies of the Olmert and Sharon governments that “gave and gave.” He pointed out that no terror group has been dismantled in the PA, and illegal weapons remain. “We have our commitments, but they have theirs and we never hear about this.

“The time has come to put things on the table. The fog that we create [with diplomatic nicetie causes us to lose out focus. The former government went a long way and what happened--the Second Lebanon, our being forced to launch Operation Cast Lead, Qatar and Mauritania cutting off ties and Gilad Shalit remaining in captivity.”

He said the question is not whether he rejects or accepts the Annapolis, Maryland conference statement, which effectively calls for ignoring the Roadmap step-by-step program for establishing a new PA state, but rather to examine the results. ”Negotiations mean give and take and not just give,” he added. “It has to be two-sided. 'Regional peace’ cannot be discussed without examining the points, such as dividing Jerusalem and the Arab ‘right of return.’”



Regarding media reports of his comments to a Russian newspaper on the Saudi Peace Plan, he charged that the translation was incorrect and that someone in his own ministry leaked “a twisted version.”

He explained that the only issue he related to in the plan is the Arab demand for the immigration of approximately five million Arabs who claim to be descendants of Arabs who once lived in Israel. “Anyone who wants to retain a Jewish state cannot negotiate that issue,” he stated.

The Foreign Minister implicitly backed the destruction of Jewish communities in Judea and Samaria by saying that Israel would honor all of its previous commitments, However, he added that “16 years of discussions has resulted in bringing in Fatah [Yasser Arafa from Tunisia, the expulsion of Jews from Gaza, rockets in Sderot and billions of shekels for the PA—and where are we? At a dead end.”

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