Ben Gurion University
Ben Gurion University - Neve Gordon
(Dept. of Political Science) is an Israeli Disgrace
http://counterpunch.com/gordon03262009.html
Meet Netanyahu's
Foreign Minister
Avigdor Lieberman,
Israel's Shame
By NEVE GORDON
March 26, 2009
Thanks to Binyamin Netanyahu's
overweening ambition, Israel is to be saddled with a foreign
minister who is a national disgrace.
Imagine a country that appoints
someone who has been found guilty of striking a 12-year-old boy to
be its foreign minister. The person in question is also under
investigation for money-laundering, fraud and breach of trust; in
addition, he was a bona fide member of an outlawed racist party and
currently leads a political party that espouses fascist ideas. On
top of all this, he does not even reside in the country he has been
chosen to represent.
Even though such a portrayal may
appear completely outlandish, Israel's new foreign minister, Avigdor
Lieberman, actually fits the above depiction to the letter.
• In
2001, following his own confession, Lieberman was found guilty of
beating a 12-year-old boy. As part of a plea bargain, Lieberman was
fined 17,500 shekels and had to promise never to hit young children
again.
• In
2004, Lieberman's 21-year-old daughter Michal set up a consulting
firm, which received 11m shekels from anonymous overseas sources.
Lieberman, according to the police, received more than a 2.1m-shekel
salary from the company for two years of employment. In addition,
according to an investigation by Haaretz, he allegedly received
additional severance pay – amounting to hundreds of thousands of
shekels – in 2006 and 2007, while he was minister of strategic
affairs and deputy prime minister. According to Israeli law, this is
illegal.
•
Lieberman is an ex-member of Meir Kahane's party, Kach, which was
outlawed due to its blatantly racist platform. Moreover, his views
towards Arabs do not appear to have changed over the years. In 2003,
when reacting to a commitment made by Prime Minister Ariel Sharon to
give amnesty to approximately 350 Palestinian prisoners, Lieberman
declared that, as minister of transport, he would be more than happy
to provide buses to take the prisoners to the sea and drown them
there.
• In
January 2009, during Israel's war on Gaza, Lieberman argued that
Israel "must continue to fight Hamas just like the United States did
with the Japanese in the second world war. Then, too, the occupation
of the country was unnecessary." He was referring to the two atomic
bombs dropped on Nagasaki and Hiroshima.
•
Lieberman does not live in Israel according to its internationally
recognised borders, but rather in an illegal settlement called
Nokdim. Legally speaking, this would be like US Secretary of State
Hillary Clinton residing in Mexico and UK Foreign Secretary David
Miliband living on the Canary Islands.
And yet, despite these egregious
transgressions, newly-elected Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu has
no qualms about appointing Lieberman to represent Israel in the
international arena. Netanyahu's lust for power has led him to
choose a man who actually poses a serious threat to Israel. Both
Lieberman's message and style are not only violent, but have clear
proto-fascist elements; and, as Israeli commentators have already
intimated, he is extremely dangerous.
Politics being politics, most
western leaders will no doubt adopt a conciliatory position towards
Lieberman, and agree to meet and discuss issues relating to foreign
policy with him. Such a position can certainly be justified on the
basis of Lieberman's democratic election; however much one may
dislike his views, he is now the representative of the Israeli
people. Those who decide to meet him can also claim that ongoing
diplomacy and dialogue lead to the internalisation of international
norms and thus moderate extremism.
These justifications carry weight.
However, western leaders will also have to take into account that
the decision to meet Lieberman will immediately be associated with
the ban on Hamas, at least among people i
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