Yaalon: Pulling Out Under Fire is Perceived as Surrender, Encourages Terror …

Yaalon: Sharon Planned Pullout out of Personal Distress

Excerpts;

Former IDF chief of general staff Moshe Yaalon said Thursday that Israel’s pullout from the Gaza Strip is a failure, saying the plan was conceived to save former prime minister Ariel Sharon from political distress.

“There is no doubt that the disengagement failed. This failure emanates from the fact that the disengagement was essentially based on a doomed idea. It was not the result of thorough strategic analysis but the result of a political distress of his who was prime minister then, Ariel Sharon,” Yaalon told Haaretz.

Yaalon… added that “the disengagement was an internal Israeli game that ignored what’s going on outside Israel. It was a disengagement from reality and a disengagement from the truth.”

Speaking to Haaretz, the former chief of staff said: “…. The disengagement was mainly a media spin. Those who initiated it and led it lacked the strategic, security, political and historical background. These people put Israel in a virtual spin that is disconnected from reality using a media spin campaign which is imploding before our eyes.”

“The intellectual failure of the disengagement is this: the fact that there is no one to speak to on the other side doesn’t mean that
we can ignore the other side and the effects of his activities on us. The fact that even the Fatah leadership is not ready to recognize the State of Israel as a Jewish state while it says it is committed to the road map peace plan doesn’t mean it is possible to ignore the fact that pulling out under fire is perceived as surrender and encourages terror,” he said.

“The Israeli public backed the disengagement because it was blinded and drugged and also because it really wanted to free itself from the burden of the conflict and divide the land. But we have to understand that although we are trying to shake the Palestinians off our backs they refuse to do so and stab us instead. We shouldn’t fool ourselves. We live in the Middle East. We cannot barricade ourselves behind walls and fences. There is no such thing as unilateralism. Even when we refuse to talk with our neighbors there is interaction with them.

Our steps affect them. When the steps are withdrawal after withdrawal, after withdrawal, we convey weakness. And he who conveys weakness in the Middle East is like a weak animal in nature: he comes under attack.”

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