Barghouti’s Early Release; A Matter of Time in Olmert’s Latest Mutant “Convergence” Scheme

Analysis: Olmert Laying Groundwork for Barghouti’s Release, by Anshel Pfeffer (Jerusalem Post)

“Many Israelis will instinctively say that if the choice of partners is between Barghouti and the Hamas leadership, then we might as well go on fighting for another century. But anyone interested in jump-starting a new process with the Palestinians might feel that releasing Barghouti would accelerate it. Already there are those who are preparing the explanations and excuses to the public for his early release, not to mention the answers that will be needed to deal with petitions to the Supreme Court.”

Excerpts;

In his speech at Sde Boker on Monday, Prime Minister Ehud Olmert promised the Palestinians that if the cease-fire holds and they cooperate in his new diplomatic initiative, Israel will be willing to release large numbers of prisoners, including those “who have been sentenced to long periods.”

Bearing in mind that the speech was intended both for internal and international consumption, this was an interesting choice of words. In the past, when Israeli leaders have been willing to go a long way toward the Palestinians, the talk was of even releasing some prisoners “with blood on their hands ” – those who had been involved in murdering Israelis.

What exactly constitutes “blood on their hands” – was it actually pulling the trigger or also aiding and abetting – was never clear, but it was always enough to cause a public uproar in Israel. For the Palestinians it meant that the final solution to the prisoner issue was still far away.

But when Olmert is talking of prisoners who still have “long periods” left to serve, this isn’t just another way of saying that murderers will eventually be allowed to walk in a future peace deal. What he’s actually doing is swinging the ultimate prize in front of the Palestinians’ eyes. There is one particular prisoner serving five life sentences and 40 years, who every Palestinian was thinking about at that moment.

It was only two-and-a-half years ago that Marwan Barghouti was convicted for five murders and one attempted murder as leader of the Aksa Martyrs Brigades and handed a sentence that should keep him behind bars until the mid-22nd century. He’s already a candidate for inclusion in the impending prisoner exchange for Gilad Shalit.

No one in government is going to admit that Barghouti’s release is being considered. Olmert expressly denied it on the plane to Washington two weeks ago. But neither did he say it was out of the question, and this week’s speech was a clear hint in that direction.

Barghouti might be a convicted murderer, but the attitude of Israel’s leadership towards him is as a leader in exile. He is frequently visited in his Hadarim Prison cell by politicians and officers carrying messages from up high, and was allowed to play a central role in the negotiations leading to Sunday’s cease-fire in the Gaza Strip.

Barghouti was already the most influential Palestinian leader of his generation before his imprisonment, a favorite counterpart of Israeli left-wingers in meetings before the second intifada.

Olmert isn’t alluding to the possibility of Barghouti’s release just as an incentive to the Palestinians. No one in the Middle East still believes the enfeebled Mahmoud Abbas is capable of delivering at the negotiating table. For Olmert’s new plan to have any chance of turning into reality, he’s going to have make a difficult choice of which Palestinian leadership to deal with.

Many Israelis will instinctively say that if the choice of partners is between Barghouti and the Hamas leadership, then we might as well go on fighting for another century. But anyone interested in jump-starting a new process with the Palestinians might feel that releasing Barghouti would accelerate it. Already there are those who are preparing the explanations and excuses to the public for his early release, not to mention the answers that will be needed to deal with petitions to the Supreme Court.

All of sudden we will be reminded that Barghouti wasn’t actually a part of the teams that carried out the suicide bombings, that he was more on the political side. After all, he fought Arafat over corruption and human rights and was in favor of peace with Israel since 1994.

But as much as Olmert might be interested in boosting his new plan by releasing Barghouti, he’s still got to sell it to an infuriated public. One method might be coupling it with a more popular outcome – getting Gilad Shalit back.

As cruel as it sounds, the negotiations over the impending prisoner deal have long ago stopped being about the freedom of Shalit.

Whether or not the government considers using Barghouti to cut through this Gordian knot, or as seems more likely, keep him as a bargaining chip for a more advanced stage, what is now almost certain is that the Palestinians already have their assurance that Barghouti’s early release is just a matter of time.

Commentary;

Possible release of Marwan Barghouti will provide Olmert with a facade, just as with Arafat and Oslo in 1993 or Abbas and the Roadmap, that there is someone to talk to, a “peace partner.” But just as with Arafat or Abbas, this is outright fraud. Barghouti’s release would serve as no more than a tool for Olmert and his ilk to perpetrate further fraud upon the Jews, to implement further expulsions of tens of thousands of Jews from Jewish land in Yehuda and the Shomron.

Although Barghouti may not have perpetrated suicide bombings, attacks, murders of Jews with his own 2 hands, he is complicit, as is Abbas, n the planning, financing and manning of murderous terror indiscriminately perpetrated against Jews. For that he deserves to serve out full sentence behind bars, throw away the keys, until the mid-22nd century. MB

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