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Shimon Peres: Brand without substance
Published in Al-Ahram Weekly on 04 - 10 - 2016

Former Israeli prime minister and president Shimon Peres was a very successful brand. He was presented to the world as stately, wise, a relentless advocate of peace, and a sane voice amidst a conflict deemed senseless and unending.
Now that he is dead, at 93, international media is rife with touching tributes and heart-warming eulogies of the Nobel Peace Prize winner, one of Israel's most sagacious founding fathers, who was also seen as a giant among men.
These attributes were mostly based on sentiment rather than fact, however. Full knowledge of the man's legacy certainly lingers among many Palestinians, Lebanese and advocates of peace and justice in the Middle East.
The truth is, Peres was never truly a peacemaker; he never laboured to achieve fair and just political compromises that would preserve the dignity and rights of the Palestinians, along with securing the future of his people. In fact, he was a maximalist, a man who blatantly shoved his ideas forward in order to achieve his goals, no matter what the method or price.
Nor was he a leader with specific qualities that allowed him to excel in particular fields of politics. Instead, he was the embodiment of the archetypical Israeli politician who swapped roles and rebranded himself as the occasion or role required.
“Over seven decades, Peres served as prime minister (twice) and president, though he never actually won a national election outright,” wrote Ben White in Middle East Monitor. “He was a member of 12 cabinets and had stints as defence, foreign and finance minister.”
He was also characterised as a warrior at home, and a peace dove in global forums. He came across as kind and stately, and Western media often embraced that erroneous image with little questioning.
But for many, Shimon Peres was a false prophet. Like Ehud Barak, Tzipi Livni, Ehud Olmert and others, he was a peacemaker in name only, and only by those whose ideals he fulfilled.
Fearing to appear too soft to lead Israel (which is often led by battle-hardened generals), Peres often meted out severe punishment on the Palestinian and Lebanese peoples. His history was rife with brutal war crimes that went unpunished.
Although he is remembered for his ordering of the bombing of a UN shelter in the Lebanese village of Qana in 1996, killing and wounding hundreds of innocent people, the list of war crimes associated with his name is as long as his career. He remained, until the very end, a staunch supporter of the Israeli right-wing government's wars on Gaza and the perpetual siege on that impoverished, forsaken region.
Even as a peacemaker he failed terribly. He championed the Oslo Accords as a political treaty that would entrench the Israeli occupation and turn the little that remained of historic Palestine into disjointed Bantustans, as was the case, if not to a worse extent, in apartheid South Africa. Yet he certainly never took responsibility, or expressed any remorse, for the resultant plight of the Palestinians.
Nevertheless, the brand of Shimon Peres is an old one. It spans over the course of his long career, starting with him joining underground Zionist militias prior to the establishment of Israel on appropriated Palestinian land. His militant group, the Haganah, was entrusted with the implementation of Plan Dalet, which essentially aimed at the ethnic cleaning of the Palestinian population of its historic homeland.
As one of the disciples of David Ben-Gurion, the first prime minister of Israel, “Peres spent his long political career in the public spotlight”, although “his greatest successes were engineered in the shadows,” according to Yaron Ezrahi, a politics professor at Hebrew University in Jerusalem, as quoted by Jonathan Cook.
One of these successes was the nuclear bomb. Although various Middle Eastern countries, most notably Iraq and Iran, are often derided for nuclear weapons they have never possessed, Peres was the founding father of weapons of mass destruction in the region.
“Peres, like his mentor, believed an Israeli bomb was the key to guaranteeing Israel's status — both in Washington DC and among the Arab states — as an unassailable Middle East power,” Cook wrote.
Dodging American protests, Peres enlisted the clandestine support of Britain, France, Norway and other countries to realise his ambition.
Yet throughout his career, Peres never ceased speaking of peace. His rhetoric and rehearsed face of sincerity suited even his political rivals very well, for the juxtaposition of peace-loving Peres versus, for example, warmongering Ariel Sharon presented Israel as a country with healthy, democratic institutions.
The true mockery, though, is that the differences between Peres and his rivals, who also included former Israeli prime minister Yitzhak Shamir, were barely even apparent and only relevant within Israel's own political and historical contexts.
For example, Shamir, who led the government between 1983-84 and, again between 1986-1992, was a member of the terrorist Zionist paramilitary group, Lehi, also known as the Stern Gang, at the time when Peres was a member of the Haganah. Throughout their militant and political careers, both collaborated in ethnic cleaning, waged wars, expanded illegal Jewish colonies, and entrenched the military occupation of Palestinian land after 1967.
However, stately Peres chose his words carefully and was indeed a cunning diplomat, while Shamir was a blunt and disagreeable character. As far as practical differences are concerned, however, the end results of their policies were practically identical.
A particularly poignant example was the unity government in Israel in 1984 that had a most peculiar leadership arrangement that included both Shamir of the rightwing Likud Party and Peres of the Labour Party, who was at the time in the early phase of his reinvention as a dove. (Yitzhak Rabin was appointed to the post of defence minister.)
These two individuals who stood at the helm of the Israeli leadership constituted the worst possible combination from the point of view of Palestinians in the occupied territories. While Shamir and Peres served the role of the hard-liner and peace-seeker respectively before the international community, both men and their governments presided over a legacy saturated with violence, illegal annexation of Palestinian land and settlement expansion.
The number of Jewish settlers who moved to the occupied territories between 1984 and 1988 rose considerably, contributing to a policy of slow annexation of Palestinian land and, predictably, the ethnic cleansing of more people.
In October 1994, Peres, along with Yasser Arafat and Yitzhak Rabin, was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. While Rabin was assassinated by a Jewish extremist and Arafat died from suspected poisoning, Peres lived to be 93, advocating Israel's interest at the expense of Palestinians to the very end, as well as justifying Israeli wars, sieges and military occupation.
The Israelis and many in the mainstream Western media may very well praise Peres as a hero, but for Palestinians, Lebanese and a multitude of others he is just another war criminal who escaped accountability for his countless misdeeds.

The writer is founder of PalestineChronicle.com.


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