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Jewish World Review Dec. 23, 2003 / 28 Kislev, 5764
Reading Sharon's mind
By Daniel Pipes
Sharon announced that the "road map," a U.S. plan that envisions Israel and the Palestinians negotiating a settlement between
them, has only a "few months" left to live. If "the Palestinians still continue to disregard their part in implementing the road
map," he warned, "Israel will initiate the unilateral security step of disengagement from the Palestinians."
Perhaps the most startling element of this speech because it is most at odds with Sharon's long-time views was this
statement about the Israeli civilians living in the West Bank and Gaza: "There will be no construction beyond the existing
construction line, no expropriation of land for construction, no special economic incentives and no construction of new
settlements."
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In a much-noted speech last week, Israel's Prime Minister Ariel Sharon ostensibly made a dramatic reversal in course. But I
am wondering whether to take his shift at face value.

This "Disengagement Plan," he explained, will include "the redeployment of [Israeli] forces along new security lines and a
change in the deployment of settlements" to reduce the number of Israelis living among Palestinians. Security will be provided
by "[Israel Defense Forces] deployment, the security fence and other physical obstacles."
Though presented in a take-charge, active, and even somewhat bellicose manner, the Disengagement Plan sent three defeatist
messages:
Taken at face value, then, the Sharon speech amounts to a major blunder; were its defeatist policies put into effect, they would
spur Palestinians to engage in more violence, and so delay a resolution of the Arab-Israeli conflict.
But that's taking this speech at face value. Count this observer as skeptical that Sharon actually means what he says, for it too
starkly contradicts his known views, for example on the need for Israelis to control the West Bank. (In 1998, as foreign
minister, he urged Israelis there to "grab more hills, expand the territory. Everything that's grabbed, will be in our hands.
Everything we don't grab will be in their hands.")
Last week's speech appears to reflect momentary imperatives, not long-term goals.
This reflects the fact that as prime minister, Sharon has two different audiences. Palestinians he wants to convince that violence
against Israelis is counterproductive, and this he achieves by retaliating hard against terrorism. The Israeli public and President
George W. Bush he wants to stay on good terms with by demonstrably engaging in diplomacy.
Maintaining these two more-or-less contradictory policies at the same time has not been easy; Sharon has done so through a
virtuoso performance of quietly tough actions mixed with voluble concessions.
I don't pretend to know what is on the prime minister's mind he does not confide in me but I do suspect that his speech
last week amounted to yet another such concession, this time addressed to an Israeli public demanding something more activist
and immediate than the achingly long-term policy of deterrence. Sharon, a shrewd politician who knows when he must bend,
has outlined a plan that I believe he has little wish to fulfill.