Olmert, Netanyahu clash over Hamas and Golan Heights
English
Prime Minister Ehud Olmert and Opposition Leader Binyamin Netanyahu blamed each
other on Monday for the rise of Hamas, highlighting the growing tensions in the
Knesset over how Israel should regard the new Palestinian unity government.
Olmert told the Knesset's Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee that if the new
Palestinian unity government were to free kidnapped IDF Cpl. Gilad Shalit,
Israel would have to reconsider its position on the Palestinian Authority
coalition.
However, Olmert also noted that "Up to now, Abbas has been an opponent of Hamas.
If the new government makes the same inflated demands of Israel, it will show
that [PA Chairman Mahmoud Abbas] has moved from his previous position, toward
Hamas."
Olmert told the committee that he would go through with plans to attend a
three-way summit with Abbas and US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice next
Monday despite expected domestic criticism.
According to Olmert, he would attend the meeting to explore possibilities for a
"diplomatic horizon." An argument then broke out between the prime minister and
Netanyahu when the opposition leader accused Olmert of giving in to Abbas.
To that, Olmert replied, "Netanyahu has gone back to being the same old
Netanyahu," and accused him of directly contributing to strengthening the Hamas
movement by releasing the movement's founder, Sheikh Ahmad Yassin, during his
term as prime minister.
"Netanyahu established Hamas, gave it life, freed Sheikh Yassin and gave him the
opportunity to blossom," he said, adding that the current political situation in
the Palestinian Authority came about "because of the nonsense that was done
while Netanyahu was prime minister."
In a Likud faction meeting three hours later, Netanyahu lashed back, for the
first time criticizing Olmert's handling of the summer's war in Lebanon.
Netanyahu broke his policy of defending the government's handling of the war,
which he had done repeatedly in interviews with the foreign press.
"The prime minister clearly hasn't learned anything," Netanyahu said. "This is
the same prime minister who allowed Hamas to run in Jerusalem. It's the same
prime minister who is not able to nip things in the bud before they get out of
hand. He gets carried away due to his lack of leadership and that was proven by
the way things got out of hand in the South and then the North and his
scandalous handling of the war. It's a government of failure and blunder and it
has to go as soon as possible."
Netanyahu said that Abbas was "crawling to Hamas," while Olmert was "crawling to
Abbas."
Olmert and Netanyahu also clashed when Olmert told the committee that peace with
Syria would mean giving up the Golan Heights.
"The whole world knows that in any future
negotiations, if they are renewed, we will have to give up on the entire Golan
Heights," Olmert said.
He added that according to documents, prime ministers from 1993 to 2001,
(Yitzhak Rabin, Netanyahu and Ehud Barak), all held negotiations with Syria
during which the idea of Israel completely ceding the Golan and withdrawing to
the 1967 border was put on the table.
Netanyahu interrupted Olmert saying, "How many times can Olmert repeat this lie?
He knows full well that it was my insistence that we keep the Golan Heights that
led to the collapse of the negotiations with Syria."
Olmert repeated that what he had said was "true and accurate," and added that
"some people are always eager to prove that there is no diplomatic horizon."