Advertisement
X

'Hero In War and Peace'

Anwar Sadat was able to lead Egypt towards peace only because he was admired as the commander who had defeated Israel in the Yom Kippur War.

Sometimes a single sentence is enough to reveal a person's mental world and intellectual profundity. Such asentence was uttered by Shaul Mofaz, the Minister of Defense, some days ago during a visit to the Israelitroops in the Gaza Strip.

"With our enemies, it seems, no shortcuts are possible. Egypt made peace with Israel only after it wasdefeated in the Yom Kippur War. That will happen with the Palestinians, too."

This means that there is no political solution. There is only war, and in this war we must"defeat" the Palestinians. A simple, simplistic, not to say primitive, view.

But the revealing sentence is: "Egypt made peace with Israel only after it was defeated in the YomKippur War".

Revealing, because it utterly contradicts the almost unanimous view of all the experts in Israel and aroundthe world - historians, Arabists and military commentators. These believe that the exact opposite is true:Anwar Sadat was able to lead Egypt towards peace only because he was admired as the commander who had defeatedIsrael in the Yom Kippur War. Only after the Egyptian people had won back their national pride were they ableto consider peace with the enemy (with us).

When the war broke out, the Egyptians did something that amazed the world and shook Israel: they crossedthe Suez Canal and overcame the celebrated "Bar-Lev line". Everybody considered this a brilliantmilitary feat. The stupidity of Israeli army intelligence and the arrogant complacency of Prime Minister GoldaMeir allowed the Egyptians to achieve total surprise, destroy a large number of tanks and pin down the IsraeliAir force. The Minister of Defense, Moshe Dayan, was in shock and talked about the "destruction of thethird Jewish state". (In traditional Jewish historiography, the first two Jewish states are symbolized bythe first and second temple in Jerusalem.)

In the course of the war, the tide turned and, in the end, the Israeli army crossed the Canal into Egypt.At the end of the war, Israeli troops were established on the western shore, but large Egyptian forcesremained to their rear, on the eastern side. This week a long-delayed official study by the Israeli army wasleaked. It declares unequivocally that Israel had "not won that war".

Advertisement

But the professional military analysis is not so important in this context. What is important is how theevents appear to the Egyptian consciousness and affect their actions since then.

I succeeded in reaching Cairo on the morrow of Sadat's sensational visit to Jerusalem, and found myself ina city drunk with joy, in some kind of delirious popular carnival. Over the main streets stretched hundreds ofslogans celebrating the act of the president. Every commercial corporation felt duty-bound to hang such aslogan with a peace message.

The one slogan that outnumbered all others was "Anwar Sadat: Hero of War and Peace".

The Egyptian people would not have supported peace, if they had considered it a surrender to the diktatof an arrogant enemy. Only the crossing of the Canal four years earlier, which Egyptians consider one of thegreatest victories in all the 8000 years of their history, enabled them to accept the agreement as acompromise between equals, without loss of honor. Like many other nations, the Egyptians - and all other Arabs- consider national dignity the most important treasure.

Advertisement

Perhaps Mofaz should go to Cairo and visit the round building that houses the museum of the Ramadan War (asArabs call the Yom Kippur War). There he will see an exciting, emotion-laden display of the crossing of theCanal. Every day the place is thronged with people, especially school-children.

If one wants to draw a parallel between the Egyptians and the Palestinians, as Mofaz tries to do, theconclusion would be: only after the Palestinians win back their national self-respect, will they be able tomake peace with Israel. The first intifada, which Palestinians consider a victorious struggle againstthe immense might of the Israeli army, allowed them to accept the Oslo agreement. Only the second intifada,which has already proved that the Israeli army cannot subdue the Palestinian uprising, enabled them to acceptthe Road Map, which is supposed to bring about peace between the Israeli and the coming Palestinian state.

On a related topic: On the eve of the thirtieth anniversary of the Yom Kippur War, Israeli newspapers arefull of revelations about it. Among them is the disclosure that I saved the life of Moshe Dayan. Thatsurprised me, as it would have surprised Dayan, if he were still living. But it appears to be true.

Advertisement

The facts are revealed by Amir Porat, the former communication officer and personal confidant of ShmuelGonen (universally known as "Gorodish"), who was in charge of Southern Command during the war.Later, when the public was looking for a scapegoat for the terrible initial defeat, the main blame was put onGorodish. He was dismissed from his command and nobody was prepared to listen to his side of the story. Allthe media boycotted him.

This man, who practically overnight had fallen from the height of glory (as one of the heroes of the 1967Six Day War) to the depths of ignominy, was in despair. He blamed Dayan for the injustice done to him. In theend he made an appointment with him, planning to shoot him and then himself.

At the very last moment, one day before the fateful meeting, Haolam Hazeh correspondent Rino Tzror arrangeda meeting between us. At the time I was editor-in-chief this newsmagazine, the only medium in the country thatwas truly independent of the establishment. We had a reputation for supporting the underdog and challengingthe powers that be. I talked with him at length. During the whole conversation he toyed with his pistol.

Advertisement

Gorodish was very far from my political views, he was a right-wing person, an out-and-out militarist, but Ibecame convinced that the official inquiry into the war had indeed done him a shocking injustice. Therefore Ipromised to help him getting his side of the story across. He saw that the whole world was not closed to him.Having someone listening to his side of the story and promising to publish it relieved his despair and madehim give up the idea of killing Dayan and committing suicide. I published a large article under the headline"The Israeli Dreyfus".

This affair has its ironic side. In the whole of Israel, no one was more opposed to Dayan than I. More thananyone else (except Ben-Gurion and his sidekick, Shimon Peres) Dayan laid down in the 1950s the anti-Arabtracks on which Israel is moving to this very day. In the pages of Haolam Hazeh I attacked him relentlessly,writing hundreds of articles against him, exposing his illegal traffic in stolen archeological finds and hisprivate peccadilloes that endangered the security of the state. And in the end it appears that I saved hislife.

Back to the main point: The Yom Kippur War did not lead to the "destruction of the third state",as Dayan had prophesied, but to peace with Egypt, after its national honor had been restored. If Sharon andthe army command succeed in disrupting the hudna (truce) and bring about the renewal of the intifada,they will not break the Palestinians, who will refuse to submit. And after large-scale bloodshed, YasserArafat will make a speech in the Knesset, as did Sadat, the "Hero of War and Peace".

Published At:
US