INDEPENDENT NEWS

Cablegate: Knesset Speaker Discusses Crisis with Codels

Published: Mon 14 Aug 2006 01:29 PM
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Carol X Weakley 08/16/2006 04:04:16 PM From DB/Inbox: Carol X Weakley
Cable
Text:
C O N F I D E N T I A L TEL AVIV 03198
SIPDIS
CXTelA:
ACTION: ECON
INFO: ADM PD AID FCS IPSC SCI IMO CONS RES POL DCM
AMB
DISSEMINATION: ECON
CHARGE: PROG
APPROVED: CDA:GCRETZ
DRAFTED: ECON:AABELL
CLEARED: POL:NOLSEN, ECON:RTANSEY
VZCZCTVI307
OO RUEHC RUEHXK
DE RUEHTV #3198/01 2261329
ZNY CCCCC ZZH
O 141329Z AUG 06
FM AMEMBASSY TEL AVIV
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC IMMEDIATE 5606
INFO RUEHXK/ARAB ISRAELI COLLECTIVE IMMEDIATE
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 TEL AVIV 003198
SIPDIS
CODEL
E.O. 12958: DECL: 08/13/2016
TAGS: PGOV PREL IS
SUBJECT: KNESSET SPEAKER DISCUSSES CRISIS WITH CODELS
MILLER AND ROYCE
Classified By: Charge d'Affaires Gene A. Cretz for reasons 1.4(b) and (
d).
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SUMMARY
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1. (C) Knesset Speaker Dalia Itzik (Kadima) and MK Yuval
Steinitz (Likud) told CODELs Miller and Royce on August 9
that Hizballah's July 12 attack demonstrated that the nature
of the conflict between Israel and Iran is ideological and
not territorial. Itzik explained that the Hizballah actions,
following Israel's 2000 withdrawal from Lebanon, have left
Israelis feeling frustrated, and less inclined to believe
that they will ever live in peace. She recounted how the
present conflict has convinced her to adopt more right-wing
positions, and both she and Steinitz asked the CODEL for USG
help in obtaining more time to "finish the job" in Lebanon.
Itzik encouraged the USG to use moderate Arab states to drive
a wedge between Syria and Iran, and put Iran's nuclear
ambitions back into the international spotlight. She agreed
with Rep. Johnson that the GOI needs to make public diplomacy
a higher priority in order to win the battle of ideas. End
summary.
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DOVISH ITZIK SOUNDING MORE LIKE A HAWK
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2. (C) Left-of-center Speaker of the Knesset Dalia Itzik
(Kadima) told CODELs Miller and Royce that she had supported
Israel's withdrawal from Lebanon in 2000 as an important
gesture of Israel's desire for peaceful coexistence. She
confided that, after delivering a hard-line speech on August
8, her former colleagues in the Labor Party had asked her how
could she have moved so far to the right. Itzik replied that
she hadn't moved, but that reality had moved around her.
Articulating the frustration of her constituency, she said,
"all we want is to be a normal country, but they don't let
us. Maybe we have to be more aggressive with them...I don't
believe I hear myself saying this."
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A CONFLICT OF IDEOLOGY, NOT TERRITORY
-------------------------------------
3. (C) Itzik stressed that Hizballah's behavior has convinced
her that the Shia do not seek peaceful coexistence, but only
the destruction of the State of Israel. She said that the
impetus for this conflict is not territory, but ideology,
with an Islamic culture that seeks at least regional, if not
global, domination. MK Yuval Steinitz (Likud) said that
Iran's six-year arms buildup in Lebanon was meant not to
deter Israel, but for use against Israel. Furthermore, he
claimed that Iran wants to "cleanse" the Middle East of all
non-Muslims, and he expects their next target to be Christian
Arabs. He complained that most Western leaders are reluctant
to recognize this ideology publicly, and instead prefer to
incorrectly define the conflict as a territorial dispute.
Steinitz also said that the Knesset and Congress have
important roles to fill in advocating closer
inter-governmental cooperation in the war on terrorism.
Steinitz said the two legislative bodies should now push to
fund a cooperative short-range rocket defense system.
-----------------------------
STRENGTHEN THE MODERATE ARABS
-----------------------------
4. (C) Responding to the CODELs questions about long-term
strategies for defeating radical political Islam, Itzik said
that the USG and Israel must not lump the entire Arab world
together in one basket with the extremists. She stressed
that the Western powers must encourage Palestinian President
Mahmoud Abbas to be strong. By publicly calling him weak,
she continued, the GOI has made Hamas believe that Abbas is,
in fact, weak. Itzik said that moderate Arab regimes in
Jordan, Tunisia, and Qatar need Hizballah to be defeated as
much as does Israel and the U.S., and they have a
constructive strategic role to play. Itzik also said that
the USG and GOI must try to wedge Syria away from Iran, and
put Iran's nuclear ambitions back into the international
spotlight.
---------------------
LET US FINISH THE JOB
---------------------
5. (C) Itzik complained to the CODELs that Secretary Rice had
reacted too harshly towards Israel after the IAF strike on
Qana. She said that the GOI had expressed its sorrow for the
unintended civilian casualties, but rhetorically asked when
had the Arabs ever apologized for Israeli civilian
casualties. She said that, if anything, the IDF had acted
"too morally" by not acting more aggressively in Lebanon.
Itzik said that it was very important for Israel to be
allowed now to "finish the job."
6. (C) Steinitz asserted that Israel must eradicate the
Hizballah military presence from southern Lebanon and
assessed that the IDF had done a good job destroying its
infrastructure, the "body," but had not yet finished the job
of destroying all the "fingers." He lamented that this
should have been the first priority at the beginning of the
war, but said that the GOI needs USG support for more time to
finish the war now.
---------------------------
A CALL FOR PUBLIC DIPLOMACY
---------------------------
7. (C) Rep. Johnson warned Itzik and Steinitz that Israel
might not be able to "finish the job" using only military
means, as the military campaign was creating as many enemies
of Israel as it was destroying. She told the Knesset members
that Israel was losing the propaganda war against Hizballah
and urged them to make public diplomacy a higher priority in
any Israeli military operation. Itzik agreed with the
Congresswoman.
8. (C) Itzik concluded by saying that Israelis feel strong,
but are frustrated with the neighborhood in which they live.
She claimed that Israelis draw strength from fighting for
their homeland, and that the GOI had no choice but to defend
Israel's citizens. She expressed her gratitude for the
CODEL's visit during this difficult time, and emphasized the
value of American moral support for Israel.
9. (U) Participants:
ISRAEL
Speaker of the Knesset Dalia Itzik (Kadima)
MK Yuval Steinitz (Likud)
Foreign Policy Advisor to the Speaker Yaakov Levy
MFA Counselor Eyal Sela
MFA Counselor Iris Sapir
U.S.A.
Rep. Jeff Miller (R-FL)
Rep. Nancy Johnson (R-CT)
Rep. Clay Shaw (R-FL)
Rep. Don Sherwood (R-PA)
Rep. Edward Royce (R-CA)
Mrs. Marie Royce
Staff Director Doug Roach
Staff Director Tom Sheehy
Staff Member Edward Burrier
Staff Member Brian Diffell
Econoff (Notetaker)
10. (U) The CODELs did not have an opportunity to clear this
cable before departing post.
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