Reading articles by Kevin Peraino is an utterly unpleasant experience - antisemitism and plain ignorance ooze from every page. It's a such that such a person has been appointed correspondent in Jerusalem...
Israel’s Dissident
Natan Sharansky fights to save democracy promotion from the wreck of the Bush administration.
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It's hard to think of a foreign leader whose public image is more closely tied to George W. Bush's than Natan Sharansky. A former Soviet dissident turned Israeli politician, his 2004 book, "The Case for Democracy," has been credited with serving as the intellectual underpinning for Bush's discredited "freedom agenda." The 43rd U.S. president once referred to Sharansky in a private letter as his "soul mate," and the 60-year-old Israeli keeps a cartoon on his office wall showing him and Bush exchanging a high-five.
Yet Sharansky is not suffering by association with America's unpopular war president because Israel, which goes to vote in February, looks likely to welcome back a hawk of its own. Polls show Benjamin Netanyahu's Likud Party surging in popularity and primed to capture as many seats as Tzipi Livni's Kadima Party in the election. That's good news for Sharansky, a Likud ally who could get a key job in any Netanyahu government. "Sharansky has the inside track to become foreign minister," says Gerald Steinberg, a political-studies professor at Israel's Bar Ilan University.
Should he win the post it would represent a remarkable reversal of fortune and stand as a testament to Sharansky's ability to reinvent himself. He quit Israel's cabinet in 2005 to protest then prime minister Ariel Sharon's unilateral disengagement from Gaza. During the following years, most of which he spent at a Jerusalem think tank, Sharansky watched in dismay as the Bush administration bungled and abandoned its ambitious attempts to push democratic reform in the region.
Today Sharansky sounds tired of the Knesset shoptalk—ten years "is enough," he says. Still, he's leaving open the door to a cabinet post. He confirms that he has held quiet talks with Netanyahu about playing a role in a future government. "I want to influence what kind of foreign policy [Israel makes]," he says. Ron Dermer, the co-author of "The Case for Democracy," has already signed on as a key Netanyahu aide.
Sharansky hardly fits the image of the cool and dashing diplomat. He's 5 foot 3 and, as a native Russian speaker, his English is often indecipherable (though his Hebrew's not bad). He's prone to fits of excitement—during an interview for this story, he pounded his fist on his desk so hard he nearly smashed the tape recorder. Yet there would be a certain logic to his selection. Sharansky is not well loved at home but overseas, his years as a political prisoner in the Soviet gulag have earned him respect; he won a U.S. Congressional Gold Medal in 1986 and the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2006. His high-minded and idealistic public rhetoric could also provide a useful foil for Netanyahu's hard-edged realpolitik at home.
And Sharansky is far more sophisticated than he sometimes seems. "He's a much more complicated and multidimensional person than the image suggests," says Steinberg. Indeed, Sharansky is a clever strategist, a master chess player who once beat Garry Kasparov (albeit in one of several simultaneous matches Kasparov was playing). Consider the way he's taken subtle steps to separate himself from his American "soul mate." In 2005, when Bush was still touting Sharansky's book, the Israeli in a NEWSWEEK interview criticized Bush's relationship with Saudi Arabia's autocratic King Abdullah as a betrayal of democratic principles. He also warned that Washington's push for Palestinian elections "before any democratic institutions are built" would lead to trouble, and to claims that "democracy is dangerous." That is exactly what happened when Hamas won the vote and staged an armed takeover of Gaza.
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