Ariel Sharon, the controversial prime minister often blamed
for lighting the touchpaper of the second intifada in 2000, and who led Israel
out of the Gaza Strip in 2005, has died at the age of 85. He had spent eight
years in a coma following a massive stroke in January 2006.
A dominant yet divisive figure in Israel, both as a military
and political leader, Sharon died on Saturday afternoon at the Sheba Medical
Center at Tel Hashomer, where he had been receiving long-term care.
His son Gilad Sharon announced: "He has gone. He went
when he decided to go."
A lifelong soldier, Sharon had turned to politics
immediately after ending his service in the Israel Defense Forces at the age of
45. He had fought in the nation's conflicts from before the inception of the
state in 1948 up to and including the 1973 Yom Kippur War. He retired from the
military with the rank of major general, and entered the Knesset. His political
career flourished, albeit, like his military life, not without some
controversy.
Sharon served as defense minister from 1981 to 1983, and
prime minister from 2001 to 2006. It was while he held highest of political
posts that he suffered the stroke that would leave him in a coma.
Ariel Sharon was born in Kfar Malal on March 1, 1928 to
parents Deborah and Samuel Sheinerman, who arrived in Israel in the Third
Aliyah from Russia, after the First World War.
Throughout the years, Sharon's personal life bore much
turmoil and drama. His first wife Margalit was killed in a car accident in
1962. Their son, Gur, was killed in 1967 at the age of 11 after a bullet discharged
from a rifle Sharon used as decoration in his home.
One year following Margalit's death, Sharon married her
sister, Lily. The two had two sons, Omri and Gilad. Lily passed away from lung
cancer in March 2000, and asked to be buried on a hill overlooking their famous
Sycamore Ranch.
In 1942, he joined the Haganah, the pre-state militia that
evolved into the IDF, and thus began a long career in the military. During the
1948 War of Independence, at the age of 20, he was a platoon commander in the
Alexandroni Brigade and was seriously injured in the battle of Latrun. Upon his
recovery, he became a battalion intelligence officer.
In 1951, Sharon was appointed chief intelligence officer for
the Central Command, and in 1952 served in the same role in the Northern
Command. He then took study leave, working for a bachelor's degree in history
and Middle Eastern studies at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem.
In 1953, he was an instrumental figure in the creation of
Unit 101, whose purpose was to carry out retribution operations in response to
infiltration attacks (Palestinian fedayeen) from Jordan and the Gaza Strip.
Under his command, Unit 101 carried out several successful retaliation
operations; however in October 1953, a retribution action in the village of
Qibya in the West Bank resulted in 69 Arab casualties.
Following the "Qibya massacre", the decision was
made in January 1954 to end the unit's independent operations, and it merged
into a paratrooper battalion, under the Sharon's command. In 1956, he was
appointed commander of the Paratroopers Brigade, and fought in the Suez Crisis
(Operation Kadesh) the same year.
From 1958 to 1962, Sharon studied law at the Hebrew
University, and commanded the Infantry Brigade and the army's infantry school.
With the appointment of Yitzhak Rabin as the IDF chief of staff in 1964, Sharon
was named Chief Staff Officer in the Northern Command, and two years later he
was appointed head of training within the IDF General Staff, a role that
awarded him the rank of major general.
He took part in the Six-Day War as an Armored Division
commander, winning high praise. In 1970 he was appointed as head of the
Southern.
Command. He primarily took command of the War of Attrition,
while fiercely criticizing the policies of then-IDF Chief of Staff Haim Bar-Lev
and quarrelling with his General Staff colleagues. At the end of the War of
Attrition and in 1971 he planned several attacks on terrorist cells in the Gaza
Strip. In addition, he evacuated the Bedouins from northern Sinai, an act for
which he was reprimanded by the then-chief of staff.
Sharon retired from the IDF in June 1973, and turned his
attention to the Liberal party and the Knesset elections. He spent the next
several months working with Menachem Begin on establishing the Likud, an
amalgam of several existing rightist and liberal political parties. When the
Yom Kippur War broke out in October 1973, Sharon returned to active duty as an
Armored Division commander, quarreled with his superiors, and crossed the Suez
Canal in what would become the war’s turning point.
New battles
Sharon became a Knesset Member in the general elections of
December 1973, but resigned a year to return to the IDF. From 1975-1976, he
served as defense advisor to Rabin, who was by then prime minister.
In 1980, Defense Minister Ezer Weizmann resigned, and Sharon
sought to replace him. But Prime Minister Menachem Begin refused his request,
and tensions arose between the two. It was only after the elections for the
tenth Knesset in 1981 that Sharon was named defense minister. In this role,
Sharon initiated Operation Oranim (Pines), which aimed to eliminate terrorist
bases in Lebanon, and put an end to the ongoing attacks across the northern
border.
The major operation, dubbed Peace for Galilee, began on June
6, 1982. Sharon was involved in all its stages, and critics charged that he had
taken several steps without Prime Minister Begin's knowledge or approval. In
September 1982, after the assassination of Lebanese President Bachir Gemayel,
the Lebanese Phalange forces massacred thousands of Palestinian residents of
the Sabra and Shatila refugee camps of Beirut, an act that would haunt Sharon –
and Israel – for years to come. The Israeli Kahan commission of inquiry found
that Sharon bore personal responsibility for the massacre, and he was forced to
resign as defense minister.
Despite this, Sharon continued to serve in the government as
minister without portfolio, and was appointed industry and trade minister in
the unity government formed after the 1984 elections, despite the opposition of
HaMa'arakh (alignment) party members.
In February 1990 he resigned due to the government's
decision to allow elections in the Palestinian territories. After the fall of
the government on March 15, Sharon was appointed minister of housing and
construction under Yitzhak Shamir. In this position he accelerated large-scale
settlement construction in the territories.
Ahead of the 1992 elections, Sharon ran for Likud
leadership, yet came in third after Yitzhak Shamir and David Levy. Following
Likud's defeat by Labor in the 1992 elections, Shamir retired from political
life. In the internal Likud elections in February 1993, Sharon chose not to run
against Benjamin Netanyahu, who went on to lead the party to victory in 1996.
Sharon was initially left out of the new Netanyahu
government, but was given the ministry of national infrastructure following an
ultimatum presented by David Levy. He was member of the security cabinet, and
towards the end of the government served as its foreign minister.
National leader
Following his overwhelming defeat in the 1999 elections,
Netanyahu resigned the Likud leadership, and Sharon was elected as his
successor in September 1999.
In September 2000, Sharon visited the Temple Mount, a
controversial visit that received much media attention, despite warnings
regarding the possible consequences of such an act. Following the visit, a wave
of violence erupted among Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, as well
as among Israeli Arab citizens. This wave of violence marked the start of the
Al-Aqsa Intifada.
In the 2001 elections, Sharon ran against Ehud Barak in a
special election for prime minister, and won by a landslide. In January 2003 he
led the Likud to a decisive win in the Knesset elections.
Sharon inherited the prime minister's chair with the second
intifada in full swing, and Israel facing numerous terrorist attacks. Under
Sharon, the country took major steps against the continuous assaults, including
a prolonged military attack against terrorist organizations. Military action
peaked in late March 2002, with Defensive Shield, a major operation involving
conscripted and reserve soldiers triggered by a massive suicide bombing at the
Park Hotel in Netanya on the first night of Passover days earlier, in which 30
people were killed.
In December 18, 2003, Sharon began to promote his plan for
unilateral Israeli disengagement from the Gaza Strip. The full details of the
plan were presented in April 2004, when Sharon announced he intended to execute
a full separation from Gaza, which would include the evacuation of all Israeli
communities in the Strip, along with four settlements in northern Samaria.
Within the next few months, Sharon managed, albeit with
great difficulty, to maintain the stability of his government and implement his
disengagement plan: In August 2005, all Israeli settlements in Gaza were
evacuated, along with the four settlements in the northern West Bank.
The disengagement led to a severe internal crisis within the
Likud. In November 2005, after the resignation of the Labor party from Sharon's
government and the agreement on early Knesset elections, Sharon announced his
departure from the Likud and - the establishment of a new party, Kadima.
It was during what would prove to be a short-lived term as
head of a Kadima government that Sharon suffered from two strokes, the second
of which would leave him comatose. The first, in December 2005, was a mild
stroke, and he was hospitalized for just two days. But on January 4, 2006, the
prime minister suffered a massive cerebral hemorrhage. Ehud Olmert, who served
as Sharon's deputy prime minister, became acting prime minister.
Sharon never regained consciousness. He is survived by his
two sons, Omri and Gilad, and several grandchildren.
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