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Back to Ambassadorial Speeches - Ambassador Itamar Rabinovich
Ambassador Itamar Rabinovich on CNN's "The Late Edition" on
Operation "Grapes of Wrath" April 14, 1996
FRANK SESNO: Mr. Ambassador, how long, to what end will this operation
continue?
AMB. ITAMAR RABINOVICH, Israeli Ambassador to the U.S.: We hope that it
doesn't have to take very long and that suffering on both sides of the border
can be brought to an end soon. But the end is very clear. There has to be a
complete end to Hizbullah attacks. There was an agreement limiting these
attacks that functioned relatively well between the summer of '93 and until a
few weeks ago. In the past few weeks there's been a deliberate policy by
Hizbullah and by Iran - that is the power behind and beyond Hizbullah - to
shoot freely, at will, into Israel in order to provoke, in order to bring
damage about. And before this is brought to an end, we will not cease our
pressure on Hizbullah and on the government of Lebanon.
FRANK SESNO: Well, Mr. Ambassador, are you saying that Israel will reject any
kind of diplomatic intervention, will reject any kind of talk, until
militarily all the Hizbullah guerrilla activities and bases, as far as you can
identify them, are destroyed; that this is, first and foremost, a military
operation?
AMB. ITAMAR RABINOVICH: No, definitely not. First of all, we're not rejecting
any diplomatic initiative. Secondly, we're not seeking to destroy. What we
are seeking to bring about is an end to attacks against us. If Hizbullah
undertakes to do that, stops this attack, and undertakes not to attack in the
future, and the political powers - first and foremost, the government of
Lebanon, but also the government of Syria that has sway in Lebanon - persuade
us that this is something that is going to hold on, we will, of course, accept
it. A military operation has logic only in a political and diplomatic sense.
And what we are looking for is a political and diplomatic solution, but one
that is going to work, one that is going to hold water.
FRANK SESNO: Two hundred thousand Lebanese civilians have become refugees.
The civilians have become casualties, as they often are, in operations such as
this. Israel has been condemned by many, most within the Arab world. What
does all this do to the peace process?
AMB. ITAMAR RABINOVICH: The peace process, of course, is under siege, is
beleaguered. But it is not beleaguered by this. It is beleaguered by
Hizbullah and by Iran. And as I said earlier, this is something that began a
few weeks ago. It began deliberately. The same hand that sent the Hamas
suicide bombers to act inside Israel is the same hand that pushes about in
Lebanon.
When we had the summit of peacemakers in order to try to deal with that, on
that very day there was a broad range of Katyusha attacks all along the
Lebanese-Israeli border as a signal to all of us that Iran and its allies or
henchmen in Lebanon do not share that policy. And therefore, all of us who
are partners to Middle Eastern peace want and ought to work together in order
to bring a political and a practical end to all of this.
FRANK SESNO: Mr. Ambassador, let me touch on the whole issue of diplomatic
initiative, though, one more time. Would Israel be interested in engagement
by the United States, which has brokered arrangements, agreements, cease-fires
in the past, at this time between Israel and Lebanon?
AMB. ITAMAR RABINOVICH: We, of course, will be interested in an American
initiative or activity in all of this. We speak to the U.S. government all
the time. But I think the time to become active and the time to try to broker
is the time when there is clear willingness on the other side not only to
respond technically but to respond in a fashion that will bring an effective
end to violence and bloodshed.
FRANK SESNO: So you're saying the time is not right yet for diplomacy?
AMB. ITAMAR RABINOVICH: I'm not determining that the time is right now or not
right now. I'm saying that there has to be a very simple test to the
suitability of the time frame; namely, when the United States discovers on the
other side that there is willingness to engage seriously with an understanding
that what we ought to achieve is not some arrangements that may collapse after
24 hours, but a durable, practical, virtual end to all fire and violence, then
would be the right time.
FRANK SESNO: All right, finally, Mr. Ambassador, one last question. What do
you say to your critics, Israel's critics around the world, who say that this
is much less about military operations and security than it is about politics,
specifically the election upcoming that Mr. Peres faces and very tough
opposition from Mr. Netanyahu and the Likud party?
AMB. ITAMAR RABINOVICH: I would say that the Israeli government has shown an
amazing degree of patience and resilience over the past few weeks. This is
not something that began last week. This is something that began a few weeks
ago. And we have really lingered because we wanted to let the political-
diplomatic channels yield the most. But I would say that those who speak
about politicking, those who speak about electioneering, should take a very
hard look at Iran, Hizbullah and Hamas and ask themselves, 'Why is it that
now, a few weeks before the elections, we see this sustained campaign by Iran
and its emissaries in the Arab world?' Maybe the people who are trying to
affect elections in Israel are on the other side of the border. FRANK SESNO:
Itamar Rabinovich, Israeli ambassador to the United States, thanks very much
for joining us today from New York.
AMB. ITAMAR RABINOVICH: Thank you very much.
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