|
|||||
| Olmert cannot remain in the prime minister's office | |||||
| By Ari Shavit | |||||
|
Ehud Olmert may decide to accept the French
proposal for a cease-fire and unconditional surrender to Hezbollah. That
is his privilege. Olmert is a prime minister whom journalists invented,
journalists protected, and whose rule journalists preserved. Now the
journalists are saying run away. That's legitimate. Unwise, but
legitimate. |
|||||
|
Still, if Olmert had come to his senses as Golda Meir did during the Yom Kippur War, if he had become a leader, established a war cabinet and called the nation to a supreme effort that would change the face of the battle, a penetrating discussion of his failures could be postponed. But in blinking first over the past 24 hours, he has become an incorrigible political personality. Therefore, the day Nasrallah comes out of his bunker and declares victory to the whole world, Olmert must not be in the prime minister's office. Post-war battered and bleeding Israel needs a new start and a new leader. It needs a real prime minister |
|||||