Tuesday, May 01, 2007

One Israeli Cabinent member gone, and waiting to say goodbye to Olmert

Israeli cabinet minister quits over Lebanon war report

By Jeffrey Heller

JERUSALEM (Reuters) - A member of Ehud Olmert's cabinet quit on Tuesday, opening the first crack in Israel's government after the prime minister vowed to ride out a scathing reprimand by an inquiry into last year's costly Lebanon war.

Announcing he was stepping down, Eitan Cabel, a minister without portfolio from the Israeli leader's main governing partner, the Labour Party, told a news conference: "I cannot sit in a government headed by Ehud Olmert."

Cabel said Olmert "must resign" after the Winograd Commission probing the conflict with Hezbollah gunmen listed severe failings on the part of the premier, Defence Minister Amir Peretz of Labour and the army chief, who has already quit.

The panel said the government had rubber-stamped the decision to go to war but Olmert bore "supreme responsibility" for launching the air, sea and land offensive without a proper plan after Hezbollah seized two Israeli soldiers on July 12.

The government-appointed commission, however, stopped short of recommending that Olmert step down. A snap Israel Radio opinion poll after its interim report examining the start of the war found that 69 percent of Israelis wanted Olmert to go.

Olmert, as widely expected, accepted responsibility for "many mistakes" during the inconclusive 34-day campaign in which Hezbollah rained 4,000 rockets on Israel and Israeli warplanes pounded southern Beirut, a Hezbollah stronghold.

Some 1,200 people were killed in Lebanon, including about 900 civilians, while 117 Israeli troops died along with 41 civilians caught in Hezbollah rocket strikes on northern Israel.

Olmert, who heads the centrist Kadima party, said he would not resign, insisting he was the best man to put things right.

"It would not be right to quit and I have no intention of doing so," Olmert told Israelis in a concise televised address, hours after the nation watched former Supreme Court judge Eliyahu Winograd read out sharp criticism of his actions.

LABOUR LEADERSHIP

Cabel said he would try to persuade Labour to pull out of its power-sharing partnership with Kadima. Labour holds a leadership election on May 28 that Peretz is widely expected to lose.

Labour holds 19 of the Olmert coalition's 78 seats in the 120-member parliament.

A survivor of decades at the heart of Israel's combative politics, Olmert declared himself "indestructible" last month.

"This government made the decisions and this government will deal with correcting the defects," Olmert told the nation on Monday. The cabinet would meet on Wednesday to discuss how.

On Thursday, critics including reservist citizen soldiers called up for the war and parents of some of those killed plan to lead a rally in Tel Aviv demanding the government quit.

However, few in the ruling coalition which commands over two thirds of the seats on parliament seem ready to face a new election and none of Olmert's rivals within his Kadima party has moved publicly to seize what many see as a poisoned chalice.

Aside from former prime minister Binyamin Netanyahu of the rightist opposition Likud party, Olmert also has potential challengers on his own team -- one name much cited is Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni, though some question her experience.

After a series of sleaze and graft allegations, many Israelis are disillusioned with their political class and some saw the report on the war as the final straw for the premier.

"He can't remain prime minister after such a report," said the mass circulation paper Maariv, echoing much of the media.

Original article posted here.

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