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Extraction Summary

5
People
8
Organizations
3
Locations
4
Events
3
Relationships
5
Quotes

Document Information

Type: Memoir/book excerpt (house oversight document)
File Size:
Summary

This document is a page from a memoir by Ehud Barak (page 121, House Oversight page 407). It details the political and military dynamics of the Gaza operation (Operation Cast Lead) and the subsequent Israeli elections (2009). Barak describes his disagreements with Prime Minister Olmert regarding the depth of the Gaza incursion, the eventual cease-fire on January 17, and the political fallout where Tzipi Livni won a narrow election victory but failed to form a coalition government against Benjamin Netanyahu.

People (5)

Name Role Context
Ehud Barak Author/Narrator
Narrating the events, advising Olmert, leading the Labor party. Identified via header '/ BARAK /'.
Ehud Olmert Prime Minister (Former)
Wanted to expand attacks deeper into Gaza; insisted on continuing the operation.
Tzipi Livni Politician/Leader of Kadima
Referred to as 'Tzipi'. Won the election narrowly but failed to form a coalition; described as not interested in poli...
Benjamin Netanyahu Leader of Likud
Referred to as 'Bibi'. Rival to Tzipi; held parallel talks with Orthodox parties to form a coalition.
Avigdor Lieberman Leader of Yisrael Beitenu
Led the far-right party that made significant gains in the election; described as a former Likudnik.

Timeline (4 events)

Election (2009)
Tzipi Livni won narrow victory (28 seats) over Bibi (27 seats); Labor dropped to 13 seats.
Israel
January 17
Announcement of cease-fire after three weeks of operation.
Israel/Gaza
Israeli Government Hamas
Post-Election
Coalition formation talks; Tzipi failed to form government due to Bibi's parallel negotiations.
Israel
Review period (Year following attack)
Reduction of rocket attacks from 3,000 to 300.
Israel

Locations (3)

Location Context

Relationships (3)

Ehud Barak Political/Military Advisors Ehud Olmert
Barak advising Olmert on military strategy during Gaza operation.
Tzipi Livni Political Rivals Benjamin Netanyahu
Ran against each other in election; competed to form coalition.
Avigdor Lieberman Former Affiliation Likud Party
Described as a 'former Likudnik'.

Key Quotes (5)

"But that’s because we’re outside the main populated areas"
Source
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Quote #1
"The deeper we get in, the better it will be for Hamas. They gain simply by surviving, like Hizbollah."
Source
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Quote #2
"She won the election, in a photo finish, with opinion polls suggesting she’d been effective in shaping the campaign as a choice “between Tzipi and Bibi.”"
Source
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Quote #3
"Tzipi’s attempt to form a coalition became less a political process than a contest between rival stalls in a Middle Eastern bazaar."
Source
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Quote #4
"In the end, she threw up her hands, saying she refused to draw out a process which was not so much a negotiation as organized extortion."
Source
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Quote #5

Full Extracted Text

Complete text extracted from the document (2,826 characters)

/ BARAK / 121
But both Olmert and Tzipi soon fell prey to the same self-defeating temptation that had worried me during the meandering war against Hizbollah. Our ground incursion began a few days into the operation. The intention was to stay for a few more days and then, responding to inevitable international appeals, call a halt to a campaign that had already achieved nearly all of its targets. Perhaps wanting to balance the failures in Lebanon there with “success” in Gaza, Olmert wanted us to continue, and expand our attacks deeper into Gaza. I reminded him that we’d agreed the aims beforehand. The longer we stayed, the less clear any gains would be. Yes, our ground forces had so far faced virtually no resistance or casualties. “But that’s because we’re outside the main populated areas,” I said. “The deeper we get in, the better it will be for Hamas. They gain simply by surviving, like Hizbollah.” Yet Olmert kept insisting that we’d succeeded so far, so let’s not stop.
It wasn’t until January 17, three weeks after the operation began, that we announced a cease-fire. Militarily, the operation was a success. While Hamas launched nearly 3,000 rockets into Israel in the year before our attack, there were only 300 in the year that followed. But politically and diplomatically, the extra week reduced, rather than helped, the chances of reaching an understanding for a longer-term reduction of the attacks. To the extent there was any political gain, it was to burnish Tzipi Livni’s credentials as a tough potential Prime Minister ahead of the election. That was not her intent. Of all the politicians I’ve known, she is among the least interested in such games, especially with lives at stake. But it was one of the effects.
She won the election, in a photo finish, with opinion polls suggesting she’d been effective in shaping the campaign as a choice “between Tzipi and Bibi.” Kadima got 28 Knesset seats, to 27 for Bibi and the Likud, which gave her the first crack at forming a government. There’s no way of disguising the fact that Labor’s result in my first election back in charge was a disappointment. We went down six seats, to 13. The big gainer was a far-right, stridently anti-Arab party called Yisrael Beitenu, led by a former Likudnik named Avigdor Lieberman. Tzipi’s attempt to form a coalition became less a political process than a contest between rival stalls in a Middle Eastern bazaar. Bibi was holding parallel talks with the Orthodox parties critical to assembling a parliamentary majority. He was matching and raising every assurance of a ministerial seat or budgetary concession that Tzipi was prepared to offer. In the end, she threw up her hands, saying she refused to draw out a process which was not so much a negotiation as organized extortion. I am
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