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Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Reaction over Lebanon war report: Olmert refuses to resign as cabinet minister quits
2007-05-02
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, 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.

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 coalitionÂ’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.
Posted by:Fred

#6  I think at this point Kadima needs to go. It was lovely as a vehicle to make Ariel Sharon Prime Minister, but sadly it's too full of weak characters to be safely allowed to rule the country. I vote for a quick election putting Likud in power, so they have a little time to prepare for the next round of war.
Posted by: trailing wife   2007-05-02 12:25  

#5  this just in

all wire services

Livni calls for Olmert to resign, announces her own candidacy to head Kadima.
Posted by: liberalhawk   2007-05-02 11:58  

#4  this am yithaki, head of Kadimas parliamentary faction, called for Olmert to go, and rumor apparently is Livni, Foreign Minister and Olmerts main rival in Kadima, will call for his ouster any hour now.

I give Olmert two weeks, at the outside. Maybe days.

Next question: can Livni hold the coalition together?
Posted by: liberalhawk   2007-05-02 10:13  

#3  See also HAARETZ > A GOVERNMENT WITHOUT GOD. WHy GOD/FAITH matters more to Gubmint + Society than the Totalitarian Neutralism-Dialecticism-Politicism, etc. known as SECULARISM.
Posted by: JosephMendiola   2007-05-02 03:21  

#2  Hey, he may be clueless but at least he has no shame.
Posted by: gorb   2007-05-02 02:22  

#1  Brings to mind the old SNL/Belushi skit - "The Thing That Wouldn't Leave."
Posted by: PBMcL   2007-05-02 01:00  

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