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Sharon: ISRAEL'S WARRIOR-POLITICIAN
 
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Sharon: ISRAEL'S WARRIOR-POLITICIAN [Paperback]

Anita Miller MILLER (Author)
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)

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Book Description

August 30, 2005
Ariel Sharon, Israel’s new Prime Minister, is perhaps one of the most controversial public figures in the Mideast.

He was born in 1928 in a moshav—an agricultural community in which, unlike a kibbutz, residents own their own property—and was raised by parents who were not only ardent Zionists but were also rugged individualists. His father especially was contemptuous of socialism and believed in individual enterprise, raising his son to be self-reliant and physically strong in order to prepare him for the inevitable struggle to establish a Jewish state.

Sharon is perhaps best known as the organizer of what was called Commando Unit 101 and for his original ideas for the training of commando forces, which he later adapted to the training of larger, more traditional armies.

During his military career he personally led many raids into Arab territory and has been criticized for his role in the destruction, in 1953, of some forty Arab homes—which he insists he thought were empty and in which sixty-nine Arabs died. Later, in 1982, he was blamed also for allowing the Lebanese Militia into a Palestinian refugee camp in which hundreds were killed.

His political career is of course indelibly colored by his military exploits.

What makes Sharon tick? What kind of a man is he? How did his childhood and early life condition him to become a brilliant commander, controversial soldier and as-yet-untested leader of a small democracy which is divided both within and without?

This first biography in English—frank, but balanced—will perhaps answer some of the questions raised by his career both as a soldier and politician.

--This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Readers will be left frustrated by the lack of psychological insight in this detailed but unsatisfying biography of controversial Israeli prime minister Ariel Sharon. The book's strength is in its early pages, where the authors detail Sharon's youth. He was born in 1928 to a strongly individualist father who had moved to Palestine from the Soviet Union. The authors (Anita Miller is a literary scholar, Jordan Miller a poet and playwright, Zetouni a director of Olive Production and a contributing editor to Chicago Life magazine) also lay out clearly Sharon's early rise through the Israeli army and his developing reputation as a loose cannon. The book competently describes the notorious 1982 massacre of Palestinian refugees by Lebanese Christian troops, for which an Israeli commission later found Sharon indirectly responsible. But three-quarters of the book is devoted to the past decade the rise and fall of the Oslo peace process and the second Palestinian intifada and Sharon's role in these events. There are few revelations here, and little attempt is made to probe Sharon's motivations, for example the possible effects of the personal tragedies he's suffered the early deaths of his first wife and his first-born son. A figure as important and complex as Sharon deserves a more sophisticated treatment. Photos not seen by PW.
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

From Library Journal

Prime Minister Ariel Sharon has been a hard-line fixture of Israeli politics since he retired from the army in 1974 after approximately 30 years of service. He has promoted the expansion of settlements as a way of solidifying control over the occupied territories and consistently advocated a policy of retaliation against Arab villages when Israeli settlements in the territories or in Israel proper have been attacked. Not truly a biography, this work spotlights Sharon's public career as he wended his way through recent history; two-thirds of the text is devoted to the eight years since the Oslo Accords of 1993. Miller (Arnold Bennett: An Annotated Bibliography, 1897-1932) draws solely on news stories and secondary sources, providing little behind-the-scenes material about his public life or information about his private life. Sharon's autobiography, Warrior, appeared 13 years ago, and while the new work does provide a summary update of his career since, it offers very little else and stops before the latest outbreak of violence in the Middle East. A marginal purchase.
Marcia L. Sprules, Council on Foreign Relations Lib., New York
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 625 pages
  • Publisher: Academy Chicago Publishers (August 30, 2005)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0897335317
  • ISBN-13: 978-0897335317
  • Product Dimensions: 8.5 x 5.5 x 1.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.8 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #7,372,225 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

6 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.0 out of 5 stars (6 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Well written, May 17, 2005
By 
Jill Malter (jillmalter@aol.com) - See all my reviews
I like this book. Sure, the first third of the book does rely too much on the works of Van Creveld and Morris. And it could have said something more (and something different) about Israel's war in Lebanon. But it is fairly reasonable. It does spend a little time showing how Sharon won the libel suit against Time Magazine. And it has some interesting material from Sharon's time as leader of Unit 101 (an anti-terrorism squad that was formed in 1953, after more than 450 Israelis died in terrorist attacks over a three-year period).

There is plenty of discussion about retaliatory raids for terror attacks. Can one simply ask folks nicely not to allow their towns to sponsor terrorist attacks? Um, no. That does not work. The people in the town simply deny them. And they mention that they are not required to keep Israel safe! Well, what if one fights back? Doesn't that just provoke more terror? Not necessarily. We see that even the Kibeyeh raid did more to slow down terror than increase it.

Still, the best part of this work is the excellent history from 1997 to 2002, which takes up about two thirds of the book. We are told of the BBC's vicious untruths in its program "The Accused," which aired in June of 2001. We read about the Durban conference. And the battle of Jenin. And much more.

I've seen quite a few books about Israel fall down badly when they get to recent history. This one is a big exception to that rule. I recommend it.
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7 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars A Great Disappointment, November 1, 2002
By A Customer
This is not a scholarly work, and not truly a biography (although it does have an elementary review of personal details about Sharon). The presentation is a flat monotone with no attention to relative importance of events discussed. It's as if the authors had daily news bulletins spread out before them, and then give us a synopsis. There is no analysis of significance and import of the events, or background explanation of Israeli and Palestinian personalities, politics or issues. What commentary that is given is by way of quotations (or paraphrases) of recognized authorities in the field, and often this material is without source attribution. Unless the reader has some significant prior understanding of the Israeli/Palestinian situation, much of the book will be confusing and of low informative value.
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9 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The story of Sharon is the story of his country, September 19, 2002
After looking forward for some months to receiving this new book, I have been somewhat disappointed. Unlike other monographs of this kind, which are written on the basis of original documentats and first hand information, this book is in part a rehash of secondary materials. As attested by their few earlier publications, the authors are not historians, political scientists or military experts, who might have illuminated their presentation with their own original insight. Nevertheless this book is quite worth reading.

In its first third, this book rehashes earlier books on the subject, which are cited at length throughout the text without critical comment. The first few chapters are based on books with a positive assessment of Sharon, while in the following chapters the authors tend to lean heavily on two monographs, those of Martin Van Creveld and Benny Morris who are critical of Sharon, the IDF and Zionism. To exemplify Van Creveld's bias: In his chapter "The Lebanese Morass", analyzing Sharon's military strategy in Lebanon in 1982, he states "he even voted against the Camp David Accords.", as if Sharon's political views in 1993 have bearing on the military campaign in 1982. When using blatantly biased material, a responsible author is expected to point this out to a naïve reader.

In writing this part of the book the authors seem to be too involved in presenting their borrowed information, so that they failed to use other, highly relevant, more recent resources readily available to them. For instance, in Chapter 25 which describes the Sabra and Shatila massacre in 1982 and in Chapter 26 which describes the aftermaths of that massacre, the authors fail to discuss the eye-witness account of the massacre by Robert Hatem, whose book "From Israel to Damascus: The Painful Road to Blood, Betrayal and Deception" they cite in Chapter 70. Hatem points out that the Sabra and Shatila massacre was a very clever Syrian political move to defeat Israel politically, estrange it from the US and bring about Sharon's political downfall. Under instructions from Damascus, that massacre was instigated and directed by a Syrian agent who managed at the time to fool Sharon as well as the Christian Lebanese leadership. How could the authors have failed to discuss such crucial information that was available to them?

In the second two thirds of this book (Chapters 33 - 84, the authors present a far more balanced reportage of recent events in Israel up the mid 2002. Consequently, this part of the book, which covers the recent pages of Sharon's life story, which is incidental to the history of the State of Israel in the last ten years, is new and quite informative. This part of this book is highly recommended to anyone interested in the current struggle for survival of the Jewish state.

As a whole, this book demonstrates how deeply interwoven is the personal life story of the present Prime Minister of Israel with the history of his country in the last fifty years.

I wish this book was published by one of the major American publishers (to have a better public exposure) rather than have the Senior Acquisition Editor of a small publishing house publish her own book. On the other hand, maybe thanks to this fast, "inside track" publication this book is so up to date.

An editorial comment: I wish that the Notes to each chapter were at the end of the respective chapters, if not at the bottom of each page, rather than at the end of this thick, 84 chapter-long book. Since those notes are quite important in evaluating the text, following them up slows down the reading and enjoyment of serious, interested readers. This should be corrected in the next edition, which I hope will rectify some of the shortcomings pointed out above.

One more comment - this is not "the first biography of Sharon in English" as stated on the back-cover -- half a dozen or so of earlier biographies of Sharon in English are cited even in this book.

In spite of its shortcomings, I still will give it 4 stars (it really deserves 3.5 stars), hoping that the next revised edition will justifiably deserve 5 stars.

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