Monday, March 5, 2012

Yitzhak Rabin 4th November 1995 nytimes

ASSASSINATION IN ISRAEL: THE OVERVIEW;RABIN SLAIN AFTER PEACE RALLY IN TEL AVIV; ISRAELI GUNMAN HELD; SAYS HE ACTED ALONE

By SERGE SCHMEMANN
Published: November 05, 1995
Correction Appended
Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin, who led Israel to victory in 1967 and began the march toward peace a generation later, was shot dead by a lone assassin this evening as he was leaving a vast rally in Tel Aviv.
Mr. Rabin, 73, was struck down by one or two bullets as he was entering his car. Police immediately seized a 27-year-old Israeli law student, Yigal Amir, who had been active in support of Israeli settlers but who told the police tonight that he had acted alone.
The police said Mr. Amir had also told them that he had tried twice before to attack the Prime Minister.
It was the first assassination of a prime minister in the 47-year history of the state of Israel, and it was certain to have extensive repercussions on Israeli politics and the future of the Arab-Israeli peace.
Mr. Rabin was to lead his Labor party in elections scheduled for November next year, and without him the prospects for a Labor victory, and of a continuation of his policies, were thrown into question.
In the immediate aftermath, Foreign Minister Shimon Peres, Mr. Rabin's partner in the peace negotiations, automatically became Acting Prime Minister. It was widely expected that he would be formally confirmed as Mr. Rabin's successor.
Mr. Rabin, who rose to national prominence as commander of the victorious Israeli army in the 1967 Six-Day War, became the second Middle Eastern leader, after President Anwar el-Sadat of Egypt, to be killed by extremists from his own side for seeking an Arab-Israeli peace. Mr. Sadat, the first Arab to make peace with Israel, was assassinated in 1984.
Mr. Rabin and his Labor Government have come under fierce attack from right-wing groups over the peace with the Palestinians, especially since the agreement transferring authority in the West Bank to the Palestine Liberation Organization was reached in September. Mr. Rabin has been heckled at many of his appearances in recent weeks and his security has been tight.
A gruff, chain-smoking career military man, Mr. Rabin led Israel both in its greatest military triumph and in one of its most dramatic bids for peace.
Shortly before his death, Mr. Rabin, obviously buoyed by the huge turnout of more than 100,000 supporters of the peace process, told the rally, "I always believed that most of the people want peace and are ready to take a risk for it." [Excerpts, page 16A.]
He then joined other participants in singing the "Song of Peace," a popular paean. Unfamiliar with the words, the prime minister followed from a text he tucked into his pocket.
Hours after the shooting, Mr. Peres said the blood-soaked sheet of music was found in his pocket and stood as a symbol of Mr. Rabin's sacrifice.
Since achieving a historic peace agreement with the P.L.O. in 1993, and especially since the follow-up agreement two months ago on establishing Palestinian self-rule in much of the West Bank, Mr. Rabin had come under increasingly bitter attack from Jewish residents of West Bank settlements and right-wing opponents of the agreement.
In recent months, he had been heckled at his appearances and had received open threats from extremist groups. The fury of the criticism led to a tightening of security around him and other government ministers, and to a growing debate about the potential for violence.
As he walked to his car this evening, Mr. Rabin gave his last interview to a radio reporter, saying, "I always believed that the majority of the people are against violence, violence which in the recent period took a shape which damages the framework of fundamental values of Israeli democracy."
At 9:30 P.M., as he was preparing to enter his car, there were four shots. Two struck one of Mr. Rabin's bodyguards, who was reported in critical condition. One or two struck the prime minister. The Minister of Health, Ephraim Sneh, said Mr. Rabin had no heartbeat or blood pressure when he arrived at Ichilov Hospital. He was pronounced dead at 11:10 P.M.
At 11:15 P.M. the director of Mr. Rabin's office, Eytan Haber, came out before the waiting crowd at the hospital to read a brief statement: "The Government of Israel announces with shock and deep sorrow the death of the Prime Minister, Yitzhak Rabin, who was murdered by an assassin tonight in Tel Aviv."
The crowd, which only recently was singing and dancing in the streets, erupted in shouts of "No! No!"
The rally had been called by a coalition of left-wing political parties and peace groups as a response to increasingly strident street protests by the right-wing opponents of the peace agreement. More than 100,000 people turned out on Kings of Israel Square in front of Tel Aviv's city hall; organizers declared it the largest rally in the coastal city in at least a decade.
As word spread, seens of grief and fear spread through Israeli streets. In Jerusalem, women wept and stunned students gathered in groups, wondering what would happen to them and their future.
"I'm not crying for Rabin, I'm crying for Israel," one woman sobbed. About 1,000 mourners gathered outside Mr. Rabin's residence with candles, while devout Jews gathered at the Western Wall in the Old City to chant memorial prayers.
For all the passion of the debate over the peace, the notion of an assassination of an Israeli leader by an Israeli Jew was far from anybody's mind in a nation whose greatest bond has been the joint Jewish struggle for survival against hostile Arab neighbors.
Mr. Rabin's spokewoman and close aide, Aliza Goren, who was next to him when he was shot, said, "I never imagined that a Jew would murder a Jew. It's a horrible thing. If someone imagines that he can seize power through murder, then our state is simply finished."
In the immediate aftermath, the police gave no indication that the student, Mr. Amir, had any support, though some reporters received messages on their beepers from an unknown group that described itself as the "Jewish Avenging Organization" taking responsiblity for the attack.
The police said that before entering the law school of Bar-Ilan University, Mr. Amir had studied in a yeshiva, a religious institution, and was a member of Eyal, an extreme right-wing group. Eyal leaders, however, denied any link to the killing.
Like many Israelis, Mr. Amir was licensed to carry a pistol. He lived in Herzliya, a northern suburb of Tel Aviv. The Israeli radio said he had confessed, and quoted him as saying: "I acted alone on God's orders and I have no regrets."
About an hour after the death was announced, the full Cabinet met, with Mr. Rabin's place draped in black. Ministers wept as Mr. Peres eulogized Mr. Rabin as a rare and determined leader who was aware of the risk he took.
Mr. Peres also vowed that the process he and Mr. Rabin launched would continue: "We are all determined to continue on this great path, to serve the people, the state. The only thing we can do after this tragedy is to continue on this course."
Officials said Mr. Rabin's body would lie in state at the Parliament on Sunday and would be buried on Monday afternoon at the Israeli state cemetery on Mount Herzl, in Jerusalem. President Clinton is among the leaders to announce that he would attend.
Mr. Clinton had led the historic meeting on Sept. 13, 1993, at which Mr. Rabin shook hands with Yasir Arafat, the chairman of the P.L.O., and began the journey toward peace. Mr. Clinton also presided over the signing of the follow-up agreement last Sept. 28 that set out the schedule for the transfer of authority to the Palestinians over their population centers in the West Bank.
In Gaza, Mr. Arafat expressed condolences and the hope that the process toward peace would continue, saying, "I hope that we will have the ability -- all of us, Israelis and Palestinians -- to overcome this tragedy against the peace process, against the whole situation in the Middle East."
Israeli conservative leaders immediately condemned the attack and joined in expressing their grief.
Benjamin Netanyahu, the leader of the Likud opposition coalition, called the assassination "one of the worst tragedies in the history of the state of Israel, and even the history of the Jewish people."
With Mr. Peres and Mr. Arafat, Mr. Rabin was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1994 for the secret negotiations in 1993 that led to the agreement to end Israeli rule over the Palestinians in the occupied territories.
But the peace also provoked a loud and passionate opposition. Settlers and right-wing nationalists have held held constant demonstrations and protests, blocked intersections and jeering Mr. Rabin wherever he appeared.
In the immediate grief, there was little discussion of the political repercussions of the assassination. But it was bound to have a major impact. In the elections scheduled for next November, voters will be voting separately for the prime minister for the first time in Israeli history, and Mr. Rabin's personality, age and record were expected to be a central issue.
Mr. Peres is generally acknowledged to be far less popular than than Mr. Rabin was, and it was possible that Labor would seek a more acceptible leader.
Mr. Rabin's popularity stemmed from his record as a genuine war hero, and from his reputation for rough candor. He was accepted by supporters as a man they could trust, and many political analysts felt that no other contemporary political leader could have persuaded Israelis to accept a deal with Mr. Arafat, who was universally perceived in Israel as a terrorist dedicated to the crushing of the Jewish state.
Born on March 20, 1922, Mr. Rabin came to national prominence as the military chief of staff during the Six Day War in 1967, when Israel swept through the West Bank and East Jerusalem. The images of Israeli soldiers weeping at the Western Wall, previously in Arab hands, remain a national icon in Israel.
After the war, Mr. Rabin was appointed Ambassador to Washington, where he served from 1968 to 1973. He was elected Prime Minister in 1974, but was compelled to step down in 1977 over a scandal involving an illegal bank account his wife held in the United States. He was Defense Minister from 1984 to 1990, during the Arab uprising in occupied territories, which he fought with an iron hand. Mr. Rabin returned to the Prime Ministry in 1992.
A year later, he and Mr. Peres stunned the world when they announced that secret negotiations with the P.L.O. in Oslo had produced an agreement to end the hostility between Israelis and Palestinians. The agreement was sealed with the historic handshake between Mr. Rabin and Mr. Arafat at the White House on Sept. 13, 1993. A year later, Israel signed a peace agreement with Jordan, leaving only Syria and Lebanon among its neighbors still in a state of hostility with Israel.
Correction: November 6, 1995, Monday A front-page article yesterday about the assassination of Yitzhak Rabin misstated the year President Anwar el-Sadat of Egypt was assassinated. It was 1981, not 1984.