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Ariel Sharon Yedioth Aharonoth archive |
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Sharon crowning Begin (Yedioth Aharonoth archive) |
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Sharon
sitting on an Egyptian army tank; the Israeli economy telling Sharon:
You're hurting morale. Rabin in the background with a "Down with Begin"
sign (Yedioth Aharonot archive) |
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Peres and Gur on the left, Rabin and Sharon on the right (Yedioth Aharonoth archive) |
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Justice; Sharon spraying away Peace Now activists, letting settlers free (Yedioth Aharonoth archive) |
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Begin and Sharon lifting up the Lebanese cedar (Yedioth Aharonoth archive) |
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Israeli export: "How do you know that this is Arik Sharon?"; The Likud sitting on a Nigerian crate (Yedioth Aharonoth archive) |
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"It doesn't fit," the peace and security puzzle (Yedioth Aharonoth archive) |
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The impenetrable Sharon (Yedioth Aharonoth archive) |
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Netanyahu throwing an elections bomb to Sharon (Yedioth Aharonoth archive) |
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Sharon removing bricks (Yedioth Aharonoth archive) |
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Sharon sending Netanyahu and his rebellion scrolls packing (Yedioth Aharonoth archive) |
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Former Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's political life story in caricatures since hitting the limelight in 1973
Michal Margalit
September 7, 1973
In the days of the founding of the Likud,
which united several right-wing movements, initiated by Ariel Sharon
and led by Menachem Begin,
the journalist Shlomo Nakdimon described the establishment of the new
party as a complicated front of personal relationships and conflicts of
interest.
Sharon crowning Begin (Yedioth Aharonoth archive)
December 1974
Sharon was elected as a member of Knesset in the new party of Likud in December 1973, after the Yom Kippur War,
but just a year later he resigned and returned to the IDF.
Sharon
sitting on an Egyptian army tank; the Israeli economy telling Sharon:
You're hurting morale. Rabin in the background with a "Down with Begin"
sign (Yedioth Aharonot archive)
June 1975
Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin
appointed Sharon to be his general affairs consultant. Defense Minister Shimon Peres
and IDF Chief of Staff Mota Gur said they were doubtful Sharon would
be successful. The claim at the time was that Rabin used the appointment
to downplay Peres, and Rabin said he had become too popular for his
liking.
Peres and Gur on the left, Rabin and Sharon on the right (Yedioth Aharonoth archive)
April 1982
A day before this political cartoon was published, activists of Peace
Now hassled a Nahal Brigade ceremony in protest that it was being held
over the Green Line. At a reform Judaism movement outpost, soldiers
blocked the activists access to the ceremony and a small skirmish
transpired during Defense Minister Sharon's speech.
Justice; Sharon spraying away Peace Now activists, letting settlers free (Yedioth Aharonoth archive)
June 1982
The IDF was making its way to Beirut during the First Lebanon
War. It made to Beirut in six weeks, putting it under siege with most
of it being captured and the airport being destroyed. There were 368 IDF
soldiers and more than a thousand PLO terrorists killed.
Begin and Sharon lifting up the Lebanese cedar (Yedioth Aharonoth archive)
July 1984
The British media reported that Scotland Yard was investigating
Israel's relations with Nigeria after two Mossad agents were arrested
for allegedly kidnapping the Nigerian transportation minister in a
crate. At the same time there were claims that the Likud was trying to
hide Sharon at all costs, who had become the symbol of the failure of
the Lebanon War, trying to keep his public profile low.
Israeli export: "How do you know that this is Arik Sharon?"; The Likud sitting on a Nigerian crate (Yedioth Aharonoth archive)
April 2001
A month after being elected prime minister, Sharon was forced to wake
up and understand that he couldn't bend the reality to his wishes ,
Yedioth columnist Eitan Haber wrote.
"It doesn't fit," the peace and security puzzle (Yedioth Aharonoth archive)
August 2005
The day before the end of the withdrawal from Gaza. Ministers Limor
Livnat, Yisrael Katz, Dan Naveh, Uzi Landau, Effi Eitam and Tzachi
Hanegbi, who opposed the plan, couldn't bring Sharon down.
The impenetrable Sharon (Yedioth Aharonoth archive)
August 2005
Benjamin Netanyahu
resigned from Sharon's government due to the Gaza withdrawal plan. He
said that he feared a terror center being established in Gaza, while
others claimed that he resigned for political gains.
Netanyahu throwing an elections bomb to Sharon (Yedioth Aharonoth archive)
August 2005
A survey after the Gaza withdrawal said 54% of Israelis wanted a
peace plan and were willing to remove settlements from the West Bank.
There was 68% in support of removing illegal outposts.
Sharon removing bricks (Yedioth Aharonoth archive)
August 2005
Days after the Gaza withdrawal.
Sharon sending Netanyahu and his rebellion scrolls packing (Yedioth Aharonoth archive)
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