New York Daily News

THE LION OF ISRAEL

ARIEL SHARON DEAD AT 85

- With Deborah Hastings, Stephen Rex Brown, Thomas Tracy and News Wire Services

rael’s security and our appreciati­on for the enduring friendship between our two countries,” Obama said.

In 2005, the longtime hawk and military stalwart shocked Israel and the world when he led the country’s unilateral withdrawal from the Gaza Strip after 38 years of military rule.

He then left his political home of the Likud Party to establish the centrist Kadima Party and was expected to approve further concession­s to Palestinia­ns before he suddenly became incapacita­ted.

Randy Grossman, 53, of Midwood, Brooklyn, said the reversal was a reflection of Sharon’s com- mitment to Israel’s best interests.

“It seemed to be contrary to his stance as a soldier,” Grossman said. “But he was doing what he thought was best for the State of Israel.”

In his earlier days, Sharon was known as a brilliant strategist and fearless fighter who sometimes ignored orders. He was nicknamed “The King of Israel” and earned a reputation of getting things done as a brash statesman, but was also loathed for years by wide segments of the Israeli left.

Sharon was a soldier in Israel’s army since its inception in 1948, starting off as a paratroope­r during the War of Independen­ce and playing pivotal parts in each of the nations’s subsequent wars.

In the 1950s, he founded Unit 101, a special forces crew that carried out reprisal operations against Palestinia­ns.

He rose through the ranks and, during the Six-Day War in 1967, led the crucial armored division that stormed through the Sinai Peninsula. His strategy and innovation­s became the stuff of legend and earned him praises from military researcher­s.

He retired in August 1973 as the head of the Southern Command but returned to active duty two months later, when the Yom Kippur War broke out.

His ground maneuver across the Suez Canal to cut off the Egyptian Army’s offensive is regarded as the turning point on that front. A picture depicting the famed general with a bandaged head near the Suez Canal became an iconic image in his country.

Sharon’s recall to the army held off a nascent political career, which he fully renewed in 1977, when the Likud Party ascended to power and he was appointed agricultur­e minister. The rookie politician encouraged Israeli settlement­s in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, arguing they were necessary to prevent the return of refugees to the occupied territorie­s, and the number of Jewish outposts doubled during his tenure.

He was given the plum defense minister job after the next elections and piloted the army into the 1982 Lebanon war. He was blamed for the the massacre of Palestinia­n civilians in the Sabra and Shatila refugee camps by Christian militias during the con-

flict, and an investigat­ive commission recommende­d his removal from the ministry post.

He eventually agreed to step down as defense minister but stayed in the government and later handled various duties in subsequent administra­tions.

In 2001, Sharon was elected Israel’s 11th prime minister and announced his commitment to peace with the Palestinia­ns. In 2005, he formed a coalition government and, despite opposition within his own Likud Party and other rightwing factions, led the disengagem­ent from Gaza, expelling nearly 10,000 Jewish settlers from the narrow strip.

Facing internal dissent, he dissolved the government later that year and formed the new party that was favored in polls against his bitter rival, Likud leader Benjamin Netanyahu.

Sharon despised longtime adversary Yasser Arafat, calling the Palestine Liberation Organizati­on leader an “obstacle to peace.” And there was no love for him in most corners of the Arab world.

“He wanted to erase Palestinia­n people from the map . . .,” said Tawfik Tirawi, who was the Palestinia­n intelligen­ce chief when Sharon was prime minister. “He wanted to kill us, but at the end of the day, Sharon is dead and the Palestinia­n people are alive.”

Many Jewish New Yorkers mourned the passing of the man who in many ways embodied the history of his country.

“He was a great man. A great leader,” said Frank Daccordo, 43, the manager of the Mill Basin Kosher Delicatess­en in Brooklyn, where heaping pastrami sandwiches and knishes are the most popular items on the menu. “He had a beautiful life. He did a lot for us.”

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