was, in fact, a condolence call, an attempt by Sharon to maintain an open line of com- munication into the leading Christian fami- ly in faction-torn Lebanon. Dan also provides numerous details about Sharon's emotional departure from the Defense Ministry, his decision to sue, and the trial itself. On another level, he marshalls a broad attack against David Halevy, the originator of the Israeli story. In the book, he begins by stating that Halevy was "born in Jerusalem to a family with left- wing leanings, members of the Mapam pan ty." He describes how Halevy "cozied up" to Labor leader Shimon Peres; referring to Halevy's brief service in the IDF during the war of attrition on the Suez, he writes: "Halevy served for three months. Many, many other Israelis also volunteered and served longer, but Halevy cashed in on his three months. Apparently discarding his patriotism along with his uniform, the hard-hitting reporter immediately publi- cized his heroism at the Suez Canal." Dan makes it clear that in his view, most Israeli journalists are no better than Halevy. "He overlooked or never absorbed the fact that he was supposed to observe American journalistic standards and acted precisely like the Israeli reporter he was," he writes. "After all, he had grown up among Israeli journalists. The sole dif- ference was that they published their falsities in Hebrew, while Halevy published his in English for Time." Time magazine, he says, had a special reason to accept the false reports of the Israeli journalist. "They have had a long- bias that does not favor a strong Israel, an Israel with its own opinions about several things in the world," he says. "From time to time it was more anti-Israeli, from time to time less anti-Israeli — but when it came ' to the Begin-Sharon era, this is where I think their nails came out. They began to believe what they were writing; it became a vicious circle. You have a certain preconception about a political figure, you begin to write about him, and then you begin to believe it:' He suggests that Time felt free to attack Sharon because, "by February, 1983, he was considered by the Israeli press as a political cadaver. You can spit on him. You can write a story without checking with him — I repeat, without checking with him. They never dreamt that it would come to trial. "This, by the way, is why most of the rivals of Sharon are making the mistake again and again by coming to bury him and not to praise him. They are always sur- prised to find that he is more alive than dead. That's a beautiful saga." If Dan is hard on Halevy, he is positive- ly effusive about General Sharon, a feeling which comprises the final layer to the com- plex construction of Blood Libel. Every ad- jective relating to the general is a positive Uri Dan: the worst he can say about his former boss is that he displays a "slight tendency toward impatience." Photo By Stan Barouh 43 Ifirt 4,111