JERUSALEM
(AP) — Ariel Sharon, the hard-charging Israeli general and prime
minister who was admired and hated for his battlefield exploits and
ambitions to reshape the Middle East, died Saturday, eight years after a
stroke left him in a coma from which he never awoke. He was 85.
As
one of Israel’s most famous soldiers, Sharon was known for bold tactics
and an occasional refusal to obey orders. As a politician he became
known as “the bulldozer,” a man contemptuous of his critics while also
capable of getting things done.
He
led his country into a divisive war in Lebanon in 1982 and was branded
as indirectly responsible for the massacre of hundreds of Palestinians
at the Sabra and Chatilla refugee camps outside Beirut when his troops
allowed allied Lebanese militias into the camps. Yet ultimately he
transformed himself into a prime minister and statesman.
Sharon’s
son Gilad announced the death on Saturday afternoon. Sharon’s health
had taken a downturn over the past week and a half as a number of bodily
organs, including his kidneys, stopped functioning, and doctors on
Thursday pronounced his condition “grave.”
“He
has gone. He went when he decided to go,” Gilad Sharon said outside the
hospital where his father had been treated in recent years.
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