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Jewish World Review June 8, 2007 / 22 Sivan, 5766
Bush administration forcing Israel to endanger itself
By Caroline B. Glick
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Time for friends of the Jewish state especially Christian Zionists to make their voices heard
http://www.JewishWorldReview.com |
Ahead of Prime Minister Ehud Olmert's trip to the White House on June 19,
the Bush administration is pressuring Israel to endanger itself on at least
two fronts.
First the Americans are pressuring the Olmert government to agree to
Palestinian Authority and Fatah chief Mahmoud Abbas's request to bring
millions of bullets, thousands of Kalashnikov assault rifles, RPGs,
anti-tank missiles and armored personnel carriers into Gaza from Egypt.
The government has yet to respond to the request. Those who oppose it argue
that Fatah forces in Gaza are too weak and incompetent to battle Hamas
forces and so any weaponry transferred to Fatah militias will likely end up
in Hamas's hands.
This logic is correct, but incomplete. It is true that Fatah forces are
unwilling and presumably unable to defeat Hamas forces. But it is also true
that Fatah forces use their arms to attack Israel. So even if there was no
chance of Hamas laying its hands on the weapons, allowing Fatah to receive
them would still endanger Israel.
The same limited logic informs Israel's strenuous objection to the
Pentagon's intention to sell Saudi Arabia Joint Direct Attack Munition
satellite-guided "smart bombs" or JDAMS. The government claims that while it
has no truck with the Saudis, it fears for the stability of the regime. If
the House of Saud falls, Osama bin Laden would get the bombs.
Yet like Fatah, the Saudis aren't simply vulnerable. They are culpable. In
addition to being the creators of al Qaida and Hamas's largest financial
backers, the Saudis themselves directly threaten Israel.
In direct contravention of their commitment to the US, (and the US's
commitment to Israel), the Saudis have deployed F-15 fighter jets at Tabuk
air base located 150 km from Eilat. On May 13th, the Saudi Air Force held an
air show at Tabuk for the benefit of King Abdullah and senior princes where
the F-15s where ostentatiously shown.
The timing of the show was interesting. It took place the day before
Abdullah hosted Vice President Richard Cheney at Tabuk.
The administration is not just asking Israel to facilitate the arming of its
enemies. It is also placing restrictions on Israel's ability to arm itself.
As The Jerusalem Post reported on Wednesday, the Pentagon has yet to
respond to Israel's request to purchase the F-22 stealth bomber. Moreover,
the US seems to be torpedoing Israel's acquisition of the F-35 Joint Strike
Fighter. The Pentagon recently voiced its objection to Israel's plan to
install Israeli technology in the jets that are to be supplied starting in
2014. Israel's installation of its own electronic warfare systems in its
F-16s and F-15s is how it has managed to maintain the IAF's qualitative edge
over Arab states that have also purchased the aircraft.
The administration's hostility towards Israel is unfortunately not an
aberration. It is the result of a policy shift within the administration
which occurred immediately after the Republican Party's defeat in the
Congressional elections last November.
After the Republican defeat, the administration embraced former secretary of
state James Baker's foreign policy paradigm which is based on the belief
that it is possible and desirable to reach a stable balance of power
in the Middle East. As Baker sees it, the balance can be reached by forcing Israel to
shrink to its "natural" proportions and assisting supposedly moderate and
stable states like Egypt and Saudi Arabia to grow into their "natural"
proportions. Once the states of the region (including Syria and Iran which
Baker wishes to appease) have settled into their proper proportions,
stability will be ensured.
Baker fleshed on his view in the Iraq Study Group's recommendations which
were published immediately after the elections. Although President George W.
Bush rejected the ISG's recommendations, the day after the elections he
sacked defense secretary Donald Rumsfeld and replaced him with Robert Gates
who served on the ISG. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice is a disciple of
Baker's ally former national security advisor Brent Scowcroft.
The problem with the Baker paradigm is that it has never been borne out by
reality. It collapsed during the Cold War both as the Soviet Union worked
tirelessly to destabilize countries allied with the US and when the states
of East-Central Europe revolted against the teetering empire and gained
their freedom with its collapse.
In the 1990s, Baker's stability paradigm failed to foresee the
post-nationalist movements that swept through Western Europe and the Muslim
world and embraced the Soviet goal of weakening the US. Baker still denies
the phenomenon and ignores its policy implications.
Today, the notion that stability is a realistic aim is even more far
fetched. Specifically, the willingness of Muslim secularists to form
strategic relations with jihadists and the willingness of Shiites to form
strategic partnerships with Sunnis was unimaginable twenty years ago. Aside
from that, the specter of a nuclear-armed Iran throws a monkey wrench into
any thought of regional stability. A look around the region shows just how
absurd Baker's notions truly are.
In Lebanon today, Fatah al Islam, which is apparently allied with al Qaida,
is fighting the Lebanese army in a bid to bring down the Siniora government
at the behest of its sponsor the secular Ba'athist regime in Damascus.
Fatah al Islam is also aligned with Hizbullah, which shares its goal of
bringing down the Lebanese government and with Iran which gives the Syrians
their marching orders.
This state of affairs is also the name of the game in Iraq where Iran and
Syria support both Muqtada al Sadr's Shiite Mehdi army and al Qaida's Sunni
death squads. It repeats itself in Afghanistan where Iran is arming the
Taliban and in the Palestinian Authority.
Furthermore, the paragons of moderation and stability in Egypt and Saudi
Arabia which Baker and his followers are so keen to strengthen are neither
stable nor moderate. Both Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak and King Abdullah
are old men of uncertain health. To "stabilize" their regimes they wrought
unholy alliances with the Muslim Brotherhood and the Wahabis which are the
only forces in Egyptian and Saudi societies that have not been flattened
under their jackboots.
This week Channel 10 reported that the Bush administration recently informed
Israel and the Gulf states that it has no intention of launching military
strikes against Iran's nuclear installations. The Americans explained that
they need Iranian assistance in stabilizing Iraq to pave the way for an
American withdrawal from the country before Bush leaves office. Under
Baker's regency, the administration apparently now subscribes to the belief
that they will be better off out of Iraq with a nuclear-armed Iran than in
Iraq without a nuclear-armed Iran.
For their part, the Arabs have demonstrated clearly that they do not share
the administration's newfound faith that a nuclear-armed Iran will reach a
stable equilibrium in a Bakeresque Middle Eastern balance of powers. Their
stated aim to build nuclear reactors is a clear sign that they recognize the
danger of a nuclear-armed Iran. The administration's support the Arabs'
quest for nuclear reactors makes clear that it is now willing to have a
Middle Eastern nuclear arms race.
This brings us back to Israel, which is situated smack in the middle of the
regional chaos. How is Israel contending with this threatening state of
affairs?
For its part, the IDF seems to be contending with it fairly well, at least
with regard to Syria and Lebanon. The IDF's decision have television crews
film IDF soldiers fighting in mock-up Syrian villages this week, like Chief
of General Staff Lt. Gen. Gabi Ashkenazi's announcement that the IDF is
prepared to fight on two fronts simultaneously are signs that the IDF
recognizes that its only safe bet is to prepare for all contingencies. Were
the IDF to complement these actions with warnings to Iran and operational
plans to attack Iran's nuclear installations and distribute gas masks to the
public, the General Staff would go a long way towards proving that it is
adopting the only reasonable strategic posture available given the cards
Israel has been dealt.
Yet not only is the IDF not warning Iran, the Olmert government is
undermining the IDF's correct posture towards Syria and Lebanon. Indeed, on
every front, including towards Israel itself, Prime Minister Ehud Olmert has
himself adopted Baker's failed paradigm.
Rather than publicly explain that in light of Syria's position as an Iranian
client state in Lebanon, Iraq and Israel, there is nothing for Israel to
talk to Syria about, Wednesday Olmert announced that he wishes to open
negotiations on the Israeli surrender of the Golan Heights with the Syrians.
The Syrians for their part cornered Olmert Thursday by agreeing to his
offer. As Karl Moor and David Rivkin explained Thursday in The Jerusalem
Post, it is not true, as Olmert and his minions claim that Israel has
nothing to lose by negotiating with Syria. Given Israel's perceived weakness
in the wake of last summer's war and Syria's perceived strength, speaking to
Syria about an Israeli surrender of the Golan Heights will only encourage
Syrian belligerence.
And as with the Syrians, so too with the Palestinians, the Olmert government
acts as Baker's water boy. Rather than waging a rational military campaign
to defeat the jihadist front that has seeded itself in Gaza, Olmert issues
near daily statements telling the Palestinians that Israel will cause them
no harm. He defends this policy by declaiming on the importance of
strengthening the "stability" of the Palestinian Authority.
Then there is the daily brown nosing Olmert and Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni
engage in towards the Egyptians and Saudis. Israel praises both as
"moderates" while Egypt vows publicly not to take action to stop the
transfer of weapons from Sinai to Gaza and the Saudis bankroll Hamas and
demand that Israel implement their "peace plan" which calls for Israel's
destruction.
Yet all of this incompetent bumbling pales in comparison to Israel's
weakness towards Iran. Transportation Minister Shaul Mofaz's assertion this
week to the Post that he does not "think it is right today to talk about
military options" towards Iran because he thinks that sanctions can still
convince the mullahs to give up their nuclear ambitions comes dangerously
close to an Israeli collapse in the face of an existential threat. The fact
that Mofaz made this statement the same week that Iranian President Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad announced that Iran had crossed the nuclear threshold only
exacerbates the perception of Israeli strategic disarray.
Sooner or later the US will pay a price for the Bush administration's
decision to embrace the delusion of stability as its strategic goal. With
jihadist forces growing stronger around the globe, if the Americans leave
Iraq without victory, there is no doubt that Iraq (and Iran and Syria) will
come to them. But whatever the consequences of America's behavior for
America, the price that Israel will pay for embracing Baker's myths of
stability will be unspeakable.
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