June 1, 2012
Defense
Minister Ehud Barak has done it again. Speaking on Wednesday at the
Institute for National Security Studies in Tel Aviv, Barak warned that
if Israel can't cut a deal with the Palestinians soon, it should
consider surrendering Judea and Samaria in exchange for nothing.
Even
the diehard leftists in the media had a hard time swallowing his words.
After all, when Barak was premier, he oversaw Israel's unilateral
surrender of south Lebanon in 2000. Barak promised that by giving
Hezbollah south Lebanon, Israel would force the Iranian proxy army to
disarm and behave like a Western political party.
Whoopsie.
Then of course, there is the Gaza precedent.
Ignoring the
lesson of Lebanon, Barak's successor Ariel Sharon reenacted his
unilateral surrender policy in Gaza in 2005. Like Barak, Sharon promised
that once Gaza was cleared of all Jewish presence, it would magically
transform itself into a Middle Eastern version of Singapore.
Whoopsie.
Both
Barak and Sharon promised that their unilateral surrender policies
would do more than merely transform Hezbollah and Hamas into liberal
democrats. They said that by cutting and running, Israel would earn the
love of the international community, and winning the love of the likes
of Washington and Brussels, they said, was the most urgent item on
Israel's agenda.
Apparently Barak was referring
to the same imperative when on Wednesday he said that Israel needs to
act fast because, "We are on borrowed time. We will reach a wall, and
we'll pay the price."
So yes, Hezbollah has
taken over not just south Lebanon, but all of Lebanon. And true, there
is no one in the Palestinian Authority today who is willing to accept
the continued existence of Israel in any borders. But that just means we
need the West to love us even more. And the only way to get the West to
love us is by imperiling our very existence by handing our heartland
over to people who wish to destroy our country.
Given
the high value Barak and his comrades place on winning the love of the
West, it is worth considering what motivates the West - or more to the
point, the US, which leads the Western world.
Unfortunately,
the situation is not pretty. US President Barack Obama's policies are
just as irrational as the ones that Barak is urging Israel to implement
in order to win Obama's support. And Obama's rationales for adopting
these policies are just as divorced from reality as Barak's are.
The
place where this irrationality is displayed most prominently today is
in Obama's policy regarding Iran. As Michael Singh rightly noted on
Wednesday in the New York Daily News, under Obama, US policy towards
Iran is based on the view "that at the root of the Iran nuclear crisis
is US-Iran conflict, and that the root cause of that conflict is
mistrust."
THIS VIEW is pure fantasy. No
Iranian leader has ever given the US any reason to believe that this is
the case. To the contrary, every Iranian leader since the 1979 Islamic
Revolution has made clear that the regime is dedicated to the
destruction of the US and Israel.
The Iranians
do not wish to destroy the US and Israel because they distrust them. The
likes of Ayatollah Khomeini, Ayatollah Khamenei, President Ahmadinejad
and all of their comrades wish to destroy Israel and the US because they
hate us. They hate us because as they see it, both nations represent
forces that are antithetical to their revolution's goal of Islamic world
domination.
Rather than accept this
fundamental, but unpleasant truth, Obama and his advisors base their
policy of engaging Iran on fairy tales about nonexistent fatwas that
purportedly ruled out the development of nuclear weapons. As Vice
Premier Moshe Ya'alon put it delicately this week, the Iranians are
"laughing all the way to a bomb."
Ya'alon
explained, "During talks with world powers, the Iranians have managed to
enrich 750 kilograms of uranium to 3.5 percent, and 36 kilograms of
uranium to 20 percent."
And while the Iranians
were enriching all that uranium, according to satellite imagery
published on Wednesday by the Institute for Science and International
Affairs, they were destroying buildings at the Parchin nuclear site.
The
buildings in question were suspected of being used to conduct high
explosive tests pertinent to the development of nuclear weapons.
And
yet, despite Iran's obvious bad faith, and despite the fact that the
much-touted sanctions against Iran have done nothing to slow the pace of
its sprint to the nuclear finish line, the Obama administration insists
on clinging to the fantasy that it can convince the Iranians that they
can trust the US and therefore convince them to give up their nuclear
weapons program.
Lacking any substantive means
of defending this Tinkerbell-fairy-dust policy towards the most pressing
threat to international security today, the only thing the Obama
administration can tell increasingly distressed Israeli leaders is that
we should trust them. They know what they are doing.
Allowing
Iran to go nuclear isn't the only price Obama has been willing to pay
to fulfill his fantasy of solving Iran's conflict with the US by
building trust. He is also willing to destroy any chance of Syria
becoming a responsible actor on the international stage.
Obama's
willingness to sit on his thumbs for 14 months as Syrian President
Bashar Assad has killed as many as 15,000 of his countrymen owes in part
to Obama's desire to win the trust of the ayatollahs in Tehran. Since
Assad is Iran's client, any US move to overthrow him would weaken Iran.
And since as far as Obama is concerned Iran doesn't have anything
against the US, but simply suffers from a chronic lack of trust in
Washington, it would be wrong to harm Tehran's interests by overthrowing
the ayatollahs' Syrian lackey.
Obama's Syria
policy is not only a product of his fantasy-based policy towards Iran.
It is also a consequence of his fantasy-based policy towards Turkey.
Rather than intervene early in the conflict and support pro-Western
forces in Syria as an alternative to Assad's tyranny, Obama outsourced
the organization of the Syrian opposition to Turkey's Islamic Prime
Minister Recip Erdogan.
In Obama's fantasy
world, Erdogan is a great ally of the US. The fact that Erdogan has
redefined Turkey away from the West and towards Tehran and the Muslim
Brotherhood; rendered incoherent NATO's strategic mission; ended
Turkey's strategic alliance with Israel; used advanced US arms to kill
Kurdish civilians, and threatens war in the eastern Mediterranean over
natural gas deposits that do not belong to him is irrelevant. All that
matters is the fantasy that Erdogan is America's friend. And since Obama
embraces this fantasy, he subcontracted the formation of the Turkish
opposition to Erdogan.
Lo and behold, the
opposition Erdogan established was dominated by the Muslim Brotherhood.
And now, according to a report by Jacques Neriah from the Jerusalem
Center for Public Affairs, the Syrian opposition is dominated not only
by the Muslim Brotherhood, but increasingly by al-Qaida. So whereas a
year ago the US had an opportunity to build and shepherd into power a
multiethnic, pro-Western Syrian opposition, in the throes of his
fantasies about Iran and Turkey, Obama squandered the opportunity. As a
result, today we are faced with the grim reality that the world might be
safer leaving Assad alone than intervening to overthrow him.
THIS
BRINGS us back to Barak, and the Israeli establishment that cannot rid
itself of the notion that we need to give away the store to the
Palestinians to win the support of the "international community," that
is, to win Obama's support. But towards the Palestinians as well, Obama
has embraced fantasy over reality. This week the State Department had
the bureaucratic equivalent of an apoplectic fit when it learned that US
Sen. Mark Kirk inserted an amendment into the State Department funding
bill that will require the department to provide Congress with two
pieces of information: the number of Palestinians physically displaced
from their homes in what became Israel in 1948, and the number of their
descendants administered by the United Nations Relief Works Agency,
UNRWA.
The Palestinians claim that there are
some five million refugees. They demand that Israel allow all of them to
immigrate to its territory as part of a peace deal. UNRWA and the
Palestinians claim that not only are the Palestinians who left Israel in
1948 to be considered refugees, their descendants are also to be
considered refugees.
Estimates place the number of Palestinians alive today who were physically displaced from Israel at 30,000.
All
Kirk wants is the information. And for his effort to bring some facts
into the discourse about the Palestinian conflict with Israel, the State
Department came down on him like a wall of bricks. In a letter to the
Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Deputy Secretary of State Thomas
Nides wrote that Kirk's "proposed amendment would be viewed around the
world as the United States acting to prejudge and determine the outcome
of this sensitive issue."
As far as the State
Department is concerned, until the Palestinians and Israel reach an
agreement, the US must keep faith with the international community by
supporting a policy regarding Palestinian refugees that is both
factually absurd and deeply hostile to Israel.
This
policy is in perfect alignment with the US policy on Jerusalem. In late
March we learned that in the interests of not prejudging the outcome of
nonexistent negotiations between Israel and the Palestinians over
eastern Jerusalem, the US refuses to recognize Israeli sovereignty not
only over eastern Jerusalem, but over any part of Jerusalem. The fact
that Jerusalem is Israel's capital is of no interest. The fact that US
law requires the US government to recognize that Jerusalem is Israel's
capital and to locate the US Embassy in Jerusalem is irrelevant. To
appease the international community, the US won't even recognize Israeli
sovereignty over western Jerusalem.
So
according to Barak and his associates, to prevent Israel's isolation by
securing US support, Israel ought to ignore the lessons of the Lebanon
withdrawal, the phony peace process with the PLO, and the withdrawal
from Gaza and move full speed ahead with policies that will make it
impossible to defend the country.
As for the
US, to win the support of Europe, Iran and Turkey, Obama has adopted
policies that enable Iran to become a nuclear power, make Assad the most
attractive leader in Syria, empower the most anti-American forces in
Turkey and pressure Israel to renounce its right and ability to defend
itself.
Standing alone never looked so good.
Originally published in The Jerusalem Post.
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