"In
a time of universal deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary
act." George Orwell.
Several of Israel's most important
politicians experienced dyspepsia when Deputy Defense
Minister Danny Danon gave an
interview
in which he plainly stated that there is no majority in
Israel's government in support of the "two
state solution."
Danon indicated that Prime Minister Netanyahu's professed
support for the creation of a Palestinian state is for public
consumption only, as the Prime Minister knows the Palestinian
Authority will never agree to accept a demilitarized state, an
Israeli military presence in the Jordan Valley, Jerusalem as the
undivided capital of Israel, no right of return, or even
recognition of Israel as the Jewish
state.
Further, Danon explained that, in the unlikely event that a
tentative agreement with the Palestinian Authority is negotiated by
the Prime Minister, most of the government would vote to quash
it.
What audacity! How dare Danon expose the truth about the
futility of negotiating with the Palestinian
Authority?
Danon's coldly accurate statements caused the Prime
Minister's Office great consternation, so much so that it issued a
statement to the media to the effect that Danon was wrong about
Israel's official policy. Howls of outrage and
even demands that Danon be summarily
fired could be heard from the likes of Justice Minister Tzipi
Livni, Environmental Protection Minister Amir Peretz, and Knesset
Members Amram Mitzna , Nachman Shai and Isaac Herzog. Even the
sober-minded and realistic Defense Minister, Moshe
"Bogie" Yaalon,
was reportedly upset by
Danon's public comments.
What are the reasons for the
outrage?
For leftist ideologues like Livni and Peretz, it is because
Danon is so dismissive of the delusion to which they have been
clinging so desperately for years. His comments render them
irrelevant.
For the Prime Minister, such a blunt statement makes it
difficult to continue playing charades with those forces in the
international community, including the Obama Administration and the
European Union, that insist on pursuing a "peace process' that goes
nowhere. After all, Secretary of State John Kerry is
frenetically flying to and from the Middle East and pressing the
parties for the resumption of negotiations between Israel and the
Palestinian Authority, and clarifying that such efforts are wasted
might be seen as insulting to the imperious, sanctimonious Kerry.
So Prime MInister Netanyahu prefers the politically correct
lie that he is eager to negotiate with Mahmoud Abbas to the
uncomfortable truth that the "two state solution" is
dead.
The unalterable reality is that the conflict between
Israel and the Palestinian Arabs, which is more accurately described
as the one-sided and unremitting Arab war against Israel, is a
zero-sum game. a member of the Executive Board of the World
Likud, a member of Ariel University's International Board of
Governors.
HIstory teaches that Arab hostility is not the result of a
territorial dispute or the absence of a Palestinian state. If it
were, there would have been a peaceful resolution decades
ago.
Well-intentioned, determined political leaders throughout the
world have attempted to devise a rational method of dividing the
land for almost a century. The Arabs have violently rejected
every effort, including the Peel Commission recommendations of 1937,
the United Nations General Assembly Partition Plan of 1947, the
absurdly generous offer made by Prime Minister Ehud Barak which was
brokered by PresidentBill Clinton at Camp David in 2000, and
Prime
There was no obstacle to the establishment of a Palestinian
state between 1948 and 1967 when Jordan occupied Judea and Samaria
and Egypt occupied Gaza, but there was not even a thought of doing
so.
The reason, of course, is that the root of Arab hostility to
Israel is found in Islamic doctrine, which holds that Israel is
sitting on Islamic holy land. No Muslim can agree that even a
square meter of holy land can be held by an infidel Jewish state.
Israel is a painful bone in the Muslim throat that can never
be swallowed and digested.
Once this reality is accepted, Israel's leaders can adopt
rational policies that achieve peace through overwhelming military
strength. There will never be peace like the amity that exists
between the United States and Canada, but there can be peace in the
sense of security resulting from deterrence, i.e., a credible threat
to retaliate with crushing force to acts of war or terror against
Israel's Jewish citizens by neighboring Arabs. It is not
perfect, but it is preferable to the bloodshed and murder that
inevitably follow acts of appeasement.
Danny Danon should be commended for his political courage in
committing the "revolutionary act" of telling the simple truth.
It's time for other Israeli leaders, and American Jewish
leaders, to do the same. It won't be popular, and it carries
political risks, but it is necessary.
The writer is National Vice Chairman of the Zionist
Organization of America, member of the Executive Board of the World
Likud, member of Ariel University's International Board of Governors
and Vice President of Children of Jewish Holocaust Survivors, Los
Angeles. He practices law in Los
Angeles.
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