
Avoiding Israel's self-destruction
Old-guard military establishment types in the Jewish State are openly calling for a civil war
By Caroline B. Glick
In his testimony before the Knesset's Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee Tuesday, Shin Bet director Avi Dichter described some short-term threats inherent in carrying out Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's plan to pull the IDF out of the Gaza Strip and northern Samaria. "In a situation where Israel is not in control of the Philadelphi corridor [which separates Gaza from the Sinai Peninsula]," Dichter warned,"terrorists arriving from Lebanon are liable to infiltrate through it into the Gaza Strip and there is the distinct possibility that in a short while the Gaza Strip will turn into south Lebanon."
Dichter also cautioned that the current "trickle" of
arms smuggling through the corridor is liable to turn into a
"river." As to northern Samaria, Dichter said that
"Samaria is an area with terrorist potential that already
proved itself in the past. Therefore nothing should surprise us.
If we evacuate the area and turn it into Area A, under complete
Palestinian security control, we are liable to get an area there
that operates by the Gaza model."
Dichter presented us with real cause for concern over Sharon's
plan, but his analysis was far from exhaustive. He limited his
remarks solely to the realm of terrorist warfare. Since the 1967
Six Day War, the view of the leaders of the IDF's General Staff
has been that in a conventional war with Egypt and Jordan
participating, Palestinian forces can wreak havoc on Israel's
lines of communications moving from west to east and north to
south. As a result, until 1993, the view of Israel's defense
establishment had always been that from a strategic perspective,
the establishment of a Palestinian state in the territories
constituted too great a threat to Israel's national security to
be an acceptable option.
This week the International Atomic Energy Agency reported that
Egypt has been secretly advancing a nuclear armament program.
Apparently aided by Pakistani nuclear scientist A.Q. Khan, Egypt
reportedly was experimenting with uranium as recently as last
year. Then, too, two months ago the IAEA found plutonium
particles near an Egyptian nuclear facility. A nuclear-armed
Egypt would no doubt feel much more comfortable opening
conventional hostilities against Israel, which, given an Egyptian
nuclear threat, would be hard-pressed to use its own
nonconventional arsenal to deter an Egyptian offensive.
Dichter also did not speak of the demographic threat that a
Palestinian state would constitute to Israel. The reason we are
given by Sharon and his underlings and allies for the withdrawal
from Gaza and northern Samaria, and, as Deputy Prime Minister
Ehud Olmert told The Jerusalem Post recently, for further
withdrawals from Judea and the rest of Samaria in the near future,
is demography. The Palestinians, we are told, are so numerous
that if we don't give them a state they will overwhelm Israel and
either turn the country into a racist regime where a Jewish
minority controls an Arab majority or Israel will cease to be a
Jewish state altogether. That is, we are told, the choice is
among a democratic Jewish Israel, a theocratic, racist Israel or
a non-Jewish democracy.
There are three main problems with this view. First, it makes no
sense numerically. During the decade since the establishment of
the Palestinian Authority, the number of Jews in Israel rose by
around one million. The Arab population in Israel has also grown
significantly so that Arab citizens of Israel still make up
roughly 20 percent of the population. Additionally, the
Palestinian population has risen significantly, mainly as a
result of the thousands of foreign Arabs who entered the areas
with the PLO. If past experience is a guidepost for future
developments, it is reasonable to assume that the number of Arabs,
like the number of Jews, will continue to grow significantly
after the establishment of a Palestinian state in the territories.
The demographic argument, therefore, is not about numbers but
about intentions. The view is that if a Palestinian state is
established, Arabs will no longer wish to overrun Israel and
create a "one-state solution," happy as they will be to
live under their own leaders.
Yet this assumption ignores what the Palestinian leadership is
telling us will happen. In his recent jaunt through Syria and
Lebanon, PLO chairman and soon to be "elected" PA
chairman Mahmoud Abbas vowed that there will be no peace until
millions of foreign Arabs (referred to as "Palestinian
refugees"), who have been forced to live in UN internment
camps (referred to as "refugee camps") for the past 56
years, are allowed to move to Israel. US President George W. Bush
announced last April that the US would not support a Palestinian
demand to have these people enter into Israel as part of a peace
deal. So we can assume relatively safely that in the initial
period of statehood, these Arabs in Lebanon, Syria and elsewhere
will instead move to the Palestinian state.
The question is: What will they do there? The PA has received
more foreign aid per capita in constant dollars over the past
decade from the international community than Western European
citizens received in the Marshall Plan, and yet the Palestinian
economy is in far worse condition by every indicator than it was
before the Oslo process was instigated. Yasser Arafat and his
minions, who now surround Abbas, systematically stole, diverted
and misappropriated some $6.5 billion in international aid. This
impoverishment of the Palestinians was done by design. The
purpose was to cultivate rage and extremism throughout
Palestinian society as Arafat and his minions like Abbas
understood that a happy, prosperous populace does not extol the
virtues of suicide bombing to its children.
Given Abbas's statements in recent days and weeks in praise of
terrorism and in condemnation of "the Zionist enemy,"
as well as his deep involvement in Palestinian corruption and
terror financing, it strains credulity to believe that he will
oversee a process of reform over PA budgets and militias. Rather,
it is safe to assume that, under his leadership, Palestinian
society will continue to be characterized by destitution and rage.
If this situation is further exacerbated by the entry of millions of destitute Arab immigrants into the rump Palestinian state, what does Israel think will happen? Since Abbas, and the rest of the PA leadership, not to mention Hamas and Islamic Jihad, have all proclaimed consistently that their demand is for these Arabs to move to Israel, can there be any doubt that they will point to their economic desolation and blame it on Israel's "obstinate refusal" to allow these hostile foreigners to live inside its borders? And what does our leadership think that Europe's response to this demand will be, given the European view, passively supported by the US, that the current terror war is Israel's fault?
The public debate regarding the soundness of Sharon's withdrawal
and expulsion plan has been completely silent on these issues.
Indeed, Dichter's remarks about the specter of a massive
escalation in the terror threat to Israel received but a yawn, as
it was discounted as an "alarmist, gloom-and-doom scenario"
by the major newspapers and broadcast media.
The only issue that interests the Israeli media today is the
threat manifested by a tiny number of Israeli opponents to Sharon's
withdrawal and expulsion plan (Dichter placed it as a few dozen),
who may use violence against soldiers sent to throw them out of
their homes and communities in Gaza and northern Samaria.
In Wednesday's papers covering Dichter's remarks at the Knesset,
his statements about the threat of increased terrorism after the
withdrawal plan received less than one hundred words of coverage
in both Ma'ariv and Yediot Ahronot. At the same time, both papers
devoted five pages, including their cover pages, to the issue of
Israeli opponents to the pullout plan.
On the radio and television, there has been saturation coverage
of the prospect that thousands of soldiers may refuse to
participate in the expulsion of Jews from their homes, while the
strategic implications of the program have been systematically
ignored by everyone. Major cultural icons like Yair Lapid have
demonized the settlers, extolling the virtues of a civil war.
Lapid argues that such a war would not be a war between brothers
because, as far as he's concerned, anyone who wants to stay in
Gaza, Judea and Samaria and opposes the establishment of a
Palestinian state is no longer to be considered a "real"
Israeli and hence is no longer part of the family.
Old-guard military establishment types like Labor MK and (res.)
Brig.-Gen. Ephraim Sneh are openly calling for a civil war. In an
opinion column published in Ma'ariv two weeks ago, Sneh wrote,
"85 years after its establishment, the United States of
America was drawn into a cruel and destructive civil war, but the
results of that war formed the democratic character of the giant
country. The confrontation among [Israelis] is also unpreventable."
Totally ignoring the threats emanating from Palestinian society
today and those likely to arise in the coming months and years,
Sneh wrote, "Even if the confrontation will be bloody, the
toll will be minuscule in comparison to the blood and sacrifice
that more decades of conflict with the Palestinians will extract
from us."
If we can be brought to believe that the dangers that Sharon's
plans manifest relate only to the pesky, overwhelmingly religious
Israelis who live in the areas he wishes to empty of Jews, rather
than to the country as a whole, then there can be little doubt
that there will be bloody confrontations (provoked mainly by the
Left) between Jew and Jew. On the other hand, if we are willing
to recognize that the dangers inherent in his plans relate to the
entire state, then not only would such internecine violence be
consummately avoidable, we would also be able to craft policies
that would ensure the well being and security of Israeli society
as a whole for decades to come.
Courtesey of: Jewish World Review