Into the fray: Stupid, seditious or suicidal?

When both reason, reality fail to impact on two-staters, Arab-appeasers, Muslim-mollifiers, perhaps all that remains is ridicule.
Dennis Ross [file photo]

    Talk sense to a fool and he calls you foolish.

    – Euripides

    During times of universal deceit, telling the truth becomes a revolutionary act.

    – George Orwell

I must admit to a growing sense of exasperation and impatience with the imbecility (or iniquity) of the Israeli Left and the impotence (or insincerity) of the Israeli Right. So if my frustration expresses itself more intemperately than usual – my apologies.

The crumbling edifice

But when confronted with such infuriating dogmatism on the one hand, and inept dereliction on the other, everyone has his limit when it comes to courtesy and decorum.

And there are indeed limits – a limit to how long one can extend the benefit of the doubt to those who insist on advancing a consistently failed policy and still continue to believe they are doing so in good faith.

Or a limit on continuing to believe that those who ostensibly oppose this policy, but refrain from offering any real alternative, are sincere in their opposition to it.

The entire edifice of conventional wisdom regarding the Arab-Israel conflict is collapsing. The bedrock upon which the traditional approaches to a resolution of Middle East hostilities are based is crumbling, the fabric of accepted thinking unraveling.

The folly of a deal on the Golan with the Assad regime, the absurdity of an agreement with the unelected Fatah regime, the myopia of reliance on the durability of the peace with Egypt are all becoming increasingly obvious.

Yet to judge from the public discourse on developments in the Middle East it seems that nothing has changed.

Refusal to recognize realities

As if living in an alternative universe, pundits prattle on about the importance of the preservation the peace agreement with Egypt – which, at best, was no more than a non-belligerence accord – apparently oblivious to the fact that it has become little more than a nostalgic figment of the past, totally discordant with the prevailing mood across the land of the Nile.

As this week’s rocket attacks indicate, Sinai will either become a hotbed of jihadist terror, which even the sturdiest of hi-tech fences with not impede for long, or it will be remilitarized. It might become both. For recent calls from Israel for Egypt to “exercise its sovereignty” to thwart such attacks constitute an invitation for the deployment of additional Egyptian troops in the demilitarized peninsula. Without such deployment Cairo can always claim it is incapable of combatting renegades forces that have taken control of much of the area.

However, given the less than amicable sentiments in Cairo toward Israel, it is in no way improbable that these reinforcements will have neither the resolve nor the inclination to reign in the activities of the anti- Israeli gangs. Or that they will be less than meticulous in preventing their own arms and equipment from falling into jihadist hands – whether via theft or mutually profitable trade.

The failure to control the terrorists will in all likelihood be followed by demands to increase Egyptian military capabilities in Sinai even more. Given the paramount importance ascribed to the dead-letter peace accord, these will doubtless be agreed to by Israel.

Clearly this process will lead to increasing erosion of the demilitarization of Sinai – the principal, arguably the only, benefit Israel derived from the 1979 peace treaty.

No Sinai, no peace, no demilitarization

Accordingly, it is far from implausible that soon Israel will face an openly hostile regime ensconced in Cairo, a significant and potentially belligerent military force deployed in Sinai, and active radical terrorist groups operating against its southern front – from Gaza to Eilat – either aided or unhindered by Egyptian regulars.

It would therefore be no more than self-evident prudence for Israeli strategic planners to adopt as their working assumption that the reality Israel will soon have to confront will be one of Three No’s: No Peace, No Sinai, No Demilitarization. Yet there seems little evidence that such dour realism is driving the agenda of the strategic discourse.

If anything, quite the opposite is true. It appears that the seismic shifts in the region have barely impacted the discussion concerning Israel’s policy options and imperatives.

Apparently impervious to the strategic significance of the tectonic changes that have swept through the region, figures who shape the debate seem welded to the past, clinging to the hopelessly unrealistic notions such as a two-state resolution of the Israel-Palestinian conflict, acceptance of Israel by the Arab world and the reconstitution of the Turco-Israeli alignment.

Only ridicule remains

The dogmatic intransigence of committed two-staters, Arab-appeasers and Muslim- mollifiers seems immutable by means of reason or rational argument. Unwilling to admit error – or even the possibility thereof – they appear incapable of bringing themselves to concede that their noxious brew of delusion and hubris has created a situation of mortal peril.

No matter how frequently the facts disprove their doctrinaire perspective, they never admit to it being discredited – stubbornly hoping against forlorn hope that somehow reality will eventually realize its mistake and see things their way.

It is becoming increasing difficult to avoid the conclusion that they are persisting in their proposal for a two-state solution and nearly unreserved accommodation of Arab demands, not because they think it is a formula that can provide a stable solution, but because they feel that if they admit it cannot, they will irreparably undermine their professional standing and personal prestige.

So if these folks can’t be reasoned out of their untenable positions, perhaps they can be ridiculed out of them by underscoring – brusquely – how ludicrous and unrealistic, how disingenuous and hypocritical, how counter-productive and self-obstructive their proposals are. Or alternatively how subversive and seditious they are.

For in light of the recurring failure of their prognoses, there are only two explanations for their obduracy – malice or idiocy. And whatever the truth is, it must be exposed.

Stupid or subversive?

Take for instance Dennis Ross’s latest “contribution” at this week’s Presidential Conference in Jerusalem – where he prescribed that Israel should not only undermine its security, but its economy as well, “to restore belief in a two-state solution.”

Predictably, Ross studiously disregarded the fact, once so compellingly conveyed by his host Shimon Peres, that “if a Palestinian state is established, it will be armed to the teeth. Within it there will be bases of the most extreme terrorist forces, who will be equipped with anti-tank and anti-aircraft shoulder-launched rockets, which will endanger not only random passersby, but also every airplane and helicopter taking off in the skies of Israel and every vehicle traveling along the major traffic routes in the Coastal Plain.”

Ross suggested that the first step Israel should take to demonstrate that it is serious about a Palestinian state in the “West Bank” is to publicly announce that the government will provide financial compensation to settlers who are prepared to leave their homes and to move to “Israel proper.”

Of course Ross, who today serves as a counselor for the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, and was a senior director in Barack Obama’s National Security Council, offered no assurances that what is sweeping through the Arab world would not sweep through “Palestine” or what occurred in Gaza would not occur in Ramallah. Nevertheless, he suggested that the government go ahead and plan not only to bring millions more Israelis within the range of weapons being used today from territory Israel ceded to the Palestinians, but it should take measures that would increase both the demand (and hence the price) of housing in country, and the unemployment. Stupid or subversive?

Validating population resettlement

Of course Ross’s proposal did have one positive element – it validated the notion of financing population relocation to achieve political ends.

For unless he subscribes to blatant double standards, how could he object to applying his suggested methodology to the Palestinians as well? After all, if there is nothing wrong with Israeli government financing voluntary resettlement of Jews to set up what is highly likely to be a failed, unsustainable micromini- state and a haven for Islamist terror, why should there be anything wrong with the Israeli government funding voluntary Palestinian resettlement to prevent the establishment of a what is highly likely to be a failed, unsustainable micro-mini state? Indeed, one might think that there are far more compelling reasons to pursue the later course than the former – especially for anyone mindful of the security of Israel and the safety of Israelis.

Dummy or dhimmi?

But Ross’s counsel on Turkey is if anything even more outrageous. Ross said that it was in Jerusalem’s long-term strategic interest to try to patch up the relationship, even at the cost of issuing an apology over the Mavi Marmara incident, as Ankara has demanded.

Quite apart from the fact that if any apology is forthcoming it should be from Ankara to Jerusalem, for allowing its citizens to create the violent confrontation with Israeli forces; quite apart from the fact that it is more than a little offensive to suggest that Israel should have to apologize for its soldiers’ use of deadly force to prevent themselves being disemboweled, the logic behind his suggestion is as impaired as the morality behind it.

Ross waxes delusional, stating: “Turkey and Israel have an enormous common stake in Syria. Is it difficult to make an apology? Yes, I don’t dismiss that. But how does that weigh against wider strategic interests you have in Syria and a region undergoing tremendous upheaval?” He goes on to claim that restoration of the relationship would have an impact on the whole region, and suggests imagining what a sobering affect this type of rapprochement would have on ascendantplayers such as the Muslim Brotherhood.

What planet does this guy inhabit? Can he really be unaware that Turkey has undergone a fundamental transformation, that it is no longer a Western-oriented secular state but a Islamic-oriented theocratic one, that its relations with Israel are a far more a function of what it has become, than of what Israel does – or doesn’t do.

Of course one might well wonder: If there are so many strategic interests in common between Turkey and Israel, why doesn’t Ross suggest that Ankara forgo its childish demand for an apology? Is that his “soft racism” of low expectations showing? Or is it the dhimmi in him that feels the need for submission to the Muslim demands? Or perhaps just the dummy?

Presidential perfidy?

And if we are still on the Presidential Conference, we need to ask a trenchant question: Can presidents be perfidious? For it would seem that there are elements of this conference that severely undermine the foreign policy of the elected government of Israel. Indeed it seems in some respects to seems to have out-“J”-ed J Street.

For whatever the motivations behind the invitation of individuals such Peter Beinart who publicly advocate BDS measures (albeit partial) against the products of the nation, it cannot but be interpreted internationally as presidential endorsement of the proposal.

Why otherwise extend the invitation to someone who not only undermines important elements of Israeli diplomacy but whose proposals have also been repudiated by far-left organizations – including J Street itself.

But this is not the only troubling element on the invitation list.

Noam and Norman next?

Among the invited speakers was also Saeb Erekat who openly advocates the “right of return” which in effect would end the existence of Israel as the Jewish nation-state and obviate the essence of the Zionist endeavor.

In December 2010, Erekat the wrote the following in the British Guardian: “Today, Palestinian refugees constitute more than 7 million people worldwide – 70% of the entire Palestinian population. Disregarding their legitimate legal rights enshrined in international law to return to their homeland, would certainly make any peace deal signed with Israel completely untenable.”

So one invitee advocates BDS; another the “right of return.” Who can we expect next?

Noam Chomsky and Norman Finkelstein?

Imbecility and impotence

A grim picture indeed.

But perhaps the only thing more distressing than the imbecility of the Israeli Left is the impotence of the Israel Right, for not effectively combatting this lunacy; for in effect being guilty of totally unwarranted intellectual surrender; for in fact adopting the policy of their political rivals – not because their previous criticisms proved wrong but despite them being proved right.

www.martinsherman.net

June 22, 2012 | 11 Comments »

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11 Comments / 11 Comments

  1. And quietly and steadily there are now between 680,000 Jews to 720,000 Jews beyond the Green Line. All the perpetual talk of peace with a non-existent partner has all but dissolved. Jews in Yesha continue to go about their lives. Sometimes we are forced to wonder how are they going to dismantle five apartment buildings in Beit El which are part of an integrated 14 apartment building complex. No other country in human history has ever had to answer such a ridiculous question. I think I will know that Mashiach will be here not when the idiots like Dennis Ross stop talking but when they stop receiving a paycheck. I have come to the conclusion that even in the Messianic Era there will still be idiots.

  2. What a thoughtful comment and a truly enlightened idea of starting an independent advocacy organization. Maybe it could form an alliance with the Emergency Committee for Israel?

  3. We need to focus on Islam education. The Allies used force to stop Nazi hate teachings in Germany. Israel must use military force to stop Arab hate teachings. Boots on the ground to stop evil teachings in areas where Israeli boots can walk. Protests to the UN for other regions. Nonstop protests.

  4. “…the first step Israel should take to demonstrate that it is serious about a Palestinian state in the “West Bank….” Because the Israeli govt has continually led the world to believe that it is “serious about a palestinian state in the west bank” the world now operates on the basis that it is a given. What should have been said, over and over at every statement to the contrary, is that the west bank belongs to the Jews and to legally demand that the UN charter, and its precedents, mandate the facilitation of settlement of the west bank by jews of the world. Furthermore, that settlement is not related to sovereignty and therefore “prejudicing negotitations” as an excuse is irrelevant. Israel has brought this on itself by employing subterfuge and tricks. However, thei paradigm can be shifted by stating that all agreements and statements to the contrary were made under the duress of the 2000 year holocaust of the europeans, the almost century long modern arab slaughter, the ethnic cleansing of jews from arab lands and the perpetual swindiling of jews from their historical lands and that agreements made under duress are not legally binding. They are also not morally binding because a victim will say anything to survive. At this point harm is being done because the jewish position has become unknown not only to the world but to jews who are denied a factual education even in their own nation just as they are denied religious freedom in the homeland of the Jews. Israeli leadership has become a set of pompous, pontificating arrogants who purport to know what is best for the children they lead, rather than represent. Deals are made to give away Israels patrimony behind closed doors by traitors who do not possess that right. The entire population must be involved. the diaspora jews also have a right in that Israel operates as the representative of all Jews and has abrogated its duty by preventing the fulfillment of the still legally binding mandates to encourage the settlement of jews west of the jordan. Why did not anyone, from the right, ask dennis ross why he thought it was ok to obstruct rather than encourage that right which is embodied in the UN charter and the US as signatory to san remo treaty is a guarantor. In fact I never hear anyone on the right bring that into the face of all those officials who are operating as if the jews do not have that right. Frankly, the right wing appears pathetic and unable even to tell a factual story, evidenced in writing in legally binding agreements, to its own nation or to the world. Jews will have to wait and hope that the left will one day carry the banner of settlement because they will be able to sell their narrative.

  5. To Mr Sherman – I have long admired your columns.

    Years ago I used to say, Yes, of course, he’s so right, why can’t everyone, including the government, agree with his logical arguments.

    But with time my reaction to columns such as yours has evolved.

    Now I say, Why do they still think that flawed thinking is to blame for disastrous policies? It’s obvious that there are other factors at work motivating their decisions.

    Your politicians don’t need more persuasive arguments. Too much time and land have been lost already. And there’s a constant erosion of Jewish rights on the land.

    What they need is to understand that it’s in their best interests as politicians to listen to the majority of Israelis (instead of a tiny elite or bullying foreign powers) and to act accordingly.

    Don’t appeal to their principles. They don’t have many. Appeal to their own political interests.

    That’s why I urge Mr Sherman and all those who share his ideas to become part of an organization – not a political party – but an independent advocacy organization to attract the best thinkers and the best activists in Israel to propose and advance clear solutions.

    It needs to be a large unified front. Lone activists are too vulnerable to intimidation.

    Ideally this organization should involve all kinds of rational Israeli Jews. But there does not seem to be a unifying theme in Israel.

    That’s why the most likely birthplace for this organization should be Yesha.

    They have been dealing with uncertainty, terror, and Arab encroachment on a daily basis.

    Getting an organization off the ground is hard work. There are lots of young people who would gladly donate their talents, time and effort into the building of this organization. Mr Sherman and other intellectual leaders could provide their experience, their guidance, and their integrity.

    Even if you start small, this organization could become a source of inspiration and mobilize hundreds of thousands of patriotic Israelis.

    The minority ruling elite counts on Jewish division, defeatism, hopelessness, and confusion in order to implement their suicidal agenda.

    That has to stop.

  6. Kissing Turkey’s smelly butt:

    Jewish Israel has always been pathetically desperate for muslim “allies”. Turkey, when it was controlled by its “non-religious” military, was neutral, if not slightly friendly, towards Jewish Israel. So Jewish Israel gave Turkey a free pass for its genocide of the (Orthodox) christian Armenians (which (catholic) christian Hitler cited as a role model to him).

    But more amazing is the whitewashing and free pass given Turkey for its treatment of the Greek Orthodox Cypriots. They constitute 80% of the population of Cyprus. Turkish muslims form the other 20%. In 1974, the Greek Cypriots wanted to unite Cyprus with Greece. The Turkish military (the ones Jewish Israel loves so much) invaded Cyprus. They conquered northern Cyprus (40% of the total land)(i.e, imperialism), ethnically cleansed all the Greek Orthodox living there (at least 150,000 people), colonized it with mainland muslim Turks, and proclaimed northern Cyprus to be an independent (muslim) state. They set up a barrier between muslim north Cyprus and christian south Cyprus, as well as a wall across the capital city Nicosia (i.e., an apartheid fence).

    This situation has now been in effect for 38 years. You constantly hear about Jewish Israel as an imperialistic, colonialist, apartheid state. Do you ever hear the same about muslim Turkey? Muslim Turkey recently tried to send ships to Gaza to help the muslim arabs in Gaza kill more Jewish Israelis. The muslim Turks tried to kill Israeli sailors who boarded the ships. Of course, the Jews were branded as “international war criminals” for defending themselves, while there was no mention of Turkish provocation.

    Sooner or later, Jewish Israel will have a major war with the muslim Turks over the natural gas fields in the Mediterranean. Israel is now allying itself with the Greek Cypriots and the (muslim) Kurds against the Turks. And when alawite Syria falls to the sunnis, Russia and Israel may well draw closer (depending on Obama).