T. Belman. In discussing the Arab-Israeli conflict, Kedar left out the possibility of replacing King Abdullah who is an obstructionist, with Mudar. Once he is replaced by Mudar, the Confederation everyone is talking about is between Arab Jordan and Jewish Israel. Confedereation is too strong a word. Probably partnership is much better. It will be an economic and security partnership.
Three wars, at the very least, are raging in the Middle East, and Israel will get fallout from all of them.
Wars are raging in various parts of the Middle East, although there is a tendency not to call the conflicts by that name because of the fear conjured up by the word.
One conflagration is the war Iran is waging against those – headed by Israel – who stand in the way of its plans to take over the entire Middle East.
Another is the Assad regime’s war to take back control of the entire country, and a third is the PLO’s battle for survival.
Much has been written about the first of these wars, and reports have claimed that from early 2017 on, Israel has launched over 200 attacks in Syria, mainly at targets connected to Iran.
Two points should be emphasized:
1. Israel has been battling the Iran-Syria-Hezbollah coalition from the air for several years, with almost no reaction from the other side. There are various reasons for this low level response, among them the internal Syrian war, Israel’s technological superiority, fears of the coalition ending up in a war with Israel with its forces at a disadvantage, as well as Iran’s shaky economic and governmental situation.
2. My feeling is that the day the coalition decides to surprise Israel and take all out revenge for its attacks is not far off. Israel must be prepared for an Iranian-Syrian-Hezbollah reaction at the time and place that coalition feels Israel least expects it. My wild guess is next week on Tuesday, September 11th, the second day of the Jewish New Year holiday. Why? Because that is Assad’s birthday and his army officers will want to give him a special present.
If that sounds hallucinatory, may I remind you that the Yom Kippur War did not start on Judaism’s holiest day because the Arabs noticed its occurrence, but because it was Hafez el-Assad’s birthday and his army officers decided that the Golan Heights made a nice birthday gift. He had lost the region in the June 1967 Six Day War, when he was serving as Syria’s Defense Minister and Commander of its air force. This is a wild guess, as I said, but remember, the author of the biblical book of Proverbs (see Chap. 28) wrote: “Lucky is the man who is always afraid.”
I figure Iran is about to implode economically because of the financial paralysis brought on by the US sanctions. Even Japanese corporations are limiting their activities in Iran to a mere fraction of what they were. The distance from economic collapse to regime collapse is very short, and my heart tells me that every one of the Iranian leaders has already planned his escape route and the country which will let him in on the day when the millions of unemployed, persecuted, humiliated and above all, hungry Iranians burst out in the streets with knives in their hands aimed at the necks of anyone who is part of the regime.
At that point, Iran’s army will return home from Syria, Yemen and Iraq to protect the regime and its leaders. The entire Middle East will go out to dance in the streets.
The Battle of Idlib
Idlib and its environs are going to be attacked by Syrian, Russian, Iranian and Hezbollah forces in the near future. Estimates of how many civilians will pay for this attack with their lives run from thousands to hundreds of thousands,depending on the type of bombs Russia uses and the chemical weapons the Syrian forces have at their disposal. Most of the pundits discussing the issue ignored the role of Turkey whose borders are a short distance away. Will Sunni Islamist Turkey and its Islamist leader be able to sit on the sidelines while Sunni Muslims are being slaughtered?
Armed intervention will put Erdogan in direct conflict with Putin, so it is more probable that Turkey will simply open a secure escape route from Idlib to Turkey for fleeing residents. Chances are that Putin and even Assad will turn a blind eye, because it will show that Assad rules the entire country and enable him to fill the empty spaces with Shiites from Iraq, Iran and Afghanistan.
The Battle of Ramallah
The idea of a Palestinian State is on its deathbed, now that it has been mortally wounded by attacks from every direction. First to attack was Hamas, which divided the Palestinian Authority into two parts back in 2007 and has no intention of giving up its precious terror tunnels and weapons for the sake of someone suspected of security and intelligence cooperation with Israel.
Now America has joined the realist camp that understands that any Palestinian State will soon become a Hamas state, this time in Judea and Samaria. That can come about through elections like the ones that were held in 2008 and gave Hamas a majority in the Palestinian Legislative Council, or through a violent conflict on the lines of the 2007 takeover of Gaza by Hamas.
The US has also decided to stop giving artificial respiration to the two main pillars of the Palestinian Idea:
a. Palestinian-Arab-Islamic control of Jerusalem, cutting it off from Israel
b. Flooding the Jewish state with millions of so-called Arab “refugees” whose status is being preserved by UNRWA until that hoped-for day arrives.
Trump realized what Israel has known for a long time and decided to burst those two terrorist bubbles. He recognized Jerusalem as Israel’s capital, moved the Embassy to the Holy City and decided to stop funding the “refugees” that the Arabs have forced the world to keep on ice for the last 70 years.
Mahmoud Abbas understands the mortal blow sustained by the false PLO narrative upon which he built the future of the invented “Palestinian nation,” realizing that without Jerusalem and “refugees” there is nothing left of that narrative. The collapse of the Palestinian narrative made room for other options, such as a Jordanian-Palestinian federation or confederation. The Jordanian king is not terribly keen to have the PLO in his midst, however, still remembering how his father was forced to fight them to the death in 1970,
The PLO and Abbas, left stranded in the ruins of the house of cards they built, do not see any reason to talk to the US government, Israel or even Hamas, which already has its own 11 year old Islamic state. Since many PLO members realize what has happened, they are forming independent armed militias, as the Arab world is fond of doing.
In the Arab world, if you cannot convince your rival through negotiations, you “convince” him by having him look down the barrel of your Kalashnikov.
According to recent reports, Palestinian leaders – Jibril Rajoub, Mahmoud Elalul, Toufik Tirawi and Maj’ad Farej – are collecting weapons, bullets and fighters, in order to take over the PA institutions once Abbas is gone for good. It seems that all the talk of a “Palestinian People” was a pipe dream of politicians and academics in Israel and other places, who know less than nothing about how the Middle East works and think it is an extension of Europe or the US.
It seems that Arabs who live west of the Jordan are not very different from those who live all over the Middle East. The tendency to break up into warring groups, the avoidance of taking responsibility for failure, the penchant for blaming someone else for failure, lack of flexibility in thought and politics, calling the other side traitor or heretic and resort to live weapons whenever negotiations are stuck – all these characterize the Middle Eastern Arab culture as well as the Arabs west of the Jordan.
It is important to remember that the PA has several security organizations attached to it, who will probably join the militias. They will face off against the other militias, including the one Hamas has established secretly in Judea and Samaria without anyone being the wiser.
In order to prevent a descent to violence (which Israel will be blamed for no matter what) Israel must take a few preemptive steps:
The first and most crucial is to disarm the PA by means of drying up its sources of funds, transferring all authority to the heads of clans in each and every city.
The second step is to take away all the arms in the hands of the PA security forces, weapons which will be turned against the other militias and the IDF (which wil be accused of collaborating with the other militias).
The third step is to find all the active members – or to be more accurate, terrorists – belonging to Hamas, Islamic Jihad, the Democratic Front, the Popular Front, ISIS and every other terrorist organization and alien ideology adopted by a few fanatics. This will purge the region from the jihadist and nationalist ideology which has as its standard the destruction of Israel in every possible way.
The fourth step, as I have said here in the past, is establishing emirates in the Arab cities of Judea and Samaria.
A happy new year to all
Dr. Mordechai Kedar is a senior lecturer in the Department of Arabic at Bar-Ilan University. He served in IDF Military Intelligence for 25 years, specializing in Arab political discourse, Arab mass media, Islamic groups and the Syrian domestic arena. Thoroughly familiar with Arab media in real time, he is frequently interviewed on the various news programs in Israel.
The below is possible to happen (this not what I would plan if I were Prime Minister).
Abbas dies, the PA dissolves and fighting takes place in the PA areas lead by various Fatah gang leaders to trying to take power and Hamas also gets involved in the fighting.
The IDF closes off the PA cities and where it can it takes the weapons and arrests terrorists. It is possible that Israel makes deals with various clan leaders to manage internally a PA city or two. Sounds similar to what Kedar wrote, no? Yes this is possible especially while Bibi is Prime Minister because remember he is the number one proponent of the status quo and if the PA dissolves or breaks into parts he will not look to annex large Arab population centers. He will not want to manage these areas either, if possible. So if they can be controlled with deals with a local Arab leader plus the IDF control of mostly the perimeter plus raids seizing weapons and terrorist gunmen this is likely what he will do.
The EU may squawk but what can they actually do.
Hopefully if this does occur Bibi will apply Israeli civil law to all Jewish Towns in Area C plus the Jordan Valley.
The question will remain what to do about the Arabs in Area C. If Ted, is correct they will be foreign resident Jordanians. That part is in Teds’ forecast Not mine. If Ted is not correct, I believe Israel will need to revert to the 1950s solution of martial law for the Arab populated areas including Arab villages in Area C.
Ben Gurion said it matters what the Jews do and not what the Goyim say. According to Adam that is reversed!
@ adamdalgliesh:
The “International legitimacy” is not worth a handful of the straw that Pharaoh deprived the brick-making Hebrews of. Every time it’s mentioned, in every publication I’ve seen, the mention of “The State of Palestine” is always appended a disclaimer that specifies that it is purely symbolic.
If Israel finds a reason that satisfies it, they can disarm the PA police the same way that they make raids at will into YESHA after terrorists. Apart from the usual knee-jerk outcry which falls on deaf Jewish ears, no international repercussions should follow.. There would be no justification, because Israel acts in self defence.
Besides, Trump has very effectively sidelined the “Palestine” nonsense very matter-of-factly into semi obscurity, and the world has moved on to far ore important things.
@ adamdalgliesh:
You have no idea what is going on or what the Jordan Option is or what plan Trump has in mind. Trump has rendered the UN and the EU powerless. Evan Iran has shut its mouth. It no longer calls for the death of the Big Satan or the Little Satan.
@ adamdalgliesh:
I am the only commentator that knows what is going on. I talk with Mudar daily and know whereof I speak.
Kedar’s ideas are just as unrealistic as Ted’s. The Western powers and Russia would never allow Israel to occupy Judea-Samaria and disarm the “State of Palestine” and all the other armed Palestinian organizations. Nor will the “international community” ever accept the ’emirates” idea. The “State of Palestine” has already received too much international legitimacy for the world’s great powers to accept any other “solution.” Israel’s only option is to exercise guile and patience, until a) it can demonstrate that its very survival requires it to fully reoccupy Judea and Samaria, or b) the PLO actually asks Israel to intervene (which they have publicly “threatened” to do on more than one occasion). In either of these two situations, the “international community” will grudgingly tolerate Israeli intervention.
Again, Ted, you are the only commentator on Jordan affairs who takes Mudar seriously. There is no evidence that he has any significant support in Jordan. I wish you would concentrate on realistic projects to help Israel survive rather than being obsessed with a fantasy. In general, the problem with the Israeli “Right” is that it lives in a world of fantasies and dreams (each right-wing thinker has his/her own dream), and leaves realistic efforts to achieve results to the ill-intention