By Martin Sherman, IISS
Wilf seems oblivious to “pesky details” such as the murderous terror unleashed by the Palestinians, their Judeophobic indoctrination and Judeocidal incitement, as “grand obstacles to peace”
Hear this, O foolish and senseless people, who have eyes, but see not, who have ears, but hear not – Jeremiah 5:21
There Are None So Blind As Those Who Will Not See – traced to John Heywood (1497 – c. 1580)
Fair-minded, rational human beings might surely been excused for believing that the “jury is no longer out” on the land-for-peace doctrine and its “two-state” corollary.
A desperate & dogged obsession
After all, by any conceivable criterion, the endeavor to implement them, beginning over a quarter-century ago with the ill-conceived—and hence, ill-fated—Oslo Accords have proved a tragic and traumatic failure—precipitating all the perils its opponents warned of, but none of the promised pay-offs it proponents pledged.
Yet, despite the fatal fiasco that two-statism has proven, many of its proponents, impervious to both reason and bitter experience, refuse to admit error—clinging to their credo with a desperate and dogged obsession, reminiscent of the most devout religious radicals.
Even when compelled to admit the calamitous consequences that the quest of their cherished goal has wrought, they resist any thought of renouncing further pursuit of it—as if its eventual attainment was some divinely ordained inevitability. Rather than raise doubts as to the prudence of further efforts to attain their goal, they embark on concocting new ways of achieving it—prepared only to concede that the methods of its pursuit were flawed, at times even resorting to the very ideas they previously rejected as unacceptably detrimental!
A perverse diagnosis
A glaring illustration of this unfortunate phenomenon appeared recently in the well-known publication, “The Atlantic”—where apparently political correctness, rather than sound augmentation, is the overriding criterion for publication. This was an opinion piece written by a long-standing two-stater, Einat Wilf, a former MK for the Labor Party (2010–2011), and later (2011–2013) for the now defunct Independence Party, founded by ex-Defense Minister, Ehud Barak—whom she followed into political oblivion in 2012.
In the article, entitled, “The Fatal Flaw That Doomed the Oslo Accords: The very feature of the agreement that was supposed to ensure its success was its undoing”, Wilf admits: “In retrospect, the Accords seem less a triumph than an abject failure”. However, rather than admit that the problem was the very attempt to foist statehood on the Palestinian-Arabs itself, she embarks on an endeavor to identify flaws in the methodology used to do so.
Somewhat perversely, she diagnoses the cause of Oslo’s failure as precisely the features which made Oslo possible in the first place: “Constructive Ambiguity”.
The “Constructive” culprit
Thus, Wilf writes: “What doomed the Oslo Accords is also what made them possible in the first place: constructive ambiguity”.
She then goes on to explain the concept of “Constructive Ambiguity”: “Given decades of war and bloodshed, the theory went, the two sides could not be expected to immediately settle their core disputes; an interim period of trust-building was required. It was better to remain ambiguous about the core issues which needed to be resolved, the negotiators assumed, rather than force the sides to adopt positions and make concessions which they might not be ready to make.”
This, according to Wilf, was both the factor that facilitated Oslo and caused it to fail: “This constructive ambiguity, imbued in each element of the Accords, proved to be utterly destructive”—leaving the rational reader to conclude that, if what made Oslo possible also caused is failure, then surely, it was never feasible in the first place! For, according to Wilf, Oslo, the flagship endeavor of two-statism, was either doomed to failure—or never to exist. Or am I missing something here?
A staggering contention
Condemning “constructive ambiguity”, Wilf writes: “Instead of building trust and allowing the parties to adjust to the reality of the inevitable compromises which were necessary for peace, it merely allowed each side to persist in its own self-serving interpretation of what the Accords implied and to continue the very behavior which destroyed trust on the other side. And so, when the time came, a few short years later, to settle the core issues, the ensuing failure was all but inevitable.”
In many ways this is staggering contention, underscoring the obtuse arrogance of obsessive two-statism.
Indeed, one can only wonder which clauses of the Oslo Accords Wilf feels prompted the Palestinians “own self-serving interpretation of what the Accords implied” to mean that they were somehow entitled to engage in wholesale carnage of Israeli civilians in cafes, buses, and streets—an “inconvenient fact” totally absent in Wilf’s analysis of why “trust was destroyed”.
No less astonishing is Wilf’s brazen assessment of what compromises are “inevitable”—highlighting the haughty belief by two-staters of the indisputable axiomatic truth of their oft disproven, but ne’er discarded, political prescription.
“Inevitable” parameters for peace?
Wilf details what she deems the inevitable “parameters of a peace agreement between Israel and the Palestinians” as follows: “a Palestinian state in the West Bank and Gaza, Jewish Jerusalem as the capital of Israel, Arab Jerusalem as the capital of Palestine, and a special arrangement in the Holy Basin to secure freedom of worship for all; annexation of major Jewish settlement blocs adjacent to the Green Line in exchange for swaps of equivalent land; removal of all other settlements from the West Bank; and enabling Palestinians living in Jordan, Syria, and Lebanon, to settle into a new State of Palestine—not into Israel”.
So there you have it—Wilf’s “inevitable” prescription for peace: Divide Israel’s capital; allow armed Arab militias to deploy within mortar range of the nation’s parliament and other institutions of government; remove tens of thousands of Jewish communities, and their residents, while retaining others in exchange for unspecified—and unspecifiable—land swaps involving territory within pre-1967 lines; and open up the envisaged Palestinian state to inundation by millions of “refugees” from neighboring Arab countries—all this after the Palestinians have shown themselves to be spectacularly incapable of managing their own affairs—even without a “tsunami” of largely impoverished newcomers.
What could possibly go wrong??
The snake-oil of “specificity”
As an alleged antidote to ruinous “ambiguity”, Wilf suggests replacing it with “specificity”. She writes: “In place of destructive ambiguity, we need constructive specificity. Serious peacemakers need to let go of vague and nebulous concepts such as ‘trust’ and ‘confidence building’, and…spell out every detail”.
So instead of delaying agreement on intractable core issues for later resolution, Wilf proposes resolving them immediately—i.e. Israel should agree, posthaste, to Palestinian demands for the physical establishment of a Palestinian state, the physical division of Jerusalem, the physical demolition of Jewish communities, and the physical influx of potentially hostile hordes into the territory abutting and overlooking Israel’s coastal megatropolis—all this in exchange for an ephemeral pledge by the Palestinian-Arabs not to covet any territory across the pre-1967 lines–a pledge they are clearly unable/unwilling to make, and even if made, would be of highly dubious credibility.
Accordingly, translated into plain English, Wilf’s proposal is indistinguishable from saying that the sides should agree on what they disagree so that they can agree. Gee! What a splendid idea.
Seen in this light, “specificity” is clearly little more than “snake-oil”.
“Ariel too deep to be included…”
A brief perusal of Wilf’s other writings immediately underscores just how much she is willing to capitulate to Palestinian demands; what she has in mind when she refers to “annexation of major Jewish settlement blocs”; and what fate she envisages for Jews not included in those blocs.
Thus for example, she is unambiguously clear about excluding Ariel—a city of 20,000 residents and home to a fully-fledged university with over 10,000 students, both Jews and Arabs—from any major settlement bloc.
In 2016, she wrote: “The eastern border must be based on the required minimum to allow a significant number of settlers to join Israel, but no more than necessary. We must give up Ariel…”
In a later 2017 article, entitled “Constructive ambiguity has not worked. Peace needs constructive specificity”, she reaffirms this with unequivocal specificity: “I propose that the main blocs, except Ariel, should be part of Israel. Ariel goes too deep into the West Bank to be included”.
As for another large Jewish community, east of Jerusalem, Ma’ale Adumim, with almost 40,000 residents, she stipulates: “I propose that Ma’ale Adumim…be connected to Israel only with a road.”
Specifying abandonment of Jewish communities
By this, Wilf clearly negates the annexation of Area E1 on Jerusalem’s eastern flank, which connects Ma’ale Adumin to the capital. The significance of this is to potentially isolate Ma’ale Adumin from Israel, with its only lifeline being a tenuous road through Palestinian-controlled territory, which could be disrupted and severed at will, leaving its 40,000 residents, stranded, at the tender mercies of their frequently less-than-amicable neighbors.
What could possibly go wrong? Or have I said that before?
As for the fate of her countrymen not included in her designated (sans-Ariel) blocs, Wilf is again unabashedly specific, prescribing that they should be abandoned: “The “no” to the settlements must be unambiguous. There is no need to evacuate them, and there is no need for a compensation plan for those who leave. The settlements beyond the border should be left to wither economically and be deprived of support”.
Doesn’t get much more specific than that!
Wilf seems to apportion equal blame to Israel and the Palestinians for the failure of the Oslo endeavor: “These two grand obstacles to peace—Israeli settlements and the Right of Return—each representing a form of territorial maximalism and the ideological negation of the other people’s right to self-determination in the land, grew ever larger under the umbrella of constructive ambiguity.”
Oblivious to “pesky details”
Oddly, Wilf seems totally oblivious to “pesky details”, such as the murderous terror unleashed by the Palestinians, their Judeophobic indoctrination and Judeocidal incitement, as significant “grand obstacles to peace”—perhaps because they would spoil the aesthetics of the misleading “symmetry” in the intellectual edifice she attempts to construct. But beyond this jarring omission, her appraisal raises several other trenchant questions.
For example, one might well ask why two-staters object so strenuously to the “settlements” and the “settlers”? After all, if genuine two-state peace is possible—as two-staters claim—they could certainly be a welcome source of employment for their Arab neighbors. But more to the point, unless two-staters believe that in a post-peace scenario, the Arab residents of Israel should be forced out of a Jewish Israel, why should they believe that Jewish residents be forced out of an Arab Palestine? Why should an Arab presence in a Jewish nation-state be compatible with a resolution of the conflict—but a Jewish presence in an envisioned Arab nation-state be incompatible with such a resolution? Unless of course, two-staters know what they cannot admit: That while an Arab minority can exist and thrive in a Jewish state, a Jewish minority is likely to be torn limb from limb in the Arab state they advocate…
Invoking divorce rather than marriage
According to Wilf, in order to achieve some kind of lasting settlement “the parties need to approach the negotiations not as a marriage, but as a divorce.”
This kind of reasoning does have some superficial appeal to it—until one considers the context.
Indeed, having your disagreeable spouse separate, and move off to some distant location, allowing each former partner to live their life in undisturbed peace, is one thing. It is quite another to allow a belligerent spouse to take control of a property overlooking your own—from which he/she can harass you continuously, egged on by similarly inimical neighbors in the surrounding areas.
For a basic flaw in Wilf’s reasoning is her seeming assumption that once a Palestinian state is established, all grievances will disappear. This of course is a grave miscalculation—and any putative Palestinian state will certainly be subject to incitement and infiltration by the most radical elements that abound in the Muslim world—spurring it on to further aggression against the infidel Zionist entity—with or without the complicity of Israel’s purported peace partner.
It is thus clearly time for obstinate two-staters to accept that their two-state formula is little more than a prelude to a flimsily disguised, more sinister and longer range design: A two-STAGE strategy for the total elimination of the Jewish state.
Martin Sherman is the founder & executive director of the Israel Institute for Strategic Studies
@ ms: Thanks for the information, Dr. Sherman. However, if her husband lives in Germany and is a personof some influence there, she can always “escape” to that country if security ever gets dicey in Tel Aviv. My impression is that many if not most Israeli “peaceniks” have made similar arrangements. The anti-Zionist and anti-Israel former head of the Jewish agency, has a second home in Belgium as well as business interests in that country. Mr.Herzog, former Labor Party leader and now head of the Jewish Agency, has an apartment in New York. Ehud Olmert’s brother and (I think) on eof his sone lives in the United States. A recently passed German law allows Jews whose parents or grandparents were forced to flee the country during the Hitler era to claim German citizenship. The law is highly relevant to the Israeli “peace camp,” whose leaders are overwhelmingly “yokes.” Some such as Tom Negev, were born in Germany. The fact that a large section of Israel’s elite can leave the country and go elsewhere whenever they choose is thus relevant to their demand that their fellow Israelis “take risks for peace” and make “painful compromises.” The risks are not those that most leading peaceniks need to take for themselves.
I was referring to my own comment, not your excellent article exposing that Wilf is still a left-wing wolf cross-dressing as a pragmatic, hard-nosed, Zionist leftist nationalist as in the long gone days of Ben-Gurion and Golda Meir. But you accurately expose her as someone who will continue to surrender Jewish lands for war and terrorism while I expose her as someone who totally rejects her Jewish faith – she herself says she and her German goy husband share the same faith – atheism – and that they are an “international couple.” After all, borders and nation states are an absurd anachronism today, so what difference does it matter if the Israeli government abandons its Jewish citizens in Ariel and changes boundaries from one day to the next? At least I think we can see that in both are political and personal posture Wilf consistently adopts the same position when engaging our enemies: supine!
Actually, she claims her son doesn’t have dual citizenship, but German law permits both of them as wife and son of a German citizen to be granted German/EU passports immediately at any consulate. So it is for practical purposes really irrelevant that Wilf and son have not yet officially become citizens of the German Reich. Wilf, an “international citizen” with Harvard and Cambridge pedigrees who still plans on becoming particularist Israel’s UN Ambassador in New York despite her disastrous association with the far-leftist Ehud Barak, realizes that applying for German citizenship would forever foreclose that possibility.
Yes, a Tel Aviv resident (after all where else would a wealthy, leftish, cosmopolitan convinced atheist live?), but Wilf travels every month to Germany to be with her husband Richard Gutjahr, who like Wilf calls himself a “devout atheist.” The two also call themselves an “international couple.” Their son has dual citizenship. Wilf is also an advocate of marrying out for others; intermarriage she says is a plus. I would think that since she is opposed to defending the Jewish people’s basic right to self-preservation and continuity by her own behavior, she has made herself ineligible to speak for the only Jewish nation.
@ adamdalgliesh:
Actually she lives in Tel Aviv
If Ms. Wilf really believed that Israeli territorial withdrawals and the forced resetlement of part of its population would bring peace, why isn’t she willing to stay in Israel and find out? I believe that there has been a massive emigration of Israeli peaceniks in recent years to the relative security of Western Europe and the United States. This shows that they have no committment whatsoever to Israel’s survival, and that the “peace” they desire is for themselves, not the Israelis who will not or cannot emigrate. Their actual, although not professed, peace plan, is for the Arabs to conquer and destroy Israel once the upper-middle class, secular Israelis who share their hatred of Zionism have emigrated.
I am coming to believe that, contrary to Aristotelian logic, ad hominem attacks are sometimes valid. Why should an Israeli who has chosen to live in another country, far away from the dangers faced by her former fellow-countrymen, have any credibility at all when urging them to subject themselves to even greater danger than they now face?
@ ms:
You are correct, MS: The OP is not ad hominem, though I might add that Merett0’s comment is.
Martin Sherman’s article is logically sound. He attacks the naiveté of Wilf and others, whose arguments make light of Israel’s security requirements.
Why ad hominem?? . The critique is directed as what she wrote not who she is
Might be seen as an ad hominem attack, but it should be remembered that Einat Wilf has cast her fate with Germans and not the Jewish people by marrying a German goy who is a well-known TV anchor in his country. She proudly calls herself an atheist as well. And she has never said a word against her erstwhile ally Ehud Barak, who makes the most incendiary and extreme allegations against PM Netanyahu. She shouldn’t be given the time of day.
It seems that these pesky know nothings will never go away. They all suffer from the most debilitating, political and moral astigmatism. They see temporary cease fire lines as frontiers, and all not included inside the line as being Arab Land, notwithstanding the glating fact that these Arabs have NO RIGHT at all to a smidgen of it.
They are mainly Imported terrorists and thise inculcated with the irrational Jew Hatred.
Oh Wilf, where is the Wolf…I mean the “Big Bad One” who will gobble you and your like up, so that we will be free of your cant and stupidity. We’ve battled against it for far too long, and that’s the problem. We’ve given you a platform, when we should not have.
To dispute with fools is futile —and dangerous. They will drag you down to their level, and then defeat you with their abundant experience.