📄 Extracted Text (9,886 words)
The
Shimon Post
Presidential Press Bulletin
17 Se tember, 2011
Article 1.
The Economist
America in the middle between Israel, Turkey, Egypt
and Palestine
Article 2.
The Christian Science Monitor
An Israel in trouble makes a peace deal more urgent
John Hughes
Article 3.
Foreign Policy
Will Congress make the Israel Mess Worse?
James Traub
Article 4.
NYT
Ten Reasons for a European 'Yes'
Martti Ahtisaari and Javier Solana
Article 5.
Wall Street Journal
Optimists Were Wrong About the Arab Spring
Josef Joffe
Article 6.
CSIS - Center for Strategic and International Studies
The Future of the U.S.-Israel Strategic Partnership
Haim Malka
EFTA01168815
The Economist
America in the middle between Israel,
Turkey, Egypt and Palestine
Sep 17th 2011 -- WHEN is anything going to go right for Barack
Obama in the Middle East? The president came to office hoping to
deliver a two-state solution in Palestine, and wasted a lot of political
capital failing to do so. He wanted dearly to put America on the right
side of the Arab spring, though this entailed joining a war in one
Arab country (Libya) while looking on helplessly while another
(Syria) slaughtered its own citizens. Now he has been drawn into a
tangle of quarrels between America's best friends in the eastern
Mediterranean, from which there may be no exit.
Only yesterday, or so it seems, the eastern Mediterranean was a
tranquil lake, policed congenially by the American sixth fleet. Israel,
Egypt and Turkey were all friends not only of the United States but
also of one another. Over the years, it is true, the peace between
Israel and Egypt grew cold. After the 2008 Gaza war between Israel
and Hamas a frost settled on relations between Israel and Turkey as
well. Behind the scenes, however, the governments (and armed
forces) of the three countries seemed happy to stick to their strategic
understandings, leading policymakers in America to hope that this
might be at least one virtuous triangle in the otherwise vicious
geometry of the Middle East. No longer. On September 10th Mr
Obama and his defence secretary, Leon Panetta, found themselves in
frantic phone calls with Israel's prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu,
and Field-Marshal Muhammad Hussein Tantawi, the chairman of
Egypt's governing council, striving to save Israel's staff in Cairo
from a mob that had invaded its embassy. Egyptian soldiers rescued
EFTA01168816
3
the trapped Israelis. But the spectacle of Israel's ambassador being
plucked from the jaws of the Arab spring to the safety of Jerusalem
was a signal of what the Arab democratic awakening might mean for
the peace treaty between Israel and Egypt, Jimmy Carter's proudest
achievement and the foundation on which America's Arab-Israeli
diplomacy has stood for more than 30 years.
At the same time, America has been struggling without success to
repair the breach between Israel and Turkey that followed Israel's
killing of eight Turks and a Turkish-American on board the Mavi
Marmara when it tried to break the Israeli naval blockade of the Gaza
Strip in May last year. An elaborate plan to patch up the quarrel
collapsed when Mr Netanyahu's prideful coalition partners refused to
let him go beyond expressing regret and offer a formal apology.
Turkey's own response has now gone into rhetorical overdrive: on
top of booting out Israel's ambassador, suspending defence ties and
threatening legal action, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the prime minister,
appeared at one point to hint that Turkish warships might escort
future aid convoys to Gaza.
As in the case of the growing tensions between Israel and Egypt, the
rupture between Israel and Turkey leaves America helplessly in the
middle. Turkey is a NATO partner; Israel is America's special friend.
The State Department says forlornly that it would like to see "these
two strong allies of the United States" work together in search of
regional stability. That will not happen any time soon. A UN report
finding Israel's naval blockade legal, even if its use of force was
"excessive", makes it even harder for Mr Netanyahu to give Mr
Erdogan his apology. Mr Erdogan, likening Israel to a "spoiled
child", has meanwhile gone on the warpath. He was in Cairo this
week, at the beginning of a tour of the Arab world, winning the
admiration of rapturous Egyptian crowds for his belligerent blasts
against Israel.
EFTA01168817
4
Not content with standing on Turkey's own national honour, Mr
Erdogan is also intent on making Turkey a champion of the
Palestinians. Having felt personally slighted when Israel launched its
Gaza war just when he was trying to mediate between Israel and
Syria, he has now thrown Turkey's support behind the Palestinians'
plan to give up on the interminable "peace process" and take their
quest for statehood directly to the United Nations later this month.
"Let's raise the flag of Palestine to the sky and let it be a symbol of
justice and peace in the Middle East," he told a meeting of Arab
League foreign ministers in Cairo.
The Americans, who are the chief sponsor of the interminable peace
process, are appalled by this idea. However strong an advocate he
may be of a Palestinian state, Mr Obama says that trying to create one
via a UN resolution, without a negotiated agreement, will be a
"distraction". It could be much worse than that. Israel and its friends
in Congress are considering dire retaliation, including cutting off
financial aid and tax transfers to the Palestinian Authority. Security
co-operation between Israel and the Palestinians in the West Bank
might collapse, sparking a new intifada. So unless the Palestinians
thoroughly dilute their planned resolution, Mr Obama will almost
certainly veto it if it reaches the Security Council. That would give
his pro-Israel credentials a needed pre-election boost, but might
shatter all his strenuous efforts to improve America's standing with
the Arabs.
Paying the Israel premium
American officials sped to the region this week, hoping, with
European help, to avert a collision at the UN. But even if they
succeed, America's Middle East diplomacy will be a mess. Though
Egypt's present rulers might not welcome a rupture with Israel, the
forces unleashed by its revolution will continue to push for one. Mr
Erdogan's Israel-bashing will continue as well, because it is driven
EFTA01168818
5
not just by a grievance but also by a strategic decision to put Turkey
on the right side of the Arab spring after Mr Erdogan spent too long
ignoring the massacres in neighbouring Syria. That may seem hard
on Israel, but the Jewish state is paying what some call a "Netanyahu
premium" for its prime minister's intransigence towards the
Palestinians. And America, whose president also wanted so much to
get on the right side of the Arab spring, will pay a growing premium
for its friendship with Israel.
EFTA01168819
o
The Christian Science Monitor
An Israel in trouble makes a peace deal
more urgent
John Hughes
September 16, 2011 -- If the dramatic upheaval taking place
throughout the Arab world is to have a constructive outcome, a
critical necessity is peace between Arabs and Israelis. On this issue,
the world is now at crunch time.
The choice is clear: New descent into the senseless antagonism and
violence that has bedeviled the Arab- Israeli relationship for decades,
or a two-state agreement providing security for Israel and a sovereign
homeland for Palestinians.
The prospects are not great. As one Arab nation after another is
wrestling with the emergence from dictatorship into freedom, Israel,
the most democratic country in the region, is confronted by an
unenviable series of developments:
1. Egypt after Hosni Mubarak is seeing a surge of anti-Israel clamor,
in which mobs have sacked the Israeli Embassy in Cairo and sent its
diplomats fleeing.
2. Hamas, the extremist Palestinian organization that already holds
sway in Gaza, has been making inroads in the West Bank, run by the
more moderate Fatah.
3. The United States, Israel's staunchest ally, risks Arab isolation
because of its opposition to the Palestinian push for statehood at the
United Nations. The US says it will veto any attempt for full
recognition of Palestine through the UN Security Council.
Washington also objects to a possible vote by the UN General
EFTA01168820
7
Assembly, which would likely approve a nonvoting "observer" status
for Palestine.
4. Syria, whose negotiation over the Israeli-controlled Golan Heights
would be a critical part of any peace agreement, is in turmoil and its
leadership is in question. It can hardly, at present, be seen as a
responsible participant in discussions with Israel.
5. Turkey, which has sought a more influential role in the Middle
East, is taking a significantly more aggressive attitude toward Israel.
It once brokered negotiations between Syria and Israel; now it
threatens to use its warships to challenge Israel's blockade of Gaza,
with which Israel seeks to prevent arms reaching Hamas. The Turks
have expelled the Israeli ambassador.
6. As if all this negative news for Israel were not enough, Iran seems
on faster course to acquiring a nuclear weapon or weapons. Could
Iran, which has blustered about "obliterating" Israel, be irrational
enough to threaten Israel with a nuclear missile if it produces one?
The danger is that Israel, which has its own nuclear arsenal, might not
wait long enough to find out. Although Iran is not an Arab nation, it
is Islamic, and such a nuclear confrontation would wreak havoc in the
Middle East as Arab friends and foes of Iran and Israel respectively
took sides, even — especially in the case of Saudi Arabia — to the
point of developing their own nuclear arsenals.
The most immediate of these problems demanding solution is the
Palestinians' determination to press for statehood recognition at the
UN. Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas claims this
move stems from deep frustration over the lack of any positive
negotiation on an Israeli-Palestinian peace agreement, and that
statehood would put Palestine on equal footing with Israel for further
talks.
The US argues that there is no shortcut to statehood, and a UN move
by the Palestinians only complicates negotiations. The US Congress,
EFTA01168821
8
largely pro-Israel, might well cut off aid to the Palestinians if the UN
moves favorably on statehood.
As long as a festering Israeli-Palestinian relationship, in which the
US appears to favor Israel, continues, it will undermine the Obama
administration's efforts to improve US relations with the Arab world.
The US has enormous stakes in seeing that an edgy Israel and the
Palestinians, who have a legitimate claim to a homeland of their own,
achieve the accord that has so far eluded them.
The crux of any agreement would be that Israel and Palestine should
be independent states, living side by side with guarantees of security
for each. There are difficult details to be worked out, political issues
concerning borders, and immensely sensitive religious issues over the
future of Jerusalem. Nobody suggests this is easy.
But the consequences of failure are unthinkable.
John Hughes, a former editor of the Monitor, writes a biweekly
column.
EFTA01168822
9
Foreign Policy
Will Congress make the Israel Mess
Worse?
James Traub
September 16, 2011 -- With barely a week to go before the
Palestinian Authority (PA) seeks a vote on statehood at the United
Nations, members of U.S. Congress have begun to stage a lively
competition for the most elaborately punitive legislative response.
Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, chair of the House Foreign Affairs Committee,
has prepared a bill that would withhold funds "from any UN agency
or program that upgrades the status of the PLO/Palestinian observer
mission," a measure that cleverly kills two abhorred birds -- the
United Nations and the Palestinians -- with one stone. Rep. Steve
Israel, a New York Democrat, did her one better with a measure that
would eliminate bilateral military assistance for any country that
voted for statehood, thus punishing dozens of America's allies for
expressing a difference of opinion. But Rep. Joe Walsh, a right-wing
Republican from Illinois, took the cake with a resolution endorsing
Israel's right to annex the West Bank should the PA go ahead with the
vote, thus putting an end to a two-state solution. Walsh has proudly
noted that he is copying a radical right-wing bill introduced into the
Knesset.
This cynical bidding war demonstrates that blind partnership for
Israel crosses both partisan and confessional lines: Anti-Semitic
conspiracy theorists should note that Christians, not Jews, have
sponsored much of this legislative blackmail. Fortunately, none of it
has a chance of becoming law; the Senate is unlikely even to take up
any of these measures. But there is one bill that sounds just sane
EFTA01168823
10
enough to pose a genuine threat: a House subcommittee has inserted
language into an appropriations bill that would cut U.S. budgetary
support to the PA should the Palestinians go ahead with the U.N.
vote. Compared with all the loony bills, says Jeremy Ben-Ami, head
of J Street, the liberal Israel lobbying group, "only cutting Palestinian
aid begins to look like a compromise position."
Some compromise. Right now, the United States provides slightly
more than $500 million a year to the Palestinian Authority. Of that,
$200 million goes straight into the Palestinian budget. It is these
"Economic Support Funds" that the House measure targets. That's
only about 15 percent of the PA's $1.3 billion budget; but the
Palestinians already have a $600 million deficit and stopped paying
public salaries last month. Unless the Saudis or other Gulf Arabs
make up the difference -- and it's their failure to make promised
payments that has created the shortfall -- the enormous progress that
the PA has made in building a state could grind to a halt. It's possible,
though unlikely, that an additional $200 million shortfall could lead
the PA to collapse. But it's nearly certain that the government's
legitimacy will suffer -- and that United States will be blamed.
Nita Lowey, a New York Democrat and the ranking member on the
House committee overseeing foreign aid, has been a leading
supporter of the move to threaten the cut in funding. Unlike Walsh,
who has said, "There is no such thing as a two-state solution" and
believes that peace will come through "Israel having sovereignty over
the whole land," Lowey has been a strong supporter of the PA's state-
building process and the U.S. funding that has helped make it
possible. I asked why she was prepared to put all that in jeopardy to
punish the Palestinians for seeking a vote on statehood. "There has to
be a line in the sand," she said. The unilateral bid for statehood
undermines the peace process. "The Palestinians," Lowey said, "will
have to deal with the consequences."
EFTA01168824
11
But it's not just the Palestinians who will bear the consequences.
Anything that jeopardizes the authority of the PA -- and by extension
the moderate Fatah faction -- opens the door to its rival, Hamas,
which of course would truly bring the peace process to a halt. And
anger over an American decision to not only obstruct the Palestinian
bid for statehood but punish its citizens will prove costly for the
United States in a new Middle East where public opinion -- and
people power -- increasingly matters.
I asked Lowey whether she worried about these consequences. "I
worry," she said, "about the Palestinian Authority going to the U.N."
She wasn't thinking about the consequences; that was the
Palestinians' job. At moments like this, I can't help feeling that
Congress should not be allowed to make foreign policy.
Lowey said that she still hoped that the Palestinian President
Mahmoud Abbas would sheer off before she and her colleagues had
to deploy their doomsday device. "I am an optimist," she kept
repeating, pointing to the U.S. team, led by White House official
Dennis Ross, that has been dispatched to the Middle East to gain
Israeli and Palestinian agreement on a new framework of negotiations
to be held under the aegis of the so-called Quartet, thus derailing the
bid for statehood. But these discussions are in fact a shadow play; it
is widely understood that Abbas cannot afford to abort the effort
unless Israel makes the kind of concessions that it plainly is not
prepared to make. Indeed, Abbas just delivered a speech rejecting the
diplomatic bid and vowing to seek statehood at the U.N. Security
Council.
Lowey and her colleagues are threatening the Palestinians with doom
for refusing to engage with a peace process that is self-evidently
dead. Palestinian leaders have been quite open about the fact that they
chose the U.N. path only after they concluded that Washington could
not or would not push Israel into making meaningful concessions.
EFTA01168825
12
"We know there is no escape from negotiations," a Palestinian
official is quoted as saying in a recent report by the International
Crisis Group. "We have no options because the process' sponsor has
checked out." The U.N. statehood bid, then, is more a gesture of
despair than an act of calculated diplomacy.
Kay Granger, chairman of Lowey's subcommittee and author of the
legislative language terminating aid, recently described the upcoming
vote as a "train wreck" -- which it may well be. Granger was of
course blaming the Palestinians, who are driving the train. But this
looming calamity has less to do with Palestinian stubbornness than
with Israeli intransigence and American paralysis, both conditioned
in part by the pro-Israel (right or wrong) crowd in Congress. In their
despair, the Palestinians really may do something genuinely self-
destructive. Abbas is fully aware that the United States would veto an
attempt to gain statehood in the Security Council. That would be a
train wreck, bringing terrible harm both to U.S. standing in the Arab
world and to the Palestinians' standing in the United States. It's the
one thing that might make Senate action on an aid cutoff
unavoidable, thus turning Granger's metaphor into a self-fulfilling
prophecy.
President Barack Obama's administration is now trying to line up
enough votes at the Security Council to make a veto unnecessary and
then persuade the Palestinians to go instead to the General Assembly,
which could not grant statehood but could upgrade their status to that
of "nonmember observer state," like the Vatican. Of course, the
United States would oppose this too; and the Obama administration is
hoping to reduce the Palestinians' expected margin of victory in the
General Assembly by peeling off key European allies. That,
according to a senior congressional aide, a U.S. diplomat, and an
expert in the region, is the real purpose of the administration's
eleventh-hour dash to the Middle East: to devise language
EFTA01168826
13
sufficiently acceptable to EU countries that they would agree to vote
against the Palestinians in the Security Council or the General
Assembly.
This is what U.S. diplomacy on the Middle East has come to. It didn't
have to be this way. Perhaps if Obama didn't have to worry about the
political consequences, he would be trying to find the least
confrontational way of giving the Palestinians the dignity of
enhanced status at the United Nations. Perhaps administration
officials would now be trying to draft a General Assembly resolution
that the Palestinians could accept, and that Israel could almost live
with.
But they're not; in fact, U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. Susan Rice
recently felt compelled to squash rumors that the United States was
doing any such thing, lest the Obama administration be accused of
accepting an unacceptable reality. Instead, the United States will
stand fast with its great friends in the Marshall Islands, and perhaps
some EU members, in opposing an upgrade in Palestinian status at
the United Nations. Then Congress may punish the Palestinians for
their effrontery. And the Palestinians may react badly. And then the
Israelis may react badly. And then the Arab street may react badly.
Welcome to the train wreck.
James Traub is a contributing writerfor the New York Times
Magazine and author of most recently, The Freedom Agenda.
"Terms of Engagement,".
EFTA01168827
14
NYT
Ten Reasons for a European 'Yes'
Martti Ahtisaari and Javier Solana
September 16, 2011 -- It is not often that Europe has the chance to
play a pivotal role on the world stage. But as the Palestinians push for
recognition as a state at the United Nations later this month, the
European Union is finding itself courted by each side, and therefore
more influential on the Middle East process than at any time since the
Oslo Accords. As ever, the biggest challenge facing the E.U.'s 27
member states is presenting a unified front. There are 10 compelling
reasons for them to coalesce around a "yes" vote and keep the two-
state approach to Middle East peace alive. The critical vote is likely
to be in the General Assembly, on a resolution to upgrade the
Palestinians' status from observer to non-member state. The
Palestinians are likely to get a majority, but what matters more than
the outcome of the vote is its size and composition. The Israeli
government is lobbying hard for a "no," and the P.L.O., unable to
significantly shape realities on the ground, hopes to at least show
some diplomatic traction for its continued faith in the two-state
approach. Europeans find themselves in the unusual position of being
the key prize in this tussle.
The first reason why the E.U. 27 should vote "yes" is that the U.N.
resolution is an attempt to keep the two-state solution alive. This
solution is under attack from the steady expansion of Israeli
settlements in the occupied territories, and from Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu's belief that the conflict should now be
accepted as "insoluble." As a result this vote is not a meaningless
distraction, but a reaffirmation that the peace process is meaningful.
EFTA01168828
15
The second reason for a European "yes" is that the Europeans have
already invested hugely in the two-state solution that is under
scrutiny, including the annual £1 billion aid to help build a
functioning Palestinian state. Again, a "yes" is a reaffirmation that
the project is worthwhile and can succeed.
The third reason for a "yes" is simply to respond positively to
Mahmoud Abbas' state-building achievements. Failing to vote "yes"
would be to respond to demands for state-building by refusing to
formally acknowledge where they have got to.
The fourth reason is about the Arab Spring. Anything other than a
"yes" would expose Europeans to charges of double standards from
both post-revolutionary governments and conservative Arab regimes
(for different reasons) for failing to support rights for Palestinians
while advocating them elsewhere.
Usefully, a "yes" also aligns European interests with European values
(the fifth reason), as it resets regional relationships. Interests —
including preventing jihadist terrorism, containing Iran, security
energy supplies and retaining markets for our exports — would all be
damaged by perceived hypocrisy on the Israel/Palestinian conflict.
Despite concerns from Atlanticists that a "yes" will damage relations
with the United States, arguably it could also be in Washington's
interests (the sixth reason). The U.S. is unable to vote "yes" for
evident domestic reasons, but the E.U. 27 doing so would strengthen
America's hand when dealing with Israel. In the words of William
Hague, a healthy trans-Atlantic relationship would be solid rather
than slavish.
The seventh and eighth reasons concern Israel. The Israelis'
objections to the vote — that it is unilateral and violates previous
agreements — do not hold water, and are no reason for Europe not to
vote "yes." Although the vote would open up negotiating options for
Palestine that are currently closed, overall it might even help Israel.
EFTA01168829
16
Moves toward recognition of Palestinian statehood within 1967
borders would reinforce the legitimacy of Israel's own existence.
Despite Israeli fears, it would not necessarily open an easier path for
Palestinian recourse to the International Criminal Court, and might
give Europe a position from which it could pursue a quiet
understanding with the Palestinians that they would not pursue I.C.C.
jurisdiction for a significant period, drawing the sting from this
troubling issue.
The ninth reason for a European "yes" is that it would not make
Palestinian violence more likely. Indeed, a combination of perceived
failure and the influence of the Arab Spring could touch off a "third
intifada." Squeezed between Israel and the invigorating sight of
televised uprisings, the Palestinian authorities need a sign of progress
if they are to prevent frustrations turning to violence. European
endorsement of their statehood would be a powerful public signal that
progress is possible.
Finally, a "yes" at the U.N. does not entail bilateral recognition of
Palestine. The vote is for upgrading representation at the U.N., and
only individual states can bestow recognition on Palestine.
There is of course an 11th reason for a unified European "yes" vote.
The world already has enough examples of European inability to play
an effective international role. Optimists will hope that Europeans
will, this time, surprise us all by doing the right thing and securing
themselves a much-needed diplomatic success in the process.
Martti Ahtisaari, a former president of Finland and U.N. mediator,
was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2008. Javier Solana is a
distinguished senior fellow in foreign policy at the Brookings
Institution, and served as secretary general of NATO and E. U. high
representativefor common foreign and security policy.
EFTA01168830
17
Wall Street Journal
Optimists Were Wrong About the Arab
Spring
Josef Joffe
September 16, 2011 -- I wasn't alone, but the mea culpa is all mine.
Like many, I thought that dawn was finally breaking over the Arab
world when those nice, middle-class crowds thronged Cairo's Tahrir
Square chanting "freedom" and "democracy" without burning
American and Israeli flags. What a miracle, I mused: The dogs of
hate are not barking. And what a wondrous moment of
transcendence! Free the people, and they will free themselves from
the obsession of anti-Americanism and anti-Semitism their overlords
had implanted to distract them from misery and oppression.
It was a false dawn—and not only because of the sacking of the
Israeli embassy in Cairo last week. On my desk sits a Reuters photo
dated May 13; the caption reads: "People burn an Israeli flag during a
demonstration on Tahrir Square." There were no such symbols of
"Arab rage" when the protests erupted in late January.
The demons of yore are back, and presumably, they have never left.
The Friday demonstration on Tahrir Square was at first standard
fare—yet another protest against the military regime. But at the end,
several thousands armed with Palestinian flags, crowbars and
hammers marched off to the Israeli embassy for a bit of
deconstructionist work.
But there is more. For six hours, desperate Israeli leaders tried to
contact the junta; its leader Field Marshall Tantawi refused to speak
with either the prime minister or his defense minister. It took another
EFTA01168831
18
seven before Egyptian security forces rescued the last Israeli—
perhaps only because Washington had interceded in the meantime.
The moral of this tale is simple. The revolution isn't going anywhere,
and life is as miserable as always. So how about a little pogrom? It
wasn't the junta that invented this stratagem, but our good friend
Hosni Mubarak now fighting for his life in a Cairo courtroom. How
do despots stay in power amid poverty, hopelessness and repression?
By feeding the people the heady brew of hatred against the "Other."
But why Israel, a neighbor officially recognized by Cairo and granted
30 years of peace? An iron law of Arab politics cracks the paradox:
the better state-to-state relations, the worse the anti-Americanism and
anti-Semitism within. Jew hatred? Isn't it just righteous anti-Israelism
fed by the plight of the Palestinians? Go to a bookstore in Cairo,
Amman or Riyadh—all quasi-allies of Israel—and you will find piles
of anti-Semitic tracts. They are in Arabic, but a 100% import from
yesterday's Europe—blood libel, world conquest and all. Ditto the
TV fare and newspaper cartoons, which depict the Jew as
bloodsuckers or cannibals.
Mubarak et al had struck a devil's bargain with their peoples: I'll treat
with the infidels, and you gorge yourselves on the fantasies that keep
you in line. The mistake of Arab Spring optimists like me was to
ignore the stubborn reality behind the well-worn tactic. They should
have asked: Why would the despots call on those particular demons?
Because they are an integral part of Arab political culture, hence so
easy to rouse. The import of European anti-Semitism began in the
'30s, long before Israel's birth, let alone its conquest of the West
Bank.
To invoke "essentialism"—deep and enduring traits—when looking
at a culture, is a tricky thing. Cultures do change, even profoundly—
look at Germany's breathtaking leap from Nazism into liberal
democracy. But the sad trajectory of the Egyptian revolution, going
EFTA01168832
19
toxic only after a few weeks, confirms the depth of the loathing.
Acceptance of the "Other" who is the Jew (or even a Copt) is not a
pillar of Islamic culture. But the opposite—abhorrence—is such
superb cement for societies rent by myriad conflicts: between sects,
classes, tribes and nationalities, between modernity and tradition, city
and country, devout and secular. To serve as target and unifier has
been the fate of Jews in Europe, and it remains their fate in Arabia.
Nor does it help to apologize, as the hapless effort of the Netanyahu
government demonstrated when it tried to soothe tempers after five
Egyptian soldiers were inadvertently killed when Israeli troops were
pursuing militants along the Sinai border last month. The message of
the mob in Cairo was: The embassy must go, the peace must go,
Israel must go.
Is there no way out? Sure there is. Happy societies don't need the
barbarians at the gate. But Arab society is not happy, which is why
the clash within drives the conflict without, spilling over into Europe
and, on 9/11, into the United States.
When will it ever end? Not soon. Take Sweden, a nice Protestant
place. In the 17th century, it was the scourge of Europe, conquering
about half of the Holy Roman Empire's states. It stopped fighting in
1814, taking the slow road to development and democracy instead.
Only in the mid-20th century did it become such admirable model of
tranquility. Would that history moves a bit faster in this century.
Mr. Joffe is editor of Die Zeit in Hamburg, a seniorfellow of the
Freeman-Spogli Institute, and a fellow of the Hoover Institution.
EFTA01168833
20
AniCIC 6.
CSIS Center for Strategic and International Studies
Crossroads: The Future of the U.S.-Israel
Strategic Partnership (Executive Summary + key
findings and recommendations)
Haim Malka
Executive Summary
Sep 16, 2011 - Profound demographic, social, and political
transformations are reshaping the U.S.-Israeli relationship. Changes
under way in both the United States and Israel have eroded traditional
pillars of the relationship, brought new elements to the fore, and
contributed to debates in each country about how to defend that
country's interests in a rapidly changing strategic environment.
Uncertainty is growing about how the United States and Israel can
and should cooperate to secure their interests and confront common
challenges in a region undergoing dramatic shifts. Even more
profoundly, Americans and Israelis increasingly see each other's
policy choices as undermining their interests. The trend deepens U.S.
doubts of Israel's strategic value and reinforces Israeli fears about
U.S. commitments and guarantees to its security. Many argue that
rising tensions in the bilateral relationship are transient, the mere by-
products of a left-leaning U.S. president and a right-leaning Israeli
prime minister. Others suggest the tensions stem from short-term
policy differences over confronting Iran and resolving the Arab-
Israeli conflict. Yet the real issue is far more profound. The United
States and Israel have changed and continue to change, but the two
countries' relationship has not kept pace. For years, the growing
differences have been papered over, but continuing to do so is both
unsustainable and counterproductive. Denial of the differences risks
EFTA01168834
21
undermining the national security of both the United States and Israel
and deepens the spiral of mistrust that has intensified over the past
several years. It is crucial to examine how and why the U.S.-Israeli
bilateral relationship is changing and to assess frameworks for
cooperation that could strengthen the interests of both Israel and the
United States. More Israelis than Americans acknowledge that
change is under way, but the ideas debated in both countries fall
short. Some advocate a U.S.-Israeli defense pact, usually as part of a
comprehensive regional agreement. Others argue for the United
States to extend a nuclear deterrent to Israel in an effort to reassure
Israelis and demonstrate the U.S. commitment to Israel's security.
These options might provide short-term relief for Israeli security, but
they ultimately reinforce Israel's deep dependency on the United
States. That dependency fuels Israeli anxiety over the extent and
sustainability of U.S. cooperation and assistance, generating more
bilateral tension and misunderstanding. What is needed, instead, is a
relationship that treats Israel less as a dependent and that contains
clearer commitments of what each side will do for the other-with an
implicit understanding that there are limits to those commitments.
U.S. military aid to Israel also needs to be rethought, emphasizing
Israel's role as it grows from being a dependent to a more equal
partner. Israel faces multiple challenges, yet it is no longer the weak
and vulnerable state it was at its founding, and it is no longer the state
it was 20 years ago. The United States and the key constituencies
within it that are driving U.S.-Israeli ties are also different from what
they were a generation ago. The bilateral relationship needs to reflect
these realities. Restoring true partnership in the bilateral relationship
will be difficult but not impossible. To that end, Israel and the United
States must work to rediscover the sense of common mission that
bound the two allies in the past. That mission must transcend mutual
threats and find a common strategy for advancing U.S. and Israeli
EFTA01168835
22
interests in the region through promoting regional stability and
Israeli-Palestinian peace. Most important, Israelis and Americans
must recognize that the future will be different from the past. Both
should prepare for a time when the historic rationale for strong U.S.-
Israeli ties may be less significant and when the politics in both
countries may change the parameters of U.S.-Israeli cooperation. The
U.S.-Israeli relationship is deep, but the challenges to it now are more
profound than at any time in history. More honest assessments of the
bilateral relationship are both urgent and vital.
Key findings and recommendations
This study has sought to understand how and why the U.S.-Israeli
partnership is drifting. In the process it addresses difficult issues that
many in both countries would rather leave unspoken. The importance
of the partnership to U.S. interests in the Middle East and Israel's
security, however, requires a critical assessment of why the
partnership is changing and what lies ahead. Popular revolts in the
Middle East signal an era of heightened instability for the foreseeable
future and make addressing U.S.-Israeli differences more urgent.
Those events have served as a reminder that change is inevitable and
what may seem like given certainties today can quickly erode
tomorrow.
It would be convenient to dismiss the crisis in U.S.-Israeli relations
that unfolded in 2009-2010 as the inevitable clash between a
progressive U.S. administration and nationalist Israeli government.
Many supporters on both sides prefer to interpret the current
differences as mere turbulence in the midst of a fundamentally
durable relationship. But the differences are deeper than personalities
and chemistry between Israeli and U.S. leaders. Social and political
trends in the United States and Israel are reshaping the politics of
both societies. What is especially alarming is the erosion of the
intangible elements of support, most importantly the ideal of shared
EFTA01168836
23
values that had been the glue of the partnership long before the
strategic alliance took shape. Israeli society today is very different
from the Israel most Americans think they know. The rightward shift
in Israeli politics, influenced in part by the expansion of ultra-
Orthodox and Russian Israelis into public life and the retreat of
Israel's secular liberal elite, is changing the values and priorities of
Israeli society. These social and demographic shifts are, in turn,
driving and shaping Israeli politics that are increasingly at odds with
the politics of many U.S. supporters of Israel as well as long-standing
U.S. policies. Israel's politics, which have been driven in part by
leaders trying to survive rather than charting a long-term course that
addresses the country's deeper challenges, have reinforced these
political trends. In the United States, meanwhile, Israel has become a
complicated domestic political issue. Unconditional support for Israel
is becoming manipulated as a political tool in Washington's growing
partisan divide, threatening to undermine the bipartisan support that
has been a core element of the partnership. At the same time, liberal
segments of the American Jewish community, especially among the
younger generations, are feeling increasingly estranged from Israel.
These dynamics amplify political disagreements and raise doubts
about the values and reliability of each ally. Demographic and social
trends in both countries suggest these political dynamics will
continue in the years ahead. On a strategic level those changes create
greater uncertainty about how the United States and Israel cooperate
to secure their interests and confront common challenges. More often
than in the past, Israelis and Americans see both the politics and
policies of the other undermining their strategic interests. These
trends erode mutual trust, deepening America's doubts of Israel's
strategic value while reinforcing Israeli fears about U.S.
commitments to its security. Distrust creates uncertainty, causing
each side to act more unpredictably in order to secure its own
EFTA01168837
24
interests. The depth of strategic challenges facing both allies raises
the stakes, further highlighting the diverging ways in which most
Americans and Israelis see the world amid the tectonic changes
occurring in the Middle East. Ignoring these perceptions only creates
more friction and unpredictability, pointing to more turbulent times
ahead.
Israelis and Americans Seek Different Outcomes and Solutions to
Their Challenges
More than in the past, Israeli and U.S. threat assessments,
understandings of the Middle East, and strategies for addressing
threats diverge. Full convergence has never existed, and no two allies
share identical perceptions and strategies. Yet these sharp
divergences emerge during a period of significant regional change
that will affect the interests of both allies in different ways. Whereas
the United States sees a historic opportunity to fundamentally change
the authoritarian foundation of Arab governance, Israel sees a direct
threat to stability that could be exploited by radical forces. These
differences reflect more concrete threats as well. Historically, Israel
has mostly aimed to manage its security challenges in the absence of
any promising means to more permanently resolve them; yet now, in
the face of a perceived existential threat from Iran, it searches for an
enduring solution. It sees Iran behind its most pressing security
challenges-from a nuclear challenge to support for Hamas and
Hezbollah. The United States, in contrast, has continued managing
the Iranian threat as it seeks to resolve the Palestinian issue in the
belief that an Israeli-Palestinian agreement could fundamentally
improve the regional political and security landscape. Israelis argue
that attempting to resolve the Palestinian issue while Hamas remains
the dominant Palestinian political actor is not only untenable but
dangerous. The differences reflect different assessments and priorities
as well as different policies for addressing the challenges. Israel
EFTA01168838
25
believes urgent action against Iran is necessary and wants the United
States to use force or at least the threat of force to persuade Iran to
stop its nuclear weapons program. While Israel might have the
military capability to delay Iran's nuclear enrichment program
through military action for a limited period, Israelis widely believe
that only the United States has the combined political and military
assets to mount a broader military campaign against Iran's nuclear
program. To Israelis, stopping Iran's development of nuclear weapons
is the test of U.S. power and commitment in the region. Israelis fear
that the United States will fail the test, leaving Israel to face its
threats alone. Instead of threatening military force to stop Iran's
nuclear program, Israelis hear talk of engagement, deterrence, and
containment. For Israel the message is clear: the United States seeks
to manage the Iranian threat, not resolve it conclusively. Many
Israelis interpret the U.S. unwillingness to threaten Iran with military
force as not only strengthening Iran's resolve but making a nuclear-
armed Iran inevitable. Meanwhile the U.S. government has declared
resolving the Palestinian issue as a national security interest. After
raising the Palestinian issue so high on its agenda, the Obama
administration remains committed to seeking a diplomatic
breakthrough. The administration believes that the Israeli government
continues undermining opportunities for progress, which ultimately
hurts both Israeli and U.S. interests. In the years ahead the diplomatic
challenges will likely intensify and spark additional U.S.-Israeli
friction. Having lost faith in the ability of the United States to secure
statehood, the Palestinian leadership seeks to leverage growing
international sympathy to force a showdown in the United Nations
and through international recognition of an independent state. The
United States may well continue to use its veto in the UN Security
Council, as it did in February 2011, to prevent resolutions
condemning Israel or deemed to threaten Israeli interests. Doing so,
EFTA01168839
26
however, will increase the international diplomatic costs in terms of
U.S. credibility at a time when the United States is moving to rely
more on multilateral support on a range of international and regional
efforts, and will further strain U.S.-Israeli ties. If U.S.-Israeli
relations continue to hinge on progress toward an Israeli-Palestinian
agreement or decisive resolution of the Iranian nuclear threat, both
sides will remain frustrated and U.S.-Israeli ties will undoubtedly
suffer. Much of the frustration will come as political and strategic
shifts fuel Israeli uncertainty about U.S. power. Israelis believe the
United States is projecting weakness in a region that has no mercy for
the weak. The Israeli elite do not doubt U.S. power and military
capabilities, but they do question the ways in which the United States
will use its power in the Middle East to help promote stability and
secure Israeli interests. Many Israelis across the political spectrum
fear that Israel can no longer take America's projection of power for
granted in an increasingly multipolar world. They see regional
powers like China, Russia, and Turkey increasingly challenging U.S.
policy and constraining its ability to protect Israeli security.
Failure to Address Political and Strategic Shifts Will Erode the
Quality of U.S. - Israeli Ties
The threat is that political and strategic tension will gradually erode
the quality of U.S.-Israeli cooperation and, at some point in the
future, either by design or as a consequence of unforeseen
circumstances, will lead to a deeper rift that will be difficult to repair.
The need to rebuild trust between the United States and Israel is
urgent because the lack of trust makes addressing common
challenges more complicated and difficult. Ignoring these troubling
dynamics threatens to undermine the national security of both Israel
and the United States and risks deepening the spiral of mistrust at a
moment when the United States needs the full cooperation of its
allies and Israel faces serious challenges to its international standing
EFTA01168840
27
and security. For Israelis the stakes are high: as they see U.S. power
and commitment declining, they foresee a parallel decline in their
own power. For decades, Israel's partnership with the United States
has been a force multiplier for its own deterrent. Yet, if the United
States fails to shape the Middle East strategic environment, then
Israel is more vulnerable. Those fears create deep uncertainty for
Israeli policymakers, making decisive action to protect Israeli
security and interests more urgent. If Israel perceives that the United
States is passive or indecisive as Iran approaches nuclear breakout,
Israel's impulse to take unilateral action will increase, making Israeli
decision-making less predictable and posing significant challenges
for U.S. management of the Middle East. Whatever Israel's unease
about U.S. strategy, however, there is simply no substitute for U.S.
leadership in the Middle East in the foreseeable future. Israel has few
options for steering a different course. It will continue trying to
influence the shape of U.S. Middle East policies, but its ability will
remain limited especially if Israeli-Palestinian diplomacy stays
frozen. Rather than expect that the United States will neutralize the
Iranian threat, Israel will have to adapt and work within a broader
U.S. containment security architecture, regardless of the drawbacks
of such a framework. Even though many Israelis and Israel's
supporters would like to believe that U.S. military power can solve
Israel's most pressing problems if properly applied, ultimately the
United States can only help Israel manage its threats and challenges;
it cannot provide solutions.
Israel and the United States Should Restore a Sense of
Partnership and Common Mission
It is unrealistic to expect U.S. and Israeli interests to be completely
aligned. As a small country in a constant state of
ℹ️ Document Details
SHA-256
3331a590e3e4fcd4ef7f41edb4427477c2f65baa304a956f44957e8f5c03d70b
Bates Number
EFTA01168815
Dataset
DataSet-9
Document Type
document
Pages
35
Comments 0