Monday, March 04, 2024

Day 150 of the October 7 Gaza War

I find myself irritated with Benny Ganz for making a solo trip to Washington today without Cabinet backing. I am annoyed with Netanyahu for failing to instill unity in his war cabinet. He has long mis-led by example.

I can't say I am disappointed at VP Kamala Harris for using a civil rights backdrop to hold forth about a Hamas-Israel ceasefire. It was a cheap, tendentious gimmick.

I appreciate that wokes, Muslims, and African Americans have lost patience with Joe Biden for standing with Israel. I know they are core constituencies in the Democratic Party, and their empathies lie with the Palestinians, not the Israelis. 

Some Democrats in Congress want to save UNWRA even though it is riddled with Hamas functionaries and has as its mandate to keep Palestinian refugees – refugees in perpetuity. Other Democrats want to save Hamas leaders hunkering down in Rafiah from the IDF. There's a lot of Democratic energy on Capitol Hill and at the White House devoted to rescuing Hamas from its deserved fate.

I well appreciate that Israel, under Netanyahu's botched leadership, has failed to offer a strategic plan for Gaza, created a military and humanitarian vacuum, and done so in an already hostile media and international political environment.

Be that as it may, there is a consensus among ordinary Israelis that Hamas must be defanged, that it can not again be the sovereign in Gaza. Sure, there will always be Palestinian Arab terrorism – after all,  the Palestinian polity rejects a national homeland for the Jewish people in any part of our country and has done so for over 100 years.

That is why the PLO and Hamas do not want a Palestinian state and have blocked one at every juncture.

Tens of thousands of Israelis remain dislocated at our border with Lebanon (which is controlled by Hezbollah) and at our border with Gaza.

The IDF is taking casualties daily. Barely a day goes by without an IDF funeral. Thousands of young men have suffered life-changing war injuries.

Hezbollah and Hamas continue to shoot and launch rockets and weaponized drones.

Hamas cares not a whit for non-combatant Gazans. It uses them as fodder for its propaganda. As sacrifices for its jihad. It never offered the Palestinian masses the protection of its vast tunnel network. And the chic kafiyah wearers who shill for Hamas don't mob Times Square or Trafalgar Square for the war victims in the Sudan, Congo, Ethiopia, and Yemen – and we all know why they are so decerning in their humanitarian concerns.

Life in Israel has taken on a new "war normal." Yes, many of us hope for the Netanyahu government's demise, but I have little faith in Benny Ganz. Simply not being Netanyahu is a low bar for leadership. He – and Yair Lapid, too, unfortunately – has been pushing to exchange Israeli captives for dangerous Palestinian terrorists without knowing if any of our hostages are even alive. I find this scandalous—this willingness to gamble the safety of 9 million Israelis for an unknown number of captives or remains. While giving Hamas the respite it craves.

No one on the political horizon inspires confidence, not in Israel and not in America.

 

 

 

Friday, January 26, 2024

What Losing in Gaza Would Look Like for Israel & What it Means Regarding Lebanon

The chiefs of the CIA and Mossad are scheduled to hold hostage talks with 

Qatari and Egyptian spymasters who are in contact with Hamas.

It smells like a deal is in the air.

In almost any possible "deal," the price for Israel would be

 defeat in Gaza.

And if we lose in Gaza, it would be futile to embark on a war with Hezbollah. 

Losing would entail (1) an open-ended break in fighting, (2) exchanging hundreds if not thousands of terrorists with blood on their hands for the remaining captives or corpses, (3) a photo op of Hamas leaders strolling through the wreckage of Gaza (4) not seizing control of the Phildelphi corridor (5) failure to facilitate a Palestinian Authority 2.0 to take over in the Strip and (6) not insisting in any armistice that the Palestinian Authority 2.0 lease us the right to the 1-kilometer-wide buffer zone we are clearing on our border with Gaza so there is no “war crime” claim. 

The instant it is clear we did not fail in Gaza, the troubles with Hezbollah will fall into place. 

We will be in a credible position to insist that Hezbollah pull back north of the Litani. 

We should offer them a face-saving cosmetic border concession in the Har Dov area. 

But if we trade captives and corpses for a Gaza defeat, we might as well sue for peace with Hezbollah on their terms.

Friday, January 19, 2024

Netanyahu held a news conference last night, and too much attention was paid to what he said about a Palestinian state

Hi Elliot,

I expect you anticipated I’d be trying to understand & seeking your views on this;

what do you think about Netanyahu’s latest ( at least latest here) statement suggesting that a 2 state solution is impossible ? is it ( to my mind a not very subtle ) negotiating 1st position that he can then climb down from and meet in what looks like a compromise position but closer to his wishes than it would have been if he had started in what one would think of as a more reasonable place or is it indeed where he sees the end place as being? how much support does he get from the people? and if not much what hope of doing anything about it? can there/ will there be elections while the war is on? I think you suggested that even if there were the numbers don’t suggest the government would necessarily change to 1 that was less right wing.

 



The headline writers in the foreign media came away from Binyamin Netanyahu’s “news conference” last night with the revelation that he had “publicly” rejected the “US push for a Palestinian state.”  

He did warn rather disingenuously that when he was gone, Israel would have wobbly leaders who would allow a militarized Palestinian state. “I can say something about what they call the day after Netanyahu. I do not love to speak of myself in the third person. But those who speak of the day after Netanyahu are talking about the creation of a Palestinian state led by the Palestinian Authority…”

Personally, I look forward to hearing him one day say, Nixon-like, "You won't have Netanyahu to kick around anymore because, gentlemen, this is my last press conference." We should live and be well.

On Thursday night, however, all Netanyahu did was reiterate that he opposes a state that could threaten Israel. As most of us Israelis do.

Mainly, his “news conference,” which aired just before the main news programs, was orchestrated so that Netanyahu could attack the mainstream media and feed his brainwashed base. Last night was not primarily about the Palestinian issue. He lied, dissembled, and evaded – about his dysfunctional relationship with his cabinet and the medications he supposedly arranged to be provided to our captives.

Personally, I would have told the BBC and Guardian not to stop the presses over his remarks about a Palestinian state.

The two-state solution mantra has no resonance for Israelis like me. Not at this juncture. Not when polls show that 82 percent of Palestinian Arabs back the butchery of October 7. Not when we are in the middle of a war that is bleeding us. When we have lost over 1,400 soldiers and civilians. Thousands of soldiers and reservists have been wounded, including an untold number with life-changing injuries. Tens of thousands of citizens have been dislocated from our boundary with Lebanon and our border with Gaza. Hundreds of thousands of families have been upended because fathers, mothers, sisters, sons, and partners have been called up for reserve duty. And when the families of our captives are stuck in a limbo of anguish and torment. 

For the only way to bring our captives home now is by trading them for bloodthirsty terrorists in our prisons, including those involved in the October 7 atrocities. Yet Hamas will not discuss even such a lopsided trade unless we declare defeat, pull out of Gaza, and let it resume governing the Strip. 

Most Israelis do not want to capitulate to Hamas.

So, I am not much in the mood to talk about a Palestinian state – especially since the Palestinian Arabs have repeatedly rejected one. Not when they have yet to accept the idea of a national homeland for the Jewish people in any part of Palestine. We can't want a Palestinian state more than the Palestinians. And Arab-conducted polls before October 7 show the Palestinians reject a two-state solution.

The PLO/PA, crooked and discredited, has demonstrated it is incapable of creating an infrastructure for a Palestinian state. It has opposed normalization and coexistence with Israel. 

The West Bank and Gaza will need some trusteeship. Or a Palestinian Authority 2.0 – whatever.

Right now, though, I want to see Hamas and the other Islamist groups in Gaza (and the al-Aqsa Martyrs Battalions in the West Bank) defanged so that they do not pose a threat to Israel and can’t govern in the Strip or Judea and Samaria.

If we succeed in Gaza, Lebanon will fall into place. If we fail, it will whet Hezbollah’s appetite.

The campaign needs time. Unfortunately, the government is in disarray, so decisions are not being made – about who should run Gaza in places where there is no fighting and about the strategic Philadelphi corridor separating Gaza from Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula, for example. Hence, as Israel pulls out of north Gaza, we are seeing Hamas policemen in uniform returning to Gaza's streets.  

Getting back to the “two-state solution.” Yes, it is presently impossible since the Palestinians need to accept the idea of a demilitarized state. Every recent Israeli prime minister, including Netanyahu in 2009 – with the exception of Naftali Bennett – is on record as accepting a Palestinian state. No Israeli prime minister will tolerate a Palestinian state that is militarized or will have unlimited sovereignty that would allow it to invite Iran to set up a forward base down the road from Ben-Gurion Airport.

Netanyahu has never been as politically enfeebled as he is today, not because he opposes a PLO or Hamas-led state overlooking our cities but because he allowed us to be caught unprepared after spending months dividing the country and after forming an extremist government that would protect him as he navigated corruption trials.

There is a small but growing movement for elections during the war. I am not sure it is a good idea. But if the war continues to be mismanaged, there may be no choice. The best solution would be for Likud to depose Netanyahu, but he has created a party in his image that is indebted to him, and his internal opponents don’t trust each other.

The polls I see show Likud capturing about 16 seats out of 120 if elections were held today. Remember, no Israeli party in the country’s history has ever won an outright majority. Yesh Atid, led by Yair Lapid – the party I am inclined to support – gets a meager 13 seats. Benny Ganz, the Hamlet-like leader of the National Camp and now a war cabinet minister, would get 39 seats and presumably form the next coalition. The extremist messianic settler parties would get 14 seats. The ultra-Orthodox haredim would get about 15 seats. Meretz (but not Labor) would make it into the Knesset with four seats – in pre-October 7 days, they favored a Palestinian state almost unconditionally.

As a security hawk, I oppose Netanyahu for his corruption, ineptitude, judicial putsch, and – having led the country from 2009 to 2021 and again since December 29, 2022 – for the October 7 debacle. (*) That does not mean he is wrong about Hamas or the PLO. However, he is dead wrong in refusing to make clear what Israel is for. 

By not saying what Israel wants, Netanyahu is opening the door for Hamas or some other nefarious actor to fill the power vacuum, and to provide the answers to questions he refuses to address. I already mentioned that Hamas police are back on the streets in northern Gaza.

He is wrong for playing partisan politics during wartime, refusing to make peace with Yoav Gallant, his defense minister, and repeatedly playing the gullible Ganz for a fool.

But since voters seem to identify with him, it may well be that Ganz is the one who will have the last laugh.

----------------

(*) Netanyahu also held power from 1993 to 1996.

Monday, January 01, 2024

Opportunities for peace are missing, not being missed

Moshe Sharett

Clever people counsel never to waste a good crisis. In the US, Europe, and the broader international community, Jerusalem is told not to miss the prospect of peace that a postwar Gaza might bring.

There is an entire literature, spanning the past 75 years, on missed opportunities for peace between Israel and the Arabs. Among the most sound is Prof. Elie Podeh’s Chances for Peace – Missed Opportunities in the Arab-Israeli Conflict.

I am particularly interested in the 1950s and 1960s because I was too young then to follow events based on sound knowledge and in real time.

Scholars who research “missed opportunities” during the 1950s tend to examine the role of Moshe Sharett, who was born in Ukraine in 1894 and died in 1965. Besides his de facto role as foreign affairs chief of the pre-state Jewish Agency, the comparatively dovish Sharett served as Israel’s first foreign minister from 1948 to 1956. During the interlude when David Ben-Gurion “retired” and moved to Sde Boker in the Negev, Sharett became prime minister, serving from December 6, 1953, to November 3, 1955, when Ben-Gurion returned to the job.

Sharett began keeping a diary in October 1953. He is our only Arabic-fluent prime minister and the only one who spent his adolescence on a farm in Samaria. In Moshe Sharett: Biography of a Political Moderate, Gabriel Sheffer characterizes him as humane, realistic, and restrained. 

Reading Sheffer, I got the sense that Sharett would not have “missed an opportunity” to make peace — but he was not Israel’s top leader; Ben-Gurion was, and you need an Arab partner anyway.

Take Syria, for example. Husni Zaʽim, a bellicose, mercurial military man of Kurdish stock, took power in Damascus on March 30, 1949. Israel’s War of Independence ended with armistice deals with Egypt (February 24, 1949) and Jordan (April 3, 1949). Zaʽim messaged Israel via the US that he was ready to go beyond an armistice deal to settle some 400,000 Palestinian refugees and sign a peace treaty.

In return, he wanted Israeli territorial concessions that included the shoreline of the Kinneret/Sea of Galilee along terrain that Syria had conquered beyond the 1947 UN Partition lines. Zaʽim asked for a secret, face-to-face meeting with Ben-Gurion. The Israeli leader sent word that there was nothing to talk about until Syria pulled back to the partition boundaries. He felt confident that the IDF could recapture the territory if need be. Sharett offered to see Zaʽim instead, but the Syrian insisted it had to be Ben-Gurion. The Americans kept up the pressure on Ben-Gurion until he was willing to see Zaʽim, but by then the atmosphere had soured, and the Syrian strongman announced he would not cut a separate peace with Israel. After lengthy negotiations, Damascus signed an armistice deal on July 20, 1949. On August 14, 1949, Zaʽim was assassinated. Whether a genuine “opportunity for peace” had been missed is anyone’s guess.

Sharett came closer to not missing an “opportunity for peace” with Egyptian leader Gamal Abdul Nasser.

Nasser and his junta of Free Officers took power on July 23, 1952. Israel had quietly maintained contact with the comparatively liberal-minded, anticolonial Wafd Party during King Farouk’s regime. Before the coup, Wafd’s popularity had dissipated due to its willingness to work within Egypt’s parliamentary system (created in 1923) — and irrespective of the monarch’s obeisance to Britain. When the Free Officers took power, it looked like General Muhammad Naguib was in charge. On July 26, 1952, the New York Times termed him the “undisputed master of the country.” Naguib seemed to want Wafd’s support for his agenda, which promised a corrupt-free constitutional government. Israel hoped its Wafd connections could serve as a conduit to Naguib. He seemed receptive to peace feelers. An Israeli emissary, Zalman Divon, held secret talks with Egypt’s Ahmad Abudd in Paris on Sharett’s behalf. The Egyptians wanted to move slowly, saying they needed first to get their domestic house in order.

On February 7, 1953, the UN’s emissary Ralph Bunche arrived in Israel from Cairo with an Egyptian offer, which he presented to Ben-Gurion and Sharett. The Arab states would absorb the Palestinian refugees who had left or been forced out during the 1948 fighting in return for financial reparations. Coincidentally or not, Israel announced that it was unfreezing $2.8 million in blocked Palestinian refugee bank accounts. Israel also took steps to compensate Arabs, who were displaced within Israel because of the fighting, by creating new neighborhoods, including near Ramle, Tzfat, and Nahariya. “We are carrying out this policy undeterred by the agitation on our borders or the obstinate refusal of neighboring states to make peace with us,” Sharett said at the February 11, 1953 ceremony in Ramle.

These conciliatory decisions were taken despite an intensification of the Arab economic boycott of Israel, cross-border attacks from the West Bank, and Egypt’s blockade of Israel-bound ships using the Suez Canal.

Moreover, Bunche told Ben-Gurion and Sharett that Egypt was demanding a territorial link between Gaza (which it occupied) and the Jordanian-held West Bank, and it wanted Jerusalem internationalized. It is hard for me to see how Jordan would have agreed to give up East Jerusalem to an international regime, and Israel had no interest in internationalizing West Jerusalem. In any case, Bunche’s peacemaking efforts did not pick up steam.

In November 1954, the world discovered that Naguib was not the master of Egypt. Nasser revealed himself to be the real powerbroker among the Free Officers. They had needed Naguib out front as a sort of responsible adult. When he began taking himself too seriously, Nasser placed him under house arrest and openly took control. (Anwar Sadat, another Free Officer, freed Naguib in 1971, and he lived unobtrusively until he died in 1984.)

In January 1953, according to Sheffer, Nasser signaled Sharett via Abudd that he was ready to open a dialogue. He sought Israel’s backing in demanding that Britain hand over control of the Suez Canal. Sharett asked for assurance that Israel would have free navigation of the waterway. He also wanted Radio Cairo to stop broadcasting anti-Israel propaganda.

Meantime, Palestinian infiltrators engaged in a series of deadly attacks into Israel across the Jordanian and Egyptian armistice lines, targeting passenger trains and busses. For example, in the Ma’ale Akrabim Massacre of 1954, 11 passengers were killed on a road connecting Eilat and Beersheba. Ben-Gurion’s instinct was to order the IDF to embark on ever harsher retaliatory raids. Sharett was less than convinced that reprisals were serving as a deterrent. Instead, he wanted to spotlight the Arabs’ atrocities in the international media to pressure Jordan’s King Hussein and Nasser to reign in the terrorists.

Sharett’s strategic assessment differed from Ben-Gurion’s. He thought Israel should consider declaring that it could accept the 1949 Armistice Lines as its borders. Ben-Gurion’s stance was that since the Arabs did not recognize Israel’s right to exist within any borders, the IDF should push to achieve strategically better positions. Ben-Gurion mocked Sharett as too attuned to the US and the international community. “Our future does not depend on what the Gentiles say but on what the Jews do,” Ben-Gurion famously needled.  

In January 1954, as Sharett settled into the prime minister’s office, Ben-Gurion continued manipulating policy from Sde Boker. He had eased out Mordechai Makleff as IDF Chief of Staff, replaced him with Moshe Dayan, and appointed Pinchas Lavon as minister of defense (a role Ben-Gurion had filled in addition to prime minister). He sniped at Sharett in opinion pieces in the Labor Party newspaper Dvar.

That is the context in which an ill-fated Israeli sabotage operation (which came to be known as the Lavon Affair) got underway in July 1954. Israeli military intelligence ordered a cell of Egyptian Jews it was running to sabotage Nasser’s relations with the West and make it seem as if the country was unstable. They were instructed to carry out a series of fire bombings of American cultural centers in Cairo and Alexandria. The operation quickly unraveled, and the spies were arrested. The affair blindsided Sharett.

Before the spies were put on trial, on September 28, 1954, at the southern entrance of the Suez Canal, Egypt impounded the Israeli freighter Bat Galim bound from Eritrea to Haifa.

Despite all this, Sharett and Nasser kept lines of communication open, with Yigael Yadin sometimes serving as an Israeli intermediary in London. At other times, they communicated through US Jewish leader Jacob Blaustein or British Jewish MP (Labour) Morris Orbach.

Concurrently, another “opportunity for peace” presented itself. Between 1954 and 1955, British and US officials were covertly pushing Project Alpha aimed at solving the Palestinian refugee problem. The plan called for Israel to pull back from the 1949 Armistice Lines in the Negev, with its shrunken boundaries to be guaranteed by Britain and the US. Israel would also resettle 75,000 Palestinian refugees. In return, Israel would get — not peace treaties — but an Arab declaration of non-belligerence. Nasser was not keen on the idea because he felt it signaled acceptance of the legitimacy of the Jewish state. Alpha died a quiet death.

Despite pleas for leniency — open and secret — on January 27, 1955, Egypt sentenced two of the Lavon Affair spies to hang (a medical doctor and teacher) and six others to hard labor. One supposedly committed suicide in his cell. Nasser quickly approved the death and prison sentences. Two members of the cell had avoided arrest and escaped.

That same day, the UN’s armistice commission, citing an “extremely grave” situation because of repeated attacks from Gaza against Israelis, called on Egypt to act against the infiltrations.

Sharrett halted the clandestine talks he was holding with Nasser through intermediaries. On February 28, 1955, a devastating Israeli retaliatory raid in Gaza sent relations into a permafrost. Sharett was tormented because the military operation had gone far beyond what he approved to the point of being counterproductive, since there were signs the Egyptians had indeed started to crack down on Palestinian infiltrators into Israel. After this raid, Cairo told Sharett’s secret emissary, Joseph Tekoa, that further talks were pointless.

Cross-border attacks into Israel intensified, and Ben-Gurion returned from Sde Boker to replace Levon as defense minister on September 1, 1955. He was keen for a big military operation.  

By November 3, 1955, Ben-Gurion had eased Sharett out of the prime minister’s office, taking the job back. Sharett stayed on as foreign minister, a role he had never relinquished. However, Ben-Gurion needed Sharett out of the way as he put the finishing touches to a secret alliance with France and Britain to attack Egypt. Ben-Gurion ruthlessly humbled Sharett until he felt forced to resign on June 14, 1956. His last remarks to the cabinet were to warn against pre-emptive war. On October 29, 1956, the government launched the Sinai Campaign, in coordination with Britain and France. It proved militarily brilliant but a diplomatic dud.

In June 1963, Ben-Gurion was himself compelled to resign due to pressures from inside the Labor Party. His successors, Levi Eshkol (1963-1969) and Golda Meir (1969-1974), are also reputed to have “missed opportunities” to make peace with Egypt. For instance, Nahum Goldmann of the World Jewish Congress sought to arrange a clandestine meeting between Nasser and Golda Meir in 1970.

***

As we think about a hoped-for day after in Gaza, it behooves us to remember that supposed “missed opportunities” don’t happen in a vacuum but in frenetic international, regional, and domestic political environments.

The Palestinian Arabs, in particular, have never missed an opportunity to miss an opportunity, to paraphrase Abba Eban. While there were peace flirtations with states like Syria, Egypt, and Jordan — Sharett and King Abdullah secretly agreed on a peace treaty in 1949, before the monarch got cold feet — the Palestinian Arab leadership has seldom taken the initiative to propose a way out of the conflict.

During the British Mandate period, Palestinian Arabs who were prepared for normalization and accommodation with Zionism were shunted aside, intimidated into silence, or assassinated as collaborators. Of course, the Palestinians’ rejection of the UN’'s 1947 Partition Plan was the mother of all “missed opportunities for peace.”

al-Hawari

This is not to say that individual Palestinian Arabs with little street cred have not talked about peace. There was an intriguing 1952 proposal by the exiled Muhammad Nimer al-Hawari (of the prominent Jaffa family) for a Palestine-Israel federation based on the Swiss Canton system. Israel would have to agree to repatriate 400,000 Palestinian refugees, according to Benny Morris in The Birth of the Palestinian Refugee Problem, 1947-1949. Al-Hawari warned that otherwise, Amin al-Husseini, the mufti of Jerusalem and Hitler cheerleader, along with the Arab states, would keep the displaced Palestinians as permanent refugees and as a battering ram against Israel. Al-Hawari, who led his own militia during the War of Independence, had broken with al-Husseini. He was eventually invited to resettle in Israel and became a prominent lawyer and judge. Was his proposal a missed opportunity? Aside from a mountain of other obstacles, Israel’s population at the time was 1.3 million (including Arab citizens), meaning that absorbing that many Palestinians would have been an immense demographic conundrum.

So, back to the notion of never wasting a good crisis. Elie Podeh calls attention to a Middle East Journal article in which scholars Ilan Peleg and Paul Scham point out, “A traumatic experience or a significant change might turn out to be a precondition for peacemaking in the Middle East in years to come.”

In thinking about today’s traumatic Gaza nightmare, suppose Israel doesn’t, sometime after January 7, 2024, simply declare “victory” and, in doing so, pull out in a Qatar-engineered deal that would exchange dozens more Israeli captives held by Hamas for Palestinian prisoners, as Netanyahu seems inclined to do. Such a “victory” would likely still leave our soldiers taken on October 7 behind to be traded for “heavy” Palestinian prisoners in another Schalit-like deal.

If this is the scenario, Hamas would have achieved the goals set forth by Mohammed Deif on Day One of the war. Nonetheless, let’s, for argument’s sake, say that I am traducing Netanyahu and that, of course, he would allow the IDF, against the relentless interference by the international community, to defang Hamas.

Would the vacuum created in a post-Hamas Gaza present an “opportunity for peace” Can the nihilistic energies of the Palestinian polity rooted in a political culture toxically nurtured since 1948 on victimization, antisemitism, and religious chauvinism be redirected toward constructive self-interest?

And how are we Israelis supposed to sift opportunities for peace from the horrifying debris of October 7?

I won’t here belabor why elephants can't fly — why the PLO can’t be counted on to lead the Gaza Strip into a better tomorrow. Nonetheless, click your heels and fantasize with me that a group of daring Palestinians comes along to establish a Palestinian Authority 2.0 that is genuinely up for serving as Palestine’s government-in-waiting. This idealized PA2 categorically accepts the right of the Jewish people to a national homeland — a prerequisite to ending the conflict — and is willing to create and enforce a demilitarized state in the West Bank and Gaza. Furthermore, it has popular legitimacy and — the cherry on top of the icing — does not tolerate violent Islamist recidivism.

In such an undoubtedly far-fetched scenario, we non-apocalyptic and non-messianic Zionists had better not miss the chance of making peace. So, yes, in such an alternate universe, I would give up the West Bank except for strategic settlement blocs. As for the Holy Basin, I would let the Disney people — or another suitable agency — administer all its sacred attractions.

Back to the world we live in.

Arab intransigence isn’t going anywhere. My daydreams will not soon become a challenging reality.

Sharett was not far from right when he said, “We might have no other way but to launch military operations for the sake of security, but we should know that these are not going to bring peace, only postpone it. We should have no illusions — we would not attain peace by war — peace would be attained only through peaceful methods. This is not naivety, not an empty belief, nor is it a moralistic proclivity. This is the most logical and pragmatic view of things as they actually are.”

I don’t believe our military operations serve only to postpone peace. Mostly, they allow us to survive; for now, that is the best we can hope for. We need to be alert to opportunities for peace. I fear the problem is not that we are missing them, but they are just not presenting themselves.

 

 

Friday, December 22, 2023

Maladjuster of the Middle East - New Nasser Book - A Review



We Are Your Soldiers: How Gamal Abdel Nasser Remade the Arab World by Alex Rowell  (W.W. Norton, 2023).

If you think it is time to bone up on Egypt's Gamal Abdel Nasser and his contributions to today's Middle East chaos, I can vouch that Alex Rowell's deeply researched and lucidly written We Are Your Soldiers is a good place to start.

Rowell is an Arabist – I mean that in a nice way. He lives among the Arabs, understands Arabic, and, as a journalist, endeavors to rationalize the Arab and Muslim Middle East in prestigious American and British media outlets. Don't let the fact that Rowell is not a philo-Zionist put you off for this book, for he has a solidly constructed thesis and presents a wealth of color and material that observers who care about Israel may want to squirrel away.


I look past lines like Israel captured the "Palestinian West Bank and Gaza" in 1967. Rowell knows those territories transferred from Turkey to England to Jordan and Egypt before falling to Israel in the Six-Day War. Maybe he means that they would have been Palestinian had the Palestinian Arabs not rejected the 1947 UN Partition Plan. But let's not quibble. The book relates only tangentially to Israel.

Rowell brings something new to the table. He proposes that Gamal Abdel Nasser, who died in 1970 at age 52, not only left behind a fractured Egypt but that he is blameworthy for the instability that today troubles Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, Yemen, and Libya.

Start with Egypt. Except for the brief 2012 to 2013 presidency of the democratically elected Muslim Brotherhood's Mohamed Morsi, the country has had only military men at its helm – Nasser, Anwar Sadat, Hosni Mubarak, and Abdel Fattah el-Sisi who (on December 19, 2023) captured 89.6 percent of the vote to secure a third term. Astonishing not.

Rowell spells out in a gripping narrative the damage Nasser did as he habitually interfered with the normal political development of Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, Yemen, Libya, and his own Egypt. The real Nasser, as opposed to the iconic revolutionary caricature, "methodically destroyed the institutions of parliamentary democracy, banned all political parties, muzzled the press, gutted the judiciary, strangled civil liberties, and jailed or outright killed his opponents" and did so not only "at home but abroad."  

It didn't have to be this way. By 1952, it was indeed time for the ineffective King Farouk to go and for British suzerainty to end. Egypt was ready to run its own affairs and control its resources, including the lucrative Suez Canal. Waiting in the wings were the comparatively liberal reformist Wafd Party but also its competition, the Muslim Brotherhood (which eventually spawned al-Qaida, Islamic State, and Hamas). Wafd would have been the better choice. Instead, the motley "Free Officers," of whom Nasser was the most dominant, took power in a bloodless coup on July 23, 1952. The monarch sailed into exile on his yacht.

The figurehead of the putsch was General Muhammad Naguib, but when he imagined that he was more than that, Nasser promoted him to a ceremonial position. Nasser, like other Arab tyrants – Assad the Elder, Saddam, and Muammar Gaddafi – had found his path toward upward mobility through the military, making frenemies and influencing people who would comprise their juntas.

He completed the consolidation of power in 1955 and set out to restructure the country's polity, creating a cult of personality. At first, Nasser cooperated with Hassan al-Banna, the founder of the Muslim Brotherhood, while going after Wafd politicians. The crushing of parties like the Wafd, which promoted a semblance of tolerance and democratic values, is a motif throughout the Muslim Middle East. Hence, outside Israel, there is not a single country in our region with a democratic-oriented ruling party.

In 1954, Nasser was ready to turn against the Brotherhood. Along the way, he banned political parties, purged the army, politically neutered university campuses, controlled broadcasting, and closed newspapers. Transistor radio, which became available in 1954, transmitted his Voice of Cairo throughout the Middle East.

In April 1955, as European states were shedding their colonies, he appeared on the world stage at the Bandung Conference, where the non-aligned/third-world bloc of countries supposedly neither loyal to Soviet communism nor US capitalism was born. Israel was not invited due to Arab pressure. Nasser met Red China's Chou En-Lai, India's Jawaharlal Nehru, and Sukarno of Indonesia alongside representatives from Pakistan and Jordan. The conference was a Muslim opportunity to gang up on "aggressive Zionism" and support "the rights of the Arab peoples in Palestine." It passed a unanimous resolution calling for the internationalization of Jerusalem (odd since, at the time, east Jerusalem was in Jordan's hands), called for an Israeli withdrawal to the 1947 Partition Plan lines, and a return of Arab refugees who had left or been forced out during the 1948 War. There was no mention of recognizing the right of the Jewish people to a national homeland within any boundaries.

Nasser "came back from Bandung a different man" full of himself, writes Rowell. He nationalized the Suez Canal, in which France had a substantial financial stake. This decision and Nasser's encouragement of cross-border attacks from the Gaza Strip (which Egypt occupied) into Israel precipitated the 1956 Sinai Campaign, in which Israel captured Gaza and Sinai while the French and British recovered military control of the Suez Canal. US President Dwight Eisenhower came to Nasser's diplomatic rescue and pressured Israel back unconditionally to the 1949 Armistice Lines. After flirting with him, the CIA mistook Nasser for a Soviet pawn and gave way to Moscow.

Around this point, foreigners, educated Arabs (Rowell mentions the family of Edward Said), and Jewish people found it expedient to leave Egypt. Once cosmopolitan, Cairo was becoming increasingly religious, provincial, and overpopulated because of urbanization. Nasser built concentration camps – Rowell describes these in detail – to punish political opponents; forced labor and torture by the sadistic secret police became a routine tool to maintain his authoritarian control.

The stage was now set to export Nasserism. But what was Nasserism? It was essentially secular pan-Arab nationalism. Throw in a dash of nationalization of major industries and a pinch of bloated government. Power and wealth accrued to the officer corps. Its foreign policy prescription was to keep Western influence at bay while tilting toward the Soviets.

Nasserism was also an imperialism. Nasser's bloody fingerprints were all over the coup that overthrew Iraq's Hashemite King Faysal II on July 14, 1958. Iraq's "Free Officers" (a recurrent euphemism for "revolutionary" nationalists coming out of the military) tormented and murdered moderate reformist politicians. Antisemitism went up a notch. With the sensible monarch and his wise prime minister out of the way, Iraq was spoiled for intramural warfare among its contending ethnic, tribal, and religious groups. The Free Officers turned on one another. Each successive strongman sought Nasser's approval. A Nasser protegee named Saddam Hussein emerged. As Rowell tells it, "If Nasser did not literally install Saddam on the throne, he nonetheless did a great deal to create the conditions that enabled him to get there – not the least during the three years he hosted, paid, and protected him as his guest in Cairo." The fiend clutched ruthlessly onto power from 1979 to 2003 until he was finally hung in 2006.

After a Nasser-instigated revolution in Syria, he pushed for a merger of the two countries into the “United Arab Republic.” Next, he appointed a high commissioner to administer affairs in Damascus and benefited from the services of a sadistic secret police chief. The Ba'ath Party of Syria wanted only to be Nasser's political tool, seeking closer union with Egypt. For Nasser, total devotion was not enough. Once he took over, Nasser sought to dismantle surviving trace elements of Syrian independence.

"The speed with which Nasser proceeded to squander" the "adulation" he enjoyed in Syria "was remarkable, writes Rowell. There was a "mismatch between Nasser's intentions and Syrians' expectations." A period of vicious instability followed that forced the Egyptian overlords out. Nonetheless, a pro-Nasser faction emerged that included a certain captain Hafez al-Assad. He, too, had been on  Nasser's payroll, was influenced by his style of rule, and lived in Cairo, perhaps rubbing elbows with Saddam Hussein. In September 1970, Assad wrested control of the country.

The psychopath does not fall far from the sociopath. Hafez's son Bashar replaced his father in July 2000. At least 350,000 Arabs have been killed in the fighting to keep the Assad clan of Alawites in power. Bashar, having butchered his way back into Arab good graces, is today a rehabilitated member of the Arab League hectoring Israel and praising the "Gaza Resistance."

In Lebanon, Nasser played a central role in stoking the 1958 intramural fighting, which heralded the unraveling of Lebanon's delicate sectarian political system. Then in 1964, he created, funded, and trained the Palestine Liberation Organization. He endorsed the ascendency of Cairo-born Yassir Arafat in 1967, as he edged out the PLO's founding chairman, Ahmad Shuqayri of Lebanon. The Palestinians had arrived in Lebanon after the 1948 War. By 1968, their "refugee camps" (opposition to permanent resettlement is a core ethos of Palestinian victimization) became autonomous, and PLO militias developed into a potent armed force. Nasser pressured the disintegrating Lebanese polity into accepting the “Cairo Agreement” (1969), which created a state within a state and gave the PLO the right to attack Israel from Lebanon. The country never regained sovereignty over its borders.

Nasser also did his darndest to overthrow Jordan's King Hussein (father of the current monarch Abdullah II). The young Hussein tried to placate Nasser, seek his guidance, and follow his lead. With Nasser's deceitful approval, Jordan flirted with becoming a member of the pro-Western Baghdad Pact. To his credit, the King experimented with democratic institutions, but Nasser's agents exploited every opening to undermine his regime. Nasser employed the Syrian secret police to destabilize Jordan. He tried repeatedly and continually failed to kill Hussein by poisoning his food and even his nasal spray and (using the Syrian airforce) shooting down his plane. Cairo either ordered or acquiesced to the assassination of Jordanian politicians close to the King. Fear that a genuine parliamentary government would be exploited to create insecurity helps explain how Jordan devolved into what it is today: a police state.


A wary Hussein and Nasser buried the hatchet by 1964 when Cairo created the PLO. Its establishment was awkward as Jordan had annexed the West Bank and held east Jerusalem. The only part of Palestine the PLO could liberate was Israel. In 1967, Nasser bamboozled Hussein to join him in going to war with Israel, which led to Jordan's loss of the West Bank and Jerusalem. Had Jordan stayed out of the war, as Israeli leaders pleaded for him to do, there would be no Jewish presence today in Judea and Samaria, no "settlements," and – who knows – Jordan, with its overwhelmingly Palestinian population, might today be a confederated Hashemite-Palestinian state.

It is de rigueur among anti- and post-Zionists to imagine that Nasser wanted to make peace with a recalcitrant Israel going back to the days of Moshe Sharett. I don’t doubt that Israel missed opportunities, but not obviously so. After losing the 1967 War, Rowell writes that Nasser was prepared to accept peace offers that would essentially undo his military losses. These included UN SC Resolution 242, crafted to be open to interpretation, and the 1969 Rogers Plan put forth by William Rogers, Richard Nixon's Secretary of State. He claims that, unlike Arafat, Nasser accepted a two-state solution to the conflict. I am not sure how he squares these assertions with Khartoum's "Three No's" – No peace with Israel, No recognition of Israel, No negotiations with Israel - announced at the Arab League Summit on September 1, 1967.

As for the Roger's Plan, Egypt demanded a total Israeli withdrawal from all the territory captured in the 1967 war and restoration of the "legitimate rights" of Palestinian refugees – presumably meaning repatriation within Green Line Israel. The Rogers Plan implied the Palestinian right of return. For Israel, this was a non-starter. Golda Meir wanted to negotiate permanent borders and peace treaties directly with Egypt and Jordan. The plan did not call on the Palestinian Arabs to end terrorism or accept the right of the Jewish people to a national homeland. It struck Israeli leaders as an attempt to appease the Arabs at Israel's expense.

In June 1970, the PLO tried to overthrow Hussein in what became known as Black September. One of its constituent groups hijacked five airplanes, four of which were ultimately flown to Dawson's Field in Jordan and blown up – TWA Flight 741; Swissair Flight 100; Pan Am Flight 93; and BOAC Flight 775.

Meantime, the hijacking of El Al Flight 219 was foiled, although the Palestinian hijacker Leila Khaled, became the poster girl of the "destroy Israel by-any-means-necessary" crowd. Palestinian terrorists had also taken Western hostages, staying at two Amman hotels. And Palestinian gunmen had repeatedly shot at the King's motorcade. All this messaged Hussein's powerlessness to control his country.

To survive, the King unleashed his tanks and artillery on the PLO, which was embedded in the Palestinian refugee camps. Thousands were killed. Arafat, in his slippery way, sued for peace, and Nasser hosted a sulha reconciliation meeting in Cairo on September 26, 1970. The Egyptian leader suffered a heart attack and died on September 28, 1970, but not before he had rescued Arafat to fight another day.

Leaving Jordan, the PLO leader set up shop in Beirut, deploying his men in south Lebanon, which became Fatahland, to launch terror attacks into northern Israel. That ended in 1982 when the IDF ousted the PLO from Lebanon, and Arafat's entourage moved on to Tunisia until the 1993 Oslo Accords brought him to Ramallah.

No country suffered more than Yemen from Nasser’s interference. The Egyptian leader's involvement in Yemen was unprovoked and pure aggression, according to Rowell. In September 1962, Yemen's "Free Officers," inspired by Nasser, overthrew  Muhamad al-Badr, the Shi'ite imam running the country. His base was in northern Yemen among the Zaydi-Shi’ite tribes – the same population from which the Houthi clan would emerge in the 1990s. The fanatical Wahhabi Sunni Saudis and the evanescent British Empire joined forces with the Shi'ite imam against Nasser.

Today, as the war Hamas wrought rages in Gaza, Yemen is much in the news. Instead of Egypt, imperial Persia, which is Shi'ite, is on the scene. Yemen is dominated by the Houthi clan, who are Shi'ite Arabs. They are in strategic control of the strait of Bab al-Mandab, which leads to and from the Suez Canal (and Eilat). It is a choke point between the Red Sea, the Indian Ocean, and the Mediterranean. By putting a squeeze on boats sailing between Asia and Europe, they hope the international community will pressure Israel to abandon its must-win war to defang Hamas.

In his day, the Egyptian leader used his airforce and sent tens of thousands of foot soldiers to Yemen. It was the only country where Egypt used poison gas and biological weapons (even after Nasser lost the 1967 war to Israel). He pulled out in defeat only in November 1967. Even his supporters referred to Yemen as Egypt's Vietnam.

Nasser left a further lethal legacy before he died – one Muammar Gadaffi. A Nasser-wannabe, he took power of Libya in September 1969. "Tell President Nasser we made this revolution for him," the young lieutenant cabled to Cairo. In his early days, Gadaffi was charismatic and feigned sanity, not the Caligula figure that comes down to us in history. To guide his acolyte, Nasser sent a viceroy to direct the development of Libya (as if the master had not run Egypt into an economic and political ditch). According to Rowell, from behind Libyan proxies, Nasser directed the country's foreign policies and negotiations with the outside world. Saddam Hussein tried to elbow Nasser out, but Gadaffi was true to his love. Nasser told Gadaffi that Allah had chosen him to rule Libya and implied that he would succeed him as leader of pan-Arabism and Nasserism.

Nasser's interest was understandable – Libya had a small population and immense oil wealth. Like his mentor, Gadaffi spread terror and destruction at home and beyond. He was behind multiple plane hijackings and assassinations, including  Pan Am Flight 103, blown up over Lockerbie, and the La Belle disco bombing in Germany. Rebels belatedly killed Muammar Gaddafi while one of them sodomized him with a bayonet in 2011; a fitting end.

Alas, Libya, Syria, Lebanon, and Yemen are hopelessly failed states. Jordan and Egypt are, at best fragile states.

Rowell's book should put the final nails in the coffin of those who pretend Nasser was some avuncular revolutionary uncle.