Israel
in a Post-American Era
by
Patrick
J. Buchanan
Recently
by Patrick J. Buchanan: The
Dirty Old Man and the IMF
In 1918, the
United States proved militarily decisive in the defeat of the Kaiser's
Germany and emerged as first power on earth.
World War II,
ending in 1945, produced two truly victorious nations, the Soviet
Union of Joseph Stalin and the America of Harry Truman.
Out of the
Cold War that lasted from Truman to the disintegration of the Soviet
Empire and breakup of the Soviet Union at the end of Ronald Reagan's
term came a lone victor: the last superpower, the United States.
Who emerged
triumphant from the post-Cold War era, 1991-2011?
Indisputably,
it is China, whose 10-12 percent annual growth vaulted her past
Italy, France, Britain, Germany and Japan to become the world's
second largest economy and America's lone rival for first manufacturing
power.
If we use a
metric called "purchasing power parity," China overtakes America
in 2016. Says the International Monetary Fund, the American era
is over.
Strategically,
too, the United States seems in retreat, nowhere more so than in
that region that was the focus of George W. Bush's "global democratic
revolution." And no nation reflects more the relative loss of U.S.
power and influence than does Israel, whose isolation is today unprecedented.
A decade ago,
Turkey, a NATO ally of 50 years, was a quiet friend and partner
to Israel. Today, the Palestinians in Gaza view the Turks as among
their staunchest friends in the Middle East.
President Hosni
Mubarak of Egypt scrupulously adhered to the terms of his predecessor's
peace treaty with Israel and maintained the western end of the Israeli
blockade of Gaza.
Since he fell,
the interim Egyptian regime has midwifed a unity government of Fatah
and Hamas, moved to establish diplomatic relations with Tehran for
the first time since the fall of the Shah and begun to lift the
Gaza blockade. September's elections are almost guaranteed to deliver
to parliament a huge if not controlling bloc from the Muslim Brotherhood.
While the Brotherhood
appears to be the strongest party in Egypt, it has held back from
openly seeking the presidency or absolute power in the legislature.
It appears to be playing a waiting game. After them, us.
Mahmoud Abbas,
the Palestinian leader who had looked to President Obama to bring
a halt to new Israeli settlements in the West Bank and East Jerusalem
and preside over peace talks, appears to have given up on the Americans.
Though the
beneficiary of hundreds of millions in U.S. aid, he has entered
a coalition with his old enemy Hamas, and together – if they can
stay together – they plan to seek recognition of an independent
Palestine by vote of the U.N. General Assembly in September.
The likelihood
is that the overwhelming majority, including many of America's allies,
will vote to recognize Palestine and seat it in the General Assembly,
where it can make demands on Israel, backed by U.N. sanctions, to
terminate its occupation and vacate its national territory.
The General
Assembly resolution will set as the borders of Palestine those that
existed between 1948 and 1967. But, today, beyond those borders
live no fewer than 500,000 Israeli Jews.
While the United
States vetoed a recent Security Council resolution condemning Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's continued expansion of settlements,
we have no veto in the General Assembly. If Obama opposes the U.N.
resolution, we and Israel will stand virtually alone.
Nor are these
the only crises Israel confronts.
To Israel's
north is Hezbollah, which has become the dominant force in Lebanon.
To the south is Gaza, dominated by Hamas, which has never accepted
Israel's existence. Israel has fought wars with both.
To the east
is the West Bank, where the Palestinian Authority appears to have
given up on U.S.-sponsored peace talks. Beyond lies Jordan, whose
King Abdullah rules over millions of Palestinians, who is under
pressure to take a tougher stand against Israel and who has no love
for Bibi Netanyahu.
And what happened
Sunday on the 63rd anniversary of Israel's independence and the
Palestinian "nakba," or "catastrophe," where 700,000 fled or were
driven into exile, is perhaps the most ominous portent of all.
Palestinian
protesters approached the fence separating Lebanon and Israel and
climbed the fence on the Israeli-occupied Golan heights to come
and reclaim Palestinian lands. Fifteen to 20 were shot to death
and scores were wounded by Israeli troops.
Though
the White House backed Israel, across Europe what Israel did to
these protesters seemed exactly what the king of Bahrain and the
president of Yemen had done to theirs.
Given the coordination
of the Palestinian actions, we may be on the verge either of a Facebook
revolution or a "third intifada," an uprising by Palestinians in
Israel, the occupied territories, and Lebanon, Syria, Jordan and
Egypt, where hundreds of thousands of descendants of the original
exiles still live.
Such an uprising
would divert the attention of Arab peoples from the failures of
their own regimes and isolate Israel and her principal – indeed,
only – ally, the United States, as they have never been before in
the Arab world.
May
20, 2011
Patrick
J. Buchanan [send
him mail] is co-founder and editor of The
American Conservative. He is also the author of seven books,
including Where
the Right Went Wrong, and A
Republic Not An Empire. His latest book is Churchill,
Hitler, and the Unnecessary War. See his
website.
Copyright
© 2011 Creators Syndicate
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