Is
the Window Closing on Israel?
by
Patrick
J. Buchanan
Recently
by Patrick J. Buchanan: Setting
Grandma's Hair on Fire
In June 1967,
with ex-Vice President Richard Nixon, this writer toured an Israeli
military hospital full of wounded Egyptian soldiers.
An Israeli
officer told us that in the hospital was an Egyptian officer he
had captured in the 1956 Sinai campaign, and that he had asked the
Egyptian: "We have fought three times now, and three times you have
been defeated. Why do you keep fighting us?"
The Egyptian
replied, "You may have defeated us three times, and you may defeat
us 11 times. But the 12th time we win."
From that Six-Day
War, wise Israelis took away two lessons.
First, they
had to remain alert and strong enough to defeat all their neighbors
at once. Second, the more important struggle was that they must
win the acceptance of the Arab peoples to survive in an Arab sea.
The Israelis
were not alert in 1973 when Egypt launched the attack of Yom Kippur
that sent their army reeling along the Suez Canal.
President Nixon
intervened with a massive airlift to save Israel.
Half a decade
later, President Sadat and Menachem Begin agreed at Camp David to
a trade of land for peace. Israel would give up all of Sinai captured
in 1967 in return for a peace treaty with Cairo.
A treaty with
King Hussein of Jordan followed.
Israel was
on its way to winning acceptance in the Arab world.
In 1982, after
an Israeli diplomat was mortally wounded by an assassin in London,
Begin ordered an invasion of Lebanon. Gen. Ariel Sharon swiftly
reached the suburbs of Beirut, and Yasser Arafat's PLO was expelled
to Tunis.
But as Yitzhak
Rabin ruefully conceded, "We let the Shia genie out of the bottle."
In the south
of Lebanon, quiescent Shiites had begun to fight the Israeli occupation
in militias that came to be known as Hezbollah.
Bled
for 18 years, the Israelis withdrew in 2000, leaving Hezbollah dominant
in Lebanon.
Perhaps more
critically, after the Six-Day War, the Israelis had annexed all
of Jerusalem and begun to move settlers into East Jerusalem and
onto the West Bank. In 1987 came the First Intifada, an uprising
of the Palestinians using sticks and stones. Yet the movement of
Israeli settlers continued. From a few thousand in the 1970s, the
number has grown to half a million.
Having won
peace with Egypt and Jordan, the Israelis began secret negotiations
with the Palestinians. In 1994 came the Oslo Accords, an agreement
to trade land for peace. As Sadat got back the Sinai by making peace
with Israel, Palestinians would get a nation of their own in return
for recognizing Israel.
Israel had
broken out of her isolation and won acceptance from Egypt, Jordan
and even Arafat's PLO.
But in 1995,
Prime Minister Rabin, who had won the Nobel Peace Prize for Oslo
and had come to believe in the necessity of trading land for peace,
was assassinated by an Israeli fanatic determined to prevent any
surrender of West Bank land.
When Sharon
came to power, he gave up Gaza, but refused to yield on Jerusalem
or the West Bank. His successor, Ehud Olmert, like Rabin and Ehud
Barak before him, came to believe that Israel had to give up the
West Bank for peace, or she would never know peace.
But Olmert
failed to negotiate that peace.
Looking back,
Israel has prevailed in all her wars, from the War of Independence,
to the Sinai campaign, to the Six-Day and Yom Kippur wars, to the
1982 invasion of Lebanon, to the first and second intifadas, the
Lebanon War of 2006 and the Gaza War of 2008.
But today Israel
is more isolated than she has ever been, and the prospects are bleak
that she can break out of this isolation.
Hamas rules
Gaza. Hezbollah rules Lebanon. The Turks have turned hostile. The
Palestinian Authority has given up on Barack Obama and is demanding
a state from the Security Council and U.N. General Assembly. Israel's
partner in Egypt, Hosni Mubarak, is gone. The Israeli embassy in
Cairo has been sacked. Mobs in Amman have sought to do the same.
George W. Bush
was persuaded by neocons that an invasion of Iraq would start the
dominoes of Arab tyranny falling and usher in an era of pro-Western
democracies in the region.
Not quite.
The Arab Spring that followed the U.S. invasion by a decade is bringing
down the despots but also unleashing the demons of ethnonationalism
and Islamic fundamentalism that are anti-American and anti-Zionist.
Israel's
great patron, America, is in retreat from the region, with her army
in Iraq home by year's end and her autocratic allies down in Egypt
and Tunisia and tottering in Bahrain and Yemen.
By 2050, Palestinians
west of the Jordan will outnumber Israelis two to one. Syria, Jordan
and Egypt, which had 40 million people at the time of the Six-Day
War, will have 170 million. Militarily, Israel remains dominant,
but neither time nor demography seems to be on her side.
And Arab acceptance
seems more distant than ever.
September
24, 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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