Topic: The Israeli Crisis
HotRodDeluxe's photo
Wed 08/15/12 03:40 AM
Edited by HotRodDeluxe on Wed 08/15/12 03:41 AM
The Israeli Crisis


August 14, 2012


By George Friedman

Crises are normally short, sharp and intense affairs. Israel's predicament has developed on a different time frame, is more diffuse than most crises and has not reached a decisive and intense moment. But it is still a crisis. It is not a crisis solely about Iran, although the Israeli government focuses on that issue. Rather, it is over Israel's strategic reality since 1978, when it signed the Camp David accords with Egypt.

Perhaps the deepest aspect of the crisis is that Israel has no internal consensus on whether it is in fact a crisis, or if so, what the crisis is about. The Israeli government speaks of an existential threat from Iranian nuclear weapons. I would argue that the existential threat is broader and deeper, part of it very new, and part of it embedded in the founding of Israel.

Israel now finds itself in a long-term crisis in which it is struggling to develop a strategy and foreign policy to deal with a new reality. This is causing substantial internal stress, since the domestic consensus on Israeli policy is fragmenting at the same time that the strategic reality is shifting. Though this happens periodically to nations, Israel sees itself in a weak position in the long run due to its size and population, despite its current military superiority. More precisely, it sees the evolution of events over time potentially undermining that military reality, and it therefore feels pressured to act to preserve it. How to preserve its superiority in the context of the emerging strategic reality is the core of the Israeli crisis.

Egypt

Since 1978, Israel's strategic reality had been that it faced no threat of a full peripheral war. After Camp David, the buffer of the Sinai Peninsula separated Egypt and Israel, and Egypt had a government that did not want that arrangement to break. Israel still faced a formally hostile Syria. Syria had invaded Lebanon in 1976 to crush the Palestine Liberation Organization based there and reconsolidate its hold over Lebanon, but knew it could not attack Israel by itself. Syria remained content reaching informal understandings with Israel. Meanwhile, relatively weak and isolated Jordan depended on Israel for its national security. Lebanon alone was unstable. Israel periodically intervened there, not very successfully, but not at very high cost.

The most important of Israel's neighbors, Egypt, is now moving on an uncertain course. This weekend, new Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi removed five key leaders of the military and the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces and revoked constitutional amendments introduced by the military. There are two theories on what has happened. In the first, Morsi -- who until his election was a senior leader of the country's mainstream Islamist movement, the Muslim Brotherhood -- is actually much more powerful than the military and is acting decisively to transform the Egyptian political system. In the second, this is all part of an agreement between the military and the Muslim Brotherhood that gives Morsi the appearance of greater power while actually leaving power with the military.

On the whole, I tend to think that the second is the case. Still, it is not clear how this will evolve: The appearance of power can turn into the reality of power. Despite any sub rosa agreements between the military and Morsi, how these might play out in a year or two as the public increasingly perceives Morsi as being in charge -- limiting the military's options and cementing Morsi's power -- is unknown. In the same sense, Morsi has been supportive of security measures taken by the military against militant Islamists, as was seen in the past week's operations in the Sinai Peninsula.

The Sinai remains a buffer zone against major military forces, but not against the paramilitaries linked to radical Islamists who have increased their activities in the peninsula since the fall of former President Hosni Mubarak in February 2011. Last week, they attacked an Egyptian military post on the Gaza border, killing 16 Egyptian soldiers. This followed several attacks against Israeli border crossings. Morsi condemned the attack and ordered a large-scale military crackdown in the Sinai. Two problems could arise from this.

First, the Egyptians' ability to defeat the militant Islamists depends on redefining the Camp David accords, at least informally, to allow Egypt to deploy substantial forces there (though even this might not suffice). These additional military forces might not threaten Israel immediately, but setting a precedent for a greater Egyptian military presence in the Sinai Peninsula could eventually lead to a threat.

This would be particularly true if Morsi and the Muslim Brotherhood impose their will on the Egyptian military. If we take Morsi at face value as a moderate, the question becomes who will succeed him. The Muslim Brotherhood is clearly ascendant, and the possibility that a secular democracy would emerge from the Egyptian uprising is unlikely. It is also clear that the Muslim Brotherhood is a movement with many competing factions. And it is clear from the elections that the Muslim Brotherhood represents the most popular movement in Egypt and that no one can predict how it will evolve or which factions will dominate and what new tendencies will arise. Egypt in the coming years will not resemble Egypt of the past generation, and that means that the Israeli calculus for what will happen on its southern front will need to take Hamas in Gaza into account and perhaps an Islamist Egypt prepared to ally with Hamas.

Syria and Lebanon

A similar situation exists in Syria. The secular and militarist regime of the al Assad family is in serious trouble. As mentioned, the Israelis had a working relationship with the Syrians going back to the Syrian invasion of Lebanon against the Palestine Liberation Organization in 1976. It was not a warm relationship, but it was predictable, particularly in the 1990s: Israel allowed Syria a free hand in Lebanon in exchange for Damascus limiting Hezbollah's actions.

Lebanon was not exactly stable, but its instability hewed to a predictable framework. That understanding broke down when the United States seized an opportunity to force Syria to retreat from Lebanon in 2006 following the 2005 assassination of Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik al-Hariri. The United States used the Cedar Revolution that rose up in defiance of Damascus to retaliate against Syria for allowing al Qaeda to send jihadists into Iraq from Syria.

This didn't spark the current unrest in Syria, which appears to involve a loose coalition of Sunnis including elements of the Muslim Brotherhood and other Islamists. Though Israel far preferred Syrian President Bashar al Assad to them, al Assad himself was shifting his behavior. The more pressure he came under, the more he became dependent on Iran. Israel began facing the unpleasant prospect of a Sunni Islamist government emerging or a government heavily dependent on Iran. Neither outcome appealed to Israel, and neither outcome was in Israel's control.

Just as dangerous to Israel would be the Lebanonization of Syria. Syria and Lebanon are linked in many ways, though Lebanon's political order was completely different and Syria could serve as a stabilizing force for it. There is now a reasonable probability that Syria will become like Lebanon, namely, a highly fragmented country divided along religious and ethnic lines at war with itself. Israel's best outcome would be for the West to succeed in preserving Syria's secular military regime without al Assad. But it is unclear how long a Western-backed regime resting on the structure of al Assad's Syria would survive. Even the best outcome has its own danger. And while Lebanon itself has been reasonably stable in recent years, when Syria catches a cold, Lebanon gets pneumonia. Israel thus faces the prospect of declining security to its north.

The U.S. Role and Israel's Strategic Lockdown

It is important to take into account the American role in this, because ultimately Israel's national security -- particularly if its strategic environment deteriorates -- rests on the United States. For the United States, the current situation is a strategic triumph. Iran had been extending its power westward, through Iraq and into Syria. This represented a new force in the region that directly challenged American interests. Where Israel originally had an interest in seeing al Assad survive, the United States did not. Washington's primary interest lay in blocking Iran and keeping it from posing a threat to the Arabian Peninsula. The United States saw Syria, particularly after the uprising, as an Iranian puppet. While the United States was delighted to see Iran face a reversal in Syria, Israel was much more ambivalent about that outcome.

The Israelis are always opposed to the rising regional force. When that was Egyptian leader Gamal Abdel Nasser, they focused on Nasser. When it was al Qaeda and its sympathizers, they focused on al Qaeda. When it was Iran, they focused on Tehran. But simple opposition to a regional tendency is no longer a sufficient basis for Israeli strategy. As in Syria, Israel must potentially oppose all tendencies, where the United States can back one. That leaves Israeli policy incoherent. Lacking the power to impose a reality on Syria, the best Israel can do is play the balance of power. When its choice is between a pro-Iranian power and a Sunni Islamist power, it can no longer play the balance of power. Since it lacks the power to impose a reality, it winds up in a strategic lockdown.

Israel's ability to influence events on its borders was never great, but events taking place in bordering countries are now completely beyond its control. While Israeli policy has historically focused on the main threat, using the balance of power to stabilize the situation and ultimately on the decisive use of military force, it is no longer possible to identify the main threat. There are threats in all of its neighbors, including Jordan (where the kingdom's branch of the Muslim Brotherhood is growing in influence while the Hashemite monarchy is reviving relations with Hamas). This means using the balance of power within these countries to create secure frontiers is no longer an option. It is not clear there is a faction for Israel to support or a balance that can be achieved. Finally, the problem is political rather than military. The ability to impose a political solution is not available.

Against the backdrop, any serious negotiations with the Palestinians are impossible. First, the Palestinians are divided. Second, they are watching carefully what happens in Egypt and Syria since this might provide new political opportunities. Finally, depending on what happens in neighboring countries, any agreement Israel might reach with the Palestinians could turn into a nightmare.

The occupation therefore continues, with the Palestinians holding the initiative. Unrest begins when they want it to begin and takes the form they want it to have within the limits of their resources. The Israelis are in a responsive mode. They can't eradicate the Palestinian threat. Extensive combat in Gaza, for example, has both political consequences and military limits. Occupying Gaza is easy; pacifying Gaza is not.

Israel's Military and Domestic Political Challenges

The crisis the Israelis face is that their levers of power, the open and covert relationships they had, and their military force are not up to the task of effectively shaping their immediate environment. They have lost the strategic initiative, and the type of power they possess will not prove decisive in dealing with their strategic issues. They no longer are operating at the extremes of power, but in a complex sphere not amenable to military solutions.

Israel's strong suit is conventional military force. It can't fully understand or control the forces at work on its borders, but it can understand the Iranian nuclear threat. This leads it to focus on the sort of conventional conflict they excel at, or at least used to excel at. The 2006 war with Hezbollah was quite conventional, but Israel was not prepared for an infantry war. The Israelis instead chose to deal with Lebanon via an air campaign, but that failed to achieve their political ends.

The Israelis want to redefine the game to something they can win, which is why their attention is drawn to the Iranian nuclear program. Of all their options in the region, a strike against Iran's nuclear facilities apparently plays to their strengths. Two things make such a move attractive. The first is that eliminating Iran's nuclear capability is desirable for Israel. The nuclear threat is so devastating that no matter how realistic the threat is, removing it is desirable.

Second, it would allow Israel to demonstrate the relevance of its power in the region. It has been a while since Israel has had a significant, large-scale military victory. The 1980s invasion of Lebanon didn't end well; the 2006 war was a stalemate; and while Israel may have achieved its military goals in the 2008 invasion of Gaza, that conflict was a political setback. Israel is still taken seriously in the regional psychology, but the sense of inevitability Israel enjoyed after 1967 is tattered. A victory on the order of destroying Iranian weapons would reinforce Israel's relevance.

It is, of course, not clear that the Israelis intend to launch such an attack. And it is not clear that such an attack would succeed. It is also not clear that the Iranian counter at the Strait of Hormuz wouldn't leave Israel in a difficult political situation, and above all it is not clear that Egyptian and Syrian factions would even be impressed by the attacks enough to change their behavior.

Israel also has a domestic problem, a crisis of confidence. Many military and intelligence leaders oppose an attack on Iran. Part of their opposition is rooted in calculation. Part of it is rooted in a series of less-than-successful military operations that have shaken their confidence in the military option. They are afraid both of failure and of the irrelevance of the attack on the strategic issues confronting Israel.

Political inertia can be seen among Israeli policymakers. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu tried to form a coalition with the centrist Kadima Party, but that fell apart over the parochial Israeli issue of whether Orthodox Jews should be drafted. Rather than rising to the level of a strategic dialogue, the secularist constituency of Kadima confronted the religious constituencies of the Likud coalition and failed to create a government able to devise a platform for decisive action.

This is Israel's crisis. It is not a sudden, life-threatening problem but instead is the product of unraveling regional strategies, a lack of confidence earned through failure and a political system incapable of unity on any particular course. Israel, a small country that always has used military force as its ultimate weapon, now faces a situation where the only possible use of military force -- against Iran -- is not only risky, it is not clearly linked to any of the main issues Israel faces other than the nuclear issue.

The French Third Republic was marked by a similar sense of self-regard overlaying a deep anxiety. This led to political paralysis and Paris' inability to understand the precise nature of the threat and to shape their response to it. Rather than deal with the issues at hand in the 1930s, they relied on past glories to guide them. That didn't turn out very well.



"The Israeli Crisis is republished with permission of Stratfor."

http://www.stratfor.com/weekly/israeli-crisis?utm_source=freelist-f&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=20120814&utm_term=gweekly&utm_content=readmore&elq=55d8f8a78ded4498851d2538b344c4e5

Although purely a speculative opinion piece, it demonstrates Israel's position within the ME as the political landscape changes around her. The future of Syria & Egypt potentially have disastrous consequences for Israeli security, and although the anti-semites (used in the accepted sense) will applaud this situation, it has serious global implications.

s1owhand's photo
Wed 08/15/12 06:25 AM
Edited by s1owhand on Wed 08/15/12 07:15 AM
As the article above suggests, the crisis facing Israel has much
broader implications affecting the global political landscape in
its entirety. This is why "The Israeli Crisis" is a misnomer. It
should be called "The Current World Crisis" and Israel is merely
one of the most vulnerable of the free nations which is now
being subjected to backwards and xenophobic irrational religious
bigotry.

There is a crisis and it is not merely in Israel but also applies
to the entire Mideast and the rest of the world as well. It is the
war which is being waged by radical Islam on the West.


The 21st century version of the Crusades is an open and extremely
violent assault on ideological, religious and political freedoms
on the basis of radical Islamic fervor. See for example
"Obsession - Radical Islam's War against the West (1)

Fortunately, as many majority Islamic nations have become more
prosperous and well educated they have come to see the value of
secular and free societies and have become slowly more accepting of
modern society and attitudes. Nonetheless there are still tens of
millions of poorly educated radical Islamic religious bigots and
thugs organized in a large number of regionally isolated but
globally connected terrorist groups like Al-Qaeda who are constantly
subjecting the free world to their religious and political
intolerance.

It will be a long process but I think the hope for Israel and Israel's
allies in the modern world will be the eventual demise of radical
Islam as a political force. As every Western society and many Eastern
societies have experienced violent terrorist radical Islamic attacks
in recent years (2), all of these countries have come to better understand
the threats and are now much better equipped to respond to such
anachronistic and ignorant religious fundamentalism.

The realization of the backward and counterproductive nature of
fundamentalist radical Islamic government and religious political
systems and their rigidity and moribund nature will be what sets
Israel and ultimately the world free from the scourge of anti-intellectual
and prehistoric religious superstition.

Global cooperation is already occurring between the countries which
have experienced modern political radical Islamic attacks such as
the World Trade Center bombings, London and Madrid bombings, the
radical Islamic attacks in Russia, India, Malaysia, Australia,
South America and Israel of course. This pulls all thoughtful and
free peoples together to better confront the ignorance of the current
World Crisis of confronting ignorant radical fundamentalist terrorists.

oldhippie1952's photo
Wed 08/15/12 06:47 AM
The only thing wrong, if I remember correctly, is the 9-11 terrorists were all educated, weren't they?


no photo
Wed 08/15/12 07:14 AM

The only thing wrong, if I remember correctly, is the 9-11 terrorists were all educated, weren't they?




Their fanatic Muslim religious beliefs superseded their education....

s1owhand's photo
Wed 08/15/12 07:23 AM
Edited by s1owhand on Wed 08/15/12 07:23 AM

As the article above suggests, the crisis facing Israel has much
broader implications affecting the global political landscape in
its entirety. This is why "The Israeli Crisis" is a misnomer. It
should be called "The Current World Crisis" and Israel is merely
one of the most vulnerable of the free nations which is now
being subjected to backwards and xenophobic irrational religious
bigotry.

There is a crisis and it is not merely in Israel but also applies
to the entire Mideast and the rest of the world as well. It is the
war which is being waged by radical Islam on the West.


The 21st century version of the Crusades is an open and extremely
violent assault on ideological, religious and political freedoms
on the basis of radical Islamic fervor. See for example
"Obsession - Radical Islam's War against the West (1)

Fortunately, as many majority Islamic nations have become more
prosperous and well educated they have come to see the value of
secular and free societies and have become slowly more accepting of
modern society and attitudes. Nonetheless there are still tens of
millions of poorly educated radical Islamic religious bigots and
thugs organized in a large number of regionally isolated but
globally connected terrorist groups like Al-Qaeda who are constantly
subjecting the free world to their religious and political
intolerance.

It will be a long process but I think the hope for Israel and Israel's
allies in the modern world will be the eventual demise of radical
Islam as a political force. As every Western society and many Eastern
societies have experienced violent terrorist radical Islamic attacks
in recent years (2), all of these countries have come to better understand
the threats and are now much better equipped to respond to such
anachronistic and ignorant religious fundamentalism.

The realization of the backward and counterproductive nature of
fundamentalist radical Islamic government and religious political
systems and their rigidity and moribund nature will be what sets
Israel and ultimately the world free from the scourge of anti-intellectual
and prehistoric religious superstition.

Global cooperation is already occurring between the countries which
have experienced modern political radical Islamic attacks such as
the World Trade Center bombings, London and Madrid bombings, the
radical Islamic attacks in Russia, India, Malaysia, Australia,
South America and Israel of course. This pulls all thoughtful and
free peoples together to better confront the ignorance of the current
World Crisis of confronting ignorant radical fundamentalist terrorists.



The only thing wrong, if I remember correctly, is the 9-11 terrorists were all educated, weren't they?




Their fanatic Muslim religious beliefs superseded their education....


I would argue that they were "poorly educated", or "religiously
brainwashed". But in the larger scheme of the conflict there is
no doubt that solidarity among the very large numbers of countries
that have now experienced radical Islamic terrorist attacks and
the general improvement in economic prosperity and educational
opportunities in Islamic nations will be the long term antidote
for this religious poison.

There is hope. But there are also setbacks. For example the recent
announcement of the Saudis building an all female city for the
purpose of both giving women an outlet for their intellectual
aspirations and also attempting to satisfy backwards and radical
Sharia law considerations from 2000 years ago!

laugh

It might be an interesting experiment. I wonder how that will work
for them...All in black full length hijabs?

http://frontpagemag.com/2012/frank-crimi/saudi-arabias-gender-apartheid-city/

willing2's photo
Wed 08/15/12 07:23 AM
IMO, there's no such thing as a moderate muslim.
Not if they follow a murduring, pedophile mohamed.

s1owhand's photo
Wed 08/15/12 07:28 AM

IMO, there's no such thing as a moderate muslim.
Not if they follow a murduring, pedophile mohamed.


Not politically correct there willing!!

laugh

(Not true either)
There are plenty of caring and kind and considerate and tolerant
Muslims. They are not the problem. But there are still tens of
millions of radical Islamist fundamentalists and many of them
are intolerant bigots and violent criminals.

http://youtu.be/AediQLpoGGM