By Barry Rubin
HERZLIYA, Israel — People ask me what the United States should be doing toward the upheavals in the Middle East. Here’s a short, quick list of themes:
1. Understanding that there are some people who want real democracy and others who don’t, U.S. policy should be focused on battling the latter, especially the revolutionary Islamists, just as much as it might help the former.
2. The United States has a right to look after its national interests. If a few of its remaining allies in the world are dictatorships–and it is amazing how few there are, only about a half-dozen compared to something like 70 just 30 years ago–then those alliances are still necessary.
3. President Obama should never have said he has no problem with the Muslim Brotherhood being in Egypt’s government. The way people in the Middle East think is that now Obama wants the Brotherhood in government! He should have said nothing.
4. Do not promote Muhammad ElBaradei who is a front man for the Brotherhood. If there is no presidential candidate good for U.S. interests just stay neutral. Admit that things can go wrong and make plans on what to do if an Islamist or anti-American Egypt were to emerge.
5. In every way possible (whether publicly or otherwise) help real democracy advocates, who have little money or organization, and not Islamists, who are well-funded and highly organized already.
6. Never make statements that the Muslim Brotherhood is harmless, moderate, and against violence. It is ridiculously untrue and does nothing for U.S. interests.
7. Let the American media publicize the extremism, antisemitism, anti-Christianism, and pro-terrorist activities of the Brotherhood. The American people should know who their enemies are.
8. Make sure the current regimes in Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, and Morocco survive, with whatever reforms they are willing to make and that don’t endanger them.
9. Know that no matter how much you distance yourself from Israel or fail to support that country your enemies will like you no better. Indeed, they will take that as a signal to increase their aggressiveness since they will assume that Israel doesn’t have your backing. Maybe you could even recognize that the main barrier to peace is the Palestinian Authority and Hamas.
10. Do everything possible to subvert the Hamas regime in the Gaza Strip. You’ve already made three big mistakes–pressing Israel into elimating most sanctions on Gaza, giving money to the PA to pass onto Gaza, and encouraging a revolution in Egypt that might align with Hamas even without an Islamist government in Cairo. It’s time to stop empowering your enemies.
10. Assemble a broad alignment of anti-Islamist forces to combat the spread of revolutionary Islamism–whether from the Iran-led alliance or the Muslim Brotherhoods–which is the main threat to peace, stability, democracy, and Western interests in the Middle East.
11. Direct your efforts against the most horrible and anti-American regimes to weaken them in whatever way is appropriate: Iran, Syria, Hizballah’s domination of Lebanon, the current Turkish regime, and Hamas in the Gaza Strip. Iran is now supplying advanced rockets to the Taliban in order to kill Americans in Afghanistan and helping Iraqi insurgents to kill Americans in Iraq. Isn’t that warfare?
It really isn’t so hard to come up with a good and sensible U.S. policy. Yet over and over again in recent years I’ve been as frustrated as the great baseball manager Casey Stengel said when his team kept losing: “Can’t anybody here play this game?”
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Why Palestinian Terror Attacks Ensure There Will Be No Peace
Events like the massacre of an Israeli family by terrorists aren’t just tragedies or crimes, they are events of huge political and international importance. They reveal issues and stories that Western governments and media refuse to understand yet which foil their plans and contradict their assumptions.
While the Itamar massacre of the Fogel family–an Israeli couple and three of their young children–is only one in a long chain of such terrorist attacks and murders, it points to a major issues that U.S. policy has never addressed and which poses as much–and arguably more–threat to the possibility of peace than do settlements. That issue is incitement.
The main political impact of terrorist attacks is not on Israeli but rather on Palestinians. Inciting beforehand and justifying–even celebrating–afterward has far less effect on hardening Israeli attitudes than on ensuring that the Palestinian political atmosphere remains extremist and the Palestinian Authority’s (PA) policies on any real chance for a peace agreement remain hard line.
To put it a different way, if the day after a horrendous terrorist attack the PA offered a real and credible comprehensive peace deal, Israel would still accept it. But the political culture of terrorism makes it certain that the PA will do no such thing and ensures that such a peace is–to put it in the most optimistic possible terms–at least a generation away.
During the 1990s’ peace process, the PA sometimes acted to stop attacks and to punish the perpetrators afterward minimally, temporarily, and more for their inconvenient timing than for their crime. Yet it continued to promote the culture of martyrdom and blind hatred that promoted terrorism. Thus, the process of war by terrorism was easily restarted when Arafat wanted to do so in 2000.
Then and since then, day in and day out, the PA’s official media–television, radio, and newspaper (al-Hayat al-Jadida)–and schools incite violence against Israel; glorify terrorists as heroes and role models who will also receive great heavenly rewards; portray Israelis as monsters; and teach Palestinians that Israel has no right to exist and should be wiped off the map.
The PA’s summer camp is named after a terrorist. Just last week, a football tournament was announced named in honor of a suicide bomber. Last year a major square in Ramallah, the PA’s capital, was renamed to honor another terrorist. Mahmoud Abbas extolled a band that called for war on Israelis. The PA’s minister of religion states that Allah commands that Muslims rule the entire land and eliminate Israel. Is there some pattern here, perhaps a phenomenon worthy of a little international attention, a story meriting some reporting?
In this latest case, there was an especially pointed example: just three weeks before this latest attack Palestinian Authority television showed a program celebrating the terrorist who murdered three Israeli civilians in the same town nine years ago.
And as if all this were not enough, the day after–let me repeat that–the day after the killing of the Fogel family, the PA renamed a square in the town of el-Bireh after a terrorist who murdered Israeli civilians. It is conceivable–fully conceivable–that if one day the murderers of the Fogel family will be honored by the PA.
There is no such situation on the Israeli side save for extraordinarily marginal extremists who receive no social sanction and often face real punishment. Any attempt to portray the two sides as equivalent in this respect is a flat and conscious lie.
As for the PA leadership, what we see over and over again is a showy but routine denunciation of terrorism in English for the international audience coupled with encouragement to commit terrorism in Arabic to the Palestinian audience. It is easy to demonstrate that this is the actual situation. Yet the Western news media almost totally ignore this issue.
Thus, even the naming of squares, sporting events, and institutions by the Palestinian Authority after specific terrorists who murdered Israeli civilians draws no major U.S. government criticism (much less pressure or punishment) or media coverage.
The U.S. State Department has already issued a statement criticizing an Israeli government decision, in response to the massacre, to build a couple of hundred more apartments on the West Bank. State Department spokesman Mark Toner said the plan “runs counter to efforts to resume direct negotiations.” Why doesn’t what the PA does every day sabotage negotiations and progress? And incidentally, the PA refuses to talk even when Israel does freeze construction. They aren’t rejecting negotiations because of settlements; they are rejecting negotiations because they don’t want to negotiate.
Yet there is no real criticism or pressure over incitement. If you want to understand why there is no peace now or hope for it in the forseeable future, the U.S. government’s failure to deal with this issue–or condition aid and support for the PA on some change-is a large part of the answer.
It is not only that the terrorist violence makes Israel and Israelis mistrustful of the Palestinian Authority and about making more concessions, when those in the past have cost so many lives of Israeli civilians. In addition, the incitement and even celebration of terrorist acts creates a Palestinian public opinion favoring endless conflict and demanding total victory; elevates the gunmen and their supporters to real power in Palestinian politics (“President” Mahmoud Abbas and Prime Minister Salam Fayyad are largely front men kept their to keep foreign donors happy); and persuade Palestinians that compromise is equivalent to treason.
When Western governments denounce Palestinian terrorist acts in the same terms they decry an earthquake in Japan or a tsunami in Thailand they miss the point. These are not just regrettable events but arise from Palestinian–either Palestinian Authority or Hamas–decisions. The key question is not whether Israeli police can prove a case in court but the atmosphere that produces a Palestinian cult and strategy of terrorism that has lasted decades.
The real cycle of violence isn’t that settlements create terrorism, or between Israeli violence and terrorism, but rather the relationship between Palestinian incitement and terrorism. Incitement itself is built on the idea that terrorism mobilizes public approval, demoralize the enemy, and is justified morally.
This is not some sideshow or minor issue but is at the very core of the problem. Incidentally, the same basic points apply to revolutionary Islamism. The Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood has not “renounced” violence. It glorifies, extolls, and encourages violence, portraying its enemies as subhumans who the deity wants killed. At a given moment–like the PA–it might not implement violence but the justifications have been made and its followers are ready to murder when the signal is given.
As for the Israel-Palestinian conflict, until this issue is addressed–and there is no current sign that it ever will be–there won’t be any diplomatic progress. Regarding the wider regional battle for control of Arabic-speaking countries, the revolutionary Islamists believe they are just getting started.
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Monitoring the Israel-Egypt oil connection
It is now being reported by Egypt’s natural gas supplier to Israel that shipments will be renewed after a five-week stoppage. If that is true, then my article saying the supply was apparently stopped–as many sources reported–was wrong and if the gas starts flowing again I will remove that article. If it isn’t true then I will remove this possible correction.
Even if the supply is continued, however, there are continuing reports that the long delay was due to political objections to selling Israel gas, some in principle and some related to the current price. Many Egyptian politicians have spoken up in favor of either renegotiating the contract or ceasing deliveries altogether.
But if the supply is renewed for now one must draw the opposite conclusion from the one I gave: that this is a sign of stability in the Egypt-Israel relationship, at least until an elected government–rather than the current military junta–takes power. Any sign that Egypt’s government will live up to previous international commitments is, of course, a positive thing. Again, though, I would suggest that this does not necessarily mean the next government in Cairo will continue to do so.
It is always a pleasure to correct my mistakes when the result is that something better is happening. Either way, though, I will never hesitate to correct errors. The goal is to be accurate, not to push any particular theme or perspective.
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Barry Rubin is director of the Global Research in International Affairs (GLORIA) Center and editor of the Middle East Review of International Affairs (MERIA) Journal. GLORIA Center site: http://www.gloria-center.org He may be contacted at barry.rubin@sdjewishworld.com