A serious heart to heart dialogue is warranted, all I see is
myths manufactured on both sides. Real and genuine security comes when the
people take time to know each other, then conflicts will fade and solutions will
emerge. I continue to admire professor Ben-Meir's approach towards
solutions.
Mike Ghouse
Israel Palestine Dialogue.com
Israel’s National Security: Myths And Reality
Professor Alon Ben-Meir
Oct 9, 2012
Oct 9, 2012
Israel’s national security has, and for good reason, continues
to be of prime concerns not only to its citizens but to world Jewry and many of
its friends and allies around the globe. Israel has every reason to be weary of
its enemies, who have time and again demonstrated that they are not worthy of
trust and remain committed to Israel’s destruction both in word and deeds. For
this reason, many Israelis have become increasingly more pessimistic and
skeptical about the prospect of peace and for that matter, its durability even
when achieved.
This argument, however cogent it may be, has lost much of its
significance as time and circumstances have changed. To be sure, although
Israel’s military power remains central to its national security, no territorial
depth or continued military buildup provides Israel the ultimate security it
needs. In the final analysis, Israel’s security rests on peace with the Arab
states, and its formidable military prowess must now be used to secure that
peace, however elusive it may seem.
There are those who suggest that Israel’s withdrawal from the
West Bank will make Israel vulnerable to rocket attacks from the mountains
overlooking Israel's population and industrial centers in the coastal strip
below, rendering the country indefensible. As one critic wrote citing an
American military expert, "’modern weapon systems, most of them with components
which require line-of-sight emplacement, if deployed in the [Judean and
Samarian] mountains…’ [Israel’s] present width in the central sector of the
country would be reduced from 40-55 miles to 9-16 miles… [which] would render
the country indefensible.” To support this argument there are those who simply
take at face value the statements made by right-wing Israeli officials who link
territorial depth to national security without examining the real relevance
between the two, especially in the context of the West Bank and the territorial
depth involved.
Against the one “American military expert” there are hundreds
of Israeli military experts who disagree with this argument. No one is
suggesting that a peace agreement, in and of itself, provides Israel instant
security. Indeed, any peace accord will have to be implemented in stages that
would entail quid-pro-quo requiring both sides to fully adhere to all provisions
of the agreement, especially on the matter of national security concerns to
Israel. Thus, security measures will have to be in place including, for example,
the stationing of an international peace force, led by the United States,
stationed along the borders with Jordan replete with enforcement capabilities.
More important, however, is Israel’s deterrence and its own military that has
and can prevent any violation of an agreement with the
Palestinians.
With today’s military technology and the proliferation of
short and medium range rockets (ranging from three miles to three hundred) in
the hands of Hamas and Hezbollah, “modern weapon systems,” regardless of where
they are placed, can hit every population center in Israel. Therefore, whether
the distance from the mountains of the West Bank is ‘40 to 55 miles or reduced
to 9 to 16 miles’ will hardly make any difference. What will make, in the final
analysis, a real difference are Israel’s retaliatory capabilities and the
potential unacceptable damage that Israel can inflict that would persuade the
enemy from provoking Israel.
Ask yourself, why have the Palestinians in the West Bank,
Hamas in Gaza and Hezbollah in Lebanon have refrained from provoking Israel in
any serious manner since the Palestinians in the West Bank suffered from the
Israeli onslaught in the wake of the Second Intifada in 2000, Hezbollah in 2006
and Hamas in 2009? Hamas and Hezbollah in particular have not as of yet
recovered from the destruction they sustained, and for them to re-engage Israel
militarily would be nothing short of suicide. This is the reason why the
Palestinian Authority opted to forsake violence to achieve its political
objectives by peaceful means and the reason behind the relative calm that has
prevailed. If one adds to that the element of the peace agreement, the
likelihood of a new conflagration will become increasingly less
desirable.
The issue is not where the border is finally drawn. Successive
Israeli governments have sold the myth to the Israeli public linking the borders
to national security, when in fact building settlements, such as Ariel, deep
into the West Bank is ideologically motivated and has little if anything to do
with national security. Indeed, what makes the border between Israel and a
future Palestinian state defensible is not as much where the final border is
finally established, but continued Israeli deterrence and, in particular, on the
establishment of a comprehensive peace and normal relations in which both sides
develop, over time, a vested interest. Any claim to the contrary is baseless
regardless of what the ultimate intentions of the Palestinians are, as many
Israelis contend.
It is a common belief in Israel that the Arabs, especially the
Palestinians, cannot be trusted. They further argue that even if an
Israeli-Palestinian peace agreement is achieved today the Palestinians will
annul it as soon as they feel that its dissolution will work to their advantage.
Many Israelis insist that the Palestinians are inherently committed to Israel’s
destruction and that for the Palestinians, forging a peace agreement will amount
to nothing more than a tactical move while waiting for a better day to realize
their ultimate goal to bring about the destruction of Israel. The question is,
however, who would make peace on the basis of trust alone? Trust can be
cultivated only through a constructive and ongoing relationship that only peace
can foster.
Let us assume for a moment that the lack of trust is the main
obstacle to making peace. The question is, when will the day come when both
sides begin to trust each other? Will it come after developing trade,
commercial, cultural, scientific and diplomatic ties, or will it come when the
occupation continues, the settlements expand, multiple checkpoints remain in
place and thousands of Palestinian prisoners languish in Israeli jails ? Defying
Israel today does not come from religious beliefs, albeit Hamas and others find
it convenient to create such a link to convey their convictions. Indeed,
notwithstanding the religious component of the conflict, the people, including
the Palestinians want to live. They know that there is no virtue in dying in
vain, especially when the prospect of destroying Israel is virtually
non-existent, and more than anything else, when they have something to hold
onto, like an independent state of their own.
Israel is and remains, for as far as the eye can see, a
military power that no individual Arab state or combination of states can
overwhelm militarily, and if they try they will do so at their peril. At no time
in its history has Israel been stronger militarily. This mighty military prowess
can and will be used to deter, defend or go on the offensive should Israel’s
security be threatened. For this reason Israel cannot mortgage its security to a
third party, it must remain vigilant, powerful and ready at all times to take
any legitimate military action deemed necessary to ensure its survival.
Such a military power however can and indeed must also be used
to reach out to the Palestinians and the rest of the Arab states from a position
of strength. Otherwise, what is the point of such a military prowess if it does
not advance peace? Israel will become increasingly more isolated, gradually
evolving into a garrison state with ever diminishing friends and allies. As it
is, there is not a single country in the whole world, including the US, that
supports the occupation and calls on Israel to end it for its own sake.
Meanwhile Israel is gradually losing its soul and its
resonance as it was envisioned by its founders. It is time for the Netanyahu
government to be honest with the public and stop covering for the expansion and
the building of new settlements in the name of national
security.
Click here to read this article and more on AlonBen-Meir.com.
Click here to read this article and more on AlonBen-Meir.com.
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