A Green Light for Israel

EDITORIAL A Green Light for Israel Is the United States a reliable ally, one that can be counted on in time of crisis to assist close friends it has promised to defend? If the answer is yes, then...

...Under these circumstances, Arafat feels no need to halt the violence...
...For as the New York Times's Thomas Friedman has noted, Mubarak lives in constant fear that pro-Palestinian protests in Egypt stirred up by Arafat could fly out of control and metamorphose into attacks on the Mubarak dictatorship itself...
...He should assert true American leadership by suspending our role as the Middle East's honest broker, on the grounds that the peace process in which such a role might conceivably make sense has given way to a condition of war...
...But what if, instead of falling for Mubarak's con job, we turned up the heat and raised the stakes...
...Every time a terrorist kills innocent Israelis, and the Israelis respond in even the most limited fashion, Colin Powell's State Department evenhandedly condemns the "cycle of violence...
...Indeed, the Egyptian government's recent calls for a "more active and engaged role" by the United States in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict would be merely amusing were they not so profoundly offensive...
...The famous report by George Mitchell, the mediation efforts of CIA director George Tenet, the daily statements by the State Department spokesman, all declare the United States morally and politically neutral as between its Israeli allies and the Palestinians who war against them...
...The reality is, so long as the United States sticks to the neutral banalities of the Mitchell report, Mubarak has no incentive to act...
...green light to Israel could actually create the conditions for stability and peace in the region...
...This past week, panicky Egyptian officials were in Washington begging the Bush administration to put more pressure on Israel, warning of "enormous instability in the region," i.e., in Egypt, if something isn't done to stop Sharon...
...They are rather advocating an abdication by the United States of both moral judgment and political leadership...
...The basic fact is this: Only when confronted by the prospect of a United States firmly behind Israel will Palestinian and Arab leaders, and the Palestinian and Arab peoples, take seriously their own interest in and obligation for restoring peace...
...Glib proponents of a more "active" U.S...
...evenhandedness between terror and its victims, and between democracy and dictatorship...
...It was Mubarak, after all, who helped torpedo the peace process last year, when he urged Arafat to reject the unbelievably generous offer of Israeli prime minister Ehud Barak at Camp David...
...At worst, it would mean rewarding the perpetrators of terror...
...And Arab leaders, such as Egypt's pusillanimous and cynical Hosni Mubarak, have no incentive to put pressure on Arafat to stop the violence...
...role in the conflict should not be allowed to get away with sounding like they are advocating American world leadership...
...Mubarak is now desperate for the United States to pull his chestnuts out of the fire...
...At the present time, the best hope for a "peace process"—and certainly for peace—in the Middle East is for the United States to give Israel a green light...
...But the president should do more than resist foolish counsel...
...The foreign policy establishment nods sagely, and Mubarak gets what he wants without having to use any of his own enormous influence with Arafat...
...Under these circumstances, Israel has no confidence that if it moved against Arafat and his dic-tatorship—an action which really could lay the groundwork for reducing both Israeli and Palestinian bloodshed—it would receive American backing...
...President Bush deserves credit for resisting calls for more "active" U.S...
...And he believes this because the world, and more importantly the United States, encourages him to believe it...
...But even if it didn't, there is no alternative consistent with American interests and moral obligations...
...Robert Kagan and William Kristol...
...If the answer is yes, then it is now time for the United States to stand unequivocally with Israel...
...When Israel peacefully occupies a Palestinian political headquarters in East Jerusalem in response to a vicious terrorist murder, Powell's State Department accuses Israel of "escalating" the conflict...
...He should let it be known to the Israelis, the Palestinians, and to the Arab world that Israel will be allowed to fight the war by the means it deems necessary, without American carping and with whatever American material and financial support may be required...
...Until he does, we should support Israel and let Mubarak stew in his own juices...
...At best, this would imply U.S...
...What if we made it clear that, far from pressuring Israel, we planned to back its right to defend itself, and trusted our ally to do the right thing in the very difficult situation in which it finds itself...
...Such engagement would mean, in practice, putting pressure on Israel not to fight back against terror...
...He should make clear that for the duration of this war, which has been thrust upon Israel by Yasser Arafat and his Palestinian Authority, the United States is morally and strategically compelled to support its ally...
...Strange as it may seem to our foreign policy establishment and to the international club of peacemaking professionals, an American The president should assert true American leadership by suspending our role as the Middle East's honest broker, on the grounds that the peace process in which such a role might make sense has given way to a condition of war...
...If Mubarak is so afraid of his own people's fury getting out of control, then let him pressure Arafat to clamp down on the terrorists immediately...
...Such appeals from a "moderate" Arab leader like Mubarak strike terror in the hearts of State Department Middle East hands, who insist we must sit on the Israelis or lose Mubarak to the Muslim crazies...
...engagement" in the conflict between Israel and the Palestinian Authority...
...Right now, Yasser Arafat believes he can let the terrorists loose and keep the intifada brewing without paying a real price...

Vol. 6 • September 2001 • No. 47


 
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