Don't blame Israel
by Alan Dershowitz
New York Post, May 9, 2009
"The task of forming an international coalition
to thwart Iran's nuclear program will be made easier if progress is made
in peace negotiations between Israel and the Palestinians, White House
Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel has said, according to sources in Washington.
Israeli TV stations had reported Monday night that Emanuel had actually
linked the two matters, saying that the efforts to stop Iran hinged on
peace talks with the Palestinians." - Jerusalem Post, May 4
Rahm Emanuel is a good man and a good friend of Israel,
but in a highly publicized recent statement he linked American efforts
to stop Iran from developing nuclear weapons to Israeli efforts toward
establishing a Palestinian state. This is dangerous.
I have long favored the two-state solution, as do most Israelis
and American supporters of Israel. I have also long opposed civilian settlements
deep into the West Bank. I hope that Israel does make efforts, as it has
in the past, to establish a Palestinian state as part of an overall peace
between the Jewish state and its Arab and Muslim neighbors.
Israel in 2000-2001 offered the Palestinians a state in
the entire Gaza Strip and more than 95% of the West Bank, with its capital
in Jerusalem and a $35 billion compensation package for the refugees.
Yasser Arafat rejected the offer and instead began the second intifada
in which nearly 5,000 people were killed. I hope that Israel once again
offers the Palestinians a contiguous, economically-viable, politically
independent state, in exchange for a real peace, with security, without
terrorism and without any claim to "return" 4 million alleged
refugees as a way of destroying Israel by demography rather than violence.
But the threat from a nuclear Iran is existential
and immediate for Israel. It also poses dangers to the entire region,
as well as to the US - not only from the possibility that a nation directed
by suicidal leaders would order a nuclear attack on Israel or its allies,
but from the likelihood that nuclear material could end up in the hands
of Hezbollah, Hamas or even Al Qaeda. Recall what Hashemi Rafsanjani said
to an American journalist:
[Rafsanjani] "boast[ed] that an Iranian [nuclear] attack
would kill as many as five million Jews. Rafsanjani estimated that even
if Israel retaliated by dropping its own nuclear bombs, Iran would probably
lose only fifteen million people, which he said would be a small 'sacrifice'
from among the billion Muslims in the world."
Israel has the right, indeed the obligation, to take this
threat seriously and to consider it as a first priority. It will be far
easier for Israel to make peace with the Palestinians if it did not have
to worry about the threat of a nuclear attack or a dirty bomb. It will
also be easier for Israel to end its occupation of the West Bank if Iran
were not arming and inciting Hamas, Hezbollah and other enemies of Israel
to terrorize Israel with rockets and suicide bombers.
In this respect, Emanuel has it exactly backwards: if there
is any linkage, it goes the other way - defanging Iran will promote the
end of the occupation and the two-state solution. Threatening not to help
Israel in relation to Iran unless it moves toward a two-state solution
first is likely to backfire.
After all, Israel is a democracy and in
the end the people decide. A recent poll published in Ha'aretz concluded
that 66% of Israelis favored a preemptive military strike against Iran's
nuclear facilities, with 75% of those saying they would still favor such
a strike even if the US were opposed.
Israel's new government will accept a two-state solution
if they are persuaded that it will really be a solution - that it will
assure peace and an end to terrorist and nuclear threats to Israeli citizens.
I have known Prime Minister Netanyahu for 35 years and I recently had
occasion to spend some time with Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman. I
am convinced that despite their occasional tough talk, both want to see
an end to this conflict.
Israelis have been scarred by what happened in Gaza. Israel
ended the occupation, removed all of the settlers, and left behind millions
of dollars worth of agricultural and other facilities designed to make
the Gaza into an economically-viable democracy. Land for peace is what
they sought. Instead they got land for rocket attacks against their children,
their women and their elderly. No one wants to see a repeat of this trade-off.
Emanuel's statements were viewed with alarm in Israel because
most Israelis, though they want to like President Obama, are nervous about
his policies toward Israel. They are prepared to accept pressure regarding
the settlements, but they worry that the Obama Administration may be ready
to compromise, or at least threaten to compromise, Israel's security,
if its newly elected government does not submit to pressure on the settlements.
Making peace with the Palestinians will
be extremely complicated. It will take time. It may or may not succeed
in the end, depending on whether the Palestinians will continue to want
their own state less than they want to see the end of the Jewish state.
Israel should not be held hostage to the Iranian nuclear threat by the
difficulty of making peace with the Palestinians. Israel may be rebuffed
again, especially if Palestinian radicals believe that such a rebuff will
soften American action against Iran. In the meantime, Iran will continue
in its efforts to develop nuclear weapons.
That cannot be allowed to happen, regardless of progress
on the ground toward peace with the Palestinians. These two issues must
be delinked if either is to succeed. There are other ways of encouraging
Israel to make peace with the Palestinians. Nuclear blackmail is not one
of them.
Facts and Logic About the Middle East
P.O. Box 590359
San Francisco, CA 94159
Gerardo Joffe, President
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