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January
28, 2009
Gaza
The Road
to Ruad
by Fred Reed
The practical question regarding Israel's recent
invasion of Gaza is not "Who is right?" but "Can
Israel last?"
As I write, Israel is using a military designed
to fight hostile countries to fight a hostile
population. In the modern world, this has seldom
worked. To defeat a country you destroy its
military and capture its territory. But Gaza has
little military to destroy, no tanks or aircraft,
and Israel already owns its territory. The IDF can
invade but, afterward, the population will still be
there, and still be hostile. Stabbing jello doesn't
buy you much.
Israel remains a small state in a region that
intensely doesn't want it. The rights and wrongs
change nothing. Again and again, Israel lashes out,
lashes out, against enemies that can be defeated
but never decisively. And so the bombs fall on
Gaza, on Syria, on Beirut, perhaps on Iran. Each
war guarantees the next: 1948, 1956, 1967, 1973,
1982, 2006, 2009, world without end.
Israel today is not the country once dreamed, in
which Heidelberg professors escaped from Europe
would work the soil with their hands on kibbutzim
and play chess and the violin at night. It looks
more like what the professors fled. Brutal
conflicts breed brutal people. Atrocities engender
counter- atrocities, extremists come to the fore,
and military solutions seem the only solutions.
Where is this going? How long can it continue?
Another fifty years? A hundred? Say I, either the
country finds peace with its neighbors or it goes
the way of the Crusader Kingdom. We can stipulate
that the Israelis are the world's best people, or
the worst. It doesn't matter. You can die in the
right as easily as in the wrong.
The Israelis appear to be trapping themselves in
their own policies. They continue their annexation
of the West Bank. The settlements are now so
numerous and so populous that dismantling them is
probably politically impossible for any Israeli
government, which rules out a two-state solution.
To control a large hostile population, you need
harsh methods, which keep the population hostile.
Arabs outbreed the Israelis, so that a
proportionately declining number of Israelis rule a
slowly rising tide of Arabs. Think: South Africa.
How is this going to work? For how long?
Israel also has a large internal minority of
Arabs. These also outbreed the Jews. If this
continues and the internal Arabs can vote, Israel
will one day become an Islamic state. Sooner or
later, the question will be: Democratic, or
Jewish?
America killed its indigenous population, the
Spanish married theirs, but Israel can do neither.
Now what?
Since Israelis do not yearn to get in touch with
their inner Moslem, the choices will be
disenfranchisement or ethnic cleansing.
Disenfranchisement would, again, leave a
diminishing proportion of Jews ruling more and more
Moslems. Think: Alabama in 1930.
Disenfranchisement apparently is starting.
Israel just banned its Arab parties from voting in
the upcoming elections, and then the courts
unbanned them.
Ethnic cleansing? Rounding up a large minority
and expelling it would require horrendous
brutality. This is the least moral but perhaps most
practical solution. It is barely possible that
Congress would balk but, I suspect, not until it
was too late to matter. If Israel nuked Chicago,
Congress would approve.
The long-term indicators point downward.
Israel's military position is not as good as one
might think. It has, or had when I last covered
such things, a splendid air force, a good militia
army, nuclear weapons, and inferior enemies. None
of these is particularly useful against angry
populations.
It seems probable that Islamic countries will
eventually have nuclear weapons. The danger is not
that a Moslem country would spontaneously launch
them against Israel, as this would constitute
national suicide. But you don't have to use nuclear
weapons for them to be effective.
Today, the Bomb is Israel's trump card. If, say,
Syria attacked and (improbably) began to win, its
cities would turn to green glass, and Damascus
knows it. Thus Israel is in exactly zero danger of
conventional defeat. But if Arab countries had
nuclear weapons, the trump card would lose its
value. You have to be very careful about bombing
countries that can vaporize your cities.
Further, Israel depends entirely on a foreign
country, namely America, for its survival. The US
provides the weaponry, the financial aid, the
vetoes in the UN, and the last-resort military
support that comes when Israel is in trouble (1973,
for example). Without this support, Israel could
not last. Small countries without oil cannot
support massive militaries.
If I were an Israeli, I would be uneasy about
this. American support depends crucially, if not
entirely, on the Israeli lobbies. Should these
falter, so will Israel. It is not that the US
seethes with repressed anti-Semitism awaiting its
chance. It doesn't. But Americans don't much care
about the outside world, know little of history and
less of geography. Congress is loyal only to
itself.
Today one reads of the recent overwhelming vote
in Congress in support of Israel, but the number is
highly artificial. The rub is that today is today,
but there is always tomorrow. Congress supports
whoever pays it or intimidates it, and today the
Lobby can exact a heavy price for opposition. If
the winds blow another way, Congress will sway in
another direction. What might constitute a
sufficient wind? I don't know. I note that Israel
has no oil, its enemies do, and world demand is
growing fast. Think: Taiwan.
Further, I doubt that public support for Israel
is nearly as strong as we are told it is. Among
conservatives, no small group, there is
considerable mild hostility to Jews and a far
stronger dislike of Israel. I'm not sure how
serious the antagonism is. To be annoyed is one
thing, but to want to see the country fall with the
nearly assured hideous results is another. But
people seldom think that far. Many, if they could,
would shrug and say, "Whatever. It's their
problem." A national shrug would end Israel.
Methinks a faint smell of doom hangs over Tel
Aviv. American power appears to be on the decline,
the outcome of its Islamic wars in doubt, its
control over its Moslem client states uncertain.
Nothing Israel is likely to do looks workable in
the long run. The demographics are terrible,
regional Arab hostility assured, the military
balance only able to deteriorate, the whole
enterprise hanging by a lobby. I remember thinking
about the Soviet Union, "This can't last." I
couldn't see how it could stop lasting either. It
did stop. Unless something changes, and I don't
have any bright ideas, I don't see a happy
ending.
Reed
Archive
Copyright 2009 by Fred Reed and reproduced here by
permission of the author.
About
the Author (by the author):
Fred Reed is a Marine combat veteran, police
reporter, amateur biochemist, former long-haul
hitchhiker, and part-time sociopath living in
Mexico. Fred, a keyboard mercenary with a
disorganized past, has worked on staff for Army
Times, The Washingtonian, Soldier of Fortune,
Federal Computer Week, and The Washington
Times. He has been published in Playboy,
Soldier of Fortune, The Wall Street Journal, The
Washington Post, Harper's, National Review, Signal,
Air&Space, and suchlike. He has worked as a
police writer, technology editor, military
specialist, and authority on mercenary soldiers. He
is by all accounts as looney as a tune.
Visit the "Fred
on Everything" website to read his previous
columns and sign up for his regular e-mail
feature.
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The essays in A Brass Pole in
Bangkok, are sometimes wildly funny,
sometimes deadly serious, always merciless
in their unmasking of the pretenses and
charlatans of society. Fred, a former
Marine, subscribes to no ideology ("an
ideology is just a systematic way of
misunderstanding the world") but
exuberantly wreaks havoc on practically
everything, and delights in everything
else: the psychotherapy swindle, squalling
feminists, race racketeers, damn fool
wars, red-light districts in Asia, and
tequila fests in Mexico, where he
lives.
A
Brass Pole in Bangkok: A Thing I Aspire To
Be, by Fred Reed
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Buy Fred's new reprehensible book,
Nekkid In Austin! Another
collection of Fred's collected outrages,
irresponsible ravings, and curmudgeonry
from "Fred On Everything" and some
innocent magazines that, he says,
foolishly published him. Wildly funny,
sometimes wacky, always provocative essays
on the collapse of America.
Nekkid
in Austin: Drop Your Inner Child Down a
Well, by Fred Reed
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