Under Netanyahu, Israel is stronger than ever (WASHINGTON POST OP-ED) By Fareed Zakaria 05/10/12)
Source: http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/under-netanyahu-israel-is-stronger-than-ever/2012/05/09/gIQAcTH2DU_story.html
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While incumbents around the world are struggling to hold on, one is
thriving. By bringing the rival Kadima party into his ruling
coalition, Benjamin Netanyahu has become “king of Israel,” in Aaron
David Miller’s phrase. He has an unusual, perhaps unique, opportunity
to use his new power to secure Israel’s future.
Netanyahu’s coalition now commands the largest parliamentary majority
in Israeli history. He faces no plausible rival as prime minister.
When pushed on the Palestinian issue, Netanyahu has often cited the
constraints of his coalition to explain why he had not taken bolder
steps toward resolution. Perhaps he liked being constrained: He
refused to form a national unity government in 1996 (with Shimon
Peres) and refused again in 2009 (with Tzipi Livni). But now he has a
broad enough base of support — with many moderates — and could move
toward a peace settlement without endangering his hold on power.
Look beneath the recent war fears, and Israel is in a stronger
position than ever. Its per capita gross domestic product rivals
Italy’s (at $31,000). The World Economic Forum’s Global
Competitiveness Index ranks Israel sixth in innovation capacity, just
after the United States. It is behind only the United States and
China in the number of companies listed on Nasdaq. Militarily, Israel
is the region’s superpower, with an armed force that could easily
defeat any of its neighbors. U.S. aid (Congress recently moved to add
$1 billion for Israel’s missile defense program to the president’s
budget) enhances its military edge. It also has one of the world’s
largest nuclear arsenals, estimated at more than 200 missiles. At
home the wall along the West Bank has essentially solved the problem
of Palestinian suicide bombing, rendering Israel safer than at any
point in its history.
While Iran does pose a threat, it has been systematically exaggerated
over the past few years. Many serious Israeli leaders, including
several senior members of its military and intelligence
establishment, have spoken up about this in an unprecedented manner.
Tamir Pardo of Israel’s intelligence agency, Mossad, has said that
Iran is not an existential threat. Last month, Army Chief Benny Gantz
described the Iranian regime as rational. Mossad’s Meir Dagan has
said that an attack on Iran would be “stupid.” Kadima party head
Shaul Mofaz, the new vice prime minister and a former army chief, has
said that an Israeli attack on Iran would produce a regional war and
accelerate Iran’s nuclear program. He argues that “the threat that
Israel will become a binational state is far more serious than the
Iranian nuclear issue.”
In his passionate and intelligent book “The Crisis of Zionism,” Peter
Beinart observes a distinction between the ethics of weakness and
power. If you see yourself as weak, besieged by the world, and as a
victim, Beinart argues, you will embrace any policy that allows you
to survive, regardless of its impact on others. On the other hand, an
ethic of power recognizes that you are strong and must promote your
own interests but with some concept of responsibility as well. Worse,
Beinart argues, the obsession with victimhood has prevented people in
Israel and the United States from focusing on the gravest threat to
Israel’s existence as a Jewish and democratic state: demography. If
there is no progress toward a two-state solution, at some point
Israel will not to be able to continue to rule over millions of
Palestinians without giving them the right to vote — at which point
it will cease to be a Jewish state.
In the past, Netanyahu has fiercely embraced the ethic of survival.
For decades he has argued that Israel was in imminent danger of
extinction, making comparisons to the Nazi threat to Jews in 1938.
Long opposed to a Palestinian state, he railed in 1993, when Yitzhak
Rabin and Peres signed the Oslo accords, that Peres, then foreign
minister, was “worse than [Neville] Chamberlain.” In the book
Netanyahu published that year, he argued that dismantling Jewish
settlements would produce a “Judenrein” West Bank (“free of Jews,” a
phrase the Nazis used). When he reissued his book in 2009, those
phrases were still in the text. Since then, perhaps recognizing the
demographic dangers to Israel, he has said he now supports a two-
state solution, but he has done nothing to move toward it.
Israel faces real dangers. It sits in a hostile neighborhood, with
anti-Semitism rising. Obstacles to Israel-Palestinian peace include
the weakness of Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas and
radicalism from the terror group Hamas. But a politician of
Netanyahu’s skill can find ways to navigate this terrain. The larger
questions are: Does he see an opportunity to become a truly great
figure in Israeli history? Can he use his power for a purpose other
than his own survival? (© 2010 The Washington Post Company 05/10/12)
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