Israeli Officers Are Wrong to Ask for U.S. Intervention

By Shoshana Bryen

Shoshana Bryen

WASHINGTON, D.C. — Military officers in democratic countries have a difficult mission: to protect the people and to wage war at the command of their governments. It isn’t easy, and the IDF – like the United States military – has an admirable record. Occasionally however, military officers glide off into politics. A group of retired Israel officers, Commanders for Israel’s Security (CIS), appears to be doing that – which normally would be an issue only for Israelis and their government. But this group is asking the United States to create circumstances they believe serve their country but are not being pursued to their satisfaction by their own government.

In other words, they are looking for American pressure on the Prime Minister of Israel.

A word of advice to CIS – don’t. Ever.

It is an equally bad idea for Americans to tell Israelis how to defend themselves, but since they asked for interference, an assessment of their platform is reasonable.

They write: “Active US involvement is needed to… begin reversing the slide toward the tragedy of one state between the Mediterranean and the Jordan River.” Israel is a democratic country (yes, their electoral system is strange, but so is ours). Recent elections (all of them) show no indication that the people regard the current situation as an emerging “tragedy.”

Maybe that’s not what they meant.

Aside from “settlements” and nebulous words about harassing people, most of the issues in which the officers demand the US involve itself apply to the Palestinians. If they are suggesting that the US can change fundamental Palestinian principles, they have more faith in the Washington establishment than most Americans.

“The administration should clarify that the eventual two-state outcome balances Palestinian aspirations for a viable, territorially contiguous, state with Israel’s Jewish-democratic character and security requirements.” The “two-state solution” is an Israeli construct. While it may balance Israeli and Palestinian interests, the impediments are twofold: the Palestinians do not agree, and there are currently three governing bodies between the Jordan and the Med. CIS should ask the Palestinians for a map of where the sovereign State of Israel will sit next to Palestine.

CIS posits “unified Palestinian governance,” with “control over all armed entities,” which “presupposes an eventual disarming of Hamas, Palestinian Islamic Jihad and other Gaza splinter groups.” Who will disarm them? It won’t be Israel. The last PA attempt to assert control over Hamas was a bloody civil war. Do they think the US will condone another, or worse, help?

In an oxymoron, the officers demand a “non-militarized State of Palestine” while noting that “robust security arrangements… will enable the gradual phasing out of an Israeli security presence in its territory.” With no Israeli security presence, a nascent non-militarized Palestinian state would be fodder for Iranian ambitions. The rearming of a recently disarmed Hamas, et al would be fairly simple.

In a “non-militarized state” without Israeli forces, what are “robust security arrangements” anyhow? CIS couldn’t possibly be considering the old notion of “multinational forces” in the West Bank and Gaza – could it? American troops to do what? Police the territory? Keep Iran out? Kill off a resurgent Hamas? Keep the Israelis from retaliating for cross-border activity? Excuse me if I, as an American citizen and mother and mother-in-law of US army officers, say, “No way in Hell.”

There is more. Continuance of “Palestinian security coordination with Israel… and the PA cannot reward those who resort to violence or their families.” So, the disarmed Palestinians will have security coordination with Israeli security which is not in their territory, and end “pay for slay.” OK. Fine – how? Who? The US Congress enacted the Taylor Force Act, which the Biden has end-run.

CIS wants “steps that reduce friction between the two peoples, enhance security for all, and remove impediments for Palestinian freedom of movement, governance, and economic development.” More than 100,000 West Bank Palestinians work in Israel every day, largely unremarked upon. The primary impediment to Palestinian advancement is the corruption of the PA and the official and ongoing incitement to violence against Jews. Washington cannot fix this.

“Washington should lead efforts to shore up the PA… For the PA to be able to care for its people, and for its security forces to continue coordination with ours, it must enjoy popular support and legitimacy. The PA and its security agencies need to demonstrate that they serve Palestinian national aspirations.”

There are “Palestinian national aspirations” to which the US should never be a party. Adherence to the PLO Charter, rejection of the nationalism of the Jewish people, and the “right of return,” are not aspirations the US should advance over Israel’s objections. The US has spent literally billions of dollars trying to improve Palestinian lives and governance to no avail. The PA is corrupt and that has to be solved internally.

Since the heady days of Oslo, the US has tried to find a mechanism for bringing Palestinians into serious negotiations with Israel. The Biden administration may try as well. But in no case should Israeli citizens – even military officers – ask the United States to interfere with Israeli governance or repeat failed and expensive experiments in “nation building.”

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Shoshana Bryen is senior director of the Jewish Policy Center.  She may be contacted via shoshana.bryen@sdjewishworld.com

1 thought on “Israeli Officers Are Wrong to Ask for U.S. Intervention”

  1. clayton miller

    Keep in mind, if Israel had listened to the CIS with regards to Syria there would be members of Isis, Hezbollah and/or the Iranian Revolutionary Guards dipping their toes in the Sea of Galilee right now.

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