Qassam rockets rain
down on Negev towns; suicide bombings have reappeared; Israel is maintaining a
blockade on the Gaza Strip with periodic invasions that are growing in severity;
Hezbollah is re-arming itself in a chaotic Lebanon; and the fear of a nuclear
Iran remains. It seems an odd time to say that Israel is now in the best
position it has ever been to normalize its existence.
But that is
precisely the case, and Israel's sixtieth birthday is the perfect opportunity
to see this.
Israel has been
at the center of global intrigue for so long, it's hard now to recall the
idealism in which it was born. But sixty years ago, the first citizens of
Israel dreamt of a country that was both Jewish and democratic, and that was
welcomed fully into the family of nations and at peace with its neighbors.
Today, the view
of Israel around the world is at its lowest point ever. Yet it has also been
offered full recognition and normal relations by the entire Arab world, and all
the negative press it has received has not eroded the general support in the
West for its continued existence as a Jewish state.
Had this Arab
offer been proposed even twenty years ago, most Israelis would have wept in joy
at the prospect and leapt at it. But today, Israel is hesitant to extend its
hand to that offer, even while it has acknowledged it as a positive step.
What's changed, and how can we change it back?
Living By The Sword
Beginning with
the very birth of the country in 1948, Israelis have lived each day with the
sense that their neighbors want to destroy them. One can debate whether Arab
determination toward that goal has waned, but that doesn't change the very real
feelings Israelis have or their historical basis.
Modern
historical research has shown that the Arab effort in 1948 to eliminate Israel
in its infancy was half-hearted, but the war still cost Israel one percent of
its population. Even if the facts on the ground were not in line with the mythos
of the Israeli David triumphing over the Arab Goliath, it was still a stunning
triumph, and one which cemented the central place the Israeli military holds in
Israeli hearts and minds.
Technically,
that war never ended. An armistice was reached, but a state of war remained
with Egypt until 1979, with Jordan until 1994, and is still in place with
Lebanon, Syria and Iraq.
War flared again
in 1956, 1967 and 1973. Israel learned to live by the sword, and this was only
reinforced as it moved away from fighting other countries back toward fighting
the Palestinians.
The 1982
invasion of Lebanon, which led to Israel's eighteen year occupation of southern
Lebanon, an era many compared to America's Vietnam quagmire, was followed five
years later by the first Intifada. Even the Oslo years were marked, in the
mid-1990s, by an upsurge in terrorist attacks and, until early 2000, by the
ongoing violence in southern Lebanon.
In the
twenty-first century, Israel has seen the worst violence with the Palestinians
since the 1948 war. In 2006, it also experienced its first significant
cross-border conflict since 1973, as war broke out with Hezbollah.
That's a lot of
fighting, and it's meant that Israel, which from its birth has focused on its
military abilities, has become even more mistrustful of diplomatic initiatives.
This feeling has been reinforced in recent years by the Israeli government's
embrace of George W. Bush's style of international relations. That style is
best described as "shoot first and ask questions if it happens to be convenient
later."
The Right Flowers and the Jewish
Mainstream Wilts
It isn't hard to
see that with all that militarism in the mix, and the very real threats Israel
has faced, an aggressive, right-wing element has moved consistently closer to the
forefront, in both Israeli politics and among Israel's supporters throughout
the Jewish world.
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