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Archive for September, 2009

AJC 2009 Survey, American Jews Support Iran Attack

Wednesday, September 30th, 2009

The results of the AJC’s 2009 annual survey of American Jewish political opinion (full survey) are a mixed bag that shows Jews to be eminently pragmatic on some issues and living in a fantasy world on others.  In terms of fantasy land, 81% believe that U.S. relations with Israel are positive.  This in the midst of one of the most friction-filled periods in bilateral relations in a decade or more.  59% approve of Bibi Netanyahu’s approach to relations with the U.S.  This is the guy who’s stone-walling the American president on a settlement freeze and unwilling to enter into final status negotiations with the Palestinians, all policies advocated by the U.S. president.  While 54% of American Jews approve of Obama’s approach to Israel, only 41% approve of the centerpiece of his policy toward Israel, a settlement freeze.  I don’t know whether that means Jews are schizoid or refuse to understand clearly the issues.

I note that the survey question about the freeze mischaracterizes U.S. policy, as it asks whether respondents agree with U.S. policy which calls for stopping “new” construction.  In reality, our government’s policy calls for stopping ALL construction whether new or existing.  It is the Israelis who have proposed only stopping new construction and this issue has not yet been agreed upon mutually.

According to the survey, 58% believe Jerusalem should not be shared with the Palestinians, which of course would mean that there could be no peace agreement.  75% of Jews believe the wacky, racist and inaccurate claim that Palestinians ultimate goal is to destroy Israel.  This to me indicates that the propaganda of Israel lobby groups like ZOA and even the AJC itself can be quite effective in distorting the Palestinian reality: polls of Palestinian opinion and statements by most Palestinian leaders totally disprove this statement.

Nearly 80% of Jews believe Israel can never come to an agreement with a Hamas-led government.  Which flies in the face of a much more pragmatic approach by Israelis who believe, according to polls, that their government should sit down and talk to Hamas (even though they recognize it is an implacable foe of Israel).

In light of current world affairs, most troubling are the results approving a military attack on Iran: 56% approve a U.S. attack and 66% support an Israeli attack.  In this, of course, American Jews have drunk the Kool-Aid offered by the Israel lobby and Israeli government, which has orchestrated an effective full-court press in this country to portray Iran as a nation composed of mad mullahs gunning not just for Israel, but the entire Jewish people (Bibi expressed precisely this claim).  This result points out how much work Jewish progressives have to do on this issue.

Which is why a coalition of local Jewish, Iranian-American and peace groups will be hosting a conference in December here in Seattle presenting a pragmatic approach to resolving the U.S.-Israel-Iran conflict.  I’m eager to enlist financial support from readers and anyone else interested in preventing military conflict in the Middle East.  Please consider a donation (via the Paypal button) to defray the costs of the conference if you haven’t already done so.

One question was thrown in as a sop to Bibi Netanyahu, as it’s one of his signature conditions used against the Palestinians whenever he wants to shirk his responsibility to negotiate.  It asks whether Palestinians should be required to recognize Israel as a Jewish state as part of a final peace agreement.  This of course is an entirely irrelevant issue since no Palestinian government will ever recognize Israel as a JEWISH state (as opposed to recognizing it as a state, which it will be required to do).  94% agree with this condition, which indicates how completely out of touch the respondents are with Palestinians, and even Israel itself.

By this I mean that American Jews don’t seem to understand what the nature of a Jewish state is.  They seem to think it’s akin to motherhood and apple pie.  They have no idea what implications this has for the relationship between Israeli Jews and its Palestinian-Arab citizens.  I would love to see a question in a future poll asking if there was a conflict between Israel being a democracy or a state in which Jewish religion and values predominate, which one would they prefer. That answer would be instructive.

There were, of course, reassuring responses to polling questions which should be noted.  54% approve of the president’s handling of relations with Israel.  A plurality of 49% continues to favor a two-state solution.  60% believe that Israel should dismantle some or all of the settlements in return for peace.  49% approve of Obama’s handling of relations with Iran. These are of course, important results which shouldn’t be minimized.

Fully 30% of Jews feel either fairly or very distant to Israel.  In the light of the Gaza war last January, I’d have thought the number would’ve inched up, but it didn’t.

Cordesman on Folly of Israeli Attack on Iran

Wednesday, September 30th, 2009

Back in May, Reuven Pedatzur, a lecturer in political science at Tel Aviv University and Director of the Galili Center for Strategy and National Security (and also an IAF pilot in the reserves), wrote an eminently lucid analysis of a March, 2009 report by Anthony Cordesman (pdf and summary) on Israel’s likelihood of success if it attacks Iran’s nuclear program.  The Haaretz headline for this article is entirely inaccurate and should be disregarded.  According to Cordesman and Pedatzur, the chance of success (defined as destroying or delaying by 1-3 years Iran’s securing a nuclear weapon) is not high enough to warrant the risk in pursuing an attack.  Among the many impediments are the following:

The first problem the authors point to is intelligence, or more precisely, the lack of it. “It is not known whether Iran has some secret facilities where it is conducting uranium enrichment,” they write. If facilities unknown to Western intelligence agencies do exist, Iran’s uranium-enrichment program could continue to develop in secret there, while Israel attacks the known sites – and the strike’s gains would thus be lost. In general, the authors state, attacking Iran is justified only if it will put an end to Iran’s nuclear program or halt it for several years. That objective is very difficult to attain.

…A strike mission on the three nuclear facilities would require no fewer than 90 combat aircraft, including all 25 F-15Es in the IAF inventory and another 65 F-16I/Cs. On top of that, all the IAF’s refueling planes will have to be airborne: 5 KC-130Hs and 4 B-707s. The combat aircraft will have to be refueled both en route to and on the way back from Iran. The IAF will have a hard time locating an area above which the tankers can cruise without being detected by the Syrians or the Turks.

One of the toughest operational problems to resolve is the fact that the facility at Natanz is buried deep underground. Part of it, the fuel-enrichment plant, reaches a depth of 8 meters, and is protected by a 2.5-meter-thick concrete wall, which is in turn protected by another concrete wall. By mid-2004 the Iranians had fortified their defense of the other part of the facility, where the centrifuges are housed. They buried it 25 meters underground and built a roof over it made of reinforced concrete several meters thick.

…Because the Natanz facility is so important, the Iranians have gone to great lengths to protect it. To contend with the serious defensive measures they have taken, the IAF will use two types of U.S.-made smart bombs. According to reports in the foreign media, 600 of these bombs – nicknamed “bunker busters” – have been sold to Israel…For these bombs to penetrate ultra-protected Iranian facilities, IAF pilots will have to strike the targets with absolute accuracy and at an optimal angle.

…Iran has built a dense aerial-defense system that will make it hard for Israeli planes to reach their targets unscathed. Among other things, the Iranians have deployed batteries of Hawk, SA-5 and SA-2 surface-to-air missiles, plus they have SA-7, SA-15, Rapier, Crotale and Stinger anti-aircraft missiles. Furthermore, 1,700 anti-aircraft guns protect the nuclear facilities – not to mention the 158 combat aircraft that might take part in defending Iran’s skies. Most of those planes are outdated, but they may be scrambled to intercept the IAF, which will thus have to use part of its strike force to deal with the situation.

…All these obstacles are nothing compared to the S-300V (SA-12 Giant) anti-aircraft defense system, which…Russia may have secretly supplied to Iran recently…The Russian system is so sophisticated and tamper-proof that the aircraft attrition rates could reach 20-30 percent: In other words, out of a strike force of 90 aircraft, 20 to 25 would be downed. This, the authors say, is “a loss Israel would hardly accept in paying.”

If Israel also decides to attack the…reactor in Bushehr, an ecological disaster and mass deaths will result. The contamination released into the air in the form of radionuclides would spread over a large area, and thousands of Iranians who live nearby would be killed immediately; in addition, possibly hundreds of thousands would subsequently die of cancer. Because northerly winds blow in the area throughout most of the year, the authors conclude that, “most definitely Bahrain, Qatar and the UAE will be heavily affected by the radionuclides.”

And here are but a few of the repercussions that such a strike might have on the Middle East and the U.S. itself:

The study also analyzes the possible Iranian response to an Israeli strike. In all likelihood the result would be to spur Iranians to continue and even accelerate their nuclear program, to create reliable deterrence in the face of an aggressive Israel. Iran would also withdraw from the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, which until now has enabled its nuclear program to be monitored, to a certain degree, through inspectors from the International Atomic Energy Agency. An Israeli strike would immediately put a stop to the international community’s attempts to pressure Iran into suspending development of nuclear weapons.

Iran would also, almost certainly, retaliate against Israel directly. It might attack targets here with Shahab-3 ballistic missiles, whose range covers all of Israel…In addition, the Iranians would use Hezbollah and Hamas to dispatch waves of suicide bombers into Israel. The Second Lebanon War showed us Hezbollah’s rocket capability, and the experience of the past eight years has been instructive regarding Hamas’ ability to fire Qassams from the Gaza Strip.

Hezbollah launched 4,000 rockets from South Lebanon during the Second Lebanon War, and their effect on northern Israel has not been forgotten: Life was nearly paralyzed for a whole month. Since then the Lebanese organization’s stockpile was replenished and enhanced, and it now has some 40,000 rockets. Israel does not have a response to those rockets. The rocket defense systems now being developed (Iron Dome and Magic Wand) are still far from completion, and even after they become operational, it is doubtful they will prove effective against thousands of rockets launched at Israel.

An Israeli strike on Iran would also sow instability in the Middle East. The Iranians would make use of the Shi’ites in Iraq, support Taliban fighters and improve their combat capabilities in Afghanistan. They also might attack American interests in the region, especially in countries that host U.S. military forces, such as Qatar and Bahrain. The Iranians would probably also attempt to disrupt the flow of oil to the West from the Persian Gulf region. Since the United States would be perceived as having given Israel a green light to attack Iran, American relations with allies in the Arab world could suffer greatly.

Even more important than all the common sense above is Pedatzur’s policy advice to the Israeli political, military and intelligence echelon (which will undoubtedly be ignored as it contains too much commons sense to be useful in Israel’s right-wing government deliberations):

…What should Israeli policy makers conclude…? That an IAF strike on Iran would be complicated and problematic, and that the chance of it succeeding is not great. That they must weigh all of the far-reaching ramifications that an Israeli strike on Iranian nuclear facilities would have, and that they must not be fooled by promises…by Israel Defense Forces officers who present the attack plan as having good odds for success.

…It is questionable whether Israel has the military capability to destroy Iran’s nuclear program, or even to delay it for several years. Therefore, if the diplomatic contacts the Obama administration is initiating with Iran prove useless, and if in the wake of their expected failure the American president does not decide to attack Iran, it is likely that Iran will possess nuclear weapons in a relatively short time. It seems, therefore, that policy makers in Jerusalem should begin preparing, mentally and operationally, for a situation in which Iran is a nuclear power with a strike capability against Israel.

…In another year, or three years from now, when the Iranians possess nuclear weapons, the rules of the strategic game in the region will be completely altered. Israel must reach that moment with a fully formulated and clear policy in hand, enabling it to successfully confront a potential nuclear threat, even when it is likely that the other side has no intention of carrying it out. The key, of course, is deterrence. Only a clear and credible signal to the Iranians, indicating the terrible price they will pay for attempting a nuclear strike against Israel, will prevent them from using their missiles. The Iranians have no logical reason to bring about the total destruction of their big cities, as could happen if Israel uses the means of deterrence at its disposal. Neither the satisfaction of killing Zionist infidels, nor, certainly, the promotion of Palestinian interests would justify that price. Israeli deterrence in the face of an Iranian nuclear threat has a good chance of succeeding precisely because the Iranians have no incentive to deal a mortal blow to Israel.

Therefore, all the declarations about developing the operational capability of IAF aircraft so they can attack the nuclear facilities in Iran, and the empty promises about the ability of the Arrow missile defense system to contend effectively with the Shahab-3, not only do not help bolster Israel’s power of deterrence, but actually undermine the process of building it and making it credible in Iranian eyes.

The time has come to adopt new ways of thinking. No more fiery declarations and empty threats, but rather a carefully weighed policy grounded in sound strategy. Ultimately, in an era of a multi-nuclear Middle East, all sides will have a clear interest to lower tension and not to increase it.

I bring this article to your attention now primarily because of its sound policy advice which echoes precisely advice of pragmatists like Flynt Leverett and Roger Cohen in the pages of the N.Y. Times this week.  It is clear that the current Israeli government has no interest in pursuing the realistic proposals set forth by Pedatzur.  But they should be known and disseminated further.  Some time in the future they will be more politically relevant.  It is important to understand that in the midst of the “fiery declarations and empty threats” of Israeli generals and politicians there are Israeli analysts who are talking sense.  They should be heard and heard in Washington DC as well.

A point not raised in Pedatzur’s article, but which is directly relevant to current U.S. policy debates is this from the Cordesman report:

Iran should be engaged directly by the U.S. with an agenda open to all areas of military and non-military issues that both are in agreement or disagreement. Any realistic resolution to the Iranian nuclear program will require an approach that encompasses Military, Economic, Political interests and differences of the U.S vs Iran.

The fact that Anthony Cordesman, Flynt Levertt and Roger Cohen all agree on the above point is very significant.  Would that Barack Obama and his advisors were listening.

Leveretts on Iran: Sanctions, Force Cannot Work

Tuesday, September 29th, 2009
Iran sanctions: gutter ball

Iran sanctions: gutter ball (Alex Nabaum/NYT)

More pragmatism on Iran on the op-ed pages of the N.Y. Times.  Today’s common sense comes from Flynt and Hillary Leverett, who pose a persuasive argument that anything short of a comprehensive diplomatic initiative simply cannot work regarding Iran:

TEHRAN’S disclosure that it is building a second uranium enrichment plant near the holy city of Qum has derailed the Obama administration’s already faltering efforts to engage with Iran. The United States will now cling even more tightly to the futile hope that international pressure and domestic instability will induce major changes in Iranian decision-making.

The columnists argue that the Obama policy is little more than warmed over Bushism and that it threatens to fail because Obama has surrounded himself with hawks like Dennis Ross, who betray the very foreign policy principles the candidate espoused before he was elected:

Because President Obama assembled a national security team that, for the most part, did not share his early vision for American-Iranian rapprochement, his administration never built a strong public case for engagement. The prospect of engagement is still treated largely as a channel for “rewarding” positive Iranian actions and “punishing” problematic behavior — precisely what Mr. Obama, as a presidential candidate, criticized so eloquently about President George W. Bush’s approach.

At the UN General Assembly last week, President Obama used language reminiscent of Mr. Bush’s “axis of evil” to identify Iran and North Korea as the main threats to international peace…

Here is the money quote, what Obama must do if he wishes to retrieve his wavering Iran policy from the maw of defeat:

The Obama administration’s lack of diplomatic seriousness goes beyond clumsy tactics; it reflects an inadequate understanding of the strategic necessity of constructive American-Iranian relations. If an American president believed that such a relationship was profoundly in our national interests — as President Richard Nixon judged a diplomatic opening to China — he would demonstrate acceptance of the Islamic Republic, even as problematic Iranian behavior continued in the near term.

After taking office in 1969, Nixon directed the C.I.A. to stop covert operations in Tibet and ordered the Navy to stop its regular patrols of the Taiwan Strait even while China was supplying weapons to kill American soldiers in Vietnam. President Obama has had several opportunities to send analogous signals to Tehran — such as ending Bush-era covert programs against Iran — but has punted.

…The Obama administration’s focus on mustering support for effective economic penalties is delusional.

…The Obama administration may hope that even an ineffective quest for “crippling” sanctions will hold the line against those in Washington and elsewhere advocating a military strike on Iran’s weapons program. That is sadly reminiscent of our experiences at the State Department and the National Security Council in the Bush administration, when officials who opposed the Iraq war championed “smart sanctions” and tighter containment of Saddam Hussein’s regime as the alternative course. Such calls did nothing to change Mr. Hussein’s calculations, and were overwhelmed by the exaggerated allegations of Iraq’s renewed efforts to build nuclear weapons.

INSTEAD of pushing the falsehood that sanctions will give America leverage in Iranian decision-making — a strategy that will end either in frustration or war — the administration should seek a strategic realignment with Iran as thoroughgoing as that effected by Nixon with China. This would require Washington to take steps, up front, to assure Tehran that rapprochement would serve Iran’s strategic needs.

On that basis, America and Iran would forge a comprehensive framework for security as well as economic cooperation — something that Washington has never allowed the five-plus-one group to propose. Within that framework, the international community would work with Iran to develop its civil nuclear program, including fuel cycle activities on Iranian soil, in a transparent manner rather than demanding that Tehran prove a negative — that it’s not developing weapons. A cooperative approach would not demonize Iran for political relationships with Hamas and Hezbollah, but would elicit Tehran’s commitment to work toward peaceful resolutions of regional conflicts.

This column makes clear that Obama’s policy is running off the rails, as previous Democratic presidents have (notably JFK with Cuba and Jimmy Carter with Afghanistan) who came to power talking pragmatism and diplomatic engagement and turned to force and bluster after a U.S. opponent “took advantage” of the president’s reasonableness. Obama is being led by the nose by hawks like Ross and others.

He needs the type of sweeping-clean that the Leveretts advocate here if he is regain the initiative.  Their proposals of course would involve tremendous risk because Republicans are looking for every chink in the president’s armor. They would bellow at the “soft” approach advocated by these analysts.  But the choices are a slow, strangled almost certain failure of U.S. policy (cf. Bush in Iraq) or a politically risky comprehensive approach advocating engagement over intimidation, that might yield constructive results. The current policy is more of the same warmed over containment attempted by Bush in the past with resounding failure.  It cannot work in the long or short-run.

Dersh: Zionism Came to Rid ‘Holy Land of Disease’

Monday, September 28th, 2009
The Mouth, looking a little pale around the gills

The Mouth, looking a little pale around the gills

This is one in a contuining series which I call Dersh Watch.  To wit, a chronicle of the brazen, lying effrontery of one of Israel’s most disgusting boosters.  The latest is a review he wrote for the N.Y. Times of a new biography of U.S. Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis.

Here’s the whopper of a passage:

Brandeis was convinced that Zionism was an outgrowth of his progressive values. The idea of Jews’ having a homeland, based on social justice and Jewish prophetic principles, seemed entirely natural to him. He poured his heart, soul, fortune and considerable energies into persuading American Jews, who were generally unsympathetic to European Zionism, that one could be a patriotic American while at the same time advocating a Jewish homeland for the oppressed Jews of Europe. His most important contribution to Israel’s establishment was in turning Zionism from a theory alien to many American Jews into a pragmatic program to rid the Holy Land of disease, to increase its agricultural production and to make it feasible for European Jews to live in peace with their Arab neighbors.

Now, it is possible that Brandeis himself believed that Zionism was a pragmatic program to rid the Holy Land of disease though Dershowitz doesn’t make clear from where this sentiment derived.  But even if we avert our eyes from the obvious inference that the Arab inhabitants of the Holy Land might be the “disease” which Zionists wished to remove from the Holy Land, the notion that Israel before the arrival of Zionists was a cesspool of vice and disease reeks of colonial noblesse oblige.  While I agree with Dershowitz that Brandeis in much of his jurisprudence and political activism was a consummate progressive, if Brandeis actually espoused the views the reviewer claims for him, then in this he was little more than a typical western colonialist (of whom there were undoubtedly many in America at the time including perhaps chief among them, Teddy Roosevelt).

Another recently published passage from Dershowitz in the Jerusalem Post is a superb specimen of the Dersh Big Lie.  In a painfully bloated assault on Neve Gordon for his recently ground-breaking L.A. Times op ed supporting the BDS movement, (likely settler Rebbetzin) Yocheved Miriam Russo*:

“It is my opinion that Neve Gordon has gotten into bed with neo-Nazis, Holocaust justice deniers, and anti-Semites…. he is a despicable example of a self-hating Jew and a self-hating Israeli, whose writing consists of anti-Israeli propaganda designed to ‘prove’ that the Jewish State is fascist.”

Neve Gordon actually supports a two state solution and has never had any direct involvement or contact with any of the groups Dersh mentions above.  You’ll note that the Harvard professor never even deigns to prove his charge and there’s one reason for that, he can’t.  I also find it laughable that an Jewish Ivy League lawyer, who never put on a uniform to defend Israel is calling a decorated IDF officer, who fought in a major battle of the 1982 Lebanon war, suffering there a wound causing a 40% disability, a “self-hating Jew and self-hating Israeli.”  This is height of antic chutzpah.

Though I’m not an expert on Neve Gordon’s writing, the idea that he’s called Israel “fascist” seems far-fetched in the extreme.  Of course, he’s called Israel’s Occupation apartheid.  But only a flaming demagogue with lazy rhetorical habits could believe that the two terms are synonymous.  Neve Gordon actually believes in Israeli democracy (real democracy, not ethnocracy) far more than Alan Dershowitz and that’s what burns rightist rhetorical thugs like him up.

Just by the way, this interview with Der Dersh is instructive in that we freely admits he “doesn’t have a particularly good brain” but does have an overactive mouth:

When I was  young everybody told me I had a good mouth, but I didn’t have a particularly good brain.  And so my principal called me in one day and said: “Find a profession that you use your mouth but not your head.  You could either be,”  he said, “a lawyer or a Conservative rabbi.”  I wasn’t smart enough to be a rabbi so I had to become a lawyer.

* Among Russo’s publishing outlets are the Kahanist N.Y. Jewish Press and Chabad.org.

Israel to PA: Rescind Appeal to Criminal Court or Else

Monday, September 28th, 2009

If you’re old enough you’ll remember Yaakov Smirnoff, a Russian Jewish comic who emigrated to the U.S., and his tongue-in-cheek tagline: “America, what a country!” I feel the same way about the Only Democracy in the Middle East™ defended by the Most Moral Army in the World (it’s true–Alan Dershowitz and Ehud Barak told me so).

icc logoExcept Israel appears to have a little problem that’s driving that most moral army slightly bonkers.  The PA has approved an appeal to the International Criminal Court regarding possible Israeli war crimes during Operation Drop Dead (Cast Lead).  Simply not cricket, says chief of staff Gabi Ashkenazi.  You Fatahniks wanted us to go into Gaza and teach Hamas a lesson.  Now you turn on us?  Et tu, Abu Mazen!

Tensions are mounting between Israel and the Palestinian Authority following Ramallah’s call on the International Court at The Hague to examine claims of “war crimes” that the IDF allegedly committed during Operation Cast Lead…The issue is already weighing…on the relations between the leadership of Israel’s defense and security establishment with their counterparts in the West Bank, and is part of a growing list of Israeli complaints about the behavior of PA officials.

Meanwhile, Israel has warned the Palestinian Authority that it would condition permission for a second cellular telephone provider to operate in the West Bank – an economic issue of critical importance to the PA leadership – on the Palestinians withdrawing their request at the International Court.

I find it astonishing though not surprising that Israel would mix apples and oranges and attempt to use economic blackmail in order to block Israeli moral culpability for its crimes in Gaza.  Also, the notion that Israel has a legitimate “complaint” against the PA because it is standing up for Palestinian human rights takes quite a bit of chutzpah on the former’s part.

But the real money quote in this Haaretz story is this one which lays bare the true nature of Israel as a national security state in which all other issues play second fiddle (if that):

…The chief of staff conditioned his approval of a second cellular provider to the Palestinians’ withdrawing their appeal to the court.

“The PA has reached the point where it has to decide whether it is working with us or against us,” senior figures in the defense establishment have said.

Yes, in Israel the chief of the armed forces runs the nation’s telecom policy (when it comes to the Palestinians).  And he can use whatever excuse he wishes to draw his troops out from under the shadow of an ICC war crimes charge.

If the following portion of the this report is accurate, then I also find this passage instructive in terms of how seriously Abbas takes the issue of Palestinian human rights (when it’s the human rights of Gazans who support his rival, Hamas).  This is something of which Fatah should be ashamed if it is true:

At the PA it is being said, in response to the Israeli demands, that Abbas and Fayyad will water down their appeal to the ICJ, though they will refuse to promise that it will rescinded entirely.

That’s right, selling Palestinian rights for a mess of telecom porridge.  This bloody mess reminds me of an abattoir rather than a conference table at which two nations negotiate their differences with respect.  If it is an abattoir, I can’t tell you whether Israel or the PA are the butchers, perhaps both.

After Qom, Where Do We Go from Here?

Sunday, September 27th, 2009
Irans alleged secret nuclear facility near Qom (Reuters)

Iran's alleged secret nuclear facility near Qom (Reuters)

With righteous indignation, Pres. Obama announced at the UN that Iran had secretly begun a nuclear research facility near the holy city of Qom, which our intelligence agencies believe can only be meant to produce weapons-grade nuclear fuel. This development delighted the anti-Iran hawks in Israel and the U.S., who have been talking up the military option for months. I’m half convinced that much of Obama’s reaction may have something to do with trying to pre-empt the hawks and so stay ahead of the neocon curve. Nothing speeds the demise of a president’s political relevance more than to appear to be out of touch with hot button cable news-ready stories like this one. Had Obama not rattled the sanctions saber mightily he’d be even more the object of rage and scorn on FOXNews and the other right-wing media outlets.

But where does all this leave us?  Iran has certainly miscalculated in a major way in developing this secret facility.  But does it care?  The Revolutionary Guards, who built this facility, derive political strength from the prospect of confrontation with the west.  I simply don’t see any way that we in the west can weaken their hold on power, which is supposedly what most of us want to see happen, by reacting as if Iran had done the equivalent of introduced nuclear missiles on Cuban soil, 90 miles from American shores.

Let’s keep in mind that we’ve discovered the facility, the Iranians have agreed to its being inspected.  We’ve known for several years about the plant though we weren’t sure what it’s purpose was until recently.  Going to Defcon IV at this point would be a bit premature.

There is an almost universal cry in the U.S. and Israel for “punishing sanctions” against Iran.  Though interestingly, much of the rest of the world (German, Russia, and China in particular) doesn’t seem to share in this consensus.  Just what can sanctions do?  Very little, especially in light of the reluctance of Iran’s major trading partners to go along.

Roger Cohen has written yet another sharp analysis of the current situation in his column in today’s Times:

Sanctions won’t work. Ray Takeyh, who worked on Iran…at the State Department…told me that “sanctions are the feel-good option.”Yes, it feels good to do something, but it doesn’t necessarily help. In this case, sanctions won’t for four reasons.

One: Iran is inured to sanctions after years of living with them and has in Dubai a sure-fire conduit for goods at a manageable surtax. Two: Russia and China will never pay more than lip-service to sanctions. Three: You don’t bring down a quasi-holy symbol — nuclear power — by cutting off gasoline sales. Four: sanctions feed the persecution complex on which the Iranian regime thrives.

A senior German Foreign Ministry official last week told an American Council on Germany delegation: “The efficiency [ed. I think the world the speaker intended to use is "efficacy"] of sanctions is not really discussed because if you do, you are left with only two options — a military strike or living with a nuclear Iran — and nobody wants to go there. So the answer is: Let’s impose further sanctions! It’s a dishonest debate.”

This last point is very important. The sly hawks are talking sanctions (the talon-exposed hawks are going right for the jugular and talking regime change). But the former likely know, as Bush did when he proposed sanctions against Saddam, that time will come when people will say sanctions have not worked and we need to go on to the next stage. That’s when the anti-Iran warrior class expects the world to come to its senses and embrace a military attack as the only viable option.

This is why it’s very important that Iran pragmatists put the sanctions cards on the table for all the players to see. Those cards are a losing hand. But the card players believe their ace in the hole is the military card and they can barely wait to play it. We need to tell the world that sanctions are little more than a ploy, a device to mark time till the real show can begin.

That’s why anti-Iran programs like one sponsored here in Seattle by the local Jewish federation are all heat and no light.  They are foisted upon an unsuspecting Jewish community by the Israeli diplomats and the Israel lobby (in the form of StandWithUs and Aipac, who are providing the main speakers and paying their way) in hopes of invoking Jewish fear and paranoia in the fight to demonize Iran.  If you’re so unfortunate as to attend, you’ll hear about the existential threat to Israel that Iranian weapons pose (neglecting scores of Israeli nuclear weapons currently aimed at Teheran).  You’ll hear the Bibi mantra that today is 1938 and Teheran is Munich and we must not fail this time to confront the contemporary equivalent of the Nazis.  You’ll hear about Shimon Peres’ grandstanding slogan condemning Iranian nukes as “a flying Holocaust.”  What won’t you hear?  Reason and pragmatism.  You might hear tepid endorsement of diplomatic engagement, but only in the context of ratcheting up pressure when it fails (as it must in the war party’s vision).

As progressive Jews, we must fight the doomsday lobby and fight the inclination to “resolve” this issue with force.  That’s why I’m planning a counter-conference here in Seattle that will feature Iranian-American and American Jewish pragmatists who are also experts in this field.  The event will be sponsored by the Seattle chapter of the United Nations Association and local Jewish groups.  Our speakers’ message may be critical of Iran (and Israeli policy toward it).  But it will not be shrill and it will not be knee-jerk.  It will present a vision of what could work and improve Israel-Iran-U.S. relations.  And it will support the Obama administration’s policy of diplomatic engagement.  I expect it will cost upwards of $5,000 to cover the travel costs and accomodations for our speakers plus rental of a hall.  I urge you to support our effort.

Cohen proposes an intriguing alternate approach to defusing the crisis. Engage with the Iranians on all major regional issues that unite and divide us:

…Open a…bilateral U.S.-Iran negotiation covering…Afghanistan and Iraq (where interests often converge); Hezbollah and Hamas (where they do not); human rights; blocked Iranian assets; diplomatic relations; regional security arrangements; drugs; the fight against Al Qaeda; visas and travel.

Isolated, nuclear negotiations will fail. Integrated, they may not. Iran’s sense of humiliation is rooted in its America complex; its nuclear program is above all about the restoration of pride. Settle the complex to contain the program.

There is no guarantee that diplomatic engagement will work.  But there is far more likelihood it will succeed than the military option.

International Criminal Court to Investigate IDF Officer

Saturday, September 26th, 2009

This is how it starts.  Palestinians and anti-Occupation activists scream bloody murder for years about Israeli war crimes.  The world mumbles under its breath: “Yeah sure.”   Israel finally crosses a red line with two brutal wars massacring civilians in Gaza and Lebanon.  An eminent international jurist writes a voluminous report for a United Nations committee documenting said war crimes.  Israel begins to take notice and mounts its own counter-attack.   A chief prosecutor for the International Criminal Court announces he is considering filing charges against a specific IDF officer.

IDF Lt. Col. David Benjamin to be investigated for war crimes

IDF Lt. Col. David Benjamin to be investigated for war crimes

Perhaps the prosecutor will file such charges.  Perhaps the officer will be served with a summons.  Perhaps he will refuse to submit to the ICC’s jurisdiction.  Or perhaps nothing will come of this particular case.  But make no mistake.  Lt. Col. David Benjamin , citizen of Israel and South Africa may be the first investigated or even charged.  But he will not be the last.  In fact, he will be the first of many.

The first case may go far or nowhere.  Israel will scream bloody murder.  It will refuse jurisdiction.  It will claim a double standard.  It will claim moral hypocrisy.  Many Israeli supporters will bridle with indignation.  But as time goes on more and more such cases will be brought.  The ice will be broken and moral dam will burst.  Israeli officers will face justice.  They will go to jail.  Their faces will be plastered across the world (and Israeli) press.  Finally, the opprobrium of the rest of the world may sink into to the typical Israel’s obdurate consciousness.  It may not happen this year or even next.  But it will happen.

And when it does, Israel’s standing will fall ever so slightly.  Along with increasing successes of the BDS movement and other anti-Occupation activism, Israel’s impunity will end.  It will be made to pay a price.  And at some point the pain will become so intense it will register for the average Israeli.  And along may come Israel’s DeKlerk who realizes the entire regime is liable to collapse unless Israel reaches an accord.  Bibi is certainly not that DeKlerk and nothing good can come from him.  I’m afraid Israel will have to suffer much more before it understands that its Bibis do not have the answers.  But eventually I’m convinced that Israelis will be able to be pragmatic and see a new political paradigm is needed.  And there may be one wise enough to become the Israeli DeKlerk.

Many observers are likening this wider world awakening to Israel’s impunity regarding war crimes to the development of the anti-apartheid movement in South Africa.  This is certainly an apt historical analogy.

But in terms of a legal analogy, I’m also reminded about the history of tobacco industry liability lawsuits.  A decade or two ago you’d hear every so often of a plaintiff filing suit against one of the tobacco companies.  Invariably the suits would be thrown out of court.  But some time later, you’d hear that a plaintiff actually succeeded in bringing the case to trial even though a jury refused to find the tobacco company negligent.  Then came the state attorneys general lawsuit against Big Tobacco and the hundreds of millions of dollar settlement.  Then the CEOs of Big Tobacco lied before Congress claiming their product was not addictive.  Recently, the federal government proposed regulating tobacco the same as other products.  Finally, tobacco will banned or so tightly regulated that it will be much harder for people to become addicted.

Ideas like tobacco liability and Israeli war crimes are tough to swallow at first.  But due to the blunders of an industry and a nation and egregious violations of law and common decency by both, taboos and barriers begin slowly to break down.  What once was unthinkable becomes thinkable and even commonly accepted.  It will happen, im yirtzeh ha-Shem.

Here’s some more background on the Benjamin case:

The ICC began looking into Benjamin’s case after receiving material from pro-Palestinian organizations in South Africa. The material included a transcript of an interview Benjamin gave to the web site Bloomberg.com, in which the officer recounted his involvement in legal consultations with the IDF ahead of army operations.

“We were intimately involved in planning,” Benjamin said, including “authorizing the targets that could be struck, war materiel – everything passed by us.”

Benjamin served for many years as legal adviser to the GOC Southern Command, and later headed the Military Advocate General’s department on international law.

In August, he visited South Africa to attend a conference organized by the local Jewish community on international law during wartime, with special reference to the Gaza war. Benjamin later described the trip as a “personal hasbara [public diplomacy] trip.”

The pro-Palestinian organizations promptly asked South African state prosecutors to open an investigation into suspicions that Benjamin had committed war crimes in Gaza. To avoid a potential confrontation with local authorities, Benjamin left South Africa several days earlier than he had planned.

At the conference, Benjamin rejected claims that the IDF committed war crimes in Gaza, as well as demands that Israel’s wartime conduct be subject to an external investigation.

Dennis Davis – a South African district court judge and international law lecturer at the University of Cape Town, who directed the conference – said he firmly opposed the remarks delivered by Benjamin, who was once his law student. Davis added that were Benjamin still his student, he would “fail him.”

I find it a delicious irony that Benjamin is the chief Israeli military legal “scholar” used by Alan Dershowitz in his pro-Israel screed film, The Case for Israel: Democracy’s Outpost (I kid you not–that’s the subtitle).  This is hoisting Benjamin, the IDF and Dershowitz on their own petard.  I only wish Der Dersh would volunteer to serve as an IDF lawyer in the next shande-war Israel prosecutes against one of its neighbors.  If he takes responsibility for approving the IDF’s choice of targets like Benjamin did, then maybe he could be prosecuted too.  Though unfortunately, the U.S. has not yet ratified the UN treaty and isn’t subject to the ICC.  Alas.

Lieberman: ‘If Everyone is Worried About Iran, Everyone Forgets Palestinians’

Saturday, September 26th, 2009

Would Israel go to all the trouble it has pumping up a death match with Iran, all in order to distract the world from its oppression of Palestinians?  Avigdor Lieberman made precisely such a statement to Haaretz after his visit to the UN:

Lieberman said he met with Arab foreign ministers while at the United Nations last week and said they expressed their alarm over Iran’s nuclear program to him.

Nobody is worried about the Palestinian problem, everybody in the Muslim and Arab world, and first and foremost in the Gulf states, are worried about the Iranian problem,” he said.

Would Israel risk bringing the Middle East to the brink of all-out war (in the event of an attack on Iran’s nuclear facilities) to ease pressure on it to negotiate with the Palestinians?  It seems far-fetched.  But Yvette said it, I didn’t.  And it makes perfect sense if Bibi’s ultimate goal is the prevent a Palestinian state at all costs and delay the start of any negotiation process.

The effect of yesterday’s announcement that Iran has a second nuclear processing facility that may be designed to produce weapons grade uranium is yet another gift dropped into Bibi’s lap.  The first was Obama’s announcement that he’d essentially thrown in the towel over the whole concept of a settlement freeze.  If Bibi’s second goal after torpedoing final status negotiations with the Palestinians is also causing immense misery for Iran, this is his lucky week.

He’s calling for “punishing sanctions” against Iran.  Do we remember what such draconian policy wrought on Iraq before Saddam’s demise?  Did it cause his regime to crumble?  No.  What did it do?  Killed hundreds of thousands of vulnerable children and elderly.  And that’s what we can expect in Iran.  So a people who saw its own children perish in the Holocaust will now eagerly bring similar privation on Iran’s young.

This is also an Iranian regime which Israel’s defense minister conceded last week does not pose an existential threat to Israel.  In fact, Ehud Barak said that Israel, if it had to, could live with an Iran that possessed nuclear weapons.  And why shouldn’t it?  Have the Arab states lived with Israel as a nuclear state for decades?  If they can do so why shouldn’t Israel be able to do the same?  Pro-Israel advocates here argue that there is a qualitative difference between the two states.  The mullahs are mad, willing to incinerate their nation in nuclear ash for the sake of annihilating Israel.  Iran supposedly is a nation of religious fanatics.  While Israel is a reasonable state wishing nothing more than peace with its neighbors and getting nothing less than incessant hatred in return.

Well, you’ll have to pardon us for taking issue with these characterizations.  Iran is not the ogre the Israel lobby and Bibi make it out to be.  Nor is Israel the bastion of enlightenment and reasoned discourse its advocates make it out to be.  The truth is somewhere in the middle.  Which is why Israel will likely have to learn to live with a nuclear Iran.

The only alternative would be a nuclear free Middle East with world powers guaranteeing the security of all the major states in the region, but especially Israel.  I don’t see Israel giving up its nuclear weapons on any account.  But if it wishes to retain them, then it can hardly expect the world to care when it screams bloody murder at Muslim states getting the bomb.