Restoring military supremacy
Restoring military supremacy, Israel Hayom, David M. Weinberg, July 27, 2014
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry seems oblivious to Israel’s strategic need to finish the fight against Hamas with a resounding, unequivocal triumph. By attempting to bring about an immediate cease-fire that simply restores the status quo ante (based on the irrelevant and unacceptable 2012 cease-fire conditions), he is acting to weaken Israel.
Kerry doesn’t understand that what is at stake here is not just the lives of Palestinians and Israelis in Gaza and the Negev, but a reasonable regional balance of power where Israel stands a chance at deterring its many enemies.
More astute observers of the region know that Israel’s security has long been based on several pillars: it military supremacy, its alliance with the United States, its internal cohesion and steadfastness, and peace with its neighbors where possible. Over recent years, however, each of these four security pillars has taken a hit.
Implacable nonstate enemies like Hamas, Hezbollah, Islamic Jihad and al-Qaida have weaponized heavily and embedded themselves in civilian populations on Israel’s borders — making it difficult and painful for Israel to strike at these groups. Iran is supplying these groups with money, weapons and military training, while building a nuclear bomb.
The Obama administration has distanced America from Israel.
The strength of Israel’s social fabric has come into question following two decades of materialistic bingeing and very divisive diplomatic experimentation.
The country’s peace diplomacy has fallen flat too, with the Oslo Accords in tatters, and peace treaties with Egypt and Jordan threatened by Islamic earthquakes.
As a result, we know that Israel’s enemies have viewed Israel as weak and vulnerable.
Israel’s war against Hamas in Gaza must be viewed in this broader context. Israel is acting not only to end the immediate and acute rocket and tunnel threat to Israel — which alone is more than enough to justify our current military offensive — but acting to restore a measure of overall deterrence against all or enemies; to regain the aura of military supremacy, in their eyes.
Israel must prove that it is not deterred by Islamic terrorist militias that embed themselves in civilian populations and think themselves thereby invulnerable. Israel is showing that it can and will take the fight into their streets and underground hideouts, and uproot and destroy their bases of operations — despite the cost in life to our soldiers and to noncombatants unfortunately trapped (purposefully so, by Hamas) in the crossfire, and despite international condemnation.
If Israel can’t do this, and do so while maintaining a high degree of internal cohesion and social solidarity, then Israel’s long-term security prospects are bleak. Iran and all its regional subsidiaries are watching closely.
Consider, for example, our northern border. We know for sure that Hezbollah has dug its vast missile armories deep into the Lebanese mountainsides, underneath civilian towns. It is also very possible that Hezbollah has dug dozens of terror attack tunnels under the Israel-Lebanon border, reaching deep into the kibbutzim and towns of the Galilee. It is only a question of time until Israel has to take military action to “mow that grass,” to degrade and denude Hezbollah’s terror infrastructure and weaponry.
Wining this war against Hamas, then, is step one in restoring Israel’s security and its broader deterrent abilities. It is part of Israel’s response to the gains made by radical Islamists in Arab civil wars raging across the region. It is part of a re-assertion of the basic building blocks in Israel’s strategic posture. It is critical for Israel in grand strategic perspective.
Israel must not allow Kerry’s shortsightedness to throw us off track.
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July 27, 2014 at 4:42 PM
Kerry is a Buffon and should be ignored. The correct path for Israel now is to finish off Hamas once and for all. Israel will need to stay in Gaza till Hamas has been rooted out of its deepest darkest hole.
Israel should then annex the West Bank. The two state solution is dead and buried!