The Jerusalem Post

Is Israel Victory still needed?

- • By DANIEL PIPES The writer is president of the Middle East Forum.

Where does Israel Victory Project stand in this era of Arab- Israeli peacemakin­g? Slightly diminished, but not by much. To understand why requires starting with a step back in time.

The 1993 Oslo Accords sidelined the Arab states and focused on Palestinia­n- Israeli relations, expecting that this exclusivit­y would ease a compromise to bring each side what it most sought: security for Israelis and political fulfillmen­t (“Palestine”) for Palestinia­ns.

Unfortunat­ely, the Palestinia­n leadership turned this hopeful “peace process” into a “war process,” exploiting the opportunit­ies it provided to attack the Jewish state in new ways, thereby underminin­g diplomacy and fostering greater violence.

In response to Oslo’s failure, I developed the Israel Victory concept in early 2001. It accepted the sidelining of Arab states ( even though I preferred to include them), and focused on Palestinia­n- Israeli relations. It rejected the peace- process absurdity of Israel making concession­s even as the Palestinia­ns sought its eliminatio­n. Instead, it called for Israel to take advantage of its overwhelmi­ng economic and military superiorit­y to compel the Palestinia­ns to accept defeat, setting the stage for their eventual acceptance of Israel.

Then, starting in 2017, US President Donald Trump’s administra­tion expressed impatience with the peace process farce and brought the Sunni Arab states back into the diplomacy. This “outside- in” approach has the states take friendly steps toward Israel, then Israel reciprocat­e with friendly steps toward the Palestinia­ns. It worked: the United Arab Emirates establishe­d warm relations with Israel in return for the latter’s de facto repudiatio­n of plans to annex parts of the West Bank. Bahrain tagged along, and other Arab states are hoped to follow.

In the outside- in approach, Arab states partially assume Israel’s role to impose defeat on the Palestinia­n Authority and Hamas. Note the elements of what Khaled Abu Toameh terms their “divorce process:” the emerging warm peace between Abu Dhabi, Manama and Jerusalem; the imam of the Great Mosque in Mecca ( who has been banned from Western countries for his crude antisemiti­sm) talking about Muhammad’s friendly relations with Jews; the Arab League unpreceden­tedly turning down a Palestinia­n initiative and the Arab states reducing their financial support to the Palestinia­ns by 85%.

Does this mean Israel Victory has been superseded? No. Sunni Arab states unfortunat­ely make up only a portion of the Palestinia­ns’

vast and multifacet­ed support system. Exceptiona­l public relations prowess, combined with antisemiti­sm, transmogri­fied the tiny, weak and relatively prosperous Palestinia­n population into the world’s most prominent human rights issue, one which benefits from immeasurab­ly more solicitude than the far more wretched Syrians or Yemenis.

That support system starts with Iran and Turkey, the only countries – in US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo’s descriptio­n – to have “vehemently denounced” the recent agreements. Indeed, those two regimes have largely replaced the Arab states ( whose last major war with Israel was in 1973) as the Palestinia­ns’ regional stalwarts.

Second, because the foreign policies of Russia and China globally oppose the US, Jerusalem’s tight alliance with Washington makes them both significan­t Palestinia­n supporters.

Third, Israel’s Left despises Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, pooh- poohs the recent accords and touchingly believes that Palestinia­ns will be content with a Palestine adjoining Israel.

Finally, and perhaps most importantl­y, the global Left – including most professors, journalist­s and bureaucrat­s; the Durban Conference; Jeremy Corbyn and Sen. Bernie Sanders – has taken up the Palestinia­ns as a central cause, so that support for Israel now tarnishes one’s progressiv­e credential­s. This anti- Zionism, it bears noting, focuses almost exclusivel­y on the supposed suffering of the 3.2 million inhabitant­s of the West Bank and Gaza, hardly caring about such issues as Israel’s income inequality, its tensions with Iran and Turkey or its nuclear weapons.

The Left currently can do only limited damage to Israel, being out of power in most major countries ( Japan, India, Germany, France, the UK, Brazil and the US). But the wheel inevitably turns and when leftists reach to power, their unleashed venom will confront Israel with a great crisis. This imminent prospect renders it especially urgent that Israel address the Palestinia­n rage underlying and fueling leftist rancor.

The government­s of Iran, Turkey, Russia and China, plus the Israeli and global Left, will most likely follow the Sunni Arab states’ lead if the Palestinia­ns have been compelled to abandon their illusion of eliminatin­g the Jewish state. That’s the role of Israel Victory, which offers the only path to end Palestinia­n rejectioni­sm.

Thus does Israel Victory remain nearly as important as ever.

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