Chattanooga Times Free Press

EVERYONE IS GOING ALL THE WAY

- Thomas Friedman

TEL AVIV, Israel — It is hard to spend a week in Israel and not come away feeling that Israelis have the wind at their backs.

They’ve built an awesome high-tech industry, and everyone’s kid seems to work for a startup. Regionally, the Arabs and Palestinia­ns have never been weaker, and under President Donald Trump, Israel has never had a more unquestion­ingly friendly United States. Trump recognized Jerusalem as Israel’s capital, asking Israel for nothing in return. The Arab states barely made a peep.

Alas, though, all of this wind has whetted the appetite of Israel’s settlers and ruling Likud Party to go to extremes. Reuters reported on Dec. 31 that the “Likud Party unanimousl­y urged legislator­s in a nonbinding resolution … to effectivel­y annex Israeli settlement­s in the occupied West Bank, land that Palestinia­ns want for a future state.”

I’ve seen this play before. It was May 17, 1983 — the day Israel, a year after invading Lebanon, signed a peace accord with Beirut. “Signed” isn’t exactly right. Israel (backed by the U.S.) imposed virtually all its security demands on a weak Lebanese government, including a framework for normalizin­g trade and diplomacy.

Back then, Egypt had just signed a peace treaty and dropped out of the conflict, and another young Arab leader — Lebanese Christian warlord Bashir Gemayel — beckoned Israel to join him in crushing the Palestinia­ns and remaking the Middle East together.

My Washington Post Beirut colleague Jonathan Randal wrote a book about that moment, “Going All The Way: Christian Warlords, Israeli Adventurer­s and the War in Lebanon.”

I always loved that title — going all the way. It’s a recurring theme out here, and it almost always ends with a “Thelma and Louise” moment — partners driving over a cliff — and so it did with Israel in 1983.

Lebanese militias, led by Hezbollah, quickly emerged to resist the May 17 treaty. On March 5, 1984, only 10 months after it was signed, I wrote in this paper from Beirut: “Lebanon today formally canceled its troop withdrawal accord with Israel,” marking “the end of the so-called ‘Israeli era’ in Lebanese politics and to shift Lebanon solidly back into the Syrian-Arab fold.”

Why do I tell this story? Because everywhere I look today I see people going all the way.

I see Republican­s trashing two of our most sacred institutio­ns — the FBI and the Justice Department. I see Iran controllin­g four Arab capitals: Damascus, Sanaa, Baghdad and Beirut. I see Hamas still more interested in building tunnels in Gaza to kill Israelis than schools to strengthen Palestinia­n society.

I see Turkey’s president silencing every critical journalist in his country. I see Bibi Netanyahu trying to derail a corruption investigat­ion by weakening Israel’s justice system, free media and civil society — just like Trump and for the same purposes: to weaken constraint­s on his arbitrary use of political power.

Worst of all, I see an America — the world’s strongest guardian of truth, science and democratic norms — now led by a serial liar and norms destroyer, giving license to everyone else to ask, why can’t I?

Can anything stop this epidemic of going all the way? Yes: Mother Nature, human nature and markets.

How? Well, look at Gaza. Due largely to Hamas’ malevolenc­e and incompeten­ce, but also some Israeli restrictio­ns, Gaza has limited hours of electricit­y each day. Result: Gaza’s already inadequate sewage plants are often offline, and waste goes untreated straight into the Mediterran­ean.

Then the prevailing current washes Gaza’s poop north, where it clogs Israel’s big desalinati­on plant in Ashkelon — which provides 15 percent of Israel’s drinking water. In both 2016 and 2017, the Ashkelon plant had to close to clean Gaza’s crud out of its filters. It’s Mother Nature’s way of reminding both that if they try to go all the way, if they shun a healthy interdepen­dence, she’ll poison them both.

Iran’s military boss, Qasem Suleimani, thinks he’s a big man on campus. His proxies control four Arab capitals. All bow down. But then out of nowhere Iranians back home start protesting against Suleimani’s overreach.

And if you don’t think markets have a way of curing excesses, you haven’t been reading newspapers this week.

So to all of you going all the way, I say: Watch out for the market, Mother Nature and human nature. Because, noted Israeli political theorist Yaron Ezrahi, the first two are “uncontroll­able and the other is irrepressi­ble.”

The New York Times

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