Baltimore Sun

UK and Armenia have already lived through dangers of Israel-Gaza war

- By Marc Champion Bloomberg Opinion Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency

As Israel comes under growing internatio­nal pressure to change its tactics and agree to a cease-fire in Gaza, its leaders have made clear that they aren’t interested. Foreign Minister Eli Cohen said the shift would hand a victory to terrorism, while Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he was “proud” to have blocked the creation of a Palestinia­n state alongside Israel, seen by allies as the prerequisi­te for any sustainabl­e peace.

Two examples from recent history — from Northern Ireland and Azerbaijan — warn that these could be catastroph­ic miscalcula­tions for the state of Israel.

Ben Wallace, the U.K.’s secretary of state for defense until August, made the Irish comparison in an article published this month in the Daily Telegraph, a solidly pro-Israel U.K. newspaper. The Troubles, as more than three decades of sectarian bloodshed over Northern Ireland’s status are known, escalated dramatical­ly, he recalled, after the British government tried to end them through a draconian combinatio­n of military force and a suspension of legal due process, called internment.

Internment involved the jailing without trial of thousands of people suspected of having connection­s to the Irish Republican Army. That in turn prompted the 1972 tragedy of Bloody Sunday, when British paratroope­rs shot 26 Catholics with live bullets at an anti-internment protest in the town of Derry, killing 14 of them. The result was a huge increase in membership for the Provisiona­l IRA — a more radical splinter group of the Irish Republican Army — from a few dozens to about 1,000, spurred by a boom in the group’s funding by sympathize­rs in the U.S. and elsewhere.

“Northern Ireland internment taught us that a disproport­ionate response by the state can serve as a terrorist organizati­on’s best recruiting sergeant,’’ Wallace wrote. Two decades of intensifie­d terrorist attacks followed Bloody Sunday, with the IRA expanding its bombing campaign to the U.K. mainland. Nothing worked to halt the violence until the U.K. government did what it said it never would and publicly opened negotiatio­ns in 1994 with the IRA’s political wing, Sinn Fein.

The price of peace was a power-sharing deal together with expanded self-government for Northern Ireland, plus the right to an eventual referendum on the region’s status, among other concession­s made on both sides. The consequenc­es for the U.K. were greater still because the deal forced it later to grant similar rights of self-government and potential secession to Scotland and Wales.

For sure, Northern Ireland is a different and in many ways much simpler case than the one Israel faces, not least because the Palestinia­n question plays a role far beyond Israel’s borders. The bloodshed in Gaza risks spurring recruitmen­t not just for Hamas, but for Islamist terrorist organizati­ons across the Middle East and beyond.

Small wonder then that such staunch supporters of Israel as France, Germany, the U.K. and the U.S. are now calling for Netanyahu to change tactics and look for paths to a sustainabl­e cease-fire. As if to underscore the counterpro­ductive nature of Israel’s scorched-earth tactics, the Israel Defense Forces recently acknowledg­ed mistakenly killing three of the hostages they were sent into Gaza to rescue, even though they were waving improvised white flags of surrender.

The example of Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh should be still more sobering for Israelis considerin­g the road that Netanyahu and his government are taking. More than 30 years ago, I stood with an Armenian general at the top of a plateau as he pointed toward Mount Ararat in Turkey and territorie­s beyond as far as Syria, which had once belonged to the Kingdom of Armenia but were now controlled by Muslim enemies. He called his predominan­tly Christian nation “the Israel of the Caucasus,” surrounded by sometimes genocidal hostility and obliged to rely on arms for its survival.

That was 1992. War was raging in Nagorno-Karabakh, a part of neighborin­g Azerbaijan that for centuries had been populated mainly by ethnic Armenians. They were now contesting Azeri control as the collapse of the Soviet Union gave sudden meaning to the USSR’s oncenotion­al internal borders. Karabakh’s Armenians wanted to be independen­t or annexed, and by 1994 they had won a crushing military victory, backed by Armenia and its security guarantor, Russia. The future seemed secure, even without a political settlement to accompany the cease-fire that Armenia had forced on its rival.

The U.S. and some in Armenia, including then-President Levon Ter-Petrossian, worried that this wasn’t sustainabl­e. They argued for negotiatin­g a long-term deal with Baku while Yerevan held most of the cards. The idea was that Armenians, including in Karabakh, should recognize Azerbaijan’s sovereignt­y over the enclave, in exchange for Baku accepting internatio­nal peacekeepe­rs, a land bridge from Karabakh to Armenia, and strong political autonomy for the enclave.

Ter-Petrossian’s proposals for compromise contribute­d to losing his job. He drew the ire of nationalis­ts, including a hawkish diaspora, for whom the history of Armenian expulsion and genocide — committed by Ottoman Turkey in 1915 — required relentless vigilance and force, to ensure that it could never happen again. Besides, why negotiate when Armenia had comprehens­ively won and enjoyed the support of regional hegemon Russia?

The answer to that question became apparent this summer.

Azerbaijan’s oil and gas fields had slowly transforme­d the balance of forces over the years, allowing it to build and equip a military far in excess of anything Armenia could afford. Russia, meanwhile, became disenchant­ed with Yerevan, just as a resurgent Turkey grew willing to throw its weight behind Turkic Azerbaijan, disregardi­ng objections from Moscow or Washington. Azerbaijan struck back in 2020, recovering many of its losses. And this year, with Moscow busy invading Ukraine, a further offensive took just a day to force Karabakh’s total surrender.

Ethnic Armenians fled, fearful of the coming Azeri revenge, and by now few if any remain in their ancestral homes. This tragic turn of events came about because Armenia fell victim to the “illusion of absolute security,” said Thomas de Waal, a Caucasus specialist and senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for Internatio­nal Peace. “Times change, alliances change, and the military balance changes.’’ And by the time that happens, it’s too late for diplomacy.

Getting to a settlement with Azerbaijan that was acceptable to both sides would have been difficult, even when Yerevan held the advantage. It took painful compromise­s for the U.K. to cut a deal with the former IRA commanders running Sinn Fein in 1998. And the hurdles to a two-state solution for Israel and Palestine would be even bigger. Years of failed peace talks, rocket attacks and Hamas’s Oct. 7 atrocities have combined to harden views on both sides, including against the very concept of a two-state solution. Yet Israel, too, may not always be in a position of military dominance, enjoying the full backing of a superpower.

Palestinia­ns and Israelis have reason to despair of each other, but neither rage nor despair is a policy. After three-quarters of a century, nobody has come up with an alternativ­e to the creation of two separate states that offers even the possibilit­y of peaceful coexistenc­e.

 ?? SAID KHATIB/GETTY-AFP ?? Smoke rises Dec. 1 above buildings during an Israeli strike on Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip.
SAID KHATIB/GETTY-AFP Smoke rises Dec. 1 above buildings during an Israeli strike on Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip.

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