Las Vegas Review-Journal

Biden’s opportunit­y to make peace

- Thomas Friedman Thomas Friedman is a columnist for The New York Times.

Leon Trotsky once supposedly observed, “You may not be interested in war, but war is interested in you.” To President Joe Biden I’d say today, “You may not be interested in Middle East peacemakin­g, but Middle East peacemakin­g is interested in you.”

Here’s why: All three key players in the Israeli-palestinia­n conflict have been dealt some huge painful shocks over the past year. They know, deep down, that another round of fighting like the one we saw in the past two weeks could unleash disastrous consequenc­es for each of them. Henry Kissinger forged the first real peace breakthrou­gh between Israelis and Arabs after they were all reeling, vulnerable and in pain as a result of the 1973 War. They each knew that something had to change.

Today, if you look and listen closely, you can sense a similar moment shaping up in the wake of the latest Hamas-israel war.

The Palestinia­n Authority in the West Bank, led by Abu Mazen, was dealt a significan­t blow when President Donald Trump last year managed to get the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Morocco and Sudan to each normalize relations with Israel — without waiting for a Palestinia­n-israeli peace deal. The message to the West Bank Palestinia­n leadership was crystal clear: You are utterly messed up, corrupt and ineffectua­l, and we Arab states are no longer going to let you have a veto over our relations with Israel. Have a nice life.

And by the way, despite Israel’s relentless pounding of Hamas in Gaza, none of those four states renounced their normalizat­ion with Israel.

But Israel also got a shock: It was surprised that Hamas chose to fire rockets at Jerusalem — in effect inviting this war. It was surprised by some of the long-range rockets that Hamas was able to build in its undergroun­d factories and deploy despite heavy blows by the Israeli air force.

But most of all, Israel was stunned by this fact: Hamas, by its actions, was able to embroil Israel into a simultaneo­us fivefront conflict with different Arab population­s. That was scary.

On several days last week, Israel found its military and police confrontin­g violent Palestinia­n protesters in the West Bank; enraged East Jerusalem Palestinia­ns on the Temple Mount; rockets fired, most likely by Palestinia­n militants, from southern Lebanon; rockets fired by Hamas from Gaza; and, most dangerousl­y, mob violence in mixed Israeli towns between Israeli Arabs and Israeli Jews.

Israel managed to keep a lid on all of it. But it is not hard to imagine, had it continued or if it flares up again, that this would severely stress Israel’s army, police and economy. Israel has not faced that kind of multifront threat since the Jewish state was founded in 1948.

This time around, Israel still found a lot of world public opinion and sympathy on its side — but for how long? This war with Hamas exposed and exacerbate­d Israel’s vulnerabil­ity in public opinion.

Israel’s use of sophistica­ted air power, no matter how justified and precise, triggered a set of images and video, in the age of social networks, that inflamed and energized its critics around the world and exposed just how much the rising progressiv­e left, and even some young Jews, have grown alienated from Bibi Netanyahu’s right-wing government and its willingnes­s to abandon democratic norms to ensure perpetual control over the West Bank.

As the Guardian columnist Jonathan Freedland put it, a new connected generation of progressiv­e left-wing activists in America and Europe are reframing the Israeli-palestinia­n struggle not as a conflict between two national movements, “but as a straightfo­rward matter of racial justice. Note the placards at last weekend’s demonstrat­ion in London: Palestine Can’t Breathe and Palestinia­n Lives Matter.”

Many American Jewish college students are either unwilling, unable or too afraid to stand up in their class or dorm and defend Israel. Democratic lawmakers tell me they are being savaged on Twitter and Facebook for even remotely suggesting Israel had a right to defend itself against Hamas rockets. A dam has burst.

Which is why I was not the least bit surprised to read that Netanyahu’s longtime ambassador to D.C., Ron Dermer, (now retired) bluntly told a conference a few weeks ago that “Israel should spend more of its energy reaching out to ‘passionate’ American evangelica­ls than Jews, who are ‘disproport­ionately among our critics,’” Haaretz reported.

Let me know how that works out for you. If Israel loses the next generation of liberal Americans, including liberal Jews, it is in for a world of political hurt that no amount of evangelica­l support will be able to blunt.

And then there is Hamas. As usual — indeed right on cue — the morning after the Gaza cease-fire took effect, Hamas’ leaders declared another glorious victory. I guarantee you, though, the morning after the morning after, another set of conversati­ons started in Gaza. It was the Gazan shopkeeper, widow, doctor and mourner, surveying the damage to their homes and offices and families, quietly saying to Hamas, “What the hell were you thinking? Who starts a war with the Jews and their air force in the middle of a pandemic? Who is going to rebuild my home and business? We can’t take this any longer.”

So if I were Hamas, I would not just bask in the new voices criticizin­g Israel on the left. I would also worry that virtually no Arab government­s came to its defense, and that the Biden administra­tion and the European Union, Russia and China basically gave Israel the time it needed to deliver a heavy blow to Hamas.

And I would worry about something else as well: As Hamas makes itself the vanguard of the Palestinia­n cause — and becomes its face — more and more progressiv­es will come to understand what Hamas is — an Islamo-fascist movement that came to power in Gaza by a 2007 coup against the Palestinia­n Authority, during which, among other things, it threw a rival PA official off a 15-story rooftop.

Moreover, after Israel withdrew from Gaza in 2005, and before there was any embargo, Hamas could have turned Gaza into a thriving entity. It chose instead to turn the territory into a launching pad for attacks on Israeli border posts and then to invest in 250 miles of attack tunnels and thousands of rockets. Today, Hamas openly aspires to replace Israel with its own Tehran-like Islamic government, which subjugates women and persecutes any LGBTQ Gazans who want to publicly express their sexual identity.

This is not a “progressiv­e” organizati­on — and Hamas will not enjoy indefinite­ly the free pass it has gotten from the left because it is fighting Netanyahu.

For all of these reasons, my friend Victor Friedman, an academic activist who has worked extensivel­y in Jewish-palestinia­n and Israeli-arab dialogues in Israel, emailed me from Israel to say:

“Maybe this is another ‘Kissinger moment.’ Like the 1973 war, this situation is a wake-up call for Israel. Despite the spin, people know that there was no real victory here. More than ever there is a feeling that something has to change. Hamas, like the Egyptians, in 1973 surprised Israel and did real damage. Bibi wanted to do enough damage to humiliate Hamas as much as possible, without going in on the ground. But Biden stopped us before we could totally humiliate Hamas.”

So, Victor added, “There is a potential opening here for some creative diplomacy, just like after the 1973 war.”

I think he is right, but with one huge caveat. Kissinger’s negotiatin­g partners were all strong national leaders: Egyptian President Anwar Sadat, Israeli Prime Minister Golda Meir and Syrian President Hafez al-assad — and they were resolving an interstate conflict between sovereign nations.

Indeed, what Kissinger began in 1973 and President Jimmy Carter completed at Camp David was only possible because all these leaders actually agreed to ignore the core problem — the intrastate problem, the problem of two people wanting a state on the same land. In other words, the Israeli-palestinia­n problem.

What Bibi Netanyahu, Mahmoud Abbas and the various leaders of Hamas all have in common is that they have never been willing to risk their political careers or lives to forge the kind of hard compromise needed for a peace breakthrou­gh in their war over the same piece of land.

So I am dubious, to say the least, about the prospects for peace. What I am not dubious about, though, is this: the pain on all the actors in this drama — from more accurate rockets to more global boycotts to more homes destroyed that no foreigners want to pay to rebuild to unemployme­nt to more inflammato­ry social networks to more anti-semitism — is only going to intensify.

So, my message to Biden would be this: You may be interested in China, but the Middle East is still interested in you. You deftly helped to engineer the cease-fire from the sidelines. Do you want to, do you dare to, dive into the middle of this new Kissingeri­an moment?

I won’t blame you if you don’t. I’d just warn you that it is not going to get better on its own.

 ?? SAMAR ABU ELOUF / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? People celebrate the ceasefire between Israel and Gaza Strip on May 21 in Gaza City.
SAMAR ABU ELOUF / THE NEW YORK TIMES People celebrate the ceasefire between Israel and Gaza Strip on May 21 in Gaza City.

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