| Israel's Fraying Image and Its Implications. 
 Remarks to a Seminar Convened by The National Interest to Discuss an Article by Jacob Heilbrunn.
 
 mepc.org
 
 Ambassador Chas W. Freeman, Jr. (USFS, Ret.)
 
 May 22, 2013 | Washington, DC
 
 
 It is a privilege to have been asked to join this  discussion of Jacob Heilbrunn’s  account of Israel’s fraying image. His article seems to me implicitly to raise two grim questions.
 
 The first question is how long Israel can survive as a democracy or  at all. The Jewish state has left the humane vision of early Zionism and  its own beginnings far behind it. Israel now rules over a  disenfranchised Muslim and Christian majority whom it would like to  expel and a significant minority of disrespected secular and progressive  Jews who are stealing away to the safer and more tolerant environs of  the United States and other Western countries. Israel has befriended  none of its Arab neighbors. It has spurned or subverted all their offers  to accept and make peace with it except when compelled to address these  by American diplomacy. The Jewish state has now largely alienated its  former friends and supporters in Europe. Its all-important American  patron and protector suffers from budgetary bloat, political  constipation, diplomatic enervation, and strategic myopia.
 
 The second question is what difference Israel’s increasing  international isolation or withering away might make to Americans,  including but not limited to Jewish Americans.
 
 Let me very briefly speak to some of the issues that create these questions.
 
 For a large majority of those over whom the Israeli state rules  directly or indirectly, Israel is already not a democracy. It consists  of four categories of residents: Jewish Israelis who, as the ruling  caste, are full participants in its political economy; Palestinian Arab  Israelis, who are citizens with restricted rights and reduced benefits;  Palestinian Arabs in the West Bank, who are treated as stateless  prisoners in their own land; and Palestinian Arabs in the Gaza ghetto,  who are an urban proletariat besieged and tormented at will by the  Israeli armed forces. The operational demands of this multi-layered,  militarily-enforced system of ethno-religious separation have resulted  in the steady contraction of freedoms in Israel proper.
 
 Judaism is a religion distinguished by its emphasis on justice and  humanity. American Jews, in particular, have a well-deserved reputation  as reliable champions of the oppressed, opponents of racial  discrimination, and advocates of the rule of law. But far from  exhibiting these traditional Jewish values — which are also those of contemporary America —  Israel increasingly exemplifies their opposites. Israel is now known  around the world for the Kafkaesque tyranny of its checkpoint army in  the Occupied Territories, its periodic maiming and slaughter of Lebanese  and Gazan civilians, its blatant racial and religious bigotry, the  zealotry and scofflaw behavior of its settlers, its theology of ethnic  cleansing, and its exclusionary religious dogmatism.
 
 Despite an ever more extensive effort at hasbara — the very sophisticated Israeli art of narrative control and propaganda —  it is hardly surprising that Israel’s formerly positive image is, as  Mr. Heilbrunn reports, badly “fraying.” The gap between Israeli  realities and the image projected by hasbara has grown beyond  the capacity of hypocrisy to bridge it. Israel’s self-destructive  approach to the existential issues it faces challenges the consciences  of growing numbers of Americans — both Jewish and non-Jewish —  and raises serious questions about the extent to which Israel supports,  ignores, or undermines American interests in its region. Many have come  to see the United States less as the protector of the Jewish state than  as the enabler of its most self-injurious behavior and the endower of  the many forms of moral hazard from which it has come to suffer.
 
 The United States has assumed the role of protecting power for  Israel, which depends heavily on the ability of American Jews to  mobilize subsidies, diplomatic and legal protection, weapons transfers,  and other forms of material support in Washington. This task is made  easier by the sympathy for Zionism of a large but silent and mostly  passive evangelical Christian minority as well as lingering American  admiration for Israelis as the pioneers of a vibrant new society in the  Holy Land. It is noteworthy, however, that those actually lobbying for  Israel are almost without exception Jewish. Their efforts exploit the  unscrupulous venality and appeasement of politically powerful donors  that are essential to political survival in modern America to assure  reflexive fealty to Israel’s rightwing and its policies. When it’s not  denying its own existence, the Israel Lobby boasts that it is the most  effective special-interest advocate in the country. Official America’s  passionate attachment to Israel has become a very salient part of U.S.  political pathology. It epitomizes the ability of a small but determined  minority to extract tax resources for its cause while blocking efforts  to question these exactions.
 
 Americans tend to resent aggressively manipulative behavior and have  little patience with sycophancy. The ostentatious obsequiousness in  evidence during Prime Minister Netanyahu’s address to Congress two years  ago and the pledges of fealty to Israel of last year’s presidential  campaign were a major turn-off for many. Mr. Netanyahu has openly  expressed his arrogant presumption that he can manipulate America at  will. Still, thoughtful Israelis and Zionists of conscience in the  United States are now justifiably concerned about declining empathy with  Israel in the United States, including especially among American Jews.  In most European countries, despite rising Islamophobia, sympathy for  Israel has already fallen well below that for the Palestinians.  Elsewhere outside North America, it has all but vanished. An  international campaign of boycott, disinvestment, and sanctions along  the lines of that mounted against apartheid South Africa is gathering  force.
 
 Those who have lost the support of more than a passionate minority  are often driven to defame and vilify those who disagree with them.  Intimidation is necessary only when one cannot make a persuasive case  for one’s position. As the case for the coincidence of American  interests and values with those of Israel has lost credibility, the  lengths to which Israel’s partisans go to denounce those who raise  questions about Israel’s behavior have reached levels that invite  ridicule, parody, melancholy, and disgust. The Hagel hearings evoked all  four among many, plus widespread foreign derision and contempt. Mr.  Hagel’s “rope-a-dope” defense may not have been elegant but it was as  effective against bullying assault as nonviolent resistance usually is  in the presence of observers with a commitment to decency. The American  people have such a commitment and reacted as might be expected to their  Senators’ overwrought busking for political payoffs.
 
 Outside the United States, where narratives made in Israel do not  rule the airwaves, the Jewish state has lost favor and is now widely  denigrated. Israel’s bellicosity and contempt for international law  evoke particular apprehension. Every war that Israel has engaged in  since its creation has been initiated by it with the single exception of  the Yom Kippur / Ramadan War of 1973, which was begun by Egypt. Israel  is currently threatening to launch an unprovoked attack on Iran that it  admits cannot succeed unless it can manipulate America into yet another  Middle Eastern war. Many, if not most outside the United States see  Israel as a major source of regional instability and — through the terrorism this generates — a threat to the domestic tranquility of any country that aligns with it.
 
 To survive over the long term, Israel needs internationally  recognized borders and peace with its neighbors, including the  Palestinians. Achieving this has for decades been the major objective of  U.S. diplomacy in the Middle East. But no effort to convince Israel to  do what it must to make peace goes unpunished. Jimmy Carter’s tough  brokering of normal relations between Israel, Egypt, and, ultimately,  Jordan led to his disavowal by his own party. Barack Obama’s attempt to  secure Israel’s acceptance in the Middle East led to his humiliation by  Israel’s Prime Minister and his U.S. yahoos and flacks. The Jewish state  loses no opportunity to demonstrate that it wants land more than it  wants peace. As a result, there has been no American-led “peace process”  worthy of the name in this century. Israel continues to ignore the  oft-reiterated Arab and Islamic offer to normalize relations with it if  it just does what it promised in the Camp David accords it would do:  withdraw from the occupied territories and facilitate Palestinian  self-determination.
 
 Israel has clearly chosen to stake its future on its ability, with  the support of the United States, to maintain perpetual military  supremacy in its region. Yet, this is a formula with a convincing record  of prior failure in the Middle East. It is preposterous to imagine that  American military power can indefinitely offset Israel’s lack of  diplomatic survival strategy or willingness to accommodate the Arabs who  permeate and surround it. Successive externally-supported crusader  kingdoms, having failed to achieve the acceptance of their Muslim  neighbors, were eventually overrun by these neighbors. The power and  influence of the United States, while still great, are declining at  least as rapidly as American enthusiasm for following Israel into the  endless warfare it sees as necessary to sustain a Jewish state in the  Middle East.
 
 The United States has made and continues to make an enormous  commitment to the defense and welfare of the Jewish state. Yet it has no  strategy to cope with the tragic existential challenges Zionist hubris  and overweening territorial ambition have now forged for Israel. It is  the nature of tragedy for the chorus to look on helplessly as a heroic  figure with many admirable qualities is overwhelmed by faulty  self-perception and judgment. The hammerlock that the Israeli right has  on American discourse about the Middle East assures that America will  remain an onlooker rather than an effective actor on matters affecting  Israel, unable to protect Israel’s long-term interests or its own.
 
 The outlook is therefore for continuing deterioration in Israel’s  image and moral standing. This promises to catalyze discord in the  United States as well as the progressive enfeeblement of American  influence in the region and around the globe. Image problems are often  symptoms of deeper existential challenges. By the time that Israel  recognizes the need to make compromises for peace in the interest of its  own survival, it may well be too late to bring this off. It would not  be the first time in history that Jewish zealotry and suspicion of the  bona fides of non-Jews resulted in the disappearance of a Jewish state  in the Middle East. The collateral damage to the United States and to  world Jewry from such a failure is hard to overstate. That is why the  question of American enablement of shortsightedly self-destructive  Israeli behavior needs public debate, not suppression by self-proclaimed  defenders of Israel operating as thought police. And it is why Mr.  Heilbrunn’s essay needs to be taken seriously not just as an  investigation of an unpalatable reality but as a harbinger of very  serious problems before both Israel and the United States.
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