Article by John Derbyshire |
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| Does
Israel Have a Future? In his
splendid (translation of the word “splendid”:
full of things to argue and write web columns about) new book The
Death of the West, Pat Buchanan relates a story about his days working
with President Nixon — who was, as Pat quotes Golda Meir saying, one of
the best friends Israel ever had. In
the story, Nixon had just hung up after receiving a phone call from
Yitzhak Rabin. Pat’s wife
Shelley asked the President what he thought of Israel’s prospects.
“The
long run?” Nixon responded. He
extended his right fist, thumb up, in the manner of a Roman emperor
passing sentence on a gladiator, and slowly turned his thumb over and
down. In this
opinion, as in many others, the 37th president was ahead of his time.
The question of Israel’s long-term survival is now on a lot of
minds. Pat’s book gives the
dismal demographic news: 25
million Palestinian Arabs living alongside 7 million Palestinian Jews by
mid-century. Many of us are
starting to wonder if Israel has a future. Back in
October, Norman Podhoretz published a piece in the magazine Commentary
putting as brave a face on things as can be put.
After pooh-poohing the Oslo “peace
process,” comparing Shimon Peres with Neville
Chamberlain, and acknowledging that the current leadership of the
Palestinian Arabs has no real wish to make peace with Israel, Podhoretz
looks to the future. There
is, he says, “no glimmer of light at the end of this dark and gloomy
tunnel”. He counsels
Israeli Jews to hunker down and wait for the day when “the Arab world
will make its own peace with the existence of a Jewish state.” That article
naturally generated a lot of mail to Commentary.
Amongst it was a letter from Ron Unz, the west coast entrepreneur
and policy intellectual who campaigned successfully against bilingual
education in California. Unz (who, like Podhoretz, is Jewish) puts the
pessimistic case with great force: I
expect Israel's trajectory to follow that of the temporary Crusader
kingdoms, surviving for seventy or eighty years following its 1948
establishment, then collapsing under continual Muslim pressure and
flagging ideological commitment. So who’s
right? The Podhoretz party,
which believes Israel just has to hold on until the Arabs see sense?
Or the Unzes, who believe that Israel is one of those grafts that
just won’t “take” — like white Rhodesia or the Crusader kingdoms? The answer
probably lies with the Jews of Israel, with whether they have the will and
nerve to sit things out until the Arab world enters the modern age,
assuming it ever does. Here
the signs are not good. In a
recent poll of Israeli Jews aged 25-34, a third want to leave the country.
With suicide bombings now almost a daily occurrence, it’s hard to
blame them. Jews live free,
comfortable, secure lives all over the western world.
So who needs Israel? A Zionist
might point out, quite truthfully, that 100 years ago you could have asked
the same question. Anywhere
in Europe west of Russia (of which at that time, Poland was a part), Jews
were confident that they had gained, or were close to gaining, acceptance,
and that the horrors of the Middle Ages were all behind them.
Zionists were regarded by most European Jews as crackpots.
Theodor Herzl, the prime mover of modern Zionism, himself felt that
way until 1894. Then, as a
newspaper reporter, he witnessed the dishonoring of the Jewish army
officer Alfred Dreyfus on the parade ground of the École Militaire in
Paris, Dreyfus shouting out his innocence while beyond the wall a mob
bayed: “Death to the Jews!” We
shall never be secure until we have a nation of our own, was the
entirely natural conclusion Herzl came to, and set about building the
modern Zionist movement. It took the
rise of Hitler to make any large number of Jews agree with him, though.
The arc of
European-Jewish feeling about Zionism can be traced by imagining the
reaction of an “average” west European Jew to the statement that there
could be no security without a national home.
In the U.S.A.
the matter is more complicated. There
have been very few full-blown antisemitic pogroms in this country:
the one in New York City in August 1991 is the only one I know of.
Because of the peculiar circumstances in that case — it occurred in just
about the only neigborhood anywhere in the U.S.A. that Jews share with
blacks — most American Jews were not much bothered by it.
They feel quite secure; and
I think, with some slight qualifications, they
are right to feel that way. At
the same time, the Jews of America include many thousands of Holocaust
survivors, who are naturally wary of slipping back into the complacency of
their own parents 70 years ago. It
has often been said that black Americans and white Americans will never be
at ease with each other until the generation that remembers Jim Crow has
died out. It may similarly be
true that Jews will never feel truly secure, even in the U.S.A., until the
Holocaust generation has passed on. But
when that happens — and the very youngest Holocaust survivors are now in
their sixties — the question will be asked with even more force:
Who needs Israel? I had better
step out front and center here and admit that I am a pessimist, with the
Unzes. I think Israel will go
down. The reason I think this
is that I am British, and have been watching all my life, occasionally at
very close quarters, the long struggle between the two
constitutional nations of the British Isles and the terrorists of Sin Féin/IRA.
I do not see how anyone who has followed that conflict can come to
any conclusion other than the one I have come to, which is, that democracy
is no match for terrorism. This may be a
universal truth, I don’t know. At
any rate, it is certainly true of the modern Anglo-Saxon style democracies
(among which I would include the Republic of Ireland). Dedicated irredentist terrorists with a single clear goal —
unite Ireland! destroy
Israel! — will get what they want in the end.
They have too many things going for them that their opponents, the
modern constitutional democracies, do not have.
They have stamina — the iron determination to press on for
decades, for generations, brushing aside all reverses, weathering
all storms, expelling all doubters, holding steadfast to the golden
vision. They have the luxury
of perfect ruthlessness as regards method.
I have been told many times by supporters of Irish terrorism — I
was told it once in the “letters” column of the Wall Street Journal
— that anything, anything at all, is justified in the name of the
Cause. While their enemies
debate the morality of this weapon or that,
and the best way to avoid “collateral” casualties, and whether
their terrorist prisoners should have air conditioning, the terrorists
themselves are planting bombs in busy shopping streets, leading away the
single mother of ten children to be executed for the “crime” of
comforting a dying enemy soldier, or shooting up 12-year-old girls at a
bat mitzvah. And the
terrorists have the moral condition of the modern democracies working for
them, too. We are open
societies, in which all voices can be heard.
The terrorists can make their case in public;
and of course they have a case.
Sinn Féin has a case; the
PLO has a case; as George
Orwell pointed out in the middle of WW2, even Hitler had a case — one to
which, until he started invading other people’s countries, the world was
much more receptive than we now care to remember.
The intellectual, litigational, over-educated elites who run modern
democracies are much more interested in hearing a case argued than in
organizing the gruelling, deadly, morally ambiguous work of
counter-terrorism. And the
loathing that so many of our elites nurse in their innermost hearts for
the culture into which they were born, naturally helps the enemies of that
culture Indeed, if
you pursue the Irish parallel, the prospects are even more depressing than
Ron Unz tells us. Taken to
its full length, that parallel would suggest that even if democracy
comes to the Palestinians, and even if they get a viable state, and
even if the great majority of the Palestinian people are content
with that state and give up, or postpone indefinitely, the old dream of
driving the Jews into the sea: even
if all that, there would still be tiny groups of fanatics who would
reject the whole deal and continue their war “by all means
necessary”... and that the people whose duty it was to fight those
fanatics would eventually tire of the task, and give in to everything the
terrorists demand. Even more
than they demand, perhaps: the
IRA now has offices in the House of Commons! So my answer
to the title question is a glum: “No,
probably not.” Sick of
terror, longing for a normal bourgeois life, those who can — those who
have education, talents, marketable skills — will slip away.
The dumbed-down remainder, outnumbered and outwitted, will sink
into defeatism and criminality. The
only great nation at all inclined to act as protector will tire of doing
so, making all sorts of excuses as she backs away from her obligations: “Oh, you know, they’re not exactly model
constitutionalists are they? Look
how they treat their minorities! Because
of them, all our foreign policy is bent out of shape!
Bombs are going off in our own cities!
And the expense! ” I’m
sorry, but I’ve seen it all, in another place.
The result is too predictable.
This is how civilization yields ground to barbarism. |
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