Wednesday, April 1, 2009

from NY to Israel Sultan Reveals The Stories Behind the News




from NY to Israel Sultan Reveals
The Stories Behind the News

Link to Sultan Knish






Netanyahu's Big Challenge - Chamberlain or Churchill


Posted: 31 Mar 2009 07:32 PM PDT




As Netanyahu is sworn in as Prime Minister for the second time, he takes
power in a year that is as crucial to the survival of Israel, as 1947 was.
And he has to do it all while performing in a political circus the likes of which
anyone has hardly ever seen.

The closest American analogy to Netanyahu's challenges would be if
George W. Bush was called back to run the country for a third term with
a cabinet composed of Hillary Clinton, Jesse Ventura, Pat Robertson, Joe
Biden and Al Sharpton... any of whom could topple his government at any
time just by walking out. During an economic crisis and facing a nuclear
threat from a revived Soviet Union run by a madman, which had just
created and armed a separatist 100 million man state in Aztlan comprising
most of Texas, Arizona, Nevada and California. All the while the rest
of the world was doing its best to brand the United States, a terrorist
regime and calling for its dismantlement and destruction.

The problems and threats that Netanyahu has to deal with are numerous
and great. Beginning with...

1. Internal War

The Oslo process begun by the Rabin government has steadily created a
terrorist army within Israel's own borders. Over the next decade and a
half, that army has steadily advanced from a guerrilla force to a quasi
state. The regular rocket attacks on Israel, from within Israel,
demonstrate that we are approaching the Third Stage of Mao's 3 stages
of Guerrilla Warfare.

While Fatah\Hamas are in no shape to fight a conventional war with
Israeli troops singlehanded, they have they shown that they don't need to.
Instead a generation of territorial concessions by Israeli politicians has
wrecked the morale of the Israeli public and locked the country into a one
way course of more appeasement and concessions, interrupted by
occasional bombing raids that fail to change the situation on the ground.

Israel's capital is now on the chopping block Israeli Arabs are becoming
radicalized and terrorist cells are now active in Jerusalem itself. Should
any part of the city be sacrificed, the conflict will quickly move into Stage
Three, with a divided city at war.
New demands will be placed on the table, involving territorial concessions
across the Galilee and the Return of the Refugees, essentially the
dismantlement of Israel.


Israel's left has firmly wedded itself to more concessions, regardless of
the consequences. Israel's right has tried to hold out for more moderate
concessions, in exchange for an end to the terror. Naturally the concessions
themselves are the cause of much of the terrorism, and as a result each phase
of concessions, only boosts the terrorism index higher.
In his first term Netanyahu failed to hold out, and wound up both making
concessions and being blamed for causing terrorism by taking "provocative
steps". The Clinton Administration managed to topple his government,
resulting in Barak's hasty withdrawal from Lebanon, turning the border
over to Hizbullah, with the resulting disastrous effect we saw during the
Second Lebanon War.

This time out Netanyahu will have to resist pressure from an administration
so nakedly hostile to Israel, that the Clinton Administration looks almost
friendly by comparison. His government has been saddled with Barak on
Defense, despite his legacy of failure. And he will have to overcome both
those problems to take a hard stand against Arab terrorism and
international interference in Israel's domestic affairs.

Time is short and there is no more room for Do Overs. Once Israel hits
Stage Three warfare, the way will be open for international peacekeepers
to intervene, naturally on the enemy side. Israel will have a choice
between being Yugoslavia or being carved up at gunpoint. Neither
option is particularly appealing.

2. Foreign Affairs

Israel has grown much too dependent on its relationship with America.
The friendship however began to sour as the US pushed harder for Israel
to make a deal with Arafat. Bush Sr and Clinton finally succeeded, and the
result has brought Israel to brink of disaster.

This time out however the situation is far worse, with an open terrorist
sympathizer in the White House, and the State Department's toadies
running around the world to cut deals with Iran, Syria, Hamas, the Taliban
and any terrorist or Islamofascist who will talk to them. Israeli diplomats
and military aides however have been ignored, frozen out or threatened.

As Netanyahu takes office, he will find the looming eye of Obama looking
over his shoulder, and demanding that Israel conduct talks with Hamas,
cut open its own capital and begin making territorial concessions on a
whole new scale.

With Iran's puppets in Syria, Lebanon and Gaza.

With US backing for Hamas, the Fatah\Hamas unity government will
quickly become the Hamas government, turning the PA into a Hamas run
organization.

That means that Iran will have tens of thousands of armed military
personnel inside Israel. And that the US will pressure Israel into
turning over more territory, cash, weapons and power to Mini-Iran.


Paradoxically parts of Europe may prove friendlier by comparison, but
not by much. And any diplomatic relations reached with the Muslim world
will continue falling apart.

Breaking the Diplomatic Cycle of Terrorism will require thinking outside
the box. Whether Israel continues making concessions, makes fewer
concessions or make no concessions will not change the diplomatic
assault being applied against Israel. Sooner or later, an Israeli
soldier will shoot a terrorist-- and once again there will be UN
resolutions about genocide, Olyphant cartoons regurgitated from Der
Sturmer, and condemnations of Israel violence. The entire circus has
been running for far too long, for anyone to pack up the tents.

Israel can get off the train and go on the offensive for a change, or keep
getting torn to pieces, even as it's busy trying to surrender. The latter
is the "safe option" that Prime Minister after Prime Minister has done,
including Netanyahu himself.

The former is the only hope for Israel's survival.

For a decade and a half, Israel has been playing the game by UN rules, by
Moscow rules, by Washington D.C. rules and Ridyah rules. By accepting
those terms of engagement, Israel has accepted their desired final outcome of
the war. Its own defeat and destruction. To survive, Israel must choose its own
rules, end its defensive wars and defensive diplomacy. To survive, Israel must
fight back.

Not in limited operations, but in a decisive campaign with a decisive outcome.

Obama's victory is both a final threat and a final opportunity for Israel to end
its psychological dependency on the US, to break with the disastrous politics
of a decade and a half, and decide its own destiny. If Israel fails to do so, it will
go over the cliff still clinging to the White House.

3. External War

While Iran has kept busy feeding proxy wars against Israel, in Lebanon and
Gaza...

Iran is moving toward achieving its goal of fielding nuclear weapons. How
those weapons will be used, as straight out rockets, as suitcase bombs
passed off to its own terrorists, is of less concern than their intended target,
Israel.

The regime of the Mullahs knows its own domestic weakness, which means
their own internal clock is running down. Destroying Israel would not
only fulfill their genocidal dreams, but allow them to claim the leadership
of the Muslim world and with a weakened US, assert authority over much
of the Middle East. That would strengthen the Mullahs at home, and allow
them to bring in their foreign terrorist groups to suppress domestic dissent,
without any interference from abroad. And if that was to mean a second
genocide at home of some of Iran's pesky minorities, including the Azeri,
having seen Iran's power, the world would fold its hands and do nothing.

While Iran plots military destruction, Saudi Arabia and the Gulf
Emirates continue the old Soviet line of sponsoring terrorists and
engaging in the political demonization of Israel, backed by their hefty
oil laden pocketbooks. With Mubarak's government no longer
enjoying American support, the Muslim Brotherhood, Hamas
and Al Queda's parent organization, is now closer than ever to taking
power in Egypt.

4. Domestic Politics

The splintering of Israel's political system has accelerated to a terrifying
degree, particularly with the creation of Kadima. Both political
corruption and party drift are now out of control. And the average man
on the street has very little faith in the entire system.

Netanyahu has hammered together a coalition by going against his
instincts and giving everyone a piece of pie, creating a bloated coalition
with 30 ministers and assorted deputy ministers, prime ministers and
vice prime ministers. This entire absurd pork pie hat of a government
requires giving everyone a share in the budget, something no country
could afford in a global economic crisis. Yet this form of government is
virtually inevitable and follows in the footsteps of Sharon and Olmert
who assembled similarly absurd coalitions.

While such a coalition, with the resulting infighting, may do for
Netanyahu what it did for Sharon by providing him with a free hand,
there is no real way that Netanyahu will be able to fight corruption or
exercise financial discipline under this system. With public
dissatisfaction already high, Netanyahu will have to make a
difference quickly. And returning to his theme of financial reform
in this situation will be virtually impossible.


The good news is that leaves him little outlet except to take bold steps
against terrorism. The bad news is that if Netanyahu repeats his first
term's mistakes of muddling along, waiting on Washington, and trying
to take the middle road... it won't be very long before his coalition
falls apart. And envoys from Washington, along with some CIA types,
will be quick to come sniffing around some of the coalition partners
promising them a good deal of US aid if they jump ship in favor of
a Livni led government.

To survive that, Netanyahu must juggle the incompatible demands of
hawks and doves, religious and secularist parties, whose party leaders
really only care about one thing, the financial bottom line for their
faction. He must balance one party against the other, always pointing
to a potential replacement coalition partner, while somehow keeping
the bunch of them from spending Israel dry... and do it under
constant fire from the press, weathering manufactured corruption
scandals created by a politicized left wing judiciary in concord with
the media.

He'll have to do all that while dealing with strong dislike from the
Israeli public which has never been able to trust him or connect
emotionally to him. He'll have to do it all while resisting intense
pressure from Washington and Brussels...fight a domestic
insurgency backed by Iran and deal with Iranian nuclear weapons...
even while even Iran enjoys inflated power from its ties to the
Obama administration.

It would take a genius or a miracle worker, or just a plain miracle
to pull all this off. Which means this is Netanyahu's chance to be
Churchill or Chamberlain. And even Churchill couldn't survive the
turmoil and irrationality of parliamentary politics without wartime
exigencies at his back. Nor did Churchill ever have quite so many
things against him from the very start.

And that is Netanyahu's challenge, his chance to soar or flame out...
likely taking Israel with him. Netanyahu has flamed out before.
Now he'll get the chance to show if he learned the lessons of his
previous term. And the lives of millions hang in the balance.














No comments:

Post a Comment