Since the Six-Day War in 1967, Israel has not won a war. However, in
all its wars during the last generation, neither has Israel been defeated.
The Yom Kippur War turned from an almost-defeat into an almost-victory
when the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) crossed the Suez Canal in the south
and threatened Damascus in the north. The Lebanon War got tangled and complicated
but nevertheless brought about Yasser Arafat's expulsion from Beirut and
the dismantlement of the PLO sub-state he had established. The first intifada
faded before Israel wearied of it, and developed into the Oslo peace process.
The second intifada was repulsed before Israel wearied of it, and developed
into the disengagement.
So that in four different campaigns - to which we could add the War
of Attrition and the Gulf wars - Israel achieved a stalemate of one kind
or another, which was not decisive but allowed a certain stability to persist
until the next campaign. Accordingly, the second Lebanon war is different
from all its predecessors. In the second Lebanon war, there is a danger
that Israel will be defeated. If the large-scale ground move that Ehud
Olmert initiated very late does not go well, the reality to which we are
liable to awaken after the war is one of a first Israeli defeat.
A defeat is not a holocaust. It is not the end. The French were defeated
in Indochina and survived, the Americans were defeated in Vietnam and prospered.
Egypt was defeated in 1967, drew its conclusions and was back on its feet
by 1970 and certainly in 1973. However, to prevent even a point-specific
Israeli defeat, we must define the situation precisely. The attempt to
create a fake ostensible victory does not serve Israel's national goals
or national existence. On the contrary: it lulls the nation and prevents
it from mobilizing all its strength for the necessary coping with its fate.
If Israel seeks life, it cannot go on living within the gossamer webs of
a military establishment with high-powered PR. It must emerge from the
virtual-reality studio of the channels of patriotic ratings and look at
reality as it really is. The reality is hard, very hard. Very hard, but
not hopeless.
To begin with, the immediate problem must be defined: Israel failed
in the first three stages of the war of 2006. The air offensive failed,
the limited ground offensive failed and the days of the hesitation and
confusion of post-Bint Jbail failed. As a result, Israel was perceived
to be helpless in the face of a sub-state terrorist organization that was
battering it repeatedly without being vanquished.
Israel is a country surrounded by actual and potential enemies. The
strength of those enemies is far greater than the strength of Hezbollah.
If Israel is incapable of defending its sovereignty and its citizens against
Hezbollah in the course of three long weeks, the impression is created
that it has become a country that is not defendable. That impression is
completely wrong. At the bottom, Israel is a strong country. In the Middle
East, however, the very creation of an image of weakness means defeat.
The meaning of such a defeat is a war soon. A war that will be harder and
more terrible than the present war. Therefore, the last-minute attempt
to reverse the situation and achieve a late victory at a heavy price in
blood is correct and necessary. Precisely those who seek life, stability
and perhaps even peace must be ready to pay the terrible price that is
required so that the second Lebanon war will not end in an Israeli defeat.
Afterward the immediate reasons for the immediate crisis must be determined.
Why did this happen to us? Why did the summer of the soccer World Cup become
the summer of a faltering war? Why did Israel move in one fell swoop from
a condition of economic-hedonistic haughtiness into a condition of military
impotence?
The Yom Kippur War is burned into the Israeli consciousness as a blunder.
The second Lebanon war will be burned into the Israeli consciousness as
a failure. Even if in the end Nasrallah is vanquished, one way or another,
the war of 2006 exposed the fact that the Israel of 2006 is experiencing
systemic failure. If this is not to become systemic collapse, it must be
diagnosed accurately already now, when Israel is sending its sons to fight
for its future in the battlefield of the North.
The political establishment failed. It failed in that it lent itself
to the simplistic belief in a simplistic unilateral withdrawal without
understanding its inherent dangers. It failed in that it did not create
crushing Israeli deterrence in the face of the Qassam rocket offensive
in the south after the unilateral withdrawal. It failed in that it went
to war hastily without weighing properly the war's prospects and without
defining properly its goals. It failed in that it was in thrall to the
defense establishment, which it was incapable of criticizing, restraining
or focusing. It failed in that it thrust Israel into a booby-trapped battlefield
where we must win even though it is impossible to win.
The military establishment failed. It failed in that it assumed that
the Air Force and its precision weapons provide an answer to the fundamental
problems of Israel's security. It failed in that it promised to win conventional
wars without blood, sweat and tears. It failed in complacency. It failed
in arrogance. It failed in that it did not create a relevant combat ethos
and did not instill a steadfast spirit of combat. It failed in that it
invested most of its resources in managing the occupation on the one hand
and preparing the disengagement on the other hand, without deploying properly
for an actual war.
The Israeli elites failed. The capitalists, the media and the academics
of the 21st century failed in that they bedazzled Israel and deprived it
of its spirit. Their recurrent illusions about the historical reality in
which the Jewish state exists led Israel to navigate poorly and lose its
way. Their incessant attacks - direct and indirect - on nationalism, on
militarism and on the Zionist narrative corroded the tree trunk of Israeli
existence from within and caused it to lose its vitality. While the broad
Israeli public displayed sobriety, determination and staying power in all
the tests it faced in the past decade, the elites disappointed. They imparted
to Israeli youth a flawed set of values, which makes it very difficult
for them to charge ahead when charging ahead is indisputably just. A country
in which there is no equality, no justice and no belief in the justness
of its path, is a country for which no one will charge ahead. And, in the
Middle East of the 21st century, a state for which many of its young people
are not willing to kill and be killed, is a state living on borrowed time.
A state that is not sustainable.
Thus, the challenge of the final days of the war and of the long day
that will come immediately afterward, is to turn Israel into a sustainable
state again. To that end, all the basic questions must be reopened. To
that end, a thorough housecleaning has to be done not only in the systems
of the government, the army and the establishment but in all the systems
of our life. There must be discussion and debate, clarification and clarity.
The Israeli condition must be defined, and what that condition obliges
must be understood.
Israel is the state of the Jewish people. Israel is a free country.
Both because it is a Jewish state and a free country, Islamic zealotry
seeks to destroy Israel. Since the Khomeinist revolution in Iran in 1979,
Muslim fanaticism has been on the rise. Thus the threat facing Israel is
concrete and not abstract. Existential and not territorial. The challenge
it faces is how to organize its life systems such that it can preserve
its identity and defend its freedom against the tsunami that would engulf
it.
For about half a century, between the mid-1930s and the mid-1980s, Israel
was able to do this, standing up to secular Arab nationalism. Israel-in-the-making
and fledgling Israel was able to adjust its values, its internal structure
and its military strength to meet the existential challenge it faces. The
balance was found between belonging culturally to the West and doing what
was obliged by life in the East. The balance was found between freedom
and mobilization, between love of life and readiness to die. Almost miraculously,
Israel succeeded in carving a path between the internal contradictions
of its existence and even turned those contradictions into a source of
strength. Precisely because it was aware of its fragility and its singular
weaknesses, Israel was able to create a vibrant and productive national
existence that was fortified by a powerful, deterrent national security.
In the past 20 years, that balance was lost. The political upheaval
(1977), the Lebanon War, the settlements, the privatization, the intifadas
and post-Zionism brought about the unraveling of the old Israeli order.
No new Israeli order emerged. No new Israeli story was told. No contemporary
wisdom was articulated to bridge the terrible disparity between the internal
Israeli milieu and the external milieu in which Israel has its existence.
The new elite of capital, which replaced the old elite of service, was
not value-based but exploitative. It did not see to the general good but
to the personal and class good. Thus, no second Israeli republic was founded
here to succeed the ascetic and determined republic of siege that existed
until the mid-1980s. Instead, it forged a free-market reality that is not
restrained by a valid state-oriented approach. It forged a regime of rampant
capitalism and extreme individualism that debilitates any sense of solidarity
and enervates the national immune system. It promised peace and again promised
peace and turned the empty promise of peace into a dogma. It turned Israel
into a pleasure yacht whose captains, drunk with arrogance, and whose owners,
intoxicated with corruption, have absolutely no understanding of the great
looming storm.
Now we are in the midst of the storm. The second Lebanon war sometimes
looks like a repeat of the past, but in truth it is the flash of the future.
An Iranian Cuba was established on our northern border. If the Iranian
Cuba is not disarmed, it will threaten us continuously and intolerably.
However, our present effort to disarm the Iranian Cuba looks more and more
like the Bay of Pigs fiasco.
Accordingly, we must assume that what we are now experiencing is only
the first campaign in a confrontation that will have both a second and
perhaps a third campaign. The subject on the agenda is not the abducted
soldiers. The subject is the attempt by Iran to put an end to Israel's
strategic hegemony in the region. The subject is the attempt by the powerful
Iranian state of evil to expel the West from the Middle East by undermining
Israel.
This being the case, the second Lebanon war should be seen as resembling
the war in Spain in the 1930s which preceded the global conflict and served
as its testing ground. It must be understood that the question with which
the second Lebanon war leaves us is whether we are Czechoslovakia, which
collapsed in the face of evil, or whether we are Britain, which after a
very difficult period was able to cope with the evil and created a turning
point against it. One way or the other, the second Lebanon war will not
be a true end. The shaky quiet that will prevail at its conclusion will
be no more than a respite. What will determine the outcome of the confrontation
that will follow the end of the respite is which side will exploit the
years ahead to its advantage. Which side will understand their fatefulness
and make intelligent use of them in order to be prepared for the hour of
truth that will assuredly come.
This summer Hassan Nasrallah challenged us in the most profound way.
Employing a small, disciplined and determined army of believers, he set
out to hurl at us defiantly the claim that our democracy is rotten. That
our hedonism causes degeneration. That our decadence is terminal. There
is no hope, Nasrallah is saying, no hope for a free society that loves
life in a fanatic Middle East.
Now the challenge is before us. Israel is a deceptive country. When
it is aware of its inherent weakness, it is capable of overcoming it and
becoming a power. When it assumes that its might and supremacy are taken
for granted, it is weakened and takes a beating. Therefore it is precisely
now, precisely because of the hard blow we took in the war-of-the-sin-of-arrogance,
we have it in us to rise from the debacle, shake ourselves off and bring
forth from within us our latent forces. However, to do that we must look
unflinchingly at ourselves and at our fate.
What this means is that the discussion about the Israeli condition and
what it obliges must begin immediately. This brief article suggested in
passing several preliminary insights. However, the trenchant postwar discussion
must produce many more insights - complementary or conflicting. Was the
idea of a civil agenda and a civilian leadership correct or false? Was
the attack on Israeli militarism and Israeli macho-ism justified or dangerous?
Does the attitude toward the occupation and the convergence plan need to
be reassessed? Is it the occupation that caused the IDF's "metal fatigue"
- or is it Tel Aviv's hedonism? Should we treat the settlers differently
now, because they still preserve an energetic source of national vitality?
On the other hand, is it time to define a militant approach of a secular
Israel that will make it possible for young Israelis to defend their world
of freedom and pleasure against Muslim fanatics? Is there a diplomatic
route to blocking the Iranian threat, perhaps by means of a peace treaty
with Syria?
In the weeks ahead Haaretz intends to float all these questions, and
many more, as part of an intensive conceptual discussion it will conduct
in these pages.
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/745748.html
August 04, 2006
Russian version