Rescuing Biden from Afghanistan
The think-tank crowd and Jewish former officials of the State Department are desperately trying to undercut the notion that the U.S. debacle demonstrates American unreliability where Israel is concerned.
(August 30, 2021 / JNS) The obvious lesson for Israel from
America’s abandonment of Afghanistan to the Taliban is that it can’t count on
the U.S. to protect it from the consequences of ceding more territory.
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Sgt. Nicole Gee, killed in Kabul |
This reality, however, is a disaster for those who have been
banking on the idea of offering “American security guarantees” to facilitate
additional Israeli withdrawals. It explains the recent flurry of statements
from the think-tank crowd and Jewish former officials of the State Department
trying to undercut the notion that the Afghanistan mess demonstrates U.S.
unreliability.
Writing in The Hill on the eve of Prime Minister Naftali
Bennett’s arrival in Washington, ex-State Department “peace processor” David
Makovsky urged Bennett to publicly express “confidence that the U.S. is a
steadfast ally” of Israel. That, Makovsky asserted, is needed as a “rebuke to
the new narrative”—coming out of Afghanistan—“that the U.S. has given up
fighting extremism.”
Meanwhile, Washington think-tanker Lucy Kurtzer-Ellenbogen
told The New York Times: “A lot of the criticism about Afghanistan is that it’s
an abandonment of traditional U.S. allies. [Bennett’s meeting with President
Biden] was an opportunity to sit with a longstanding, steadfast ally and say
this is still a focus and we will work side by side.”
Two other failed “peace processors” weighed in with
strikingly similar advice. Former U.S. Ambassador to Israel Daniel Kurtzer told
The Forward that the events in Afghanistan “change nothing” concerning
America’s reliability and Israel. “I don’t think [Afghanistan] will impact the
[Bennett-Biden] meeting at all,” he said, claiming that “the American people
are very happy” with Biden’s actions in Afghanistan.
Kurtzer’s colleague, Aaron Miller, writing on CNN.com, urged
Bennett to “be supportive rather than demanding” with Biden, by “strengthening
the Palestinian Authority” (meaning, making more concessions to the P.A.) and
“taking steps to avoid provocation of the Palestinians in Jerusalem” (meaning,
banning Jews from living in some parts of the city).
What these commentators have in common (aside from Makovsky
and Kurtzer-Ellenbogen oddly using the same language) is that they are all
trying to achieve the same goal: to rescue Biden’s image from the rubble of
Afghanistan, lest Israelis derive the obvious lessons from that debacle.
And there’s a specific reason they are so anxious to do
that.
Makovsky, Kurtzer, Miller and Kurtzer-Ellenbogen all
advocate creating a Palestinian state in Israel’s back yard. That would reduce
Israel to just nine miles wide and leave its security dependent on the good
graces of the P.A. But they know that most Israelis think the statehood
proposal is too risky. So Makovsky et al think they can sugarcoat the pill by
offering American “security guarantees.”
For years, pro-Palestinian pundits and State Department
officials have been floating various versions of this scheme. They speak of
stationing American or multinational forces along Israel’s border or setting up
American-manned “early warning” posts.
Occasionally, they have pushed for a U.S.-Israel
mutual-defense treaty. Perhaps they could model it on the Southeast Asia
Collective Defense Treaty that the U.S. signed with South Vietnam.
The U.S. abandonment of Afghanistan is a disaster for
Makovsky and his colleagues, because it exposes the fragility of America’s
overseas commitments. It reminds Israelis that, in the end, no U.S. president
can “guarantee” something that one of his future successors might not uphold.
The ex-peace processors are desperate to get that Afghanistan lesson out of the
limelight as quickly as possible.
But carefully orchestrated soundbites will not suffice to
pull the wool over the Israeli public’s eyes, because Israelis have long
memories.
The Israelis remember how they withdrew from the Sinai after
the 1956 war in exchange for a U.S. guarantee of freedom of passage in the
Straits of Tiran. When Egypt closed the straits on the eve of the 1967 Six-Day
War, the Johnson administration suddenly couldn’t remember the promise that the
Eisenhower administration had made.
They remember how the Nixon administration pressured Israel
to accept a premature ceasefire in the 1970 War of Attrition, in exchange for a
U.S. promise to stop Egypt from moving missiles close to the Suez Canal. But
when the Egyptians went ahead and moved their missiles forward, President Nixon
didn’t honor that promise. Israel paid a heavy price when those missiles were
deployed in the Yom Kippur War three years later.
There have been American technicians stationed in the Sinai
Desert since 1975. That was how former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger got
the Israelis to give up strategically vital mountain passes and oil fields
there. In fact, ex-Ambassador Martin Indyk—Makovsky was his right-hand man—has
just written a book glorifying that Kissinger mission.
Indyk obviously sees the involvement of Americans on the
ground as a useful way to get Israelis to take extreme risks, then and now.
It’s important to keep in mind, however, that those Americans in the Sinai have
never been tested. You can bet they would be on the first plane out if a new
Egyptian regime sent its tanks into the Sinai.
Afghanistan is another vivid, tragic illustration of the
fact that, in the end, Israel is on its own. And Israelis can see that with
their own eyes in the scenes of desperate Afghans clinging to the wheels of
American planes departing from Kabul. That’s an image that’s hard to erase.
Stephen M. Flatow is an attorney in New Jersey and the
father of Alisa Flatow, who was murdered in an Iranian-sponsored Palestinian
terrorist attack in 1995. He is the author of “A Father’s Story: My Fight for
Justice Against Iranian Terror.”
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