Ukraine crisis shows Israel the international community
won't rescue you
Even though Israel’s presence in Judea and Samaria is fully
supported by history and international law, and Russia illegally occupies large
parts of Ukraine, accusations against Israel will continue.
By STEPHEN M. FLATOW Published: https://www.jpost.com/opinion/article-698728
The Russian invasion of Ukraine has only just begun, yet the
lessons for Israel are already obvious and they’re not very encouraging.
Lesson #1: The international community will not rescue you.
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People take cover as an air-raid siren sounds, near an apartment building damaged by recent shelling in Kyiv, Ukraine February 26, 2022 (photo credit: REUTERS/GLEB GARANICH) |
If ever there was a situation in which the international
community would be totally justified to come to the armed defense of a
beleaguered ally, this is it.
Ukraine is the innocent victim of Russian aggression.
Ukraine is a democracy; Russia is de-facto totalitarian. Ukraine’s location
makes it strategically vital to the West. Yet, none of that matters.
Not a single country is willing to take up arms to defend
Ukraine against the Russian assault. Every one of the reasons cited above and
many more would apply if Israel was again invaded by its Arab neighbors. And
not a single country, including Israel’s closest allies, would pick up a gun if
Israel faced annihilation.
For years, the Jewish Left and the United States (US) State
Department crowd have been proposing that US peacekeeping troops should be
stationed in Judea-Samaria and the Golan Heights. The idea is to lure Israel
into surrendering those territories, based on the assumption that a Palestinian
state or its allies would never attack American troops.
However, the American
peacekeepers would flee the moment war seemed imminent, exactly as the United
Nations (UN) peacekeeping troops fled from the Sinai on the eve of the 1967 war
and exactly as the UN troops in southern Lebanon have proven to be completely
helpless in the face of Hezbollah’s de facto control of that region.
Israelis watching the unfolding of the Ukraine crisis
undoubtedly recall Israel’s own bitter experiences with international
indifference in the face of Arab aggression.
When Arab armies invaded the newborn Jewish state in 1948,
the Truman administration declared an arms embargo and refused to give Israel a
single bullet.
When Arab armies surrounded Israel in 1967 and prepared to
attack, the Johnson administration refused to lift a finger.
When Arab armies prepared to invade Israel in 1973,
secretary of state Henry Kissinger pressured the Israelis not to strike first
and then withheld weapons for ten days in order to prevent Israel from
achieving a decisive victory.
When Israel defended itself against mass rocket attacks by
Hezbollah in 2006 and by Hamas in 2008, 2014, and 2021, the US pressured the
Israelis to end their operations prematurely, thus granting de facto victories
to the terrorists.
Lesson #2: The hypocrisy will never end.
Regardless of Russia’s own behavior, Russia and its allies
will continue to falsely accuse Israel of illegally occupying Arab territory.
Even though Israel’s presence in Judea and Samaria is fully
supported by history and international law, and even though Russia illegally
occupies large parts of Ukraine, the accusations against Israel will continue.
Human rights groups will continue to obsessively focus on
the Israeli occupation, while paying little or no attention to Russia’s
occupation of Ukraine. The UN will continue to adopt mountains of resolutions
condemning Israel and will ignore Ukraine.
Lesson #3: Appeasers will look for ways to appease.
World leaders who see appeasement as the easy way out will
continue look for ways to appease dictators rather than confront them.
The entire world heard President Biden’s initial statement
that a “minor incursion” by Russia into Ukraine would not result in a serious
western response. In the face of intense criticism, the administration
retracted that position. But the whiff of appeasement was clearly in the air.
Others have been more explicit. Italy’s foreign minister has
declared that international penalties against Russia should not include “the
energy sector.” Inevitably, other European leaders will soon look for ways to
weaken or evade imposing real sanctions on Russia.
Lesson #4: It matters who your neighbors are.
Throughout history, dictators have constantly assaulted
their neighbors. Sometimes they have been motivated by religion or nationalism;
sometimes they have wanted to distract their own population from domestic
problems. Usually, some combination of those motives has been involved.
Whatever their motives, the indisputable fact is that authoritarian regimes
often turn aggressive.
Israel is right to be concerned about the fact that the
Palestinian Authority and Hamas (in Gaza) are dictatorships, not democracies.
And Israel is right to worry about the fact that those regimes are deeply
corrupt, deny civil rights to their citizens and refuse to hold truly
democratic elections. Democracies tend to be peaceful neighbors, dictatorships
tend not to be.
Thus, the Ukraine crisis is a reminder to Israel that this
is what happens when you have a hostile, fascist dictatorship next door. And when
a hostile Palestine and its Arab allies prepare to attack, nobody will come to
Israel’s rescue.
The writer is an attorney 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,” and a new Israeli citizen.
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