Israelis, mainly peaceniks, Pt. 4: Amos Gvirtz

On March 4, I had a delightful evening at the home of Amos
Gvirtz
in Kibbutz Shefayim,
on the Mediterranean coast north of Tel Aviv.  Gvirtz is a longtime member of the kibbutz—maybe
he was born there? I’m not sure. 
Today, Gvirtz still lives in one of its simple, late-1950s-style homes. He
has a day job running one of the kibbutz factories but spends most of his
discretionary time doing peace work.  He’s a longtime pillar of the Israeli nonviolence movement,
and was a founder of Palestinians and Israelis
for Nonviolence
.  He was also chairperson of the Israeli Committee
Against Home Demolitions
, and every week since summer 2006 he has published
a short essay under the title “Don’t Say We Did Not Know.” You can find some
older samples of these essays here,
along with the email through which you can subscribe to them.

Gvritz had invited me to dinner at
the suggestion of our mutual friend Rabbi Moshe Yehudai,
an inspiring guy who sits on the board of Rabbis
for Human Rights
. Yehudai describes himself as
both a pacifist and a Zionist, and makes about the best case I’ve ever heard
for how one can be both things.  Gvirtz, by contrast, says he’s no longer a
Zionist—see below. But the two men have worked together for a long time
and clearly get along very well despite that difference.

Yehudai picked me up from my hotel
for the evening on the kibbutz. I wish it had been lighter by the time we got
there, as I’d have loved to have a look round. But it had gotten pretty late
and it was dark, so we went straight to Gvirtz’s home,
where he served us an excellent vegetarian dinner. 

We had a good conversation with the meal, but it was only
later that I pulled out my notebook and I’m afraid I can’t reconstruct the
earlier portion of what we said.  So
join us as we sit on the low, Scandinavian-style seats in the sitting area of Gvirtz’s home, drinking herbal tea after the meal.  This is where I picked up my pen…

Gvirtz was talking about the continuity
of the practice of settling new areas with Jewish settlers and dispossessing
the native Palestinians, from the pre-state era right through to the
present.  (Later, he made the point
that “The Nakba wasn’t really a single event that
happened in 1948, so much as a long-drawn-out process, that continues to
this day.”)

He said,

Continue reading “Israelis, mainly peaceniks, Pt. 4: Amos Gvirtz”

Israelis, mainly peaceniks, Pt. 3: Moshe Ma’oz

Moshe Ma’oz is a veteran Israeli
peacenik and a retired prof of Middle East Studies at
Hebrew University who has done a lot of great research and writing on
Syria.  Jewish Israelis are often
very wary of agreeing to come to meetings in East Jerusalem.  As Benny Morris once told me: “It’s
simply because we don’t know our way around here; we come here so rarely.” Ma’oz, to his credit, was happy to come over to the little
hotel I was staying in there—I think I’d told him about the attractions
of its restaurant; plus, crucially, he seemed to know where it was.

But on March 3, as the time for our meeting approached even
he was defeated by the horrible parking situation, so he called and asked if we
could meet at the American
Colony
instead.

For
those who don’t know it, the AC is named after a group of quixotic Presbyterian
utopians from Chicago who made their way to Jerusalem in 1881 with the aim of
setting up a utopian colony dedicated to various good works.  They attracted many participants from
both the US and Sweden, and eventually ended up in a beautiful, courtyarded old home outside the Old City’s walls to the north,
in the neighborhood known as Sheikh Jarrah after a
famous local mosque.  At some
point, the colony had declined to the point that the remaining members of it
decided to turn the beautiful old house and a couple of others the colony owned beside it into a hotel. One of the colony’s last surviving members/descendants, Val Vester, lived in a cool basement apartment there till her
death a couple of years ago.

Back
in the 1980s 
before
the hotel’s Swiss management company jacked up the prices
quite inordinately, they used to always keep a few rooms at low rates for
visiting journalists and researchers, and my husband and I often stayed
there.  Sometimes we would go and
visit with Mrs. Vester and hear all her great stories
about the old days.

Also
in the 1980s, the AC was one of the places where George Shultz or other
visiting American dignitaries would visit Palestinian leaders like Faisal Husseini or Hanan Ashrawi. Those were “the good old days”—before the
Israelis started to completely prohibit any Palestinian political activity in
Jerusalem at all. (That came with Oslo.)

Anyway,
if you can spring for the price of two cups of coffee, it’s still a pleasant
place to sit and do an interview with someone. The internal courtyard is truly
lovely—planted with orange trees, vines, and flowers.  But it was ways too cold for us to sit
there, so I would plant myself and my interviewee in
one of the lounges, instead.

When Ma’oz walked in, he was
pretty depressed, but he expressed it in his usual friendly and half-joking
(maybe?) way:

Helena, I am so depressed! Do you
think Denmark has room for six million Jews? There is no future for us here! …
Honestly, I am ashamed to be an Israeli.

The main message he wanted to convey was this:

Continue reading “Israelis, mainly peaceniks, Pt. 3: Moshe Ma’oz”

Israelis, mainly peaceniks, Pt. 2: Naomi Chazan

Naomi Chazan was one of the founders of Meretz,
which was founded in 1992 as a leftist and pro-peace party.  She was one of Meretz’s
MKs from 1992 through 2003, serving from 1999 through
2003 as a deputy speaker of the Knesset. She is currently Chairman of Meretz’s party congress and president of the New Israel
Fund, which tries to support pro-peace and social justice projects within
Israel.

She was one of the few Israeli public figures who spoke out
publicly against the war from the very beginning. (By contrast, Meretz’s current leader Haim Oron actively
supported the war
in its early days, only coming out against some of its
later phases.)

On March 1, I talked with Chazan at
some length about the decline of the Israeli left.  I suggested that a good starting point might be the time in
September 1982 when, as news about the massacres that had been carried out
under the the IDF’s
auspices in the Sabra and Shatila
refugee camps south of Beirut  started to hit the international airwaves, a massive
crowd estimated at some 600,000 people gathered in Tel Aviv to protest the IDF’s involvement in the affair.

(I still, personally, think that was the Israeli peace
movement’s finest hour. 600,000 people was roughly
one-fifth of Israel’s entire Jewish population at the time. It was huge. They
succeeded in forcing the government to form the Kahan
Commission, which ultimately came out with its well-known censure of  Defense
Minister Sharon. They forced prime minister Menachem Begin to suddenly understand the degree to which
he had been duped by Sharon. And they showed that organized mass action can have a serious effect, even in a society as heavily
militarized in all respects as Israel’s. 
Of course, 
as
Daphna Golan and many others have noted, there was  no protest activity on anything like
that scale
during Israel’s barbaric recent war in Gaza—and that was
one where the IDF undertook its own barbarism rather than, as in 1982,
subcontracting it out to Lebanese Maronite
subordinates.)

Anyway, Chazan argued that 1992
rather than 1982 should be taken as the starting point of an attempt to chart
the decline of the Israeli left–

In  the elections of 1992, remember,
Labour won 44 seats, and they were down to 13 in this
past election. In ’92, Meretz had 12 seats, and they
are now down to just three.

So that’s the scale of it… And yes,
there is just now the start of an auto-critique inside Meretz.
We think we lost two seats to Livni and some votes to
Hadash.

Continue reading “Israelis, mainly peaceniks, Pt. 2: Naomi Chazan”

Israelis, mainly peaceniks, Pt. 1: Daphna Golan

    I have so much great material in my notebooks from my recent trip! Now, I’m going to start presenting some of the highlights from the interviews I did with various Israeli figures, mainly in the peace movement. These are, of course, in addition to the interview I did with Likud strategic thinker Efraim Inbar, which I already published here, and some highlights from the interview with Benjamin Pogrund, as published here. I have more from Pogrund that i might use sometime, too. he’s a fascinating representative of a fairly influential brand of “Left” Zionism.

Daphna
Golan
is a long-time Jewish-Israeli activist for peace and human rights who
runs a human-rights program in the law school of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.
We met in late February in the university’s Ramat Gan
campus. She spoke very poignantly about how isolated she and other Israeli
peace activists had felt during the Gaza war.

Even during the war there were only
twenty people or so taking part in the weekly Women in Black antiwar protests.
There was one antiwar demonstration in Tel Aviv with about 20,000 people in it.
But most pathetic of all was an action that Peace Now organized here in
Jerusalem: There were fewer than twenty people taking part.

Honestly, the war was the worst
time for us, we were feeling so isolated. But it seemed so obvious to us that
the war would not “achieve” anything except spread more misery and anger.

… During the war, of course,
Israelis weren’t shown anything about what was happening inside Gaza. We don’t
even have CNN on our cable offerings here. Mostly, what we
shown on our t.v.
was
lots of ex-generals giving their ‘analysis’ of events. But it was meaningless
technical gobbledygook: ‘Bank of targets’—what is that supposed to mean?

Later, as we walked out the campus’s main gate, she pointed
to a fence where, she said, during the war some rightwing students had hung
some very racist posters urging the killing of all the Gazans.

Continue reading “Israelis, mainly peaceniks, Pt. 1: Daphna Golan”

Play It Again, Barry

I thought it might be interesting to look at two speeches, comparing President Obama’s speech on Afghanistan Friday to President Nixon’s Vietnamization speech on November 3, 1969. Comparative excerpts follow.
First, announce the New Strategy–
Nixon:
We have adopted a plan which we have worked out in cooperation with the South Vietnamese for the complete withdrawal of all U.S. combat ground forces, and their replacement by South Vietnamese forces on an orderly scheduled timetable. This withdrawal will be made from strength and not from weakness. As South Vietnamese forces become stronger, the rate of American withdrawal can become greater.
Obama:
Today, I’m announcing a comprehensive, new strategy for Afghanistan and Pakistan. And this marks the conclusion of a careful policy review, led by Bruce, that I ordered as soon as I took office. My administration has heard from our military commanders, as well as our diplomats. We’ve consulted with the Afghan and Pakistani governments, with our partners and our NATO allies, and with other donors and international organizations.
Then the scary part–
Nixon:
Fifteen years ago North Vietnam, with the logistical support of Communist China and the Soviet Union, launched a campaign to impose a Communist government on South Vietnam by instigating and supporting a revolution. But the question facing us today is: Now that we are in the war, what is the best way to end it?
Obama:
The situation is increasingly perilous. It’s been more than seven years since the Taliban was removed from power, yet war rages on, and insurgents control parts of Afghanistan and Pakistan. Attacks against our troops, our NATO allies, and the Afghan government have risen steadily. And most painfully, 2008 was the deadliest year of the war for American forces.

Continue reading “Play It Again, Barry”

Milanovic: ‘The crisis of maldistribution’

Publisher’s
note: I am very happy to publish the following short essay on the economic
crisis by the distinguished economist Branko Milanovic, a senior associate with the
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace and for a long time a lead economist
in the World Bank’s research department. Milanovic is
an expert on income and wealth distribution both within and among countries,
and was the author of Worlds
Apart: Measuring International and Global Inequality
(Princeton UP, 2005.)
Like all JWN content, this essay is published under a Creative Commons License. ~HC.

The crisis of maldistribution

By Branko Milanovic,

Carnegie Endowment for International Peace

The current financial crisis is
generally blamed on feckless bankers, financial deregulation, crony capitalism,
and the like. While all of these elements may be true, this purely financial
explanation of the crisis overlooks its fundamental reasons. They lie in the
real sector, and more exactly in the distribution of income across individuals
and social classes. Deregulation, by helping irresponsible behavior, just
exacerbated the crisis; it did not create it.

To go to the origins of the crisis,
one needs to go to rising income inequality within practically all countries in
the world over the last 25 years. In the United States, the top 1% of the
population doubled its share in national income from around 8 percent in the
mid-1970s to almost 16 percent in the early 2000s. (Piketty and Saez,
2006).  That replicated the
situation that existed just prior to the crash of 1929, when the top 1% share
reached its previous high watermark 
In the UK, the top 1% receives 10% of total income, a share greater than
at any point since World War II (Atkinson, 2003, Figure 3).  In China, inequality, measured by the
Gini coefficient (the most common measure of inequality), almost doubled
between 1980 and 2005. The top 1% of the population is estimated to garner
around 9% of national income. Even more egregious were developments in Russia,
where the combined total wealth of thirty-three Russian billionaires listed on
the Forbes list in 2006 was $180 billion as against total country’s GDP of
about $1,000 billion that same year (Guriev and
Rachinsky, 2008).  Just before his
downfall, the richest oligarch, Michael Khodorovsky
had an estimated income equal to average Russia-wide incomes of 250,000 people.
(The same number for Bill Gates and the United States in 2005 was 75,000.)
Think of it. With his income alone, that is without touching
a penny of his wealth,
Khodorovsky could create (if need be) an army of
quarter million people. No wonder the Kremlin took notice, and Khodorovsky
ended up in jail. But the time of oligarchs in Russia did not end with him.
Similarly, in Mexico, Carlos Slim’s wealth, prior to the crisis, was estimated
at more than $53 billion. Assume a conservative return of 7% on his assets, and
that gives an annual income of $3.7 billion with which, given Mexican GDP per
capita in the same year, Slim could command even more labor than Khodorovsky:
440,000 people. These are only a few examples. But they were replicated, albeit
on a smaller scale, in practically all countries of the world.

What did it mean? Such enormous
wealth could not be used for consumption only. There is a limit to the number
of Dom Perignons and Armani suits one can drink or
wear. And, of course, it was not reasonable either to “invest” solely in
conspicuous consumption when wealth could be further increased by judicious
investment. So, a huge pool of available financial capital—the product of
increased income inequality—went in search of profitable opportunities
into which to invest.

But the richest people and the
hundreds of thousands somewhat less rich, could not
invest the money themselves. They needed intermediaries, the financial sector.
Overwhelmed with such an amount of funds, and short of good opportunities to
invest the capital, as well as enticed by large fees attending each
transaction, the financial sector became more and more reckless, basically
throwing money at anyone who would take it. Eventually, as we know, the bubble
exploded.

But its root cause was not to be
found in hedge funds and bankers who simply behaved with the greed to which
they are accustomed but to large inequalities in income distribution which
generated much larger investable funds than could be profitably employed. The
under-consumptionist explanation of crises, of course, has a long history.  When the times are good, such theories
are covered by oblivion and often held in disrepute. But when the economy
implodes, people remember them. Keynes in 1936 brought them back from
semi-obscurity in which they vegetated between the early 20th
century (when they were used to explain European colonial expansion) and the
Great Depression.  Begrudgingly, he
granted them a measure of respectability. But, in the roaring 1990’s, they were
forgotten.  Moreover, as underconsumptionism had an unmistakable Marxist pedigree,
it always seemed suspect to those brought up in the Marshallian tradition, and
later to neoclassical economists.

But today, when we face the need to
explain the crisis, there are, it seems, only two possible culprits: to lay the
entire blame on the human factor and greed (which would be rather odd for the
economists to do since they routinely praise greed as the spiritus movens of all change), or to look for structural causes
of the crisis. It may not be entirely  coincidental that Robert Lucas,
a Chicago economist and the recipient of the Nobel prize in economics, was the
man who both declared in 2003 (as we were recently reminded  by Paul Krugman) that “the central
problem of depression-prevention has been solved”, and a year later,  poured scorn on all these concerned
with rising inequality by writing that “of the tendencies that are harmful to
sound economics, the most seductive, and …the most poisonous, is to focus on
questions of distribution.” If you do not understand why income distribution
may be important, it seems natural not to get it that crises are not a thing of
the past.

REFERENCES

Robert Lucas (2004), “The Industrial revolution: past and
future”, Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis, pp. 5-20. 2003
Annual Report Essay.
Available at http://www.minneapolisfed.org/publications_papers/pub_display.cfm?id=3333.

Atkinson, Tony (2003), “Top incomes in the
United Kingdom over the Twentieth Century”, December 2003.

Thomas Piketty and Emmanuel Saez, “Income Inequality in the
United States, 1913-1998”, Quarterly Journal of Economics, February 2003.

Thomas Piketty and Emmanuel Saez (2006), “The evolution of
top incomes : a historical and international
perspectives”, American
Economic Review
, vol.96, no.2, 2006, p. 200-2005.

Sergei Guriev and Andrei Rachinsky (2008), “The evolution of personal wealth in the
former Soviet Union and Cental and Eastern Europe”,
in James B. Davies (ed.), Personal Wealth from a Global Perspective, Oxford, UNU-WIDER
Studies in Development Economics, 2008.

Problems of the west’s extreme casualty aversion, Afghanistan and Gaza

The extreme aversion of the US and Israeli armies to own-soldier casualties has huge and often unintended consequences in the realms of both strategic effectiveness and ethics. This is now being amply demonstrated with regard both to Israel’s practices in Gaza (and the West Bank), and US military’s practices in Afghanistan and Pakistan.
Joshua Foust of the generally excellent Registan blog has a ‘guest writer’ gig on the Reuters Pakistan blog, summing up the most important things he learned during his just-completed ten-week military embed with the US forces in Afghanistan.
His main point, well illustrated in the Reuters post, is that the culture of extreme casualty aversion that’s dominant in the US military hobbles it from waging effective “counter-insurgency” in Afghanistan.
Writing that, “It is a cliché that, in counterinsurgency, one must be among ‘the people’,” Foust then shows some of the many ways in which the own-soldier casualty aversion of the US forces in Afghanistan means that that is not happening:

    A rural insurgency is a devil’s game. It is difficult for a foreign counterinsurgent force to concentrate itself to maximize effectiveness, in part because the insurgency itself is not concentrated. When there are no obvious population clusters, there are no obvious choices for bases. Bagram Air Base, the country’s largest military base, is in the middle of nowhere, comparatively speaking – dozens of miles north of Kabul, and a 45-minute drive from Charikar, the nearest city in Parwan Province. FOB Salerno, a large base in Khost Province, is miles away from Khost City, the province’s capital-and the road in between is riddled with IEDs.
    The many smaller bases strung in between are surrounded by enormous Hesco barriers, concertina wire, and guard towers. No one is allowed on the base without being badged and interviewed by base security, and in many places delivery trucks are forced to wait in the open for 24 hours before completing their trips to the dining halls, clinics, or technology offices.
    There are other ways in which Coalition Forces are separated from the people of Afghanistan beyond their heavily fortified bases. Most transit – on patrol, on delivery runs, or on humanitarian missions – is performed through Mine Resistance Ambush Protection, or MRAP vehicles. These enormous trucks, thickly plated with metal blast shields on the bottom with tiny blue-tinted ballistic glass, make it near-impossible to even see the surrounding countryside from another other than the front seat.
    On the narrow mountain roads that sometimes collapse under the mutli-ton trucks, soldiers drive, too, in up-armored Humvees, which are similarly coated in thick plates of armor and heavy glass windows they aren’t allowed to open.
    When soldiers emerge from their imposing vehicles, they are covered from head to groin in various forms of shielding: thick ceramic plates on the torso, the ubiquitous Kevlar helmets, tinted ballistic eye glasses, neck and nape guards, heavy shrapnel-resistant flaps of fabric about the shoulders and groin, and fire-resistant uniforms. A common sentiment among Afghans who see these men and women wandering in their midst is that they look like aliens, or, if they know of them, robots.
    There is no doubt that MRAPs, up-armored Humvees, and the seventy pounds or so of bullet and blast shielding has saved the lives of countless soldiers. But counterinsurgency is counterintuitive: in the relentless quest to ensure a casualty-free war, it seems the West has begun to engineer its own defeat.
    By separating itself so completely from the population it claims to be trying to win-even at Bagram, where there is almost no combat, ever, it is almost impossible for a soldier or civilian to walk outside the gates to purchase something in the nearby bazaar-there remain precious few opportunities to do the gritty work of actually trying to “win hearts and minds”.
    The end result is stark: in a war that is desperately short of the troops needed to provide security to increasingly less remote communities, 93% of the soldiers stationed at the Coalition’s primary base never walk outside the gates. Instead of a focus on separating the insurgents from the population – another clichéd pillar of counterinsurgency – the focus seems instead to be simply killing as many of the enemy as can be identified.

I would just amend what he writes in one way, what “the west” is trying to fight in Afghanistan is not entirely a “casualty-free war”, but rather one in which the casualties among its own soldiers are reduced as far as possible toward zero. Casualties among the identified “enemy” may indeed, as he writes, tend to get maximized. But intense aversion to own-soldier casualties also– in both Afghanistan and Gaza– leads to far greater casualties than would otherwise be the case among the civilian population.
In Gaza, as many testimonies from the IDF soldiers themselves have now made clear, the general ROEs were that own-soldier casualties should be avoided even if that meant opening fire on Palestinian civilians. That, despite the fact that even the IDF’s own code of ethical conduct reminds soldiers that a soldier has a duty under international law to avoid civilian casualties even at the cost of some additional risk to his own troops.
In Gaza, many of the killings of civilians were fairly up-close affairs, but others were inflicted from drones or from aircraft flying at very high altitude– just like the way the US forces operate in Afghanistan (and Pakistan.)
This does not, as Foust notes, help win “hearts and minds” in a counter-insurgency context in Afghanistan.
And nor did it succeed, in Gaza, in inflicting a paralyzing dose of “shock and awe” to the Gazan population, where that seemed to be more of the intention than any form of, um, winning “hearts and minds.”
In today’s Haaretz, Amos Harel writes that before the latest Gaza war:

    The General Staff expected that Israelis would have trouble accepting heavy Israel Defense Forces losses.
    The army chose to overcome this problem with an aggressive plan that included overwhelming firepower. The forces, it was decided, would advance into the urban areas behind a “rolling curtain” of aerial and artillery fire, backed up by intelligence from unmanned aircraft and the Shin Bet. The lives of our soldiers take precedence, the commanders were told in briefings. Before the operation, [GOC Southern Command Yoav] Galant and Chief of Staff Gabi Ashkenazi painted a bleak picture for the cabinet ministers. “Unlike in Lebanon, the civilians in Gaza won’t have many places to escape to,” Ashkenazi warned. “When an armored force enters the city, shells will fly, because we’ll have to protect our people.”
    A large part of the operation was conducted by remote control. “The Palestinians are completely transparent to us,” says A., a reservist whose brigade was posted in the Gaza Strip. “The Shin Bet has people everywhere. We observe the whole area from the air and usually the Shin Bet coordinator can also tell you who lives in what house.” The Shin Bet defines the enemy and, for the most part, someone who belongs to Hamas’ civilian welfare organizations (the da’awa) is treated the same way as a member of its military wing, the Iz al-Din al-Qassam.
    Essentially, a person only needs to be in a “problematic” location, in circumstances that can broadly be seen as suspicious, for him to be “incriminated” and in effect sentenced to death. Often, there is no need for him to be identified as carrying a weapon. Three people in the home of a known Hamas operative, someone out on a roof at 2 A.M. about a kilometer away from an Israeli post, a person walking down the wrong street before dawn – all are legitimate targets for attack.
    “It feels like hunting season has begun,” says A. “Sometimes it reminds me of a Play Station [computer] game. You hear cheers in the war room after you see on the screens that the missile hit a target, as if it were a soccer game.”
    …There is a discrepancy between the official military response, of denial and horrified disapproval, the testimonies of the Rabin pre-military preparatory course graduates, and the response to those reports by key officers, unwilling to be identified.
    “What did you think would happen?” a senior officer wondered this week. “We sent 10,000 troops into Gaza, more than 200 tanks and armored personnel carriers, 100 bulldozers. What were 100 bulldozers going to do there?”
    The IDF estimates that approximately 2,000 houses were destroyed in the fighting. The Palestinians say the figure is twice that. IDF officers, who were not surprised by the testimonies, recalled that during the Al-Aqsa Intifada, military courts convicted soldiers for killing civilians, including the British peace activist Tom Hurndall, who was killed in Gaza in 2003.

Harel also reminds us that it was not until the Second Intifada, which started in 2000, that the IDF judge advocate general “annulled the practice of opening an investigation into every killed Palestinian.”
Wow, that would be how many investigations they would have to launch into what went on in Gaza?
What Harel writes about the IDF’s targeting doctrine indicates very clearly indeed that the IDF was not trying to make the distinction, deemed essential under international humanitarian law, between combatant (legal) and noncombatant (illegal) targets.
I don’t have time to write more about this important topic now. I’ll just note that the lethal and destructive consequences of the decision that both the IDF and apparently also the US military have made, to work to avoid own-soldier casualties even where this can clearly be expected to increase the casualties inflicted on noncombatants are first and foremost quite tragic for the civilian residents of the war-zone.
Making this decision to value the lives of one’s own soldiers above that of civilian residents of the war-zone is racist and, quite simply, illegal under international humanitarian law.
Also, at the end of the day these decisions are strategically either ineffective in these kinds of wars or even actively counter-productive.
All of Foust’s post there on the Reuters blog bears close reading. He points out that the extreme own-soldier casualty aversion of the US troops in Afghanistan has resulted in huge areas of the country simply being ceded to the effective control of insurgent forces.
He concludes with these wise words:

    It is that mentality – severe risk aversion, coupled with attention paid to process rather than outcome – that risks ultimately undoing the Western mission in Afghanistan. As an institution, the U.S. Army seems unwilling to make the difficult choices necessary to create the conditions for peace: a population that is adequately protected from the crime, drug, and war lords, and therefore no longer contributing to the desperate regional instability.
    It is also a mentality that can be challenged in small doses from below, but demands concerted action from above. Command at the highest levels is vital in changing course, and admitting that war is actually a terrible and ghastly thing that requires your own people dying to win. It is a choice not many at the top seem willing to consider.

I should note that I disagree strongly with Foust in his assessment that for the US “winning” in Afghanistan is even possible. But he is a realist; and he’s right to note that the idea that the US can ever “win” in Afghanistan without taking very many casualties among its own soldiers is quite wrongheaded.
He’s equally right to remind everyone that “war is actually a terrible and ghastly thing.”
Because of that, international customary law lays upon every international actor that has a deep conflict with another party a very strong responsibility to find non-military ways to resolve that conflict.
Do such non-military ways exist in the case of Israel, with the Palestinians, or the US, in Afghanistan?
Of course they do.

Why only Hamas can save a ‘Jewish state’ (if it wants to)

My own view on the Hamas question, which has now been interestingly raised in the US by Henry Siegman’s Group of Ten, is actually that only Hamas can deliver a durable two-state outcome in Israel/Palestine– if it should choose to. And therefore that if Jewish Israelis and their supporters around the world want to save the idea of Israel as “a Jewish state”, then only Hamas can do that for them.
If Hamas chooses to do that, which is of course another question…
This conclusion is something I’ve arrived at increasingly over the past two months. Basically, a lot of it has to do with the near-total implosion of Fateh as a coherent political force, whose results I witnessed while I was in Palestine and neighboring countries on my latest trip.
Anyway, I’ll be talking a lot more about this during the two events I’m speaking at in DC next week… (Details are here. Pre-registration is required for both.)

US security mandarins urge action on Palestine peace

Two important op-eds in the major US MSM today.
In this one in the NYT, Roger Cohen reports on a new initiative in which ten significant American national-security mandarins have now spelled out the steps they urge Pres. Obama speedily to take, to win a sustainable two-state solution to the Palestine-Israel conflict.
The ten include Brent Scowcroft and Zbig Brzezinski, along with Lee Hamilton, Chuck Hagel, Tom Pickering, and other luminaries.
The web version of Cohen’s piece has a link to the PDF of the whole policy paper the ten have now handed to Obama, via group member Paul Volcker, who is a key Obama economic adviser (and former Chairman of the Fed.)
Cohen writes that he believes that the paper’s approach is also generally in line with that of national security adviser Gen. Jim Jones,who has considerable familiarity with Palestinian issues, as well as special envoy George Mitchell.
The paper urges speedy US intervention in the diplomacy including the articulation of a specifically American vision of the outcome.
It also urges what it describes as A More Pragmatic Approach Toward Hamas and a Palestinian Unity Government, as follows:

    A legitimate, unified and empowered Palestinian side to negotiate with Israel is of importance if any agreement is to be reached and implemented. Direct U.S. engagement with Hamas may not now be practical, but shutting out the movement and isolating Gaza has only made it stronger and Fatah weaker. Israel itself has acknowledged Hamas is simply too important and powerful to be ignored.
    In brief, shift the U.S. objective from ousting Hamas to modifying its behavior, offer it inducements that will enable its more moderate elements to prevail, and cease discouraging third parties from engaging with Hamas in ways that might help clarify the movement’s views and test its behavior.
    Finally, cease discouraging Palestinian national reconciliation and make clear that a government that agrees to a ceasefire with Israel, accepts President Mahmoud Abbas as the chief negotiator, and commits to abiding by the results of a national referendum on a future peace agreement would not be boycotted or sanctioned.

In his article, Cohen explains that Henry Siegman, the now London-based American figure who has organized this initiative, recently traveled to Damascus to meet Hamas head Khaled Meshaal:

    Meshal told him, and put in writing, that although Hamas would not recognize Israel, it would remain in a Palestinian national unity government that reached a referendum-endorsed peace settlement with Israel.
    De facto, rather than de jure, recognition can be a basis for a constructive relationship, as Israel knows from the mutual benefits of its shah-era dealings with Iran.
    Israeli governments have negotiated a two-state solution although they included religious parties that do not recognize Palestinians’ right to statehood.
    “But,” Siegman said, “if moderates within Hamas are to prevail, a payoff is needed for their moderation. And until the U.S. provides one, there will be no Palestinian unity government.”

Some parts of the Group of 10’s detailed proposal seem highly unlikely to be workable, including the idea that for 15 years after the signing of a peace agreement a US-led NATO force supplemented with forces from other countries including Israel should be responsible for security in the demilitarized Palestinian state.
But the urgency expressed in the proposal and the way it proposes finding a way to include Hamas in the diplomacy both seem excellent.
… Meantime, over in the WaPo, David Ignatius has a piece on a small but significant subset of the “problem” of the US’s current stance on matters Palestinian. Namely the fact that numerous organizations based in the US and registered with US tax authorities as “philanthropies” have in fact been funneling huge amounts of money into Israel’s completely illegal settlement-building project in the occupied territories over the past decades.
As David points out, official US aid monies cannot in general be used by Israel on its settlement projects in the occupied territories. But the US “charities” that are supporting Israeli settlements get a tax break from the IRS because of their charitable status; so the amount of that tax break is in effect being contributed to the recipients by the US taxpayer.