Fortress Israel: The Inside Story of
the Military Elite Who Run the Country—and Why They Can’t Make Peace
by Patrick Tyler
Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 576 pp., $35
by Patrick Tyler
Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 576 pp., $35
Back in
1988, I refused to do a stint of reserve duty in the Israel Defense Forces and
was sentenced to a twenty-one-day prison term. It was at the height of the
First Intifada and my unit was to serve thirty-five days in the casbah—the old
town—of Nablus, in the heart of Samaria. I refused because I thought that
Israeli rule in the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip was oppressive and that
Israel should make peace with the Palestinians based on a
two-states-for-two-peoples solution. The First Intifada, from 1987 until 1991,
was a popular uprising, largely consisting of strikes, boycotts, street
demonstrations, and riots, in which the rioters almost invariably employed
non-lethal means. (By contrast, in the Second Intifada, from 2000 to 2004, the
Palestinians employed highly lethal means—suicide bombings in buses and
restaurants—and their target, in my view, was not so much the occupation as
Israel itself.)
Young Palestinian
demonstrators throw rocks and bottles at Israeli soldiers during the First
Intifada,
December 1987. (Photo by Esaias Baitel/AFP/Getty Images.)
December 1987. (Photo by Esaias Baitel/AFP/Getty Images.)
The judge
at my trial was our division’s deputy commander, a lieutenant colonel who was
obviously uncomfortable with the situation. He said something like “not all of
us in the military are happy with what’s happening” and coaxed me to relent.
But the following Sunday I went off to Prison No. 4, in Sarafand, where I
served out a relatively pleasant seventeen days (I arrived two days late, and
two days were taken off for good behavior). A year or two later, I was again
called up for reserve duty (not in the territories), and a while later I was
honorably discharged from the IDF at the age of 44, in line with the custom at
the time for combat soldiers.
I was
reminded of this personal episode while reading Patrick Tyler’s Fortress Israel: The Inside Story of the Military Elite Who Run
the Country—and Why They Can’t Make Peace. As the title makes clear,
Tyler charges Israel with being a modern “Sparta.” How were conscientious
objectors punished in Sparta? I don’t know if Leonidas suffered conscientious
objectors before the Hot Gates, but I do know how they were treated in
Wilhelmine Germany, the classic modern “militarist” society. And I know how
they fared in the United States, France, and Great Britain when these countries
were at war and had conscription and reserve duty. The norm in each case was
either a few years behind bars or some form of internal exile.
Tyler’s
book is a gossipy overlong pseudo-history of Israel, which is noteworthy mainly
for what it indicates about the standing of Israel among the chattering
classes. For Patrick Tyler is the former chief correspondent of The New York
Times and the
former Middle East bureau chief of TheWashington
Post, and his book comes festooned with blurbs from former Times executive
editor Howell Raines, CNN’s national security analyst Peter L. Bergen, and
others lauding its scholarship as “meticulous” and describing it as “the
definitive historical and analytical account” of the role of the military in
Israel. Incidentally, Tyler does not know Hebrew or Arabic, and the only
archive he appears to have visited is the Lyndon Baines Johnson Library in his
home state of Texas.
Chief of Staff Yitzhak Rabin, center, with Haim Bar-Lev, left, and
Ezer Weizman at the General Headquarters in Tel Aviv during the Six-Day War,
June 1967. (Photo courtesy of Government Press Office, Israel.)
For
decades Zionists and their supporters have described Israel as a latter-day
Athens, and Tyler seems to take it personally, insisting instead on describing
Israel as “a modern Sparta in a region of weak states.” Indeed, at one point
Tyler seems preposterously to liken Nasser’s Egypt to Athens:
Thucydides
had written of the Peloponnesian War: “What made war inevitable was the growth
of Athenian power and the fear which this caused in Sparta.” But in this case
there was no growth of Athenian power. Nasser’s strength was declining … It was
Israel—Sparta—whose power had grown . . .
I will
return to Tyler’s perverse and implausible account of the lead-up to the
Six-Day War. For now, let us ask: Is Israel Sparta? Well, let’s see. It is true
that Israel has a powerful army and spends a large part of its annual budget
(say twenty to twenty-five percent) on defense; true, too, that generals and
security chiefs, past and present, have a major say in shaping defense and
foreign policy and have had substantial representation in successive cabinets,
though only three—Yitzhak Rabin, Ehud Barak, and Ariel Sharon—out of Israel’s
twelve prime ministers were former generals. All the others, David Ben-Gurion,
Moshe Sharett, Levi Eshkol, Golda Meir, Menachem Begin, Shimon Peres, Yitzhak
Shamir, Binyamin Netanyahu, and Ehud Olmert, were civilians. It could be argued
that Begin and Shamir, as former commanders of guerrilla organizations in the
pre-state period, also had “security” backgrounds. (Shamir also served for a
while in the Mossad.) But then Israel has been under siege from without and
terrorist threat from within since its establishment. So security, personal as
well as collective, is understandably a paramount consideration in the minds of
Israelis. This is hardly surprising. American ex-generals have often risen to
political prominence during or after wars: Washington in the 18th century,
Jackson and Grant in the 19th, Eisenhower, George C. Marshall, and Colin Powell
in the 20th, to name just a few.
In his
Prologue, Tyler asserts that “militarism” is the ruling spirit in Israeli
society:
Once in
the military system, Israelis never fully exit. They carry the military
identity for life . . . through lifelong expectations of loyalty and secrecy.
Many Israeli officers carry their “top secret” clearances after retirement,
reporting back to superiors or intelligence officers items of interest gleaned
from their involvement in business, finance, and interactions with foreigners.
On the
next page, he writes, “the specter of the security state remains a dominant
aspect of life,” and a little later, “The military is the
country to a great extent.” This is all nonsense. Had Tyler been writing about
Israel during the late 1940s and 1950s, perhaps he would have had a point.
Perhaps. But the Israel of the past several decades, Israel today, is another
animal altogether. For most Israelis, individual achievement and interests
trump the old collectivist Zionist ethic. Indeed, fewer and fewer Israelis
actually serve in the army or do reserve duty (as the few who carry the burden
are constantly complaining). It is true that among eleventh and twelfth
graders, there is still great competitiveness to get a slot, once inducted, in
one of the IDF’s elite units or in pilot training, but this has more to do with
adolescent competition and machismo than militaristic ideology. Indeed, a good
argument can be made for depicting the Israeli army as one of the world’s least
“military.” Since its inception in 1948, the IDF has abjured saluting (the
practice exists only in formal parades), and the men, after completing basic
training, generally address their non-coms and officers on a first-name basis.
The dress code in the army ranges from informal to sloppy and always has
(except in the Armored Corps), and breaches of discipline tend to be punished
lightly. While females are still kept out of combat units, women non-coms and
officers are playing a major role in training combat troops (in armor and
artillery, for example), and there are growing numbers of women pilots and
navigators, also flying combat aircraft. All of this points to a liberal rather
than “militarist” military.
As with
poker players, books have tells. At one point in Fortress
Israel Tyler
writes that Israel’s paratroops wear black berets. Had he interviewed any
Israeli, even a child (even an Israeli Arab child), he would have known that,
as in Britain and France, paratroopers wear red berets. Sadly, Tyler knows
nothing about the nuts and bolts of Israel or its military.
Israel
is, in sober fact, a small, flawed, and embattled democracy, with a strong and
unusually egalitarian military that has produced an extraordinary stream of
writers, academics, and artists, supported by world-class academic and artistic
institutions. In short, it is more Athenian than Spartan.
Prime Minister Levi Eshkol and Israel Navy Commander Shlomo Harel
on patrol in the Straits of Tiran during the Six-Day War, June 1967. (Photo by
Ilan Bruner, courtesy of Government Press Office, Israel.)
Tyler is
as weak on the history of Israel as he is on its sociology, though he is
chock-full of opinions and judgments, all of them anti-Zionist. Let’s return to
the causes of the Six-Day War. The history of the countdown to this
conflagration is clear, generally agreed upon, and pretty well documented. The
opening of the relevant Israeli military and cabinet papers—closed for another
four years by Israel’s fifty-year rule—is unlikely to offer much added
enlightenment. And the Arab archives, which might shed new light, remain
closed, as they are for every period of the Israeli-Arab conflict
(dictatorships do not open state archives). The slide to war began with Syria’s
sponsorship of Palestinian operations against Israel across the Lebanese and
Jordanian borders and Syria’s own efforts at diverting the headwaters of the
Jordan River. Syria’s leaders spoke frequently and publicly of a coming “war of
liberation” for Palestine. Israel warned Syria that it was playing with fire
and might even provoke an Israeli assault.
In early
May 1967 Damascus and Moscow, Syria’s chief international backer, passed on
intelligence to Egypt that Israel was massing troops on the Syrian frontier.
The implication was that Israel was about to launch a massive attack and that
Egypt, with whom Syria had a defense pact, would have to come to Syria’s aid.
Moscow spoke of ten to twelve Israeli brigades and of May 17 as D-Day. This
“intelligence” was untrue. The UN armistice supervision organization, UNTSO,
checked the border areas and dismissed the reports. Indeed, Nasser sent his
army chief, Muhammad Fawzi, to Damascus to find out what was happening. In his
memoirs, Fawzi later wrote, “I did not find any concrete evidence to support
the information received. On the contrary, aerial photographs taken by Syrian
reconnaissance on May 12 and 13 showed no change in normal [Israeli] military
positions.”
Tyler
fails to tell his readers any of this. Instead, he slyly implies that there was
something to the Syrian and Russian reports: “The Soviet information was mostly
disinformation”—note the carefully placed modifier “mostly.” “It was clear,”
Tyler goes on, “that the Israeli army was in a heightened state of alert along
the northern frontier.” Again, the implication is that an attack was being
prepared. It wasn’t.
Tyler
then proceeds to justify Nasser’s subsequent actions, which directly provoked
the Six-Day War:
Still, it
was impossible for Nasser to ignore the [Soviet-Syrian] intelligence reports .
. . For Nasser, it didn’t matter whether the intelligence reports were false .
. . What mattered was that Nasser was in an untenable spot as the
putative leader of the Arab world.
So, on
May 13 he ordered his armored divisions to cross the Suez Canal into Sinai,
which had been demilitarized after the 1956 War, threatening southern Israel.
Nasser then compounded this with two steps that, in the absence of
international intervention, made war inevitable. On May 16, he ordered the UN
peacekeeping force in Sinai (UNEF), which physically separated the Egyptians
and Israelis, to leave, and on May 22 he announced the closure of the Straits
of Tiran to Israeli shipping and aircraft, blocking the port of Eilat, which
was Israel’s port of access to Africa and southern Asia, and its air-link to
South Africa. All of this was in violation of international law. At the end of
the month, Nasser signed a defense pact with his old enemy King Hussein, and
battalions of Egyptian troops were flown to Jordan; Iraq made ready to send
armored divisions to bolster Hussein’s defenses. Israel felt a pan-Arab noose
tightening around its neck.
Tyler
describes these Egyptian moves, each of which was a clear casus belli, but then blames Israel for the war’s outbreak.
He writes that Prime Minister Levi Eshkol tried but failed “to restrain the
generals and quell the surge of enthusiasm for war that was becoming more and
more pronounced in the officer corps.” Meanwhile, the Americans failed to put
together an international flotilla that would force open the straits—Tyler
writes as if this idea was still in play when Israel struck on the morning of
June 5, but it wasn’t—or to send in their own ships, which is why Washington in
the end gave Israel a “yellow light” (the phrase is William Quandt’s) to
attack.
One other
Six-Day War matter that Tyler elides and distorts is the Israeli conquest of the
West Bank, an area that Jordan had ruled since conquering it in 1948. Early on
the morning of June 5, Israel told King Hussein—through the UN and U.S.
channels—that if Jordan held its fire, no harm would come to it. The Jordanians
nonetheless opened fire, including artillery fire, on Israeli West Jerusalem
and the coastal plain. Israel re-contacted the Jordanians, promising not to
open fire if they immediately ceased. But the Jordanians continued firing, and
around noon, Israeli troops began to push into the West Bank and East
Jerusalem. Within three days, the territory down to the Jordan River was in
Israeli hands.
Tyler
omits any mention of these June 5 warnings and assurances to Jordan, and
instead writes:
After
Jordanian artillery batteries had opened fire on Jewish neighborhoods in
Jerusalem, Yigal Allon and Menachem Begin joined in proposing . . . that the
shelling gave Israel the pretext it needed to liberate Arab East Jerusalem,
including the Old City and the Western Wall.
One
wonders if Tyler would describe the American response to a comparable attack
(say the shelling of Washington, D.C. and New York) as a “pretext.”
In the
aftermath of the war, on June 19, the Israeli cabinet resolved, in secret session,
that Israel would agree to withdraw from all of the Sinai Peninsula in exchange
for peace with Egypt and the peninsula’s demilitarization and from all of the
Golan Heights in exchange for peace with Syria and the Heights’
demilitarization. (The cabinet could not agree on the fate of the West Bank, so
nothing was offered to Jordan.) Tyler, as usual when trying to downplay Israeli
peace-mindedness, puts it vaguely: “Eshkol, Meir, and Dayan convinced [the
ministers] . . . that they should at least offer to return some of the Arab
territories if they could do so on favorable terms.” Which is not quite the
same thing.
It is
worth adding that there are historians who are convinced that this cabinet
decision never reached Cairo and Damascus, though the truth, on this score,
will only be definitively known if and when the Egyptian and Syrian archives
are opened. What is certain is that in September 1967, in response to the
Israeli victory and perhaps to these peace proposals, the Arab governments
unanimously resolved never to negotiate with Israel, never to recognize it, and
never to make peace—the famous “three nos” of Khartoum.
One other
point Tyler makes about the war’s aftermath is worth quoting because it is so
blatantly untrue: “It seemed that with few exceptions, everyone in Israel had
embraced a creed that envisioned a Greater Israel, from the Mediterranean to
the Jordan. There were differences [only] about how to achieve it.” It is true
that a semi-messianic euphoria took hold, but post-1967 Israel was nonetheless
a deeply divided society and remains so down to the present. Many opposed, or
were uncomfortable with, retention of the Palestinian-populated territories.
Tyler forgets to tell his readers that Ben-Gurion, whom he repeatedly brands an
arch-expansionist and warmonger, immediately advised Eshkol to withdraw from
the whole of the West Bank except East Jerusalem, nor does he mention that
Labor Party minister Yigal Allon quickly formulated a plan which called for
withdrawal from the bulk of the West Bank in exchange for peace with Jordan.
The “Allon Plan” was never formally adopted as the Labor Party’s platform or
Israeli government policy, but it guided Labor’s policies for a decade.
(Settlements were not established in the areas earmarked for transfer to Arab
sovereignty.) In the immediate post-1967 years, Israel’s leaders, in secret
meetings, repeatedly proposed the plan to King Hussein as a basis for a
bilateral peace settlement to no avail.
Following
the Six-Day War, Egypt’s president, Nasser, launched a “war of attrition”
against Israel’s forces in the Sinai Peninsula, hoping to wear down Israeli
resolve to remain in occupation of Egyptian territory. This consisted of
artillery strikes against the Israeli forts built along the Suez Canal’s
eastern bank (the so-called Bar-Lev Line) and of commando raids against the
forts and the roads through which they were supplied. The Egyptians enjoyed
overwhelming superiority in artillery, which caused serious Israeli casualties
on an almost daily basis. (I was wounded by a shell splinter in one of the
forts, codenamed Zahava Darom, on the southern edge of Small Bitter Lake.) To
offset this Egyptian advantage, in the summer of 1969 the Israelis sent in the
Israel Air Force (IAF) to hit the Egyptian artillery and frontline trench
system on the west bank of the Canal. By the end of the year the Egyptian
artillery had not been silenced, so in January 1970 the Israelis sent the IAF
and commandos to attack army bases and anti-aircraft missile emplacements deep
inside Egypt. Thousands of Egyptian soldiers and military construction workers
were killed and injured during the half-year air campaign. On two occasions,
bombs went astray or the targeting was mistaken and an Egyptian factory and an
elementary school, which was situated inside a military compound, were
destroyed, causing dozens of civilian deaths. Tyler summarizes the Israeli air
assault as follows: “The air force . . . [dropped] an estimated eight thousand
tons of bombs on military and civilian targets over these months . . .
U.S.-made F-4 Phantoms terrorized Egyptian cities.” In effect, Tyler tells his
readers that Israel indiscriminately killed Egyptians, deliberately targeting
civilians. In fact, during these months life went on as normal in Egypt’s
cities, since its government and citizenry knew full well that they were not
being targeted.
The War
of Attrition came to an end after the Soviets sent in thousands of their own
personnel to man anti-aircraft missile batteries and fighter squadrons to
counter the IAF. In one incident, Israeli Phantoms shot down five
Soviet-piloted MiG-21s. At this point, both sides called it quits. The
Egyptians were now thoroughly exhausted, and the Israelis feared an open-ended
clash with the Russians. Tyler, as usual, has the story all wrong. He tells us
that Soviet pilots “shot down half a dozen Israeli Phantoms.” This never
happened.
Tyler
replays the same atrocity card when describing Israel’s First Lebanon War,
against the PLO and Syrians in Lebanon in 1982, when he writes of “the
saturation bombing of the city [of Beirut].” Of course, there was never any
“saturation” bombing. Tyler himself writes of six hundred civilians killed; in
Dresden on February 13-15, 1945 Allied bombers killed an estimated twenty-five
thousand civilians—older estimates put the number at around one hundred
thousand or even higher. That’s saturation bombing. In 1982, the IAF very
carefully targeted PLO buildings and camps in and around Beirut, and while
hundreds of civilians no doubt died collaterally, some of them Lebanese rather
than Palestinian, this was not the result of deliberation or intention. That’s
what happens during wars in built-up areas—even when the more powerful side is
careful. Tyler’s description is agitprop, not history.
The
subtitle of Tyler’s book carries a clear message: Bloodthirsty Spartan generals
“run” Israel and that is why it has not achieved peace with its neighbors. The
actual history of the various post-1967 Israeli-Arab peace processes gives the
lie to this argument. IDF generals and ex-generals have actually loomed large
in these peace processes, both those which succeeded and those which didn’t.
Israel so
far has signed two peace treaties with Arab states, with Egypt in 1979 and with
Jordan in 1994, both of which are still in force (though how they will fare in
the coming years, with fiercely anti-Israeli and anti-Semitic Islamists on the
ascent in Arab politics, is anyone’s guess). Negotiations with Egypt were led
by Menachem Begin, a civilian who had headed the pre-state right-wing Irgun
Zvai Leumi (IZL). But the two men who pressed and persuaded him to make the
requisite concessions, including handing over to Egypt the whole of Sinai, were
his foreign minister Moshe Dayan and his defense minister Ezer Weizman, both of
whom had spent most of their lifetimes in the IDF. Dayan was a former chief of
general staff, and Weizman was a past commander of the Israel Air Force. The
peace treaty with Jordan, in which Israel ceded several hundred square
kilometers of territory in the south, was negotiated and signed by Yitzhak
Rabin, also a former IDF chief of general staff.
In the
late 1970s, the public drive to pressure Begin to make peace with Egypt was
spearheaded by the Peace Now movement. Tyler says, almost correctly, that
its importance “was that it arose in great measure from the military
establishment.” Most of the original signatories of the letter that launched
the movement were, in fact, IDF reserve officers. But of course this
contradicts Tyler’s own thesis that the Israeli military “can’t make peace.” He
seems not to notice.
After the
Sadat-Begin treaty, the Israeli public, which according to Tyler had by then
been tutored to “militarism” and expansionism by its leaders and generals for
decades, immediately endorsed the government’s conciliatory posture, and some
eighty percent of Israelis supported giving back all of Sinai to Egypt in
exchange for peace. How does Tyler explain this? It was, he writes, “a strong
affirmation that the martial impulse could be overpowered by a strategy based
on accommodation with the Arabs.” What this fluff means is anyone’s guess. But
what a more honest and plain-spoken commentator would have written would have
been something like this: The Israeli public, when persuaded that there was a
sincere, genuine Arab partner ready to make peace, would overcome its
security-driven hesitations and rush headlong to sign on.
The basic
problem with Fortress
Israel is that
Tyler dismisses, or is simply unaware of, the pan-Arab desire to rid the Middle
East of the Jewish state and its periodic efforts to do so. According to Tyler,
Israel alone is to blame for the wars, for the absence of peace, for the
hopelessness. Thus, he fails completely to deal with the 1948 War, about which
all acknowledge that the Arabs—first the Palestinians and then the neighboring
Arab states—were the aggressors; thus, he fails to come to grips with the very
real Arab threats to Israel in 1956 and 1967 and, indeed, ever since. He
pooh-poohs Saddam Hussein’s effort to achieve nuclear weaponry in the early
1980s and writes off Israel’s destruction of the Osirak nuclear reactor outside
Baghdad in 1981 as merely “a new phase of [Israeli] militarism.”
Indeed,
Tyler kicks off the book with a description of how, in 2011-2012, Israeli
agents “murdered” two top Iranian nuclear scientists on the streets of Tehran.
“The astonishing thing,” Tyler writes, “was that Iran might not have been
engaged in clandestine nuclear weapons development at all.” Rather, Israel’s
“highly provocative” killing of the scientists pushed Iran into pursuing, or
resuming the pursuit of, nuclear weaponry. All of this flies in the face of
what almost all the world’s intelligence agencies believe, which is that Iran
aims to build nuclear weapons and has been trying to do so for more than two
decades. A few years ago, the American intelligence community suggested that
the Iranians might have halted their nuclear weapons program in 2003, but it
has since concluded that Iran is still pursuing nuclear weapons. Israeli
intelligence has never believed that there was a real halt and continues to
believe that Iran’s theocratic, brutal government is bent on building nuclear
weapons as soon as possible. Israeli intelligence also takes the Iranian
leaders at their public word and believes that the Iranian regime seeks to
destroy Israel. A division of opinion exists among the Israeli intelligence
assessors about whether the Iranians, once they build an arsenal of such weapons,
will unleash them on Israel or whether they will use them to strategically
overawe and defeat Israel in some more subtle and staggered manner. In any
event, returning to Tyler and his thesis, according to press reports, it is the
IDF general staff and the heads of the security services who held back and are
currently holding back Netanyahu from launching a strike against Iran’s nuclear
facilities, which, once again, upends the author’s thesis.
Along the
way, Tyler also makes another argument: that the warmongering generals have
traditionally controlled their peace-prone civilian superiors. But here, too,
history ill-serves him. During the 1948 War, which Tyler generally avoids,
Ben-Gurion repeatedly overruled the army. In May 1948 he forced the generals
repeatedly to launch assaults on the Latrun Police Fort, against their better
judgment. Later in 1948 and again in March 1949 the army (meaning OC Southern
Front, General Yigal Allon) pleaded with Ben-Gurion to order the conquest of
the West Bank. Ben-Gurion turned Allon down flatly, though the IDF could easily
have managed the conquest, militarily speaking.
During
the early and mid-1950s, some IDF generals, including then-head of operations
and, from 1953, chief of general staff Dayan pressed prime ministers Ben-Gurion
and Moshe Sharett (1953-1955) to launch a war against Jordan to conquer the
West Bank in order to give Israel a more secure, natural frontier or to launch
wars of pre-emption and conquest against Egypt, Syria, and Lebanon. Ben-Gurion
occasionally toyed with these expansionist ideas, but he and Sharett always
held back, checking Dayan’s annexationist proposals. Only in 1956, after Nasser
acquired large amounts of advanced Soviet weaponry and launched massive
fedayeen attacks on the Israeli heartland did Ben-Gurion agree to launch a
pre-emptive war against Egypt.
A decade
later, in the summer of 1967, with Nasser provoking war, the IDF General Staff,
to a man, pushed and pressed their civilian master, Prime Minister Levi Eshkol,
to launch a pre-emptive strike against Egypt. But it took him three long,
nail-biting weeks to decide that international diplomacy had failed and would
continue to fail. In other words, from May 15 until June 4 Eshkol held off his
generals and the dogs of war. If Tyler’s thesis were right, Eshkol would have
crumpled before the military elite who have “always run the country” in
mid-May.
Prime Minister Golda Meir with Israeli troops in the Golan Heights
during the Yom Kippur War, November 1973. (Photo by Ron Frenkel, courtesy of
Government Press Office, Israel.)
In the
early 1970s then-Prime Minister Golda Meir scuppered peace or interim peace
initiatives by Moshe Dayan, her defense minister, and Egyptian President Anwar
Sadat that might well have resulted in averting the October War. Dayan at the
time was supported by two of the IDF’s top generals, Ariel Sharon and Israel
Tal, but opposed by chief of general staff Haim Bar-Lev. In 1981, when Begin
pressed the motion for the IAF attack on the Osirak reactor, he was opposed by
the head of IDF intelligence, the head of the Mossad, and the head of the
opposition, Labor Party chief Shimon Peres, who for years had headed the
country’s defense establishment (though he was no general). A decade later, in
1991, when Iraq’s Saddam Hussein launched 39 Scud missiles against Israel’s
cities, it was the hardline prime minister, Yitzhak Shamir, who faced down much
of the defense establishment and checked the IDF.
In other
words, the picture that emerges from the actual history is clearly one in which
there is complete subordination of the military to the Israeli civilian
authorities. Sometimes, the generals are the ones pushing for action and war
and the civilians are successfully putting on the brakes; at other times it is
the civilians who are gung ho, while the generals persuade their bosses to
exercise restraint. At all times, it is the prime minister and the cabinet who
have the final say.
Tyler’s
purpose in writing this book was not to offer his readers an honest history, it
was to blacken Israel’s image. Fortress
Israel is just
the latest in a spate of venomous perversions of the record that have appeared
in the past few years in the United States and Britain, all clearly designed to
subvert Israel’s standing in the world. Deliberately or not, such books and
articles are paving the way for a future abandonment of the Jewish state.
I am
reminded of the spate of books and articles that appeared in Western Europe in
1936 through1938 repudiating the legitimacy of the newly formed Czechoslovakia
before its sacrifice to the Nazi wolves. In 1934, the Conservative weekly Truth hailed
Czechoslovakia as “the sole successful experiment in liberal democracy that has
emerged from the post-War settlement.” By the end of 1936, The Observer was
writing it off as “a diplomatic creation with no sufficient national basis
either in geography or race.” By March 1938 The New
Statesman, in the past a great friend to central Europe’s only democracy,
was writing: “We should urge the Czechs to cede the German-speaking part of
their territory to Hitler without more ado.” Of course, as all understood, this
meant leaving Czechoslovakia defenseless. Hitler conquered the rump of the
country a few months later without a shot. The appeasement of the Arab-Islamist
world at Israel’s expense is in the air and Tyler is one of its (very, very)
minor harbingers.
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