General James Mattis Warns the Israeli Right. By Jeffrey Goldberg.
An American General Warns the Israeli Right. By Jeffrey Goldberg. Bloomberg, July 25, 2013.
Among the Settlers. By Jeffrey Goldberg. The New Yorker, May 31, 2004. NJBR, January 5, 2013.
Top U.S. General: We Pay a Price for Backing Israel. By J.J. Goldberg. The Jewish Daily Forward, July 25, 2013.
CENTCOM Review: Turmoil in the Mideast and Southwest Asia. Video. AspenInstitute, July 20, 2013. YouTube. Mattis’s comments on the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict start at 41:22, and he returns to the subject in response to an
audience question at 47:28.
Jeffrey Goldberg:
Last
weekend, Marine Corps General James Mattis, the recently retired leader of U.S.
Central Command and a man known inside the White House for his sharp opinions
(which is one reason he’s no longer leading Central Command) issued a very
sharp opinion about Israel’s future.
Speaking
at a security conference in Aspen, Colorado, Mattis warned Israel that time was
running out for it to reverse its West Bank settlement project.
“We
have got to find a way to make the two-state solution that Democrat and
Republican administrations have supported, we’ve got to get there,” he said.
“And the chances for it, as the king of Jordan has pointed out, are starting to
ebb because of the settlements and where they’re at, are going to make it
impossible to maintain the two-state option.”
After
blaming the lack of peace squarely on the settlements, he went a step further,
and raised the incendiary question of apartheid: “If I’m Jerusalem and I put
500 Jewish settlers out here to the east and there’s 10,000 Arab settlers in
here, if we draw the border to include them, either it ceases to be a Jewish
state or you say the Arabs don’t get to vote – apartheid. That didn’t work too
well the last time I saw that practiced in a country.”
Mattis
has homed in on the precise issue that alienates liberal-minded Americans and
Israelis: the West Bank double standard. Although Israel, within its 1967
borders, is a democracy in which Arabs have legal and voting rights, the West
Bank is a two-tiered political entity: Jewish settlers in Hebron have the
rights of Israeli citizens, but their Arab neighbors – people who sometimes
live mere yards away – are under military occupation, without the same rights.
This is a politically and morally untenable arrangement, and Mattis was right
to call it out.
He was
wrong to blame the lack of peace solely on Israel – the Palestinians have
rejected one compromise offer after another, and the Gaza Strip, which would
make up about half the future Palestinian state, is under the control of Hamas,
which seeks Israel’s elimination – but he isn’t wrong to identify the
settlements as an enormous impediment to compromise.
Mattis
is also conveying conventional Pentagon wisdom, and this is why the settlers,
and their advocates in the cabinet of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, ought
to be paying close attention, because they can’t forever stand against the
opinions of men like Mattis (who, by the way, couldn’t be considered “anti-Israel”
by any stretch of the imagination).
Mattis
went on to make another assertion that Netanyahu’s cabinet ought to heed: “I
paid a military security price every day as the commander of Centcom because
the Americans were seen as biased in support of Israel and that moderates all
the moderate Arabs who want to be with us, because they can’t come out publicly
in support of people who don’t show respect for the Arab Palestinians.” He went
on to say that John Kerry, the U.S. secretary of state who’s trying to restart
peace talks, “is right on target with what he’s doing. And I just hope the
protagonists want peace and a two-state solution as much as he does.”
Arab
rulers who complain about U.S. support for Israel to generals like Mattis are
playing their American counterparts a bit: It’s very hard to imagine the Saudis
and the Emiratis and the Kuwaitis and the Jordanians not taking American help –
or not providing bases to the U.S. – because they’re upset by settlements. The
Arabs uniformly fear and loathe Iran more than they fear and loathe Israel.
Still, it’s true that American military commanders wouldn’t have to sit through
quite so many lectures about Palestinian rights if there was movement on the
peace process. It’s also true that men like Mattis make their own weather –
that is, whether he’s right or wrong, this is what he believes, and it would be
foolish for the Israelis, a dependent power, to ignore the feelings of powerful
American generals.
What
Israeli army generals know – and what many of their political leaders don’t
seem to recognize – is that Mattis’s views are commonplace in the American
defense establishment. The Israeli right can only ignore this reality for so
long without doing its country permanent damage.
General James Mattis, 2005:
Don’t
patronize the enemy. They mean business. They mean every word they say. They’re
killing us now. Their will is not broken, They mean it. . . . If they’re there,
your job is to kill them all. I did not want to have them just retreat and have
to fight them all over again.