Israel and the Death of Pan-Arabism. By Caroline Glick.
Israel and the death of pan-Arabism. By Caroline Glick. Jerusalem Post, January 10, 2014. Also at Real Clear World and CarolineGlick.com.
Glick:
The
so-called Arab Spring unleashed forces that have been dormant for a century.
Like their counterparts throughout the region, Israel’s Arabic-speaking
minorities are changing in profound ways. But our leaders fail to grasp the
implications of what is happening.
Consider
the Christian community.
Father
Gabriel Nadaf, a Greek Orthodox priest from Nazareth, has become the symbol of
this new period. Nadaf is the spiritual leader of an Israeli Christian movement
calling for Israeli Christian youth to serve in the IDF. He is responsible for
the 300 percent rise in Christian Arab enlistment in the IDF in the past year.
Nadaf
does not hide his goal or his motivation.
His
seeks the full integration of Israel’s 130,000 Christians into Israeli society.
He views military service as the key to that integration.
Nadaf
is motivated to act by the massive persecution of Christians throughout the
Arab world since the onset of the Arab revolutionary wave in December 2010.
As he
explained in a recent interview with Channel 1, it is “in light of what we see
happening to Christians in Arab countries, how they are slaughtered and
persecuted on a daily basis, killed and raped just because they are Christians.
Does
this happen in the State of Israel? No, it doesn’t.”
Shahdi
Halul, a reserve captain in the Paratroopers who works with Nadaf, declared,
“Every Christian in the State of Israel should join the army and defend this
country so it will exist forever. Because if, God forbid, the government is
overthrown here, as it was in other places, we will be the first to suffer.”
These
men, and their supporters, are the natural result of the most significant
revolutionary development of the so-called Arab Spring: the demise of Arab
nationalism.
As Ofir
Haivry, vice president of the Herzl Institute, explained in an important
article in the Mosaic online magazine, Arab nationalism was born in pan-Arabism
– an invention of European powers during World War I that sought to endow the
post-Ottoman Middle East with a new identity.
The
core of the new identity was the Arabic language. The religious, tribal, ethnic
and nationalist aspirations of the peoples of the Arabic- speaking region were
to be smothered and replaced by a new pan-Arab identity.
For the
Christians of the former Ottoman Empire, pan-Arabism was a welcome means of
getting out from under the jackboot of the Islamic Laws of Omar, which reduce
non-Muslims living under Muslim rule to the status of powerless dhimmis, who
survive at the pleasure of their Islamic rulers.
But now
pan-Arabism lies in ruins from North Africa to the Arabian Peninsula. The
people of the region have gone back to identifying themselves by tribe,
religion, ethnicity, and in the case of the Kurds and the Berbers, non-Arab
national identity. In this new era, Christians find themselves imperiled, with
few if any protectors or allies to be found.
As
Haivry notes, Israel’s central strategic challenge has always been contending
with pan-Arabism, which was invented at the same time that the nations of the
world embraced modern Zionism.
Since
its inception, pan-Arab leaders always saw Israel as the scapegoat on which to
pin their failure to deliver on pan-Arabism’s promise of global Arab power and
influence.
Israel
changed its position on pan-Arabism drastically over the years. Once, Israel
could see the dangers in pan-Arabism and Arab nationalism.
But
since 1993, says Haivri, Israel’s national strategy has been based on appeasing
the secular authoritarian pan-Arab leaders by offering land for peace to Syria
and the PLO.
Haivry
notes that Shimon Peres is the political godfather of Israel’s accommodationist
strategy, which is rooted in a mix of perceived powerlessness on the one hand,
and utopianism on the other.
The
sense of powerlessness owes to the conviction that Israel cannot influence its
environment.
That
the Arabs will never change. Israel’s neighbors will always see themselves
primarily as Arabs, and they will always want, more than anything else, Arab
states.
At the
same time, the accommodationists hold the utopian belief that Israeli
appeasement of Palestinian Arab nationalism will break through the wall of
pan-Arab rejection, end hatred for the Jewish state, and even lead the Arabs to
invite Israel to join the Arab League.
The
so-called Arab Spring has put paid to every one of the accommodationists’
beliefs. From Egypt to Tunisia to Iraq to Syria, Israel’s neighbors are
fighting each other as Sunnis, Shi’ites and Salafists, or as members of clans
and tribes, without a thought for the alleged primacy of their Arab identity.
What Israel’s Palestinian-state-obsessed Left has failed to realize is that
many of Israel’s neighbors do not share the pan-Arab scapegoating of the Jewish
state. So bribing the now largely irrelevant Arabs nationalists with another
Arab state may do little more than create the newest victim of the Arab
revolutions.
It is
because they see what is happening to their co-religionists in the
post-pan-Arab Middle East that more and more Israeli Christians realize they
will lead safer, more prosperous and more fulfilling lives as Christian
citizens in the Middle East’s only democracy than as pan-Arabs battling the
Zionist menace.
But old
habits die hard. Most of Israel’s elected Arab leaders owe their positions to
their embrace of pan-Arabism. This embrace has brought them the support of the
PLO and Europe, and since 1993, of the Israeli Left.
And so,
since he first appeared on the scene, Father Nadaf’s life has been constantly
threatened.
Everyone
from Arab members of Knesset to the Communist head of the Greek Orthodox
Council has incited against him, calling him and his followers traitors to the
Palestinian Arab nation.
He also
threatens the Israeli Left. For its view of Israel’s strategic powerlessness
and consequent need to appease its neighbors to remain relevant, the pan-Arab
forces in the Arab world must be perceived as still dominant, even invincible.
And so,
the Israeli Left refuses to consider the larger strategic implications of the
regional upheaval from which Nadaf’s initiative emerged.
Even
worse, the official policy of the Netanyahu government appears based on this
irrelevant Leftist view of the region. This is the implication of Foreign
Minister Avigdor Liberman’s defeatist speech at the Foreign Ministry’s annual
conference of ambassadors on Sunday.
Liberman’s
speech has been rightly viewed as the supposedly right-wing politician’s formal
break with his ideological camp and his embrace of the Left. In his remarks
Liberman let it be known, that like the Left, he now bases his positions on a
complete denial or avoidance of reality.
For
this, he was congratulated for his “maturity” by Peres who was sitting on the
stage with him.
In his
speech, Liberman acknowledged that the Obama administration’s peace plan for
Israel and the Palestinians is horrible for Israel. But, he said, it is better
than the European Union’s peace plan.
Never
considering the possibility of saying no to both, Liberman said he thinks we
should accept the bad American deal. His only condition is that he insists that
the PLO accept towns in the Galilee and their 300,000 Israeli Arab residents.
Liberman’s
surrender of the Galilee is a key component to his population swap plan. Under
his plan, Israel would retain control over the fraction of Judea and Samaria in
which large numbers of Israeli Jews live, in exchange for the area of the
Galilee that is home to 300,000 Israeli Arabs. This plan has reportedly been
presented to US Secretary of State John Kerry as an official Israeli position.
In
other words, the Netanyahu government has failed to recognize the implications
of the death of pan-Arabism. In maintaining their slavish devotion to the
two-state formula, and viewing the Arabs in the Galilee, Judea, Samaria,
Jerusalem and surrounding states as an impenetrable bloc, they are placing
Israel’s future in the hands of actors who have already disappeared or will soon
disappear. Instead of building alliances with non-Jewish citizens of Israel,
such as Druse and Christians, who are more than happy to defend Israel against
Islamists and other regional fanatics, the Netanyahu government insists on
placing the state’s future in the hands of pan-Arabs whose grip on power is
slipping and who would never willingly coexist with Israel anyway.
Nadaf
and his followers respond to the allegation – uttered by MKs like Haneen Zoabi
and Basel Ghattas, among others – that they are traitors to the Palestinian
Arab nation, with contempt.
“When
someone tells me, ‘We’re all Arabs,’ I tell him, ‘No, we’re not all Arabs.
You’re an Arab. I’m not,’” Halul told Channel 1.
Samer
Jozin, whose daughter Jennifer opted for IDF service instead of medical school,
agrees.
“Telling
me I’m a Palestinian is a curse. I’m, thank God, an Israeli Christian and proud
of it. And I thank God I was born in the Land of Israel,” he said.
The
message couldn’t be clearer. We are basing our national strategy on a world
that no longer exists.
Today
our longtime allies the Kurds have carved out virtually independent states for
themselves in Iraq and Syria.
Christians
throughout the region are on the run. The Druse of Syria and Lebanon are
exposed, without protection, and looking for help.
As for
the Muslims, as Haivry notes, they are fragmented along sectarian and political
lines, and at war with one another in battlefields throughout the region. While
so engaged, they have little time to devote to blaming Israel for their
failures.
This
state of affairs has implications for Israel’s Arab Muslim minority. None of
the regional warring Muslim camps are natural homes for Israel’s Muslim
community. A community that has lived in an open, free society for 65 years
does not naturally turn to Salafism. Israel is a much easier fit for most
Israeli Muslims.
At a
minimum, no one is better off if Israel forces them to cast their lot with any
of the warring factions in Syria or Lebanon, or the increasingly irrelevant
forces in the Palestinian Authority.
There
may very well be hundreds of Muslim versions of Father Nadaf just waiting for a
signal from our government that we want them to lead their community into our
society.
The
post-pan-Arab Middle East exposes the truth that has been obscured for a
century. The Jews and their Jewish state are a natural component of our diverse
neighborhood, just like the Kurds, the Christians, the Druse, the various
Muslim sects, and the Arabs. The demise of pan-Arabism is our great
opportunity, at home and regionally, to build the alliances we need to survive
and prosper. But so long as our leaders insist on clinging to the now
irrelevant dream of appeasing the defunct pan-Arabists, we will lose these
opportunities and convince our allies that we are treacherous, disloyal and
temporary.