A Bush-Sharon Doctrine
Arnaud de Borchgrave
UPI Editor at Large
Wednesday, Feb. 12, 2003
WASHINGTON, Feb. 10 (UPI) Israel is asking the United States for $4
billion in additional military assistance in addition, that is, to the
just under $3 billion a year a year it receives automatically plus $8
billion in commercial-loan guarantees.
The $12 billion question about the
$15 billion grant-and-loan package is "What is the quid pro quo?" Is it tied
to a permanent solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conundrum? The beginning
of a dismantlement of 145 Israeli settlements in Gaza and the West Bank? A
freeze on new settlements? A timetable, however vague, for the establishment
of a Palestinian state within five years?
None of the above. The strategic objectives of the United States and
Israel in the Middle East have gradually merged into a now cohesive
Bush-Sharon Doctrine. But this gets lost in the deafening cacophony of
talking heads playing armchair generals in the coming war to change regimes
in Baghdad.
The Washington Post's Bob Kaiser finally broke through the sound
barrier to document (Feb. 9) what has long been reported in encrypted
diplomatic e-mails from foreign embassies to dozens of foreign governments:
Washington's "Likudniks" Ariel Sharon's powerful backers in the Bush
administration have been in charge of U.S. policy in the Middle East
since president Bush was sworn into office.
In alliance with Evangelical Christians, these policy-makers include
some of the most powerful players in the Bush administration. The course
they plotted for Mr. Bush began with benign neglect of the Mideast peace
process as Intifada II escalated. Sept. 11, 2001, provided the impulse for a
military campaign to consign Saddam Hussein to the dustbin of history.
Sharon provided the geopolitical ammo by convincing Bush that the war on
Palestinian terrorism was identical to the global war on terror. Next came a
campaign to convince U.S. public opinion that Saddam Hussein and Osama bin
Laden were allies in their war against America.
An alleged secret meeting in
Prague in April 2001 between Mohamed Atta the lead suicide bomber on
9/11 and an Iraqi intelligence agent got the ball rolling. Since then
stories about the Saddam-al Qaeda nexus have become a cottage industry.
But this was barely step one in the Bush-Sharon Doctrine. The strategic
objective is the antithesis of Middle Eastern stability. The destabilization
of "despotic regimes" comes next. In the Arab bowling alley, one ball aimed
at Saddam is designed to achieve a 10-strike that would discombobulate
authoritarian and/or despotic regimes in Iran, Syria, Saudi Arabia and the
other Gulf Emirates and Sheikhdoms.
The ultimate phase would see Israel surrounded by democratic regimes
that would provide 5 million Israelis soon to be surrounded by 300
million Arabs with peace and security for at least a generation. A
meritorious plan if it achieves all its objectives.
Close U.S. allies Jordan and Turkey were to form an axis along with
Israel to weaken and "roll back" Syria. Turkey was the first Middle Eastern
state to recognize Israel in 1949. In 1996, the two countries also signed a
strategic partnership that allows the Israeli air force to train in Turkish
air space.
The roots of the overall strategy can be traced to a paper published in
1996 by the Institute for Advanced Strategic and Political Studies, an
Israeli think tank. The document was titled "A Clean Break: A New Strategy
for Securing the Realm" and was designed as a political blueprint for the
incoming government of Binyamin Netanyahu, a super hawk in the Israeli
political aviary.
The complete break with the past was to be a new strategy
"based on an entirely new intellectual foundation, one that restores
strategic initiative and provides the nation the room to engage every
possible energy on rebuilding Zionism."
Israel, according to the 1996 paper, would "shape its strategic
environment," beginning with the removal of Saddam Hussein and the
restoration of the Hashemite monarchy in Baghdad. The Iraqi monarchy was
overthrown in a military coup in 1958 when young King Faisal, a cousin of
Jordan's late King Hussein, was assassinated.
Last year, Jordan's former Crown Prince Hassan shocked King Abdullah by
failing to inform him he was journeying to London to attend a conference of
exiled dissident Iraqi officers. Hassan speaks Hebrew and is known to be
bitter over his removal as Crown Prince by his brother Hussein a few days
before the king lost his battle to cancer.
The rebuilding of Zionism, as the paper urged, must at the same time
abandon any thought of trading land for peace with the Arabs, which it
described as "cultural, economic, political, diplomatic and military
retreat."
The strategic roadmap which has been followed faithfully thus far by
both Netanyahu and his successor Sharon called for the abandonment of
the Oslo accords "under which Israel has no obligations if the PLO does not
fulfill its obligations." Yasser Arafat blundered by obliging Israel.
"Our claim to the land [of the West Bank] to which we have clung for
2,000 years is legitimate and noble," the paper continued. "Only the
unconditional acceptance by Arabs of our rights, especially in their
territorial dimension, is a solid basis for the future."
For the strategy to succeed, the paper suggested, Israel would have to
win broad American support for these new policies. And to ensure support in
Washington, Netanyahu was advised to use "language familiar to the Americans
by tapping into themes of past U.S. administrations during the Cold War,
which apply as well to Israel."
Prominent American opinion makers who are now senior members of the Bush
administration participated in the discussions and the drafting that led to
this 1996 blueprint. Prime Minister Sharon has flown to Washington seven
times in two years to meet with Bush, more frequently than any other head of
state or government.
Sharon quickly convinced a receptive and deeply religious Bush that
Palestinian terrorism, al Qaeda and Saddam Hussein's weapons of mass
destruction were part of a three-pronged offensive against the
Judeo-Christian civilization.
The destabilization part of the strategy appears to be working. The Arab
League seems to have reached a dead end. And it has no idea how to turn
around.
Arabs states are the only ones in the world with living standards
that have declined steadily for the past two decades. Even the richest
one Saudi Arabia has fallen from per capita incomes of some $20,000
plus to $7,000 since 1983. Saudi royals know they have to open up their
private fiefdom to participatory democracy.
Eight other Arab states are
committed to political pluralism and market economies. How to keep
politico-religious extremists from winning elections is now their common
problem.
Copyright 2003 by United Press International.
All rights reserved.
Read more on this subject in related Hot Topics:
George W. Bush
Israel
Middle East
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