Defending Israel: A Strategic Plan for Peace and Security
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Israel is a tiny country. From tip to toe, it stretches 260 miles long but is only 60 miles at its widest point. Since the days of the British mandate, the question of "defensible borders" for the Jewish state has always been problematic. Yet considering the larger picture of what has happened in the Middle East over the last 25 years -- the peace treaties with Egypt and Jordan, the weakening of Syria as a result of the collapse of the USSR, the smashing of Iraq by the U.S. -- Israel is, militarily speaking, stronger than ever before. The greatest remaining threats are terrorism and guerilla warfare; and those, this book argues, are best dealt with territorial concessions. Martin van Creveld's Defending Israel is a compact, incisive study that is certain to draw attention.
Martin van Creveld
Martin van Creveld was born in the Netherlands in 1946 and has lived in Israel from 1950. Having studied in Jerusalem and London, since 1971 he has been on the faculty of the History Department, the Hebrew University, Jerusalem. A specialist in military history and strategy, he is the author of 20 books, including The Land of Blood and Honey and Defending Israel, and has appeared regularly on CBS, CNN and the BBC.
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Defending Israel - Martin van Creveld
INTRODUCTION
Starting around the turn of the twentieth century, when some of the earliest Zionist immigrants encountered opposition in their attempt to reclaim the Land of Israel, the Arab-Israeli conflict has now lasted for about a hundred years. Partly because the Middle East belonged to the Ottoman Empire, widely recognized as the Sick Man of Europe, and partly owing to the strategic and economic importance of the region, other powers—Britain, France, Germany, and, to a lesser extent, Austria-Hungary and Russia—were involved from the start. This was carried to the point where, in 1917–1918, Britain and France took over from Turkey, and from then on it was they who ruled the region; still, until 1948, the year that marked the creation of the State of Israel, the conflict remained localized. One reason for this was that both Jews and Arabs were far too weak and insignificant for their quarrels to disturb the peace of the world. Neither World War I nor World War II had its origins in the Middle East or was centered in it. Compared to those momentous events, whatever took place there was a sideshow.
In 1948–1973 the conflict escalated.¹ The periodic small-scale, mutual butchery that had characterized the Land of Israel during the 1920s and 1930s was followed by several major interstate wars, causing the country to be partitioned. In 1948 alone as many as 700,000 people were driven from their homes, whereas the 1967 War probably added another 250,000. Millions of others came to live under an occupation regime which, whatever the original intentions that led to it, became so prolonged as to appear permanent. Perhaps worst of all, a situation was repeatedly created whereby the most important global powers of the time, the U.S.A. and the U.S.S.R., confronted each other on behalf of their respective clients. Both made warlike noises, one sent its own uniformed personnel to assist the belligerents, and one went so far as to put its nuclear forces on alert; at other times, afraid that the flames might consume them both, they recoiled and tried to pour water on them.
Though the years since 1982 have not witnessed any large-scale military operations in the region, the conflict, particularly that part of it which involves Israel and the Palestinians, continues to fester. To be sure, the global crisis which was predicted by Samuel Huntington and reached its (temporary?) climax in the attacks on the Twin Towers and the Pentagon, and has pitted parts of the West against much of the Arab and Islamic world, is not just a by-product of the Palestinian-Israeli conflict. Still, that conflict does form an important element in the larger clash of civilizations.² Should it be resolved or at least de-escalated, then surely the latter will lose some of its sting.
For Israel itself, the writing is on the wall. In strictly military terms it has won every conventional war it fought against its larger neighbors, beating them time and again, inflicting more casualties than it took, and seizing additional territory until most of its adversaries more or less gave up the struggle and some concluded peace. To the extent that its victories resulted in the occupation of inhabited districts, however, they only caused it to become bogged down in an endless counterinsurgency campaign against the much weaker Palestinians; as Napoleon used to say of Spain, the conflict has turned into a running ulcer. Israel’s morale is being undermined, its government is becoming less effective as lawlessness and corruption spread,³ and civilian control over the military is weakening as several successive chiefs of staff have made direct appeals to public opinion.⁴ Economically speaking the situation is equally bleak. Israel’s GDP has begun to decline, causing its economic position to worsen both in comparison with some Arab countries and, a fortiori, other developed ones; this is the first time in twenty years that has happened. With unemployment standing at 12 percent, immigration has all but ceased.⁵ Last, but not least, human losses are mounting. The number of dead and wounded is already larger than that suffered in the June 1967 War that led to the occupation in the first place. To put the matter into perspective, 2,800 people were killed in the events of 9-11, the largest act of terrorism ever. Compared to the size of the population, though, this is only one twelfth as many as Israel has lost to Palestinian terrorism since the current Uprising began in September 2000.
From time to time there is talk of a political solution called the Mitchell Plan, or the Tennet Plan, or the Road Map, or some such. Each time this happens a whole series of international luminaries show up in the Middle East. A few, primarily American ones, have real clout, but the majority do not. They shake hands all around, show themselves in front of as many cameras as possible, do their best to act as honest brokers in an all but hopeless situation, and, if the countries they represent are rich, promise some modest assistance as well. So far, with each plan, it has only been a matter of time before a spate of suicide bombings (by some Palestinian terrorist organization) and/or targeted killings
(by the Israelis) makes sure they will fail. It is as if leaders on both sides are determined to kill enough people on the other to kindle the flames; talks lasting for months can be, and often are, derailed by an incident measured in seconds.
As a result, the best the present Israeli chief of staff, General Moshe Ya’alon, can promise, is that every Palestinian who commits a terrorist act will be punished either sooner or later⁶—a policy which, so far, has deterred few, if any, of them. Worse still, even if the Israel Defense Force (IDF) wins
the conflict in some limited sense, hostilities will only be suspended until the other side recovers and feels strong enough to resume them. The very fact that the occupation continues will make sure that a fresh outbreak will take place every few years; meanwhile, since the rate of natural increase in the Territories is one of the highest in the world, time is working against Israel.
Most worrying of all is a deepening cleavage between Right and Left that, if left to develop, may threaten Israeli society itself with dissolution. Already, the leaders of a country long known for its family-like informality, move around in armored cars and under heavy escort. They take all kinds of evasive action, directed as much against Jewish terrorists as against Arab ones. The security-related queues that form each time a major figure such as Shimon Peres makes a public appearance must be seen to be believed; no sooner did Ariel Sharon start talking of returning some settlements in the summer of 2003 than threats on his life multiplied many times. There is nothing insignificant about such threats. In the words of a former minister of defense, Benjamin Ben Eliezer, the next bullet through a prime minister’s spine may kill not just him but the country itself.
If Israel is lucky, then the end of the occupation will be brought about by negotiation and agreement, and will be followed by the establishment of a cohesive Palestinian State willing to live in peace and capable of maintaining order within its borders. If, as in view of past experience is perhaps more likely, it is not, then the withdrawal may well have to be carried out unilaterally and the situation on the other side be damned. This, after all, is what David Ben Gurion, himself an outstanding authority on defense, said should be done immediately after the victorious 1967 War; and what Prime Minister Ehud Barak, overriding the objections of many of his advisers, did in Lebanon in May 2000. Even if the most favorable scenario comes to pass, though, it will be a long time before passions cool down and the Middle East becomes a place where war can be ruled out. Until that happens, Israel will still have to look after its defense against the worst that the Palestinians, the neighboring hostile Middle Eastern States (including, for good measure, such under the horizon
enemies as Iran and Libya) or all of these combined can do. The purpose of the present study is to ask what such a defense might look like; and, indeed, whether it is possible at all.
In case the plan here outlined is not followed, then Israelis and Palestinians may well be doomed to fight each other forever, with all the attendant human, social, and economic consequences—not to mention the possible repercussions for the rest of the Middle East and, indeed, the world at large. If it is followed, though, then the struggle, though it may not come to an end, will almost certainly de-escalate. Israel will finally be relieved of a self-imposed burden under which it has been laboring for more years than the majority of its citizens can even remember. A notable feature of Israel has always been its formidable human energies. Cutting the chain that binds the fast, elegant, Israeli frigate off the leaking, barely seaworthy, Palestinian barge will enable it to focus those energies on a single task, i.e. developing the country. The period between 1993 and 2000, when the illusion of a coming peace caused the Israeli economy to double and for a time made the shekel into the strongest currency on earth, showed what could be done; and even that was just a foretaste of what the future may bring.
The outline of this brief book is as follows. Providing the background, chapter 1 examines the way Israel used to look after its security before it fought, and won, the 1967 War. Chapter 2 asks how the territorial gains made in that War affected Israel’s security situation and how this spectacular victory paradoxically gave rise to the doctrine of defensible borders.
Chapter 3 looks at the grand strategic equation in the Middle East as it affects Israel’s ability to defend itself, as well as the way in which a withdrawal from the Territories might affect that equation and that ability. Chapter 4 deals with defense against terrorism and guerrilla warfare, chapter 5 with defense against conventional war, and chapter 6 with defense against long-range air and surface-to-surface missile attack, including such as may carry weapons of mass destruction. Chapter 7 takes a brief look at some nonmilitary, nonstrategic, factors that affect Israel’s defense. Finally, chapter 8 comprises my conclusions.
Since much of the present volume deals with the future rather than the past, and since the IDF is not in the habit of permitting outsiders to look at its future plans, my research has been limited almost entirely to published sources. I have grabbed them left and right, using whatever I thought might shed light on the question at hand. Some of my arguments were unwittingly provided by right-wing extremists in Israel and abroad who, asked just what defensible borders
meant and why Israel needed them, turned out to have either no answer at all or one that was based on the situation as it was over thirty years ago. Though I have not had the benefit of receiving any official assistance from the IDF,⁷ I did have the opportunity to talk things over with some of its members. The most important of them was Colonel (ret.) Dr. Shmuel Gordon. Gordon is a one-time commander of a squadron of F-16s, a military consultant, and a former student of mine; having spent years studying the subject, he probably knows more about the Revolution in Military Affairs (RMA) than any other Israeli does. Of the rest, some agreed with what I had to say, others not. To all of them, I am grateful.
Before ending this introduction, I want to thank the Axel and Margaret Axson Johnson Foundation, Stockholm, for providing financial aid, without which the writing of this book would have been impossible. Thanks are also due—once again—to Zeev Elron and Dvora Lewy. The former has gone over the manuscript with his usual meticulous eye, telling me how wrong I was and correcting for errors; if there are any left, it is my fault rather than his. The latter has been my partner in life during the last twenty years. Normally her contribution to my work consists of everything that only a good marriage can provide, which is very much indeed. This time, though, she gave me still more; namely, the very idea of putting the question at hand and trying to answer it. Since the idea underlying this study was originally hers, and since, in my view, our common future and that of our children depends on its conclusions being adopted, it is only fit that I put my gratitude to her on record.
ONE
ISRAELI DEFENSE BEFORE 1967
Considering the alleged indefensibility
of Israel’s pre-1967 borders, how did the State defend itself during the first nineteen years of its existence when it was much weaker than it is today? To answer this question, let us start by looking at some maps published at the time. Except on the west, where it borders the Mediterranean, Israel was surrounded by enemies on all sides. So long were its land frontiers, and so small the territory they enclosed, that there was hardly any spot more than thirty miles from the nearest hostile border. From the Jordanian-held town of Kalkilya to the shore the distance was only ten miles; a drawing by Israel’s best-known cartoonist took advantage of the twists and turns in the border to present it in the form of an angry snake, ready to strike. As legend had it, tourists journeying from Haifa to Tel Aviv and having a sausage in their possession were advised to hold it from north to south to prevent the Arabs from slicing off a part when they passed the narrowest point. Seriously, an armored force stationed in the foothills of the West Bank and seeking to reach the coast would have been able to do so in less than an hour, effectively cutting the country in half.
Then as now, Israel’s heartland was greater Tel Aviv, which held about one quarter of the entire population and also comprised the economic heartland. Yet it was threatened by Egyptian troops stationed in the Gaza Strip, perhaps forty miles to the south, as well as Jordanian ones standing fewer than twenty miles to the east. During the 1967 War its northern neighborhoods came under the latter’s artillery fire, albeit most of the shells fell harmlessly into the sea. Haifa, the main and, until the 1960s, only Mediterranean port and an important industrial center, was only about twenty-five miles from the Jordanian border and at about an equal distance from the Lebanese one. The position of the port of Eilat, which served as Israel’s only artery to south and east Asia (violating the 1949 Armistice Agreements, the Egyptians did not permit Israeli shipping, or even foreign ships carrying loads destined for Israel, to pass the Suez Canal) was even more difficult. It was, and still is, the world’s only city that is located where the borders of four countries (Israel, Egypt, Jordan, and Saudi Arabia) meet. To cut it off, all the Egyptians had to do was move their forces some ten miles to the east.
Perhaps worst of all was the position of the capital, West Jerusalem. Reflecting the outcome of the 1948 War, it was located at the apex of a triangle jutting into Jordanian territory and surrounded on three sides. The highest point of all, Mount Nebi Samuel, was also in Jordanian hands. In 1948 it had served to rain down artillery shells on the city; several Israeli attempts to capture it had failed. Of the roads leading into the capital only one was really suitable for modern traffic, and that one ran so close to the border that smugglers from both sides sometimes met right besides it. The railroad that linked the city to Tel Aviv, indeed, was the border; occasionally it was blocked as Arab kids from neighboring villages put stones on the tracks. During the 1948 War both those arteries had been closed for a period of about three months, which led to the loss of the old Jewish quarter—it was taken by the Jordanians on 28 May—and brought the city close to starvation. Both in the center, where the Jordanians overlooked the coastal plain, and in the north of the country, where the Syrians occupied the dominating Golan Heights and used them as a base for harassing the Israeli settlements in the Jordan Valley, it was Israel’s enemies who occupied the high ground. They thus enjoyed all the advantages that doing so entails. When Israeli Foreign Minister Abba Eban once spoke of Auschwitz borders,
he had a point, though he was no military expert and he later modified that statement.
And yet, the difficulties were not insuperable. In part, this was because the borders, though they were completely without logic and though they cut right across countless streams, valleys, and transportation arteries, turned out not to constitute a serious obstacle to the country’s development. The latter proceeded as if those borders, and with them the hostile states on the other sides, did not exist; proof, if proof were needed, that it is primarily human ingenuity and not geography that makes a society tick.¹ Nor were the military problems that these borders created nearly as bad as they seemed at first sight. To quote a wise saying by Moshe Dayan, the road from Tel Aviv to Damascus was no longer than the one which led from Damascus to Tel Aviv; in fact, even taking the pre-1967 border as one’s starting point, it was considerably shorter. Take the Gaza Strip. To anyone familiar with the map the Strip, some twenty-five miles long and less than seven miles wide in most places, looks like a finger pointing straight at Tel Aviv. During the 1948 War it was occupied by the Egyptian Army, which, having overrun the few Jewish settlements in the area, turned it into a forward base and used it to advance to within twenty-five or so miles of that city. In fact, however, since there are no topographical obstacles of any kind, the finger is hopelessly exposed to an invasion from two directions. It is also narrow enough so that its entire length can be brought under artillery bombardment both from the land and the