By Caroline B. Glick
Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak had his first reported telephone
conversation with his Iranian counterpart President Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad. Their conversation was a sign of the rising intimacy in
Egyptian-Iranian relations in the wake of November's US National
Intelligence Estimate on Iran's nuclear weapons program. According to
media reports, the two men discussed the situation in Gaza.
Their conversation brought immediate results. Wednesday Mubarak allowed
Hamas to take control of the international border between Egypt and
Gaza. Hundreds of thousands of Gazans streamed across the border.
Mubarak maintained his faith with Ahmadinejad even after the US
Wednesday afternoon began demanding that he reassert Egyptian control
over the border. Wednesday evening Mubarak said that the border will
remain open.
Wednesday's border takeover by Hamas was but the latest escalation of
the Palestinian campaign for control over the international border.
This campaign has been ongoing since Israel withdrew in 2005 and was
sharply escalated after Hamas seized control over Gaza last June.
Many claim that Hamas's aim of attaching Gaza to the rest of the Arab
world by opening its border with Egypt is good for Israel because it
allows Israel to disengage completely from Gaza. And there is some
truth to this claim. With an open border with Egypt, Gazans will be far
less dependent on Israel. To a degree this may help Israel to ease
international pressure on it to continue to support Gaza by providing
its Hamas-supporting population with electricity, fuel, food and
employment opportunities.
But that is not the main significance of the move. Supported and
directed by Iran and Syria, Hamas is uninterested in maintaining ties
with Israel. Its short term goals are to end its diplomatic isolation
in the West, and to force Fatah to accept its control over Gaza and
reinstate open negotiations towards the reestablishment of a unity
government between Fatah and Hamas.
Its medium term goals involve extending its control over Gaza to Judea
and Samaria and then unifying the west and east banks of the Jordan
River by overwhelming the border with Jordan in much the same way it
took control over the border with Gaza.
For its part, in the lead-up to the Hamas border takeover on Wednesday
and in its aftermath, Fatah has shown itself to be wholly incapable of
influencing events either in Gaza or in Judea and Samaria. It has been
unable, despite its massive financial resources, to in any way degrade
Hamas's popularity in Gaza. It has been unable to keep its own forces
in Gaza from integrating with Hamas. It has been unable to stem Hamas's
rising popularity in Judea and Samaria.
Hamas's border takeover was synchronized to take place at the same time
as Hamas leaders were meeting with their Palestinian and Lebanese
jihadist counterparts at an anti-peace conference in Damascus. The
conference, held under Syrian and Iranian sponsorship was supposed to
be held at the same time as US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice's
peace conference at Annapolis. But since the State Department decided
to invite Syria to attend that conference, Damascus decided to delay
its anti-peace conference until this week. Fatah leader Mahmoud Abbas
went to Syria in recent weeks to beg Syrian President Bashar Assad to
cancel the conclave, organized to demonstrate Fatah's weakness and
unpopularity, but his appeals failed.
In this regard, it also bears noting that Fatah's response to the
erosion of its power has been to escalate its support for jihad. Its
television and radio broadcasts are indistinguishable from Hamas's. Its
security forces in Judea and Samaria actively engage in terrorism
against Israel. Its residual forces in Gaza are full partners in the
rocket and mortar attacks on the Western Negev.
The strategic significance of Hamas's border war clearly escaped the
attention of Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni. In her address before the
Herzliya Conference on Tuesday, Livni spoke as if Hamas can simply be
wished away. The day before Egypt surrendered control over its border
to Hamas, Livni claimed that in the Arab world, "Nobody wants to see
Hamas succeed."
Livni then went on to justify the negotiations she is holding with
Fatah's Ahmed Qurei towards and Israeli handover of Judea, Samaria and
Jerusalem claiming that by negotiating massive Israeli land giveaways
she is preventing the Palestinian conflict with Israel from turning
into a religious conflict. She also claimed separately that Israel's
conflict with Iran is not related to its conflict with the
Palestinians.
All of Livni's statements are demonstrably false. Discussing the
surrender of Judea, Samaria and Jerusalem with Fatah does not weaken
Hamas. It strengthens Hamas. Either the discussions will succeed, in
which case Hamas will seize control over Judea, Samaria and Jerusalem
from Fatah the minute that Israel withdraws, or the talks will fail in
which case Hamas will say it just goes to show that there is nothing to
talk with Israel about. It will then reunify its forces with Fatah and
increase its subversion of Israel's Arab citizens. In all cases, Hamas,
with its clear vision of Israel replaced by an Islamic caliphate, comes
out the winner.
Livni's assertion that Iran is unconnected to the Palestinians is
similarly ridiculous. Livni was a member of Ariel Sharon's government
in January 2002 when Israeli naval commandos seized the Iranian cargo
ship *Karine A* in the Red Sea. That was a ship purchased by Fatah,
filled with Iranian weapons en route to Fatah forces. It was commanded
by Fatah officers and manned by Fatah sailors. Livni was there when the
decision was made to use Fatah's clear connections to Iran as a reason
for not conducting negotiations with the group.
And of course, Iran today is Hamas's primary sponsor. And its
sponsorship of Hamas is facilitating Iran's bid to secure Arab support
for its war against Israel and the US. So Livni's contention that Iran
is unrelated to the Palestinians is both ridiculous and dangerous.
Livni's championing of Fatah and continued Israeli territorial
surrenders to the Palestinians is identical to her boss Ehud Olmert's.
So too, her dismissive treatment of the threat arising from Hamas's
continued control over Gaza, like her dismissive treatment of
Hizbullah's reinforcement in Lebanon and the importance of US's retreat
from strategic rationality towards Iran in the wake of the NIE, is no
different from Olmert's.
It is important to note this fact because a week before the publication
of the Winograd Commission's final report on the Second Lebanon War,
Olmert's blood is in the water. The publication this week of an open
letter by fifty reserve company commanders essentially demanding that
Olmert resign after the report is released is a preview of the public
calls for his departure from office that will sweep the country
starting January 31.
While the leaders of the radical Left in Peace Now, Meretz, and
*Haaretz*are supporting Olmert's bid to remain in office and launching
smear campaigns against all forces rising against him, the fact is that
even his most ardent supporters know that it will be difficult to
protect Olmert from the public after the Winograd report is published.
Consequently, leading figures on the Left, in Labor and Kadima are
seeking ways to force Olmert out of office and replace him with Livni.
Livni escaped the public's wrath over the consequences of the failed
2006 war with Hizbullah. During the war she took a backseat to Olmert
and then defense minister Amir Peretz, rarely speaking publicly. Yet
from the outset of the war Livni led the diplomatic campaign for a
ceasefire. And her campaign was flawed and failed, no less, and indeed
more than the military campaign.
Livni began her diplomatic machinations with two incorrect assumptions.
First, she assumed that Israel could not defeat Hizbullah militarily.
As a result, from the very beginning she opposed any escalation of
Israel's campaign in Lebanon. Second, she believed that the
international community would agree to fight Hizbullah for Israel. As a
result she worked hard to get a Chapter VII - that is legally binding -
UN Security Council resolution setting up such a force.
The government's refusal to authorize a timely ground assault in
Lebanon ensured that Israel would not defeat Hizbullah. Livni's belief
that the international community would be interested in fighting
Hizbullah led to Israel becoming the main champion of UNIFIL which both
before and since the war has acted as a shield for Hizbullah against
Israel.
And yet, Livni's diplomatic skills couldn't even secure her own limited
and incorrect goal of securing a binding, strong international force in
south Lebanon. In his book, *Surrender is not an Option*, former US
ambassador to the UN John Bolton wrote that on the eve of the Security
Council vote on resolution 1701 which set the terms of the ceasefire,
Livni complained to Rice, "You've given away the cease-fire, you've
given away Chapter VII, you've given away Sheba Farms, now tell us why
we should sign on to the resolution?"
But of course, when the next day the resolution passed unanimously in
the Security Council, Livni was quick to tout it as a strategic
success. And ever since, in spite of the fact that under 1701 Hizbullah
has rearmed and reasserted its control over south Lebanon; paralyzed
the Lebanese government; expanded its influence over the Lebanese
military and intimidated UNIFIL, Livni continues to uphold the
resolution as proof of her own competence. And she has yet to be called
on this.
In his own speech on Wednesday at Herzliya, Olmert tried to silence
critics of his government's incompetent response to the Hamas takeover
of Gaza. Olmert argued "If the quiet prevailing in the North would
prevail today in the southern part of the country, would we be occupied
with a daily counting of the number of rockets and missiles which would
be hoarded there in storerooms?"
That is, in Olmert's view, the nature of both Hizbullah and Hamas,
their ties with Iran and Syria, and their burgeoning arsenals are
unimportant. The only thing that matters is if they presently shooting
at Israel. And Livni's view is just as outrageous.
In her speech on Thursday at Davos, Livni proclaimed that the threat
Iran poses to global security stems not from its nuclear weapons
program and its support for terrorism but from its opposition to her
negotiations with Qurei. Livni was quoted as remarking, "Iran is a
global threat which threatens the peace process."
The Olmert-Livni government's ineptitude has brought about a situation
where Israel is threatened by Iranian proxies on three borders. Its
diplomatic fumbling of Iran's nuclear program has led to a situation
where Israel finds itself alone against Iran's Manhattan Project. Its
diplomatic fumbling of Hamas's takeover of Gaza has led to a
willingness of ever widening circles of Western diplomats and
policymakers to recognize the jihadist movement as a legitimate actor
in the region. Its diplomatic failures during the war with Hizbullah
enabled Hizbullah to emerge from the war strengthened diplomatically
and positioned to reignite the war whenever Iran orders it to do so.
Next week's publication of the Winograd Commission report has the
potential to finally end Olmert's premiership. But if the post-Winograd
political reshuffle is limited to replacing Olmert with Livni, Israel
will be no better off.
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Hamas border takeover was about a lot more than rowdy Arabs
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