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As Ariel Sharon
perceptively
observed, Vladimir Putin is a patriot and a nationalist, a man
cognizant of Russia’s “profound culture”, and driven by “national
honor…and the desire to restore the status of an immense empire with all
its influence.” The Russian president is also pragmatic. He was polite
and pleasant for the duration of his
historic visit to Jerusalem—the consummate gentleman really. But
when the niceties were over, he picked up his marbles and went to play
with Israel’s Arab neighbors.
At best, Putin seemed tepid about Russian and Israeli ties. Rejected was
Sharon’s request that Putin reconsider a decision to sell nuclear
technology to Tehran and anti-aircraft missiles to Syria. And rebuffed
also was “Jerusalem’s bid for intelligence-sharing with Moscow.” As
DEBKAfile has reported: “The Russians indicated they were open
only to one-way traffic from Israel, but offered nothing of value in
exchange.”
All a little baffling given how much the two countries have in common.
Russia supported the Jewish State at its inception. Israel is home to
the “largest
Russian minority in the Middle East”—one million Russian-speaking
Israelis, whom Putin regards as “expatriates, exemplars of Russian
culture, art, sport, language and education.” And there’s terrorism.
Israelis and Russians live alongside terrorist societies.
Both Sharon and Putin were elected to be tough on terrorists. Russians
voted for Putin because they have to put up with
Shamil Basaev (a Chechen terrorist and advocate of an Islamist state
in the Northern Caucasus); Israelis elected Sharon because they have to
contend with the
new Dalai Lama of Gaza, heir to Abdel Aziz Rantisi and Sheikh Ahmed
Yassin.
Chechnya is a
Shari’a-law dominated anarchy, whose chief export is terrorism—to
Russian cities. Americans became familiar with the handiwork of Chechen
terrorists in 2002, during a deadly hostage-taking at Moscow’s Dubrovka
Theater. And again in 2004, with the attack on a school in Beslan in
which hundreds of children were murdered. The country’s transformation
into an Islamist terrorist training ground is nearly complete. Besides a
thriving trade in weapons, drugs, stolen goods, and slaves, Chechnya has
no economy. Due process and punishment take the form of court-ordered
mutilations and public hangings.
In the Palestinian Authority it’s
business as usual. The radicalization of this society has continued
apace under Mahmoud Abbas,
Yasser Arafat’s successor. The message of murder permeates every
nook and cranny in the PA. In government, mosques, and madrasas
Palestinians
preach and teach that “Israel is a cancer spreading through the body
of the Islamic nation,” and that Muslims must “finish off every Jew.”
The July-17 election is predicted to be a shoo-in for Hamas.
Al-Qaida has inserted itself into these local conflicts. The Murder Inc.
of the Middle East and that of Russia are thus
tied to al-Qaida and share
pan-Islamic aspirations.
Both Putin and Sharon, however, are expected to concede to those who
maim and kill their civilians, while President Bush and the
international community make no such allowances in prosecuting their war
on terror. Both leaders are hectored by elements in the administration,
Britain, and Europe about granting statehood to their
terrorism-endorsing neighbors. Against insuperable odds, both are
expected to trust terrorists and their fan base to stop butchering
babies and embrace Jeffersonian democracy and a Bill of Rights (a
fantasy says James L. Payne, in
The Prospects for Democracy in
High-Violence Societies).
Consequently, Putin is being badgered to pull back from the North
Caucasus and ignore the caliphate under construction there; Sharon was
recently told to dismantle a suburb of Jerusalem, no less—Maaleh
Adumim—to make way for a suburb of “Hamastan.”
Shorn eventually of Judea, Samaria, Gaza, the Golan Heights, and East
Jerusalem, he is being counted on to sit back and trust a Palestinian
state comprising Fatah, its militant offshoot, the Al-Aqsa Martyrs
Brigades, Hamas, and Islamic Jihad to deliver peace for land.
What other commonalities do Russia and Israel share? Since the breakup
of the Soviet Union, Russia has received a great deal of
aid from the U.S., aimed at stimulating market reform. Israel’s debt
to America is incalculable. He who pays the piper calls the tune: Putin
has to stand at attention as the administration admonishes him for
allegedly sliding back into Stalinism. For their part, Israeli
politicians have long since opted to sacrifice sovereignty rather than
cut the Gordian Knot.
Let us clarify for the record that this is a broad-brush outline of what
unites Russians and Israelis and why their leaders might have forged a
more substantial relationship. It omits, for instance, that Russia is
just now transitioning into democracy; whereas Israel has been a stable
democracy since its founding, and remains a country under the rule of
enlightened Western law, with a free media and liberal courts. By the
assessment of The American Conservative, “Israel is the
only nation whose civilian courts have such a broad jurisdiction over
military actions” (March 14, 2005). The Chechens have been fighting for
independence since the 15th century; whereas the Palestinian
liberation movement is a contemporary—cynically calculating—project.
Compared to Russia’s terrorist-fighting tactics, Israel, warts and all,
is a paragon of restraint. In the two Chechen wars, the Russian army
killed tens of thousands of Chechen civilians and displaced many more.
These differences notwithstanding, there were plenty of reasons for
cooperation, if only to inject a new dynamic into the current imbalance
of power in the world. But nothing transpired. And not because Putin was
being hostile. On the contrary, he was sincerely nice, even keen to
combat
anti-Semitism in Russia. What his snub confirms is that Israel is
weak. The country is no longer the regional power it once was. Had
Sharon handed Putin Vladimir Gusinsky (an oligarch hiding in Israel) on
a platter, the Russian would still have scampered to Ramallah to seal
the sale of armored personnel carriers to the Palestinians.
Israel was not always strategically insignificant. For a brief period
after the Six-Day War, observes
Arieh Stav, “Israel ceased to be a provisory state, which
constituted a political liability and became a strategic asset, to use
State Department parlance.” Compelled by their American handlers and
their own failings, Israeli leaders have since abandoned the national
interest—and with it the very principles of international law.
By returning land to the aggressors—the Sinai first—Israel violated
Nullum crimen sine poena, the imperative in international law to
punish the aggressor. It continued to breach this principle—and its own
national self-preservation—by signing and honoring agreements (Oslo I
and II) with a terrorist organization (the PLO). Israel also flouted and
continues to flout the “rights of necessity,” says Professor of
International Law,
Louis Rene Beres:
[T]his norm was explained with particular lucidity by none other than
Thomas Jefferson. In his ‘Opinion on the French Treaties,’ written on
April 28, 1793, Jefferson wrote: ‘The nation itself, bound necessarily
to whatever its preservation and safety require, cannot enter into
engagements contrary to its indispensable obligations.’
Israel apparently can and does—abandoning even its “indispensable
obligation to endure.” For example, like his predecessor, Mahmoud
Abbas insists on “the right of return” of 4 million Arabs to Israel
proper. The Palestinian “right of return” is a euphemism for the
destruction of the Jewish State (and, with it, a bulwark against
barbarism in the region). Yet Mahmoud Abbas is considered by Israel a
“partner to peace.”
It’s now de rigueur for most Europeans, too many Britons, the
Muslim world, the Israeli far Left and their soul mates in the U.S., the
“executive committee of the Third World dictatorships” (Jeane
Kirkpatrick’s coinage for the UN), university students the world over,
and in some conservative circles, to depict Israel as the almighty
architect of “American imperialism” in the Middle East. (Though no one
can say who “moved” the world’s superpower to station troops in over 100
other countries across the world). When it comes to Israel, the logical
power pyramid is mysteriously inverted so that a small nation is seen as
wielding paranormal powers over a superpower.
Putin knows better. (So, evidently, does
Hu Jintao, China’s President!) Intent on re-establishing a presence
in the Middle East, Putin understands that strategic power lies not with
a United States satellite—“The minuscule State of Israel hanging on to a
bit of sand on the Mediterranean coast,” in
Arieh Stav’s words—but with “a Muslim world, which stretches over
two continents and 53 countries, among them 21 Arab states,” which is in
possession of “half of the world’s oil reserves, almost limitless
capability to purchase weapons, control of first-rate strategic centers
and a predetermined majority in the UN.” (Because Muslims identify with
the
ummah, the Muslim world has always been squarely behind the
Palestinians.)
The proof of Israel’s strategic insignificance is in, shall we say, the
… Putin.
©2005 Ilana Mercer
FrontPageMagazine.com
May 29
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