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Why Israel Should Intervene in Syria

Posted: 02/15/2012 7:40 pm

There is much talk in the news about Israel weighing its military options against Iranian nuclear facilities. Yet if for a moment Israel stops focusing on the region's military balance, and starts thinking of its long-term security as a Jewish state in the post-Arab Spring Middle East, it will realize that its warplanes would be of greater use flying over Damascus than over Tehran. In coalition with other nations, Israel can and should intervene to stop the current humanitarian catastrophe in Syria for the sake of its own long-term security.

Conventional wisdom states that Israeli support for any popular uprising in the Middle East would be a kiss of death to the protesters. In this case, conventional wisdom is only partly right. Going back to the first half of the twentieth century Israel has been the target of secular Arab political entrepreneurs who sought to pin their legitimacy on their opposition to Israel.

For its part, Israel has done incredible damage to its own image in the Arab world by pursuing disastrous policies -- from the expansion of settlements in occupied Palestinian land, to incoherent and trigger-happy misadventures in Lebanon and Gaza over the decades. But there is nothing written in the political DNA of the Middle East which demands Arabs and Israelis despise each other. At some point in the future, Israel must make an effort to become an accepted resident of its own neighborhood, and a Syrian intervention would be the most logical place to start.

To be sure, many would condemn Israel for any military attack against the Syrian regime, and members of the Arab League would likely retreat from their association with the uprising. Let them. To date they have done little to stop the bloodletting. And any fears that Israeli military strikes against command and control centers of the Ba'athist regime would make the Syrian government more aggressive toward its own people beg the question: Hasn't the Syrian regime already pulled all the stops?

According to the United Nations, the number of Syrians dead at the hand of Bashar al-Assad has surpassed 6,000. There is little Israel can do to make things worse for the people of Syria.

If the immediate human rights crisis weren't enough to compel action, Israel could take strategic comfort in toppling a regime that has played host to part of the HAMAS leadership, and which has served as a main supply route for arms bound for anti-Israeli Hezbollah fighters in Lebanon. This means that, unlike Egypt and Tunisia, Syria is the one place where humanitarian concerns and the strategic interests of Israel have come together.

Some Israelis who doubt the benefit of getting rid of Assad mistakenly believe that a stable, hostile dictator is always better than coping with uncertainty. "Better the devil you know," goes the adage. One member of an Israeli think tank with whom I shared a cab in Doha told me that Israelis like HAMAS to be "exactly where it is," meaning inside Assad's Syria: a short commute for Israeli jets, and a place that can be bombed from time to time with relative political impunity.

But such traditional, cynical thinking assumes the Middle East is not changing at neck-breaking pace. Whether democracy ends up taking hold in this new Middle East is still an open question, but no one can doubt that a greater level of popular participation will mark Arab politics from this point forward. It is no longer enough to be feared by a handful of dictators, one has to try to be loved (or at very least respected) by the Arab people.

None of this is to say that Israeli intervention will invite an overnight embrace from the Arab street, and there are those who will always hate Israel no matter what it does. Some newly powerful Islamists will lash out against Israel and stoke anti-Semitism to gain political ground, just as secular Arab leaders did half a century ago. Yet ultimately, the vast majority of Arabs will judge Israel by its actions, not merely the rhetoric of political entrepreneurs.

It is time for Israel to show that its warplanes can do something other than cause Arab suffering -- they can relieve it.

Nathan Gonzalez is publisher and executive editor of Nortia Press, a publisher of fiction and nonfiction books dealing with global affairs. www.NortiaPress.com.

 

Follow Nathan Gonzalez on Twitter: www.twitter.com/engagingiran

There is much talk in the news about Israel weighing its military options against Iranian nuclear facilities. Yet if for a moment Israel stops focusing on the region's military balance, and starts thi...
There is much talk in the news about Israel weighing its military options against Iranian nuclear facilities. Yet if for a moment Israel stops focusing on the region's military balance, and starts thi...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
keezze
11:26 PM on 03/10/2012
1. Israel should supply the rebels with intel and arms.
2. Israel should allow for immagration of syrians being hunted.
3. Israel should be invited by the arab league to join in a intervention, and if deemed be a surgical strike to take out asad and company.
4. Israel should work with their neighbors when its over to rebuild a democracy and rebuild their society as partners in peace.
09:36 PM on 02/22/2012
Nathan after reading your column, I have one advice for you. Don't ever bother to apply for a risk manager position at a major bank.
03:33 PM on 02/19/2012
Interesting article, and the author makes a good point.

But I think it's most likely that any israeli strike on the syrian leadership would just destroy popular support for the uprising.
01:24 AM on 02/19/2012
Not smart Nathan. That is all Assad needs to deflect the Arab mindset away from his depravity and focus it on the JEWS who will unite all the factions in Syria. What are you thinking? The Arabs will unite as one as long as they are fighting Israel, so the best course of action is to stay away.
04:39 AM on 02/18/2012
why the hell should Israel get in between arabs killing one another??
04:40 AM on 02/21/2012
Clever way of putting it.
05:45 AM on 02/21/2012
Thanks.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BeLogical1234
04:42 PM on 02/17/2012
Israel is damned if they do and damned if they don't. They simply can't win with some people, so what's the point of trying?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
discocapper
Israel Only Fires Back!
03:45 PM on 02/17/2012
If Israel wasn't falsely blamed for every ill in the world, and falsely accused of targeting civilians when they target terrorists who deliberately hide among civilians, maybe they would intervene. Israel just "intervened" in Turkey:

Israeli Earthquake Relief Delegation Welcomed in Turkey - Josh Hantman (Israel Ministry of Defense-IMRA)

An Israel Defense Ministry team on Monday visited the Van district in Turkey which was hit three months ago by a catastrophic earthquake. Israel had transported 130 structures to the area by air and sea.

District Vice-Governor Ahmet Kazankyeh, who conducted the tour for the Israeli delegation, said: "After the harsh quake that occurred here, you came, you the Israelis, with a lot of material and a lot of willingness to help. And for this I thank you very much, from the bottom of my heart."

"You are our true friends, and the proof is what we see here. Only true friends can help so quickly and with such concern for their partners."

Local university rector Prof. Dr. Mehmet Yozar said that more than 800 students will now be able to inhabit the structures provided by Israel after the earthquake. "Thanks to these structures we will be able to put life back on track here. We will finally be able to re-house the families and students."
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
50Yard
10:43 AM on 02/17/2012
Mr. Gonzales,

Did it ever dawn on you that there are 22 Arab nations many of them withe modern armies??
09:29 AM on 02/17/2012
And then what?
07:24 AM on 02/17/2012
I applaud your creative thinking but Israel has stubbornly and with determination has taken itself from any play in the region. Other than the one at the end of its guns.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
50Yard
10:38 AM on 02/17/2012
So now you are complaining that Israel is not shooting.
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cosmiczulu
let the good times roll
12:56 AM on 02/18/2012
or providing water scientific expertise, some people vilify Israel for providing aid
06:34 AM on 02/17/2012
"In coalition with other nations, Israel can and should ".....

I think I just spotted the flaw in the theory.

As in.... who, exactly, would join in a "coalition with Israel"?
03:34 PM on 02/19/2012
turkey.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Siebenstein
99% -Don't do what they tell you !
05:54 AM on 02/17/2012
I agree . Israel could make a great ally , but one large problem l;ooms in the background------IRAN !
01:18 AM on 02/17/2012
I have listened to your interviews in the past and admired your insight, but you're way off on this one. Israel will not intervene in Syria for many reasons:

1) Israelis attitude towards the Assad regime is the "Better the devil you know" and for good reasons. The opposition has elements of Muslim brotherhood and if it takes power, it is definitely going to be more hostile. The Assads however have kept a cold peace with Israel since 1973.

2) Syria is extremely important for the stability of the Middle East due to its unique ties to the regional powers.

3) The only way Israel can integrate itself to the larger Middle East is by treating the Palestinian as human beings.

4) Conspiracy in the Middle East is like a religion that makes the avid listeners of Alex Jones look like amateurs. There's already ludicrous conspiracies such as framing the Arab Spring as a Zionist strategy to weaken the Arab world. Bombing Syria will only reinforce such conspiracies.

5) Even if Israel offers to help the Syrian opposition, the Syrian National Council will distance itself from it because it is detrimental to their cause.

6) Israel has been very isolated than anytime in its recent history. Why would the Syrian opposition allign itself with an isolated regional power?
09:59 PM on 02/16/2012
Are you mad?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ari B Canaan
A glorious and enormous micro-bio!
09:28 PM on 02/16/2012
This is one of the most ludicrously delusional articles about Israel and Syria I have ever read. Does the author fancy himself as some sort of "knowledgeable political expert'??