Summary account by Marilyn Stern
MK Danny Danon is Deputy Speaker of the Knesset and Chairman of World Likud. On September 24, Mr. Danon briefed the Middle East Forum via conference call on the topic of his recent book, Israel: The Will to Prevail (2012).The Obama administration has balked at Prime Minister Netanyahu's call for red lines against Tehran's continued nuclear buildup, insisting that diplomacy and sanctions will rein in the ayatollahs. Should Israel accept this prognosis and forego its right to a preemptive strike against this existential threat?
In his conference call, MK Danon made the case for Israel's foreign policy decisions to be based on its national interests even if this meant resisting U.S. pressure. A commitment to a bold vision, he argued, would create regional stability over the long term. Danon underscored his thesis with lessons from Israel's past experience:
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In October 1973 Israel paid a heavy price in avoiding a preemptive
strike for fear of upsetting the U.S.-Israel relationship. The Iranian
threat is much greater and the stakes are much higher.
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In 1981 Prime Minister Begin was criticized by the administration
for ordering the destruction of Iraq's nuclear reactor, only to be
praised a decade later when the move proved vital for the liberation of
Kuwait from Baghdad's predatory occupation.
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The 1993 Oslo accords, based on the two-state solution, have proved
an abysmal failure as evidenced by the sharp rise of Palestinian
terrorism and Hamas's dramatic ascendancy. Instead of persisting in this
calamitous track Danon argued for a three-state solution, with Jordan
and Egypt sharing responsibility with Israel for the disputed
territories. Involving the application of Israeli sovereignty in Jewish
community areas of Judea and Samaria devoid of Palestinian Arabs, the
three-state solution would link the Palestinian population of this
territory to Jordan and Gaza's population to Egypt. And although this
seems inconceivable at the moment, the recent Arab upheavals allow
Israel to continue its containment strategy vis-à-vis Hamas and
Hezbollah while sustaining a long-term commitment to the three-state
solution.
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The 9/11 attacks prove that the ideological threat of radical Islam
goes way beyond the Arab-Israeli conflict. With the killing of Osama bin
Laden, the greatest Islamist threat today is Tehran's imminent
nuclearization. It is not just Israel that is at stake: Iran's Supreme
Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamene'i has also identified the American people
as a target. Ignoring the links between the hateful ideology of the
Muslim Brotherhood, Hamas, al-Qaeda, and Iran prevents recognition of
their shared goal: ousting the West from the Middle East as a
steppingstone to its ultimate destruction.
Summary account by Marilyn Stern, Associate Fellow with the Middle East Forum
Source: http://www.meforum.org/3349/israel-foreign-policy
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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