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17 May, 2012
Article 1.
The Economist
Greek politics: Slouching towards the drachma
The Moscow Times
Why Putin Is Afraid of the People
Vladimir Ryzhkov
Article 3.
The Washington Post
Muslim Brotherhood presidential candidate
Ernesto London°
Article 4
Guardian
Mubarak's repression machine is still alive and
well
Hossam el-Hamalawy
Article 5.
The Washington Post
Pakistan blew its chance for security
David Ignatius
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Foreign Policy
Israel's Image Revisted
Article 6.
Aaron David Miller
The Washington Institute
Secret Hamas Elections Point to Internal
Article 7.
Struggle,
Ehud Yaari
The Washington Post
Is the U.S. going too far to help Israel?
Article 8.
Walter Pincus
Article I.
The Economist
Greek politics: Slouching towards the
drachma
May 16th 2012 -- PITY Karolos Papoulias. The 82-year-old
president of Greece has spent over a week trying to persuade the
country's fractious political leaders to form a government after a
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general election on May 6th failed to produce a clear winner. Mr
Papoulias, a soft-spoken former foreign minister, handed out
mandates to various party leaders, none of whom could deliver,
and made a three-day effort of his own, before finally giving up
yesterday.
Success would have given Greece breathing space, if only for a
few months, to pursue urgent reforms—such as recapitalising its
insolvent banks and getting on with privatisation—to help
restore its credibility with European partners and financial
markets. Instead, another election now looms, on June 17th.
Until then the country will be run by a caretaker government
under Panagiotis Pikrammenos, Greece's most senior judge.
Lucas Papademos, the ex-European central banker who has run
a coalition government for the last six months, overseeing a
€206 billion sovereign-debt restructuring and Greece's second
bail-out, was not asked to stay on.
The transcripts of Mr Papoulias's last three meetings, made
public at the request of Alexis Tsipras, the leader of Syriza, a
hard-left coalition, and Greece's rising political star, reveal a
disturbing lack of vision among the men who are supposed to be
Greece's leading politicians. Rather than tackle serious issues,
such as how to keep Greece in the euro, they swapped insults
and shrugged off a warning that a bank run was imminent.
"They're all irresponsible, none of them is capable of ending
this crisis," says Aristomenes Antonopoulos, a lawyer. "How to
vote now?"
Support among Greeks for staying in the euro is up from 70% to
80% over the past three months, according to opinion polls. Yet
fears that prolonged political instability could trigger a "Grexit"
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are also increasing. Greek savers withdrew E3 billion from local
banks—about 2% of total deposits—as hopes of forming a
coalition collapsed. Greece has seen a steady erosion of bank
deposits over the past two years, yet few bankers were prepared
for such a rapid acceleration of withdrawals. Deposits had
increased in March and April, thanks to smooth handling of
Greece's partial default.
Today, cash was being taken away from the banks in orderly
fashion. There were no queues outside branches in central
Athens or its suburbs. Customers ordered cash by telephone and
picked it up 24 hours later. Some went straight into safety-
deposit boxes at the same bank; some was stashed beneath
mattresses in case Greece has to re-adopt the drachma. "People
are taking preventive measures," says one veteran banker. "If
you own a pile of euros, you'll feel rich in a drachma
environment."
Despite their enthusiasm for holding on to the euro, Greeks are
fed up with the austerity that German politicians say is the price
of continued membership. Syriza suggests that such views are
compatible, arguing that Greece can stay in the euro but also
reverse the reforms imposed by the "troika" (the European
Union, the European Central Bank and the International
Monetary Fund).
This is a message Greek voters appear to like. A recent poll
found that Syriza would win the next election with 20.5% of the
vote, just ahead of the pro-euro New Democracy party on
19.4%, but well short of an overall majority. The PanHellenic
Socialist Movement (Pasok), the only other electable party that
supports reform, would come a distant third with 11.8%.
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Mr Tsipras is reorganising his party and renewing his campaign,
neighbourhood by neighbourhood, in Athens and other cities.
His rhetoric is sharper than ever, yet his dream of forming a left-
wing government is no closer to being realised than at the
previous election. Potential partners have sounded more cross
than co-operative since Mr Tsipras bounced into second place
behind New Democracy on May 6th.
Antonis Samaras, the New Democracy leader, will pull out all
the stops. If his centre-right party cannot form a government this
time, his career will be over. A new alliance with a small liberal
party should give him another couple of percentage points at the
election. As for Evangelos Venizelos, the Pasok leader and a
potential coalition partner, he is struggling to prevent more
voters defecting for Syriza.
Even with the extra 50 seats that go to the party that comes first,
the two pro-bailout parties will still struggle to form a
government after the second election. The long-suffering Mr
Papoulias is likely to be back in action on June 18th.
Ankle 2.
The Moscow Times
Why Putin Is Afraid of the People
Vladimir Ryzhkov
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16 May 2012 -- After Moscow's large protests on May 6 and the
following days, we can easily dispel two widely held opinions
— that the protest movement had fizzled out and that Putin had
overcome his fear of demonstrations. As it turns out, the protest
mood among Russians is stronger than ever and the paranoia
of the ruling regime is getting worse.
On the way to his inauguration on May 7, Putin's motorcade
traveled along completely empty Moscow streets. Minutes later,
he accepted the oath of office in marble- and gold-bedecked
Kremlin halls, where he was met by a more than 3,000 members
of his loyal political elite who owe their privileged status to his
generous patronage.
While jubilant supporters of French President Francois Hollande
filled the streets to celebrate his victory on May 6, the deepening
chasm between Putin's regime and the people resounded with
an ominously hollow echo along Moscow's empty streets a day
later.
Despite his claims that the people adore him, Putin has become
even more frightened of them. After the inauguration and the
chilling reception in Moscow, it is no surprise that he rushed off
to Nizhny Tagil — an island of pro-Putin supporters only
because it is home to the Uralvagonzavod tank and train-car
plant that prospers because of generous government contracts
ordered by Putin himself. Putin is afraid to meet with people
who are not dependent upon his largesse. Private-sector workers
are still the majority of Moscow's population, and that is why
Putin fears Muscovites most of all. This explains why he didn't
want to encounter them on the day he ascended the Russian
throne for the third time.
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Few thought that the March of a Million rally on May 6 would
have a large turnout. Only 7,000 people had registered to attend
on Facebook, and it seemed that most opposition-minded
Muscovites would leave the city for the weekend to take
advantage of the rare warm weather for early May. But more
people showed up on May 6 than they did on Pushkin Square
and Novy Arbat in March.
In addition to the large protest on May 6, writers Boris Akunin
and Dmitry Bykov and musician Andrei Makarevich led about
15,000 people on Sunday on a writers' walk from Pushkin
Square to Chistiye Prudy. All of this shows that dissatisfaction
with Putin and his regime remains high and that people are
prepared to take to the streets, even at the risk of being beaten
by police. Another, perhaps even larger protest rally could take
place in Moscow on Russia Day, a national holiday on June 12.
The May 6 protests could have ended in serious violence.
The more radical protesters happened to be at the front of the
crowd and seemed to be eager to clash with riot police.
The authorities, for their part, were well prepared for a
confrontation. Riot police carried tear gas and gas masks,
and behind police cordons several water-cannon trucks stood
ready. The situation could easily have degenerated into a
massive, deadly riot. Fortunately, the violence did not escalate,
although many were injured.
In contrast to rallies in December, February and March, the May
6 rally was not well organized. What's more, some of the leaders
planned beforehand that they would remain at the site after
the approved time for the rally had expired. This led to clashes
with police, who broke up the unauthorized action.
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The authorities also took advantage of the poor coordination
by rally organizers to create an artificial bottleneck, leaving only
a narrow corridor for thousands of protesters to enter Bolotnaya
Ploshchad. This caused havoc and provoked demonstrators
to clash with police. Most of the blame for the violence lies with
the authorities, but the event organizers are partially to blame as
well.
For the first time since Dec. 10, a protest rally ended with police
disbursing demonstrators before they could formulate explicit
demands to the authorities. Coverage by state-controlled
television focused on protesters clashing with the police, but it
ignored the opposition's political motivation behind the rally. It
is even possible that provocateurs were planted in the crowd
to trigger the violence. They were active in previous opposition
rallies. After all, it is advantageous for the authorities to portray
demonstrators as anarchists or radicals who commit gross
violations of law and order in an attempt to lead the country
into chaos and revolution. Not surprisingly, that is exactly how
the state-controlled media described the events of May 6.
The radicalization of the protest movement plays into Putin's
hands. It gives him a carte blanche to unleash both the state-
controlled media and the police force against demonstrators.
By contrast, the regime is threatened by peaceful rallies with
clearly defined political demands, where organizers maintain
order and hand over provocateurs to the police.
The country's leaders have no arguments to oppose
the opposition's demands and complaints, and are helpless in the
face of large, peaceful rallies. We should learn lessons from the
May protest to make the June one larger and even more
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effective.
Vladimir Ryzhkov, a State Duma deputy from 1993 to 2007,
hosts a political talk show on Ekho Moskvy radio and is a co-
founder of the opposition Party of People's Freedom.
Article 3.
The Washington Post
Muslim Brotherhood presidential
candidate an underdog in Egypt
Ernesto London()
May 17 -- CAIRO — Had Egypt's post-revolutionary political
winds held steady, Mohammed Morsi, the Muslim
Brotherhood's presidential candidate, would have been coasting
to victory in this month's election.
Instead, he's running an underdog campaign. The group's
prodigious political machine, which turned the once-besieged
opposition movement into the dominant force in parliament
early this year, has to contend with an uncharismatic candidate
and a shift in public opinion as many Egyptians have soured on
the venerable Islamist organization.
The Brotherhood's political stock is plunging, analysts and
ordinary Egyptians say, because its political party has
backtracked on promises and accomplished little since a
predominantly Islamist cadre of lawmakers was sworn in in
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January.
In the working-class Cairo neighborhood of Abbasiya, where the
Brotherhood's Freedom and Justice Party campaigned
vigorously in the weeks before the parliamentary elections,
shopkeeper Abbas Helmi, 58, put down a Koran he was reciting
softly to talk politics. On the eve of those elections, he said,
Freedom and Justice campaigners set up stalls to sell residents
subsidized meat and vegetables, drawing large crowds.
"People went and bought their meat," Helmi recalled. "But after
the vote, [the party workers] disappeared, and the people felt
deceived."
The backgrounds of the two front-runners — a former foreign
minister who served under now-deposed Hosni Mubarak and a
moderate Islamist who broke away from the Brotherhood —
suggest that Egyptians may want a statesman who is more
inclusive and less dogmatic about the role of Islam in
governance than the devout politicians who control parliament.
But experts caution that it would be a mistake to dismiss Morsi's
chances outright. His rivals might be generating more
enthusiasm and doing better in the polls, they say, but none has
the Brotherhood's mighty machinery or its network of allied
preachers and local operatives.
"They go into full mobilization mode on Election Day," said
Shadi Hamid, an Egypt expert with the Brookings Doha Center
who has studied the Muslim Brotherhood for years. "They play
old-fashioned bare-knuckles politics, and they're in it to win it."
In addition to its robust get-out-the-vote campaign, the
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Brotherhood's endurance of decades of oppression under
Mubarak probably helped it to win sympathy during the
parliamentary elections. But the group's short stint in power has
proved largely disappointing.
The Brotherhood-dominated parliament has passed no laws of
consequence since its January inauguration. Many Egyptians
have been disenchanted by the Brotherhood's refusal to
prioritize the repeal of the reviled emergency law, which has
been used for decades to crack down on dissidents.
The Brotherhood's handling of another controversial issue, the
use of military trials to prosecute civilians, has angered human
rights activists. Parliament recently restricted the president from
referring civilians for prosecution in military court, but it
stopped short of also barring the armed forces from doing so.
Despite occasional public statements criticizing the ruling
military council, the Brotherhood has had a surprisingly
cooperative relationship with the generals who were once
instrumental in keeping the group oppressed and politically
disenfranchised. The Brotherhood has often discouraged its
followers from joining protests against the military, infuriating
other political factions, which view the Islamist group as
opportunistic.
`Renaissance' candidate
Senior Brotherhood officials acknowledged in interviews that
Morsi might lack charisma, but they disputed the notion that his
campaign for the two-day election next week is floundering.
"Egypt doesn't need a charismatic president," said Essam el-
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Erian, an influential Brotherhood legislator. "It needs a
president who can deal with the government and with the
parliament."
In recent weeks, some rallies for Morsi have seemed tailor-made
for ultraconservative Muslim voters, whom the campaign is
trying to woo. It has also enlisted radical clerics to rally voters,
in an apparent attempt to excite and broaden the party's base.
Morsi, 60, has dismissed as flawed polls that show him lagging
and has pointed to large turnouts at campaign rallies nationwide
as evidence that his presidential bid is not doomed.
He is branding himself a "renaissance" candidate and the only
contender who would bring impeccable Islamist credentials to
the presidency. A vote for him, Morsi has assured Egyptians, is
a way to ensure that the spirit of the revolution that ousted
Mubarak from the presidency in February 2011 endures.
"I want the revolution to stay alive after the president is
elected," Morsi said at a recent rally. "We will not allow another
dictator to control Egypt."
Morsi was not the Brotherhood's first choice when the group
reneged on its vow not to field a presidential candidate. The
group says it broke the promise because it believes the military
council that replaced Mubarak has mismanaged the transition to
democratic rule.
The Freedom and Justice Party nominated Khairat el-S hater, the
Brotherhood's top strategist and biggest bank roller, as its
candidate in March. Anticipating that Shater could be
disqualified, Morsi's name was registered as a backup.
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Shater was among 10 contenders disqualified last month by the
country's presidential election commission, an unexpected move
that forced the Brotherhood to thrust little-known Morsi into the
spotlight. Shater was disqualified because the commission ruled
that the time he served as a political prisoner during the
Mubarak regime made him ineligible.
Morsi, an engineer with a doctorate from the University of
Southern California, had a relatively low profile until he became
the Freedom and Justice Party's chairman when the long-banned
Muslim Brotherhood was allowed to register as a political party
after Mubarak's ouster.
`Not sticking to their word'
A senior Brotherhood leader who offered his candid assessment
of the Morsi campaign on the condition of anonymity said there
is deep angst about the race among the movement's old guard.
"I think they made a mistake in making too many promises and
then not sticking to their word," the veteran Brotherhood figure
said. "As Islamists, they should have stuck to their word. People
are now calling the Muslim Brotherhood dishonest."
Besides reneging on its promise not to field a presidential
candidate, Brotherhood leaders have raised eyebrows by
warming up to Washington and suggesting that they would
honor Egypt's unpopular peace deal with Israel.
Morsi's main competitors are former foreign minister Amr
Moussa, the Arab League's erstwhile chief whose appeal stems
largely from his name recognition and his hard-line stance
against -Israel, and Abdel Moneim Aboul Fotouh, a former
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Brotherhood leader who is regarded as a moderate Islamist.
Aboul Fotouh supporters have sought to disparage the
Brotherhood. New billboards that have gone up around Cairo in
support of Aboul Fotouh call the candidate's former group the
"Machiavellian Brotherhood."
Abdul Ghamed Ahmad Abdel, a 69-year-old taxi driver, said the
Brotherhood's popularity has slipped in his district of Imbaba in
Cairo.
"They took control of the parliament because they are deeply
entrenched in the rural areas," he said. But their lackluster
performance in office is sure to hurt them, he added. "They've
been exposed for what they are."
Article 4
Guardian
In Egypt, Mubarak's repression
machine is still alive and well
Hossam el-Hamalawy
16 May 2012 -- A little over a week ago, in Obour City,
hundreds of Egypt's notorious Central Security Forces (CSF)
conscripts mutinied over torture received at the hands of their
officers. The conscripts took to the highway, blocked the road,
and even started chanting a famous anti-police song composed
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by the Ultras White Knights, one of the country's football fan
groups. The mutiny was put down quickly by the army, together
with concessions and promises offered.
This was not the first time such a mutiny has occurred since the
January 2011 revolution. Several mutinies occurred on the
"Friday of Anger". The following day, I met a guy in Mohamed
Mahmoud Street while marching on the interior ministry who
was a CSF conscript who escaped from his camp to join the
protesters. Repeated mutinies were reported in Cairo,
Alexandria and elsewhere over the course of the following
months, over ill treatment by officers, long working hours and
bad food. The CSF is the interior ministry's army, and its central
arm in crushing street dissent. Those conscripts are poorly paid,
poorly fed, tortured, and made to do the state's dirtiest job. The
last time they undertook a full-scale mutiny was in 1986. It was
brutally crushed by Mubarak who sent in the army.
Civil servants at the interior ministry have also been on strike,
over pensions, pay and abusive treatment of civilians by police
officers. That follows a national strike by police corporals, over
pay, work conditions and again, ill-treatment by officers. The
corporals demanded an end to military tribunals in the police
force. Workers at eight factories owned by the interior ministry,
producing consumer goods for officers, have also gone on strike
over contracts.
Make no mistake, Mubarak's interior ministry is still alive and
well. We dealt some heavy blows to it on the Friday of Anger
and the police were heroically fought on several occasions,
including the mini uprising in November 2011. But still, the
CSF, the SS (or what's now called Homeland Security) and most
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of the repression machine is intact, and moreover is receiving
the direct help of the military police and the army's intelligence
services.
Even if the ruling army generals manage to crush the ongoing
police protests and prevent them from spreading, the objective
conditions for another 1986-style mass scale mutiny are still
there. Those new waves of conscripts are not only the sons of
poor peasants and workers, who have no love for their middle-
class officers, but the context is one of revolution. Those new
conscripts have witnessed it, and could well have participated in
it prior to their conscription.
The interior ministry will not be able to restructure its CSF.
There is not the political will; the current police generals who
belong to Mubarak's interior minister Habib el-Adly's clique are
more than happy to see the status of their army of slaves remain
unchanged. The army generals too would love to see Mubarak's
CSF revived and for it to take charge of putting down protests
instead of having to involve the military police. As we continue
to organise and fight against the interior ministry, in an effort to
dissolve it and replace it with community policing, such strikes
and mutinies by the conscripts, corporals and civil servants
should be supported by the revolutionary forces to create more
fractures in this machine of repression.
Hossam el-Hamalawy is an Egyptian journalist from Cairo. He
blogs at arabawy.org
Article 5.
The Washington Post
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Pakistan blew its chance for security
David Ignatius
May 17 -- As America begins to pull back its troops from
Afghanistan, one consequence gets little notice but is likely to
have lasting impact: Pakistan is losing the best chance in its
history to gain political control over all of its territory —
including the warlike tribal areas along the frontier.
Pakistan has squandered the opportunity presented by having a
large U.S.-led army just over the border in Afghanistan. Rather
than work with the United States to stabilize a lawless sanctuary
full of warlords and terrorists, the Pakistanis decided to play
games with these outlaw groups. As a result, Pakistan and its
neighbors will be less secure, probably for decades.
This is a catastrophic mistake for Pakistan. Instead of drawing
the tribal areas into a nation that finally, for the first time since
independence in 1947, could be integrated and unified, the
Pakistani military decided to keep the ethnic pot boiling. It was
a triumph of short-term thinking over long-term; of scheming
over strategy.
America has made many blunders in Afghanistan, which will
have their own consequences. But U.S. problems are modest
compared with those of Pakistan, which nearly 65 years after
independence still doesn't have existential security as a nation.
Like most big mistakes people make in life, this is one that
Pakistan's military leaders made with their eyes wide open.
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The Group of Eight and NATO will hold summits in the coming
days and announce the exit strategy from Afghanistan.
Fortunately, President Obama is planning a gradual transition,
with at least 20,000 U.S. troops remaining until 2024, if
necessary, to train the Afghan army, hunt al-Qaeda and steady
Afghans against the danger of civil war.
But what can Western leaders say when it comes to Pakistan?
Basically, the Pakistanis blew it. By playing a hedging game,
they missed a moment that's not likely to return, when a big
Western army of well over 100,000 soldiers was prepared to
help them. Instead, Islamabad used the inevitability that
America would be leaving eventually as an argument for
creating a buffer zone that was inhabited by a murderous
melange of the Taliban, the Haqqani network and other Pashtun
warlords.
Yes, it would have been hard to bring under Pakistani law the
rebellious badlands known as the Federally Administered Tribal
Areas. I have a shelf full of books describing how the process of
pacification eluded the British raj and was gingerly handed over
to the new government of Pakistan like a bag of snakes. But
hard is not impossible — especially when you have modern
communications and transportation and the most potent army in
history ready to help.
What comes through reading these old books is how long the
problem has persisted. A 1901 British "Report on Waziristan
and Its Tribes" lists the tribes, clans and sub-clans the British
were paying off more than a century ago through their political
agents, rather than risk a fight with these stubborn warriors.
After their disastrous Afghan wars, the British decided that
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payoffs made more sense than shootouts — a decision the
Pakistanis have repeated ever since, at the price of permanent
insecurity.
The notion of the tribal areas as a warrior kingdom,
impenetrable to outsiders, has a romantic "Orientalist" tone. I
was disabused of it in 2009 when I met a group of younger tribal
leaders who had gathered in Islamabad to tell U.S. special envoy
Richard Holbrooke that the region needed economic
development, good governance and less hanky-panky from the
central government. In a move that embodied everything that's
wrong with the Pakistani approach, these brave young men were
intercepted on the way home by the Inter-Services Intelligence
(ISI) and quizzed about why they had dared talk to the farangi.
Surely the most foolish move the Pakistanis made was to
compromise with the terrorist Haqqani network, which operates
from its base in Miran Shah, a few hundred yards from a
Pakistani military garrison. This was like playing with a cobra
— something the Pakistanis seem to imagine is an essential part
of regional realpolitik. No, you kill a cobra. If the ISI had been
up to the task, it would have had some formidable snake-killing
allies.
The Pakistanis lost a chance over the past decade to build and
secure their country. It won't come back again in this form.
That's a small problem for the United States and its allies, but a
big problem for Pakistan. What a shame to see a wonderful
nation miss its moment so completely.
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Ankle 6.
Foreign Policy
Israel's Image Revisted
Aaron David Miller
May 16, 2012 -- Writing in the Wall Street Journal this week on
the occasion of Israeli Independence Day, Israeli Ambassador
Michael Oren penned a powerful op-ed on the erosion of Israel's
image.
His conclusion: Israel's image has deteriorated in large part
because of a "systematic delegitimization of the Jewish state."
"Having failed to destroy Israel by conventional arms and
terrorism," he writes, "Israel's enemies alit on a subtler and more
sinister tactic that hampers Israel's ability to defend itself, even
to justify its existence."
First, some full disclosure. I like and respect Michael Oren. He's
a remarkably talented historian, astute analyst, and able
diplomat.
I also have no doubt that there are efforts to delegitimize Israel,
that anti-Semitism pervades some of the anti-Israel rhetoric, that
Israel is one of the few countries in the world that's judged by
impossibly high standards, and that the perception and reality of
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its power causes many to ignore the realities of its vulnerability.
But I just don't buy the argument that Israel's image has eroded
principally because of a dedicated campaign to delegitimize it.
Three other factors drive Israel's very bad PR: the realities of
nation-building, the image of the asymmetry of power, and
Israel's own actions, which, like those of so many other
countries, value short-term tactics over long-term strategy.
City on a Hill?
If Israel was created to be a paragon of virtue and a "light unto
the nations" -- the proverbial city on the hill -- it picked the
wrong hill.
Whatever the Zionist ideologues who founded Israel may have
intended, the creation of the state of Israel and the realities of
nation-building quickly became a quest for normalcy in highly
unusual and abnormal circumstances.
Unlike the United States, which had non-predatory neighbors to
its north and south and fish to its east and west, Israelis
perceived themselves to have had no security space and little
margin for error, let alone the quiet miracle of a normal life.
Born in war, Israel has remained in an active conflict zone ever
since. That it has succeeded in creating as much normalcy as it
did is a remarkable testament to its leaders and the capacities,
strength, and will of its people.
But along with that normalcy came the normal aging process of
a small state built on socialist and Zionist values turning into a
modern industrialized nation focused on material advancement
and modern comforts. Israel's idealized image of itself -- the one
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idealized by its founders and much of the American Jewish
community -- could only change for the worse.
For Israel, part of being normal has also meant acting like a
normal state, with all of the contradictions, political expediency,
hypocrisies, and self-justifying policies that such normalcy
entails in a world that is still ruled by power and self-interest.
Israel's loyal ally, the United States, operates in that world too.
Why would anyone believe that Israeli behavior would be any
different? Are the Israelis more ethical, democratic, and moral
than we are? Israel's image has eroded because it lives in the real
world as a flawed and imperfect nation. And frankly, though it's
only 60-plus years old, its abuses and flaws have yet to rival any
of the European colonial powers, let alone the Russians or the
Chinese.
Big and Small
The erosion of Israel's image is also inextricably linked to its
emergence as a regional power with a vibrant economy, a
dynamic high-tech sector, and a powerful military. The images
in Leon Uris's classic book Exodus and the Hollywood movie
version with Paul Newman leading a ragtag Israeli militia
against a sea of hostile Arabs have now been reversed. David
has become Goliath.
In the eyes of the world, Israel has shed its image of a small state
struggling against impossible odds. Israel now has "security
needs" and "requirements" rather than existential fears; its power
obligates it to be more magnanimous and forthcoming on peace
issues; its strength should produce restraint, not excess.
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Indeed much of the erosion of Israel's image is driven by the
realities and perceptions of an asymmetry of power that now pits
the nation with a per capita GDP of $31,000, 100 companies on
the NYSE, and nukes in triple digits against a weak Palestinian
quasi-state and an Arab world that's dysfunctional and
imploding.
There's much truth in this image of Israeli might, and anyone
who denies that capacity trivializes what the Israelis have
accomplished and does them a grave disservice by portraying
them as victims.
But there's also truth in Israel's vulnerabilities, too. But the
asymmetry of power doesn't work in Israel's favor here, either.
Remember the summer of 2006, when 5,000 Hezbollah fighters
equipped with rudimentary rockets shut down the northern half
of the region's strongest military power for 33 days? The day
before the war ended, Hezbollah fired more rockets than on any
previous day. Nuclear weapons and overwhelming force don't
add up to much if they can't be used and don't deter.
Israeli Actions
Finally, Israel's eroding image flows from its own actions and
behavior. These seem to fall into three categories.
The first are those actions that are legitimate expressions of
Israel's real security needs, but for which Israel is roundly and
unfairly criticized (the 1981 attack on the Iraqi reactor; the 2007
preemptive strike on the fledging Syrian one).
Second are those policies that not only make little sense morally
or strategically but are deemed to be ideological and undercut
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other Israeli goals, such as peace with the neighbors (see:
settlements).
Third are those that are dumb, arbitrary, or disproportionate in
terms of loss of life (see: Ehud Olmert's massive invasion of
Lebanon in 2006, as well as many of Israel's occupation policies
that humiliate Palestinians, including collective punishment,
housing demolitions, and so on). And many of these derive from
the reality that small powers, particularly those with 32 different
governments in 60-plus years, don't have long-range policies
and strategies. Instead, they maneuver, react, and preempt to buy
time and space.
The notion that Israel's unfavorable image is a result of some
evil cabal that plots daily against it infantilizes the Israelis and
takes them out of history as real-world actors who sometimes do
well in pursuit of their interests and at other times screw up
badly. Israel is a remarkable state that has sought to preserve its
moral and ethical soul in a cruel and unforgiving world. But it is
still only a nation of mortals trying to survive in that world.
Israeli founding father David Ben Gurion reflected the mood
and mindset perfectly: It doesn't matter what the goyim say;
what matters is what the Jews do. For better and almost certainly
worse, Israel will be judged accordingly.
Aaron David Miller is a distinguished scholar at the Woodrow
Wilson International Center for Scholars.
Article 7.
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The Washington Institute
Secret Llamas Elections Point to
Internal Struggle
Ehud Yaari
May 16, 2012 -- The ongoing Hamas elections will strengthen
the military wing, weaken Khaled Mashal, make reconciliation
with the PA more difficult, preserve close collaboration with
Iran, and, perhaps, forge closer ties with Egypt.
The secretive elections for new Hamas leadership bodies are
unofficially scheduled to continue until later this month, but it is
already safe to point out some emerging trends as the movement
struggles to cope with fierce debate over its future course. Top
leader Khaled Mashal has been considerably weakened as his
rivals in Gaza gain more influence and commanders in the
military wing assume a much broader political role. In all
likelihood, these developments will further complicate the
group's stalled reconciliation efforts with the Palestinian
Authority, accelerate its dash to achieve mass self-production of
longer-range, more accurate missiles, and prevent -- at least for
the foreseeable future -- a political divorce from Iran.
As a rule, Hamas does not publish any election details, including
the names of candidates, the number of voters, the location of
polling stations, the institutions for which elections are held, or
the results. Citing "security considerations," the group keeps all
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such information secret and prohibits campaigning. Despite
these efforts, a fairly complete picture of the group's internal
political struggle is already emerging. According to one senior
Hamas official, more than 30 percent of members in the
organization's different leadership institutions have been
replaced by new faces. That is a dramatic change for a
conservative movement that has been very reluctant to oust
veteran figures.
Initially, separate elections were to take place in each of the
movement's four designated regions. Two of these "regions" are
now expected to bypass voting and instead select their
representatives through a process of "consultations" (e.g.,
appointments).
First, Hamas prisoners will no longer choose their delegates
through a complex system of mouth-to-ear ballot casting as they
did in the past. Instead, those who already serve as the
"command" for Hamas inmates -- usually in dealings with the
Israeli Prison Service -- will be nominated as members-in-
absentia to the movement's supreme bodies. Among these
nominees will be convicted arch-terrorists such as Ibrahim
Hamed, former chief of the Izz al-Din al-Qassam Brigades in the
West Bank; Abbas al-Sayyed, mastermind of the 2002 Passover
Eve massacre in Netanya; Hassan Salameh, architect of the
group's suicide bombings in the 1990s; and Jamal Abu al-Haija,
former Qassam commander in the Jenin district. Their
participation in leadership deliberations will be limited to
occasional requests for their opinions, submitted through their
lawyers and family visitors. Yet it should be pointed out that
during recent negotiations to end a prison hunger strike, these
leaders of "the prisoners movement" -- as it is known in
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Palestinian political jargon -- essentially dictated to the rest of
the Hamas leadership the terms for a deal with Israel, brokered
by Egyptian intelligence.
Second, the West Bank is likely to skip Hamas elections for the
first time ever given the difficulties posed by continuous
harassment and detention of group members by both PA and
Israeli security agencies. Saleh al-Aruri, who founded the
Qassam Brigades in the West Bank and was released from an
Israeli prison in March 2010, is now the key man in determining
which Hamas members in the defunct Palestinian Legislative
Council will be selected to fill this region's quota in the
leadership bodies. Aruri has been operating for some time out of
Turkey -- with Ankara's tacit blessing -- in an effort to resurrect
Hamas infrastructure in the West Bank. He is now recognized as
the group's de facto top leader in the West Bank at the expense
of veteran local political figures, and has thus acquired
important standing in the new Hamas hierarchy.
In the third region—Gaza—elections were concluded in late
April, with 12,000 voters delivering a severe defeat to
supporters of Mashal, head of the Hamas Executive Committee
(a body established in 2009 yet never proclaimed as the official
replacement for the old Political Bureau). Few if any Mashal
loyalists made it to the different elected institutions: namely, the
various district shura councils, the seventy-seven-member Gaza
Shura Council (expanded from fifty-nine seats), and the fifteen-
member Gaza Political Bureau (Salah al-Bardawil, Muhammad
al-Jumasi, Issam Daghlas, and other key members lost their seats
in the latter body). So-called moderates such as Ahmed Yousef
and Ghazi Hamad were defeated, while sworn Mashal rivals
enjoyed victories: Imad al-Alami -- former chief of the "military
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(or intifada) committee" who recently returned from Damascus
after long years of tension with Mashal -- was elected deputy to
Hamas prime minister Ismail Haniyeh in the latter's
unannounced other capacity as head of the local Political
Bureau.
Although Haniyeh once again proved to be the most popular
llamas leader in Gaza, he is quite reluctant to claim overall
leadership and often avoids controversy by letting more
outspoken colleagues speak their minds. Alami, now widely
perceived as a potential future successor to Mashal, better
represents the most salient trend: the "Pasdaranization" of
Hamas. Similar to the way the Islamic Revolutionary Guard
Corps (or Pasdaran) have managed to take over Iran's state
apparatus over the past decade, the Hamas military wing is now
assuming control over the movement's political course.
For example, perhaps the biggest winners at the Gaza polls
(which are usually placed in mosques or charities) were Qassam
Brigades commanders and their political partners. Muhammed
Deif -- the behind-the-scenes Qassam shadow supremo who has
yet to fully recover from the severe injuries he suffered during
an Israeli assassination attempt ten years ago -- did not run
himself, preferring to maintain his traditional low profile. Yet
others won impressive victories on their way to the Political
Bureau: Qassam leaders Ahmed Jabari and Marwan Issa; Yahya
al-Sinwar and Rawhi Mushtaha, Qassam commanders who were
released from Israeli prison as part of the Gilad Shalit deal; and
Hamas interior minister Fathi Hamad, a close collaborator with
the military chiefs. Aside from Mahmoud al-Zahar (who
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managed to overcome military attempts to subvert his
candidacy), all of the other elected "civilians" were supported by
the significant percentage of votes controlled by the Qassam
Brigades, including such figures as Khalil al-Hayya and Nizar
Awadallah.
"OUTSIDE" MEMBERS STILL VOTING
At present, Hamas is still conducting elections in the fourth
region, which consists of a few thousand "outside" members
(including around a thousand from the group's disbanded
Damascus headquarters, currently scattered in different Arab and
Muslim countries). Voting is taking place at Hamas branches in
the Persian Gulf states, Lebanon, Sudan, Yemen, and Europe,
and the expectation is that at least some of Mashal's lieutenants
may lose their seats in the fifteen-member "outside" Political
Bureau. One key outside member -- Mustafa al-Leddawi, a first-
generation Hamas leader deported from Gaza by Israel -- was
the first to come out publicly against Mashal, and was
subsequently kidnapped for a few days in late April from his
home in the Yarmouk refugee camp near Damascus. The
unknown gunmen who seized him were widely believed to be
enforcers employed by the remnants of Mashal's entourage.
The main challenge to Mashal's faction in the outside region
comes from his deputy and rival Mousa Abu Marzouk, whom
Egyptian authorities permitted to settle in Cairo after the
dissolution of the Damascus headquarters, whereas Mashal was
compelled to pitch his tent in Doha, Qatar. A native of Rafah in
southern Gaza, Abu Marzouk has cultivated much closer
contacts with the Gaza leadership than Mashal (originally from a
West Bank village) can hope to achieve. The rivalry between the
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two stems not from ideological differences, but mainly from
longstanding personal competition, since Mashal replaced Abu
Marzouk as Hamas chief when the latter was detained in the
United States.
IMPLICATIONS
In the end, a combination of the Gaza military and the Abu
Marzouk camp will likely control the top leadership institutions:
that is, the Hamas General Shura Council, composed of sixty
members from all regions, and the nineteen-member Executive
Committee, which runs the group's daily affairs.
For his part, Mashal will enjoy the support of most, but not all,
of the West Bank representatives, though he will not command a
majority. There are some indications that he may be reelected as
Executive Committee head even though he announced in a
secret llamas gathering in Khartoum early this year that he does
not intend to run for a third term. He was apparently hoping that
his colleagues would plead with him to change his mind, but
that did not happen. Still, his rivals aim not to depose him, but
rather to limit his room for maneuver and submit him to majority
rule. They have no interest in creating an open divide in the
movement, and even his harshest critics realize the extent of his
popularity among Palestinians.
Prior to the elections, Mashal sought to lead Hamas toward
comprehensive reconciliation agreement with Fatah and was
willing to sacrifice the movement's monopoly of power in Gaza
to this end. His hope was to win future elections in the West
Bank and take over the Palestine Liberation Organization. This
policy was vehemently rejected and, in the end, foiled by his
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opponents in Gaza, who refused to dismantle the Hamas
government there. They view the strip as a captured "fortress"
that should never be relinquished, and as "the shortest route to al-
Aqsa Mosque," in Haniyeh's words.
Moreover, while Mashal aspires to reshape Hamas as a
Palestinian Muslim Brotherhood in line with the Arab Spring
trend in other countries, his adversaries want to maintain the
movement's standing as an armed resistance. Like some Gaza
members, Mashal also believes that Hamas should maintain its
distance from Iran despite receiving some $400 million annually
from Tehran. Yet the military wing, and certainly Alami, see no
alternative to close collaboration with the Islamic Republic as
their main supplier. They also want to curb intensive Iranian
support for Palestinian Islamic Jihad's military buildup in
competition with the Qassam Brigades.
Before deciding to leave Damascus, Mashal had an advantage
over Hamas officials in Gaza, since he held the purse strings and
supervised arms smuggling to the strip. The center of gravity has
now shifted back to the Gaza leadership, which is capable of
developing its own network of foreign support given the
upheaval in neighboring Egypt.
As a result, Mashal's capacity to lead the movement has been
severely impaired. He is no longer first among equals, but more
of a figurehead. Every move he makes from now on will need to
be approved by his partners in Gaza beforehand, and military
interests will likely trump political calculations in many
situations.
Regarding specific issues, Hamas will no doubt resume the
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dialogue with Mahmoud Abbas, but reconciliation will now
need to be reached on Gaza's terms. The group is also bound to
be more attentive to Egyptian priorities, especially in
maintaining the de facto ceasefire with Israel and avoiding open
clashes with Cairo's interests in the Sinai. One may also assume
that Qatar's influence will grow as its contributions to the Hamas
treasury increase beyond the $200 million provided last year.
Finally, in much the same way that the PA's establishment
sidelined the PLO, the local Gaza leadership is now gaining
ground at the expense of the outside leadership.
Ehud Yaari is an Israel-based Lafer international fellow with
The Washington Institute.
Ankle 8.
The Washington Post
Is the U.S. going too far to help Israel?
Walter Pincus
May 17, 2012 -- Should the United States put solving Israel's
budget problems ahead of its own?
When it comes to defense spending, it appears that the United
States already is.
Ehud Barak, Israel's defense minister, will meet Thursday in
Washington with Defense Secretary Leon E. Panetta to finalize a
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deal in which the United States will provide an additional $680
million to Israel over three years. The money is meant to help
pay for procuring three or four new batteries and interceptors for
Israel's Iron Dome short-range rocket defense program. The
funds may also be used for the systems after their deployment,
according to the report of the House Armed Services Committee
on the fiscal 2013 defense authorization bill.
The Iron Dome funds, already in legislation before Congress,
will be on top of the $3.1 billion in military aid grants being
provided to Israel in 2013 and every year thereafter through
2017. That deal is part of a 10-year memorandum of
understanding agreed to in 2007 during the George W. Bush
presidency.
"Those funds are already committed to existing large-ticket
purchases, such as the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter, C-130J
transport planes and other items," according to George Little,
spokesman for Panetta. He also said the Israelis had increased
their own spending on Iron Dome this year and the U.S. funds
are to "augment" their funding.
And there's more money involved. The House committee
version of the defense authorization bill, up for debate on the
House floor this week, includes an additional $168 million
"requested by [the] Government of Israel to meet its security
requirements," according to the panel's report. This money is to
be added to three other missile defense systems that have been
under joint development by the United States and Israel. The
$168 million is in addition to a separate $99.9 million requested
by the Obama administration for those programs.
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Israel has had its own debate over what its defense budget
should fund. Given its economic problems, the country has cut
its defense budget for this year by roughly 5 percent, with
another 5 percent cut planned for next year. Its defense experts
have debated whether it is more important to put scarce funds
into offensive weapons that could destroy enemy missiles or into
missile defense systems to protect civilian and military targets.
In contrast to the United States, it has raised taxes on wealthier
citizens and upped its corporate tax rate.
The Israeli military has long-term plans to deploy 13 to 14 Iron
Dome batteries to defend military and civilian targets against
rockets launched from the Gaza Strip and Lebanon. If there is
any doubt that the U.S. Congress will continue to support the
program, one only has to look at the Iron Dome Support Act.
The bill was introduced in the House in March by Rep. Howard
L. Berman (D-Calif.), the ranking minority member of the
Foreign Affairs Committee, along with the panel's chairman,
Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (R-Fla.). A companion measure is in
the Senate.
The first four batteries of Iron Dome, deployed last year in
towns near the Gaza Strip, have proved successful in protecting
against Hamas's rocket attacks. Israeli military sources have said
the system had more than a 70 percent success rate last month
against incoming rockets.
In early 2007, then-Israeli Defense Minister Amir Peretz chose
Iron Dome to meet the short-range rocket threat. Testing began
in 2008, and by January 2010 the system showed it could be
effective.
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In May 2010, President Obama said he would ask Congress to
add $205 million to the fiscal Pentagon budget for the
production phase of Iron Dome. The funds were approved, and
in March 2011 the Israel Defense Forces declared the first
batteries operational.
Iron Dome was developed and built by Rafael Advanced
Defense Systems Ltd., an Israeli-government-owned, profit-
making company that since 2004 has been headed by retired
Vice Adm. Yedidia Yaari, the former commander in chief of the
Israel navy. Rafael's board chairman is retired Maj. Gen. Ilan
Biran, former general director of the Ministry of Defense. In
August, Rafael joined Raytheon Co. to market the Iron Dome
system worldwide. The two are already partners in one of the
other anti-missile systems being jointly run by Israel and the
Pentagon. The House committee report noted that the United
States will have put $900 million into the Iron Dome system if
the full $680 million is used on the program "yet the United
States has no rights to the technology involved." It added that
the Missile Defense Agency director, Lt. Gen. Patrick J.
O'Reilly, should explore opportunities to enter into a joint
production arrangement with Israel for future Iron Dome
batteries "in light of the significant investment in this system."
So here is the United States, having added to its own deficit by
spending funds that it must borrow, helping to procure a missile
defense system for Israel, which faces the threat but supposedly
can't pay for the system alone.
To add insult to injury, Pentagon officials must ask the Israeli
government-owned company that is profiting from the weapons
sales - including Iron Dome - if the United States can have a
piece of the action.
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