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Subject March 3 update
3 March, 2012
Article 1.
The Atlantic
Obama to Iran and Israel: 'As President of the
United States, I Don't Bluff'
Jeffrey Goldberg
Article 2.
The Washington Post
Mideast peace, with something short of a deal
Robert Malley and Aaron David Miller
iticle
The daily Beast
Shimon Peres's Influence Wanes as Israel
Grows More Bellicose Toward Iran
Dan Ephron
Article 4.
Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists
Fearful of a nuclear Iran? The real WMD
nightmare is Syria
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Charles P. Blair
Article 5.
The Daily Star
Hamas rattles the Resistance Axis
Rami G. Khouri
Article 6
Pew Research Center
Millennials will benefit and suffer due to their
hyperconnected lives
(Overview)
Mick I.
The Atlantic
Obama to Iran and Israel: 'As
President of the United States, I Don't
Bluff
Jeffrey Goldberg
Mar 2 2012 -- At the White House on Monday, President
Obama will seek to persuade the Israeli prime minister,
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Benjamin Netanyahu, to postpone whatever plans he may have
to bomb Iran's nuclear facilities in the coming months. Obama
will argue that under his leadership, the United States "has
Israel's back," and that he will order the U.S. military to destroy
Iran's nuclear program if economic sanctions fail to compel
Tehran to shelve its nuclear ambitions.
In the most extensive interview he has given about the looming
Iran crisis, Obama told me earlier this week that both Iran and
Israel should take seriously the possibility of American action
against Iran's nuclear facilities. "I think that the Israeli
government recognizes that, as president of the United States, I
don't bluff." He went on, "I also don't, as a matter of sound
policy, go around advertising exactly what our intentions are.
But I think both the Iranian and the Israeli governments
recognize that when the United States says it is unacceptable for
Iran to have a nuclear weapon, we mean what we say." The 45-
minute Oval Office conversation took place less than a week
before the president was scheduled to address the annual
convention of AIPAC, the pro-Israel lobbying group, and then
meet, the next day, with Prime Minister Netanyahu at the White
House. In the interview, Obama stated specifically that "all
options are on the table," and that the final option is the
"military component." But the president also said that sanctions
organized by his administration have put Iran in a "world of
hurt," and that economic duress might soon force the regime in
Tehran to rethink its efforts to pursue a nuclear-weapons
program. "Without in any way being under an illusion about
Iranian intentions, without in any way being naive about the
nature of that regime, they are self-interested," Obama said. "It is
possible for them to make a strategic calculation that, at
minimum, pushes much further to the right whatever potential
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breakout capacity they may have, and that may turn out to to be
the best decision for Israel's security." The president also said
that Tehran's nuclear program would represent a "profound"
national-security threat to the United States even if Israel were
not a target of Iran's violent rhetoric, and he dismissed the
argument that the United States could successfully contain a
nuclear Iran. "You're talking about the most volatile region in
the world," he said. "It will not be tolerable to a number of states
in that region for Iran to have a nuclear weapon and them not to
have a nuclear weapon. Iran is known to sponsor terrorist
organizations, so the threat of proliferation becomes that much
more severe." He went on to say, "The dangers of an Iran getting
nuclear weapons that then leads to a free-for-all in the Middle
East is something that I think would be very dangerous for the
world." The president was most animated when talking about
the chaotic arms race he fears would break out if Iran acquired a
nuclear weapon, and he seemed most frustrated when talking
about what he sees as a deliberate campaign by Republicans to
convince American Jews that he is anti-Israel. "Every single
commitment I have made to the state of Israel and its security, I
have kept," he told me. "Why is it that despite me never failing
to support Israel on every single problem that they've had over
the last three years, that there are still questions about that?"
Though he struck a consistently pro-Israel posture during the
interview, Obama went to great lengths to caution Israel that a
premature strike might inadvertently help Iran: "At a time when
there is not a lot of sympathy for Iran and its only real ally,
[Syria,] is on the ropes, do we want a distraction in which
suddenly Iran can portray itself as a victim?" He also said he
would try to convince Netanyahu that the only way to bring
about a permanent end to a country's nuclear program is to
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convince the country in question that nuclear weapons are not in
its best interest. "Our argument is going to be that it is important
for us to see if we can solve this thing permanently, as opposed
to temporarily," he said, "and the only way historically that a
country has ultimately decided not to get nuclear weapons
without constant military intervention has been when they
themselves take [nuclear weapons] off the table. That's what
happened in Libya, that's what happened in South Africa." And
though broadly sympathetic to Netanyahu's often-stated fear that
Iran's nuclear program represents a Holocaust-scale threat to the
Jewish state, and the Jewish people, Obama suggested strongly
that historical fears cannot be the sole basis for precipitous
action: "The prime minister is head of a modern state that is
mindful of the profound costs of any military action, and in our
consultations with the Israeli government, I think they take those
costs, and potential unintended consequences, very seriously."
But when I asked the president if he thought Israel could
damage its reputation among Americans with an attack on Iran --
an attack that could provoke Iranian retaliation against American
targets, and could cause massive economic disruption -- he said,
"I think we in the United States instinctively sympathize with
Israel." President Obama also shared fascinating insights about
his sometimes tension-filled relationship with Netanyahu -- and
spoke at length about Syria -- but for that, you'll have to read the
entire interview. Here is a transcript of our conversation:
JEFFREY GOLDBERG: From what we understand, Prime
Minister Netanyahu is going to ask you for some specific
enunciations of red lines, for specific promises related to the
Iranian nuclear program. What is your message to the prime
minister going to be? What do you want to get across to him?
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PRESIDENT BARACK OBAMA: First of all, it's important to
say that I don't know exactly what the prime minister is going to
be coming with. We haven't gotten any indication that there is
some sharp "ask" that is going to be presented. Both the United
States and Israel have been in constant consultation about a very
difficult issue, and that is the prospect of Iran obtaining a
nuclear weapon. This is something that has been one of my top
five foreign-policy concerns since I came into office. We,
immediately upon taking over, mapped out a strategy that said
we are going to mobilize the international community around
this issue and isolate Iran to send a clear message to them that
there is a path they can follow that allows them to rejoin the
community of nations, but if they refused to follow that path,
that there would be an escalating series of consequences. Three
years later, we can look back and say we have been successful
beyond most people's expectations. When we came in, Iran was
united and on the move, and the world was divided about how to
address this issue. Today, the world is as united as we've ever
seen it around the need for Iran to take a different path on its
nuclear program, and Iran is isolated and feeling the severe
effects of the multiple sanctions that have been placed on it. At
the same time, we understand that the bottom line is: Does the
problem get solved? And I think that Israel, understandably, has
a profound interest not just in good intentions but in actual
results. And in the conversations I've had over the course of
three years, and over the course of the last three months and
three weeks, what I've emphasized is that preventing Iran from
getting a nuclear weapon isn't just in the interest of Israel, it is
profoundly in the security interests of the United States, and that
when I say we're not taking any option off the table, we mean it.
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We are going to continue to apply pressure until Iran takes a
different course.
GOLDBERG: Go back to this language, 'All options on the
table.' You've probably said it 50 or 100 times. And a lot of
people believe it, but the two main intended audiences, the
supreme leader of Iran and the prime minister of Israel, you
could argue, don't entirely trust this. The impression we get is
that the Israeli government thinks this is a vague expression
that's been used for so many years. Is there some ramping-up of
the rhetoric you're going to give them?
PRESIDENT OBAMA: I think the Israeli people understand it,
I think the American people understand it, and I think the
Iranians understand it. It means a political component that
involves isolating Iran; it means an economic component that
involves unprecedented and crippling sanctions; it means a
diplomatic component in which we have been able to strengthen
the coalition that presents Iran with various options through the
P-5 plus 1 and ensures that the IAEA [International Atomic
Energy Agency] is robust in evaluating Iran's military program;
and it includes a military component. And I think people
understand that. I think that the Israeli government recognizes
that, as president of the United States, I don't bluff. I also don't,
as a matter of sound policy, go around advertising exactly what
our intentions are. But I think both the Iranian and the Israeli
governments recognize that when the United States says it is
unacceptable for Iran to have a nuclear weapon, we mean what
we say. Let describe very specifically why this is important to
us.
In addition to the profound threat that it poses to Israel, one of
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our strongest allies in the world; in addition to the outrageous
language that has been directed toward Israel by the leaders of
the Iranian government -- if Iran gets a nuclear weapon, this
would run completely contrary to my policies of
nonproliferation. The risks of an Iranian nuclear weapon falling
into the hands of terrorist organizations are profound. It is
almost certain that other players in the region would feel it
necessary to get their own nuclear weapons. So now you have
the prospect of a nuclear arms race in the most volatile region in
the world, one that is rife with unstable governments and
sectarian tensions. And it would also provide Iran the additional
capability to sponsor and protect its proxies in carrying out
terrorist attacks, because they are less fearful of retaliation.
GOLDBERG: What would your position be if Israel weren't in
this picture?
PRESIDENT OBAMA: It would still be a profound national-
security interest of the United States to prevent Iran from getting
a nuclear weapon.
GOLDBERG: Why, then, is this issue so often seen as binary,
always defined as Israel versus Iran?
PRESIDENT OBAMA: I think it has to do with a legitimate
concern on the part of Israel that they are a small country in a
tough neighborhood, and as a consequence, even though the
U.S. and Israel very much share assessments of how quickly Iran
could obtain breakout capacity, and even though there is
constant consultation and intelligence coordination around that
question, Israel feels more vulnerable. And I think the prime
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minister and the defense minister, [Ehud Barak,] feel a
profound, historic obligation not to put Israel in a position
where it cannot act decisively and unilaterally to protect the state
of Israel. I understand those concerns, and as a consequence, I
think it's not surprising that the way it gets framed, at least in
this country, where the vast majority of people are profoundly
sympathetic to Israel's plight and potential vulnerabilities -- that
articles and stories get framed in terms of Israel's potential
vulnerability. But I want to make clear that when we travel
around the world and make presentations about this issue, that's
not how we frame it. We frame it as: this is something in the
national-security interests of the United States and in the
interests of the world community. And I assure you that Europe
would not have gone forward with sanctions on Iranian oil
imports -- which are very difficult for them to carry out, because
they get a lot of oil from Iran -- had it not been for their
understanding that it is in the world's interest, to prevent Iran
from getting a nuclear weapon. China would not have abided by
the existing sanctions coming out of the National Security
Council, and other countries around the world would not have
unified around those sanctions, had it not been for us making the
presentation about why this was important for everyone, not just
one country.
GOLDBERG: Is it possible that the prime minister of Israel has
over-learned the lessons of the Holocaust?
PRESIDENT OBAMA: I think the prime minister has a
profound responsibility to protect the Israeli people in a hostile
neighborhood, and I am certain that the history of the Holocaust
and of anti-Semitism and brutality directed against the Jewish
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people for more than a millennium weighs on him when he
thinks about these questions. I think it's important to recognize,
though, that the prime minister is also head of a modern state
that is mindful of the profound costs of any military action, and
in our consultations with the Israeli government, I think they
take those costs, and potential unintended consequences, very
seriously.
GOLDBERG: Do you think Israel could cause damage to itself
in America by preempting the Iranian nuclear program
militarily?
PRESIDENT OBAMA: I don't know how it plays in America.
I think we in the United States instinctively sympathize with
Israel, and I think political support for Israel is bipartisan and
powerful. In my discussions with Israel, the key question that I
ask is: How does this impact their own security environment?
I've said it publicly and I say it privately: ultimately, the Israeli
prime minister and the defense minister and others in the
government have to make their decisions about what they think
is best for Israel's security, and I don't presume to tell them what
is best for them. But as Israel's closest friend and ally, and as
one that has devoted the last three years to making sure that
Israel has additional security capabilities, and has worked to
manage a series of difficult problems and questions over the past
three years, I do point out to them that we have a sanctions
architecture that is far more effective than anybody anticipated;
that we have a world that is about as united as you get behind
the sanctions; that our assessment, which is shared by the
Israelis, is that Iran does not yet have a nuclear weapon and is
not yet in a position to obtain a nuclear weapon without us
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having a pretty long lead time in which we will know that they
are making that attempt. In that context, our argument is going
to be that it is important for us to see if we can solve this thing
permanently, as opposed to temporarily. And the only way,
historically, that a country has ultimately decided not to get
nuclear weapons without constant military intervention has been
when they themselves take [nuclear weapons] off the table.
That's what happened in Libya, that's what happened in South
Africa. And we think that, without in any way being under an
illusion about Iranian intentions, without in any way being naive
about the nature of that regime, they are self-interested. They
recognize that they are in a bad, bad place right now. It is
possible for them to make a strategic calculation that, at
minimum, pushes much further to the right whatever potential
breakout capacity they may have, and that may turn out to be the
best decision for Israel's security. These are difficult questions,
and again, if I were the prime minister of Israel, I'd be wrestling
with them. As president of the United States, I wrestle with them
as well.
GOLDBERG: Could you shed some light on your relationship
with the prime minister? You've met with him more than with
any other world leader. It's assumed that you have a
dysfunctional relationship. What is it like?
PRESIDENT OBAMA: I actually think the relationship is very
functional, and the proof of the pudding is in the eating. The fact
of the matter is, we've gotten a lot of business done with Israel
over the last three years. I think the prime minister -- and
certainly the defense minister -- would acknowledge that we've
never had closer military and intelligence cooperation. When
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you look at what I've done with respect to security for Israel,
from joint training and joint exercises that outstrip anything
that's been done in the past, to helping finance and construct the
Iron Dome program to make sure that Israeli families are less
vulnerable to missile strikes, to ensuring that Israel maintains its
qualitative military edge, to fighting back against
delegitimization of Israel, whether at the [UN] Human Rights
Council, or in front of the UN General Assembly, or during the
Goldstone Report, or after the flare-up involving the flotilla --
the truth of the matter is that the relationship has functioned very
well.
GOLDBERG: Are you friends? Do you talk about things other
than business?
PRESIDENT OBAMA: You know, the truth of the matter is,
both of us have so much on our plates that there's not always a
lot of time to have discussions beyond business. Having said
that, what I think is absolutely true is that the prime minister and
I come out of different political traditions. This is one of the few
times in the history of U.S.-Israeli relations where you have a
government from the right in Israel at the same time you have a
center-left government in the United States, and so I think what
happens then is that a lot of political interpretations of our
relationship get projected onto this. But one thing that I have
found in working with Prime Minister Netanyahu is that we can
be very frank with each other, very blunt with each other, very
honest with each other. For the most part, when we have
differences, they are tactical and not strategic. Our objectives are
a secure United States, a secure Israel, peace, the capacity for
our kids to grow up in safety and security and not have to worry
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about bombs going off, and being able to promote business and
economic growth and commerce. We have a common vision
about where we want to go. At any given moment -- as is true,
frankly, with my relationship with every other foreign leader --
there's not going to be perfect alignment of how we achieve
these objectives.
GOLDBERG: In an interview three years ago, right before he
became prime minister, Netanyahu told me that he believes Iran
is being run by a "messianic apocalyptic cult." Last week,
General Martin Dempsey, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff referred to the Iranian leadership as "rational." Where do
you fall on this continuum? Do you feel that the leaders of Iran
might be so irrational that they will not act in what we would
understand to be their self-interest?
PRESIDENT OBAMA: I think you're right to describe it as a
continuum. There is no doubt they are isolated. They have a very
ingrown political system. They are founded and fueled on
hostility towards the United States, Israel, and to some degree
the West. And they have shown themselves willing to go outside
international norms and international rules to achieve their
objectives. All of this makes them dangerous. They've also been
willing to crush opposition in their own country in brutal and
bloody ways.
GOLDBERG: Do you think they are messianic?
PRESIDENT OBAMA: I think it's entirely legitimate to say
that this is a regime that does not share our worldview or our
values. I do think, and this is what General Dempsey was
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probably referring to, that as we look at how they operate and
the decisions they've made over the past three decades, that they
care about the regime's survival. They're sensitive to the
opinions of the people and they are troubled by the isolation that
they're experiencing. They know, for example, that when these
kinds of sanctions are applied, it puts a world of hurt on them.
They are able to make decisions based on trying to avoid bad
outcomes from their perspective. So if they're presented with
options that lead to either a lot of pain from their perspective, or
potentially a better path, then there's no guarantee that they can't
make a better decision.
GOLDBERG: It seems unlikely that a regime built on anti-
Americanism would want to appear to succumb to an American-
led sanctions effort.
PRESIDENT OBAMA: I think the question here is going to
be: What exactly are their genuine interests? Now, what we've
seen, what we've heard directly from them over the last couple
of weeks is that nuclear weapons are sinful and un-Islamic. And
those are formal speeches from the supreme leader and their
foreign minister.
GOLDBERG: Do you believe their sincerity?
PRESIDENT OBAMA: My point here is not that I believe the
sincerity of the statements coming out of the regime. The point
is that for them to prove to the international community that
their intentions are peaceful and that they are, in fact, not
pursuing weapons, is not inconsistent with what they've said. So
it doesn't require them to knuckle under to us. What it does
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require is for them to actually show to the world that there is
consistency between their actions and their statements. And
that's something they should be able to do without losing face.
GOLDBERG: Let me flip this entirely around and ask: Why is
containment not your policy? In the sense that we contained the
Soviet Union, North Korea --
PRESIDENT OBAMA: It's for the reason I described --
because you're talking about the most volatile region in the
world. It will not be tolerable to a number of states in that region
for Iran to have a nuclear weapon and them not to have a nuclear
weapon. Iran is known to sponsor terrorist organizations, so the
threat of proliferation becomes that much more severe. The only
analogous situation is North Korea. We have applied a lot of
pressure on North Korea as well and, in fact, today found them
willing to suspend some of their nuclear activities and missile
testing and come back to the table. But North Korea is even
more isolated, and certainly less capable of shaping the
environment [around it] than Iran is. And so the dangers of an
Iran getting nuclear weapons that then leads to a free-for-all in
the Middle East is something that I think would be very
dangerous for the world.
GOLDBERG: Do you see accidental nuclear escalation as an
issue?
PRESIDENT OBAMA: Absolutely. Look, the fact is, I don't
think any of it would be accidental. I think it would be very
intentional. If Iran gets a nuclear weapon, I won't name the
countries, but there are probably four or five countries in the
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Middle East who say, "We are going to start a program, and we
will have nuclear weapons." And at that point, the prospect for
miscalculation in a region that has that many tensions and
fissures is profound. You essentially then duplicate the
challenges of India and Pakistan fivefold or tenfold.
GOLDBERG: With everybody pointing at everybody else.
PRESIDENT OBAMA: With everybody pointing at everybody
else.
GOLDBERG: What I'm getting at specifically is, let's assume
there's a Hezbollah attack on Israel. Israel responds into
Lebanon. Iran goes on some kind of a nuclear alert, and then one-
two-three --
PRESIDENT OBAMA: The potential for escalation in those
circumstances is profoundly dangerous, and in addition to just
the potential human costs of a nuclear escalation like that in the
Middle East, just imagine what would happen in terms of the
world economy. The possibilities of the sort of energy
disruptions that we've never seen before occurring, and the
world economy basically coming to a halt, would be pretty
profound. So when I say this is in the U.S. interest, I'm not
saying this is something we'd like to solve. I'm saying this is
something we have to solve.
GOLDBERG: One of the aspects of this is the question of
whether it's plausible that Barack Obama would ever use
military power to stop Iran. The Republicans are trying to make
this an issue -- and not only the Republicans -- saying that this
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man, by his disposition, by his character, by his party, by his
center-left outlook, is not going to do that.
PRESIDENT OBAMA: Look, if people want to say about me
that I have a profound preference for peace over war, that every
time I order young men and women into a combat theater and
then see the consequences on some of them, if they're lucky
enough to come back, that this weighs on me -- I make no
apologies for that. Because anybody who is sitting in my chair
who isn't mindful of the costs of war shouldn't be here, because
it's serious business. These aren't video games that we're playing
here. Now, having said that, I think it's fair to say that the last
three years, I've shown myself pretty clearly willing, when I
believe it is in the core national interest of the United States, to
direct military actions, even when they entail enormous risks.
And obviously, the bin Laden operation is the most dramatic,
but al-Qaeda was on its [knees] well before we took out bin
Laden because of our activities and my direction. In
Afghanistan, we've made very tough decisions because we felt it
was very important, in order for an effective transition out of
Afghanistan to take place, for us to be pushing back against the
Taliban's momentum. So aside from the usual politics, I don't
think this is an argument that has a lot of legs. And by the way,
it's not an argument that the American people buy. They may
have complaints about high unemployment still, and that the
recovery needs to move faster, but you don't hear a lot of them
arguing somehow that I hesitate to make decisions as
commander in chief when necessary.
GOLDBERG: Can you just talk about Syria as a strategic
issue? Talk about it as a humanitarian issue, as well. But it
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would seem to me that one way to weaken and further isolate
Iran is to remove or help remove Iran's only Arab ally.
PRESIDENT OBAMA: Absolutely.
GOLDBERG: And so the question is: What else can this
administration be doing?
PRESIDENT OBAMA: Well, look, there's no doubt that Iran
is much weaker now than it was a year ago, two years ago, three
years ago. The Arab Spring, as bumpy as it has been, represents
a strategic defeat for Iran, because what people in the region
have seen is that all the impulses towards freedom and self-
determination and free speech and freedom of assembly have
been constantly violated by Iran. [The Iranian leadership is] no
friend of that movement toward human rights and political
freedom. But more directly, it is now engulfing Syria, and Syria
is basically their only true ally in the region. And it is our
estimation that [President Bashar al-Assad's] days are numbered.
It's a matter not of if, but when. Now, can we accelerate that?
We're working with the world community to try to do that. It is
complicated by the fact that Syria is a much bigger, more
sophisticated, and more complicated country than Libya, for
example -- the opposition is hugely splintered -- that although
there's unanimity within the Arab world at this point,
internationally, countries like Russia are still blocking potential
UN mandates or action. And so what we're trying to do -- and
the secretary of state just came back from helping to lead the
Friends of Syria group in Tunisia -- is to try to come up with a
series of strategies that can provide humanitarian relief. But they
can also accelerate a transition to a peaceful and stable and
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representative Syrian government. If that happens, that will be a
profound loss for Iran.
GOLDBERG: Is there anything you could do to move it faster?
PRESIDENT OBAMA: Well, nothing that I can tell you,
because your classified clearance isn't good enough. (Laughter.)
This is part of, by the way, the context in which we have to
examine our approach toward Iran, because at a time when there
is not a lot of sympathy for Iran and its only real ally is on the
ropes, do we want a distraction in which suddenly Iran can
portray itself as a victim, and deflect attention from what has to
be the core issue, which is their potential pursuit of nuclear
weapons? That's an example of factors that -- when we are in
consultation with all our allies, including the Israelis, we raise
these factors, because this is an issue of many dimensions here,
and we've got to factor all of them in to achieve the outcome that
hopefully we all want.
GOLDBERG: Do the Israelis understand that? There have been
disagreements between Israel and the U.S. before, but this is
coming to a head about what the Israelis see as an existential
issue. The question is: In your mind, have you brought
arguments to Netanyahu that have so far worked out well?
PRESIDENT OBAMA: I think that in the end, Israel's leaders
will make determinations based on what they believe is best for
the security of Israel, and that is entirely appropriate.
When we present our views and our strategy approach, we try to
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put all our cards on the table, to describe how we are thinking
about these issues. We try to back those up with facts and
evidence. We compare their assessments with ours, and where
there are gaps, we try to narrow those gaps. And what I also try
to do is to underscore the seriousness with which the United
States takes this issue. And I think that Ehud Barak understands
it. I think that Prime Minister Netanyahu, hopefully when he
sees me next week, will understand it.
And one of the things that I like to remind them of is that every
single commitment I have made to the state of Israel and its
security, I have kept. I mean, part of your -- not to put words in
your mouth -- but part of the underlying question is: Why is it
that despite me never failing to support Israel on every single
problem that they've had over the last three years, that there are
still questions about that?
GOLDBERG: That's a good way to phrase it.
PRESIDENT OBAMA: And my answer is: there is no good
reason to doubt me on these issues.
Some of it has to do with the fact that in this country and in our
media, this gets wrapped up with politics. And I don't think
that's any secret. And if you have a set of political actors who
want to see if they can drive a wedge not between the United
States and Israel, but between Barack Obama and a Jewish
American vote that has historically been very supportive of his
candidacy, then it's good to try to fan doubts and raise
questions. But when you look at the record, there's no "there"
there. And my job is to try to make sure that those political
factors are washed away on an issue that is of such great
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strategic and security importance to our two countries. And so
when I'm talking to the prime minister, or my team is talking to
the Israeli government, what I want is a hardheaded, clear-eyed
assessment of how do we achieve our goals. And our goals are
in sync. And historically, one of the reasons that the U.S.-Israeli
relationship has survived so well and thrived is shared values,
shared history, the links between our peoples. But it's also been
because it has been a profoundly bipartisan commitment to the
state of Israel. And the flip side of it is that, in terms of Israeli
politics, there's been a view that regardless of whether it's a
Democratic or Republican administration, the working
assumption is: we've got Israel's back. And that's something that
I constantly try to reinforce and remind people of.
GOLDBERG: Wait, in four words, is that your message to the
prime minister -- we've got Israel's back?
PRESIDENT OBAMA: That is not just my message to the
prime minister, that's been my message to the Israeli people, and
to the pro-Israel community in this country, since I came into
office. It's hard for me to be clearer than I was in front of the UN
General Assembly, when I made a more full-throated defense of
Israel and its legitimate security concerns than any president in
history -- not, by the way, in front of an audience that was
particularly warm to the message. So that actually won't be my
message. My message will be much more specific, about how do
we solve this problem.
Ankle 2.
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The Washington Post
Mideast peace, with something short of a deal
Robert Malley and Aaron David Miller
March 3 -- President Obama and Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu will devote little time Monday to the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict, in part because of Iran and election-
year politics. But the principal cause is this: A negotiated, two-
state solution is running harder than ever against intractable
political and psychological realities in Israel, Palestine and the
Arab world. These are pushing toward a de facto outcome that
will not be negotiated, comprehensive or conflict-ending. Even
assuming Netanyahu is prepared to embrace a two-state solution
acceptable to Palestinians, he would have to take on powerful
settler and right-wing constituencies at a time when regional
tumult and Iran's nuclear progress exacerbate national feelings
of insecurity. Netanyahu's assertion that the Palestinian split and
instability in the Arab world counsel against risky moves might
be a convenient excuse to do nothing — but that doesn't
necessarily make it wrong. And he is unlikely to jeopardize his
political future or his country's security chasing a solution that,
to his mind, does both.
Among Palestinians, the brewing crisis over President
Mahmoud Abbas's potential succession, popular
disenchantment with the peace process and the appeal of
internationalizing the conflict mean there are few political
incentives for flexibility toward Israel. Divisions between the
Fatah and Hamas factions complicate matters: Their recent
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agreement is paper-thin and highlights that, for now,
Palestinians are focused more on immediate politics than on
their longer-term fate. Then there are regional developments:
Abbas can no longer rely on influential Arab cover for
controversial compromises. The Islamist wave is a reliable
indicator of where popular Arab sentiment resides; it probably
will not translate into imminent hostility toward Israel but, at a
minimum, excludes a forthcoming approach. Conditions will
not remain static. Over time, the political landscape is likely to
be carved by local actors' concerns. Reports of Israel's isolation
may be exaggerated, but international ill will is mounting.
Israelis recognize that if Palestinians remain under occupation
for much longer, they may drop their call for independent
statehood and demand equal rights in a single, binational (i.e.,
no longer Jewish) state. Israel has a potential answer: a
withdrawal from the most populated areas of the West Bank,
preserving the bulk of settlements and overall Israeli dominion
and sparing the country a wrenching internal conflict. The idea
is not new: Mooted in Gaza in 2005, its planned extension to the
West Bank was halted when Palestinians' acquisition of
weapons through a porous border with Egypt soured Israelis'
mood. Sooner or later, the plan could be revived, coupled with
an Israeli military presence in the Jordan Valley to minimize
risks of a Gazan repeat. Fatah and the Ramallah-based
Palestinian Authority have a long-term objective that differs
markedly from Israel's: a state enjoying full sovereign rights on
virtually all the land occupied in 1967. But many among them
are working toward goals that are closer at hand: building
institutions of a putative state, governing their people and
lessening Israel's footprint. They are unlikely to agree with
Jerusalem over the scope of its withdrawal, which almost
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certainly makes negotiations futile. For now, a unilateral Israeli
decision could suit both sides. A greater chasm separates
Hamas's and Israel's ideas for a permanent solution.
Paradoxically, this means they could be inclined to settle for a
long-term de facto understanding — what the Islamist
movement calls a truce and Israel calls an interim arrangement.
Here, too, their perspectives collide, as Hamas's conception of a
truce entails a full withdrawal from the West Bank and the right
of return for Palestinian refugees, steps Israel will adamantly
reject in a permanent or temporary agreement. Still, an Israeli
pullout from parts of the West Bank, coupled with a mutual
cease-fire but without any interaction with or recognition of the
Jewish state, is something Hamas would welcome as a victory
without endorsing as a deal.
Such an outcome would promote the protagonists' short-term
interests. Israel would mollify Western critics and neutralize the
Palestinian demographic threat; Fatah could continue building
institutions of a future state; Hamas again may claim credit for
pushing Israel back without compromising on core principles.
But the conflict would endure. Israel would not achieve Arab
recognition or an end to Palestinian claims; Fatah would not
have produced a sovereign, independent state or resolved the
refugee issue; and Hamas would have to acquiesce in the
continued presence of a Jewish state on what it considers
Palestinian land. The ultimate reckoning would still loom,
arguably under conditions more inimical to the comprehensive
resolution all claim to seek.
Since the inception of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, the status
of the land between the Jordan River and Mediterranean Sea has
been determined almost invariably by acts of war or unilateral
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decisions. Even the Oslo Accords altered the status of
Palestinian territory little on the ground. Someday this may
change. For now, events outside the negotiating room again
deserve far more consideration than what's happening inside —
and could shape Israeli-Palestinian relations for some time to
come.
Robert Malley is director of the International Crisis Group's Middle
East and North Africa Program. Aaron David Miller, a distinguished
scholar at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, is
the author of the forthcoming book "Can America Have Another Great
President?"
Ankle 3.
The daily Beast
Shimon Peres's Influence Wanes as
Israel Grows More Bellicose Toward
Iran
Dan Ephron
March 2, 2012 -- The oddest odd couple in Israeli politics might
just be Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and President
Shimon Peres, both of whom are in Washington this week for
meetings with President Obama. Netanyahu is an unwavering
skeptic with a deep devotion to Greater Israel, Peres a
relentlessly optimistic peacenik. Yet for much of the past three
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years, Netanyahu had no bigger booster than Peres, who
repeatedly vouched for him with foreign leaders and assured
people he genuinely wants peace. Netanyahu, in return, allowed
Peres a brief role in contacts with the Palestinians, though as
president, his job description restricts him mostly to pomp and
circumstance. Now the honeymoon might be ending. People
familiar with the relationship say tensions have bubbled to the
surface in recent months over how to cope with Iran's nuclear
ambitions and what to offer the Palestinians. So much so that
while Netanyahu is expected to tell Obama that Israel will take
action on its own if sanctions against Iran don't produce quick
results—raising the specter of a regional war—Peres has
different ideas. "When you see that the United States and
Europe are taking steps [to prevent Iran from getting nuclear
weapons] ... that's the way right now," he told Newsweek in a
recent interview in Jerusalem. "We don't have to monopolize
it."
That Israel's two most senior political figures don't see eye to
eye on the weightiest issues of the day is hardly unprecedented.
Israel's first prime minister, David Ben-Gurion, is said to have
imbued the presidency with zero executive powers precisely to
prevent his political rival, Chaim Weizmann, from having a role
in the decision making. But it's a reminder that even as Israel
edges toward confrontation with Iran, in defiance of
Washington, how to deal with the mullahs is the subject of fierce
debate inside Israel—not just within the political establishment
but also in the military and the intelligence community. It's also
a reflection of Netanyahu's diminished status among a certain
group of politicians, public figures, and journalists who believed
three years ago that Netanyahu would surprise everyone by
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striking a deal with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas.
Peres is merely the latest member of the group to face
disillusionment. "For a long time, Peres nurtured the hope that
with his input and consultation, Netanyahu would be much more
forthcoming and active in the peace process," says David
Landau, who has coauthored two books with Peres and sees him
regularly. "But of late, Peres has given up that hope."
The backstory of the bromance between Peres and Netanyahu is
a complicated one. In 1996 the two had squared off in one of
Israel's most fiercely fought elections for prime minister, just
months after a right-wing Jew murdered Israeli leader Yitzhak
Rabin in a bid to halt the Oslo peace process. Peres succeeded
Rabin, but then lost to Netanyahu by less than half a percentage
point, leaving the Israeli left with the feeling that the assassin
had won—and casting a dark cloud over the fate of the peace
process. Yossi Beilin, who served as a member of Peres's
cabinet at the time, recalls feeling bereft, "really broken," when
results were announced. Yet he found Peres remarkably
composed. He remembers overhearing Peres ask his wife on the
phone that day what she was cooking. When the answer,
chicken, came back, Peres gave her the standard response: I'll be
home for lunch. The ability to rebound from defeat was vintage
Peres, but he didn't seem to harbor a grudge against Netanyahu,
which surprised people around him. Peres is not above bad-
mouthing political enemies—his decades-long rivalry with
Rabin, a member of his own party, produced some seriously
nasty invective. But people who know him say they've never
heard him utter a bad word about Netanyahu, either after the
election or in the years since. Landau attributes the courtesy to a
certain reverence for Yoni Netanyahu, Benjamin's brother, who
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was killed leading the daring rescue of hostages at Entebbe in
1976. Peres, who served as defense minister at the time,
dispatched Yoni on the mission and carries the burden of
effectively having signed his death warrant.
One way or another, Peres seems to have welcomed
Netanyahu's return to the prime minister's office in 2009, even
as members of the peace camp cringed. By then Peres had been
serving as president for almost two years and was able to lend a
hand by, among other things, smoothing early wrinkles in
Netanyahu's relationship with Obama. But the good will appears
to have run out last September, when Netanyahu vetoed a
meeting Peres was to have held with Abbas in Amman, Jordan.
The two had met secretly on four previous occasions in what
amounted to the most vigorous surge of diplomacy between
Israelis and Palestinians in years. Netanyahu hoped the meetings
would divert Abbas from petitioning the United Nations for
membership, according to a source in Netanyahu's inner circle,
a move Israel feared would lead to its isolation. When Abbas
pressed ahead with the U.N. initiative, Netanyahu terminated the
Peres backchannel. About the prospects of an agreement with
the Palestinians, Peres said the gaps were small, a
characterization that is at odds with even the most upbeat
assessments in the region.
In the interview with Newsweek, Peres sidestepped questions
about tensions with Netanyahu. At 88, Peres has more than a
quarter century on the Israeli prime minister, a gap that seems to
infuse even his frustrations with an avuncular spirit. But he did
say repeatedly that giving time for sanctions against Iran to work
was the right thing to do (Netanyahu has said the sanctions
aren't enough and has made clear to the Americans that Israel
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might launch airstrikes). He also said Obama appeared to have a
"deep conviction" that Iran must not get the bomb, in contrast to
the skepticism some people around Netanyahu express about the
American president. "Let's give the necessary time to see the
effect of the economic sanctions," he said in his Jerusalem
office. "There is quite an important alliance to prevent it from
happening [Iran developing nuclear weapons]. Give them a
chance."
About the prospects of an agreement with the Palestinians, Peres
said the gaps were small, a characterization that is at odds with
even the most upbeat assessments in the region. Israelis and
Palestinians have not engaged in sustained talks in more than
three years, the longest diplomatic drought since the start of the
Oslo peace process in 1993. Most observers believe that both
sides are moving away from an agreement that would resolve
their conflict, not toward one.
But Peres is irrepressible as always. He says the setbacks are
blips on a graph line that has mostly ascended since the '70s and
'80s, when Israel and the PLO refused to even recognize each
other. And he believes there's no real alternative to the two-state
solution if Israel wants to maintain its democratic character.
Peres recently co-wrote a book with Landau about his mentor,
Ben-Gurion. It concludes that Ben-Gurion's greatest decision
was accepting the United Nations partition plan, which gave
Israel a state but much less territory than it sought. The book is a
historical accounting from a man who worked under him for
decades. But Landau says Peres also thinks of it as a
contemporary tract. "He's trying to deliver a message to people
here and now that nothing has changed since Ben-Gurion's
decision," Landau said. "In order to maintain a democratic
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country, Israel needs to forgo part of the territory."
Article 4.
Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists
Fearful of a nuclear Iran? The real
WMD nightmare is Syria
Charles P. Blair
1 March 2012 -- As possible military action against Iran's
suspected nuclear weapons program looms large in the public
arena, far more international concern should be directed toward
Syria and its weapons of mass destruction. When the Syrian
uprising began more than a year ago, few predicted the regime
of President Bashar al-Assad would ever teeter toward collapse.
Now, though, the demise of Damascus's current leadership
appears inevitable, and Syria's revolution will likely be an
unpredictable, protracted, and grim affair. Some see similarities
with Libya's civil war, during which persistent fears revolved
around terrorist seizure of Libyan chemical weapons, or the
Qaddafi regime's use of them against insurgents. Those fears
turned out to be unfounded.
But the Libyan chemical stockpile consisted of several tons of
aging mustard gas leaking from a half-dozen canisters that
would have been impossible to utilize as weapons. Syria likely
has one of the largest and most sophisticated chemical weapon
programs in the world. Moreover, Syria may also possess an
offensive biological weapons capability that Libya did not.
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While it is uncertain whether the Syrian regime would consider
using WMD against its domestic opponents, Syrian insurgents,
unlike many of their Libyan counterparts, are increasingly
sectarian and radicalized; indeed, many observers fear the
uprising is being "hijacked" by jihadists. Terrorist groups active
in the Syrian uprising have already demonstrated little
compunction about the acquisition and use of WMD. In short,
should Syria devolve into full-blown civil-war, the security of its
WMD should be of profound concern, as sectarian insurgents
and Islamist terrorist groups may stand poised to seize chemical
and perhaps even biological weapons.
An enormous unconventional arsenal. Syria's chemical weapons
stockpile is thought to be massive. One of only eight nations that
is not a member of the Chemical Weapons Convention -- an
arms control agreement that outlaws the production, possession,
and use of chemical weapons -- Syria has a chemical arsenal that
includes several hundred tons of blistering agents along with
likely large stockpiles of deadly nerve agents, including VX, the
most toxic of all chemical weapons. At least four large chemical
weapon production facilities exist. Additionally, Syria likely
stores its deadly chemical weapons at dozens of
facilities throughout the fractious country. In contrast to Libya's
unusable chemical stockpile, analysts emphasize that Syrian
chemical agents are weaponized and deliverable. Insurgents and
terrorists with past or present connections to the military might
feasibly be able to effectively disseminate chemical agents over
large populations. (The Global Security Newswire recently
asserted that "[t]he Assad regime is thought to possess between
100 and 200 Scud missiles carrying warheads loaded with sarin
nerve agent. The government is also believed to have several
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hundred tons of sarin agent and mustard gas stockpiled that
could be used in air-dropped bombs and artillery shells,
according to information compiled by the James Martin
Center.")
Given its robust chemical weapons arsenal and its perceived
need to deter Israel, Syria has long been suspected of having an
active biological weapons program. Despite signing the
Biological Weapons and Toxins Convention in 1972 (the treaty
prohibits the development, production, and stockpiling
of biological and toxin weapons), Syria never ratified the treaty.
Some experts contend that any Syrian biological weapons
program has not moved beyond the research and development
phase. Still, Syria's biotechnical infrastructure undoubtedly has
the capability to develop numerous biological weapon agents.
After Israel destroyed a clandestine Syrian nuclear reactor in
September 2007, Damascus may have accelerated its chemical
and biological weapons programs.
It's hard to guard WMD when a government collapses. Although
the United States and its allies are reportedly monitoring Syria's
chemical weapons, recent history warns that securing them from
theft or transfer is an extraordinary challenge. For example,
during Operation Iraqi Freedom, more than 330 metric tons of
military-grade high explosives vanished from Iraq's Al-Qaqaa
military installation. Almost 200 tons of the most powerful of
Iraq's high-explosives, HMX -- used by some states to detonate
nuclear weapons -- was under International Atomic Energy
Agency seal. Many tons of Al-Qaqaa's sealed HMX reportedly
went missing in the early days of the war in Iraq. Forensic tests
later revealed that some of these military-grade explosives were
subsequently employed against US and coalition forces.
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Even with a nationwide presence of 200,000 coalition troops,
several other sensitive military sites were also looted, including
Iraq's main nuclear complex, Tuwaitha. Should centralized
authority crumble in Syria, it seems highly unlikely that the
country's 50 chemical storage and manufacturing facilities --
and, possibly, biological weapon repositories -- can be secured.
The US Defense Department recently estimated that it would
take more than 75,000 US military personnel to guard Syria's
chemical weapons. This is, of course, if they could arrive before
any WMD were transferred or looted -- a highly unlikely
prospect.
Complicating any efforts to secure Syria's WMD, post-Assad,
are its porous borders. With Syria's government distracted by
internal revolt and US forces now fully out of Iraq, it is plausible
that stolen chemical or biological weapons could find their way
across the Syrian border into Iraq. Similarly, Syrian WMD could
be smuggled into southern Turkey, Jordan, Lebanon, the West
Bank, Israel, and, potentially, the United States and Europe.
At least six formal terrorist organizations have long maintained
personnel within Syria. Three of these groups
Hamas,
Hizbollah, and Palestinian Islamic Jihad -- have already
attempted to acquire or use chemical or biological agents, or
both. Perhaps more troubling, Al Qaeda-affiliated fighters from
Iraq have streamed into Syria, acting, in part, on orders from Al
Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri. In the past, Al Qaeda-in-Iraq
fighters attempted to use chemical weapons, most notably
attacks that sought to release large clouds of chlorine gas. The
entry of Al Qaeda and other jihadist groups into the Syrian crisis
underscores its increasingly sectarian manifestation. Nearly 40
percent of Syria's population consists of members of minority
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communities. Syria's ruling Alawite regime, a branch of Shia
Islam, is considered heretical by many of Syria's majority Sunni
Muslims -- even those who are not jihadists. Alawites, Druze,
Kurds, and Christians could all become targets for WMD-armed
Sunni jihadists. Similarly, Shiite radicals could conceivably
employ WMD agents against Syria's Sunnis.
Religious fanaticism and WMD. Evidence of growing religious
fanaticism is also reflected in recent Syrian suicide attacks.
Since last December, at least five suicide attacks occurred in
Syria. In the 40 years preceding, only two suicide attacks were
recorded. Al Qaeda-linked mujahidin are believed to be
responsible for all of these recent attacks. Civil wars are often
the most violent and unpredictable manifestations of war. With
expanding sectarian divisions, the use of seized WMD in Syria's
uprising is plausible. To the extent that religious extremists
believe that they are doing God's bidding, fundamentally any
action they undertake is justified, no matter how abhorrent, since
the "divine" ends are believed to legitimize the means.
The situation in Syria is unprecedented. Never before has a
WMD-armed country fallen into civil war. All states in the
region stand poised to lose if these weapons find their way
outside of Syria. The best possible outcome, in terms of
controlling Syria's enormous WMD arsenal, would be for Assad
to maintain power, but such an outcome seems increasingly
implausible. And there is painfully little evidence that
democratic forces are likely to take over in Syria. Even if they
do eventually triumph, it will take months or years to
consolidate control over the entire country.
If chaos ensues in Syria, the United States cannot go it alone in
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securing hundreds of tons of Syrian WMD. Regional leaders --
including some, such as Sunni Saudi Arabia and Shiite Iran, that
are now backing the insurgency and the regime, respectively --
must come together and begin planning to avert a dispersion of
Syrian chemical or biological weapons that would threaten
everyone, of any political or religious persuasion, in the Middle
East and around the world.
Ankle S.
The Daily Star
Hamas rattles the Resistance Axis
Rami G. Khouri
March 03, 2012 -- The decision last week by the Palestinian
Islamist movement Hamas to abandon its external headquarters
in Damascus and support Syrians demonstrating for the removal
of Bashar Assad's regime is noteworthy on several levels. All of
them affirm the vulnerable and changing nature of strategic
conditions across the Middle East.
The decision by Hamas to abandon Syria emphasizes at the most
basic level the pragmatic and political nature of the movement,
as opposed to its rigid ideological or theological foundations.
When the kitchen gets too hot, rational people get out, and so do
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Arab Islamist resistance movements, it seems.
This is in line with Hamas' gradual slide into a more pragmatic
political posture over the past decade. During this time the
movement has declared its willingness to accept a Palestinian
state in the West Bank and Gaza and coexistence with Israel, if
the principles of the 2002 Arab Peace Plan are adopted and the
Palestine refugee issue is resolved equitably. llamas has also
signaled a willingness to abandon the armed struggle in favor of
nonviolent resistance against Israel, and to agree to a long-term
truce with Israel under certain conditions.
At another level, Hamas' decision to leave Syria reflects
ongoing internal divisions within the movement. Islamist
organizations, in the final analysis, experience the same
dynamics as any grouping of diverse people united by a common
cause, but also divided over the many options they have to
achieve their goals.
We can see this in the different tactical strands among llamas
officials vis-à-vis the reconciliation with Fatah. The implications
of these various views over issues such as negotiations with or
recognition of Israel, power-sharing with Fatah, relations with
Iran, or support for Arab uprisings across the region — which
range from hard-line absolutism to a more accommodating
pragmatism — are that groups like Hamas operate according to a
domestic political calculus of survival that ultimately overrides
other forces.
This is also seen in the quiet debate within Hamas about whether
to consolidate its power base in Gaza and make do with a
diminutive Palestinian statelet that makes little sense to anyone
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other than Hamas operatives; or to rejoin and reconfigure
Palestinian national institutions such as the Palestine Liberation
Organization, to continue the struggle nationally and regionally.
This raises the third level of analysis of Hamas' decision, which
relates to the condition of that grouping of states and movements
called the Resistance and Deterrence Front — namely Syria,
Hezbollah, Iran and Hamas. These four partners have always
been fascinating for several reasons, including their ability to
transcend traditional divides in the Middle East, such as Sunni-
Shiite, Arab-Iranian, and religious-secular divides.
Hamas' decision to turn against Damascus is a blow to the
Front, but probably a minor one for now, in a volatile region.
The Syrian government is under intense pressure at home and
abroad, and may not survive in its present form. The Iranian
government faces its own vulnerabilities at home and globally,
and continues to be the major regional loser from the Arab
uprisings.
Hezbollah in Lebanon — probably the strongest member of the
front in the short term — must be working overtime to calculate
how it should respond to possible scenarios on the horizon (the
fall of the Assad regime, an attack on Iran, a revival of the Green
Movement in Iran, an Iranian-Western nuclear agreement, and
so on).
Hamas and Syria are the most vulnerable members of the
Resistance and Deterrence Front these days. How Hamas plays
its cards in the months ahead probably will not have a major
impact on the region as a whole, because the movement has
become a relatively minor and constrained actor in its Gaze
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fiefdom. Syria's impact on the region would be much greater,
should the regime change, or only alter its policies. For now, we
can only conclude two things: The Resistance and Deterrence
Front, like any political construct, is vulnerable to change; and,
Islamist movements such as Hamas will make political decisions
based on pragmatism and realism as much as on ideological
purity and absolutism.
The changes under way in the region are a logical step in the
ongoing reconfiguration of power relationships in the Middle
East, following the first year of the Arab uprisings. Hamas'
reversal on Syria is an important example of how Islamist
groups continue to make the transition from their previous world
of abstract political opposition and often bloody and costly
resistance, to the new environment in which they must grapple
more convincingly with real-world conditions and options,
especially the spreading advent of populist legitimacy and
accountability in Arab countries.
Two of the four members of the Resistance and Deterrence Front
have been hit by the Arab uprisings. Others will follow in due
course.
Ankle 6.
Pew Research Center
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Millennials will benefit and suffer due
to their hyperconnected lives
(Overview)
February 29, 2012 -- In a survey about the future of the internet,
technology experts and stakeholders were fairly evenly split as
to whether the younger generation's always-on connection to
people and information will turn out to be a net positive or a net
negative by 2020. They said many of the young people growing
up hyperconnected to each other and the mobile Web and
counting on the internet as their external brain will be nimble,
quick-acting multitaskers who will do well in key respects.
At the same time, these experts predicted that the impact of
networked living on today's young will drive them to thirst for
instant gratification, settle for quick choices, and lack patience.
A number of the survey respondents argued that it is vital to
reform education and emphasize digital literacy. A notable
number expressed concerns that trends are leading to a future in
which most people are shallow consumers of information, and
some mentioned George Orwell's 1984 or expressed their fears
of control by powerful interests in an age of entertaining
distractions.
These findings come from an opt-in, online survey of a diverse
but non-random sample of 1,021 technology stakeholders and
critics. The study was fielded by the Pew Research Center's
Internet & American Life Project and Elon University's
Imagining the Internet Center between August 28 and October
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31, 2011.
The survey question about younger users was inspired by
speculation over the past several years about the potential
impact of technology on them. Looking toward the year 2020,
respondents to this survey were fairly evenly split on whether
the results will be primarily positive or mostly negative. They
were asked to read two statements and select the one they
believe that is most likely to be true and then explain their
answers.
Some 55% agreed with the statement:
In 2020 the brains of multitasking teens and young adults are
"wired" differently from those over age 35 and overall it yields
helpful results. They do not suffer notable cognitive
shortcomings as they multitask and cycle quickly through
personal- and work-related tasks. Rather, they are learning more
and they are more adept at finding answers to deep questions, in
part because they can search effectively and access collective
intelligence via the internet. In sum, the changes in learning
behavior and cognition among the young generally produce
positive outcomes.
Some 42% agreed with the opposite statement, which posited:
In 2020, the brains of multitasking teens and young adults are
"wired" differently from those over age 35 and overall it yields
baleful results. They do not retain information; they spend most
of their energy sharing short social messages, being entertained,
and being distracted away from deep engagement with people
and knowledge. They lack deep-thinking capabilities; they lack
face-to-face social skills; they depend in unhealthy ways on the
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internet and mobile devices to function. In sum, the changes in
behavior and cognition among the young are generally negative
outcomes.
While 55% agreed with the statement that the future for the
hyperconnected will generally be positive, many who chose that
view noted that it is more their hope than their best guess, and a
number of people said the true outcome will be a combination of
both scenarios. The research result here is really probably more
like a 50-50 outcome than the 55-42 split recorded through
survey takers' votes. Respondents were asked to select the
positive or the negative, with no middle-ground choice, in order
to encourage a spirited and deeply considered written
elaboration about the potential future of hyperconnected people.
We did not offer a third alternative — that young people's brains
would not be wired differently — but some of the respondents
made that argument in their elaborations. They often noted that
people's patterns of thinking will likely change, though the
actual mechanisms of brain function will not change.
Survey participants did offer strong, consistent predictions about
the most desired life skills for young people in 2020. Among
those they listed are: public problem-solving through
cooperative work (sometimes referred to as crowd-sourcing
solutions); the ability to search effectively for information online
and to be able to discern the quality and veracity of the
information one finds and then communicate these findings well
(referred to as digital literacy); synthesizing (being able to bring
together details from many sources); being strategically future-
minded; the ability to concentrate; and the ability to distinguish
between the "noise" and the message in the ever-growing sea of
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information.
Here is a sampling of their predictions and arguments:
• The environment itself will be full of data that can be
retrieved almost effortlessly, and it will be arrayed in ways
to help people — young and old — navigate their lives. Quick-
twitch younger technology users will do well mastering
these datastreams.
• Millennials' brains are being rewired to adapt to the new
information-processing skills they will need to survive in
this environment.
• "Memories are becoming hyperlinks to information
triggered by keywords and URLs. We are becoming
`persistent paleontologists' of our own external memories,
as our brains are storing the keywords to get back to those
memories and not the full memories themselves," argued
Amber Case, CEO of Geoloqi.
• There is evidence now that "supertaskers" can handle
several complicated tasks well, noted communications
expert Stowe Boyd. And some survey respondents noted
that it is not necessarily only young adults who do this well.
• Young people accustomed to a diet of quick-fix
information nuggets will be less likely to undertake deep,
critical analysis of issues and challenging information.
Shallow choices, an expectation of instant gratification, a
lack of patience, are likely to be common results, especially
for those who do not have the motivation or training that
will help them master this new environment. One possible
outcome is stagnation in innovation.
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• Another possibility, though, is that evolving social
structures will create a new "division of labor" that rewards
those who make swift, correct decisions as they exploit new
information streams and rewards the specialists who retain
the skills of focused, deep thinking. New winners and losers
will emerge in this reconfigured environment; the left-
behind will be mired in the shallow diversions offered by
technology.
• There are concerns about new social divides. "I suspect
we're going to see an increased class division around labor
and skills and attention," said media scholar danah boyd.
• A key differentiator between winners and losers will be
winners' capacity to figure out the correct attention-
allocation balance in this new environment. Just as we lost
oral tradition with the written word, we will lose something
big in the coming world, but we will gain as well. "As
Sophocles once said, `Nothing vast enters the life of mortals
without a curse,'" noted Tiffany Shlain, director of the film
Connected and founder of the Webby Awards.
• "The essential skills will be those of rapidly searching,
browsing, assessing quality, and synthesizing the vast
quantities of information," wrote Jonathan Grudin,
principal researcher at Microsoft. "In contrast, the ability to
read one thing and think hard about it for hours will not be
of no consequence, but it will be of far less consequence for
most people."
• Some argued that technology is not the issue as much as
bedrock human behavior is. The "moral panic" over digital
technology "seems to be wired into us,"—it parallels
previous concerns about media that have not led to the
downfall of civilization, noted Christopher J. Ferguson, a
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professor from Texas A&M whose research specialty is
technologies' effects on human behavior.
• Reform of the education system is necessary to help
learners know how to maximize the best and minimize the
worst. Reform could start by recognizing that distractions of
all kinds are the norm now. Educators should teach the
management of multiple information streams, emphasizing
the skills of filtering, analyzing, and synthesizing
information. Also of value is an appreciation for silence,
focused contemplation, and "lessons in ignoring people," as
futurist Marcel Bullinga put it.
• Others noted research that challenges the idea that people
can be "multitaskers." People really toggle between tasks
and "time slice" their attention into ever-smaller chunks of
time, argued Nikki Reynolds, director of instructional
technology services at Hamilton College.
Futurist John Smart, president and founder of the Acceleration
Studies Foundation, recalled an insight of economist Simon
Kuznets about evolution of technology effects known as the
Kuznets curve: "First-generation tech usually causes `net
negative' social effects; second-generation `net neutral' effects;
by the third generation of tech—once the tech is smart enough,
and we've got the interface right, and it begins to reinforce the
best behaviors—we finally get to `net positive' effects," he
noted. "We'll be early into conversational interface and agent
technologies by 2020, so kids will begin to be seriously
intelligently augmented by the internet. There will be many
persistent drawbacks however [so the effect at this point will be
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net neutral]. The biggest problem from a personal-development
perspective will be motivating people to work to be more self-
actualized, productive, and civic than their parents were. They'll
be more willing than ever to relax and remain distracted by
entertainments amid accelerating technical productivity.
"As machine intelligence advances," Smart explained, "the first
response of humans is to offload their intelligence and
motivation to the machines. That's a dehumanizing, first-
generation response. Only the later, third-generation
educational systems will correct for this."
Another comprehensive insight came from Barry Chudakov, a
Florida-based consultant and a research fellow in the McLuhan
Program in Culture and Technology at the University of
Toronto. He wrote that by 2020, "Technology will be so
seamlessly integrated into our lives that it will effectively
disappear. The line between self and technology is thin today;
by then it will effectively vanish. We will think with, think into,
and think through our smart tools but their presence and reach
into our lives will be less visible. Youth will assume their
minds and intentions are extended by technology, while
tracking technologies will seek further incursions into
behavioral monitoring and choice manipulation. Children will
assume this is the way the world works. The cognitive
challenge children and youth will face (as we are beginning to
face now) is integrity, the state of being whole and undivided.
There will be a premium on the skill of maintaining presence,
of mindfulness, of awareness in the face of persistent and
pervasive tool extensions and incursions into our lives. Is this
my intention, or is the tool inciting me to feel and think this
way? That question, more than multitasking or brain atrophy
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due to accessing collective intelligence via the internet, will be
the challenge of the future."
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