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Wednesday, July 08, 2009

The mother of all myths

The New York Times has an excerpt from Dennis Ross (pictured) and David Makovsky's (sorry - all my pictures of him are 30 years old and not digitized - we were in yeshiva together) new book Myths, Illusions and Peace.
Of all the policy myths that have kept us from making real progress in the Middle East, one stands out for its impact and longevity: the idea that if only the Palestinian conflict were solved, all the other Middle East conflicts would melt away. This is the argument of “linkage.”

Neoconservatives have always rejected it, given their skepticism about Arab intentions and their related belief that the Israeli-Palestinian conflict cannot be resolved. While realists have been the most determined purveyors, this myth transcends all others and has had amazing staying power here, internationally, and in the Middle East. In fact, few ideas have been as consistently and forcefully promoted – by laymen, policymakers, and leaders alike.

...

The major problem with this premise is that it is not true. There have been dozens of conflicts and countless coups in the Middle East since Israel’s birth in 1948, and most were completely unrelated to the Arab-Israeli conflict. For example, the Iraqi coup of 1958, the Lebanon crisis of 1958, the Yemini civil war of 1962-68 (including subsequent civil wars in the 1980s and ‘90s), the Iraqi Kurdish revolt of 1974, the Egyptian-Libyan Border War of 1977, the Iran-Iraq War of 1980-88, the Persian Gulf War of 1990-91 (including Iraqi Kurdish and Iraqi Shiite revolts of the same year), the Yemeni-Eritrean and Saudi-Yemeni border conflicts of the mid-1990s, and the US-Iraq War, begun in 2003.

Many of these conflicts were long, bloody, and very costly. The Iran-Iraq War along lasted eight and a half years, cost in the hundreds of billions of dollars, and took between six hundred thousand and one million lives. Yet this conflict, like the others listed above, would have taken place even if the Arab-Israeli conflict had been resolved.

Since the origins of so many regional tensions and rivalries are not connected to the Arab-Israeli conflict, it is hard to see how resolving it would unlock other regional stalemates or sources of instability. Iran, for example, is not pursuing its nuclear ambitions because there is an Arab-Israeli conflict. Sectarian groups in Iraq would not suddenly put aside their internal struggles if the Palestinian issue were resolved. Like so many conflicts in the region, these struggles have their own dynamic.

In addition, as tragic as the conflict between Israelis and Palestinians has become, it has not spilled over to destabilize the Middle East. There have been two Palestinian Intifadas, or uprisings, including one that lasted from 2000 to 2005 and claimed the lives of 4,000 Palestinians and 1,000 Israelis – but not a single Arab leader had been toppled or a single regime destabilized as a result. It has remained a local conflict, contained in a small geographical area. Yet the argument of linkage endures to this day, and with powerful promoters. Why does it persist? And why has it been accepted among top policymakers as if it is factually correct?
Read the whole thing. I don't know about the rest of the book, but this part is spot-on.

3 Comments:

At 8:03 PM, Blogger NormanF said...

I think it has to do with the anti-Semitic notion that the Jews run the world. That's behind the mother of all myths and if the Jews weren't stirring up tension in the Middle East, the rest of the region would be free of trouble. The problem is as you've outlined is there is no real or apparent linkage between Israel and other Middle East conflicts.

The fact a myth has widespread currency doesn't make it true. Nevertheless, its also illustration of the hold myths have on the human mind even when there's no basis for them in reality. And the consequences for Jews in particular have often been lethal.

 
At 8:25 PM, Blogger NormanF said...


One of the interesting things about why Obama is having such a hard time bringing Israel around to a settlement freeze is the virtual absence of support for his stand on the moderate Israeli Left.



Barry Rubin has the money quote of the year:



"[T]here's no pro-Obama bloc in Israel today, not even on the left."



Read it all

 
At 10:16 PM, Blogger TeachESL said...

I find it of significance that this was published in the N.Y. Times!

 

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