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The Iranian Nukes Deal and the
Horseman of the Jewish Apocalypse

July 21, 2015 | FlaglerLive | 7 Comments

netanyahu israel iran nuclear deal
Benjamin Netanyahu could have taken a lot of the credit for the deal with Iran. Instead, he chose to demonize it instead. (Jewish Agency for Israel)

By Shlomo Ben-Ami

The nuclear agreement reached by Iran and the five permanent members of the United Nations Security Council (China, France, Russia, the United States, and the United Kingdom), plus Germany, is not about Iran’s capitulation, as Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu wished. And it is about as imperfect as any negotiated agreement between disputing parties can be. Nonetheless, it creates a solid framework to prevent Iran from producing nuclear weapons for the next 10-15 years – and that is a very positive development.


Netanyahu, if he wished, could take a lot of the credit for this achievement. Had he not fueled global hysteria over Iran’s nuclear ambitions, the crippling international sanctions regime that eventually pushed Iran to a deal might never have been implemented.

But Netanyahu has stubbornly insisted that the agreement is a strategic fiasco, citing its ambiguities in matters such as the mechanism of inspection, the number of centrifuges Iran will be allowed to maintain, and the conditions for re-imposing sanctions if Iran breaches the accord. In pursuing this course, Netanyahu has not only missed the opportunity to claim a major diplomatic victory; he has also reinforced Israel’s international isolation.

Netanyahu is now doing all he can to persuade the US Congress to pass a “resolution of disapproval.” This is highly unlikely to occur, especially in an election year, given that it would require 13 Democratic senators and 48 Democratic representatives to break with US President Barack Obama. Indeed, Netanyahu’s effort is succeeding only in turning Israel into an increasingly divisive partisan issue in US politics. That is a dangerous game: The US has broken with the international community to support Israel in the past; it is less willing to do so today.

Even if Netanyahu managed to secure such a Congressional resolution, doing so would not serve his interests. Given that the resolution would affect only US sanctions, it might not nullify the agreement, with the lifting of sanctions by all other international powers proving sufficient motivation for Iran to uphold its end of the bargain. Worse, Iran could then decide to gallop toward the bomb, now with the support of countries like China and Russia, within an increasingly fragmented international system.

Despite the obvious problems with Netanyahu’s position, dismissing it would be a mistake. Contrary to popular belief, he is not just a cynical politician in search of an agenda to deflect attention away from growing domestic problems and the conflict with Palestine. His obsessive focus on Iran – not to mention the seemingly irrational calculus that is driving him toward a politically suicidal confrontation with the US, his country’s most important benefactor – stems from deep-rooted convictions, a system of political thought, and his own perspective on Jewish history.

Netanyahu is an ideologue of Jewish catastrophe. His view of Jewish history reflects that of his father, the historian Benzion Netanyahu, who went to America in the 1940s to challenge the Allies’ failure to rescue European Jewry from the Holocaust, and thus to mobilize support for Zionism. In fact, Netanyahu remembered his father’s efforts in his address to the US Congress last March.

But Netanyahu goes a step further than remembering the past. Zionism was supposed to enable the Jews to break with their history. Netanyahu, however, has imbued the Israeli state’s existence with all of the Jewish people’s past anxieties, pains, and struggles. It does not matter that Israel possesses, according to foreign sources, a nuclear arsenal, as well as a robust economy and a strong alliance with the world’s most powerful country; for Netanyahu, it is essentially an old Jewish ghetto, attempting to hold out against relentless threats.

In this Hobbesian worldview, the threats can stem from virtually any development – political, strategic, or otherwise – and amount to existential challenges to the entire Jewish nation. The only way to avoid catastrophe is to remain constantly vigilant.

By this logic, risks and challenges cannot be approached with a view toward resolution; they must be held up as reminders for the Jewish people to keep up their guard. Netanyahu would dismiss as political lunacy the notion that the nuclear agreement opened a 10-15-year window for creative statesmanship to reshape regional politics. A regional system of peace and security based on an accord with Arab countries that includes nuclear non-proliferation is, he would argue, the agenda of naïve dreamers, not of a leader so aware of the lessons of Jewish history.

Palestine is no different from Iran, from this perspective. The Palestinian conflict is unsolvable, too; at best, it can be managed. With Hamas control in Gaza reinforcing the view of Palestine as a threat, the issue galvanizes the Israeli-Jewish nation.

If Israel is to reverse its shift toward international isolation, and help build a stable regional security environment, it must change its approach. Paranoia and antagonism must give way to sober politics, with Israeli leaders discussing potential strategic compensation with the US, working with other powers to address Iran’s support for Hamas and Hezbollah, and considering a credible revival of peace negotiations with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas.
Israel’s Labour Party, which is now debating whether to join Netanyahu’s government, should consider carefully whether it can bring about such a shift. If it cannot, and no other force emerges to do the job, Netanyahu’s prophecies of doom risk becoming self-fulfilling.

Shlomo Ben-AmiShlomo Ben-Ami, is a former Israeli foreign minister who was elected to the Knesset in 1996, on Labour’s list. He resigned in 2002. He is Vice President of the Toledo International Center for Peace. He is the author of “Scars of War, Wounds of Peace: The Israeli-Arab Tragedy” (Oxford, 2006). (© Project Syndicate)

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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Anonymous says

    July 21, 2015 at 9:50 pm

    Uh, Mr. Ben Ami, do you read the news or only your own writings? It is Iran who, only today (7/21/2015), stated that it needs “at least” 60 days to dither around and decide whether this deal meets with the approval of its government, its Supreme Leader and its Revolutionary Guard. It is Zarif, himself, who, in a radio-broadcasted address to Iran’s Parliament, made yet another threat, before the ink on the agreement has had time to dry, that Iran will not feel any need to uphold its obligations under the deal if the UN Security Council (which gave such a standing ovation to the deal so very recently) re-instated sanctions FOR ANY REASON, UNDER ANY CIRCUMSTANCES WHATSOEVER…Like, if they are caught lying and cheating. But, you keep on broadcasting your half-truths and throwing as much manure on the walls as you hope might stick, in your special “Labour’s List” way. No wonder you “resigned.” You should be ashamed!

  2. Abdul Ebstein says

    July 22, 2015 at 6:04 am

    Ah, somebody didn’t get the political position they where campaigning for !!!!!

  3. groot says

    July 22, 2015 at 10:03 am

    Yeah but, it will no doubt fall on Benji to clean up the mess.

  4. Samuel L. Bronkowitz says

    July 22, 2015 at 11:01 am

    Excellent article. Some people think that Netanyahu speaks for the people of Israel, when in reality Netanyahu speaks for himself and his party. He has no respect for the sovereignty of the United States and yet he demands military aid from us to be used against the enemies of Israel, enemies that Israel made because of its behavior against its neighbors and the Palestinians. It is unfortunate that his approach has been warmongering instead of peacemaking, because in warmongering he’s put Israel on the path committing similar atrocities against its neighbors that were committed against the Jews during WW II.

  5. Anonymous says

    July 22, 2015 at 4:40 pm

    Please pedal that comparison between Israel and the Nazis someplace else. That so-called “Progressive Left” prattle that makes some people feel more saviour-like than Jesus himself consistently and mysteriously avoids any mention of the genocidal intent and sustained violence perpetrated by Palestinians and their chosen leaders in Hamas, who have yet to decry their own Charter which calls for Jihad and the extermination of Jews and all other non-believers (but Jews first.) Just this week the Supreme leader of Iran made another hate-filled speech to shouts of DEATH TO ISRAEL! So, please spare us the “Israel is the worst Human Rights Offender that ever existed or exists today in the Middle East” propaganda. Do you know what “the Cubs of the Caliphate” are? It’s a training program for children that trains them to kill “non-believers. Their adult handlers use dolls to teach them how to chop off people’s heads. But, OOOHHHHH, those terrible Israeli’s! They really ARE the worst war-mongers on the planet. Puh-leeze!

  6. Bill says

    July 24, 2015 at 8:10 am

    Just how is one to deal with a regime that even day call for the DEATH of your Nation and people?? If one really looks at the situation of the “palestinian” people they would understand it is they who rejected a land deal when the State of Israel was formed. It is the other arab Nations that keep the palestinians poor. Jordan has more land that was set aside for them then does Israel. in Israel arabs are part of the government. in other arab Nations the palestinians are NOT given the same they are not even considered as part of jordans population.

  7. Knightwatch says

    July 24, 2015 at 12:58 pm

    President Obama has shown once again the vision, foresight and leadership to use diplomacy instead of war to achieve an outcome the entire world supports – oh yeah, with the exceptions of our Republican congress and that bully, Netanyahu.

    You lost again conservatives. The UN supports this agreement and there’s nothing you can do about it except embarrass America on the world stage. Yep, that works every time.

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