Uri Avnery
26.4.08
The Military Option
WAR WITH Syria? Peace with Syria?
A big military operation against Hamas in the Gaza strip? A cease-fire with Hamas?
Our media discuss these questions dispassionately, as if they were equivalent
options. Like a person in a showroom making a choice between two cars. This one
is good, and so is the other one. So which should one buy?
And nobody cries out: War is the height of stupidity!
CARL VON CLAUSEWITZ, the renowned military theorist, famously said that war
is nothing but the continuation of politics by other means. Meaning: war is
there to serve policy and is useless when it does not.
What policies did the wars in the last hundred years serve?
Ninety-four years ago, World War I broke out. The immediate cause was the
assassination of the Austrian heir apparent by a Serbian student. In Sarajevo they showed me
how it happened: after a first attempt on the main street had failed, the
assassins had already given up hope when one of them came across the victim
again, by sheer accident, and killed him. After this almost accidental killing
many millions of human beings lost their lives in the following four years.
The assassination served, of course, only as a pretext. Every one of the
belligerent nations had political and economic interests that pushed it into
the war. But did the war really serve these interests? The results suggest the
opposite: three mighty empires - the Russian, German and Austrian - collapsed; France lost its standing as a world power beyond
all hope of recovery; the British Empire was mortally
wounded.
Military experts point to the shocking stupidity of almost all the
generals, who threw their poor soldiers again and again into hopeless battles,
which achieved nothing but slaughter.
Were the statesmen any wiser? Not one of the politicians who started the
war imagined that it would last so long and be so horrible. In early August
1914, when the soldiers of all the countries marched into the war with merry
enthusiasm, they were promised that they would be home "before
Christmas".
No political aim was achieved in that war. The peace agreements that were
imposed on the vanquished were monuments of unbridled imbecility. It can be
argued that the main result of World War I was World War II.
THE SECOND World War was, seemingly, more
rational. The man who launched it practically single-handed, Adolf Hitler, knew
exactly what he wanted. His opponents went to war because they had no choice, if
they did not want to be overrun by a monstrous dictator. Most of the generals
on both sides were far more intelligent than their predecessors.
And in spite of this, it was a stupid war.
Hitler was, basically, a primitive person who lived in the past and did
not understand the Zeitgeist. He wanted to turn Germany into
the leading world power - an aim that was wildly beyond its capabilities. He
intended to conquer large parts of Eastern Europe
and to empty them of their inhabitants, in order to settle Germans there. That
was a hopelessly obsolete concept of power. Like all ideas of establishing settlements
as a national instrument, it belonged to centuries past. Hitler did not
understand the meaning of the technological revolution that was about to change
the face of the world. It can be said: Hitler was not only an evil tyrant and a
monumental war criminal, but ultimately also a thoroughly stupid person.
The only aim that he almost achieved was the annihilation of the Jewish
people. But even this mad endeavor failed in the end: Jews today have a strong influence
on the most powerful country in the world, and the Holocaust played an
important role in the establishment of the State of Israel.
Hitler wanted to destroy the Soviet Union and reach a compromise with the
British Empire. He belittled the United States and
almost ignored it. The result of the war was that the Soviet Union took over a
large part of Europe, America
became the main world power and the British Empire
disintegrated forever.
Indeed, the Nazi dictator proved, more than anybody else, the utter futility
of war as a political instrument at this point in time. After the destruction
of Hitler's Reich, Germany
did achieve his goal. Germany
is now the dominant economic and political power in a united Europe
- but this was attained not with tanks and heavy guns, without war and military
might, solely by diplomacy and exports. One generation after all the German cities
had become heaps of ruins in the Nazi adventure, Germany was already
flourishing as never before.
The same can be said about Japan,
which was even more militaristic than Germany. It achieved by peaceful
means what the generals and admirals had failed to achieve by war.
FROM TIME to time I read enthusiastic reports by American tourists about Vietnam. What a
wonderful country! What a friendly people! What good business can be done
there!
Only a generation ago, a brutal war was running amok there. Masses of
people were killed, hundreds of villages burned,
forests and harvests destroyed by chemical agents, soldiers fell like flies. Why?
Because of dominoes.
The theory went like this: if all of Vietnam
were to be taken over by the Communists, all the other countries of Southeast Asia would fall. Each one would bring down its
neighbor, like a row of dominoes. Reality has shown that this was complete
nonsense: the Communists took over all of Vietnam,
without affecting the stability of Thailand,
Malaysia and Singapore. When
the war memories faded, Vietnam
indeed followed the path of its northern neighbor, Red China, but in the
meantime China
has a flourishing capitalist economy.
In the Vietnam War, the stupidity of the generals competed with that of
the politicians. The champion was Henry Kissinger, a war criminal whose
towering ego disguised his basic stupidity. At the height of the war he invaded
the neighboring peaceful Cambodia
and broke it into pieces. The result was a gruesome auto-genocide, when the
Communists murdered their own people. Yet many still consider Kissinger a
political genius.
THERE ARE those who maintain that for sheer futility, the invasion of Iraq takes the
cake even in this fiercely competitive field.
It seems that the political leadership in Washington foresaw the dramatic rise of the
world-wide demand for oil. They decided, therefore, to strengthen their hold on
the oil of the Persian Gulf and the Caspian Sea
basin. The war was intended to turn Iraq into an American satellite and
to station there, under a friendly regime, a permanent American garrison that
would keep the whole area under control.
The results, up to now, have been the opposite. Instead of consolidating Iraq as a
united country under a stable pro-American regime, a civil war is raging, the
state is tottering on the brink of disintegration, the
population hates the Americans and considers them a foreign occupier. The
output of oil is less than it was before the invasion, the immense costs of the
war undermine the American economy, the price of oil is increasing incessantly,
America's
once elevated position in world public opinion has reached rock bottom and the
American public is demanding that the soldiers be brought home.
There is no doubt that American interests could have been safeguarded far
better by diplomatic means, using the economic clout of the US. That would
have saved thousands of American soldiers and ten times as many Iraqi
civilians, and trillions of dollars. But the problematic ego of George Bush,
who hides his hollowness and insecurity behind a bluster
of noisy arrogance, caused him to prefer war. As to his cerebral prowess, a
world-wide consensus has been achieved even before the end of his term in
office.
IN THE 60 years of its existence, the State of Israel has fought six
major wars and several "smaller" ones (the War of Attrition, the
Grapes of Wrath, the two intifadas and more.)
The 1948 confrontation was a war of "no alternative", if one
justifies the Jewish intrusion into Palestine
by the fact that there was no other solution for the problem of their
existence. But already the second round, the war of 1956, was an example of
incredible short-sightedness.
The French, who initiated the war, were in a state of denial: they could
not admit to themselves that in Algeria
a genuine war of liberation was taking place. Therefore, they convinced
themselves that the Egyptian leader, Gamal Abd-al-Nasser, was the root of the problem. David
Ben-Gurion and his aides (and particularly Shimon Peres) wanted to remove the
"Egyptian Tyrant" (as he was then uniformly called in Israel) because he had raised the banner of Arab
Unity, which they considered an existential threat to Israel. Britain, the
third partner, was longing for the past glories of Empire.
All these aims were totally negated by the war: France was expelled from Algeria, together with more than a million
settlers; Britain was pushed
to the margins of the Middle East; and the
"danger" of Arab Unity proved to be a scarecrow. The price: a whole
Arab generation was convinced that Israel was the ally of the nastiest
colonial regimes, and the chances of peace were pushed back for many years.
The 1967 war was intended at the beginning to break the siege on Israel. But in
the course of the fighting, the war of defense became a war of conquest which
drove Israel
into a vertigo of intoxication from which it has not yet quite recovered. Since
then we have been captives in a vicious circle of occupation, resistance,
settlements and permanent war.
One of the direct results was the 1973 war, which destroyed the myth of
our army's invincibility. Yet without this being the intent of our government,
this war had one positive result: three unusual personalities - Anwar Sadat, Menachem Begin and Jimmy Carter - succeeded in translating
Egyptian pride over the successful crossing of the Suez Canal
into a peace agreement. But the same peace could have been achieved a year earlier,
without war and without the thousands of killed, if Golda Meir had not arrogantly
rejected Sadat's proposal.
The First Lebanon War was, perhaps, the most hopeless and dim-witted of Israel's wars,
a cocktail of arrogance, ignorance and complete lack of understanding of the
opponent. Ariel Sharon intended - as he told me in advance, to - (a) destroy
the PLO, (b) cause the Palestinian refugees to flee from Lebanon
to Jordan, (c) drive the
Syrians out of Lebanon, and
(d) turn Lebanon
into an Israeli protectorate. The results: (a) Arafat went to Tunis, and later,
as the result of the First Intifada, returned to Palestine in triumph,
(b) the Palestinian refugees remained in Lebanon, in spite of the Sabra and Shatila massacre that was
intended to panic them into fleeing, (c) the Syrians remained in Lebanon for
another twenty years, and (d) the Shiites, who had been downtrodden and
beholden to Israel, became a powerful force in Lebanon and Israel's most
determined foe.
The less said about Lebanon War II the better - its true character was obvious
right from the start. Its aims were not frustrated - simply because there were
no clear aims at all. Today Hizbullah is where it
was, stronger and better armed, shielded from Israeli attacks by the presence
of an international force.
After the First Intifada,
Israel
recognized the Palestinian Liberation Organization and brought Arafat back to
the country. After the Second Intifada, Hamas won the Palestinian
elections and later took over direct control of a part of the country.
ALBERT EINSTEIN considered it a symptom of madness to repeat again and
again doing something that has already failed and to expect a different result every
time.
Most politicians and generals conform to this formula. Again and again
they try to achieve their aims by military means and obtain contrary results.
We Israelis occupy an honorable place among these madmen.
War is hell, as an American general pronounced. It also rarely achieves
its aims.