A world without Israel

I’m not quite sure how I missed this one in the spring, but I did. Here’s a fascinating piece on what the world would be like if Israel had never existed:

Let us start the what-if procession in 1948, when Israel was born in war. Would stillbirth have nipped the Palestinian problem in the bud? Not quite. Egypt, Transjordan (now Jordan), Syria, Iraq, and Lebanon marched on Haifa and Tel Aviv not to liberate Palestine, but to grab it. The invasion was a textbook competitive power play by neighboring states intent on acquiring territory for themselves. If they had been victorious, a Palestinian state would not have emerged, and there still would have been plenty of refugees. (Recall that half the population of Kuwait fled Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein’s “liberation” of that country in 1990.) Indeed, assuming that Palestinian nationalism had awakened when it did in the late 1960s and 1970s, the Palestinians might now be dispatching suicide bombers to Egypt, Syria, and elsewhere.

Let us imagine Israel had disappeared in 1967, instead of occupying the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, which were held, respectively, by Jordan’s King Hussein and Egypt’s President Gamal Abdel Nasser. Would they have relinquished their possessions to Palestinian leader Yasir Arafat and thrown in Haifa and Tel Aviv for good measure? Not likely. The two potentates, enemies in all but name, were united only by their common hatred and fear of Arafat, the founder of Fatah (the Palestine National Liberation Movement) and rightly suspected of plotting against Arab regimes. In short, the “root cause” of Palestinian statelessness would have persisted, even in Israel’s absence.

[…] Can anybody proclaim in good conscience that these dysfunctionalities of the Arab world would vanish along with Israel? Two U.N. “Arab Human Development Reports,” written by Arab authors, say no. The calamities are homemade. Stagnation and hopelessness have three root causes. The first is lack of freedom. The United Nations cites the persistence of absolute autocracies, bogus elections, judiciaries beholden to executives, and constraints on civil society. Freedom of expression and association are also sharply limited. The second root cause is lack of knowledge: Sixty-five million adults are illiterate, and some 10 million children have no schooling at all. As such, the Arab world is dropping ever further behind in scientific research and the development of information technology. Third, female participation in political and economic life is the lowest in the world. Economic growth will continue to lag as long as the potential of half the population remains largely untapped.

Will all of this right itself when that Judeo-Western insult to Arab pride finally vanishes? Will the millions of unemployed and bored young men, cannon fodder for the terrorists, vanish as well—along with one-party rule, corruption, and closed economies? This notion makes sense only if one cherishes single-cause explanations or, worse, harbors a particular animus against the Jewish state and its refusal to behave like Sweden. (Come to think of it, Sweden would not be Sweden either if it lived in the Hobbesian world of the Middle East.)

It’s another RIF (read-in-full) recommendation.

This entry was posted in Israel. Bookmark the permalink.

4 Responses to A world without Israel

  1. Lil Mamzer says:

    The author of this article made a speaking tour of the US after this was published, and I caught him on C-SPAN, answering call-in questions. The hard-core Jew-haters showed up, and he handled them gracefully. When one sweeps away the myths and lies, and all that is left is for the purest antisemites to make some noise, something important has been said.

  2. Kav says:

    A little off topic, I admit, but I saw half of a fascinating documentary on the 6 day war. The part I saw focused on the personal recollections of an officer in the battle for Jerusalem. Basically it showed Nasser for the pathetic moron he was and was marginally more sympathetic to Hussein, but only just. I really want to catch it again, the good thing with it being on BBC4 is that it is likely to be repeated.

  3. Sabba Hillel says:

    Actually, Sweden would exist as it is today if it had not had some of the toughest fighters in the world originally.

  4. Sabba Hillel says:

    Actually, Sweden would not exist as it is today if it had not had some of the toughest fighters in the world originally.

Comments are closed.