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July 24, 2006
What Options Are Left?
Arab Nations Show No Sign of Concessions or Desire for Peace.
by Victor Davis Hanson
Tribune Media Services
The conventional wisdom is that the
United States
is so tied down that it can't do much about the rocket attacks on
Israel
, the blatant sponsorship of terrorists by
Iran
and
Syria
, or the Iranian nuclear program.
Oil prices are already sky-high. Any unilateral American action might disrupt tight global supplies. That would derail the economies of our Western allies and only further enrich enemies with windfall profits.
Trying to win hearts and minds for the fragile democracy in
Iraq
also means we can't afford to offend Arab sensitivities elsewhere. And a lame-duck George Bush, low in the polls and facing uncertain congressional elections this fall, certainly doesn't want to involve the American taxpayer with more costly commitments abroad.
But despite that sound conventional wisdom, an exasperated West is running out of choices in the
Middle East
.
For years, the Arab world clamored for the
Israel
"problem" to be solved. Then peace and security would at last supposedly reshape the
Middle East
. The Western nations understood the "problem" as being Israeli retention of lands it had captured in Sinai, the West Bank,
Gaza
,
Syria
and
Lebanon
after defeating a series of Arab forces bent on destroying the Jewish state.
But after the Israeli departure from Sinai,
Gaza
and
Lebanon
, and billions of dollars in American aid to
Egypt
,
Jordan
and the Palestinians, there is still not much progress toward peace. Past Israeli magnanimity was seen as weakness. Now
Israel
's reasoned diplomacy has earned it another round of kidnapping, ransom and rocket attacks.
Finally, the world is accepting that the Middle East problem was never about so-called occupied land but only about the existence of
Israel
itself. Hezbollah and Hamas, and those in their midst who tolerate them (or vote for them), didn't so much want Israel out of Lebanon and Gaza as pushed into the Mediterranean altogether. And since there will be no second Holocaust, the Israelis may well soon transform a perennial terrorist war that they can't easily win into a conventional aerial one against a terrorist-sponsoring
Syria
that they can.
For its part, the
United States
has spent thousands of lives and billions in treasure trying to birth democracy in
Iraq
. We wished to end our old cynical support for
Middle East
dictators that earned us such scorn and instead give liberated Iraqis a choice other than either theocracy or autocracy.
In multilateral fashion,
America
has also welcomed the help of the European Union, the United Nations,
China
and
Russia
in convincing the Iranians of the folly of producing nuclear weapons. But like Hezbollah and
Hamas
,
Iran
does not wish to parley - just as the beheaders and kidnappers in
Iraq
don't, either.
The two most liberal societies in Europe
Denmark
and the
Netherlands
welcomed almost anyone to their shores from the
Middle East
. Their multicultural hospitality was supposed to have led to a utopian "diverse" nation of various races, nationalities and religions.
Instead, such liberality has earned both small nations pariah status in the Muslim world for the supposed indiscretions of a few freewheeling filmmakers and cartoonists.
Yet for all their threats, what the Islamists from Hezbollah in
Lebanon
's
Bekaa
Valley
to the Iranian government in
Tehran
to the jihadists in
Iraq
's Sunni Triangle don't understand is that they are slowly pushing tired Westerners into a corner. If diplomacy, or aid, or support for democracy, or multiculturalism, or withdrawal from contested lands, does not satisfy radical Islamists, what would?
Perhaps nothing.
What then would be the new Western approach to terrorism? Hard and quick retaliation but without our past concern for nation-building, or offering a democratic alternative to theocracy and autocracy, or even worrying about whether other Muslims are unfairly lumped in with Islamists who operate freely in their midst.
Any new policy of retaliation in light both of Sept. 11 and the messy efforts to birth democracies in
Afghanistan
,
Iraq
,
Lebanon
and the
West Bank
would be something of an exasperated return to the old cruise-missile payback. Yet in the new world of Iranian nukes and Hezbollah missiles, the West would hit back with something far greater than a cruise missile.
If they are not careful, a
Syria
or
Iran
really will earn a conventional war not more futile diplomacy or limited responses to terrorism. And history shows that massive attacks from the air are something that the West does well.
So in the meantime, let us hope that democracy prevails in
Iraq
, that our massive aid is actually appreciated by the Middle East, that diplomacy ultimately works with
Iran
, that
Syria
quits supporting terrorists, and that Hamas and Hezbollah cease their rocket attacks against
Israel
more for all their sakes than ours.
©2006 Tribune Media Services