23 October 2020

Amnon Reshef: Annexation is not my Zionism!

Source: mass emailing (please note I have only included the article and associated web links.)  

---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Commanders for Israel's Security <doar@cis.org.il>
Date: Tue, 20 Oct 2020 at 17:22
Subject: Amnon Reshef: Annexation is not my Zionism!



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Dear friends,

I hope you will find Amnon Reshef's opinion piece in today's Jerusalem Post to be a powerful answer to those who promote unilateral annexation of West Bank territory.

Best,

Dan Rothem
CEO

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Zionism is about a secure, Jewish, Democratic Israel
By Amnon Reshef | October 20, 2020 

A two-state solution may or may not be achievable in the near future, but closing the door on it to accommodate extreme annexationists' whims might close the door on the kind of Zionism we uphold.

In his "Zionism is about being pioneers in the land" [Jerusalem Post, October 8, 2020], Prof. Hillel Frisch kindly credited me for what he described as having "heroically commanded the regiment that suffered the brunt of the Egyptian surprise attack" and as leading "one of the first forces to cross the Suez Canal" in the Yom Kippur War. Astonishingly, he leaps from recounting this existential moment to describing the "strategic settlement plan" of the Palestinian Authority as "a challenge that Israel and Zionism never faced before." Seriously?

A plan for civil construction, in an area totally controlled by Israel, put forth by a weak, indeed hardly surviving, Palestinian government, is a greater challenge to today's all powerful Israel then the coordinated Egyptian-Syrian attack on that fateful Yom Kippur? Greater than the 1948 War of Independence, the absorption in 1949-51 of some 650,000 Jewish refugees by a Yishuv of about equal size? The absorption of a million Olim from the former Soviet Union in a single decade? The Iran nuclear threat?

But inflating a Palestinian plan to the magnitude of an existential threat is hardly the most bizarre feature of Prof. Frisch's piece. Far more significant is his failure to appreciate the distinction between today's reality and the pre-state struggle to secure a national home for the Jewish people where none existed. Then, land grabs were a primary mission. It was a clear prerequisite for securing a space for Jewish statehood. Today, the only existential challenge to Israel, the strong, thriving sovereign state of the Jewish people, is a program of further land grabs that ignores the three million Palestinian residents of the West Bank, whose absorption might spell the end of the Zionist enterprise. 

Likewise, Prof. Frisch's statement that pioneering settlements of the first half of the previous century, known as Homa Umigdal, are "as relevant [to Israel's security – A.R.] today as they were in the 1930s" is odd at best. He must have missed a century of developments in national security and modern warfare. Without belaboring the point, it is not civilian presence that secures Israel from incoming missiles, infiltrating terrorists, or any security risk in between. It is the IDF's troops and capabilities, certainly unmatched in the region, that keep Israel secure. If anything, a score of Jewish families in remote settlements, deep in heavily populated Palestinian areas, present an added burden for national security. It imposes on the IDF the need to deploy in these areas and police civilian population, at the expense of preparedness for its core mission of addressing threats to our security from the north (Hezbollah, Syria), south (Hamas) and east (Iran).

Born and raised here, and having fought for our country, I uphold our historic right to the land of our ancestors. However, ignoring the fact that between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean Sea there is roughly an equal number of Jews and Arabs (including our some two million Arab citizens), leaves open the question how do we assure the future of Israel as a secure, democratic, Jewish state. On the one hand, in any future agreement, we must insist on incorporating into sovereign Israel major Jewish settlement blocks as well as Jewish neighborhoods in East Jerusalem, where the overwhelming majority of Jewish settlers reside. On the other hand, we must free ourselves of controlling, policing and managing the lives of millions of Palestinians. This can only happen through a negotiated two-state solution.

Prof. Frisch also presumes to educate my CIS colleagues and me about our upbringing. Just as I never checked – nor ever cared about – the political orientation of my commanders, my subordinates, or my troops, I have no idea what the political affiliation of any of my CIS colleagues is. Speaking for myself, he is dead wrong in attributing my position to alleged allegiance to some old Labor Zionism. Indeed, I was born and raised in a conservative religious family, committed to the Zionist Revisionist stream. As a child, I sang in synagogue choirs. My late parents supported Menachem Begin and, during the curfew imposed by the British Mandate; at 10 I plastered Irgun posters on Tel Aviv buildings while evading capture by patrolling British paratroopers.

Prof. Frisch is right in accusing my over 300 CIS colleagues and me of supporting separation from the Palestinians, eventually into a two-state reality.

His Zionism, that sanctifies land -- however populated by millions of Palestinians -- over the Jewish and Democratic future of Israel, is not our Zionism. Ours rests on the over 10,000 years of cumulative security experience of CIS members, and our battle-hardened realism. These have taught us both that militarily, we are stronger than all our challengers, but also the limits of military power: there is no military answer to demography and to the aspirations of our Palestinian neighbors. 

A two-state solution may or may not be achievable in the near future, but closing the door on it to accommodate extreme annexationists' whims, might close the door on the kind of Zionism we uphold, that which is enshrined in Israel's Declaration of Independence.

Maj. Gen. (Ret.) Amnon Reshef is the former commander of the IDF armor corps. He is the founder and former Chair and a current member of Commanders for Israel's Security (CIS).

To the Article in "The Jerusalem Post" » click here.

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29 August 2020

CIS message to leadership re UAE

Source: mass emailing

---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Commanders for Israel's Security <doar@cis.org.il>
Date: Fri, 28 Aug 2020 at 16:08
Subject: CIS message to leadership re UAE



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Dear Debra V. Wilson,

Below please find the most recent weekly message from CIS Chair, Matan Vilnai, to our national elected leadership, praising the Israeli-UAE breakthrough but pointing out pitfalls to be avoided.

As it turns out, only hours after the letter was sent the fourth point mentioned therein was already in full display as the UAE canceled a trilateral meeting, reportedly in protest over Prime Minister Netanyahu's opposition to allow the sale of F35s, the American advanced stealth aircraft, to the UAE.

As we look forward to celebrating this important agreement, CIS's focus is on the following:
  • seeking clarity therein so as to avoid future crises;
  • employing this breakthrough in the service of our primary objective of progress with the Palestinians.

Best regards;

Dan Rothem
CEO

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To download the letter in PDF - Click here

August 24, 2020
To: Member of Knesset, Cabinet an Deputy Ministers
From: Maj. Gen. (Ret.) Matan Vilnai
Re:  The Israel-UAE Agreement - An Opportunity to be Pursued Carefully
 
The prime minister deserves praise on two accounts:  for making the most of a regional opportunity that offers Israel considerable strategic advantages - military, political and economic; and for using the occasion to take unilateral annexation off the agenda.  Unilateral annexation is a dangerous move under any circumstances. It could have thwarted the important progress that was ultimately made with the Emirates.

As a cautionary note, we should point out that the agreement with the UAE has still not been signed, and is apparently yet to be finalized.  On the one hand, this does not detract from the magnitude of the achievement.  On the other hand, in hammering out its details, it is vital to ensure that the wording be clear and unequivocal so as to forestall misunderstandings with unforeseen consequences.  This is especially true with regard to four issues, about which statements by the three parties to the process indicate divergent approaches.

First, is the arrangement in question a "peace agreement," as stated by the prime minister, a "normalization agreement," in the words of several Emirati spokespeople, or a "road map to normalization" as Crown Prince Sheikh Muhammed Ben Zaid has stated?

Second, during the discussions, did "Israel agree to a two-state solution, including...a map," as President Trump's son in law and advisor, Jared Kushner, declared?

Third - and here lies most of the potential for misunderstanding - was annexation taken "off the table," as President Trump stated, "suspended," in the words of the prime minister, or has the normalization process "closed the gate" on annexation, as UAE Ambassador to Washington, Yousef Al Otaiba wrote in a recent op ed piece for Yediot?

Fourth, but no less important, are the other parties clear about Israel's resolute objection to any erosion in America's unequivocal commitment to maintaining Israel's qualitative military edge (QME), and do they understand that this objection extends to advanced weapons systems that in the relevant theatre for our defense, Israel must have exclusive access to?

From the unveiling of President Trump's peace plan to the recent, momentous developments, discussion of the peace process has been plagued by conflicting statements and interpretations, obscurity and ambiguity. This could easily undermine relations between states.  As is often the case in negotiations, diplomats may be tempted to adopt nebulous formulations that hide underlying disagreements instead of resolving them.  We therefore caution against adopting this approach, particularly with regard to the third and fourth issues listed above.

Precisely because of the precedent setting and strategic significance of the emerging agreement with the UAE, Israel's negotiating team must ensure that the undertakings of each side are formulated clearly and unambiguously, leaving no room for misunderstanding or charges of bad faith on the part of one side or the other.

Misunderstandings and feelings that one side has violated its commitments could negatively impact both on the development of relations with this important country and on the security of the State of Israel in the wider, regional context (because of the sensitivity of the issue, we stand ready to elaborate in the appropriate forum). 

For these reasons, I call upon you to ensure that parliamentary oversight is exercised by means of thoroughgoing discussions of the above points and others, whether in the Knesset's Security and Foreign Affairs Committee or in its relevant subcommittees, in accordance with the sensitivity of the subject matter under deliberation.

Sincerely,

Maj. Gen. (Res.) Matan Vilnai
Chairman
Commanders for Israel's Security
 
 
 

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