The impact of Israel’s “disengagement” (retreat) from terrorist strongholds
in Gaza and Samaria would not be limited to Israel. “Disengagement” would
undermine vital American interests in the Middle East and beyond.
“Disengagement” would be inconsistent with America’s non-compromising war on
Islamic terrorism. Retreat by Israel, the role model of
countering-terrorism, would reward and energize regional and global
terrorism, including anti-US terror lords. “Disengagement” would bolster the
Palestinian Authority (PA), which has been the most sustained pro-Saddam,
pro-Bin Laden, pro-Iran, pro-Russia, pro-North Korea and pro-China regime in
the Middle East. “Disengagement” would transfer control of Gaza air and sea
ports to the PA. They could become a platform for Iranian, Russian, Chinese,
North Korean intelligence and military personnel and equipment, at the
expense of US posture in the eastern flank of the Mediterranean.
“Disengagement” would upgrade the position of the PLO, which has been the
most lethal threat to the pro-US feeble Hashemite regime in Jordan.
“Disengagement” would re-engage the military forces of Egypt and Israel in a
terror-ridden area. It would lead – inadvertently or intentionally - to
diplomatic and possibly military confrontations, exacerbating regional
instability, and sucking the US into an unnecessary conflict between two of
its allies.
“Disengagement” and American interests constitute an oxymoron, as evidences
also by recent precedents. The July 2000 Israeli “disengagement” from South
Lebanon has propelled Hizbullah from a small local terrorist group to a
prominent regional terrorist organization, haunting American GIs in Iraq and
Afghanistan. The 1994-1998 series of “disengagements” from 85% of Gaza and
40% of the Judea and Samaria have created the largest terrorist base in the
world, controlled by the PLO, the role model of hijacking, hate education
and international terrorism. It has caused the Hashemites to be sleepless in
Amman, and it has provided a platform and a tailwind to Middle East
terrorists, including Palestinians fighting the US in Afghanistan and Iraq.
The time to examine the impact of Israel’s “disengagement” on vital US
interests is before – and not following – its dire consequences befall upon
American GIs in Iraq and Afghanistan.
President Bush has elucidated his opposition to the concept of
“disengagement” (retreat) in his June 28, 2005 speech at Fort Bragg :
“Terrorists believe [that] they can force us to retreat. They are mistaken…
There is only one course of action against them: to defeat them abroad
before they attack us at home…” President Bush has presented a world view,
which professes a comprehensive, devastating offensive on the terrorists’
own ground. He aims to obliterate the political, financial and operational
infrastructure, while refusing to negotiate, appease or retreat.
Bush has concluded the proper lessons from a series of American
“disengagements”, which emboldened Islamic terrorism. In 1979, the US
“disengaged” from Iran following the embassy takeover by terrorists. In
1983, the US “disengaged” from Lebanon following the murder of 300 Americans
by PLO and Syria-assisted Hizballah terrorists. In 1993, America
“disengaged” from Somali, in reaction to the lynching of American Marines by
Moslem terrorists. These “disengagements” fueled anti-US terrorism, which
intensified in 1993, 1995/6, 1998, 2000 and 2001 with the first attempt on
the Twin Towers, the terror attacks on American GIs in Saudi Arabia, the
explosions in the American embassies in Kenya and Tanzania, the murder of 17
sailors on the USS Cole in Aden and the terror blitz of 9/11.
President Bush is determined to avoid errors committed by former presidents,
who preferred “disengagement” from – rather than head on military engagement
with – terror regimes. They confined counter-terror to limited operations,
and promoted negotiation and ceasefire with terrorist regimes. Their
“disengagement” from a decisive battle against terrorism, facilitated the
engagement of terrorists with America’s mainland.
Since 1993 the Palestinian Authority (PLO) has benefited from a sequence of
US-encouraged Israeli “disengagements”. Since 1993, the US has been plagued
by an unprecedented wave of Islamic terrorism, which has been energized by
Israel’s retreats in face of Palestinian terrorists. Would the US encourage
Israel to persist in “disengagements” (retreats), thus learning from history
by repeating – rather than by avoiding – costly errors?