U.S. Politicians Should Focus On Tehran, Netanyahu
Says

BY DANIEL FREEDMAN

September 8, 2006

NEW YORK - Benjamin Netanyahu, as part of an American
tour repositioning himself for a return to the Israeli
premiership, told an audience in New York yesterday
that President Bush is preparing to ditch the United
Nations to take on Iran alone and that American
politicians of all parties would do well to stop
squabbling about Iraq and join the president in
focusing on threat from Tehran.

The former prime minister, who leads the right of
center Likud Party in opposition to the current
government, went on to tell lunch guests of the Hudson
Institute that another war between Hezbollah and
Israel is inevitable and that a shift in Israeli
politics is about to take place with his return to
power and a return to the principles that guided
thinking in Jerusalem until the Oslo Accords.

Largely ignored in the coverage of Mr. Bush's speech
Tuesday on the war on terror, Mr. Netanyahu told his
audience more than once, was Mr. Bush's statement that
"the world's free nations will not allow Iran to
develop a nuclear weapon." Not that the "United
Nations won't allow," said Mr. Netanyahu, but that the
"free nations" of the world won't allow. Mr. Netanyahu
called it a sign that on the Iranian problem the
president was preparing to stop working through the
United Nations and instead work with whoever would
join him.

Unfortunately, said Mr. Netanyahu, Britain and
America, along with Israel and Iran, are the only
countries at the moment that understand what is at
stake if Iran acquires the bomb. Meantime, "the
Europeans ." Mr. Netanyahu trailed off, struggling to
find the right word, at which point members of the
audience interjected with inaudible, although
apparently uncomplimentary, suggestions. "I'm trying
to be diplomatic," Mr. Netanyahu replied before
saying, "for the sake of mankind," Iran couldn't be
permitted to have a nuclear weapon.

Israel's one-time ambassador to the United Nations
urged Americans of all political persuasions to "not
get caught up" arguing about Iraq. Mr. Netanyahu
dismissed the argument that fears of Iranian plans for
WMD might be false in the way that predictions on Iraq
have come under question. Mr. Netanyahu said Israel
had told America that claims about Iraq's weapons were
based on "conjecture, " while with Iran "we're not
guessing. We know."

Americans should be focusing on Iran, Mr. Netanyahu
said, because while Iran is now focusing its attention
on Israel through its proxy terrorist organization,
Hezbollah, "Israel is merely the first step." There's
a reason, he reminded the audience, that Israel is
only called the "little Satan." No guessing who is
next said Mr. Netanyahu.

Mr. Netanyahu's spoke of what he would do "when prime
minister" - or "if" as he laughingly (while winking)
had to correct himself. While Mr. Netanyahu refused to
criticize Prime Minister Olmert, he predicted the
collapse of Mr. Olmert's political party, Kadima. The
way to defeat Hezbollah "next time" - Mr. Netanyahu
said as a matter of fact that another war was coming -
is to act quickly and decisively.

Anyone who thinks Israel's military can't defeat "a
few hundred armed Iranian proxies" fundamentally
underestimates the capability of Israel's military,
Mr. Netanyahu said. The time to act after being
attacked is straight away - when world opinion, "even"
the Europeans and most Arab nations, is outside. A
quick victory is needed to win the diplomatic war as
well.

Mr. Netanyahu, the son of a distinguished historian,
used sweeping historical references throughout his
remarks. He told of how, when questioned in London
about the "proportionality" of Israel's response in
Lebanon, he told British audiences that the number of
rockets Hezbollah fired at Israel was 4,000, the same
number as the Germans fired at London during the
Second World War. Britain's response to the 4,000
rockets led to the death of hundreds of thousands of
German civilians. This is not, he hastened to add, to
say that Winston Churchill was wrong - but to put
Israel's actions in context. "That quickly silenced
them," Mr. Netanyahu said.

Responding to a question asking whether the Israeli
occupation of Lebanon in the 1980s created Hezbollah,
Mr. Netanyahu said that "the Israeli occupation of
London doesn't exist and yet you have militant Islam
there," as well as in Rotterdam and in other places
across the globe where Israeli troops have never
visited. Hezbollah is not a creation of Israel, he
said. Israel's occupation may have been used as a
pretext by Hezbollah, but would have happened anyway -
it's part of the rise of radical Islam.

What really encouraged Hezbollah's rise, Mr. Netanyahu
said, was the manner of Israel's withdrawal - without
victory or a peace agreement. The sight of Israeli
troops leaving and Hezbollah terrorists taking their
place while celebrating encouraged Palestinian Arab
terrorists to hope for the same. To defeat "Militant
Islam," Mr. Netanyahu said, one "must deprive it of
victory." Every time you retreat, every time
terrorists gain victory, that's when they recruit.
"Power attracts, weakness repeals," he said. "Victory
attracts, defeat repulses."

Mr. Netanyahu told the gathering at the Four Seasons
that Prime Minister Olmert's Kadima party was built on
the policy of unilateral withdrawals - a premise that
is now dead. And so, went his implication, is the
party and Mr. Olmert's premiership. The policy of
unilateral withdrawals started with the Oslo Accords.
He spoke of how, from Israel's founding until then,
Israel's military and her relations with her Arab
neighbors had been based on Vladimir Jabotinsky's
concept of the "Iron Wall."

This was a reference to a phrase used by the right of
center Zionist, who held that only when the Arabs
became convinced that they couldn't destroy Israel -
with every attack on Israel met by an "iron wall" -
would peace follow. If Israel's deterrence and
response to attack was so strong the Arab's found
themselves banging themselves against an "Iron Wall,"
they'd realize the futility of trying to destroy
Israel and seek peace. The "Iron Wall" principle, said
Mr. Netanyahu, led to peace with Egypt and Jordan.
They attacked Israel, were soundly defeated, and sued
for peace.

The Oslo Accords abandoned the "Iron Wall" strategy,
said Mr. Netanyahu, and Israel's leaders decided
instead to "build a bridge through the wall." The
Palestinian Arabs responded, as Jabotinsky had warned,
with terrorism. But instead of reverting back to the
"Iron Wall," Israel's leaders instead offered "more
freebies" to the terrorists - unilateral withdrawal
from Lebanon and Gaza. "When prime minister,"
Netanyahu said he'd return Israel to the "Iron Wall"
guiding principle. Mr. Netanyahu didn't mention that
he oversaw the Israeli withdrawal from the city of
Hebron.

The second half of Mr. Netanyahu's case for his return
to the premiership was his management of the economy,
although he stressed more than once that he'd only
take the finance portfolio again if it was with the
premiership as well. As finance minister, Mr.
Netanyahu told the audience, he introduced painful
free market reforms that revitalized Israel's economy.
Mr. Netanyahu described globalization as a "God-send"
for Israel and "for everyone." The first half of the
year saw Israel's economy growing at 6%, with low
inflation and falling unemployment. The economy
endured the war thanks to Mr. Netanyahu's reforms, Mr.
Netanyahu said, and remains the fastest growing
developing economy.

http://www.nysun. com/article/ 39275





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