Let’s be fair: there does seem to be some sort of pattern here, but it is not very consistent. Five times in Israel since 1980, a right-wing government has called an election WITHOUT launching a complementary military operation. The right lost two of those elections outright (1992, 1999), more or less tied two others (1984, 1988), and won only one of them decisively (2006).
On the other hand, critics of Israel point out, three times since 1980 right-wing Israeli governments have combined an election campaign with a major military operation against some Arab or Palestinian target. And this combination, it has been argued, yields decisive electoral success for the right.
Menachem Begin’s government won the 1981 election three weeks after carrying out a dramatic attack on the Osirak research nuclear reactor that France had sold to Iraq. In the view of most outside observers, the reactor, which was closely supervised both by the French and by the International Atomic Energy Agency, was not suited to the large-scale production of enriched uranium and posed no threat to Israel, but the attack was popular in Israel.
Ehud Olmert’s coalition launched the “Cast Lead” onslaught against the Gaza Strip in December 2008-January 2009. The three-week campaign of massive bombardments and some ground incursions left 1,400 Palestinians and thirteen Israelis dead. The election was held a month later, and Binyamin Netanyahu emerged as the leader of a new right-wing coalition.
So here we go again, perhaps? Netanyahu is still the prime minister, and the next elections are due in January. What better way to ensure success than to go and bash the Palestinians again? A week later, with eighty-six Palestinians and three Israelis dead, his reelection is assured: Israelis overwhelmingly support the current military operation.
That’s the case that is made against Israel. Does it hold water? Well, actually, no, it doesn’t.
Begin’s attack on the Osirak reactor in 1981 may well have been an electoral stunt, although he was clearly paranoid about the possibility of a nuclear weapon in Arab hands. But Ehud Olmert, though undoubtedly a man of the right, was not leading a right-wing government in 2008. He was the leader of a new centrist party, Kadima, that had been formed by defectors from both the right-wing Likud Party and left-wing Labour.
Moreover, Olmert had already resigned in mid-2008 over a corruption scandal, and was merely acting as interim prime minister by the time the “Cast Lead” operation was launched in December of that year. If it was an electoral ploy despite all that, it didn’t work. It was the right that actually won the election in early 2009, and formed a government led by the Likud Party’s Binyamin Netanyahu.
It is equally hard to believe that Netanyahu is seeking electoral gain by attacking Gaza this month. Every opinion poll in Israel for months past has been saying that he is going to win the January election hands down. For him, all the risk of “Operation Pillar of Defence” is on the downside: a major loss of Israeli lives in the campaign, while unlikely, could only work against him.
So why is this happening now? Historians traditionally split into two camps: those who see purpose and planning and plots behind every event, and those who think most events are just the random interaction of conflicting strategies, imperfect information and human frailty. This latter approach is known in the historical trade as the “cock-up theory of history,” and it is very attractive as an explanation for the current situation.
Netanyahu, cruising home to an easy electoral victory in January, had absolutely no need for a little war with the Palestinians. Indeed, his strategy of continuously shouting “wolf” about Iran and its alleged nuclear weapons programme has succeeded in distracting international attention from the Palestinians, leaving him free to expand Jewish settlement in the occupied West Bank unhindered.
Similarly, the Hamas leaders who ruled Gaza had no interest in triggering a military conflict with Israel. They had every reason to believe that the sweeping political changes in the Arab world were strengthening their position internationally, and they had no need to remind Arabs of their plight. So how did this idiocy happen? Another cock-up, of course.
So then Hamas fired a few of its own rockets into Israel, and Israel retaliated massively, and we were off to the races once again. A complete cock-up, and a pointless waste of lives.
But since the mini-war doesn’t really serve the purposes of any major player, it will probably be shut down again fairly soon.
Gwynne Dyer is an independent journalist whose articles are published in 45 countries.



It’s hard to take sides when there is no moral high ground to be found in the middle east. It’s quite clear neither Israel or Iran answer to anyone but themselves.
There is hardly any moral high ground available, but there is a grossly disproportionate use of force that defies nearly any measure or description of morality. Operation Cast Lead (Operation Fish Bowl is more like it) featured a kill ratio 100 to 1. The current operation is at 30 to 1, and rising. A blockade of Gaza in place since 2007 has been widely recognized as in direct defiance of international conventions, and has included the not so nice murders of un-armed American citizens, shot in the back at point range on the aid ship attempting to take humanitarian supplies to the captive Gazan population. 1.6 million people effectively held captive within walls described as “the largest open air prison in the world.” No, one can’t say Hamas is lilly white by any stretch, but a kill ratio of 100 to 1, mostly civilians to soldiers says a lot about what the IDF and its rightwing leadership is all about.
Understood. The US and disproportionate retaliation is obscene in most cases as well. Though I don’t believe civilians should pay the price for their leaders poor choice of actions and words, that is the way it unfortunately works.
Trying to get re-elected by launching unnecessary wars… don’t we know someone like that here in the U.S. too?
What crude analysis… first it is about the elections, then it isn’t, then it isn’t about much of anything except blamed on the Palestinians firing rockets into Israel…
The timeline of tit for tat events doesn’t provide a clear tipping point, but a couple of events do show escalation that eventually falls on the Israeli side of the scale for brutality. Tit-for-tat shootings were occurring off and on for weeks, in some of them Palestinian children and teens were the victims. A faction not directly under Hamas control fired at an Israeli troop carrier, injuring four. Was that the trigger? A more plausible provocation was the very public, targeted assassination of Ahmed Jabari, Hamas military leader, a man Aluf Benn describes in Haaretz, a leading Israeli newspaper, as a “subcontractor” of Israel, responsible for keeping the factions under control and NOT randomly firing short range rockets into Israel. Supposedly he failed and so Israel took him out. The fifth assassination attempt on his life finally succeeded. Israeli officials gloated over their success. Rockets started being fired in earnest at longer range targets. For more on that, see:
http://sdemetri.wordpress.com/2012/11/18/the-gaza-offensive-and-obamas-opening-with-iran/
Jabari was actually engaged with seeking a long-term ceasefire with Israel through Gershon Baskin, the Israeli peace activist that helped broker the release of Gahlid Shalit in exchange for several hundred imprisoned Palestinians… Baskin reports that Israeli high officials knew of this effort but assassinated him anyway. Israel is not interested in a long term cease-fire or in a two-state solution. They want all of Palestine and will make the Palestinians live in apartheid like conditions indefinitely to achieve this end. This is why settlements continue to steal Palestinian lands on the West Bank, why Israel maintains tight control on the largest open air prison in the world, the Gaza strip.
Oh, one other thing… the disproportionate use of power (with US made fighter jets and munitions…) In Operation Cast Lead 1400 Palestinians were killed, the majority of them civilians. 13 Israelis were killed, 3 of them civilians. So far, 100 Palestinians have been killed in 6 days of fighting, 3 Israelis. Wonder if they’ll beat their earlier record… Nearly everything about the blockade and attacks on Gaza violate war crime conventions… yet the US continues to give between 2 and 3 billion dollars per year in direst aid, most of it military. Israel’s nuclear arsenal numbers about 200 warheads. It is un-monitored, undeclared, and even violates UN resolutions…and it is destabilizing the Middle East… Talk about double standards.
Thanks for a comprehensive overview, so much more than the anemic bytes of drivel presented by others.
Why don’t the Palestinians simply recognize Israel and stop subjecting their people to the Israeli wrath. The Israeli’s fight to inflict as much punishment as possible broadcasting the message to the Palestinians not to fire rockets any longer. Your prejudice is transparent
His prejudice is transparent, though it seems yours is as well. The Israelis haven’t exactly provided much in the way of compromise – a true path to a Palestine state – which most of the world believes is their right.
There was a great website a few years back, not sure if it still exists called Protest Warrior….there was a great picture of Yassar Arrafat with the caption: “President Bush, how can we continue our campaign to push the Jews in to the sea while you continue your RACIST war against our people?” And if the Israeli’s are gloating over killing an official, I think that’s great. The fact of the matter remains that when the refs, the opposing team, and all the fans are against you and still manage to pull it off in the end, you should be able to gloat over it…
I am not an Israel-booster at all, and their hands are hardly spotless in this. But the deaths of Palestinian women and children can not be simply blamed on those horrible US-equipped Israelis attacking them while their men quietly sat reading their Kurans and Bibles.
Yeah… Lets sit the missile launcher right between the School and Mosque right across the street from the hospital and the daycare. When Israeli’s respond to our attacks we will blame them if anyone gets hurt. Maybe even throw a little fake blood on a baby for the cameras if no one does.
”
Similarly, the Hamas leaders who ruled Gaza had no interest in triggering a military conflict with Israel. They had every reason to believe that the sweeping political changes in the Arab world were strengthening their position internationally, and they had no need to remind Arabs of their plight. So how did this idiocy happen? Another cock-up, of course.
So then Hamas fired a few of its own rockets into Israel, and Israel retaliated massively, and we were off to the races once again. A complete cock-up, and a pointless waste of lives.”
I guess because of the sweeping political changes Hamas then figured no one will dare respond to their attacks? Why is hamas being the martyr in all this? Israel responds and it is a terrible thing? Hamas has fired over 8000 rockets into israel in 3 years…more than what Germany used in England in all of WW2. And Israel should sit there and say thank you? Israel knows this pres is useless and of no help so they will do what they have to do.
Is ms dyer serious, or has she not taken her anti-psychosis meds
There are no wars. Everyone who thinks there are wars is delusional.
explain.
Sorry AL for the sarcasm in anticipation of oppositional “logic”.
What the editorial writer fails to mention, is the fact that Hamas has lobbed over 700 missles into Israel,since this newest conflit began,and they fired first. This would be the same Hamas, that was accepting 25,000 dollars from Saddam Hussein, to any Palistinian parent, willing to sacrifice their child to go on suicide missions in thier “bomber jackets”, riding on public transportaion in Jurusalem, Tel aviv, and Eilat.
The same Hamas that was celebrating in the streets when the twin towers in NYC colllapsed on 9/11/01. The same Hamas that, (along with all of the nations surrounding Israel) continues to chant “Death to Israel”.
this whole thing will prove to be some of the sparks that ignited world war 3.
war is coming, soon.
prepare.
Many believe it’s already here.
Another chapter in the ongoing Israeli/Palestinian drama is not fodder for a world war. There are no comparable axis or central powers.
War is always coming however, you’re right about that, though don’t get carried away.
Whether we like the idea or not, how’s it gonna feel to have our military under the directives of the United Nations rather than the President of the United States?
Anyone who doesn’t like that idea at all would be wise to say so now.
Our military is not and has never been under the directive of the UN.
Oh, Ok! Then I guess that means it never will be…..right?
Right. The UN has and never will have such authority. That is not it’s purpose.
If you say so. Life takes me to other things right now…I’ll check back later.
When you do, let’s hear why and how you think the UN is going to assume control of the US military (or any other countries military for that matter.)
I am not a prognosticator of the future any more than you are. That said it is a fool who denies the possibilities of life and refuses to integrate intelligence with common sense.
We’re global, now…just as Obama wanted and his Presidency lies in the bed he created. He will never miss a political opportunity to deflect blame to others.
Where is the common sense and intelligence in your assertion? As conspiracy theories go, there isn’t even a slight element of believability in what you’re suggesting. It’s beyond weak. I have as good of a chance of bedding Angela Jolie and becoming a billionaire. Will you deny this possibility? How about Bibi and Amenijad make peace when their gay love affair is found out? Possible right?
Break it down for me. How does control of the US military go to the UN? The president just turns over control to Ban Ki-moon, gives him the football, and tells the generals, you answer to the UN now? And they all just go along with it because it’s totally constitutional and nothing that would raise any eyebrows?
You’re asking the wrong person.
I see that.
i wish you were correct, but you are not.
let’s take the european union for instance.
It was supposed to just be a monetary union, in the name of a unified currency to strengthen economies and make travel better.
but now, they have a president
the EU can now effectively have a standing army.
it was done a little at a time.
and now it’s there.
You’re mistaking cooperation for mutual defense and peacekeeping as “control” of sovereign armies.
The EU “presidents” are not presidents in the commonly used sense. The EU “commander in chief” is none other than the heads of state of each union member. It is a collective.
it’s not just the israel/palestine issue now.
they’re talking of striking iran as well.
Iran, china, russia, and syria are allies
china gets 40% of its oil from Iran.
what would be the repercussions in this country if suddenly 40% of our oil supply was interrupted?
gas prices at 50 or 100 dollars a gallon?
egypt is in turmoil,
the european union is collapsing before our eyes.
greece is nearly destroyed.
libya is unstable.
syria is in chaos.
iraqi leaders are calling for oil supply interruptions towards us.
we’re losing in afghanistan.
how much more has to occur before the whole thing ignites into a full blown military conflict?
Chaos isn’t anything new. There’s always a fire burning somewhere and there probably always will be.
Russia and China might do business with Iran, though are not going to go to war with the rest of the first world over them.
would we go to war with one of those countries if either one were to cut off our oil supply?
what would happen if we lost 40% of our oil imports.
I’m not sure where you’re getting 40% from or who exactly it’s supposed to represent. Iran? The sanctions against them have slowed their exports significantly.
We get oil from so many countries, that while a disruption in import from one source could spike pricing, it would not cripple us. Our eggs are in many baskets.
Israel is also a country of 7.8 million people living in an 8,100 sq mile area,(roughly 300 sq mi. more than the State of Massachusetts) surrounded by 700 million people bent on annihilating them.
“…bent on annihilating them….” Ah, that would be a no. If you believe the doomsday rhetoric of end-time evangelicals, reactionary mercenaries, and the hard right Zionist fringe you will come to this simplistic conclusion…. and would be wrong. It is exactly THAT thinking that is prolonging getting to a just peace.
Not at all….i believe what comes out of the mouths of the Arab nation’s leaders
I’ll be wiling to bet what you believe is what is “reported” coming out their mouths… not what actual sentiments are. But, I’ll leave it at that.
I’ll take that bet, there is no ambiguity in their words, or actions
Nonsense. You can have a kitchen cabinet full of ingredients, but it doesn’t magically turn itself into a cake on its own. You’re just spewing absurd doomsday predictions without even explaining how all these things would coalesce into a world war.
yes, of course.
continue to have your head in the sand, continue to deny what’s happening.
it is a reality that you should face.
Okay, but you’re still not explaining how. You have personal attacks, good for you, and you have doom and gloom, again, good for you. You don’t have a real answer as to how all this will coalesce into a world war though.
Explanations…logic…objectivity…that would be a no, no and no.
I agree with wolfndeer, nonsense. You paint a doomsday scenario that is only right by a half. China does get a lot of oil from Iran, Syria is in chaos, and Iraq and Afghanistan are not entirely stable… but no comparison to Syria. Egypt is not in civil turmoil and its powerful military would likely have no compulsion against putting things in order if it did descend into civil chaos. Europe is not collapsing, and Greece as messed up as it is, is more or less powerless on the international stage, as is Libya. The Ministry of Intelligence and Security in Iran is supporting in public, at least tacitly, negotiations with the Obama admin having publicly differentiated that Obama, not willing to rush to war, is substantively different than the leaders in Israel. The MOIS is providing a powerful foil for Ahmadinejad’s rhetoric and less than supremely powerful official position as president. He is only one voice in Iranian politics, and not the most listened to. The regime for all its faults is not suicidal or lacking pragmatic motivations. Barring Israeli aggression against Iran unilaterally, there is a good opening for a negotiated settlement with Iran. The links in this blog post give a great deal of background to support my opinion: http://sdemetri.wordpress.com/2012/11/18/the-gaza-offensive-and-obamas-opening-with-iran/
Is this a joke? “So then Hamas fired a few of its own rockets into Israel, and Israel
retaliated massively, and we were off to the races once again. A
complete cock-up, and a pointless waste of lives.” Hundreds of rockets have landed in southern Israel for MONTHS. Just because mainstream media doesn’t share it, doesn’t mean it doesn’t happen. And one rocket should be enough for defensive measures. This article is disgusting in its overt biases and misrepresentations.