Flotilla Fallout Continues for Israel…and the U.S.

I’ve been off at a wedding for most of this week and, poring over old headlines, I noticed that the flotilla incident in the Med continues to have drastic fallout for Israel and, by extension, the U.S.

By announcing that the easing of Israel’s land blockade of the impoverished Gaza Strip, P.M. Bibi Netanyahu gave us a rare glimpse of Israel bowing to international pressure. But because the U.S. played such a timid role in applying that pressure, Netanyahu’s move underscores (again and again) the U.S.’s inability to make serious progress in its regional agenda.

In contrast, middle powers like Turkey find themselves gaining concessions with their bold rhetoric and aggressive diplomacy. It’s a reversal of the trope that Arabs only understand pressure; Israelis now find themselves unable to face tough changes without a slap to coax them.

In an important piece on Time.com, Tony Karon ran down the winners and losers of the end of the Gaza blockade, including this biting observation about the U.S.:

That the blockade collapsed under pressure is also an embarrassment for the Obama Administration because Turkey’s more muscular challenge will be seen throughout the region to have forced a change in Israeli behavior — something that Obama’s polite entreaties have failed to achieve. (The President had urged the Israelis more than a year ago to ease the siege, to little effect.)

Indeed, this has much wider implications than for just Gaza.

Obama had numerous opportunities to exert serious pressure on Israel over the first year and a half of his presidency — on issues like settlements as well as the Gaza siege — and failed to so either by quickly retreating (settlements) or coming up short from the start (the siege).

Instead, Turkey, the region’s rising star, stepped into the breach. Along the way, however, Turkey’s relationship with Israel took a perhaps irreversible hit, not to mention the lost lives of nine Turkish citizens. This is not good for anyone in the Mid East, particularly the U.S., which relies on Turkey’s strategic location and its fast-growing clout in the region.

Easing the blockade in the face of pressure also undermines justifications for the strategy in the first place. All the talk of self-defense and security now rings hollow. A long-time astute observer of Mid East affairs, Media Matters’ MJ Rosenberg, picks up on this:

Everyone knows that if the Gaza blockade were necessary to Israel’s security, Netanyahu would be maintaining it and every friend of Israel would back his stand. But it isn’t, and so he can simply say “never mind.”

[…]

So ending the blockade makes Israel safer.

J Street is too polite to say it, so I will:  “We told you so.”

We knew all along that the blockade on civilian goods was designed as a form of collective punishment on Gaza’s civilian population.  We knew that it served no legitimate purpose.  And we knew that those who protested it as punitive were right.

Netanyahu himself has now admitted it.

The starvation of the Gaza Strip’s 1.5 million residents was a sham, based on now-known fallacies.

Karon connects Israel’s siege strategy to its brutal invasions of Lebanon in 2006 and Gaza in 2008. On Foreign Policy’s Middle East Channel blog, in a post highly critical of Western complicity in the blockade, Geoffrey Aronson finds the roots of the strategy even father back — as part of Israel’s 2004 plan to unilaterally disengage from its Gaza settlements.

Indeed, has the international community, and particularly the U.S., addressed this stuff strongly in the past six years? Nope. The lobby and the neocons were cheering it all on. Now the Obama administration — dare I say it — dithers, occasionally dipping its toe only to yank it back out.

On Foreign Policy, Marc Lynch chimed in that he thinks Obama deserves some credit for the blockade deal, despite the fact that it likely means U.S. acceptance of a whitewashed investigation of the flotilla incident. I tend to agree, but I wonder how long the U.S. can go on like this, jumping on the backs of issues only when others have pressed them.

Now that this six-year-old strategy has been exposed as a fraudulent cover for collective punishment, how long can the U.S. get away — before irreversible decline of its regional power (if it hasn’t already arrived) sets in — with issuing mild condemnations of Israeli malfeasance buried under full-throated endorsements of the policies they represent?

Ali Gharib

Ali Gharib is a New York-based journalist on U.S. foreign policy with a focus on the Middle East and Central Asia. His work has appeared at Inter Press Service, where he was the Deputy Washington Bureau Chief; the Buffalo Beast; Huffington Post; Mondoweiss; Right Web; and Alternet. He holds a Master's degree in Philosophy and Public Policy from the London School of Economics and Political Science. A proud Iranian-American and fluent Farsi speaker, Ali was born in California and raised in D.C.

SHOW 24 COMMENTS

24 Comments

  1. As per Delia Ruhe, the blockade is being adjusted, not ended. There’s one message in English and one in Hebrew: in English, the blockade is being eased; but in Hebrew, the blockade is being stiffened. In English the blockade is over, everyone please go home now; in Hebrew, the blockade is permanent, we will never compromise on Israeli security, and where is Galit?

    The blockade is part of a long-term strategy that has nothing to do with Hamas, but everything to do with eventually driving every last Gazan into Egypt in desperation. While they look like they have no plan, there actaully is a plan, and it’s not a two-state solution: it’s transfer. That plan is still in place- the Egyptians are starting to warn that they’re on to it- and it’s the reason this blockade will quietly return to its previous harshness in a few months when the attention of the world moves on.

    If this analysis is wrong, the blockade will really be lifted. If this is right, it will never end until every last Gazan is dead or gone.

  2. More Jews in Israel go hungry. The world aid prog has always made sure plenty of food gets to Gaza via Israel. Why don’t you admit these basic facts?

  3. Say what you wish america/israel power, influence and control is finished in the middle east.Others Russia India Iran China and not to include Turkey will fill the breach in this way israel[jacob] will cease to be a threat to her neighbours.

  4. “AP: TURKEY MUST DEMONSTRATE COMMITMENT TO WEST”
    No kidding, the above line is ‘headline news’ on Yahoo this morning, straight from the AP. By condemning Israel’s attack on an aid ship in international waters and subsequent massacre of the aid workers aboard, Turks have officially been declared ‘terrorists.’

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