Turkey has
the second largest military in NATO behind the US. On the basis of
conventional forces, if Turkey decided to attack Israel to prevent
its atrocities against Gaza, then Israel would quickly be crushed.
Israel's only response would be either quickly concede or to use its
nuclear and chemical arsenal against Turkey. But, that would be
suicide. Turkey is a member of NATO, and would be entitled to call
on it against Israel. That would cause considerable problems for the
US and NATO. The US is clearly moving increasingly away from Israel.
That is not just a matter of the political antagonism between Obama
and Netanyahu, typified, in the latter's overt intervention in the US
Presidential Elections to back Romney. But, the US has not yet,
completely dropped Israel. The US would be sure to make it
abundantly clear to Israel before any such eventuality that it could
not expect support if it resorted to use of its nuclear or chemical
arsenal. That would be the only hope it would have for preventing
things reaching such a stage.
If that
failed, and Israel did resort to a nuclear strike on Turkey, then any
attempt to block a nuclear response from NATO, by the US, would
destroy NATO itself, because it would make its true nature apparent,
and make its mutual defence clause meaningless. But, in any case it
would not do Israel much good. In such an eventuality, Turkey might
well seek support, and receive it from other nuclear armed states in
the Muslim world, for example Pakistan.
But, there
are good reasons why Turkey will be pressed to engage in “Liberal
Intervention” against Israel, and why it might agree. Firstly, the
last 20 years have shown plenty of examples of the US and other
powers intervening in such situations to prevent atrocities – in
Kosovo, Bosnia, Iraq, Libya, and potentially in Syria. That has not
only created the precedents, and ground rules for any such
intervention, but it has created the mindset of those being oppressed
to believe that they can engage in adventures, in the hope that some
more powerful external force will come to their assistance. That was
Trotsky's analysis of the role of Liberal Intervention in 1912-13, in
the
Lessons Of The Balkans.
In order to
understand the danger its important to analyse the dynamics of the
region as a whole, within the context of global strategic politics.
In the aftermath of the end of the Cold War, the US followed the
Neo-Con strategy of the “War on Terror”. That strategy was based
on the idea that its necessary to present populations with the threat
of some external enemy, in order to retain internal control, and to
push through the necessary strong state measures to enforce that
control if necessary. Al Qaeda never posed any real threat to the
US. It was in fact the creature of the CIA, developed to fight the
USSR in Afghanistan, and its main focus originally was to oppose the
ruling regimes in North Africa and the Middle East, not the US. In
1990, China was not a credible global threat for the US, but Al Qaeda
fulfilled the function admirably, because it was hidden, and
unquantifiable.
But, apart
from the 9/11 attacks, Al Qaeda has been spectacularly unsuccessful.
The Provisional IRA, for example, with much smaller forces, and
without the need to resort to suicide bombing, was able to detonate
bombs on the British mainland on a very frequent basis. No Islamist
bombers have been able to achieve that. ETA, has also been more
successful in that regard in Spain. Taken in its wider context,
Islamist terrorism poses no real threat to the great powers. Today,
the main enemies of the US are Russia, China, and Europe. This is
where the opposing congelations of economic power reside. US
strategy is geared to that reality. That is why under current
conditions the US is dropping Israel, and focussing its attention on
an alliance with the Gulf Feudal regimes. Those regimes, continue to
supply the US with much of its oil – though technological
developments mean that the US is about to replace Saudi Arabia as the
world's largest oil producer – as well as act as a necessary buffer
against Iran/Iraq, which is a sub-imperialist power, behind which
stands Russia and China.
Within this
context also has to be analysed the US establishment of bases in the
“Stans” of Central Asia, where they have shown no qualms about
aligning with dictators who boil their opponents in oil! That
strategy is designed to hem in Russia to its South, and China to its
West, towards what has become the new raw materials Wild West. The
US has also put a ring of steel around Russia and China, by moving
the bulk of its navy into the Pacific.
On that
basis the role of Sunni Jihadists is a side issue, a necessary cost
for the US in building its alliance with those Gulf regimes. That
alliance has created the condition for removing those regimes that
could have acted to block the US drive to undermine the power of
Iran, and its backers. But, as I pointed out at the time the Arab
Spring was erupting, the main loser would be Israel. The cost of
building up the Sunni Jihadists, and of the establishment of Sunni
clerical-fascist regimes in Tunisia, Egypt, and Libya might be small
for the US, but it could be very great for Israel. The first thing
is that Egypt must be under increasing pressure to open the border
with Gaza, allowing traffic of people, and arms in both directions.
If President Morsi fails to do that, he will come under increasing
pressure from the Salafist, and the dynamic of such regimes is always
to become more extreme. The possibility of a deal between Hamas and
Qatar, shows how things could escalate quickly, particularly given
the large number of foreign jihadist fighters, now well armed and
financed by those Gulf regimes, and by the US, already in Israel's
neighbour, Syria. The jihadists might hate Assad's regime, but they
hate Israel even more. In fact, Israel's atrocities in Gaza, open
the door for Assad to launch a populist opposition to Israel himself.
An obvious opening gambit in such a move would be an advance on the
Golan Heights, combined with renewed rocket attacks on Israel by
Hezbollah.
But, the
main threat as stated at the beginning comes from Turkey. The
Ottoman Empire for centuries dominated the Balkans, parts of Central
Europe – in competition with the Hapsburg Empire – and across the
Middle East and North Africa. It was only during WWI that that
Empire was finally demolished. Now a rapidly growing, and confident
Turkey is seeking to develop a Neo-Ottoman strategy. For years, it
tried to gain entry to the EU, but its attempts were blocked. Now,
it is growing much more strongly than the EU, and it has switched its
focus to building economic and political links with the East, and to
its South. Meanwhile, it too has fallen prey to Islamism. The
Islamist ruling party began modestly, now doubt concerned, given the
country's history, that the powerful military would intervene if it
pushed too far, too fast. But, the country is moving increasingly in
an Islamist direction, itself a cause of potential conflict given the
divisions between Sunnis, Alawites, Christians, and secularists.
For a long
time, while it was trying to gin entry to the EU, Turkey was an ally
of Israel. That began to change several years ago. It was typified
by the aid ship from Turkey, which was violently boarded by Israeli
troops, with several Turks being killed in the process. Turkey has
joined other Islamist regimes in vehemently attacking Israel's acts
of terror in Gaza. Some form of “liberal intervention” by Turkey
in Israel/Palestine would be an obvious way for it to assert itself
as the sub-imperialist power par excellence within the region,
rallying the other Islamist regimes behind it. That would be
unlikely to take the form of an outright military attack on Israel,
but it could take the form of supply Hamas, with sophisticated air
defences. It could take the form of an air exclusion zone over Gaza,
with Turkey threatening to take down any Israeli jets attacking Gaza.
As with other such interventions, such an approach would, however,
be likely to quickly lead to the need to go further, taking out
Israeli air defences, attacking Israeli armour on the border with
Gaza, and so on. All such actions would have the advantage for
Turkey, as a NATO member, of forcing the US to choose which side of
the fence it was on.
All those
who side with Palestine as against Israel would no doubt be glad to
see such an intervention, just as many those who sided with the
Libyan rebels, were glad to see an outside intervention against
Gaddafi, and today would be glad of such an intervention against
Assad. But, for socialists either kind of intervention is to be
opposed for the reasons Trotsky gives in his writings on the Balkan
Wars. The Israeli atrocities in Gaza are deplorable, and its not the
first time. If anything on a proportional basis, taking account of
relative population sizes, and duration of the attacks, the Israeli
atrocities in Gaza, are worse than those of the vile Assad regime.
But, once again, Trotsky's analysis in his writings on the Balkan
Wars demonstrates similarities.
In the
Balkans, as Trotsky points out forces were led into launching
adventures on the basis of expecting external intervention to come to
their support. Socialists are neither in favour of adventures, nor
of workers relying on forces other than their own, undertaking the
historical tasks that need to be completed. Looking at the situation
in Gaza today, although the Israeli atrocities are to be wholly
denounced, its also necessary for socialists to criticise the actions
of Hamas. The launching of rockets against Israel in no way
justifies Israel's murderous, and disproportionate response, but at
the same time, its clear that this strategy of rocket attacks on
Israeli civilians, is both reactionary, and doomed to fail. The
rockets are ineffective, despite the large numbers fired, and yet at
the same time, undermine the only chance that Palestinians have of
eventually resolving their problems – that is by the Palestinian
and Israeli workers joining forces.
As Trotsky
points out in relation to the Balkans, the solution was to be found
in creating a Balkan Federation capable of economically developing
the region, and breaking down national borders. That was not going
to happen if the workers of the Balkans were fighting each other.
The same is true today in the Middle East and North Africa. When
Hamas leaders appear on TV, and say that anyone who attacks Palestine
will be buried, when their tactic is resulting not in dozens of
Israeli, but in Gazan deaths, this can only be because they are
genuinely deluded, placing their faith literally in their
mediaevalist religious ideology that counts on divine intervention,
or more likely it is because, like the rebels in Libya, Syria and
elsewhere, they are counting on the resulting atrocities bringing
about intervention against Israel, by more powerful external forces
existing in the real world.
For the same
reasons as Trotsky in relation to the Balkans, we should vociferously
oppose the atrocities being committed by the Israeli regime, just as
we should do so in relation to the Assad regime. But, again for the
same reasons as Trotsky in the Balkans, we should oppose any external
intervention in the affairs of the region be that Turkish, or Iranian
intervention against Israel, or be it, intervention by the
imperialist powers and their Gulf agents in Syria. The solution for
the Middle East and North Africa is the establishment of a Federation
of States. Only the workers of the region are likely to bring that
about. Socialists should concern themselves with building the
workers forces in the region to that end, and doing so as an
independent force from their class enemies. That is not going to be
easy, and our forces to achieve it are tiny. But, as throughout our
history, our responsibility is to analyse things honestly, to tell
the truth even when its unpalatable, and to act upon it, not simply
choose some simpler solution, because it is more immediately
practical.
If Israel were to be decisively losing a war against Turkey (or anyone else), wouldn't it force the European NATO states to come to its aid by threatening to nuke them too if it went down?
ReplyDeleteThat's the whole point of Israel's Samson Option -- "if we go down, we'll drag the world down with us".
Possibly so, but that's why the US and NATO will impress on Israel that it should not pick a fight with Turkey, that would lead to such a lose-lose situation. Its also a reason Turkey would want Patriot Missiles on its border to shoot down any Israeli nukes aimed towards it, and why Europe will want its own NATO missile shield.
ReplyDeleteProvided its Turkey in the driving seat, NATO/Imperialism will hope to keep some kind of control, a control it will not have if instead the cause of the Palestinians/opposition to Israel is in the hands of the Sunni jihadists now in control in Libya and Mali, (possibly soon in Syria) and whose co-thinkers now form the political regime in Egypt and Tunisia.
The problem with that thesis is that if Turkey does assume that role, perhaps forcing Israel to concede a separate state for Palestine, a number of other problematics arise.
We already have the Two State solutions that some have demanded for a long time i.e. we have a separate Palestinian State in Gaza. It hasn't resolved anyhting for the reasons I outlined 25 years ago in that regard. Palestinians who want the whole of Palestine continue to engage in action against Israel, now with greater force behind them. Israelis who oppose that demand, and who seek a greater Israel, us the power of the Israeli State to enforce their will.
Even if Turkey could impose a more extensive Two-State solution, there is no reason that Palestinian militants, and jihadists would not continue their attacks.
Similarly, as happened with NATO's promotion of Al Qaeda, now they have taken the jihadi option out of the box in Libya etc. there is no guarantee that NATO and their Gulf allies will be able to put it back, once it has fulfilled its task of removing the Bonapartist regimes, and opening the road to defeating Iran/Iraq.