Will
Israel Survive? Bet On It
I gave my new book
the provocative title Will Israel Survive?
because Israel faces so many challenges
today that it is a legitimate question.
A year ago nearly one-fourth of Israelis
said they were not certain if Israel
would exist in the long run and 54%
feared for the existence of the state.
Israelis have good
reason to be concerned. Consider the
threat of Islamic jihadism that appears
to be gaining strength along its borders
following the Hamas takeover of Gaza
and the war with Hezbollah. Radical
Islamists cannot accept Jews ruling
over Muslims or any territory that
belongs to the past or future Islamic
empires. They will wage war so long
as Israel exists so it does not matter
where the borders are drawn.
Israel can live with
terrorism, but what happens if Iran
acquires a nuclear bomb? Can Israel
risk the threat of annihilation? If
not, what can it do? Should it rely
on the international community or the
United States to prevent Iran from
acquiring the bomb or deterring it
from using one? Does it have the capability
to act unilaterally to stop Iran and
what are the consequences of a military
strike?
Israel can decide
how to react to Iran’s nuclear ambitions,
but it can do much less about the demographic
bomb. The Palestinian Arab birth rate
is double that of the Jews, which means
that the Jewish majority in Israel
is slowly declining. Today, it is 76%,
by 2025 it is expected to drop to 70%,
which means Israeli Arabs will have
greater political clout. If Israel
were to keep the West Bank, the situation
would be even worse, with projections
suggesting the Jews could become a
minority in less than 15 years. The
demographic reality prompted the disengagement
from Gaza and ultimately will lead
to a withdrawal from the West Bank.
The Gaza experience has shown, however,
that reducing the demographic threat
does not mean Israel will not face
other dangers when it gives up territory.
One largely overlooked
threat to Israel’s survival is the
need for water. As Israel’s population
grows and its economy prospers, the
need for water also expands. Roughly
50% of its water supply could be threatened
by territorial compromises. One quarter
of Israel’s water comes from mountain
aquifers that lie in areas of the West
Bank that may be controlled in the
future by the Palestinians. Similarly,
if Israel were to withdraw from the
Golan Heights, another quarter of its
supply provided by the Kinneret would
be endangered. Neither the Palestinians
nor the Syrians have to take hostile
steps to threaten Israel’s fresh water.
Overpumping, pollution and other activities
unrelated to enmity toward Israel could
severely affect the availability of
water in Israel.
If we are to objectively
consider Israel’s long-term future,
it is necessary to consider these types
of worst-case scenarios. Another would
be the abandonment of Israel by the
United States. How will support for
Israel be affected, for example, as
the face of Congress changes with increasing
representation by Hispanics? What if
the Jimmy Carter school of thought
becomes more prevalent? Imagine how
the United Nations would treat Israel
without the threat of an American veto.
My book deals with
these and other dangers that Israel
faces and argues they can be overcome.
After all, the history of the Jewish
people is a story of survival. It took
more than 2,000 years for the Jews
to regain power in their homeland,
but Israel is now a prosperous nation
of more than seven million citizens,
while the mighty Assyrians, Babylonians
and other ancient powers that once
dominated the region have been relegated
to Marx’s dustbin of history.
For people of faith,
Israel will survive because that is
God’s will. I believe that Israel will
endure because of the strength of its
people, the support of Diaspora Jewry
and the belief of non-Jewish friends
that the Jewish people are entitled
to a state in their homeland. Even
though my book outlines the obstacles,
I am confident Israel will also achieve
peace, perhaps not the perfect peace
we all hope for, but the treaties with
Egypt and Jordan have proved coexistence
is possible.
Will Israel Survive?
Ask me again in a hundred years.
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