Fortress Israel
The Inside Story of the Military Elite Who Run the Country--and Why They Can't Make Peace
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- $11.99
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- $11.99
Publisher Description
"Once in the military system, Israelis never fully exit," writes the prizewinning journalist Patrick Tyler in the prologue to Fortress Israel. "They carry the military identity for life, not just through service in the reserves until age forty-nine . . . but through lifelong expectations of loyalty and secrecy." The military is the country to a great extent, and peace will only come, Tyler argues, when Israel's military elite adopt it as the national strategy.
Fortress Israel is an epic portrayal of Israel's martial culture—of Sparta presenting itself as Athens. From Israel's founding in 1948, we see a leadership class engaged in an intense ideological struggle over whether to become the "light unto nations," as envisioned by the early Zionists, or to embrace an ideology of state militarism with the objective of expanding borders and exploiting the weaknesses of the Arabs. In his first decade as prime minister, David Ben-Gurion conceived of a militarized society, dominated by a powerful defense establishment and capable of defeating the Arabs in serial warfare over many decades. Bound by self-reliance and a stern resolve never to forget the Holocaust, Israel's military elite has prevailed in war but has also at times overpowered Israel's democracy. Tyler takes us inside the military culture of Moshe Dayan, Yitzhak Rabin, Ariel Sharon, and Benjamin Netanyahu, introducing us to generals who make decisions that trump those of elected leaders and who disdain diplomacy as appeasement or surrender.
Fortress Israel shows us how this martial culture envelops every family. Israeli youth go through three years of compulsory military service after high school, and acceptance into elite commando units or air force squadrons brings lasting prestige and a network for life. So ingrained is the martial outlook and identity, Tyler argues, that Israelis are missing opportunities to make peace even when it is possible to do so. "The Zionist movement had survived the onslaught of world wars, the Holocaust, and clashes of ideology," writes Tyler, "but in the modern era of statehood, Israel seemed incapable of fielding a generation of leaders who could adapt to the times, who were dedicated to ending . . . [Israel's] isolation, or to changing the paradigm of military preeminence."
Based on a vast array of sources, declassified documents, personal archives, and interviews across the spectrum of Israel's ruling class, Fortress Israel is a remarkable story of character, rivalry, conflict, and the competing impulses for war and for peace in the Middle East.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In this revealing chronicle of Israeli foreign and defense policy, New York Times correspondent Tyler (Running Critical) contends that Israel is dominated by military and intelligence cliques who just won't give peace a chance. He follows this theme through an exhaustive recap of Israel's conflicts from the Suez Crisis and the Six-Day War through the interminable struggle against the Palestinians, with its bloody counterpoint between Israeli air strikes, armored incursions, and targeted assassinations, and Palestinian rocket attacks and suicide bombings. At most junctures his intimate narrative of policy making shows a government driven by the "martial impulse" of officer-politicians, like Moshe Dayan and Ariel Sharon, riding roughshod over doves and turning away from negotiations and compromise toward bellicose overreaction. Tyler's well-researched account illuminates an ugly and troubling dimension of Israeli policy and politics. He ascribes Israeli policy to factional maneuvering and a "sabra" native-born Israeli culture of toughness and militarism while underplaying factors like public opinion and the rejectionism of Palestinians and Arab regimes. In assuming that there always is a clear-cut peace program to be pursued, he underestimates the intractability of the Middle East deadlock. Photos.