More than Half-Way but Not Full Friends: Israel and Jordan
This morning I received an email from former Israel Labor Party Deputy Leader and former Deputy Defense Minister Ephraim Sneh. It started "To my Muslim friends - Ramadan Karim".
Sneh maintains a friends mailing list for his thoughts and articles, and I'm honored to be included -- and appreciate very much that in a time that the United States is twisting itself in moral knots over the false debate about a mosque near the World Trade Center site in New York that Sneh -- a leading Jewish Israeli statesman -- is reaching out to his Muslim friends.
He sets a better example of intellectual and cultural openness than many US political leaders (with a blind spot or two).
Although some of Sneh's views are divergent from my own, particularly on Iran -- which he thinks is an irrational nation to its core bent on the annihilation of Israel, I always read him and take him seriously. He was one of those whose comments recently appeared in Jeffrey Goldberg's important Atlantic Monthly article "The Point of No Return." (My response to Goldberg appears here.)
But it is not about Iran that Sneh writes today; it is about "Israel and Jordan." (unfortunately the link to the article is not yet up on the Haaretz website. I will post as soon as available.)
After remarking about how Israeli concerns about a dangerous "Eastern Front" buffering Jordan and Israel had been transformed to one of quite and stability, Sneh writes:
In the sixteen years that have passed since that ceremony in the Arava valley, Jordan has carefully ensured that its border with Israel remains quiet and safe. The efforts of the Jordanian army and Jordanian intelligence have prevented terrorist penetrations from the eastern side of the border. The effort is impressive and so are its results. We have never publicly expressed our thanks to the Kingdom of Jordan; I hope that by other channels we did so.Of late, official spokesmen are again mentioning the "Eastern Front". It's not as though we are short of security worries; on the other hand, this is not an entirely groundless concern. The military vacuum that will be formed after the exit of most of the US forces from Iraq, and the growing Iranian hold and influence on Iraq, give a certain justification for these fears, though the threat is neither tangible nor immediate.
Yet those who are truly worried--and the statements I have mentioned come from sources inside the government--have work to do. The thing most needed now, even without summoning up the "Eastern Front" from our strategic memories, is to strengthen Jordan, militarily and politically.
This is enlightened thinking from a former senior Israeli politician. Sneh calls for Israel to remove its opposition to Jordan developing its uranium resources for civilian use and also suggests that Israel support Jordan's efforts to refurbish an oil pipeline from Mosul to Haifa, moving Iraqi oil through Jordan to the Mediterranean. In what was news to me, the US is also allegedly helping to finance and construct a security wall between Jordan and Syria -- which Sneh thinks should be extended to the border between Jordan and Iraq.
And Sneh concludes:
And finally a point of morality. It would be best if for once we did not act ungratefully toward one of our few allies in the Middle East.
I want to commend Ephraim Sneh for his tone -- and to tell those who have given up thinking and listening in the US for bluster and screaming -- that there is something important when an Israeli leader can reach out and Americans, particularly Republican leaders at the moment -- but I'll add Senator Harry Reid to the mix -- can't manage a similarly enlightened posture.
The one missing hole in Sneh's article is that while he recognizes that Israel can do a lot to change the temperature in Jordan, the biggest help would come in doing more to resolve the Israel-Palestine standoff and to pull the plug on the ongoing expansion, military protection, and tax subsidization of illegal settlements in occupied territories.
I know that Sneh is actually a strong proponent of a two state outcome resulting in a secure Israel and viable, contiguous Palestinian state. But this is not something to leave out of the equation when it comes to helping Jordan achieve greater security and normalcy.
Until the toxic Palestinian situation is resolved, Jordan and Israel may be better than half-way friends but can't ever be full friends.
-- Steve Clemons publishes the popular political blog, The Washington Note, and is editor-at-large at Talking Points Memo. Clemons can be followed on Twitter @SCClemons

















Instead of "Until the toxic Palestinian situation is resolved" maybe you should be saying "Until the toxic Zionist situation is resolved". But have it your way and enjoy your two segregated states, divided, falling, and sucking us all in.
August 17, 2010 10:05 AM | Reply | Permalink
...Now if Israel can just stop shredding Gaza. Words are cheap.
August 17, 2010 10:40 AM | Reply | Permalink
Wow, an Israeli who thinks its best not to interfere in Jordan's undisputed right to develop a peaceful nuclear industry. Imagine that.
What's next? Jordanians are people too?
The toxic embrace suggested by Steve will be a disaster for Jordan. Instead of Jordan advancing its own interests in the Arab World by increasing its trade with Syria and Iraq, it (a) will be build a wall between itself and Syria, thereby cutting Jordan off from the emerging Turkish-Syrian economic arc; and (b) use its country as a transit point to bring oil to Haifa.
Essentially, Jordan will asked to serve its historic role of being Israel's lapdog and an American base.
Yuk.
The age of White Man's Burden is over. If Israel wants to be Jordan's friend, I suggest they acknowledge Jordan's rights under international law and stop trying to poison Jordan's relationships with its other neighbors. The Turks have shown the Middle East the future. They dying regimes of the Hashemites and the Sauds are the past.
August 17, 2010 11:06 AM | Reply | Permalink
So there's going to be a security wall between Jordan and Syria, how did it come to this? these people have lived in harmony for centuries and now suddenly there needs to be a security wall!
August 17, 2010 11:20 AM | Reply | Permalink
See above. It is an attempt to tie Jordan to Israel and pull it away from the rest of the Arab World. More colonial bullsh*t.
August 17, 2010 11:24 AM | Reply | Permalink
Excellent piece.
Sneh is the Deputy Defense Minister, so why does Israel still oppose Jordan's uranium development?
I'm not sure why Israel would oppose a Mosul-Haifa pipeline? Maybe it has to do with Turkey?
August 17, 2010 11:37 AM | Reply | Permalink
Steve does indeed betray his feelings on this issue using the term "toxic Palestinian" (as per Allan). This conveys a message: the problem is the Palestinians. They are at fault that their ancestors settled and lived in Palestine which was coveted by a European settler movement. The Hashemites have dictatorial power over their subjects so it is hard to gauge the feeling of the average Jordanian. But there must be many that feel shame on how Jordan has abandoned their Palestinian brothers. That regime could go quickly I suspect.
August 17, 2010 4:49 PM | Reply | Permalink
Not quick enough. Of course, I hope it's the day after the Saudi Royal Family flees into exile in Morocco.
August 18, 2010 11:10 AM | Reply | Permalink
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Not quick enough. Of course, I hope it's the day after the Saudi Royal Family flees into exile in Morocco
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