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Opinion What Ukraine can learn from the ‘Israel model’

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Israel has played a peculiar role in American debates on the Russia-Ukraine war. After Russia’s invasion started, Jerusalem faced criticism in Washington for its reluctance to send military support to Ukraine — a reluctance influenced by Russia’s military presence on Israel’s border with Syria.

Now, as NATO punts on the question of Ukrainian membership, the “Israel model” is gaining currency in Washington as a way to think about Ukraine’s long-term defense. Before leaving for this week’s NATO summit, President Biden told CNN that while he wasn’t ready to risk direct war with Russia by extending NATO’s mutual-defense guarantee to Kyiv, Ukraine would receive “the security we provide for Israel.”

Translation: Ukraine will get large-scale weapons, logistics and diplomatic support in perpetuity — but no guarantee of U.S. troops to defend its territory. It’s a testament to Israel’s success at defending itself that friends of Ukraine invoke it as a security model. But the analogy should also temper idealistic Western thinking about the war.

The Israel model implies a long conflict with borders that remain unsettled. Israel’s borders changed throughout a series of wars and peace settlements starting with its 1948 war of independence. The United States is the only country to recognize Israel’s control over the Golan Heights, and only a few others treat Jerusalem as its capital. The status of the West Bank is contested both internationally and in Israel’s domestic politics.

Territorial claims in the Arab-Israeli conflict and in the Russia-Ukraine war are not equivalent. But as with territories in the Middle East, the status of parts of Ukraine, especially Crimea, could be contested for decades. In an ideal world, Kyiv could swiftly inflict so decisive a defeat on Russia that Moscow’s claims on Ukraine would end. But growing Western interest in the Israel model reflects a recognition that this is unlikely and that Ukrainian society might need to remain militarized in a way that sets it apart from the rest of Europe.

Follow this authorJason Willick‘s opinions

The Biden administration wants to frame the Russia-Ukraine war as a global clash between democracy and autocracy. Israel is a democracy, but it has formed ties with the Persian Gulf monarchies, including Saudi Arabia, to check its most powerful rival, Iran, and has built a working relationship with Russia to operate militarily in Syria. Countries in dangerous neighborhoods without ironclad U.S. security guarantees don’t have the luxury of conducting foreign policy along the ideological lines favored in rich Western capitals. That calculation will apply to Kyiv as well — witness its plea for cluster munitions, which are banned in Western Europe.

While international institutions and the European Union have rallied to Ukraine in its time of peril, Israel’s long-term experience shows that the West can’t always be depended on. Even as the Biden administration touts the Israel model for Ukraine, it is embroiled in a diplomatic feud with Israel over its right-wing government. And if Donald Trump wins the 2024 presidential election, U.S. policy on Ukraine could change.

One advantage of the Israel model, for decision-makers in Jerusalem, is that they have more freedom to make their own foreign policy decisions than U.S. allies with formal treaties. Israel has a history of acting aggressively and unilaterally to defend its interests, including by destroying nuclear reactors under construction in Iraq in 1981 and Syria in 2007. When countries have the capacity to defend themselves with their own militaries, they have less need to defer to Washington.

One example came during Israel’s 1982 war in Lebanon. According to one account, Biden, a senator at the time, dressed down Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin, who replied: “Don’t threaten us with cutting off aid to give up our principles.” Ukraine, armed and autonomous, would pursue its principles independent of U.S. wishes under the Israel model.

One key difference, of course, is nuclear weapons. While Israel has nuclear weapons and (for now) its regional rivals don’t, Ukraine is a nonnuclear state under invasion by a major nuclear power. Perhaps that’s why Henry Kissinger (who, as secretary of state during the 1973 Arab-Israeli War, helped devise the Israel model) fears that too much Ukrainian freedom of action could make long-term peace with Russia more difficult to achieve.

In an April interview with the Economist, Kissinger worried that Ukraine “will be the best-armed country and with the least strategically experienced leadership in Europe.” He added: “It is better to have Ukraine in NATO, where it cannot make national decisions on territorial claims.” While Ukrainian NATO membership would be designed to deter Russia, Kissinger also highlights the need to constrain Ukraine.

The West has calculated that the risk of war with Russia is too great to outline when and how Kyiv can join NATO. The Israel model, broadly defined, is the path of least resistance. But just as the West sometimes tries to restrain Israel — both in its conflict with the Palestinians and in its showdown with Iran — it might also end up trying to restrain an insecure Kyiv amid a volatile security situation that will last for years. If the Israel model is a workable strategy for Ukraine, the West should be clear-eyed about what it means.

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Rumors That Putin’s Top General Was Killed Are Dismissed By ‘Those Who Know’

Ukrainian Air Force Commander Mykola Oleshchuk said on Thursday that the Armed Forces of Ukraine (AFU) had carried out two missile strikes against Russian targets in Crimea; a command post, near Sevastopol, was hit at about 3 p.m. and a military unit, believed to be a radar station in Uyutne, near the city of Yevpatoria in the evening.

Oleshchuk thanked the pilots and “everyone who planned the operation for perfect combat work.” The wording of his Telegram post suggested the attacks had likely involved Anglo-French Storm Shadow/SCALP cruise missiles.

A spokesperson for the Russian-appointed authorities in Crimea said its air defenses had intercepted ten missiles and 36 drones during the course of what they called a Ukrainian “terrorist attack” and that only fragments of destroyed projectile fell at the two locations.

However, within a couple of hours of the strike on the command post social media suggested that more than 20 soldiers and several senior Russian officers had been killed.

BREAKING:23 Russian soldiers killed in yesterday’s Ukrainian missile strike against the Russian airbase in Saky, Crimea.

9 of them special forces, 5 high-ranking commanders. pic.twitter.com/hdUiUmfmI6

— Visegrád 24 (@visegrad24) January 5, 2024

This claim was expanded upon shortly thereafter with suggestions that one of those killed had been Russia’s Chief of the General Staff Valery Gerasimov who had been made overall commander of Russia’s “special military operation” last January. Firstly, this appeared on the X (formerly Twitter) account of a user called “WarVehicleTracker” quoting Russian Telegram channel “Ordinary Tsarism.”

Ukraine Strikes Russian Command Post and Military Unit in Crimea

Explosions and air raid sirens were heard in Crimea on Thursday afternoon, and again in the evening.

Gerasimov died?
(Please let it be true, The last competent Russian dying after Surovikin got canceled out🙏) pic.twitter.com/qHi3xlS2ue

— WarVehicleTracker (@WarVehicle) January 4, 2024

It was very quickly picked up by other Ukrainian and Russian social media sites and even the US main stream news outlet Newsweek ran the story, though it was at pains to point out that there was no concrete evidence to suggest that Gerasimov had been killed, or even that he was actually in Crimea at the time of the attack.

While the rumors of Gerasimov’s demise continued to circulate on Friday, the “Insider Ukraine” Telegram channel said in the early afternoon that “media information about the command post in Crimea being hit was true but that the death of the head of the General Staff is 99 percent fake.”

Serhiy Bratchuk, a spokesperson for the Ukrainian Volunteer Army South speaking during an interview with the “Espresso” TV channel on Friday seemed to endorse this view:

“Yesterday in Crimea, an enemy command post was hit” in which there were “several high-ranking officers or generals of the Russian occupation army.” He added “I even heard the famous name Gerasimov. It would be good news, but I think it is unlikely to be true.”

Bratchuk also confirmed the strike on the air defense communication site in Uyutne in south west Crimea, after which he asserted that many ambulances were called to deal with casualties.

The Russian news agency TASS, quoting the New York Times, said on Dec. 17 that Ukraine had allegedly made a failed attempt to assassinate Gerasimov during a visit to the front lines. It went on to say that the attempt had failed because it had been made against Washington’s wishes who in turn withheld the information on the Russian’s movements that were essential to a successful attack.

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Steve Brown

Steve Brown

After a career as a British Army Ammunition Specialist and Bomb Disposal Officer, Steve later worked in the fields of ammunition destruction, demining and explosive ordnance disposal with the UN and NATO. In 2017, after taking early retirement, he moved to Ukraine with his Ukrainian wife and two sons where he became a full-time writer. He now works as an English language editor with the Kyiv Post.