Jerusalem Post 
 
The Region: The situation is looking  better 
 
By _BARRY  RUBIN_ (http://www.jpost.com/Authors/AuthorPage.aspx?id=39)  
04/29/2013

 
What often  seems to be the world’s most slandered and reviled country is 
doing quite  well. 
 
The economic and strategic situation for Israel is surprisingly bright  
right now. That’s partly due to the government’s own economic restraint, 
partly  due to a shift in Obama administration policy, and partly due to the 
conflicts  among Israel’s adversaries.

Let’s start with the economy.

During  2012, Israel’s economy grew by 3.1 percent. While some years ago 
this would not  have been all that impressive, it is amazing given the 
international economic  recession. The debt burden actually fell from 79.4% of 
GDP 
to only 73.8 percent.  As the debt of the United States and other countries 
zooms upwards, that’s  impressive, too.

Israel’s credit rating also rose at a time when  America’s was declining.

Standard and Poor lifted the rating from A to  A+. Two other rating 
systems, Moody’s and Fitch, also increased Israel’s rating.  And that’s not 
all. 
Unemployment fell from 8.5% in 2009 to either 6.8%- 6.9%  (according to Israel
’s Central Bureau of Statistics) or 6.3% (according to the  CIA).

In terms of US-Israel relations, the President Barack Obama’s visit  and 
Israel’s cooperation on Iran and on an attempted conciliation with Turkey  
brought quick rewards. For the first time, Israel will be allowed to purchase  
KC-135 aerial refueling planes, that could be most useful for attacking 
Iranian  nuclear facilities, among other things.

The same deal – which includes  sales to Saudi Arabia and other Arab 
countries to make US allies feel more  secure vis-à-vis Iran – includes V-22 
Osprey aircraft that can switch between  helicopter and plane mode. Israel is 
the 
first foreign country to be allowed to  purchase this system. It could be 
used for border patrols – a bigger problem  given the decline in the 
stability along the Egyptian and Syrian borders – and  troop transport.

Finally, there would be more advanced radars for Israeli  planes and a new 
type of missile useful for knocking out enemy anti-aircraft  sites, 
potentially useful against Iran, among other targets. In addition, an  Israeli 
company is now going to be making the wings for the advanced US F-35  fighter 
planes.

The completion of the border fence with Egypt increases  security in places 
where Palestinian and Egyptian Islamist groups are trying to  attack. It 
also has reduced illegal civilian crossings to zero. Ironically,  Israel has 
gotten control of its border while the US government proclaims that  task to 
be impossible for itself.

And of course there is the usual and  widely varied progress on medical, 
agricultural, and hi-tech innovations. Here  is a summary of those inventions.

The picture is even bright regarding  US-Israel relations, certainly 
compared to the previous four years. This point  is highlighted by Wikileaks’ 
publication of a US embassy dispatch of January 4,  2010, describing my article 
that day in The Jerusalem Post: “[As far as Israel  is concerned] what is 
important is that Obama and his entourage have learned two  things. One of 
them is that bashing Israel is politically costly. American  public opinion is 
very strongly pro- Israel. Congress is as friendly to Israel  as ever. For 
an administration that is more conscious of its future reelection  campaign 
than any previous one, holding onto Jewish voters and ensuring Jewish  
donations is very important....

“The other point is that the  administration has seen that bashing Israel 
doesn’t get it anywhere.

For  one thing, the current Israeli government won’t give in easily and is 
very adept  at protecting its country’s interests. This administration has a 
great deal of  trouble being tough with anyone. If in fact the Palestinians 
and Arabs were  eager to make a deal and energetic about supporting other 
US policies, the  administration might well be tempted to press for an 
arrangement that largely  ignored Israeli interests.

“But this is not the case. It is the  Palestinians who refuse even to come 
to the negotiating table – and that is  unlikely to change quickly or 
easily. Arab states won’t lift a finger to help  the US on Iran, Iraq, or 
Arab-Israeli issues. So why bother?” I think this  analysis really fits the 
events 
that came to fruition in March 2013 with Obama’s  coming to Israel, signaling 
a change in US policy.

Face it: The obsession  with the “peace process” is misplaced and 
misleading. The big issue in the  region is the struggle for power in the 
Arabic-speaking world, Turkey, and Iran  between Islamists and non-Islamists. 
And, no, 
the Arab- Israeli conflict has  very little to do with these issues. Those 
who don’t understand these points  cannot possibly comprehend the region.

Secretary of State John Kerry may  run around the region and talk about big 
plans for summit  conferences.

But nobody really expects anything to happen.

This is  not, of course, to say that there aren’t problems. Yet what often 
seems to be  the world’s most slandered and reviled country is doing quite 
well. Perhaps if  Western states studied its policies rather than endlessly 
criticized them they  might gain from the experience.

-- 
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