A Calculated Risk. Evan M. Wilson

A Calculated Risk - Evan M. Wilson


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      William B. Quandt

      Edward R. Stettinius Professor of Politics

      University of Virginia

      What can we learn today from looking back at the fateful decision made in the late 1940s by a small group of American officials to recognize Israel as a predominantly Jewish state in a part of what was then British-mandated Palestine? The events must seem far away to many Americans whose awareness of the Middle East and its many traumas dates from a more recent period. And yet the more we probe the issues of today, the more we realize that, for the players most involved in these events, questions of history are not abstractions; on the contrary, historical memories, or reinventions of history, are part and parcel of the narrative of current conflicts. So Americans who wish to understand the present problems of the Middle East would do well to brush up on their history.

      One excellent place to start is with Evan Wilson's even-tempered book A Calculated Risk. Wilson was a Foreign Service Officer who spent some thirty years of his career working on various aspects of Middle East affairs. His book covers the crucial years from the early 1940s through the declaration of statehood by Israel and America's decision to recognize and support the new state. For much of this period, he was an insider, but he does not limit his account to what he was able to observe. He also consulted the available archives and interviewed many of those who participated in the decisions of the day. His account is both well informed and well written.

      Wilson is also frank to admit that he was opposed to the main thrust of American policy at the time, and he spells out his reasons, and those of his like-minded colleagues. At a time when it is almost unheard of to question the decision of President Harry S. Truman to recognize Israel, it is worth examining the reasons of those who took a different position. It is too easy, and fundamentally untrue, to say, as some have done, that they were merely anti-Zionists (perhaps even worse, anti-Semites). After all, among those who were skeptical about the wisdom of recognizing a Jewish state in Palestine were a substantial number of illustrious foreign policy leaders—Secretary of State George Marshall, Secretary of Defense James Forrestal, Robert Lovett, Dean Acheson, Dean Rusk, George Kennan, Loy Henderson, and many who were less well known.

      What may surprise readers of this book even more is the evidence that even President Franklin D. Roosevelt seemed to harbor some doubts about rushing to recognize a Jewish state, as did the man who made the final decision, President Truman. In short, the issues at the time were seen as complex, debatable, and not at all as clear-cut—in either moral or strategic terms—as they may seem today.

      Wilson's account shows that the decision on Palestine was not made without prolonged discussion and a high-level of awareness of the stakes. From about 1942 onward, it was clear that the United States would play a central role in determining the face of the post-war Middle East. Great Britain and France might control most of the territory in the region, but the power realities were clear—the United States, having emerged from its isolationist stance, would have an unprecedented voice in setting up the post-war order.

      The Zionist movement, ably led by such men as David Ben Gurion and Chaim Weizmann, recognized the importance of American support, and from late1941 onward they sought to win over American support to their cause. There is a story of Ben Gurion coming to Washington to meet FDR. As Glenn Frankel tells it:

      “All David Ben Gurion wanted was 15 minutes of Franklin Delano Roosevelt's time. Israel's founding father, one of the indomitable political leaders of the 20th century, came to Washington in December 1941 yearning to present the case for a Jewish state directly to the American president. He took a two-room suite at the old Ambassador Hotel at 14th and K for $1,000 a month and cooled his heels for 10 weeks, writing letters and reports and making passes at Miriam Cohen, his attractive American secretary. But Ben-Gurion didn't get the meeting. Not then, not ever. Not even a pair of presidential cuff links.” (The Washington Post, July 16, 2006, p. W 13).

      How times have changed. Of course, FDR had other things on his mind in December 1941 than the troubles in the Middle East. Still, it is inconceivable that any president in recent memory would refuse to see such a prominent leader of the Zionist movement, the future prime minister of Israel. But times were indeed different. The United States was faced with a truly global war, the politics of the Palestine issue had not yet become so deeply involved with American domestic politics, the awareness of the tragedy unfolding for Europe's Jewry was not widespread, and the concern of Arab parties was rarely heard.

      It is striking to read this account of that period and to see how different the policy-making process was in those days. The State Department was literally across the street from the White House (in the Old Executive Office Building)—it moved to its present location in 1947. The number of people working on Near Eastern affairs was small—perhaps a dozen. It was not unusual for these officials to talk directly to the secretary of state or even to the President. And of course they were mostly of similar backgrounds—middle-aged male WASPs, often the products of east coast colleges.

      Why were so many of these officials opposed to the idea of a Jewish state? The reasons varied, but several themes stand out. First, no one thought that the Arabs could be persuaded to accept a Jewish state in their midst. Any effort to create one would result in violence and it was not a sure bet how the ensuing struggle would turn out.

      The experts were right about the resort to violence, but probably underestimated how well the Zionists (and then Israelis) would acquit themselves on the battlefield.

      A second concern, especially acute by 1947, was that the Soviet Union, now clearly the major geo-strategic rival of the United States, might exploit the Palestine issue to extend its influence into the Arab world. The Soviets had already made their interest in Iran and Turkey known, and the United States had pushed back successfully. But there was real concern on the part of most of the State Department leadership—not just the Arabists—that the Soviets would exploit the creation of a Jewish state to their advantage. Playing on Arab resentments, they would eventually succeed in winning influence in the heart of the Arab world. That was seen by many, including the Arabists, as a strategic challenge. It is now clear that this was a legitimate concern, although the Soviets eventually lost the influence they so carefully cultivated during the period of the 1950s, ’60s and ’70s.

      Some of those opposed to the idea of a Jewish state were also concerned with the moral problem of dispossessing an indigenous Palestinian Arab population who would inevitably become a minority in part of a land that had been theirs for centuries. There was a streak of anti-colonialism among those who led the State Department in this era—it applied to the British and French in particular—and Zionism was seen by some as simply a recent version of the old, and now discredited, colonial adventure.

      Finally, for some, such as Secretary of Defense Forrestal, there was the matter of oil. With the end of the Second World War, there was an acute awareness among some American officials that the rebuilding of Europe and Japan would depend upon a reliable supply of oil from the Middle East. It was also important that U.S. military forces, especially the Navy, have secure access to oil. And Saudi Arabia was by now clearly a giant in the oil business—and American companies produced all of the oil in the Kingdom. The companies, interestingly, do not seem to have lobbied in any obvious way against the Jewish state, but those who worried most about oil were also worried about the effect of U.S. support for Zionism on access to oil supplies. In subsequent years—especially during the 1973 crisis—this proved to be a real issue.

      While the arguments against the Jewish state were spelled out in detail within the American bureaucracy, it was at the White House that the decision would ultimately be made. And there the considerations were often colored by domestic politics, as well as the strategic concerns raised by Marshall, Lovett, and Forrestal. Truman in particular found himself caught between contending forces. He certainly heard and understood the concerns of those who opposed recognition of Israel. But he also heard from friends and fellow democrats who favored Zionism. In the White House, David Niles was a conduit for those views, as was Clark Clifford. Truman admits in his memoirs to feeling heavily pressured on the Palestine issue, which he resented, but through some combination of moral and political reasoning he eventually came to the conclusion that support for Israel was the


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