NOVANEWSThe Deadly Fires: Israel’s Katrina?The Israeli authorities announced Sunday night that the fire ranging inthe Carmel hills since Thursday, Israel’s most devastating fire on record,is now under control.An even worse disaster was averted. The fire did not seriously spread intoHaifa, Israel’s third-largest city, or its suburb Tirat HaCarmel. The mainreason for the unacceptably high death toll, estimated at 40+ persons –far larger than any single terror attack on Israelis since 1978 – was irres-ponsibility in sending unprepared unprotected personnel right into thefire, esp. one tragic bus of prison-service cadets.Will this disaster open Israelis’ eyes like Hurricane Katrina did for manyAmericans? Some obvious questions are, how come a nation with theworld’s most celebrated air force has zero air firefighting capabilities andrelies on outside help? Or, why have the forces run out of fire retardantsalready in the first day?There’s far more if one scratches the surface.0. The Theme is HUBRISI see this post as an (unplanned) part of the “Lost Decade in Israel-Palestine”diary series announced a few weeks ago.The underlying theme here is undue hubris and its inevitable results. Thishas been a chronic problem in Israeli mentality since 1967. One would thinkthat the thumping Israel received only six years after 1967 in the 1973 war, ascandal of which Israelis were reminded only a few weeks ago with the releaseof yet another batch of embarrassing documents – that 1973 would have taughtus the danger of hubris once and for all. But nothing seems to help. Stupid arrog-ance keeps raising its ugly head and taking over Israeli minds time and again.It seems that Occupation Israel (that is, the post-1967 entity which defines itselfon the ground via the colonization of regions beyond its legal borders and thecontrol of their foreign populations) requires hubris in order to exist.Talk to nearly any mainstream Israeli, and very quickly you’ll see that weare trained to believe in our innate superiority over the rest of the MiddleEast, especially the Palestinians. A superiority that requires no proof andcherry-picks reality to justify itself. Even worse, since the 1990′s thanks tosuccesses in the hi-tech arena, many Israelis now believe we are better thanjust about anyone in the world. Israel’s rather anomalous escape, thus far,from the worst of the current economic crisis (an escape which to my humblemind lacks proper explanation) has cemented the case that we Israelis are sosmart while the rest of the world are, well, idiots.I heard a classic example a few weeks ago on NPR. Israel’s government announceda massive alternative energy research initiative (or as Israelis prefer to call it,“Clean-tech”). Quite a few Israeli scientists and companies are among world leadersin this field – esp. solar energy – but thus far the government actually spent verylittle on this, and Israel’s power is virtually all from fossil-fuel sources. This didn’tstop PM Netanyahu from announcing that the initiative will turn Israel into theworld leader in clean technology. Not “contributing to the greening of the globe”,not “being among world leaders”, not “joining other nations in the effort” – but “the world leader”, plain and simple. Like, China and its massive recent investm-ents, Japan and its amazing work on solar grids, Denmark and its wind energy,and all the rest – they are nothing compared to us once we decide an issue isimportant enough to merit our attention.I heard this news story, presented as usual in American media with very littlein the way of criticism, and felt hmmm…. this arrogance thing is going a bit toofar now. Wonder what will happen to teach it a lesson. And there we go. It didn’ttake long.1. The Major Culprit is GLOBAL WARMINGIsrael-Palestine is (roughly speaking) bisected by the border between twoglobal climate zones. The northwest is the end of the Mediterranean regionand the sou-theast is the beginning of the Arabian desert. Border regionslike this are potentially very sensitive to climate change.Traditionally the Mediterranean part had a hot bone-dry summer from April/May to September/October. The cooler half of the year (calling it “winter” wouldbe a gross overstatement for those of you knowing what a real winter looks like)is characterized by bouts of rainstorms, often heavy, separated by days to weeksof the most beautiful weather – bright, cool to warmish, and green.Since the 1980′s most summers has been not only hotter and hotter, but alsocreeping up on the rainy season and making it shorter and warmer. And thisdecade it has become downright bizarre. We left Israel in late 2002, and untilthen I’d never heard of heat waves in February. I’m talking over-30 degrees C(for F-trapped folks, this is around 90), in February. Since 2003 or so, this hasbeen happening almost every year. And the end of summer has been pushedout further and further – until this year summer simply has not ended. Theheat never stopped, the rains never came.The first week of December 2010 in Israel-Palestine saw 30+ degrees and easte-rly desert winds. The Carmel region, usually mild, has been among the hottest.Imagine the hills above Ventura California simmering under Santa Ana windsand 90-degree temperatures in December with no rain in sight. “Tinderbox con-ditions” is an understatement to describe how volatile the Carmel forests – oneof Israel-Palestine’s largest and finest remaining patches of natural woods – havebecome. So it was a fire waiting to happen.There is universal agreement that this is the main cause of the fire. But eerily,most Israelis still don’t take global warming seriously, if they believe it at all.This is part of the Lost Decade’s mental divorce between Israel’s elites andtheir traditional allies, Western liberals. 20 years ago whatever Westernliberals thought, Israelis tended toagree. Now it’s the opposite – anything Western liberals and progressivesthink is immediately suspect to Israeli eyes – so global warming deniers arehaving a field dayin Israel. Even our political leadership’s new-found love for green technologyis presented as (and probably is) motivated by the wish to diminish the powerof Arab and Iranianoil, rather than having anything to do with climate change.Will Israelis now wake up and notice that, um, the country is in fact getting toohot for comfort? And that we know why this is happening and how it should bemitigated?2. Government Rot, and the USSR AnalogyGlobal warming might be the majorculprit, but there is also a more immediate band of hooligans to blame. No, theseare notthe two teenage Druze brothers ages 15 and 14, whom the police is holding in jail as suspects for accidentally causing the fire(talk about scapegoating!).Rather, these are successive Israeli governments who have decided, to put itbluntly, that the country does not need a firefighting infrastructure. In Israelthere is 1 firefighter per 7000 residents, compared with 1 per 1000 in most co-mparable nations. The air force used to have helicopters with fire-fightingcapabilities, but after the dips in the sea to draw water had rusted the beastsit dismantled those capabilities some 10-15 years ago. The treasury’s econo-mists decided it is not worthwhile to maintain a civilian air firefighting fleetin their stead. And so, on Thursday the only air capabilities available are 8private chemical-spraying planes, that took hours to put into operation.Israel begged around from its neighbors to send their airplanes. Finally,the same economists had also determined that it is not cost-effective tomaintain a sufficient stock of fire retardants.Thus, the forces ran out of material within the first day. All this has beenknown and alerted about for years. Only a couple of weeks ago it was deba-ted in the Knesset.Parts of the Israeli media prefer to focus on the trees not the forest. They saythe problem is the distribution of authority – budgets are centrally controlledby the treasury, instead of local authorities and individual ministries havingmore independence. But the problem is not in the system’s details, but ineco-nomic mindset and political culture.Those will not change with a few shuffles of the deck chairs.The neoliberal mindset has spread in Israel like the Plague. One can understandwhy:the quasi-socialist regime we’ve had until the 70′s (and in many respects till 1990or so) was far more like the corrupt and inept Eastern European model, than thesuccessful Western European social-democracies. By 1980 Israelis were sick ofwaiting years to get a phone line, waiting forever at various government minist-ries, etc. etc. Private companies, the Serious People told us, would do everythingmore efficiently and at a lower cost.So since the 1980′s, Israel’s economy has become an experimental playgroundfor Milton Friedman believers, causing one economic meltdown after the other.And still most Israelis believe in neoliberalism.One man is responsible more than anyone else for the dismantling process:current Prime Minister Benjamin “Bibi” Netanyahu. This is not often realized,but Bibi has been far more damaging, and far more extreme, in his economicpolicies than in his conflict-related policies. Since 1996 he has dominated econ-omic policies for 8 out of 14 years – 5 years as PM and 3 years as finance minister.He has privatized everything in sight (including, for example, the unemploymentservices!), reduced services and pensions – and embarked on a radical diet for whathe calls “the Fat Man of government”. No wonder then, that as PM in 1998 he ignoredthe strong recommendations of a special committee, to strengthen thefirefighting infrastructure.This is the mindset. The culture is that of endemic, systemic government corru-ption. As Israeli blogger Tsvika Besor reminds us (Hebrew link), when it comesto the number of ministers this Netanyahu government is actually the FattestMan on record, with 30 ministers 9 of whom do not even have a portfolio.The officially estimated cost of these superfluous ministers – 126 million NIS peryear – far outstrips all the “savings” from passing up on firefighting. This is thesame government whose head speaks high and mighty every other day aboutthe need to buckle up and cut public services.It is a culture of shamelessness, of pigging out at the public’s expense. Israel’searly politicians had their faults. Big time. But at least they were committed tonation building and lived relatively modest lives. The last of this breed was Rabin;not coincidentally he was murdered in 1995. The idea of the government actuallytrying to solve the nation’s problems and being responsible and accountable in anyway, rather than waste time and money and dish out goodies to its favored cronies,was already too outdated then.I’ve been planning this “Katrina” diary for a couple of days, meanwhileAmir Oren in Haaretz “stole” my title. Oren is a rather centrist and not very bright military analyst,but this time he seems to get it right:
Again, Oren is reading my mind. For a while I’ve been thinking about the USSR-Israel analogy. The last disaster highlighted that Israel is not an all-around player.We can have a huge airforce but no air firefighting. We build one of the world’s besttanks, but never mastered the art of building a proper passenger car. Other gapsabound: a deteriorating education system, a farming sector that was once the prideof the nation and is now nearly extinct, and zero earthquake preparedness despiteliving right on the Great Syrian-African Rift Valley and getting hit bydevastating earthquakes about once in 80 years (last time: in the 1920′s
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