Bordering on war

Reading about the invasion of Israel by Arab “protesters” on Sunday, I wondered what the Jerusalem Post’s Caroline Glick would have to say about it. She turned up yesterday with a post in NRO’s Corner to draw three conclusions:

I think the violence that broke out this weekend on the Syria-Israel border is a clear indication that the revolutions in the Arab world are engendering more rather than less radicalism and instability in the region. I think they show that another Arab war against Israel is more likely now than at any time in the last 25 years, as Egypt, Syria and other countries reassess their options and come to the conclusion that war and other aggression against Israel serve their interests today in a way they didn’t in the past.
I think Israel’s response was weak and that Defense Minister Ehud Barak, who consistently fails to understand the nature of the gathering threats, should be fired.
And I think the Obama administration, which has thrown Israel under the bus in its efforts to appease the likes of the Muslim Brotherhood, Syria’s Assad, the Palestinians, and the nuclear-bomb-building Iranian ayatollahs, has contributed massively to the precarious destabilization of the region.

In her Jerusalem Post column today, Glick discusses this weekend’s events at greater length in “Ehud Barak’s latest Nakba.”

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