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The Siege of Tel Aviv

Page 27

by Hesh Kestin


  Because the Palestinian leadership finds itself fully engaged with the construction of new towns and the infrastructure of a modern state, including such details as sewer systems and roads, it finally comes to terms with Israel. Under a secret memorandum of understanding, the Republic of Palestine will forego a standing army, its (once Jordanian) tanks, artillery, and missiles to be purchased by the IDF. In return, Israel pledges to defend Palestine’s borders from aggression by any neighboring country, its Red Sea port of Aqaba to be protected by the Israeli Navy. Moreover, a land corridor is established so that Palestinian agricultural and manufactured goods may be exported through the Israeli deepwater harbor at Ashdod, where Palestinian customs officials operate out of their own dedicated section of the port.

  Muslim holy sites in Jerusalem continue to be administered by the Waqf, the Muslim religious council. Along with the blue and white flag of Israel, the newly designed flag of Palestine, a solid green banner, flies over the Mosque of Omar and the Dome of the Rock, which Israel has rebuilt.

  The King of Saudi Arabia dies in his eighty-seventh year and is replaced by his thirty-six-year-old grandson, who faces enormous challenges. The flow of oil continues, but the riches have ceased, a situation that prevents the royal treasury from continuing to support the multitude of regional sheikhs on its payroll. The country quickly fragments, returning to the primitive tribalism that was its natural state before Saudi Arabia was formed after World War I.

  Kuwait sues in the International Court of Justice at the Hague for return of its sixty F/A-18s—London’s Daily Mail gleefully summarizes the charge sheet as “Grand Theft Air Force”—but the judges rule for Israel after documents are entered into evidence proving Kuwait a veteran financial supporter of international terror in general and anti-Israel terror specifically. The aircraft are termed spoils of war.

  134

  ALEKSEI TUPIKOV, THE RUSSIAN general in charge of GRU operations in the Middle East, is transferred to Washington as nominal second commercial secretary. One evening, at a diplomatic reception, he comes face to face with Misha Shulman, now director of covert operations for the Mossad. Though Misha never met the Russian during the war—the GRU mission in Jerusalem was helicoptered out before the first Israeli tank entered the city—Tupikov’s role, and the role of the GRU, becomes public knowledge when Israel releases video of the meetings of the Islamic Liberation Council in the boardroom of Israel Discount Bank in Jerusalem. In their hurry to leave, the Russians neglected to remove the cameras they installed.

  Ten days after the reception, Tupikov’s body is found by a jogger in Rock Creek Park, his penis stuffed in his mouth.

  The Mossad launches an investigation in parallel with that of the District of Columbia Police Department and the FBI. The American cops come up with many suspects but no indictments. The Mossad immediately identifies the killer, but its objection is not to the crime but to the concomitant flouting of bureaucratic principle: no one authorized the hit. Rather than return to Israel to face disciplinary action, Misha elects to resign from the agency. He moves to Los Angeles to produce action films where the crooks invariably outsmart the police. Variety’s headline is succinct:

  GANGSTER FILMS GANGSTER FILMS

  With Pinky retired, General Ido Baram takes over as IDF chief of staff, surprising everyone, considering his background in armor, by setting about building up the Israel Navy. Eight nuclear-powered submarines are ordered from a hastily formed shipbuilding conglomerate led by Isracorp. To head the effort, Yigal chooses a pragmatic engineer named Alon Peri.

  Perhaps as a result of the shortage of available young men after the war, Alex finds a very understanding and enthusiastic girlfriend. She marries him on condition that he retire from the air force. Together they set up a fashion house based on designs Alex often sketched between flights. Within five years, the name Alex joins that of Dior and Chanel in the highest ranks of haute couture. Beyond high profits and praise from the fashion press, the House of Alex wins the ultimate in recognition: knockoffs appear in shops all over the world.

  Of the three Super Hornet pilots at USMA Forward Base Wildcat, Captains Stanley Field and Christian Thurston re-enlist; Jimbo leaves the service to attend Yale Divinity School, where he speaks standard English.

  Israel’s ambassador to the United Nations remains on the job in New York and later becomes director general of the foreign ministry. But Shai Oren’s career will never reach a higher point than on the day Jerusalem is liberated, when he stands before the General Assembly to deliver, in sixteen words, the shortest speech ever given at the United Nations, and perhaps in diplomatic history.

  “Distinguished representatives,” Ambassador Oren says, before even one of his colleagues can reach the exit. “The State of Israel is pleased to confirm its existence. Get used to it.”

 

 

 


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