By Cliff May
Wednesday, July 30, 2014
Hamas wants to kill as many Israeli civilians as
possible. It’s been doing all it can to achieve that objective, for example
launching missiles at Israel’s international airport and constructing tunnels
to infiltrate terrorists into Israeli communities for the purpose of
slaughtering and hostage-taking.
Israelis want to kill as few Palestinian civilians as
possible. They’ve been doing all they can to achieve that – no nation under
attack has ever done more. For example, they warn noncombatants of impending
strikes on military targets by phoning, texting, leafleting and even dropping
dummy bombs.
Palestinian civilians are being killed anyway, in large
measure because Hamas has placed command posts, missile repositories and tunnel
entrances in mosques, schools and hospitals. What’s more, Hamas commanders
continue to use Palestinian men, women and children as human shields or, as
they prefer, “martyrs.”
Surprise: The U.N., much of the media, many so-called
human rights groups and large swaths public opinion, most of it on the left,
condemn Israel and condone Hamas.
It’s worth pondering the origins of such perverse
attitudes, and I’ll attempt to do so in a moment. But more urgent is to
consider what Israelis can do about it. My answer: Very little.
If that pessimistic – or realistic – view is correct, it
has policy implications. It suggests Israelis should (1) defend themselves as
best they can, while degrading their enemies’ martial capabilities (in
particular the missiles and tunnels) as much as possible; (2) continue
scrupulously observing the laws of war despite the fact that they their enemies
do not, and despite the fact that they will receive no credit for such efforts,
because (3) they will know the truth about themselves and that will fortify
them against the slanderers; (4) steadfastly reject proposals that would let
Hamas achieve “wins” as a result of having initiated this conflict; and (5) try
to drive home to Palestinians the fact that Hamas has brought them no benefits
in exchange for the sacrifices it has demanded and the suffering it has
inflicted.
One more recommendation: Once the current Battle of Gaza
is over, Israeli officials would be well-advised to reiterate to Palestinians
that if they would adopt a policy of non-belligerence (“peace” is a bridge too
far) vis-à-vis Israel they would enjoy increased security, prosperity and
self-rule, a foundation upon which further progress might be built.
It would be helpful if key actors within the
“international community” would stop encouraging Hamas to commit war crimes.
One egregious example: the UN Human Rights Council last week voted on a
resolution titled “Ensuring respect for international law in the Occupied
Palestinian Territory, including East Jerusalem.”
What does the resolution say about Hamas’ firing missiles
at passenger planes taking off and landing -- attempting to do what was done
recently done over the skies of Ukraine? Not a word.
What does it say about the tunnels from which Hamas
assault teams planned to emerge armed with explosives, tranquilizers and
handcuffs, on a mission to murder Jews and drag others beneath the earth?
Nothing.
What does it say about Hamas? The resolution does not
mention Hamas.
And note that the resolution calls Gaza “occupied”
despite the fact that the Israelis withdrew from that territory in 2005. As for
Israel’s blockade of Gaza, that was not put into place until 2007 -- after
Hamas’ violent ouster of rival Fatah from Gaza, and in response to Hamas’
continuing threats and attacks. And it’s a military blockade: Food, medicines
and fuel are allowed in – even now. But Israelis have tried, not entirely
successfully, to prevent the importation of missiles and other weapons. That’s
it: That’s the “occupation.”
Not one Western European member of the Human Rights
Council voted against this distortion of legality, morality and reality. The
most they could manage was to abstain.
Only the United States – kudos to President Obama and UN
Ambassador Samantha Power -- had the integrity to oppose a resolution
sanctioning a democracy for defending itself and supporting an organization
whose Charter calls for genocide and proclaims “death for the sake of Allah
…the loftiest of wishes.” (But because the resolution passed, there will now be
a multimillion dollar “investigation” – funded largely by American taxpayers.)
Finally, a word about the factors fueling anti-Israelism:
Among them, indisputably, is the world’s most durable prejudice: anti-Semitism,
more precisely Jew-hatred, or to use a modern construction, Judeophobia. Bias
and animosity against people of color, gays and Muslims is beyond the pale in
polite society. Against Jews -- not so much.
In recent days, demonstrators in a list of Western cities
have targeted not just Israeli embassies but synagogues -- seven in Paris alone
– as well as shops and other properties owned by Jews. In Boston, there were
shouts of “Jews back to Birkenau,” and “Drop dead, you Zionazi whores.”
Imagine the outrage if French Jews, in response to a
terrorist attack against Israelis, were to storm a mosque in Paris, or if
Italian Catholics, in response to the Islamic State’s persecution of Iraqi
Christians, threw stones at Islamic worshippers in Rome.
“The world is a mess,” former secretary of state
Madeleine Albright mused last weekend. Among the primary reasons: Bellicose,
supremacist, jihadist ideologies, movements and regimes have arisen from within
the decreasingly diverse Muslim world. Hamas is such a regime, participates in
such a movement, and subscribes to such an ideology – its Charter is explicit
in this regard as well.
Western nations cannot make peace with jihadists. They
can attempt to appease them but doing so only serves to reinforce the
impression that they are weak horses. Israelis have few options -- none of them
appealing. Some, however, are worse than others, as I suspect most Israelis
don’t need me to tell them.
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