By Brian and Garrett Fahy
Friday, August 08, 2014
Amidst another tense cease fire in Gaza, the world stops
to assess the reality on the ground. Israel estimates it has killed 900 Hamas
terrorists – a redundancy – and destroyed 32 tunnels that Hamas previously used
to infiltrate Israel and launch terror attacks against Israelis. 64 Israeli
soldiers – fighting for their country’s right to exist – and three civilians
have died in the fighting.
On the other side, Palestinian authorities, not known for
their fact-checking, claim the majority of the approximately 2,000 Palestinians
killed were civilians. Israel counters that 900 of those killed were Hamas
fighters.
The morally confused, including Hollywood darlings Javier
Bardem and Penelope Cruz, wring their hands in angst at what they perceive to
be a lopsided fight. In their view, the mighty IDF indiscriminately attacks
innocent Palestinian civilians in schools, hospitals, and churches.
Embarrassingly, the United States Secretary of State shares or sympathizes with
this view.
As with most conflicts, however, this one did not spring
up overnight, and it will not be solved overnight. A cease fire will not end a
political quandary that is fifty years in the making; it will not end a
religious struggle that is 1,300 years in the making. And it will not end a
radical geopolitical strategy that is ingrained in the very fabric of
Palestinian identity. This is where the true conflict lies.
To truly understand why Gaza is such a humanitarian,
economic, and political disaster, and why the Palestinian Authority will never
assert the control Western elites desire it to, the world must unravel a
culture of death that has controlled the Palestinian psyche for over forty
years.
In 1970, the Black September Organization was organized
to launch terrorist attacks against the West and Israel. After awakening a
sleeping world to the reality of Islamic terror in the wake of massacres such
as the 1972 Munich Summer Olympics, in 1974, former Black September member
turned Palestinian dictator and eventual Nobel Peace Prize recipient Yasser
Arafat reputedly ordered the Palestinian Liberation Organization to refrain
from attacks outside of Israel, the West Bank, and Gaza.
Since then, terror has been the chief aim of the ruling
political authorities in Palestine and Gaza. Today the Palestinian Authority
ostensibly rules, but Hamas – supported by Hezbollah – has the guns and
missiles so it controls Gaza. What does Hamas want?
Hamas has made no secret of its aims and the strategies
it will employ to achieve them. Its 1988 charter committed itself to the
destruction of Israel and the slaughter of Israelis. Its introduction
proclaims: “For our struggle against the Jews is extremely wide-ranging and
grave, so much so that it will need all the loyal efforts we can wield, to be
followed by further steps and reinforced by successive battalions from the
multifarious Arab and Islamic world, until the enemies are defeated and Allah’s
victory prevails.” Put simply, Hamas seeks another Holocaust.
Once upon a time, just twenty years ago, ideas like this
and terrorist actions in support of them had consequences. On October 8, 1997,
the Clinton administration designated Hamas a terrorist organization. It still
remains on the State Department’s list of Designated Foreign Terrorist
Organizations, alongside fellow Palestinian terrorist outfits such as the
Palestine Liberation Front, Palestinian Islamic Jihad, the Popular Front for
the Liberation of Palestine, and the Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigade.
The common thread running through each: Islamist
terrorism, which is directly responsible for the 1994 World Trade Center
attack, the 2000 USS Cole attack, 9/11, the July 2005 London bombings, the
Benghazi attack, and the Boko Haram horrors in Nigeria.
This same Islamist terrorism is Hamas’ heartbeat. Take
away Islamist terror, and there is no Hamas. Hamas does not build schools or
hospitals. It hides weapons in them. Hamas does not build roads or
infrastructure. It instead uses concrete to build tunnels into Israel so it can
kidnap and kill Israelis. Hamas does not believe in human rights. It uses
humans to shield its crude missiles that accidentally kill Palestinians.
In light of such barbarism, supporters of Israel and democracy
itself must allow the IDF to do whatever necessary to eliminate Hamas. Like the
Ebola virus, there is no measure too extreme to eradicate it. The Jewish people
will survive Hamas; they have survived much worse. If Hamas is not eliminated
soon, however, Gaza’s 1.8 million residents may not be so lucky. They might not
survive another forty years of terrorism.
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