By Mario
Loyola
Thursday,
October 12, 2023
‘We stand
with Israel,” said President Joe Biden on Tuesday. “And we will make sure that
Israel has what it needs to take care of its citizens, defend itself, and
respond to this attack.” It was a strong statement of support. But Israelis
have heard such statements from American presidents before, only to be
disappointed just weeks later by U.S. pressure to wrap up operations and agree
to a premature cease-fire.
What
President Biden should have said, and what Congress should say now, is that the
U.S. will ensure Israel has all the time, resources, and diplomatic cover it
needs to achieve complete victory over Hamas. In other words, the U.S. will
veto any U.N. Security Council cease-fire resolution and will ignore any
third-party cease-fire mediation, except on Israel’s terms. And the U.S. should
encourage Israel to keep its terms very simple: unconditional surrender.
It’s
time to get Israel out of the suicidal habit of leaving Hamas standing at the
end of wars started by Hamas. After Hamas’s 2007 takeover of the Gaza Strip it
should have been obvious that Israel could
no longer afford to tolerate the continued existence of Hamas. That is abundantly obvious now.
What the
U.S. and Israel should remember is how World War II began — and how it ended.
At the start, the U.S. and its new allies committed to “complete victory”
against the Axis. They pledged to keep fighting until the Axis powers had “laid
down their arms on the basis of unconditional surrender.”
Any
Germans who didn’t understand what that meant found out the following year when
Allied forces crossed into Germany. In Proclamation No. 1 of the Supreme
Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Force, General Dwight Eisenhower pledged to
“obliterate” Nazism and “eradicate” German militarism. “All persons in the
occupied territory will obey immediately and without question all the
enactments and orders of the military government,” he proclaimed. “Resistance
to the Allied forces will be ruthlessly stamped out.”
Most
Germans didn’t need to be told. In the newly occupied areas, they wandered
shell-shocked in the rubble of their bombed-out cities, totally broken and
totally defeated, hoping the world could one day forgive them for their
unspeakable crimes.
That is
the fate that Hamas and its many Palestinian supporters should be facing now.
That is the language that Israel should be using in the weeks ahead, and the
civilized world should lend its full support. For Hamas did not target Israelis
only. Citizens of many countries, including America, have been tortured,
brutally killed, and taken hostage in recent days.
The time
when Israel could afford to tolerate the existence of Hamas has come to an end.
After inflicting the most vicious attack on Jews since the Holocaust, Hamas has
earned the same fate as the Nazis: total eradication. And when Hamas or anyone
else proposes a truce, Israel and the U.S. should echo the steely words of
General Ulysses S. Grant at the Battle of Fort Donelson in 1862: “No terms
except an unconditional and immediate surrender can be accepted.”
As
scenes of devastation emerge from Gaza, calls for a cease-fire will come with
accusations that Israel is using “disproportionate force.” There is a common
misconception that force used in self-defense must be “proportional” to the
level of force that the aggressor used. But that would be a preposterous rule,
as it would essentially make it illegal to achieve decisive victory in a war
started by somebody else, such as World War II.
Under
international law, proportionality turns entirely on one’s military objective.
According to Protocol I of the Geneva Conventions, combatants must generally
avoid civilian casualties that are excessive in relation to the “concrete and
direct military advantage” to be gained. If the military objective is
legitimate, so is any force that is “necessary and proportional” to achieve
that objective.
After
the horrific attacks of the last week, Israel is entirely justified in
concluding that anything short of the complete destruction of Hamas could lead
many Israelis to wonder whether Israel can really survive surrounded by such
bloodthirsty and determined killers. Israel cannot let those doubts fester.
Just as the Allies did at the start of World War II, it has every right to seek
the unconditional surrender or complete destruction of Hamas — and it must.
Israel
has an obligation to avoid civilian casualties that are avoidable. But it is
Hamas, not Israel, that fights with wanton disregard for Palestinian life. From
inside schools and next to hospitals, Hamas has spent years launching
indiscriminate missile attacks against Israel, a war crime against both
Israel’s civilians and its own.
Hamas
treats Palestinian women and children as propaganda assets that are most
valuable when they’re dead, hoping to turn Israelis’ concern for human rights
into a weakness. The despicable strategy has worked until now, but it is merely
a propaganda trick, and the world should tolerate it no longer. Civilian
casualties that become unavoidable because of Hamas’s use of human shields are
war crimes attributable entirely to Hamas. Like the total destruction of Nazi
Germany in 1945, the total destruction of Hamas may bring great suffering to
innocent civilians in the short term, but it is their only hope in the long
term.
Certainly,
the destruction of Hamas will entail things that Israel might not want to deal
with, such as having to reoccupy Gaza, something which may now be unavoidable.
But that is up to Israel. In the meantime, to reiterate, the U.S. should say
unambiguously what it should have said years ago: that in a war started by
Israel’s enemies, it will give Israel all the time, resources, and diplomatic
cover that it needs to achieve complete victory.
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