By Rich Lowry
Tuesday, September 24, 2024
Israel is supposed to tolerate the intolerable.
A terror group has launched thousands of missiles
into the Jewish state over the last year — catalyzed by a hideous pogrom
against Israel carried out by another terror group — and we are told that it is
Israel, finally hitting back in earnest, that is dangerously escalating the
situation.
Since the Hamas atrocities on October 7, Lebanon-based
Hezbollah has fired roughly 8,000 rockets at Israel. These indiscriminate
attacks have forced tens of thousands of Israelis to flee the north of the
country. In July, a missile killed twelve children and teenagers who were
playing soccer in the Golan Heights, a random massacre with no military purpose
whatsoever.
Israel retaliated for the horror in the Golan Heights but
has generally absorbed Hezbollah’s attacks, since it’s been focused on the war
against Hamas to its south while the Biden administration has been working to
stay its hand in the north.
The theme, as ever, is that the Jewish state is expected
to accept as background noise unprovoked attacks on its sovereign territory
that no other state would ever abide.
What other country is asked to bear the rocketing of its
civilian population as the price for faux regional comity?
Israel won’t abide by these rules, and nor should it. It
began turning up the heat against Hezbollah with its Mission Impossible–worthy
attacks on Hezbollah operatives via their pagers and other electronic devices.
The pager attack was an experiment in whether Israel
could carry out perhaps the most carefully calibrated counterterrorist
operation in the modern age and still get accused of committing war
crimes. Sure enough, AOC and others have condemned the Jewish state.
Israel hits terrorist targets from the air — and it’s
accused of war crimes.
Israel goes in on the ground — and it’s accused of war
crimes.
Israel does neither, opting instead to target terrorists
by using their own devices against them — and it’s accused of war crimes.
The assumption is that Israel’s role is to duck and cover
and take whatever punishment its remorseless enemies dole out, lest things
“escalate.”
The Israel Defense Forces could be fighting a delaying
action as the Jewish state is being pushed into the sea by advancing forces
committed to its destruction — and it would still be accused of war crimes.
This entire way of thinking is a deep moral perversion
masquerading as nuanced strategic thought.
The idea that the pager attack is a violation of
international law is preposterous. The philosopher Michael Walzer made the case
against the operation in the New York Times, arguing that the operatives
killed and wounded “had not been mobilized and they were not militarily
engaged.” In the same breath, though, he conceded, “Yes, the devices most
probably were being used by Hezbollah operatives for military purposes.”
This made them legitimate military targets. As a
practical matter, there is no other way that Israel could have hit so many
terrorists with so little collateral damage. It could have droned or sent
sniper teams after just a few of them and — tragically — ended up causing more
collateral damage. The targeting of the pager attack was effectively done by
Hezbollah itself by distributing the devices to its own operators.
Taking advantage of the resulting disruption in Hezbollah
communications and the reduction in its effective ranks, Israel has followed up
with a bombing strike against a meeting of high-level Hezbollah leadership and
the destruction from the air of Hezbollah munitions and missile launchers. To
the Biden administration, this looks like a mere escalation because it doesn’t
understand the concept of deterrence — making an enemy fear what you might do
to him, rather than allowing the enemy to set the pace for a conflict or to
constrain your actions out of worry over what he might do next.
If Israel can successfully deter Hezbollah, it could mean
— this obviously isn’t guaranteed — that the conflict de-escalates. Regardless,
the Jewish state is under no obligation to tolerate the intolerable.
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