“Drink the poison,”
the doctors of diplomacy tell Israel. “It’ll cure you of all the pain
you’re suffering from the last time we told you to drink poison.”
Bare Naked Islam
Terrorism is a game. The rules are
simple. You have only three choices. 1. Destroy the terrorists. 2. Live
with terrorism. 3. Give in to the terrorists.
Sultan Knish
The first choice comes from the right. The third choice comes from the
left. The second choice is what politicians choose when they don’t want
to make a decision that will change the status quo.
Despite
all the explosions in Gaza, Israel is still stuck on the second choice.
The air strikes aren’t meant to destroy Hamas. They are being carried
out to degrade its military capabilities which will buy a year or two of
relative peace. And that will be followed by more of the same in the
summer of 2016 when Hamas will have deadlier Iranian and Syrian weapons
that will terrorize more of the country.
That
doesn’t sound like much of a deal, but these kinds of wars have bought
more peace than the peace process ever did. The peace process led to
wars. The wars lead to a temporary peace.
This
status quo became the mainstream choice ever since Israelis figured out
that the peace process wasn’t going to work and that their leaders
weren’t about to defy the UN, the US, the UK and all the other U’s by
actually destroying the terrorists.
When
Netanyahu first ran against Peres, the difference between the
center-right and the center-left was that he campaigned on security
first and appeasement second, while Peres campaigned on appeasement
first and security second. The center-right has dominated Israeli
politics because most Israelis accepted Likud’s security first as a more
reasonable position than Labor’s appeasement first.
Living
with terrorism was a viable choice in the 80s. It stopped being a
viable choice after Israel allowed terrorist states to be set up under
the peace process. It’s one thing to manage terrorism in territories
that you control. It’s another thing to deal with entire terrorist
states inside your borders. Even physical separation isn’t enough. Not
when terrorist groups can shell all your major cities.
Israel
responds to that that threat with light air strikes which damage Hamas’
military capabilities. Hamas loses a few commanders, fighters and
rockets, but scores a PR victory. Israel buys two years of peace while
encouraging its enemies to attack it as a bunch of racist baby killers.
Then Hamas replaces the rockets and fighters and launches a new
operation and the whole thing begins again.
The
left’s argument, framed by Washington Post pundits, Israeli leftists,
Obama, assorted diplomats, retired security chiefs, activist busybodies
funded by radical billionaires and the entire gang of foreign and
domestic enemies, is that Israel has no choice except to default back to
choice three; appeasement.

Israel
has to gamble on appeasement because its situation is constantly
worsening, they argue. What they neglect to mention is that the
situation is worsening as part of their pressure on Israel to appease
terrorists even though the current problems exist because of earlier
appeasement.
“Drink
this poison,” the doctors of diplomacy say. “It’ll cure you of all the
aches and pains you’re suffering from the last time we told you to drink
poison.”
“If
you don’t drink more poison, you’ll get sicker and die,” they say. And
if you do get sicker after drinking more poison, they’ll say it’s your
own fault for not drinking enough poison. If only you had given away all
of Jerusalem and the Golan Heights, the terrorists wouldn’t be
attacking you again.
Israel has been caught between choices
two and three, either live with terrorism or make concessions to
terrorists, and it has been bouncing between these choices.
People and politicians choose the
option that causes the least pain at any given time. Israel chooses
appeasement in response to international pressure. And when appeasement
leads to terrorism, it does enough damage to Hamas to serve as a
temporary deterrent, without leading to too much international outrage,
again choosing the least painful option.
This is the true cycle that Israel is caught in. It’s not a cycle of violence. It’s a cycle of expediency.
The first choice, destroying the
terrorists, is the most painful option in the short term, but the least
painful option in the long term. The third choice, appeasing the
terrorists, causes the least pain in the short term, but the most pain
in the long term and the medium term. The second choice, living with
terrorism, is slightly more painful in the short term, less painful in
the medium term, but still quite painful in the long term.
Israelis
have accepted short term and long term pain in exchange for a certain
amount of relief in the immediate future. The occasional terrorist
attack and the more ominous escalating conflict, an example of which we
are seeing now, is accepted in exchange for a year or two of relative
quiet.
It’s
easy to criticize Israel for not finishing off Hamas, but let’s look at
what is really standing in its way. Israeli Prime Minister Rabin
deported 400 Hamas terrorists, including many Hamas leaders. In a
Knesset speech he warned that, “We call on all nations and all people to
devote their attention to the great danger inherent in Islamic
fundamentalism. That is the real and serious danger which threatens the
peace of the world in the forthcoming years.”
Instead
the international community decided that the peace of the world was
threatened by deporting Hamas terrorists. The media spent months
covering the “suffering” of the deported Hamas terrorists. The United
States voted for a UN resolution condemning Israel and ordering it to
“insure the safe and immediate return of all those deported.”
The
United States Ambassador to the United Nations said that deporting
Hamas terrorists does “not contribute to current efforts for peace.”
In 1988, Israel had deported a handful
of Hamas and PLO terrorists. One of them, Jibril Mahmoud Rajub, vowed
that if Israel didn’t let them back in that they would “infiltrate in as
human bombs with explosives belted around our waists.”
Deputy Secretary of State John C. Whitehead warned Israel that if it didn’t reconsider the deportations “damage to our bilateral relations will occur.”
If
that was the reaction by the Reagan and Bush administrations to
deporting a few terrorists, imagine the reaction by Obama and the EU to a
comprehensive effort to force Hamas and the PLO out of Israel. And yet
the inevitable can’t be postponed forever.
If
Israel had not folded in the peace process, it might have been able to
maintain the status quo of the intifada. But the second choice is no
longer a viable long term option. The attacks have long since passed the
point of mere terrorism and are taking place on a military scale.
Tolerating
terrorism has ceased to be a long term strategy. That is something that
both the left and the right agree on. The attacks are pushing Israel
into choosing either large scale conflict or large scale appeasement.
Appeasing terrorists has failed every time. Only destroying them can
work.
Israel
has a left that is eager to embrace the destructive policies of
appeasement without regard to the consequences. It needs a right that is
equally heedless of consequences when it comes to war to overcome that
pain threshold which prevents it from doing the right thing and
reclaiming the future.
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