Israel Needs To Be Allowed To Win Decisively
Please read this article and send it to those you know who need to
read it. And join me in prayer for an Israeli
successful military campaign and may our soldiers return home safely, soon.
When Israel responds to Gaza rockets and terrorist attacks from Gaza , we are hearing growing criticism in the UN and around the world
against Israel for harming civilians. There are those who go so far as to label
us as war criminals. Of course, nothing could be further from the truth. For
years, we refrained from responding to ongoing attacks on our civilian
population, partly because we know that any response would harm civilians.
As this article so correctly points out, the standards which have
been adopted by the international community essentially expect a nation to be
more concerned with her enemies civilians than with her own. This is not only
warped ethics — it is downright unethical. It is the duty of a state to protect
its citizens. And if our enemies hide behind children, they are to blame for
the repercussions.
Israel Needs To Be Allowed To Win Decisively
The war of aggression waged by Hamas, against which
So what can the
big Satan do to help? Obviously, we are not going to contribute military force.
We already subsidize Israel ’s defense, and, more importantly, the IDF
doesn’t need that kind of aid. What Israel needs is to be allowed to win decisively:
to finish the grisly work of “breaking the will of the Arab/Palestinians, of
Hamas, to continue to fire at Israel ,” as Israeli Interior Minister Meir
Sheetrit so aptly put it.
Our best means of
bringing about that urgently needed outcome is to nullify the militarily over
matched Arab/Palestinians’ primary asset: the skewed state of international
politics and international law.
NO STATEHOOD
On the political
front, it is high time to acknowledge the failure of the fantasy that the Arab/Palestinians
are legitimate actors worthy of statehood and its privileges. Contrary to the
prevailing elite view, legitimacy is not conferred by such facile exercises as
the holding of popular elections – though such exercises are not without
consequences, which we will come to momentarily. There are certain minimal
requirements for statehood, not least of which is accepting the right of one’s
sovereign neighbor to exist. The Arab/Palestinians Charter advocates the
destruction of Israel .
At present, no
representative of the Arab/Palestinian people concedes this right to Israel . As its 1988 charter makes plain, Hamas
unapologetically seeks Israel ’s destruction. This is why Hamas was
formed: to eradicate the Jewish state as a preliminary step in the jihadist
quest for global hegemony.
That leaves Fattah,
the legacy of Yasser Arafat and Hamas’s rival. In their foolish desperation to
“solve” the currently unsolvable Israeli/Palestinian dispute, our rose-tinted
solons portray Fattah as a “moderate” party which seeks peaceful coexistence
with Israel . It’s a dangerous illusion.
Regardless of what
Arab Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas may say to Western
audiences, his message to the Arab world is that Arab/Palestinians should put
aside their internal divisions and, as he put it in 2007, “direct our guns
against Israeli occupation.” To anyone outside Brussels or Foggy Bottom, that cannot be a
surprise: Fattah, Abbas’s organization, is pledged by its constitution to the
destruction of Israel . (See, e.g., Article 12: Fattah’s first
stated “Goal” is the “Complete liberation of Palestine - Israel, and
eradication of Zionist economic, political, military and cultural existence”;
see also, e.g., Article 19: “Armed struggle is a strategy and not a tactic, and
the Arab/Palestinian People’s armed revolution is a decisive factor in the
liberation fight and in uprooting the Zionist existence, and this struggle will
not cease unless the Zionist state is demolished and Palestine - Israel is
completely liberated.”)
When we appraise
hostile countries, it has become de rigueur in our foreign policy circles to
distinguish the “people” (always good) from their nasty governments. So it is
with the noble Arab/Palestinians. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice insisted
in a 2006 interview, for instance, that the “great majority” of them – i.e.,
upwards of “70 percent” – are “perfectly ready to live side by side with Israel because they just want to live in peace.”
This is
preposterous. Arab/Palestinians are weaned on Jew-hatred through schools and
media controlled by the competing factions and other jihadists. Their national
heroes are those dedicated to killing Jews, most especially the “martyrs” (or
shaheed) who self-implode in suicide attacks. Thus, the PA pays the terrorist
family a monthly stipend for killing Israelis and committing terror. It is to
be expected, then, that when the public is polled in the actual Arab Palestinian
territories, rather than in Condi-world, a very different reality is reflected:
About three in four Arab/Palestinians deny Israel ’s right to exist, a figure that soars to
over nine in ten when only the fighting-age demographic (between 18 and 25) is
considered.
It is, moreover,
only natural that Arab/Palestinians would choose Hamas in a free election, as
they did in 2006. Of course, no shortage of delusional gibberish has been
spouted about this outcome by democracy devotees – who typically twaddle about
elections having consequences right up until the moment when the election
happens and they don’t like the consequences. So, to maintain the fiction that
we are dealing with decent, peace-loving people, we are urged to blinker the Arab/Palestinians’
choice to be led by unabashed mass-murderers. That, we are told, merely
indicates a desire for less corruption and better social services – metrics by
which Hamas is putatively superior to Fattah. I somehow doubt that we would be
so nuanced if a cognate electoral choice were made by our neighbors in Canada or Mexico .
In any event, we
must halt the mindless “two state solution” rhetoric. Before the Israelis
finally acted, Arab/Palestinian forces had launched over ten thousand missiles
at Israel from Gaza since 2005 – when Israel bowed to international pressure and ceded
control of Gaza to the Arab Palestinian Authority. And that onslaught must be
considered in context, both with Hamas’s provocations that led to the 2006 war
and with the two Intifada’s orchestrated by Arafat’s Fattah – including one
commenced after a breathtaking settlement offer which would have awarded the Arab/Palestinians
about 90 percent of their land demands.
Those are not the
actions of a people who will be ready to function as a legitimate state anytime
soon. We must look at the way they abuse their coffers and retain a substantial
sums of the funds for personal benefit and use.
Let us be blunt:
we are looking at a generation or more before the Arab/Palestinians might be prepared
to assume the obligations of sovereignty. So we should stop talking about it.
Doing so only indicates to the Arab/Palestinians that we are more interested in
the simulacrum of a settlement than in cultivating a mature statehood that is
stable, hopefully democratic, and respectful of its peers – such that it is
capable of negotiating with them absent the notion of annihilating them.
“Roadmaps” and “peace processes” which hold out the possibility (indeed, the
likelihood) of near-term statehood tell the Arab/Palestinians that terrorism
succeeds and that they can reap enormous benefits while continuing to work
toward Israel ’s demise.
In short, we can
help Israel enormously in the here and now – while simultaneously setting the Arab/Palestinians
on their only realistic path toward long-term prosperity – by making clear that
statehood is absolutely off the table until the Arab/Palestinians convincingly
abandon terrorism, acknowledge Israel’s right to exist, rescind or amend all
covenants to the contrary, and demonstrably overhaul their institutions
(especially their media and education systems) in a manner that conveys their
commitment to this new state of affairs.
END THE
INTERNATIONAL LAW FARCE
We can further
help Israel , and greatly advance the cause of counter
terrorism, by unmistakably signaling our support for Israel ’s determination to defeat Hamas. Not just
to win another half-round in an endless series of pauses that allow Israel ’s terrorist enemies to regroup, but
instead to break the enemy’s will to fight.
This will call for
taking a strong stand on a crucial matter of international law: namely, there
is no consensus international law of armed conflict.
For far too long,
we have abided – even encouraged – the fiction that there is a community of
nations all playing by the same rules. There is not. For present purposes, the
most significant demonstration of this is that many nations, including our
European allies, have joined the 1977 Protocol I to the Geneva Conventions. The
United
States has not. Israel has not. Since this is about national life
and death, we can no longer afford to keep papering over that difference.
As has happened to
us repeatedly since our military response to 9/11, Israel is being accused of war crimes based on
standards to which it has never consented. For people who care about their
international obligations – and the Israelis deeply do, just as we do – such
allegations have a devastating effect on the national cohesion needed to see
through a difficult war. They are also slanderous. Notwithstanding those
allegations; Israel continues to provide the world at large
with superior advanced high tech, new innovations in Medical techniques and
advancement in Medicine and research plus an agricultural technology that helps
the whole world.
These Protocol I
standards were designed for the benefit of terrorist organizations,
national-liberation movements, and third-world tyrannies. We don’t accept them,
nor do the Israelis, and nor would the Europeans had they not abdicated
responsibility for their own security. As construed by human rights activists,
Protocol I makes the conduct of warfare illegal – certainly if the combatant
nation has any notion of achieving its objectives, which is the point of going
to war in the first place.
Protocol I,
furthermore, is a betrayal of the human-rights mission. Its effort to convert
war from a military campaign run by soldiers to a regulatory exercise run by
lawyers invites two outcomes, both deadly: either war will be protracted,
increasing the inevitable collateral carnage, or guarantors of global stability
will refrain from acting – abandoning the field to terrorists and dictators who
are unmoved by legal obligations. These are unacceptable choices. We are under
no duty to cede moral ground to self-styled human-rights activists just because
they see warfare as the greatest of human evils when we know, based on hard experience,
which it is not.
The ethos we are
dealing with here is best demonstrated by the ludicrous contention that Israel ’s operations are “disproportionate”
because so many more Arab/Palestinians than Israelis have been killed or
wounded at this point in the fighting. The concept of “proportionality,” which
has long been a guideline in the conduct of war, has nothing to do with
comparative casualties. It refers to a weighing of the military advantage to be
derived from an operation versus the risk of inordinate collateral damage
(i.e., excessive harm to civilian lives and infrastructure).
Of Protocol I’s
many failings, among the worst is its attempt to impose legal exactitude on
proportionality and its companion concept, the “distinction” between military
and civilian targets. In the original contemplation, these standards were left
to the best judgment of commanders, mindful of the facts that the primary
objective in war is victory and that some civilian casualties are unavoidable.
Yet, as military
law experts David B. Rivkin Jr. and Lee A. Casey explain in “Leashing the Dogs
of War” (an important 2003 article published in The National Interest),
Protocol I demands that military forces contemplating operations ceaselessly
consider alternatives with a view toward causing the least conceivable danger
to civilians. Indeed, military forces must “take all feasible precautions” and
otherwise “do everything feasible” to avoid incidental loss of civilian life.
Consequently, the principal objective of warfare becomes preserving the lives
of the enemy’s civilians. Military success is subordinated despite the fact
that this could endanger one’s own civilians (over whose security war is often
fought in the first place) and extend the war (thus placing enemy civilians in
further danger anyway).
In this framework,
there is a steady warping of standards, to the aforementioned point that
proportionality is now absurdly invoked as if each side were required to
sustain roughly equivalent casualty counts. War crimes, too, are trivialized,
with antiwar activists finding them whenever injury or death is sustained by a
civilian – or at least an alleged civilian.
On the matter of
who is a civilian, Protocol I is a humanitarian disaster. The point of the
Geneva Conventions was to civilize warfare. They accord benefits, particularly
honorable prisoner-of-war status, to combatants who comply with the laws of
war: by identifying themselves as warriors and refraining from attacking
civilians. Terrorists, of course, target civilians and children (the more
killed the better, from their perspective) and compound this imperilment of
innocent life by assuming the appearance of civilians, hiding in residential
areas, storing their weapons in schools, hospitals, and houses of worship, and
so on. Nevertheless, Protocol I awards terrorists the benefits of Geneva despite their flouting of Geneva ’s humanitarian burdens.
To make matters worse,
Protocol I eviscerates the principle of distinction, “recognizing” that there
are, purportedly, “situations in armed conflicts where, owing to the nature of
the hostilities, an armed combatant cannot “distinguish himself” from the
civilian population. Given that Protocol I at least feints at protecting
civilians, one would think “the nature of the hostilities” here would not be,
for instance, a Hamas operative driving along the road with missiles in his
trunk or walking into a café with an explosive vest strapped to his chest. But
it is sadly true, as Rivkin and Casey write, that “things have reached a point
where the use of irregular attacks purposefully directed at civilians in the
form of suicide bombers has been practically, if not formally, accepted by
virtually all of the Arab countries, by much of the Third World, and by many in
Europe as a legitimate form of Arab/Palestinian ‘resistance.’ ”
That is where
Protocol I gets you. And if you are the legitimate armed force of a sovereign
state like Israel , you are expected to absorb an attack – or
perhaps 7,000 attacks – before you even think about defending yourself against
perfidious attackers who must be regarded as civilians unless you are fortunate
enough to catch them in the act.
For very sound reasons,
this is not our law. Nor is it Israel ’s. Governments with real security
responsibilities cannot protect lives this way. If they try to do so, they are
effectively elevating the lives of their enemies above their own populations.
That would be inappropriate in any event, but it is especially inane when the
enemy is the Arab/Palestinians. They have willingly chosen to be led by a
terrorist group whose sworn mission is to obliterate a neighboring country. Of
all the civilians on earth, they are the least deserving of such indulgence.
With each day’s
perusal of news accounts comes new accusations of Israeli international law
violations and war crimes. In response, we shouldn’t cower behind the usual
diplomatic niceties. We should be clear: there are no international law
obligations in warfare absent consent. We can’t stop transnational progressives
from designing suicidal compacts, and we can’t stop Europeans from adopting
them. But we are not obliged to engage the fiction that these arrangements
constitute law in our own country, in Israel , or in any nation sober enough to reject
them.
Fighting a
defensive war for survival is not a war crime. It is an obligation. It is
primarily what governments are created for. To claim otherwise is make a
perverse mockery of international law. We must defend Israel full-throatedly on this point. In doing
so, we are defending ourselves.
No comments:
Post a Comment