Golda Meir is reputed to have said of
Israel’s enemies, “They say we must be dead. And we say we want to be
alive. Between life and death, I don’t know of a compromise.”
As is often said, Israelis live in the
Middle East, not the Middle West. No matter what Israel’s enemies say or
do, this reality does not penetrate the minds of people who live in
different neighborhoods. Instead, politicians speak dreamily of
ceasefire agreements, a Palestinian state and normalization with Saudi
Arabia.
The root of the conflict is not the
so-called “occupation.” When Jordan oversaw the West Bank for 19 years
and Egypt controlled Gaza, no one demanded a new Palestinian state. The
clamor against “occupation” surfaced only after Israel took control of
these territories in self-defense. On Oct. 7, Hamas attacked from Gaza,
an area Israel vacated 18 years ago. Israel doesn’t occupy Lebanon,
Iraq, Yemen or Iran, and yet it is being attacked by all those
countries.
The issue has never been Palestinian
self-determination. Arab states invaded Israel in 1948 to carve it up
among themselves, not create a Palestinian state. The Palestinians
rejected offers of statehood in 1937, 1939, 1947, 1979 (autonomy that
would have led to statehood), literally blew up the 1993 Oslo Accords
with terrorism and turned down independence provided by the Clinton,
Olmert and Trump Mideast peace plans.
What fuels this ongoing conflict is not a
fight for Palestinian self-determination but the refusal of Islamist
forces to accept a Jewish state in their midst. Most policymakers and
pundits can’t process this idea, and students don’t want to believe in
religious wars.
At root, religion has always been the
basis of the intolerance of Jews in the Middle East. They were, at best,
treated as second-class citizens (dhimmis) in Muslim countries
before being expelled or forced to flee. In Palestine, the Mufti of
Jerusalem incited riots against the Jews two decades before the creation
of Israel, demonstrating that anti-Jewish animosity is a cornerstone of
the conflict.
Peace cannot be achieved through land or
ceasefire agreements since Muslim extremists do not believe that Jews
can live on any part of Islamic land. The two-state crowd ignores the
Palestinians when they say a Palestinian state would have to be Judenrein, the only place in the world where Jews would not be permitted to live.
Israel’s enemies make their intentions
plain, but the world looks the other way. Western leaders argue that
Hamas is not just an organization but an “idea,” suggesting that Israel
cannot defeat it militarily. If that is true, then how can peace ever be
made with an “idea” that calls for the annihilation of Jews?
For those not convinced that Oct. 7 was
only one part of the Hamas agenda, I refer you to the group’s charter,
which states plainly: “Our struggle against the Jews is very great and
very serious. … The Islamic Resistance Movement is but one squadron that
should be supported … until the enemy is vanquished and Allah’s victory
is realized. It strives to raise the banner of Allah over every inch of
Palestine … [emphasis added].
Because Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu wisely ignored U.S. President Joe Biden’s pressure to stay out
of Rafah, where Israel knew Yahya Sinwar was hiding, the Israel Defense
Forces eliminated one head of the Hamas Hydra. Still, it will regrow
and ensure that even after its military capability is demolished,
terrorism will continue. Hence the idea that Israel should turn over
Gaza to West Bank Palestinians who insist that Hamas be part of the
government is a nonstarter.
Israel has cut off several of the
Hezbollah Hydra’s heads, but it will grow another and another. Hezbollah
will remain a danger until the Iranian regime is overthrown and Lebanon
is returned to the Lebanese without the domination of Hezbollah. And
here’s a reminder of the Hezbollah “idea” that will live on as expressed
by Hassan Nasrallah: “If we searched the entire world for a person,
more cowardly, despicable, weak and feeble in psyche, mind, ideology and
religion, we would not find anyone like the Jew. Notice, I do not say
the Israeli.” To reinforce the point that the war is not about land,
occupation or Palestinian suffering, Nasrallah expressed hope that
Diaspora Jews would all make aliyah. “If they all gather in Israel, it will save us the trouble of going after them worldwide.”
War is hell, but it is also sometimes
necessary. What is the alternative when the Iranian regime has
surrounded Israel with an “axis of resistance,” attacks it with
ballistic missiles and is developing nuclear weapons to incinerate it?
Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei said, “The Zionist regime is a
deadly, cancerous growth” that “will undoubtedly be uprooted and
destroyed.” Like the antisemites on American campuses, he says he has
nothing against Jews, just Zionists, who he says “have always been a
plague, even before establishing the fraudulent Zionist regime.”
According to Khamenei, “elimination of the State of Israel does not mean
the elimination of the Jewish people,” even though 75% of the
population are Jews.
We’re told peace is possible with the
secular “moderates” in the West Bank like Palestinian Authority head
Mahmoud Abbas, who, along with other P.A. officials, praised the Hamas
massacre, boasted that some of their fighters participated in the
slaughter and eulogized Sinwar as “a great national leader.”
PLO chief Yasser Arafat once declared: “We
know only one word: jihad, jihad, jihad. … And we are now entering the
phase of the great jihad prior to the establishment of an independent
Palestinian state whose capital is Jerusalem.” The former speaker of the
Palestinian Legislative Council, Ahmad Bahar, said, “Make us victorious
over the infidel people. … Allah, take hold of the Jews and their
allies, Allah, take hold of the Americans and their allies … Allah,
count them and kill them to the last one and don’t leave even one.”
Fatah, led by Holocaust denier Abbas, has a
military wing that posts remarks such as, “To all our sons and brothers
in the Palestinian Security Forces throughout the West Bank—today is
your day. Break into the settlements, strike the sons of apes of pigs,
kill everyone who is a settler, slaughter everyone who is Israeli, by
Allah, they are the most cowardly among men. Today is a tiding of days
of victory, Allah willing—for this is jihad, jihad, victory or
martyrdom.”
Look at any P.A. map or the logos of the
terrorist organizations to see that the “solution” is not two states but
one called Palestine replacing Israel. To advance its cause, the P.A.
incentivizes the murder of Jews through its “pay-for-slay” policy of
paying the families of suicide bombers and terrorists in Israeli
prisons.
The former head of the Shin Bet
astonishingly wrote: “Winning on the battlefield does not bring us
closer to winning the war—unless we defeat Hamas’s ideology by creating a
better political horizon.”
Others, including Biden, have expressed
similar nonsense. The Palestinians were repeatedly offered and rejected a
horizon for independence precisely because they share the Islamist
ideology. Oslo was the best proof as the Palestinians were given a
five-year horizon for statehood and killed it by incessant terror.
Arafat’s reaction to the prospect offered by Clinton was to start the
Second Intifada, which lasted from 2000 to 2005.
Make no mistake, if given the opportunity,
the Palestinians and the jihadists in Iran and Hezbollah would kill
every Jew if given the chance.
Despite the best efforts of the Biden
administration, the Europeans and the United Nations, to spare everyone
but the Jews, Israelis stubbornly insist on living and not compromising
with those who unapologetically seek its destruction.
As Israelis remind the world, their fight
is not only for survival—it is a fight for the West, for the defense of
civilization against a barbaric ideology that seeks nothing less than
the destruction of the Jewish people.
Americans are in the same fight but
dislike talking about it. We are fighting ISIS, Al-Qaeda and other
Islamist terrorists, even at the cost of civilian lives. Israelis are
told they are creating more terrorists, but Americans have never
hesitated to kill terrorists out of such concern. And while some are
telling Israel to “take the win” after eliminating Sinwar, no one
proposed that the United States stop the war on terror after Osama bin
Laden was dispatched.
There is hope, however distant it may seem.
I am reminded of the British adviser who
told a Zionist official the Jews should never have allowed the United
Nations to decide their fate in 1947 because the only way they’d get a
state was if the United States and the Soviet Union agreed. That would
never happen, he said.
He was wrong.
For the next 30 years, Middle East experts
said the Arabs will never make peace. Then, Egyptian President Anwar
Sadat broke the psychological barrier by going to Jerusalem in 1977 and
signing a treaty with Israel two years later. It took 15 more years
before King Hussein of Jordan showed the same courage. Another 25 years
passed before the Abraham Accords were signed and another four Muslim
Arab states normalized relations with Israel.
Perhaps, one day, a new generation of
Palestinians will see that their future lies in coexistence, not jihad.
But that day will only come after Israel’s enemies and their hateful
ideologies are defeated, just as Nazism and communism were.
No comments:
Post a Comment