By George Neumayr on 8.13.04 @ 12:09AM
Live from Israel -- a concrete reason to be pro-fence.
JERUSALEM -- The United Nations and European Union are
threatening to sanction Israel for constructing a security fence on
the "green line" that runs along the Palestinian-controlled West
Bank even as the Palestinians engage in terrorist acts that
necessitate it. On Wednesday, that security fence saved Jerusalem
from a suicide bombing.
A terrorist from the Aksa Martyrs Brigade left Jenin in Northern
Israel with the intention of entering Jerusalem to conduct a
suicide bombing. Hemmed in by the security fence, he was unable to
slip into Israel from the north. So instead he traveled down the
West Bank past Ramallah. When he tried to enter Israel and saw
Israeli border policemen checking cars, he abandoned his original
plan, local press reported. The terrorist fled from the checkpoint
but used a remote control device to blow up a bomb there, killing
two Palestinians who were being checked ahead of him. In further
proof of the perverse permutations of Islamic moral theology, he
was willing to kill fellow Palestinians to strike a blow against
the Israeli police (the bomb wounded 6 Israeli police officers).
The Aksa Martyrs Brigade took credit for the bombing, but
acknowledged, in the course of explaining why they blew up two
Arabs, that their original plan to enter Jerusalem had been
foiled.
Israeli intelligence, which makes the CIA look like a temp
agency, was also instrumental in stopping the attack. They told
police at checkpoints around Jerusalem to go on high alert as they
learned on Wednesday that a suicide bomber was planning to enter
the capital.
The U.N. regards the Israeli security fence as an affront to
humanitarianism. But given the proximity of the West Bank to Israel
the fence is just basic common sense. The proximity, to an outsider
unfamiliar with the smallness of Israel, almost seems absurd.
Israelis living next to Palestinian militants without a fence would
be like Americans letting Al Qaeda set up shop in Newark.
"Are you pro-fence or anti-fence?" a young orthodox Jew asked me
in a taxi bus as we past the area near Ramallah. "You have to be
pro-fence on this road." Where Palestinian militants are known to
shoot on to the highway going down to Jerusalem, there isn't just
fence but wall high enough to prevent firing. These walls often
show up in photos as propaganda against it. International
diplomats, with the luxury of not living next to the Aksa Martyrs
Brigade, use this propaganda to cast the security fence as the
Berlin Wall of the Middle East. Sitting in the comfort of the
Hague, the fence just doesn't seem so necessary. One Israeli,
dismayed at reports this week that the European Union is planning
to help the Palestinians generate international pressure to
dismantle the fence, said: "They are going after the shield without
going after the sword."
When Israel was run by socialists like David Ben-Gurion, the
U.N. applauded it. But now that the socialists of old are gone and
more conservative Jews are running Israel (more and more religious
Jews are entering the upper ranks of the military), liberals at the
U.N. are happy to champion the illiberal side. Liberals within
Israel aren't helping matters, doing to Israel what the ACLU does
to America.
But even one such liberal Israeli said to me that he feels safer
now that Americans are in Iraq. He opposes the war but is glad
Hussein isn't lurking around the corner of Jordan anymore. Jews are
descended from an Iraqi -- Abraham of Ur -- he reminded me, a piece
of information he probably wouldn't have offered a few years
ago.
Abraham and his descendants had no problem seeing the necessity
of walling off terror. Jerusalem is a city of ancient walls, and as
Wednesday's foiled attack proves, it needs the new one.
topics:
Islam, Military, Iraq, Israel, United Nations, European Union, Oil