By R. Emmett Tyrrell, Jr. on 3.20.08 @ 12:08AM
Why is it that good deeds toward the Palestinians always go unrewarded?
WASHINGTON -- On the evening of March 6 in Jerusalem, a heavily
armed Palestinian terrorist from nearby East Jerusalem entered the
Mercaz Harav yeshiva and opened fire on the unarmed teenaged
students studying there. Eight died, and eleven were badly wounded
before another student and an off-duty soldier shot the terrorist.
The atrocity ignited wild celebrations in Gaza.
If you thought that the celebrations were anomalous, you might
want to know about recent findings just published by the
Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey Research, an independent
polling organization based on the West Bank. According to its
polls, 84% of Palestinians approved of this attack. Moreover, 64%
approve of Hamas randomly firing rockets and mortars from Gaza into
Israeli communities and 75% favor ending negotiations between their
leaders and the Israeli government. In September of 2005, Israel in
an irenic gesture withdrew its military from Gaza, but since then
it has endured some 2,500 rocket attacks from Gaza and almost an
equal number of mortar attacks. I wonder if 64% of the Palestinians
would approve if Israel began reciprocal random attacks on Gaza.
What is the old line, "Do unto others as you would have them do
unto you?"
Instead of lobbing artillery randomly, the Israel Defense Forces
have attempted to counter Hamas's attacks with surgical strikes
against their leaders and their rocket factories. However, Hamas's
leaders nestle their headquarters and rocket factories in civilian
neighborhoods, and civilians suffer collateral damage. That appears
to have made Palestinians angry, and not at Hamas for its
bellicosity but at Israel for responding to these cruel attacks.
According to Mr. Khalil Shikaki, the Palestinian pollster who
headed the aforementioned poll, never in the 15 years that the poll
has been conducted has a majority of Palestinians favored rocket
assaults on Israel or an end to negotiations. For handing over Gaza
to the Palestinians this is the thanks Israel has received. Now
Palestinians want further Israeli withdrawals from the West Bank.
One does not have to be a student of the late Niccolo Machiavelli
to advise against further withdrawals. Mr. Shikaki's poll
demonstrates that such withdrawals only make the Palestinians
angrier.
When the Israel Defense Forces withdrew from Gaza (taking with
them civilian settlers), the Palestinians had an opportunity to set
up a peaceful community that might encourage further accommodations
from Israel. As Victor Davis Hanson observed in a recent column,
"Gaza has plenty of natural advantages. It enjoys a picturesque
coastline on the Mediterranean with sandy beaches and a rich
classical history. There is a border with Egypt, the Arab world's
largest country and spiritual home of pan-Arabic solidarity."
Hanson mused imaginatively that Gaza could become another Singapore
or Hong Kong. Instead the Palestinians immediately began a civil
war among themselves and after that began lobbing rockets and
mortars into Israel. Somehow I doubt these people want peace. In
fact, I suspect, peace would be a disappointment to many of
them.
A recent book, The Global War on Terrorism: An
Assessment, by Robert C. Martinage of the Center for Strategic
and Budgetary Assessments, illuminates the problem that Israel
faces with Hamas and that the West faces with Islamic terror in
general. Says Martinage, "Since the death of Muhammad in 632,
Islamic history has been punctuated by many periods in which
various heterodox sects have emerged and clashed violently with
mainstream Muslims, as well as with the West." We are living
through one of those periods. Whether Israel existed or not, these
Islamic terrorists would still be with us.
All that Israel and the West can do is resist the terrorists,
the best way being to go on the offensive. Withdrawing from Gaza
certainly has not weakened the terrorists. It has made them and
their Palestinian sympathizers more eager for violence. There is
one sentiment, however, in this poll that I for one agree on.
Negotiations have been of no benefit, at least not to those who
want peace.
topics:
Islam, Military, Israel