by 
Daniel Greenfield
The following is based on a talk and Q&A session that I gave this  week in Encino, California at the home of Tammy. Thanks to her and to  all the guests who helped make this a great event.)Today we live in the age of terror. And we're reminded of that every  time we turn on the news or go through the airport, as I did on the way  here. And for millions of Jews and Non-Jews around the world, Israel has  come to be seen as the canary in the coal mine, whose status testifies  to our status, and whose health testifies to our own.
If Israel, small and isolated, populated by a widely hated and  persecuted people, can survive the age of terror, so can America and  Europe. If they can make it, so can we.
Israel's placement on the front line of terror has been a double edged  sword. On the one hand, as the age of terror has moved across America  and Europe, Israeli techniques and technologies, consultants and tactics  have shown up here too. From using drones against insurgents to  profiling potential terrorists in airports, Israeli techniques have  become the gold standard in anti-terrorism.
But  on the other hand, Israel has also taken much of the blame for the age  of terror. As irrational as that may be. As much as blaming Israel for  the spread of Islamic terrorism is as absurd as blaming the lead swimmer  caught in the tsunami, for the tsunami itself. People in authority have  a habit of shooting messengers who bring bad news. Because it's easier  to shoot a messenger, than to cope with his message.
After September 11, the United States was forced to adapt to a different  kind of war. A war without conventional armies clashing on the  battlefield, deploying tanks, infantry and aircraft to overrun and crush  each other. A war in which the terrorists use the freedom and  infrastructure of a target country against it. But Israel has been  fighting that war for some time already.
Terrorism in Israel originally existed as part of a conventional war  fought by Egypt and Syria against Israel. Terrorists crossed the border  from Egyptian Gaza before 1967, and murdered Israelis, and then  retreated back across the border. Israeli forces sometimes covertly  crossed the border and went after them. One such famous mission was led  by Ariel Sharon who destroyed an entire village in Egypt that the  terrorists were using as a base. This was part of life in a war zone.
Once Israel signed a treaty with Egypt though, terrorism was isolated  from conventional warfare. Israel had to learn to focus on fighting  terrorists, rather than entire armies.
In 2001, America was also forced to shift to fighting terrorists rather  than armies. Weapons systems designed for large scale conventional wars,  such as the Crusader Artillery System, had to be scrapped. The role of  the special forces went up. Drones were ordered. The game changed. And  we still haven't learned how to play it yet.
The problem is that the armed forces of first world countries are not designed for fighting terrorists.
Armies exist to fight other armies. When there is another army to fight,  they can perform brilliantly and efficiently. But when there no army...  they are out of their element.
The United States and the rest of the coalition neatly destroyed Saddam  Hussein's armies twice, yet the actual occupation of Iraq took far  longer and cost far more American lives.
When one army fights another, there are laws of war. Soldiers and  commanders know what they can and can't do. Mutual agreements protect  any prisoners on both sides. But what happens when an army has to fight  terrorists. Do they get the benefit of an agreement such as the Geneva  Convention that they don't abide by, or is everything on the table. The  debate over that has been raging for nine years and it still hasn't been  settled. And it won't be any time soon.
It's the Goldilocks problem. Goldilocks had to deal with three bowls.  One that was too big. One that was too small. And one that was just  right. We have the army, which is too big to deal with terrorists. We  have the police, who are too small to deal with terrorists. And we still  haven't found the bowl that's just right.
There's a reason for that. Terrorists exploit the weak spots and  vulnerabilities in our armor. They know what we can and can't do.  Sometimes they underestimate us. But they know the places they can slip  through.
Throughout the 20th century, the United States Army has only lost when  it had to deal with armed bands and guerrillas, whether it was Pancho  Villa or the Viet Cong. Israel used to know how to deal with armed bands  and terrorists, but as the generation that had founded the country  died, it began to forget. The Israeli army's roots go back to small  groups of volunteers, who watched over fruit orchards and waited for  bandits to come. Even today many Israeli soldiers come from rural towns  and villages, places that the media sometimes calls settlements. But the  Israeli worldview has become too urban and detached from the life of  the Kibbutz and the settlement.
That sense of being on the frontier, of standing watch at the edge of  civilization, of looking beyond the campfires into the darkness and  waiting to see what comes from there, not just during a period of army  service, but as a way of life, has grown absent. 
It's not that we have gotten too big. It's that we think big. We think  in terms of gigantic solutions and global problems. Rather than seeing,  than looking across the fence of that one fruit orchard at night, and  waiting to see if raiders cross that fence.
The idea that we should be thinking of that orchard, rather than the  world, seems silly. But America and Israel were both founded by men who  saw that orchard, who worked and farmed, and knew that at any moment,  they could find themselves under attack.
Why is this so important?
First of all, we are fighting men who live that way. The terrorists we  see are mainly middle and upper class and Western educated, but once we  set foot in a Muslim country, past that thin wedge of the terrorists who  infiltrate our own countries, then we are dealing with raiders and  bandits.
Al Queda in Iraq was built out of bandits and smugglers. In Afghanistan,  we are fighting tribesmen paid with Iranian money. In other words once  we bring out the troops, we find that we're fighting the same kind of  enemies that those orchard watchmen who gave birth to the IDF were  fighting.
Second of all, it's a matter of scale. The terrorists aren't launching  another Pearl Harbor with hundreds of planes in the air. They operate on  a small scale. Even 9/11 was carried out by a small group of men using  box cutters. Since then terrorists have continued to slip through into  the United States in order to stage new attacks. We've stopped most of  them. But in many cases, such as the Times Square Bomber, it was because  the terrorists were incompetent. Not because our security is tight.
Meanwhile in Afghanistan, we're bogged down fighting small unpredictable  groups of attackers, who can come and go unexpectedly. In Israel, it's  the same thing. A small group affiliated with Hamas or some subgroup of  Fatah, can slip across and kill or kidnap Israelis, and then escape  back. Unlike America, Israel is still better at tracking down and  killing those responsible. But it's not nearly as good as it used to be.
It's a question of scale. When General Wingate was training many of the  Israelis who would eventually become the core of the IDF, he taught them  to know each square centimeter of the ground, and every village in  between. To know everything about the territory they are going to be  fighting on. To take the lead and be unpredictable. A great deal of the  IDF's success can be credited to that culture in which officers lead and  men fight on their own soil. In which the IDF acts confrontationally  and unpredictably.
On the other hand when the IDF becomes predictable and entrenched, then  it loses. The difference between the two is as great as the difference  between the Six Day War, in which Israel struck first and unpredictably,  and the Yom Kippur War, in which Israel allowed itself to become  entrenched in a defensive position in the Bar Lev Line, in response to a  war of attrition. We are seeing the same thing now as Israel takes the  defensive position in response to attacks, or takes the bait by  responding to a terrorist attack.
Today the IDF is expected to think globally. An exchange of fire with  terrorists quickly becomes front page headlines. An Israeli soldier has  to think about the media consequences of firing in self-defense. And so  he freezes. And the IDF freezes. And we can see the consequences of that  attitude over and over again. The flotilla disaster happened because  Israel had become predictable and reluctant to use force. And it's a  subset of the entire blockade of Gaza, in which Israel waits for Gazan  Arabs to come to their senses, while Hamas makes propaganda and terror,  and waits for Israel to give in.
That same attitude has come to the United States. American soldiers are  dying in Afghanistan because of tight rules of engagement. Rules similar  to those that Israeli soldiers operate under. And that's where the  scale problem comes in. Armies are naturally big. They act in an  organized fashion. They have a large support structure. Terrorists look  small, because they stay out of sight, and pose as civilians. When  armies feel obligated to play nice so that they don't look like bullies,  they become vulnerable and predictable. And they can be defeated.
That is what happened to the United States. It's what happened to Israel.
Third, and most importantly, people will fight for their orchard, more  than they will fight for the foreign policy of a government. Human  beings are motivated to fight for their homes and families, more than  for something abstract. As long as the government represents the orchard  and everyone's orchards, then it will have motivated soldiers. When it  stops representing that, then the soldiers are now just doing a job. And  waiting to go home.
American troops in Afghanistan are fighting for someone else's orchards.  The orchards of people who grow opium in them. People who will  sometimes invite them in for coffee and sometimes tip off their location  to the terrorists. How much motivation can they have fighting to  protect someone's else opium harvest. How much motivation can they have  fighting to protect people who will betray them in the blink of an eye?
The situation is even worse in Israel. The left wing denounces anyone  who fights for land, as worshipping land. Peace Now files petitions to  evict the widows of murdered heroes, such as Major Klein, from their  homes. But if the soldiers aren't fighting for homes and land, than what  are they fighting for? The institutions of the state? The flag? The  chain of command?
The terrorists know what they are fighting for. They are fighting to  seize the land. All of the land. Palestine, from the river to the sea,  is their motto. Meanwhile the Israeli motto has become, creating  Palestine, but not all the way from the river to the sea. How motivated  will soldiers fighting for such a slogan be?
This is not just the situation in Israel or America. It is the situation  throughout the free world. We have lost sight of that orchard. The  enemy has not. The terrorists want the orchard. They want all the land  around it. They want Israel. They want America. They want Europe. And if  things keep going as they are, then they will have them.
And that is the ugly truth. So long as we keep retreating and  accommodating, facilitating and appeasing-- then time is on their side.
The battle is easiest for those who know what they want and are prepared  to do anything to get it. It is hardest for those who do not know what  they want and will only act in self-defense. We thought that our best  defense was the disparity in power between ourselves and the enemy, but  that disparity is being used by the enemy to their advantage.
We have lost sight of the orchard. And we are paying the price for that.
But all this is only a small part of the picture. Terrorists are not  small isolated groups with grievances, they are well funded and armed  proxies of enemy countries. These countries use them to make war,  without putting their own soldiers in harm's way.
We are not fighting the Taliban in Afghanistan. We are fighting Iran in  Afghanistan. We are fighting Iranian money and Iranian bombs. But we are  not killing Iranians, because they never have to point a gun at an  American soldier to kill an American soldier. All they have to do is  provide the weapons and the money.
In the same way, Israel is fighting Iran and Saudi Arabia. And Europe is  fighting Saudi Arabia at home. And America is fighting Pakistan and  Saudi Arabia at home too.
Terrorism is not about a solution. It's about terrorist groups being  used to sow chaos, fear and doubt. It's about using those groups to  destroy their enemies economically and politically, bankrupting them,  breaking their morale and isolating them internationally. That is what  is being done to Israel. It is what is being done to America.

Every  boycott, every protest and every ugly word of hate directed at Israel,  will eventually be directed at America. It will be directed at every  European country and at every European who stands up to terrorism. This  is not an accident, it is a deliberate campaign.
Why did Guantanamo Bay become synonymous with evil? It became synonymous  with evil because the Kuwaiti government hired a top American law firm  to sell the idea that detaining terrorists there was horrible and cruel.  They put up a website, developed media contacts and told the  terrorist's stories. They sold the narrative, sold out their country and  they got paid.
But that is only one example. Well-funded campaigns are being waged  against America and Israel from all directions. Their goal is not just  to prevent those countries from defending themselves, but to break them  down, destroy their sense of rightness and isolate them.
It's easy to get lost in that narrative. To see only a few men in masks  firing machine guns or throwing grenades. But they are only the tip of a  spear that is being held hundreds and thousands of miles away.
The narrative exploits one of our greatest weaknesses. We want to be  liked. We want to be well thought of. We want applause. We want to be  loved.
Our enemies don't want to loved, they want to be feared. Because they  know that in international affairs, only those who are feared, are  loved.
Since 9/11, Islam has become surprisingly popular in America. The number  of Americans converting to Islam has dramatically increased. The  government is constantly worried about the threat of Islamophobia. NASA  has jettisoned the space shuttle. Its new purpose is to make Muslims  feel good about themselves. Is all this because America now loves  Muslims, or because it fears them?
Is it really violence against Muslims that the authorities are worried about, or violence by Muslims?
When Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer justified a ban on burning the  Koran by suggesting that it could incite violence, whose violence was  he really worried about? That of the Koran burners or the same Muslims  who had terrorized a cartoonist who proposed Draw Mohammed Day?
In Israel, a woman was sentenced to jail for drawing a cartoon of  Mohammed as a pig. But cartoonists who draw Jews as pigs don't go to  jail. Because even in Israel, there is fear over what the Muslims will  think, but no fear over what the Jews will think.
Countries generally do not love each other. But they certainly do  appease each other. And the free world is appeasing the Muslim world  like mad. Is it doing so out of love, or out of fear? Or out of a  poisonous blend of something in between?
This is about more than whether we still have free speech when it comes  to the Koran, or whether there will be a mosque near Ground Zero. It is  about what unites and divides us in the Age of Terror.
The Muslim world is united by a sense of manifest destiny, by a vision  of Islam spreading across the world and ruling over it through Islamic  law. They may and do differ on the details. Whether it will be Sunnis or  Shiites, doctrine and interpretation, primacy and tactics. But they  agree on the end result.
We have no such sense of destiny. We did once, but we no longer do. Once  we regarded our nations as gifts from a merciful G-d, today we regard  them as the products of colonization and conquest. We tear down the  myths and write hostile and hateful history books. It is no wonder that  we have lost not only that sense of destiny, but even the sense of  justification for our presence here. We have lost that pride in a  destiny realized, and in its place has come a creeping sense of guilt.  Why are we here? Why do we have land and money? Why are we safe and  secure? Why do we have clean drinking water?
You can see that guilt embodied in commercials and editorials. Millions  of people being taught to say, "We are not worthy." And if we are not  worthy, then our enemies must be. The worse they treat us, the worse we  must be. If they kill us, then we must be even worse murderers. If they  blow themselves up, then clearly we have made them feel so awful, that  they have no choice but to kill both themselves and us at the same time.
We have become self-absorbed. Unable to see past ourselves. We think  that it is all about us. We ignore the motives and beliefs of the  terrorists themselves. Instead we assume that everything they do is only  because of us.
Liberalism fosters this manner of grandiosity, the belief that a man is  homeless because I earn a paycheck, that children in Africa don't have  enough to eat because I stole all their food, that terrorists want to  kill me because I have oppressed them. All this is unforgivably  arrogant. It treats us as the center of the universe, around which  everyone and everything revolves.
And so we ignore Islam, as a religion that has been doing this sort of  thing for over a thousand years. Instead we point to our foreign policy.  We point to Israel. As if Muslim violence was born 60 years ago, when  it wasn't even born 600 years ago.
We take the blame for everything. And that allows us to feel good about  our sense of responsibility. While they practice the martyrdom of  murder. We practice the martyrdom of taking responsibility for their  murders. The relationship is similar to that of the abusive husband, who  feels upset because he has to beat his wife all the time, and the wife  who feels upset because she thinks she can't get anything right, and  that causes her husband to beat her. That sort of thinking is sick and  it is victim thinking. But this kind of thinking has become commonplace  in the free world.
Once again, does the free world really love Muslims or does it love them  because it fears them, like the battered wife, or the victim of  Stockholm Syndrome who feels empowered by siding with the hostage  takers, so that she can pretend she isn't really a hostage anymore.
Muslims do not feel a need to be loved, respected and feared yes, but  loved no. But we do. We want them to love America. To love Israel. To  join hands and sing about how much we all have in common. And even  though we know that is never going to happen, we want it anyway.
Why do we need to be loved? Because as countries we do not love  ourselves anymore. America used to love itself. Israel used to love  itself. The nations of Europe used to love themselves. Today they go  around looking for someone else to love them. And if they find  themselves in an abusive international relationship instead, then they  are sure that they deserve it, because they are no good anyway.
And when terrorists kill us, we are afraid to fight back, because we  might look like bullies. And then we wouldn't be lovable anymore.  Sometimes when the offense is terrible enough, when the streets are  covered in the blood of our dead, then we get angry. Really angry. We  get so angry that we strike back and lash out. But our enemies know that  with enough law firms and PR firms in their corner, we will go back to  blaming ourselves. Because retaliation alone is not enough. Fighting  back out of pain is not enough. That is how a cornered animal acts. That  is how an abuse victim who has taken too much acts. But it's not long  term. And that rush of moral adrenaline can't be sustained.
That's what happened in America after 9/11 and in Israel after the  Passover Bombing. Some wonder if a big enough terrorist attack happens,  if an entire city vanishes in atomic fire, whether we will wake up. The  sad answer is that we will wake up, we will fight back, but unless we  change the way the free world thinks, we will go back to sleep again.
We need to do more than lash out because we have been hurt. We need to  regain that sense of destiny. That knowledge of exceptionalism, which  says that, in Reagan's words, G-d is not indifferent to America, or to  Israel or to any country we live in. We need to believe that we have a  right to exist and a duty to exist. Without that, we will always wind up  in the path of creeds and nations who believe in their own sense of  manifest destiny. That happened with Nazism and Communism. It is  happening again with Islam now.

The  world is not a place of peace. There is a constant struggle between  different cultures, religions and ideologies. When the Soviet Union  fell, a power vacuum opened up. Islam stepped into that vacuum. If we  defeat the Islamists, something or someone else will come along to take  their place. There is no avoiding that. And there is no surviving that,  unless we learn to believe in ourselves again. Not just in institutions,  but in the land, the people and the culture.
A strong foe believes that they have something special to offer to the  world. Our own academics and popular entertainment say that we have  nothing to offer to the world. It says that we are the problem. That is  the case all across the free world. And if we believe that we are the  problem, how are we ever going to stand up to people who claim to be the  solution?
During World War 2, Germans and Russians both believed that they had a  special destiny to save the world. Back then we believed that we had a  special destiny too. That was then. This is now.
Today Muslims claim to be the solution, and those who claim that  America, Israel and Europe are the problem, are tripping over their own  feet to roll over and roll out the red carpet for them.
And how can it be otherwise? If you think that you represent a worthless  country, a worthless culture and a worthless people-- then why would  you not surrender to Islam?
To stand up for something, you must believe in its worth. To stand up to  something, you must believe that it is less worthy. If you don't  believe that, then it is easier to sit down, to give in and let them do  whatever they want.
And what happens to the rest of the world? The United States is selling  out Israel for Saudi oil. The UK shipped the Lockerbie bomber home in  exchange for Libyan oil. And that's not surprising. Anyone who will sell  out their own country, will even more eagerly sell out their allies.  And this makes it all too easy for the Muslim world to play divide and  conquer, to promise, for example, that terrorism will end when Israel  does.
When you throw history and culture overboard, you are left with no  unifying bonds between nations. Nations that once shared a common  history and culture. And then self-interest rules. The old game of feed  your allies to the crocodile, so that you're the one last one it eats.  Divide and conquer. We betray each other, and then one by one we fall.
The political leadership of the free world believes in a world without  nations. And if we are all meant to live in a global community without  borders or nations anyway, then why quibble over whether a  Czechoslovakia or an Israel survive. Those are minor points. Irrelevant  in the bigger picture of the EU and the UN. What matters are not  nations, but institutions. And so the nations fall apart, the  institutions degenerate into tyranny, and those who do believe in  something other than an undifferentiated world overseen by  bureaucrats... take over.
And that brings us back to the orchard. It's the orchard that people go  out and fight for. Not for institutions. When a country represents that  orchard, then people will willingly fight and die for it. When it only  represents a bureaucracy, then they will not.
The orchard is ownership. It says this land is my land. It says that if  you will it, it is no dream. It gives each and every person a stake in  the country, rather than a chance to be managed by a vast bureaucracy,  told what to eat and how much of it. The orchard is America. The orchard  is Israel. As they should be. But increasingly not as they are.
All nations and creeds can in the end be reduced to a plot of land, a  space that people can call their own. That sense of ownership is the  orchard. America and Israel were both created by men and women, who left  where they were in order to be free, to find their orchard, cultivate  it and watch over it. And that orchard grew. It drew millions who wanted  a space of their own, an orchard of their own. Take away that orchard  and what is left cannot stand on its own.
I began by speaking about the threat of terrorism to Israel and America.  For many though, the Iranian nuclear threat overshadows that of  terrorism. And it is a serious threat, but also an inescapable one.
Israel can take out Iran's nuclear program if it makes the decision to.  But that is only a matter of delaying the inevitable. It is possible to  destroy Iran's nuclear program. But sooner or later, all those Muslim  countries that want nuclear weapons, will have them.
We might have been able to break the chain of proliferation, but when  the Clinton Administration failed to halt North Korea's nuclear program,  resorting instead to appeasement and bribery, the writing was on the  wall. North Korean nuclear technicians have shown up in Syria. Libya  abandoned its nuclear program, or supposedly abandoned it, only because  Khaddafi was briefly afraid of America. Egypt and Saudi Arabia, among  others are already pursuing their own nuclear programs. In other words,  even by the most conservative estimates, it's inevitable that much of  the Muslim Middle East will have nuclear capability within a generation.  Probably less.

There  is a great deal of focus now on not allowing Iran to get nuclear  weapons. As a result we're going through the same circus that we did in  the 90's with North Korea. Despite all the aid and proposals and a  signed basketball presented to Kim Jong Il, none of it worked. Diplomacy  will not stop Iran from getting the bomb. A massive series of strikes  might, but only temporarily. As long as Iran wants nuclear weapons and  as long as there are countries willing to help them build a nuclear  program, then they will have them sooner or later.
There's nothing wrong with making that later, rather than sooner. Later  is a wise policy, particularly since Iran's nuclear program, has  triggered an arms race among Sunni countries such as Egypt and Saudi  Arabia, who are advancing their own nuclear programs. But later is not  never. And it's very important to understand that.
Only one thing will prevent a nuclear weapon from being used on Tel Aviv  or Haifa. And it's not diplomacy or viruses released into nuclear  facilities. Those too delay the inevitable. The one thing that will stop  it, is the same thing that stopped nuclear weapons from being used on  New York, Los Angeles and Washington D.C.
Deterrence. Mutually Assured Destruction.
The only way to check the threat of force by an opponent with no regard  for your life, is by demonstrating equal or superior force. When it  comes to nuclear weapons, that means an awareness that any nuclear  attack will be met by nuclear attack.
Mutually Assured Destruction or MAD was denounced during the Cold War,  but it may have well saved a billion lives. The motto of the Strategic  Air Command was Peace is our Profession. And their profession did indeed  insure peace. World War 3 was averted not because of peace rallies or  people of goodwill meeting around tables and shaking hands, but because  the Strategic Air Command was ready and able to put an end to the USSR  in retaliation for any attack.
Let us turn back to Israel now. Why did the Camp David Accords really  happen? Because Israelis and Egyptians reached out and took a courageous  step for peace, as popular history would have it? The Camp David  Accords happened because the Yom Kippur War demonstrated the futility of  further egyptian attacks on Israel. That demonstration carried with it a  heartbreaking cost, but it is what brought peace. Sadat was not a  better man than Nasser, but unlike Nasser he was able to see a dead end  when it was staring him in the face. And that dead end was the Israeli  army.
If Israel is to prevent a nuclear attack, then it will only be able to  do so by demonstrating that a nuclear attack will be suicide for the  attacker. That doesn't just mean revealing its own nuclear capabilities.  Capabilities are meaningless without the will to use them. Capability  alone is not deterrence. Only capability and determination together  equal deterrence.
For 17 years, Israel has negotiated with terrorists, appeased them and  allowed them to operate inside its borders and kill its citizens. If  Israel cannot even credibly deter Hamas, how much credibility does its  deterrence have toward Hamas' Iranian masters? The answer is very  little.
Slightly more than Mutually Assured Destruction does for the United States under Obama.
To protect itself from nuclear attack, Israel must reestablish its  determination. Bombing Iran might help, but cleaning house and clearing  out terrorist groups at home, would help far more. Right now Israel has  demonstrated that it can be led around the nose by international  opinion. And if it is afraid to kill terrorists inside its own borders,  that gives Muslim countries reason to believe that it has become a paper  tiger. If IDF soldiers are afraid to pull the trigger when under fire  by terrorists only a few miles from Jerusalem, will Iran believe that  Israel will push the button to launch nuclear missiles?
Even if Iran never launches a single nuclear missile at Tel Aviv, the  chain of proliferation will not end there. Iran has become the world's  most enthusiastic sponsor of terrorists, from Israel to Lebanon to  Afghanistan.
Israel needs to demonstrate more than that it will respond to a nuclear  missile with a nuclear missile, it needs to demonstrate that it will  respond to a nuclear attack with a widescale nuclear response. It needs  to create an environment in which Iran will not turn over nuclear  materials to terrorist groups. These terrorist groups could then  detonate suitcase nukes inside Israel. A scenario which would allow Iran  to claim plausible deniability.
If Iran and the rest of the Muslim world are not made actively afraid of  doing something like that, then Israel is doomed. And the clock is  ticking. Israel has to reclaim its deterrence, or the clock will reach  zero, and it will be all over. If Israel acts with its hands tied behind  its back, then it shows that it is vulnerable, that it can be  manipulated and destroyed through that vulnerability. If Israel allows  its hands to be tied when it's only a family being murdered here or  there, then its enemies will assume that it will act the same way when  the lives of all its families are on the line.
That is the challenge which Israel has to overcome to truly avert a  nuclear attack. That is what it has to do to protect the orchard. To  protect the orchard, you have to claim the orchard and then demonstrate  that you will shoot to defend your claim. Otherwise you'll be run off  the land by anyone who has a gun and is willing to shoot in order to  take it from you.
It's the same challenge that America has to overcome. 9/11 happened  because we gave Muslim terrorists the impression that their terrorist  attacks against us would be tolerated. That you could bomb US embassies  in Africa or US ships in Yemen, and that we would just sit back and take  it. That you could bomb the World Trade Center, and we would write some  news stories about it, and then go on about our business. We made  ourselves a target, because we didn't stand up for ourselves.
The left likes to say that we act like bullies. On the contrary, we  attract bullies. We attract bullies by letting ourselves be bullied.
We let terrorist attack after terrorist attack happen, and we didn't do  much about it. Then we wondered how could 9/11 happen? It happened  because we treated those terrorist attacks like a criminal problem, no  different than any other. Buildings were blown up, bombs were planted  and an American vessel bombed. And the United States Government went on  with business as usual. Until 9/11 when business as usual was suspended.
Had we demonstrated from the first that we would respond ruthlessly to  any attack, the probability of 9/11 would have been significantly  decreased. It might have happened anyway, but the odds against the  Taliban or Bin Laden's backers in the Gulf funding or tolerating such an  action would have been far less. And had we hit him hard from the  first, Al Queda's network would be a mess, the way it is today, and much  less capable of launching an organized attack.
The situation is not so different in Europe, where appeasement leads to  greater aggression and uglier demands. This is how the game is played.  If you tolerate intimidation, the intimidation increases. If you respond  to violent threats over a cartoon with appeasement, the threats will be  acted on. The more you retreat, the more they advance. You cannot be  polite in the face of terror, unless you want to be terrorized. You  cannot compromise with violent threats, unless you want to turn over  power to those who are making them. And then violent threats, not the  ballot box or the rule of law, become the new form of power.
I said before that you can only check the use of force through superior  or equal force. But whether you need to use that force and how much of  it you need to use, depends on timing. If you check the use of force  early, then you can do it with minimal harm. Mutually Assured  Destruction is one example. On the other hand if you allow yourself to  be slapped around, then the amount of force you will need to use goes up  by a whole lot.
England found that out the hard way during World War 2. Hitler  tentatively sent German troops into the Rhineland. ready to retreat if  France took a stand. France did not take a stand. By the time it took a  stand, German troops were in Poland. Soon afterward they were in France.  And so it goes. If you won't take a stand when it's easy, you'll have  to do it when it's hard. If you won't rattle sabers when the enemy is  still afraid of you, you'll have to use them when they're not afraid of  you anymore.
Of course that's not easy to do. It's much easier to compromise. To give  away Czechoslovakia and Israel. To pretend that if you get rid of the  victims, you'll also eliminate the motive for the violence against them.
Bill Clinton visited Egypt and announced that terrorism all over the  world will go away, if Israel makes enough concessions to create a  Palestinian state. Let's put aside the fact that it would be easier to  create a Palestinian state made of cards, than an actual working one.  Let's put aside the fact that half the proposed state is run by Hamas  which refuses to sign any permanent peace accords, and which actually  won the election. Let's also ignore the fact that Israel is negotiating  with terrorists who are continuing to kill Israelis, have already said  that they will not recognize Israel as a Jewish state, and refuse to  hold elections, because they know they'll lose.
Let's ignore all that, and instead point out the absurdity of believing  that Islamic violence will go away, if some sort of deal is struck.
First of all, any such deal would not be recognized by Hamas and  numerous other terrorist groups backed by Iran. It would certainly not  be recognized by Al Queda. In short it would never be recognized by the  actual active terrorist groups who are carrying out the attacks. Those  groups would call the deal a sellout and a betrayal, and carry out  another round of terrorist attacks. This has already happened before.  Indeed Hamas ramped up its terrorist attacks in time for the latest  negotiations.
So why would a final status agreement change anything? The Palestinian  Authority has its own flag and observer status at the UN. If they get  full membership at the UN, will Hamas and Al Queda decide to call it a  day? It's utter nonsense.
Israeli attempts to negotiate with terrorists have caused far more  terrorism, than anything else. Fatah and Hamas killed more Israelis  competing to prove who was more dedicated to terrorism, than they did  before the Oslo Accords.
And there's plenty of precedent for that. The Camp David Accords helped  cause Sadat's death. In the days of the Mandate, Arab leaders who were  willing to come to terms with the Jews, were routinely assassinated.
So not only would a Final Status Agreement not end terrorism around the world, it wouldn't even end terrorism in Israel.
Secondly, Clinton is pretending that Islamic terrorism worldwide is  caused by Israel. This is an obscene lie. Are Buddhist teachers being  beheaded in Thailand because of Israel? Are there bombings in Kashmir  because of Israel? Did 9/11 happen because of Israel? Did 7/7? What  about Somalia or the Al Queda presence in Yemen? Do any of those have  anything to do with Israel.
To answer this, all we need to do is look at the motivations of Islamic  terrorists. That motivation is to impose Islamic rule and Islamic law.  That is the reason for the terrorism against Israel, India, America and  Thailand and everywhere else.
If you believe that the only moral government is a Communist government,  then you will naturally work to impose Communist governments on the  rest of the world. If you believe that Islamic law is the only moral law  in the world, then you will impose Islamic law on the rest of the  world. Particularly on countries with Muslim majorities or sizable  minorities. That is what is at work here.
But that is a scary idea, because it requires admitting that we are  under siege, not just by a few acts of terrorism, but by a war of ideas.  That this is not just about foreign policy differences, but by huge  numbers of people around the world and in our own countries who  sincerely believe that there is only one right way to live, and that  they have the right to impose that way on others by any means necessary.
It's easier to reduce the problem, to say that it's not about Islam, but  about us. It's not about Islam, it's about Israel. It's not about  Islam, it's about Islamophobia. But those are all coping mechanisms for  people who want to deny the truth.
If  you're a politician, you naturally want to minimize and manage the  problem. If the problem is Islam, then you have a huge unmanageable  problem. On the other hand if the problem is Israel, then all you need  to do is pull the foreign aid strings, send a few diplomats, have a few  angry phone conversations and browbeat those damn Jews into giving those  crazy Muslims whatever they want, so the violence stops.
If the problem is Islam, then what do you do? But if the problem is us,  then we can change. We'll tour some mosques, talk about how much all the  major religions have in common and praise the Koran. We'll also promise  to crack down on anyone who offends Muslims. And boycott Israel. There,  problem solved.
And so our leaders pretend that the problem is manageable, by making it  into something that we can control. By promising that if we just make  Israel give up some land and create a Palestinian state, terrorism all  over the world will magically vanish down the drain. The terrorists will  throw away their weapons into the sea and open up organic bakeries. And  everyone will be happy again.
It's easier to think that way. It's certainly a lot more cheerful and a  lot less depressing. At least until the truth becomes impossible to  deny.
But the victim of this behavior isn't just Israel. Like the canary in  the coal mine, Israel is only the first victim. But certainly not the  last.
When you ignore the real problem, it doesn't go away. It gets worse. If  you agree to play divide and conquer, then not only will there be fewer  allies to stand with you when the day comes, but you will have become an  accomplice to the worst crimes of your enemies.
In Bethlehem the graffiti already reads, "First the Saturday people,  then the Sunday people." In the West it could easily be rephrased as,  "First they came for the Saturday people and we said nothing. Then they  came for the Sunday people, and who was left to speak up for them?"
The answer is no one. No one will be left.
It is easier to look away. It is easier to say nothing. Even easier  still, to join with the attackers. To wave the Palestinian flag and  scream, Boycott Israel. End the War. Open Immigration. It is always  easier to join the mob, than run from their stones. Always easier to try  and be the hammer, rather than the anvil. And if not, then at least to  stand on the sidelines.
And if you're hit, then you take it. You absorb it. Because if you fight back, then you're only feeding the cycle of violence.
Obama has said that America can absorb another 9/11. It can. Just as  most people can absorb numerous beatings. If the beatings are far enough  apart, then you can heal from them and recover in time for the next  beating.
As the canary in the coal mine, Israel shows what happens when you  absorb beatings. Israel has been absorbing beatings for a long time now.  Once it was famous for hitting back, and hitting harder than it was  hit. But for the last 17 years of the peace process, Israel has been  absorbing the beatings. Or rather its citizens have been absorbing them.  Not just soldiers on patrol, but couples sitting down for a meal in a  cafe, families driving home from Jerusalem, children sitting in school  and waiting for the siren to go off.
What absorbing terrorist attacks does is it allows the terrorists to set  the terms of the battle. Then it allows the mediators to discuss the  terms of the peace. And since the terrorists have already set the terms  of the battle, they go on to set the terms of the peace.
Once you negotiate with terrorists, then you reward terrorism. And when you do, there is no end to it.
Absorbing terrorism is not the same as defeating terrorism. Absorbing  terrorism changes you. In Israel, living with terrorism has dramatically  changed the country and its people. Parents give children cellphones so  they can check in after the next suicide bombing. Families who travel  in dangerous areas split up into different cars so if there is a drive  by attack, the entire family won't be wiped out. And there will be  someone left to care for the children.
We have seen the first beginnings of that here already. We see it when  we are told to throw out liquids and walk through scanners. We're told  to get used to a lack of privacy and autonomy. To have an escape plan in  the event of a terrorist attack. As terrorism continues to be a threat,  we will also change. Just as Israel changed. We will come to terms with  a life in which we, or any member of our families, could be killed at  any moment by terrorists. And that will change us. It will change who we  are. It will change how we approach life.
That is what absorbing terrorism does to you. And why are we absorbing  terrorism, in order to avert a full scale war. To avoid, what the media  charges, was an overreaction to the attacks of September 11. We absorb  terrorism, for the same reason that Israel does, in the name of peace.
Peace is indeed a beautiful thing. The Sages of Judaism teach that when  G-d wished to bless Israel, he found no better vessel for blessing, than  the blessing of peace. That is why the blessing of the priests in the  Temple of Jerusalem was the blessing of peace. But while you can be  blessed with peace, you cannot buy peace. You certainly cannot buy it  from those who claim that there will no peace unless you pay them for it  first. Peace that has to be paid for is never worth the price. It is  surrender by another name, without the dignity of fighting a war first.
Peace is priceless unless you pay for it, and then there is a price, and that price is everything you have.
The free world has been trying to buy peace for a long time now. It  tried to buy peace from Hitler. Now it is trying to buy peace from  Islam. Those who once said, "We created Czechoslovakia in 1918, so why  not give it to Hitler in order to bring peace", now say, "We created  Israel in 1948, why not give some or all of it to the Muslims in order  to bring peace." A little compromise here. A little compromise there.  And soon there will be peace. The peace of the slave and the silence of  the grave.
During the second World War, the song on the lips of every British  sailor was, "There'll Always Be an England". But now many are asking,  whether there will indeed always be an England. And the answer is often  skeptical.
The second to last paragraph of Israel's Declaration of Independence  concludes with the words, LeGeulat Yisrael, proclaiming that the  founding of the modern State of Israel represents the realization of the  age-old dream - the redemption of Israel. But has Israel really been  redeemed at last? Or is it only another exile. Have the Jews come home,  or are they still strangers in someone else's land.
Questions like these are being asked by the concerned citizens of every  nation, about their own nations, their own covenants and their own laws.  Europe is in the thick of that fight, as it drifts toward the dark  shores of Eurabia. The EU celebrated the breakdown of nation states, but  now Europe needs those nation states more than ever. But instead of  nations, it has bureaucracies that cheer on not merely the end of nation  states, but the end of Europe itself.
The orchards are burning now. Others have grown wild and tangled. The rest are touched by the winter frost.
Today  East Jerusalem is on the table. Before the 1967 war liberated  Jerusalem, Jordanian snipers from illegally annexed East Jerusalem used  nearby Jewish buildings for target practice. Residents had to keep their  curtains closed and the lights dim in rooms with a view of East  Jerusalem, because if they didn't, they might be killed in their own  living rooms.
Only when Israel liberated East Jerusalem, only then could the shades be  pulled back and the lights be lit brightly again. But with missiles  raining down today, if East Jerusalem is turned over to the terrorists,  then those shades will have to be drawn shut again, and the light will  die out.
That light will die out not only in Jerusalem, but all around the world.  Everywhere that terrorists are and everywhere that they dream of being.  Everywhere. If we don't keep the light lit, then the darkness will grow  and the light will be lost.
Daniel GreenfieldCopyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.