by Bruce Thornton
Scenes all too familiar from the Arab conflict with Israel have followed the murder last Wednesday of a 16-year-old Palestinian, Mohammed Abu Khdeir. Mourners at his funeral chanting the Muslim war-cry “Allahu Akbar” as they carry the boy’s open coffin, the crowd shouting slogans like “Intifada rise up” and “America and Israel are the terrorists,” banners representing terrorist organizations like Hamas and Islamic Jihad waving above the crowd, gangs of “youths” attacking Israeli police throughout East Jerusalem, barrages of rockets fired from Gaza into Israel, and the usual condemnations of Israel and calls for “restraint” from the “international community” – all sadly are business as usual. And the “business” is the demonization of Israel and the obscene double standards indulged by too many in the West.
The Israeli authorities have quickly tracked down and arrested 6 Israeli minors as suspects in the killing, even as the killers of the Israelis are still at large. Israeli Prime Minister Benyamin Netanyahu said, “We do not differentiate between terrorists, and we will respond to all of them.” The speed of the arrest, and Netanyahu’s unequivocal identification of the crime as an act of terrorism, should underline the differences between Israel and the Palestinian Authority, which seemingly is making little effort to hunt down the main killers of the 3 Israelis, and the Authority’s political partner Hamas, which praised the killings. As Netanyahu pointed out, “The murderers [of the Israelis] came from the territory controlled by the Palestinian Authority; they returned to territory controlled by the Palestinian Authority. Therefore, the Palestinian Authority is obliged to do everything in its power to find them, just as we did, just as our security forces located the suspects in the murder of Muhammad Abu Khdeir within a matter of days.”
But Israel’s enemies are unlikely to draw the proper conclusion from this contrast, or even take time to note how comparatively rare such violence on the part of Israelis is compared to the thousands of Israelis murdered by Palestinian Arabs over the decades. Rather, the moral and intellectual idiocy of the “cycle of violence” meme will determine reactions to this murder on the part of those too lazy or timid to choose a side, even as they hold Israel up to standards of behavior and forbearance no other country would accept. But there are good and bad sides in this conflict, and which side has the moral high ground can be seen by comparing further the reactions of each to the recent murders.
Listen, for
example, to the response of Palestinian Authority Mahmoud Abbas to the
kidnapping of the Israeli teens, delivered at a meeting of the
Organization of Islamic Cooperation in Saudi Arabia: “Those who
kidnapped the three Israeli teenagers want to destroy us. First and
foremost [these teenagers] are human beings like us. It is our
responsibility to search for them and to return them to their families.
We will hold their kidnappers accountable, whoever they are.”
For those impressed by these comments, notice
that the first sentence condemns the kidnapping not as a moral evil or a
terrorist act, but as a tactical blunder damaging the Palestinian Arab
program of destroying Israel by “stages.” Bad p.r. is the problem, not
the evil of terrorism or the deaths of 3 innocent teenagers. This sort
of comment is consistent with Abbas’s past habit of joining general
condemnations of terrorist acts to complaints about their bad timing or
damage to Palestinian interests. Speaking of the Second Intifada and its
brutal terrorism, Abbas commented, “If we
do a calculation we will see that without any doubt what we lost was
big and what we gained was small.” Later, speaking out against a rocket
attack from Gaza, he said, “This is not the time for this kind of
attack,” which suggests there is a time for shooting rockets at women and children. That is, blowing up innocents is not wrong,
just inefficient at that particular time for achieving the long-term
goal of a Palestinian state that eventually will include the territory
of Israel.
Now compare Israeli Prime Minister Benyamin
Netanyahu’s comments on the murder of the Palestinian boy before the
arrests of the 6 suspects: “We don’t know yet the motives or the
identities of the perpetrators, but we will. We will bring to justice
the criminals responsible for this despicable crime, whoever they may
be. Murder, riots, incitement, vigilantism — they have no place in our
democracy.” A categorical condemnation of violence, not a statement of
how such a crime harms his government or Israel, and a pledge quickly
fulfilled in the swift arrest of 6 suspects. One sees the same contrast
between Israel’s response to a brief anti-Arab protest, and the low
profile of the PA police – armed and trained, by the way, by the U.S. –
during the violence roiling Jerusalem and the West Bank:
Dozens of Israelis had protested in Jerusalem on Tuesday night against the kidnap and killing of the Israeli teens, and there were reports some had shouted ‘death to the Arabs’ at one of these demonstrations. Jerusalem District Police deployed units to the field to prevent the assault of Arab residents and police confirmed that there was an explosive confrontation between inflamed protesters seeking revenge and the Arab population.No major press reports of PA police helping the Israelis keep order or arresting their own people for attacking Israeli citizens and police, let alone actively seeking to find the murderers of the 3 teens. Indeed, the U.S.-funded and trained force has over the years been complicit in terrorist violence. And more recently, as part of the rapprochement between the PA and Hamas, 3,000 PA police officers were sent to Gaza. We can be skeptical that they are there to prevent the various jihadist gangs from firing rockets against Israeli civilians.
Police forces managed to rescue eight Arabs from the mob and arrested 47 on charges of public disorder, attempted assault of Arab minors, assaulting police officers, and property damage.
These obvious differences between the
responses to 2 heinous acts on the part of the people and governments of
each side demonstrate that in this conflict moral equivalence is moral
idiocy. The truth of history is that a people established under
international law on the land of their ancestors have been assaulted,
attacked, and invaded by the descendants of conquerors, colonists, and
immigrants. In the midst of this existential threat and level of brutal
violence against civilians, Israel has stayed true to its liberal
democratic foundations and moral code even as it defends itself against a
people filled with genocidal hatred. That many in the West cannot
acknowledge this simple fact and instead hide behind “cycle of violence”
evasions–– when they are not just indulging camouflaged anti-Semitism
that always blames Israel–– is testimony to the moral rot of a decadent
culture.
Bruce Thornton is a Shillman Journalism Fellow at the Freedom Center, a Research Fellow at Stanford's Hoover Institution, and a Professor of Classics and Humanities at the California State University.
Source: http://www.frontpagemag.com/2014/bruce-thornton/moral-equivalence-moral-idiocy/
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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