by Isi Leibler
|  | 
       As of now, most Israelis, 
including his long-standing opponents, endorse Prime Minister 
Netanyahu’s leadership during Operation Protective Edge. From the outset
 he displayed determination but avoided demagoguery or generating 
unrealistic expectations. He refused to be pressured into a full 
invasion of Gaza, which in addition to even greater casualties would 
probably have culminated in global sanctions, forcing us to withdraw and
 thus providing Hamas with “victory”. But the jury is still out and 
should Hamas continue launching missiles, Israel will not engage in a 
war of attrition and may still be forced to launch a full invasion of 
Gaza.
       The IDF inflicted enormous 
damage on Hamas, demolishing the major attack tunnels and destroying two
 thirds of its missile infrastructure. Indications are that the vast 
majority of Gaza inhabitants blame Hamas for the terrible devastation 
and casualties they endured. Alas, yet again Israel has been pulverized 
in the battle for public opinion. Despite a clear cut case and highly 
articulate spokesmen, logic and reason were subsumed with the emotional 
impact of the global media sympathetic to Hamas by depicting - out of 
context and sometimes even totally fabricated - footage of heartbreaking
 and devastating war casualties and loss of innocent lives. The media 
mostly failed to point out that Hamas deliberately employed children as 
human shields and located their command posts and missile launching 
sites inside or adjacent to schools, mosques and UN centers. Israel was 
endlessly condemned for responding disproportionately to Hamas 
aggression, unleashing an outflow of hatred and a tsunami of global 
anti-Semitism reminiscent of the Middle Ages when Jews were demonized as
 the source for all the natural disasters facing mankind.
       Any objective assessment of the 
IDF behavior would confirm that there has never been a military conflict
 in which such extraordinary efforts were taken to minimize civilian 
casualties. It would be a salutary exercise to compare Israel’s efforts 
to avoid collateral damage amongst innocent civilians to those of the US
 whilst it bombed ISIS in Iraq.
       There are already murmurings 
from hostile anti-Israeli human rights and left wing groups to extend 
the demonization to demands that Israeli leaders be tried for war 
crimes. Many cowardly Western governments are likely to endorse or, at 
best, abstain from such a manifestly immoral initiative.
       The initial Egyptian proposals, 
requiring a cessation of hostilities without preconditions, remain the 
only sane option currently available to Hamas and the ultimate outcome 
of the conflict will be determined by negotiations.
       The curtailment of Hamas 
aggression could only be achieved if the US and Western countries - 
backed by the Egyptians who revile Hamas as an extension of the Moslem 
Brotherhood - steadfastly supported the initial European demand for the 
disarmament of Hamas and monitoring of its future imports and funding to
 prevent the creation of new tunnels or replenishment of the missile 
stockpiles.
       Indeed, if implemented, we could
 even visualize a major tilt in the political landscape in which the 
traditional hostility and hatred of Israel in significant sectors of the
 Arab world is superseded by alliances to confront the common threat of 
the radical Islamic movements.
       But we should not hold our 
breath that this scenario will eventuate. It is already being undermined
 by the repeated calls from the US and the Europeans to give control of 
Gaza to the Palestinian Authority headed by Mahmoud Abbas, and encourage
 him to create a Palestinian state as soon as possible.
       This places Israel in an 
impossible position. Despite the conflict, Abbas has failed to dismantle
 the PA merger with the genocidal Hamas. It would be catastrophic for 
Israel to ignore the principal lesson of this conflict by failing to 
appreciate the perils that we would confront were we to withdraw the IDF
 and accept a Palestinian state based on the indefensible 1949 armistice
 lines. The dire consequences could include terrorists operating from 
within our heartland, closure of Ben Gurion airport and extension of 
tunnels even into Tel Aviv.
       The majority of Israelis has no 
wish to rule over Palestinians and yearn to disengage from them. But for
 a country which faces existential threats and cannot afford to lose a 
single war, Israel’s security needs are paramount. The Israeli 
government cannot, as of now, gamble on a Palestinian state without 
total demilitarization and defensible borders.
       Of course we prefer Mahmoud 
Abbas who makes soothing remarks about peace rather than Khaled Mashaal 
or Mohammed Dief who openly exhort their followers to murder us.
       But we should not delude 
ourselves. Aside from a few statements, Abbas has never been a partner 
for peace. As a matter of strategy he has temporarily set aside “armed 
conflict” and substituted it with diplomacy, for which he has benefited 
considerably in the global arena. His tactic is to make no concessions 
whilst demanding unilateral concessions - in order to dismantle Israel 
in stages.
       His end goal parallels that of 
Hamas. But instead of calling for our destruction he concentrates on the
 “non-negotiable” right of return to Israel of descendants of Arab 
refugees, which would spell an end to Jewish sovereignty.
       Incitement against Israel 
saturates the PA controlled media, the mosques and schools where 
children from an early age are brainwashed with the culture of death in 
which martyrdom is sanctified as the greatest spiritual objective. This 
is reflected in state-sponsored salaries to terrorists in jail with 
generous pensions to families; city squares, institutions and even 
football clubs are named after killers of women and children; mass 
murderers released from Israel received as heroes with many proudly 
describing their monstrous acts on TV.
       This toxic culture, initially 
inculcated amongst the people by Arafat and maintained by Abbas, has 
created such a climate of hatred that any Palestinian leader seeking an 
accommodation with Israel would be in danger of assassination.
       Moreover, despite initially 
opposing the inclusion of the pro-Hamas Qatar and Turkey as mediators, 
Abbas soon joined the chorus defending Hamas and adopted all its demands
 against Israel. He failed to denounce Hamas for breaching the 
ceasefires and launching rockets against Israel. During the conflict, 
Abbas met with Hamas chief Khaled Mashaal in Qatar and issued a joint 
statement, calling for an end to Israeli “aggression”. The PA accused 
Israel of initiating the war, engaging in genocide and provided notice 
of its intention to initiate war crimes indictments against Israeli 
leadership at the International Court of Justice and the UN Human Rights
 Commission.
       Under such circumstances, Israel
 is caught between a rock and a hard place. Netanyahu has effectively 
agreed to ease Gaza border restrictions on condition that 
demilitarization and genuine supervision of border posts is introduced. 
But the solution cannot be based on handing over control of Gaza to the 
PA - a partner to Hamas.
       The Egyptians, US and Europeans 
must supervise this procedure. After the abysmal failure of the UN to 
restrict Hezbollah in Lebanon, it would be inconceivable for Israel to 
accept the proposal for a UN peacekeeping force to take responsibility 
for monitoring imports and preventing the rearming of Hamas.
       On the other hand, it would 
represent the harbinger of a new era if we could be convinced that a PA 
takeover would be paralleled by a scheme similar to the Syrian process 
of removing chemical weapons in which Egypt and a reliable international
 monitoring body ensured that imports to Gaza are monitored and that 
Hamas is ultimately demilitarized.
       Only under such conditions, 
Israel could achieve a genuine long term “quiet” which could also extend
 to a positive relationship with Egypt and the moderate Arab states.
       But, as of now, Israel faces 
concerted pressure from the US and the Europeans to make massive 
concessions to Abbas - without any meaningful provisions for security 
and compliance. There is a failure to recognize that Abbas and the PA 
represent a problem rather than the solution and that were it not for 
the corruption and incompetence of the PA, in the absence of an IDF 
presence Hamas or extremists within Fatah would by now have taken 
control of the region.
       Regrettably, the Obama 
administration - which could influence Western countries to pressure 
Hamas - repeatedly condemns its ally for the “indefensible” and “totally
 unacceptable manner” in which it was defending itself. In contrast, 
President Obama merely referred to Hamas launching thousands of rockets 
against Israeli civilians as “extraordinarily irresponsible”. He 
continues urging Netanyahu to have faith in Abbas despite his union with
 Hamas and support for their objectives. This week he told New York 
Times columnist Tom Friedman that he considered Netanyahu’s popularity 
and strength, which he contrasted to Abbas who is weak and held in low 
esteem by his people, as a principal factor inhibiting peace.
       Hopefully, the ongoing favorable
 support from the American public and a bipartisan Congress may stem or 
even reverse this negative approach. It is now urgent for AIPAC to 
accelerate action and publicly vent its concerns about the US 
government’s policies and launch a campaign, in conjunction with other 
supporters of Israel, to ensure that the US now demonstrates its 
repeated undertakings that “it has Israel’s back”.
       This could be a crucial turning 
point in the Arab-Israeli conflict. If not defanged, Hamas could still 
snatch victory from the jaws of defeat and oblige Israel to gird itself 
for the next round – and at a time to be determined by the barbarians at
 their gates.
      
       This column was originally published in the Jerusalem Post and Israel Hayom
Isi Leibler’s website can be viewed at www.wordfromjerusalem.com. He may be contacted at ileibler@leibler.com.
Source: http://wordfromjerusalem.com/?p=5189
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
No comments:
Post a Comment