by Mati Tuchfeld
Israel's response to the terrorist attack on the Temple Mount was hasty and confused, and it is no wonder that PM Benjamin Netanyahu ultimately caved
Israeli police officers walk
outside the Al Aqsa mosque compound in Jerusalem's Old City on Tuesday
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Photo credit: AP |
The problem did not start with Israel's feeble
removal of metal detectors from the gates to the Temple Mount compound.
The problem started days earlier, with the ill-advised installation of
the metal detectors in the first place. The Israeli response to the July
14 terrorist attack at the Temple Mount, in which two Israeli police
officers were murdered, was so hasty and confused that there was never
any doubt that even the slightest pushback from the Arabs and the Waqf
would lead to Israeli capitulation in the end. After all, ever since
1967, Israel's conduct regarding the Temple Mount has been like that of a
leaf in the wind.
Benjamin Netanyahu is not the first prime
minister to display utter Israeli helplessness in the face of powerful
Islamic groups that control the holy site with an iron fist. Previous
prime ministers were paralyzed by feeble threats from Turkey, Jordan and
Saudi Arabia when Israel started renovating Mughrabi Bridge (a wooden
bridge connecting the Western Wall plaza with the Temple Mount's
Mughrabi Gate), which was about to collapse. They did nothing when the
Waqf freely discarded ancient remnants of our temples that it dug up
there. It was former Prime Minister Ehud Olmert who caved to Turkish
pressure and agreed to let a Turkish delegation inspect the excavations
at Mughrabi Gate when Israel wanted to reinforce the foundations of the
only Temple Mount gate that is accessible to Jews.
But unlike the acts of previous prime
ministers, the move Netanyahu led this week went directly against his
own political base. A Channel 2 poll revealed on Tuesday evening that
after the removal of the metal detectors, 77% of the Israeli public
feels that the government caved in to pressure and 67% of the public
feels that Netanyahu did not handle this situation well. Furthermore,
68% of the public thinks that the initial decision to install the metal
detectors was correct, despite the vocal objections of the Left, so
there is no need to guess how Likud voters (and Habayit Hayehudi voters
whom Netanyahu aims to draw to Likud) feel about this situation. It
doesn't take an experienced pollster to see that the numbers are close
to 100% in all the parameters, and that is precisely Netanyahu's problem
right now.
The Temple Mount is not exactly the powder keg
that the Left often makes it out to be. Moreover, Islamic leaders'
concerted efforts to turn it into one over the last week have been
largely unsuccessful. But it is a site that does elicit profoundly
powerful emotions among Jews, on both sides of the debate, and the
cabinet decision to dismantle the metal detectors fell directly into
this trap. Our sages taught us that the people of Israel must walk tall
to ensure our survival in the face of our enemies. The metal detectors
debacle has lowered our stature in this regard.
Mati Tuchfeld
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_article.php?id=44135
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