Feckless in the forward

I read the editorial “Reckless in Gaza” in today’s Forward with a growing sense of disbelief. Then I reached this paragraph.

Now, however, the whole deal may be off, including Shalit’s freedom. Among the dead in the Gaza incursion was the 24-year-old son of Muhammad Zahar, a leader of the hawkish wing (yes, there is one) of Hamas. Zahar is now gaining stature along with sympathy, strengthening Hamas opponents of cease-fire and accommodation.

“[Y]es there is one”!?!?!? There’s a “hawkish wing” to Hamas? Really? Why, I never knew.

I can’t quite grasp the naiveté of that line. Do the editors mean to imply that there’s a “dovish wing” to Hamas or are they assuming that such is true? And what does “hawkish” mean in this context. In the context of a legitimate government it would refer to those who would more readily resort to force. But given that Hamas is a terrorist organization, by definition it’s “hawkish” in that it believes in the use of force against civilians.

What’s the gist of the editorial? Israel ought not to fight back. Fighting back is counterproductive. Earlier the editorial informs us:

In the past two years, Israeli forces killed 810 Palestinians in Gaza, as the director of the Shin Bet security service, Yuval Diskin, told a Cabinet meeting last week. Of the total, about 200 were not clearly linked to terrorist organizations — that is, bystanders. A separate study by the Ha’aretz newspaper found that the civilian toll was actually higher, totaling about 360, of whom 152 were under age 18, including 48 children under age 14.Israel’s death toll from terrorism in 2007, reported this month by the human rights group B’Tselem and confirmed by the military, totaled 13, including seven civilians. That was the lowest toll since 1999. The toll that year, the last full year that the Oslo accords were in effect, was zero.

For all that, the Palestinian war against Israel “is not being checked, but is actually intensifying,” the internal security minister, Avi Dichter, reported at the same Cabinet meeting. Dichter, a former Shin Bet chief, estimated that there are some 20,000 Palestinian fighters in Gaza, of whom Israel has killed about 5%. He said the army should shift gears and step up its efforts. It wasn’t clear how much killing he thought would suffice.

I find it fascinating that the editorial states that

the last full year that the Oslo accords were in effect, was zero.

Are the editors implying a causal relationship here? Make peace and there will be no terror? Well how do they explain the terror of 1994, 1995, and 1996?And it’s interesting that 1999 was a year of no terror. For half the year Binyamin Netanyahu was Prime Minister. But terror started up again the next year, with a vengeance, when Ehud Barak was Prime Minister. Netanyahu was widely vilified (especially by folks sympathetic to this sort of mushy-minded thinking) as hurting peace. But under his leadership – when he actually had the gall to demand compliance from the Palestinians – terror actually dropped. It picked up when his successor, Barak tried to make peace. Hmm. Is there a correlation?

Let’s go the last paragraph. Minister Dichter estimates that Israel has killed 5% of 20000 terrorists in Gaza. So how does the editorial respond.

It wasn’t clear how much killing he thought would suffice.

What shortsightedness! My guess is that if 95% of Gaza’s terrorists survive, then there aren’t nearly enough of them are scared of Israel yet. Need Dichter spell out an estimate? Or maybe we ought to just let Israel continue fighting Hamas as it needs to. Killing the significant leaders of the organization might also have a positive effect on terror as we’ve seen in the past when Israel killed Sheikh Yassin and Dr. Rantisi as Elder of Ziyon observed.

I could go on, but the whole editorial is based on assumptions that have been disproved time and again. Israel must kill those who seek to destroy it. It’s not a matter of bloodthirstiness, but of necessity.

Then there’s a column by Markus Bouillon and Michael Shtender-Auerbach that argues Push for Peace Now, Before Bush and Abbas Step Down

Like no other Palestinian leader, Abbas has been committed to peaceful coexistence with Israel and a negotiated, nonviolent end of the Israeli occupation. Reaching back to the 1980s, he was the first and most important proponent of negotiating with Israel. He was a key protagonist during the Oslo years, and in 1995 presented the first-ever draft of an Israeli-Palestinian final status accord with Yossi Beilin.Abbas also spearheaded attempts to reform the Palestinian Authority as its first prime minister, but was pushed out of office by the self-serving Yasser Arafat. Still, when Arafat passed away, it was Abbas who inherited the mantle of the unifying Palestinian leader. There are simply no alternatives to him.

Even if Abbas was convinced to run again, in the absence of a true peace process or signaled agreement, he would most likely lose. Worse still, as of now it is entirely unclear who might succeed him.

Even assuming that this columns portrayal of Abbas as a moderate is correct, what does it say when even now, 14+ years since Oslo, he’s the only Palestinian of political importance who is dedicated to coexistence with Israel. Clearly, he hasn’t built a constituency for these views. If there’s no one who could carry the mantle of coexistence in negotiations, there is also no one could do it maintain peace once Israeli concessions were agreed to and implemented. Even if Israel could come to an agreement with Abbas as head of the truncated PA, whose left to carry on those peaceful policies. When you’re only choice with the necessary “street credibility and popular appeal” is a man convicted of multiple counts of murder, you realize that the problem isn’t the failure to make peace but the absence of anyone to make peace with.

The Forward ought to be a bulwark against such dangerous nonsense, instead it promotes it.

In a different (but parallel) context, Asaf Romirowsky writes:

A disturbing variable in the equation, which complicates the situation further, is the unwillingness of many American Jews to take a strong stand on the Arab-Israeli conflict. In particular, rabbis and Jewish educators — no matter where they stand on the political spectrum — often behave in an apologetic manner when it comes to Israel, rather than make assertive arguments from a Zionist point of view.This unwillingness to confront the pro-Palestinian propaganda being nurtured by Middle Eastern-studies departments is one of the major sources of confusion among Jewish students. For example, so long as liberal American Jews fail to speak up about the issue of post-1948 Jewish refugees from Arab lands, and instead, merely allow the discussion to center on a Palestinian “right of return,” Jewish students will be on the defensive.

If pro-Israel advocates on campus are discussing the Jewish state only in terms of “Israeli oppression,” rather than in debunking such notions, the result is always going to favor the anti-Israel forces. That is why college campuses today have become podiums for those who denigrate Israel, as is apparent from the different human rights, anti-globalization and anti-imperialism groups that have adopted the Palestinian cause.

Here we have a Jewish newspaper, that instead of fighting the propaganda undermining Israel’s right to defend itself (and to exist) contributes to the cause of its enemies in the name of phony humanitarianism.

Crossposted at Soccer Dad.

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I'm a government bureaucrat with delusions of literacy.
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4 Responses to Feckless in the forward

  1. Herschel says:

    This really is indicative of the illness that is infecting the left wing, even the Jewish groups and organizations are not immune. The Forward has always been on the left, but amazingly is now tying to show some sympathy for the Arabs while living in their safe communities in NY oblivious to the barrage of rockets hitting Israel daily.
    How totally naïve to believe that the Pals want to live side by side with Israel and not destroy her.

    I had cancelled my subscription to the Forward many years ago, and just last week I received a request for reinstatement, I “politely” told them why I am not.

    The same issue is affecting my local Minneapolis area Jewish weekly periodical, the new editor is starting to quote Zogby polls, Juan Cole, Michael Lerner and other leftwing characters in his articles, and it was time to say goodbye to him as well.

    My question is, if the left wing is so blatantly wrong about Israel, what other long held liberal beliefs are also suspect?

  2. Michael Lonie says:

    What other liberal beliefs are suspect? Virtually all of them. One of the things that turned me into a conservative from a wishy-washy liberal so many years ago was noticing that liberal policies were not effective. They did not achieve what they set out to do. And liberals are content with that. Schools don’t teach, but liberals are content with that and fight against reform because the NEA is a partisan supporter of the Democratic Party. Conservatives complained about poor quality education for decades, and tried to reform it, but mostly have been stymied by the entrenched stregnth of the bureaucratic, judicial, and liberal political alliance.

    If there are 20,000 hardcore terrorists in Gaza you’ll probably have to kill 15,000 of them to end the attacks. It can’t start too soon. The Arabs/Muslims propose genocide of the Jews. The last time someone did so he made a very effective effort at carrying out this proposal. Kill the new genocidal bastards first, until they are sick of war and prefer peace. They wanted war; give it to them.

  3. Herschel says:

    The PAL schnorers are like the bully that runs home to his momma [UN] when the victim says enough, and fights back,
    and of course, the mommas “perfect” son is always right.

    What really irritates me is the knee jerk “neo-liberal” reaction against Israel retaliation, when Israel is defending itself against daily rocket attack from the hell hole Gaza strip.

    If this is what the liberals and Democrats have become, then I want no part of it!

  4. I would say that this “(yes, there is one) ” is a poor attempt at sarcasm rather than a statement about Hamas being a moderate outfit. But I am in a mellow mood on Sunday mornings ;-)

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