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The Washington Post
Sharon Flinches
By Charles Krauthammer
Friday, December 7, 2001
You would think that the right to self-defense is elementary, a minimal
decency one nation accords another. France has it. We have it. (See
Afghanistan.)
Yet when President Bush's spokesman declared on Dec. 3 that "Israel has
a right to defend herself," it was news. Indeed, it was a thunderclap.
To anyone who follows the baroquely nuanced language of Middle East
diplomacy,
it constituted something wholly new.
For eight years, under the tutelage of a president hungry for a Nobel
Prize, the American position had been that when attacked, Israel should
exercise "restraint" and not contribute to the "cycle of violence."
Everyone
knew that this was no cycle; it was elementary self-defense in the face
of an openly declared campaign of Palestinian terror. But truth could
not be allowed to stand in the way of "peace."
The Bush administration embarrassed itself too. After invoking the
solemn
right to hunt down the terrorists who perpetrated Sept. 11, State
Department
spokesman Philip Reeker was asked (Oct. 15) why he was criticizing
Israel
for doing precisely the same in hunting down Hamas terrorists. Answer:
"I can't really draw a parallel between the two."
Now he can. Now he will. The scale, coordination and sheer horror of
the four bombings in Jerusalem and Haifa in 12 hours on Dec. 1-2
finally
moved the Bush administration to dispel the fog and mendacity of
American
policy during eight years of the Oslo "peace process." Yes, Israel may
defend itself.
When Israel began retaliating for Dec. 1-2 -- Israel's Sept. 11 -- the
State Department issued no criticism. In part, this was anger. State
had just been pushing a campaign of greater American "engagement" in
the Middle East. The president declared his support for a Palestinian
state. Secretary of State Colin Powell gave a speech in Louisville
calling
for an end to "occupation" and the establishment of "Palestine." Bowing
to pressure from Arab leaders (and to mindless criticism from American
editorialists and columnists attributing the rising violence to Bush
administration "unilateralism" and "neglect"), Powell sent his first
personal representative to the region, Marine Gen. Anthony Zinni.
Zinni's
mission is to get a cease-fire. He arrives, and is greeted with a mass
murder of innocent Jews carried out by terrorists operating freely
under
Yasser Arafat. Zinni looks helpless; Powell looks the fool. Even the
State Department is moved by such humiliations.
The administration is also moved by simple truth: The parallel between
America's right to respond to terrorism and Israel's right is no longer
deniable.
The window thus opens for Israel finally to act. Here is the
opportunity
to do as America is doing to the Taliban: destroy the Arafat regime
that
harbors and protects Hamas terrorists. Here is the opportunity to root
out Arafat's infrastructure -- training camps, arms depots, propaganda
organs and eight personal "security" agencies. Here is the opportunity
to detain and deport the Palestinian Authority leadership that brought
Israel more terrorism in the eight years of the "peace process" than
in all of its previous history.
What does Prime Minister Sharon do? He flinches. He temporizes. He
attacks
symbolic targets -- destroys two of Arafat's helicopters, tears up his
Gaza airport runway, flattens a few police stations, blasts the office
next door to Arafat's. The intent is to "send a message," namely, "we
can get you." But the effect is precisely the opposite. It tells
Arafat,
"We can, but we dare not." The message is clear. Israel does not (yet)
have the will -- or the government -- to fight its own war.
Instead, Sharon is hoping that his restraint will encourage the
international
community -- the United States -- to finally acknowledge that Arafat
cynically and consistently uses terrorism, and to therefore take him
down diplomatically by delegitimizing him, derecognizing him and
cutting
off relations.
It is a wan hope. There will be no outside rescue. The shock of Dec.
1-2 will soon wear off. Media attention will wander. Normalcy, i.e.,
dead Jews daily, will return. Soon you will once again be hearing
evenhanded
laments about the "cycle of violence."
There has already been another suicide bombing, on Dec. 5. But the
detonation
was premature. No dead Jews, just injured ones. The world hardly
noticed.
True, the bomber's head was blown into a second-floor suite in a nearby
hotel. But that's old news.
THE MOMENT IS PASSING. THE WINDOW IS CLOSING. SHARON'S POLICY OF
SYMBOLIC
WAR AND SYMPATHETIC WORDS IS NOT A STRATEGY. IT IS THE MUDDLING THROUGH
OF A HOPELESSLY MUDDLED ISRAELI GOVERNMENT, A GOVERNMENT OF NATIONAL
DISUNITY.
AND YET, THERE WILL BE AN ISRAELI MILITARY CAMPAIGN TO DO TO THE
PALESTINIAN
AUTHORITY WHAT THE UNITED STATES HAS DONE TO THE TALIBAN. SOONER OR
LATER,
THE WAR IS COMING. IT IS INEVITABLE. ISRAEL CANNOT BLEED FOREVER.
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