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Moral Clarity in Gaza


Late Saturday, thousands of Gazans received Arabic-language cell-phone messages from the Israeli military, urging them to leave homes where militants might have stashed weapons.

-- Associated Press, Dec. 27

Some geopolitical conflicts are morally complicated. The Israel-Gaza war is not. It possesses a moral clarity not only rare but excruciating.

Israel is so scrupulous about civilian life that, risking the element of surprise, it contacts enemy noncombatants in advance to warn them of approaching danger. Hamas, which started this conflict with unrelenting rocket and mortar attacks on unarmed Israelis -- 6,464 launched from Gaza in the past three years -- deliberately places its weapons in and near the homes of its own people.

This has two purposes. First, counting on the moral scrupulousness of Israel, Hamas figures civilian proximity might help protect at least part of its arsenal. Second, knowing that Israelis have new precision weapons that may allow them to attack nonetheless, Hamas hopes that inevitable collateral damage -- or, if it is really fortunate, an errant Israeli bomb -- will kill large numbers of its own people for which, of course, the world will blame Israel.

For Hamas, the only thing more prized than dead Jews are dead Palestinians. The religion of Jew-murder and self-martyrdom is ubiquitous. And deeply perverse, such as the Hamas TV children's program in which an adorable live-action Palestinian Mickey Mouse is beaten to death by an Israeli (then replaced by his more militant cousin, Nahoul the Bee, who vows to continue on Mickey's path to martyrdom).

At war today in Gaza, one combatant is committed to causing the most civilian pain and suffering on both sides. The other combatant is committed to saving as many lives as possible -- also on both sides. It's a recurring theme. Israel gave similar warnings to Southern Lebanese villagers before attacking Hezbollah in the Lebanon war of 2006. The Israelis did this knowing it would lose for them the element of surprise and cost the lives of their own soldiers.

That is the asymmetry of means between Hamas and Israel. But there is equal clarity regarding the asymmetry of ends. Israel has but a single objective in Gaza -- peace: the calm, open, normal relations it offered Gaza when it withdrew in 2005. Doing something never done by the Turkish, British, Egyptian and Jordanian rulers of Palestine, the Israelis gave the Palestinians their first sovereign territory ever in Gaza.

What ensued? This is not ancient history. Did the Palestinians begin building the state that is supposedly their great national aim? No. No roads, no industry, no courts, no civil society at all. The flourishing greenhouses that Israel left behind for the Palestinians were destroyed and abandoned. Instead, Gaza's Iranian-sponsored rulers have devoted all their resources to turning it into a terror base -- importing weapons, training terrorists, building tunnels with which to kidnap Israelis on the other side. And of course firing rockets unceasingly.

The grievance? It cannot be occupation, military control or settlers. They were all removed in September 2005. There's only one grievance and Hamas is open about it. Israel's very existence.

Nor does Hamas conceal its strategy. Provoke conflict. Wait for the inevitable civilian casualties. Bring down the world's opprobrium on Israel. Force it into an untenable cease-fire -- exactly as happened in Lebanon. Then, as in Lebanon, rearm, rebuild and mobilize for the next round. Perpetual war. Since its raison d'etre is the eradication of Israel, there are only two possible outcomes: the defeat of Hamas or the extinction of Israel.

Israel's only response is to try to do what it failed to do after the Gaza withdrawal. The unpardonable strategic error of its architect, Ariel Sharon, was not the withdrawal itself but the failure to immediately establish a deterrence regime under which no violence would be tolerated after the removal of any and all Israeli presence -- the ostensible justification for previous Palestinian attacks. Instead, Israel allowed unceasing rocket fire, implicitly acquiescing to a state of active war and indiscriminate terror.

Hamas's rejection of an extension of its often-violated six-month cease-fire (during which the rockets never stopped, just were less frequent) gave Israel a rare opportunity to establish the norm it should have insisted upon three years ago: no rockets, no mortar fire, no kidnapping, no acts of war. As the U.S. government has officially stated: a sustainable and enduring cease-fire. If this fighting ends with anything less than that, Israel will have lost yet another war. The question is whether Israel still retains the nerve -- and the moral self-assurance -- to win.

letters@charleskrauthammer.com


# reads: 336

Original piece is http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/01/01/AR2009010101780_pf.html


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Israel"s moral position needs to be more prominently flagged in the world"s media, which at the moment are focusing on the shocking injuries sustained by the children in Gaza. This sells papers and obviously arouses world wide sympathy. The Sydney media made a passing mention of warning phone calls but this message has been lost amid the graphic images of the dead and wounded. The attacks by Hamas onto Israel has had a passing mention but one gets the impression that the freqency of such attacks is intermittent - the number mentioned in the article astounded me. One other thought: will violence bring about peace or provide more material for Islamic extremism to promote its obscene program of suicide bombing martrydom?

Posted by kc sydney 06/01/09 on 2009-01-06 09:42:04 GMT


Absolutely right. It is sickening to hear media people in anti-Israel demonstrations today saying Israel is the new South Afica/Apartheid system - a moral inversion if there ever was one with it being the only truly democratic, civilised state in the region. If you want to see an apartheid system why not look at Saudi Arabia with its discrimination against women, Jews, Christians, in fact everyone who is not a Wahabi Muslim.

Posted by Davidjohn on 2009-01-03 14:51:25 GMT


MM is wrong. The Palestinians are not stupid (what a ridiculous thing to say): they are hostage - in Gaza - to Hamas politics. The key to a genuine settlement in the region is to nurture moderate (mainstream) Palestinian opinion so that coexistence is possible. In the meantime, Israel has the absolute right to act to protect its lawful territories and its people. If that means attacking Gaza, then in the context, that"s quite legitimate. We must never forget that Israel is the Levant"s only genuine democracy and the only jurisdiction that lives under the rule of impartial law. That this is a western (as well as Jewish) concept presents a problem that the world must still work through.

Posted by RL on 2009-01-03 14:39:41 GMT


Is an excellent expose & is worth disseminating. Dr.Benjamin C cOHNEY

Posted by B on 2009-01-03 12:47:20 GMT


Charles Krauthammer can alwyas be relied on to tell it straight. He is an astute observer and commentator.

Posted on 2009-01-03 12:46:33 GMT