Making peace with your enemies is one thing, but
dealing with sadists is impossible.
Once again, Palestinian terrorists have shown a perverse genius
for hurting Israelis yet uniting them – even as the international media mostly
ignores the Palestinian crime. When two 16-year-olds and a 19-year-old are
abducted hitchhiking – they are no longer “yeshiva students” or “settlers” but
simply “our kids.” Israel becomes one intimate kibbutz as we all see our own
children, friends or neighbors in the smiling photos repeatedly broadcast of
Naftali Frankel, Gilad Sha’ar and Eyal Yifrach.
I have had a sick feeling in my stomach since hearing the news – terrified by
what those kids must be enduring, while heartbroken in feeling their parents’
anguish, too.
Conversations with other terror victims have taught me that if Naftali, Gilad,
and Eyal are still alive, they are replaying their mental tape of Thursday
night repeatedly, imprisoned in the “if only” regret game, blaming themselves
for doing something that is quite routine. If they survive – and we desperately
hope they do – they will struggle with the Israeli terror victim’s
vertigo-inducing life lesson: although targeted deliberately as members of a
despised group, their particular victimization was random.
Similarly, the parents are playing “what if” scenarios over as they feel
paralyzed by fear, bargaining with God, hoping that somehow, their kids will
“only” be traumatized by being kidnapped, rather than brutalized or killed. The
cost too many have paid to live in this land is too high – losing so many
precious gems. But the traditional cliché remains true: “ein breira,” we have
no choice, we cannot run away back to statelessness and impotence.
While every life is precious, kidnapping teenagers is particularly cruel. It
shows these terrorists have no ethics, no limits to their hatred – and to their
rejection of any chance at peace. What kind of a person kidnaps a teenager –
and what kind of a people celebrates such evil? The Palestinians distributing
candy to celebrate this empty “victory” disgust me. Cartoons celebrating
catching these three teenagers, showing mice with Jewish stars dangling on a
fishing rod (that the vigilant Palestinian Media Watch translated), enrage me –
and this from Fatah, Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas’s “moderate”
movement if we swallow the naïve Obama-Kerry peace-processing Kool-Aid.
Making peace with your enemies is one thing, but dealing with sadists is
impossible.
When will the world pressure the Palestinians to change their thuggish
totalitarian political culture rather than always blaming democratic Israel? In
this nasty neighborhood, Israel must restore the balance of dread, whereby our
enemies fear us more than we fear them. The Israeli government should shut down
the West Bank until Naftali, Gilad and Eyal are freed.
I desperately hope for peace but unhappily must prepare for war. Prime Minister
Binyamin Netanyahu can find encouragement in Machiavelli’s insight that it can
be “a very wise thing to simulate madness.” Palestinians must fear Israel’s
response when they target us – terrorists themselves can be terrorized if their
own people turn on them and say “stop” – a word most Palestinians have failed
to use with the murderers they idolize.
If Hamas is truly moderating as America and the rest of the world
have decided it is, here is an opportunity for statesmanship.Hamas leader
Ismail Haniyeh could free the kids as thanks for earlier Israeli medical
treatment of his mother-in-law and his late granddaughter.
A Palestinian leader saving these Israeli teens could make an epoch-changing
gesture comparable to Egyptian president Anwar Sadat visiting Jerusalem. He
would earn Israelis’ gratitude, demonstrate his power in the territories and
demonstrate that he truly wants peace. There has to be some Palestinian leader
brave enough to challenge his people to seek a different path. Do they really
want the word “Palestinian” to be most freely associated in the civilized world
with the word “terrorism?” Is that who they are? Is that who they wish to be?
In a world whose one constant is change, leaders – and followers – can make
things better or worse. Fifteen years ago, Palestinian leaders were pitching
Gaza as a tourist destination, as millennial Oslo hopes soared, even amid
tensions. Then the Palestinians turned from peace talks back to terrorism; yes
I blame them, as Bill Clinton and other experts do. Israeli counterattacks
finally produced today’s relative quiet – which the kidnappers now threaten. We
need Palestinians courageous enough to end their people’s addiction to violence
– and Israelis brave enough to respond warmly if such moves occur.
Willingness to compromise can telegraph strength, not weakness. President John
Kennedy cleverly distinguished between compromises of “issues, not of
principles,” explaining, “we can compromise our political positions but not
ourselves.” Israel’s borders can be debated and adjusted – but we will not
compromise our existence or our children’s safety. Fury at Palestinian crimes
will not blind me to our own shortcomings – or stop me from trying to lure the
dove of peace, even when the weather turns stormy.
This duality has shaped Israeli success since 1948: ever vigilant in both
defending and building the state; seeking peace while preparing for war;
sheathing the sword whenever possible but keeping it sharp and ready, because
“ein breira,” we have no choice. We must defend our children and ourselves.