http://www.northjersey.com/news/opinions/op-ed/mideast_040711.html

 

A double-standard in fight against terrorism? 

Thursday, April 7, 2011 

BY CLIFFORD D. MAY

The Record

Clifford D. May is president of the Foundation for the Defense of
Democracies, a policy institute focusing on terrorism.

THE SO-CALLED International Community has justified military intervention in
Libya on humanitarian grounds: Col. Moammar Gadhafi was threatening mass
murder in Benghazi. Fair enough.

But for years, Iran has been threatening mass murder in every city, town and
village of Israel. So, too, has Hamas, Iran's client, which rules Gaza and
has fired thousands of rockets and mortars into Israel. Fatah, which rules
the West Bank, incites terrorism against Israelis while its al-Aqsa Martyrs
Brigade kills Israelis whenever it gets the chance.

Would it be unfair to ask: In the eyes of the International Community, are
the good people of Benghazi worth more than the good people of Tel Aviv?

Of course, Israelis do not want or need foreign military forces to defend
them. They would be immensely grateful, however, were the International
Community to recognize that Israelis have a right and an obligation to
defend themselves.

In December 2008 Israel defended itself against Hamas. Less than a year
later, the United Nations Human Rights Council issued the Goldstone Report,
accusing Israel of war crimes. Last weekend, Richard Goldstone, the South
African jurist in charge of writing the report, made clear in an essay in
The Washington Post that those charges were baseless. Or, as a National
Review editorial put it, Goldstone offered "the closest thing to an apology
that we expect to see from him: an acknowledgment of the incompleteness of
the evidence behind his report and an expression of 'regret' that his panel
did not offer a fuller picture. Reversing himself on the key issue, he now
accepts that civilians in Gaza were not targeted intentionally as a matter
of policy."

That Hamas intentionally and routinely targets civilians, and uses
Palestinian civilians as human shields, cannot be disputed.

Would it be unfair to ask President Obama, who has put such stock in the
International Community, to demand that the United Nations now officially
repudiate the Goldstone blood libel?

What Obama is doing instead: Telling Israelis he expects them to make more
concessions to Palestinian leaders who refuse to make any concessions of
their own and who have been unwilling even to negotiate with Israel.

That's not all: Quoting "normally reliable diplomatic sources," The
Economist reports that Obama is encouraging Europeans to be even tougher on
Israel. Why doesn't Obama just twist Israel's arm harder all by himself if
that's what he wants to do?

According to the well-regarded British journal, Obama has told European
leaders that he has " 'too many domestic fires to extinguish' to risk a
bust-up over Israel." Would it be unfair to characterize that as duplicity
directed at an ally in the service of domestic political advantage?

If Obama's aim is to make America's only reliable ally in the Middle East
feel more insecure, isolated and embattled, he could not have chosen a
better time. On one hand, it's encouraging for them to see Arab masses at
long last rising up against corrupt and oppressive dictators who for
generations have blamed every ill - from economic deprivation to shark
attacks in the Red Sea - on Israelis and/or Jews.

On the other hand, few Israelis are confident that, in the end, the pens of
Arab moderates will prove mightier that the swords of Arab jihadis.

And is there anyone in Washington or Brussels who can imagine any Arab
leader making peace with Israel at this hinge moment in Middle Eastern
history? If one were to do so, what are the odds he'd still be in power - or
even still alive - a year from now?

Israelis want peace and will make sacrifices to achieve it. But they have
learned that the "land-for-peace" formula is a dead end - literally. Israel
came into possession of Gaza, southern Lebanon and the Sinai following
defensive wars.

Israel withdrew from Gaza and it became a base for Iranian-backed Hamas
terrorists.

Israel withdrew from southern Lebanon and it became a base for
Iranian-backed Hezbollah terrorists.

Israel withdrew from Sinai and it is too soon to know what that Egyptian
territory will become in the uncertain months ahead.

In a historic speech in 2002, President George W. Bush said the United
States would support the creation of a Palestinian state - so long as it was
not a terrorist state.

Surely, it would not be unfair to ask Obama if he agrees with that
formulation. Because if he does, his policies, like those of the
International Community, require serious adjustment.

 



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