Thursday, January 03, 2008

Fight Terrorism First

Israel Kasnett

When President Bush arrives in Israel next week, there is no doubt he will receive a stately welcome with all the pomp he deserves as president of the United St There will be plenty of stretch limos and black SUVs, smiling all around and photo-ops, but beyond all this will lay a deeper mission. The president will have a tremendous opportunity to make a strong and positive difference in the war on terror by pointedly declaring that Israel is absolved of all commitments until the Palestinians show they can cease all terror attacks.

With former Pakistani Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto lying in her freshly dug grave, the Iran crisis and the ongoing war in Iraq, it is easy to see how terrorists have disappointed those who had hoped so long for just a sliver of change.

President Bush will need to focus on the priorities on this trip and the main concern should be to bring about the cessation of terror originating in Gaza and the West Bank. He must understand that Israel finds it impossible and unacceptable to continue negotiating while under constant rocket attacks in the south, smuggling attempts from both Egypt and the West Bank and drive-by shootings – all of which happened within the past week.

While Secretary of State Rice publicly calls on Israel to stop building settlements, President Bush will need to come, and from Jerusalem call on the Palestinians to cease all terror activities. First and foremost, and according to all previously signed agreements, Palestinians must cease all terror activities and show interest in peace before Israel is remotely required to do anything.

For years, Israel has been pushed and shoved into ceding its security concerns for the “bigger picture” but time and experience have shown that when Israel gives, the Palestinians take. How can Israel relinquish everything for the sake of nothing? Palestinian terrorists know that they are succeeding when Rice takes their side, when the world demands Israel continue to supply fuel and electricity to Gaza, and Arab leaders demand a further release of terrorists.

Small portion of larger conflict
If the president takes a softer approach, terrorists will only see this as capitulation and submission. They will see that terror does pay and their efforts do bring reward. This will further fuel their desire to bring Israel to its knees and they will do anything within their reach to “pull a Pakistan.”

Israelis are tired of acquiescence in the face of Palestinian terror and deeply desire a strong, unified global push against terror and its supporters. President Bush needs to be a global leader and firmly assert his allegiance to Israel’s security interests, while pointedly declaring that America will always remain a staunch Israeli ally in the face of Islamic jihadism. He must show a firm stance against Palestinian terrorism before pushing for further negotiations and Israeli concessions.

President Bush is erroneous if he thinks he can eradicate Palestinian terror by first encouraging the establishment of a Palestinian state. By “strengthening” the Palestinian “moderates” and forcing Israel to concede on important issues, America is doing little but providing hope for terrorists and despair for the innocents.

If American and European leaders believe that the Palestinian conflict is the route of instability than the first plantings of stability must be sown here. They too must realize however, that the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is only a small portion of a much larger conflict. If the opposite were true, Benazir Bhutto would still be alive.

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