Monday, March 10, 2008

The way of terror and the response

ALAN BAKER
http://www.thestar.com/comment/article/310204

Day after day Canadians are treated – whether through footage on their TV screens or through the reports from correspondents in Jerusalem, Ramallah or Gaza – to what they are told is a "tit-for-tat" or "cycle of violence." Canadians see the ongoing, daily spectre of missile attacks on the Israeli towns of Sderot and Ashkelon and suicide bombings carried out by Hamas or other terror groups from the Gaza Strip, and the response by Israeli forces to such terror attacks, directed against the bombers and the terror infrastructure. Canadians are shown people getting killed and wounded.
But there is something very wrong and misleading in presenting this situation as a "cycle" with equal components. The equation, so glibly presented through the Canadian media to Canadians, between pure, deliberate terror on the one hand, and the attempts to prevent it on the other, is misguided, misleading and creates in itself an utterly false and unfair equivalence.

Hamas and the other terror organizations functioning under its control and supervision in the Gaza Strip are involved in directing the daily rocket firings, which wilfully and deliberately target Israeli homes, schools, hospitals, religious seminaries and kindergartens for the singular purpose of terrorizing and killing as many Israelis as they can.

Death is their only motive. That is the way of terror. That is what happens when they fire 40 or 50 rockets every day in the hope that all will kill. It is deliberate and indiscriminate, and it is directed to terrorize a civilian population. It is not merely illegal and immoral, but it is a violation of the most basic norms and principles of international law. As such it is a war crime of the first dimension, going against all accepted norms of civilization.

Israel does not wilfully and deliberately target civilians, schools, homes and hospitals. Israel has no reason to harm any Palestinian wishing to live peacefully. Israel is obliged – through a very basic need for survival – to defend its citizens against the very terrorists who are actively engaged in firing the rockets and operating the suicide bombers, and only them.

Israel does not indiscriminately target civilian homes, but targets those who send the suicide bombers and equip them with their fatal packages. Israel does not target schools, mosques and hospitals – even when they are perfidiously used by terrorists as a shield for firing missiles. But tragically, because Hamas deliberately places its operatives among the civilian population, innocent Palestinians are harmed in the crossfire, and Hamas uses the news agencies and correspondents to make sure that Canadians are treated to this very selective point of view.

If there were no daily, deliberate rocket-fire against Israeli towns and villages; if the industry of importing missiles, weapons and ammunition from Egypt were to be stopped; if the ongoing and prevalent industry of terror-planning, rocket-building, ammunition-manufacturing and jihadist religious incitement and glorification were to give way to normal industries and economic growth; if the psyche of hatred and terror that prevails over the Gaza Strip were to give way to a psyche of peaceful coexistence, culture and bonvoisinage, then Israel would have neither justification nor need to respond to terror and to defend its citizens.

There is no cycle of violence. But there is terror and the response thereto. If there were no Hamas terror, then there would be no need for an Israeli response. If the Palestinians were to seriously take responsibility over the territory they control and do what any normal territorial neighbour is expected to do – prevent the use of its territory for terror and violence against its neighbour – then Israel would have no cause to defend itself.

No reasonable people can be expected to suffer constant, daily barrages of missiles and the deliberate murder of its civilians without the right to defend itself. This is all the more evident after yesterday's tragic killing in the heart of Jerusalem.

Alan Baker is the Israeli ambassador to Canada.

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