Israel disrupted its
neighbors' afternoon nap on Wednesday. In fact, the nuisance had the
world wake up from its siesta. That West, that sleeping beauty that has
all but passed out, had been dreaming about Iran being gradually
transformed into a moderate nation when those rude Israeli commandos
raided a Panamanian-flagged merchant vessel some 1,500 kilometers (930
miles) away from home, seizing M-302 missiles that had been dispatched
from Syria to the Gaza Strip, by way of Iran.
This perception of
Israel has its origins in 1972, when the elite special forces unit
Sayeret Matkal freed the passengers aboard a hijacked Sabena plane. It
was reinforced in the wake of the daring Israeli mission in Entebbe,
Uganda in 1976, when the Israel Defense Forces rescued some 100 Israeli
hostages whose plane had been taken over by Palestinian terrorists and
diverted to Africa, and in 1988, when Khalil al-Wazir, the second in
command in the Palestine Liberation Organization, was assassinated by
Israeli commandos in his Tunis home. Later, in 2002, Israel's Flotilla
13 naval commando unit seized Karine A in the high waters of the Red Sea
before its Iranian-dispatched weapons could reach the Gaza Strip. The
most recent raid was a culmination of a lengthy undertaking that
required a great deal of preparation.
By and large, Israelis
view such operations as a badge of honor, although there a few who are
saddened whenever the IDF's popularity soars (Haaretz columnist Gideon
Levy recently criticized Channel 2's Ilana Dayan for speaking with U.S.
Secretary of State John Kerry about the sacrifice her colleagues'
children have to make when they serve in the military).
The seizure of Klos C
was not about Israeli pride. It was designed to make sure Hamas did not
lay its hands on a lethal weapons system whose explosive payload of 150
kilograms (330 pounds) can target major population centers in Israel.
The operation has other aspects, too. It helps the government as it
tries to have the world see Iran for the terrorist epicenter it really
is and undo the effect of its smiling leaders. The images of Israeli
special forces on that ship help drive home this message in European and
American households; they offer a counter-narrative that stands in
stark contrast to what the Iran-pleasers in the West are doing.
The media has already
mused whether the government lifted the news embargo on the raid because
it helped Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's U.S. visit. If Netanyahu
were such top-notch Hollywood director, he would have made sure the raid
coincided with his summit with U.S. President Barack Obama several days
ago, or at the very least, with his speech before the American Israel
Public Affairs Committee on Tuesday.
Yes, the news of the
operation was made public before the troops were safely back home. Was
the decision motivated by a desire to improve the coverage of
Netanyahu's trip? If I were speaking on behalf of the government, I
would have this answer: Yes! Many Israelis have lamented that Israel's
public diplomacy efforts have lacked a proactive posture that prepares
public opinion rather than reacts to it. Remember that botched operation
to divert the Gaza-bound Turkish-led flotilla in 2010? This time
around, public diplomacy took a front-row seat.
The world may be tuned
out, but Israel must nevertheless scream and shout. The attempted
shipment of arms through the Klos C was in violation of United Nations
Security Council resolutions (why has the Israeli Foreign Ministry yet
to lodge a complaint with the U.N.?). The intercepted delivery shows
that Tehran is engaging in illicit activity behind Egypt's back, forging
new ties with Hamas in the Gaza Strip. Eventually people will realize
that for the ayatollah regime, lying is just part of its daily life,
part of a routine.
When the IDF
intercepted the Karine A, then-Palestinian Authority Chairman Yasser
Arafat swore he had nothing to do with the shipment. Israel then made
sure implicating information was shared with then-U.S. President George
W. Bush. For Bush, this turned the Palestinian leader into a liar, an
image he could not shed for the rest of his life.
This is Karine A all over again,
and this time the villain is Iran. Tehran said it had nothing to do with
it, but the Israeli intelligence, which has won praise all over, would
be well-served if it provided a smoking gun proving that the ayatollahs
have lied, again. This is just part of the game.
No comments:
Post a Comment