Sultan Knish
In our modern age, things no longer exist to perform their function.
Washing machines aren't designed to clean clothes, but to save water and
energy. Food isn't there to be eaten, but not eaten. And armies aren't
there to win wars, but to be moral. And the truly moral army never
fights a war. When it must fight a war, then it fights it as
proportionately as possible, slowing down when it's winning so that the
enemy has a chance to catch up and inflict a completely proportional
number of casualties on them.
Forget
charging up a hill. Armies charge up the slippery slope of the moral
high ground and they don't try to capture it from the enemy, because
that would be the surest way to lose the moral high ground, instead they
claim the moral high ground by refusing to try and capture it, to
establish their moral claim to the moral high ground, which they can't
have because they refuse to fight for it.
Israel has been engaged
in a long drawn out struggle for the moral high ground. The moral high
ground is to the modern Israel what the land of Israel was to their
pioneer ancestors who drained swamps, built roads and shot bandits; some
of whom were later discovered to be the oppressed peoples of the
region, fresh from Syria or Jordan, and protesting the settlements built
on that stretch of swamp that had been set aside in their revisionist
history as belonging to their great-grandparents, complete with
oversized house keys to some of the choicer logs in the swamp.
Sadly
the only way to win the moral high ground is by losing. Just look at
the massive Arab armies who repeatedly invaded Israel, did their best to
overwhelm it with the best Soviet iron that the frozen factories of the
Ural could turn out, and lost the bid to drive the Jews into the sea,
but won the moral high ground. Then their terrorist catspaws spent
decades winning the moral high ground by hijacking airplanes full of
civilians, murdering Olympic athletes and pushing old men in wheelchairs
from the decks of cruise ships.
All these killing sprees
accomplished absolutely nothing useful, aside from the killing of Jews,
which to a certain sort of mind is a useful thing in and of itself, but
that failure won the terrorist catspaws the moral high ground. Their
failure to win a war by hijacking buses full of women and taking the
children of a school hostage conclusively established their moral
superiority and nobility of spirit.
The world was deeply moved
when Arafat waddled up to the UN podium, with his gun, wearing a
mismatched cotton rag on his head that would decades hence become the
modish apparel of every third hipster standing in line with a can of 20
dollar fair trade Lima beans at Whole Foods, because his commitment to
killing people in a failed cause that even he didn't believe in exchange
for money from his backers in the Muslim world showed his deep
commitment to the moral high ground.
In the seventies, after
Israel had ton a few too many wars, Henry "Woodcutter" Kissinger,
suggested that it lose a war to gain the sympathy of the world. Golda
wasn't too enthusiastic about the idea, but with the old woodcutter in
charge of handing out the axes, there wasn't much choice about it.
Israel came close to being destroyed in '73, but just when it might have
won the sympathy of the world, its armies of young men dashing from
synagogues into overcrowded taxis to get to the front lines, turned the
tide. Israel won. The woodcutter of Washington lost and Israeli
scrapyards filled up with piles of Soviet steel, which was good news for
the big sweaty guys who ran them, but bad news for those pining for the
lofty fjords of the moral high ground.
In '91 the Israelis went
nuclear and decided to beat Arafat at his own game. Rabin and Peres
talked the old terrorist out of retirement and down to Washington D.C.
where they surrendered to him in an official ceremony at the Rose Garden
overseen by a beaming Bill Clinton. Finally Israel had won the moral
high ground. And the United States had carved off a chunk of that
delicious moral high ground, even though Clinton was forced to fidget in
his chair at Oslo when his Nobel Peace Prize went to the greasy
terrorist, though perhaps he should have considered that defeat to be
another victory of the moral high ground.
But
the moral high ground proved notoriously elusive for the Jewish State.
There was a brief lull when it seemed that the original sin of kicking
ass had been atoned for in the Rose Garden, but then the terrorists
started killing Israelis again and the Israelis insisted on fighting
back. In no time at all the moral high ground was roped off with a
special reserved section for terrorists and a sign reading, "No Israelis
Will Be Admitted Unless They Renounce Their Government, Zionism and the
Right of Self-Defense."
Peace was the last best hope of the new
Israeli Hatikvah, not to be a free people in their own land, but to be a
moral people in a land that didn't really belong to anyone in
particular, but that they were optimistic everyone could live in harmony
in.
But peace with terrorists meant not fighting back and there
was a limit to what the 70 percent of the country that didn't go to
sleep fantasizing about peace would accept in the name of peace.
And
so, terrorists killed Israelis, Israelis killed terrorists, that part
of the world located in an ugly modernist building overlooking Turtle
Bay, which the turtles would like to have back, condemned Israel and
demanded that it resolve things peacefully by surrendering more land to
the terrorists in order to build up their confidence in Israel's
commitment to a peaceful solution.
The terrorists were not
expected to reciprocate and build up Israel's confidence in their
commitment to a peaceful solution because they already had the moral
high ground by way of losing the last thirty engagements with the IDF,
including the battle of the school they set up snipers in, the church
they took over and the hospital that they used as an ammo dump.
The
great quandary for Israeli leaders is how to win a war without losing
the moral high ground. This is a tricky matter because it requires
winning the war and winning the peace. And you can't do both at the same
time.
Israel's solution has been to fight limited wars while
remaining absolutely committed to peace. No sooner does a war begin,
then it is pressed to accept a ceasefire. To show its commitment to
peace, Israel is expected to accept the ceasefire. At which point Hamas
will begin shooting rockets again and the whole dance will begin all
over again. But Israel has trouble refusing a ceasefire because its
leaders still believe that they can get at the moral high ground by
showing that they are more committed to peace than the other side.
The
peace is however unwinnable. It's not even survivable in the long term.
Peace either exists as a given condition or it is maintained by strong
armies and ready deterrence. Peace cannot be found on the moral high
ground, only the mountains of the graves of the dead.
Seeking
the moral high ground is a fool's quest. Wars cannot be fought without
hurting someone and trumpeting your morality makes it all too easy for
your enemies to charge you with hypocrisy. The man who spends the most
time vociferously protesting that he isn't a thief, that he has never
touched a penny that belonged to anyone else and that he will swear on a
floor-to-ceilling stack of bibles to that effect, looks far guiltier
than the man who scowls and tells his accusers to mind their own
business. The more Israel defends its own morality, the more it winds
the chains of the accusers around its own neck.
Refining its
warfighting with the object of fighting a truly moral war leads to
refined techniques that kill terrorists but still cause some collateral
damage, and to soldiers that are more afraid of shooting than of being
shot at. And all this painstaking effort goes for naught since it really
makes very little difference to Israel's enemies whether they have one
photo of a dead Muslim civilian to brandish or a thousand. Either one
makes for the same manner of indictment. In aiming to win the peace,
Israel instead, like all modern states, loses the war.
The father
of an Israeli soldier told his son after he was called up for duty that
he would rather visit him in prison than visit him in the cemetery. "If
you are fired on, fire back." That is good advice not just for that
young man, but for his entire country, and for the civilized world. It
is better to fire than be fired upon. It is better to be thought a
criminal, than mourned in Holocaust museums. It is better to leave the
moral high ground to those who worship the romance of endless bloodshed
and defeat. It is better to lose the peace and win the war.
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