- Might the Turkish Military Intervene in Syria?
Dr. Can Kasapoglu
- Two States With a River Between Them: Mudar Zahran
David Haivri
- The Poor Palestinians
Ted Belman
- Jewish Liberals Denigrate Christians, Enable Islamists
Matthew M. Hausman, Att'y
|

Jewish World 1:19 PM 2/14/2012
Middle East 2:15 AM 2/15/2012
Inside Israel 4:12 AM 2/15/2012
Dr. Can Kasapoglu
David Haivri
Ted Belman
Matthew M. Hausman, Att'y
Goldstein on Gelt
Reality Bytes
Dr. Yitzhak Klein heads the Israel Policy Center, Jerusalem, which is dedicated to strengthening Israel's character as a Jewish democracy. He can be contacted at yklein@merkazmedini.org.
|
Iyar 11, 5768, 5/16/2008
Ceasefires and EscalationsThe attack on Gaza should have been launched yesterday. Or better yet, last year. A footnote to the Ashkelon attack: The timing was perfect. The guy with his finger in the launch button must have had his ear glued to Israel radio. As soon as the press reported that the Olmert-Bush powwow was over and their press conference was about to begin, he launched. The press conference got exactly five minutes of coverage during the next two hours. All the peace rhetoric was blown to smithereens for the remainder of Bush's stay. During the war in Vietnam there used to be the following pattern. The North Vietnamese, through their Vietcong terrorist allies, would launch an offensive against South Vietnam. They’d make progress in some places, get stalled in others. The Americans would bomb the heck out of their field forces and supply lines and bring them to the point of collapse. When the Vietnamese wanted a break, they would call for a cease fire—to celebrate the Vietnamese New Year, or May Day, or whatever. This may sound like ancient history but it’s not. The tactic was invented in Moscow (I think it was first used in the Korean War, actually). The Russians taught it to many peoples, including the Iranians. The Iranians taught it to Hizbullah and Hamas. For them it’s not ancient history, it’s just part of the textbook for fighting Western countries. Things that work stay in the textbook generation after generation. Our Islamofascist enemy’s greatest ally is our own hesitation. Israel’s present leadership, of course, wants peace at almost any price (for all I know it’s peace at any price—they just haven’t been put to that test yet, so that neither we nor the enemy can be sure). If we look at what’s happened in the region since the 2nd Lebanon War, however, we can see that the enemy’s strategy, for the meantime, is to play for time. Israel is between the jaws of a pincers in which the enemy has considerable advantages. To attack us it doesn’t need to invade us—just to shoot missiles. Its armies can dig in and wait for us to come to them in prepared defensive positions. As time passes, they get stronger. When they feel reasonably certain we no longer have the strength to go after them, they will attack. Israel’s best strategy is the one most difficult for a democracy to take: Pick one enemy, attack and destroy it, while trying to deter the other from making a move. It should have been done eighteen months ago. It ought to be done today. |