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Israel, Hamas, and moral
idiocy
Much of the world's response is a false moral
equivalence that simply encourages the terrorists.
By Alan M. Dershowitz, CSMonitor
December 31, 2008
Cambridge, Mass. - Israel's decision to take
military action against Hamas rocket attacks
targeting its civilian population has been long in
coming. I vividly recall a visit my wife and I took
to the Israeli city of Sderot on March 20 of this
year. Over the past four years, Palestinian
terrorists – in particular, Hamas and Islamic Jihad
– have fired more than 2,000 rockets at this
civilian area, which is home to mostly poor and
working-class people.
The rockets are designed exclusively to maximize
civilian deaths, and some have barely missed
schoolyards, kindergartens, hospitals, and school
buses. But others hit their targets, killing more
than a dozen civilians since 2001, including in
February 2008 a father of four who had been studying
at the local university. These anticivilian rockets
have also injured and traumatized countless
children.
The residents of Sderot were demanding that their
nation take action to protect them. But Israel's
postoccupation military options were limited, since
Hamas deliberately fires its deadly rockets from
densely populated urban areas, and the Israeli army
has a strict policy of trying to avoid civilian
casualties.
The firing of rockets at civilians from densely
populated civilian areas is the newest tactic in the
war between terrorists who love death and
democracies that love life. The terrorists have
learned how to exploit the morality of democracies
against those who do not want to kill civilians,
even enemy civilians.
The attacks on Israeli citizens have little to do
with what Israel does or does not do. They have
everything to do with an ideology that despises –
and openly seeks to destroy – the Jewish state.
Consider that rocket attacks increased substantially
after Israel disengaged from Gaza in 2005, and they
accelerated further after Hamas seized control last
year.
In the past months, a shaky cease-fire, organized by
Egypt, was in effect. Hamas agreed to stop the
rockets and Israel agreed to stop taking military
action against Hamas terrorists in the Gaza Strip.
The cease-fire itself was morally dubious and
legally asymmetrical.
Israel, in effect, was saying to Hamas: If you stop
engaging in the war crime of targeting our innocent
civilians, we will stop engaging in the entirely
lawful military acts of targeting your terrorists.
Under the cease-fire, Israel reserved the right to
engage in self-defense actions such as attacking
terrorists who were in the course of firing rockets
at its civilians.
Just before the hostilities began, Israel reopened a
checkpoint to allow humanitarian aid to reenter
Gaza. It had closed the point of entry after it had
been targeted by Gazan rockets. Israel's prime
minister, Ehud Olmert, also issued a stern, final
warning to Hamas that unless it stopped the rockets,
there would be a full-scale military response. The
Hamas rockets continued and Israel kept its word,
implementing a carefully prepared targeted air
attack against Hamas targets.
On Sunday, I spoke to the air force general, now
retired, who worked on the planning of the attack.
He told me of the intelligence and planning that had
gone into preparing for the contingency that the
military option might become necessary. The Israeli
air force had pinpointed with precision the exact
locations of Hamas structures in an effort to
minimize civilian casualties.
Even Hamas sources have acknowledged that the vast
majority of those killed have been Hamas terrorists,
though some civilian casualties are inevitable when,
as BBC's Rushdi Abou Alouf – who is certainly not
pro-Israel – reported, "The Hamas security compounds
are in the middle of the city." Indeed, his home
balcony was just 20 meters away from a compound he
saw bombed.
There have been three types of international
response to the Israeli military actions against the
Hamas rockets. Not surprisingly, Iran, Hamas, and
other knee-jerk Israeli-bashers have argued that the
Hamas rocket attacks against Israeli civilians are
entirely legitimate and that the Israeli
counterattacks are war crimes.
Equally unsurprising is the response of the United
Nations, the European Union, Russia, and others who,
at least when it comes to Israel, see a moral and
legal equivalence between terrorists who target
civilians and a democracy that responds by targeting
the terrorists.
And finally, there is the United States and a few
other nations that place the blame squarely on Hamas
for its unlawful and immoral policy of using its own
civilians as human shields, behind whom they fire
rockets at Israeli civilians.
The most dangerous of the three responses is not the
Iranian-Hamas absurdity, which is largely ignored by
thinking and moral people, but the United Nations
and European Union response, which equates the
willful murder of civilians with legitimate
self-defense pursuant to Article 51 of the United
Nations Charter.
This false moral equivalence only encourages
terrorists to persist in their unlawful actions
against civilians. The US has it exactly right by
placing the blame on Hamas, while urging Israel to
do everything possible to minimize civilian
casualties.
• Alan M. Dershowitz is the Felix Frankfurter
professor of law at Harvard Law School. His latest
book is "The Case Against Israel's Enemies: Exposing
Jimmy Carter and Others Who Stand in the Way of
Peace."
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