The West has developed a dangerous concern for ‘proportionality.’ In the current epidemic of Palestinian violence, scores of Arab youths are attacking, supposedly spontaneously, Israeli citizens with knives.
Apparently, edged weapons have more Koranic authority, and, in the sense
of media spectacle, they provide greater splashes of blood. Thus the
attacker is regularly described as “unarmed” and a victim when he is
“disproportionately” stopped by bullets.
The Obama State Department has condemned the use of “excessive” Israeli
force in response to Palestinian terrorism. John Kirby, the hapless
State Department spokesman, blamed “both” sides for terrorism, and the
president himself called on attackers and their victims to “tamp down
the violence.”
In short, the present U.S. government — which is subsidizing the
Palestinians to the tune of hundreds of millions of dollars a year — is
incapable of distinguishing those who employ terrorist violence from the
victims against whom the terrorism is directed. But why is the Obama
administration — which can apparently distinguish those who send out
drones from those who are blown up by them on the suspicion of employing
terrorist violence — morally incapable of calling out Palestinian
violence?
After all, in the American case, we blow away suspects whom we
think are likely terrorists; in the Israeli instance, they shoot or
arrest those who have clearly just committed a terrorist act.
Two reasons stand out.
One, Obama’s Middle East policies are in shambles. Phony red lines, faux
deadlines, reset with Putin, surrendering all the original bargaining
chips in the Iranian deal, snubbing Israel, cozying up to the Muslim
Brotherhood, dismissing the threat of ISIS, allowing Iraq to collapse by
abruptly pulling out all American troops, giving way to serial
indecision in Afghanistan, ostracizing the moderate Sunni regimes,
wrecking Libya, and setting the stage for Benghazi — all of these were
the result of administration choices, not fated events. One of the
results of this collapse of American power and presence in the Middle
East is an emboldened Palestinian movement that has recently renounced
the Oslo Accords and encouraged the offensive of edged weapons.
The Obama Intifada
Mahmoud Abbas, the subsidized president of the self-proclaimed
Palestinian State, and his subordinates have sanctioned the violence.
Any time Palestinians sense distance between the U.S. and Israel, they
seek to widen the breach. When the Obama team deliberately and often
gratuitously signals its displeasure with Israel, then the Palestinians
seek to harden that abstract pique into concrete estrangement.
Amid such a collapse of American power, Abbas has scanned the Middle
East, surveyed the Obama pronouncements — from his initial Al Arabiya
interview and Cairo speech to his current contextualizations and not-so
private slapdowns of Netanyahu — and has wagered that Obama likes Israel
even less than his public statements might suggest. Accordingly, Abbas
assumes that there might be few consequences from America if he incites
another “cycle of violence.”
The more chaos there is, the more CNN videos of Palestinian terrorists
being killed by Israeli civilians or security forces, the more NBC clips
of knife-wielding terrorists who are described as unarmed, and the more
MSNBC faux maps of Israeli absorption of Palestine, so all the more the
Abbas regime and Hamas expect the “international community” to force
further Israeli concessions.
The Palestinians hope that they are entering yet another stage in their endless war against Israel. But this time, given the American recessional, they have new hopes that the emerging Iran–Russia–Syria–Iraq–Hezbollah axis could offer ample power in support of the violence and could help to turn the current asymmetrical war more advantageously conventional.
The Palestinians hope that they are entering yet another stage in their endless war against Israel. But this time, given the American recessional, they have new hopes that the emerging Iran–Russia–Syria–Iraq–Hezbollah axis could offer ample power in support of the violence and could help to turn the current asymmetrical war more advantageously conventional.
The Palestinians
believe, whether accurately or not, that their renewed violence might be
a more brutal method of aiding the administration’s own efforts to
pressure the Israelis to become more socially just, without which there
supposedly cannot be peace in the Middle East.
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But there is a second, more general explanation for the moral
equivalence and anemic response from the White House. The Obama “we are
the ones we’ve been waiting for” administration is the first postmodern
government in American history, and it has adopted almost all the
general culture’s flawed relativist assumptions about human nature.
Affluent and leisured Western culture in the 21st century assumes that
it has reached a stage of psychological nirvana, in which the
Westernized world is no longer threatened in any existential fashion as
it often was in the past. That allows Westerners to believe that they no
longer have limbic brains, and so are no longer bound by Neanderthal
ideas like deterrence, balance of power, military alliances, and the use
of force to settle disagreements. Their wealth and technology assure
them that they are free, then, to enter a brave new world of zero
culpability, zero competition, and zero hostility that will ensure
perpetual tranquility and thus perpetual enjoyment of our present
material bounty.
Our children today play tee-ball, where there are no winners and losers —
and thus they are schooled that competition is not just detrimental but
also can, by such training, be eliminated entirely. Our adolescents are
treated according to the philosophy of “zero tolerance,” in which the
hero who stops the punk from bullying a weaker victim is likewise
suspended from school. Under the pretense of such smug moral
superiority, our schools have abdicated the hard and ancient task of
distinguishing bad behavior from good and then proceeding with the
necessary rewards and punishments.
Our universities have junked military
history, which schooled generations on how wars start, proceed, and
end. Instead, “conflict resolution and peace studies” programs
proliferate, in which empathy and dialogue are supposed to contextualize
the aggressor and thus persuade him to desist and seek help — as if
aggression, greed, and the desire for intimidation were treatable
syndromes rather than ancient evils that have remained dangerous
throughout history.
Under the canons of the last 2,500 years of Western warfare,
disproportionality was the method by which aggressors were either
deterred or stopped.
Human nature is not so easily transcended, just because a new
therapeutic generation has confused its iPhone apps and Priuses with
commensurate moral and ethical advancement.
Under the canons of the last
2,500 years of Western warfare, disproportionality was the method by
which aggressors were either deterred or stopped. Deterrence — which
alone prevented wars — was predicated on the shared assumption that
starting a conflict would bring more violence down upon the aggressor
than he could ever inflict on his victim. Once lost, deterrence was
restored usually by disproportionate responses that led to victory over
and humiliation of the aggressive party.
The wreckage of Berlin trumped anything inflicted by the Luftwaffe on
London. The Japanese killed fewer than 3,000 Americans at Pearl Harbor;
the Americans killed 30 times that number of Japanese in a single March
10, 1945, incendiary raid on Tokyo.
“They have sown the wind, and they
shall reap the whirlwind” was the standard philosophy by which
aggressive powers were taught never again to start hostilities. Defeat
and humiliation led to peace and reconciliation.
The tragic but necessary resort to disproportionate force by the attacked not only taught an aggressor that he could not win the fight he had started, but also reminded him that his targeted enemy might not be completely sane, and thus could be capable of any and all retaliation. Unpredictability and the fear sown by the unknown also help to restore deterrence, and with it calm and peace. In contrast, predictable, proportionate responses can reassure the aggressor that he is in control of the tempo of the war that he in fact started. And worse still, the doctrine of proportionality suggests that the victim does not seek victory and resolution, but will do almost anything to return to the status quo antebellum — which, of course, was disadvantageous and shaped by the constant threat of unexpected attack by its enemies. Westerners are either unwilling or unable to distinguish the more culpable from the more innocent.
The tragic but necessary resort to disproportionate force by the attacked not only taught an aggressor that he could not win the fight he had started, but also reminded him that his targeted enemy might not be completely sane, and thus could be capable of any and all retaliation. Unpredictability and the fear sown by the unknown also help to restore deterrence, and with it calm and peace. In contrast, predictable, proportionate responses can reassure the aggressor that he is in control of the tempo of the war that he in fact started. And worse still, the doctrine of proportionality suggests that the victim does not seek victory and resolution, but will do almost anything to return to the status quo antebellum — which, of course, was disadvantageous and shaped by the constant threat of unexpected attack by its enemies. Westerners are either unwilling or unable to distinguish the more culpable from the more innocent.
They lack the confidence to make moral
judgments.
Applying this to the Middle East, the Palestinians believe that the new
American indifference to the region and Washington’s slapdowns of
Netanyahu have reshuffled relative power. They now hope that there is no
deterrent to violence and that, if it should break out, there will be
only a proportionate and modest response from predictable Westerners.
Under the related doctrine of moral equivalence, Westerners are either
unwilling or unable to distinguish the more culpable from the more
innocent. Instead, because the world more often divides by 55 to 45
percent rather than 99 to 1 percent certainty, Westerners lack the
confidence to make moral judgments — afraid that too many critics might
question their liberal sensitivities, a charge that in the absence of
dearth, hunger, and disease is considered the worst catastrophe facing
an affluent Western elite.
The question is not only whether the Obama administration, in private,
favors the cause of the radical Palestinians over a Western ally like
Israel, but also whether it is even intellectually and morally capable
of distinguishing a democratic state that protects human rights from a
non-democratic, authoritarian, and terrorist regime that historically
has hated the West, and the United States in particular — and is
currently engaged in clear-cut aggression.
—
NRO contributor Victor Davis Hanson is a senior fellow at the Hoover
Institution and the author, most recently, of The Savior Generals.
Read more at: http://www.nationalreview.com/article/425787/obama-palestinians-istaelis
Read more at: http://www.nationalreview.com/article/425787/obama-palestinians-istaelis