Frank J. Gaffney, Jr.
August 1, 2006
We cannot afford to pretend that there is an appropriate way for the
United States to fight Islamofascist totalitarians and the terror they
wield against us, then insist that our allies must negotiate with and
try to appease such groups when they are in the Islamofascists'
cross-hairs
On September 11, 2001, a freedom-loving nation was attacked by a
terrorist organization operating from the territory of a sovereign
state with the acquiescence, if not the active complicity, of the
latter's government. The United States retaliated with what can only be
called a "disproportionate response."
America launched air and ground assaults on Afghanistan, aimed at
destroying not only the al Qaeda safe havens but toppling the Taliban
regime. We damaged or destroyed critical Afghan infrastructure so as to
deny its use to the enemy. Civilian casualties occurred, as did refugee
flows. At one point, the UN declared the resulting dislocation a
humanitarian crisis.
Once the campaign to eliminate al Qaeda was launched, there was no
consideration given to negotiating with the terrorists or the
government that afforded them protection. The United States would not
have contemplated a UN-mandated ceasefire, let alone the insertion of
an international peacekeeping force under a Chapter 7 mandate from the
Security Council — whose purpose, inevitably, would have been to
protect the terrorists from our military, not the other way around.
And most especially, it would have been inconceivable that the U.S.
could accede to one of its enemy's central demands — for example, the
removal of all American forces from the Mideast — as part of a
negotiated ceasefire brokered by the UN and approved by the Taliban at
the direction of al Qaeda.
It is therefore stunning, not to say depressing, to see how the Bush
Administration's early, strong support for Israel's response to the
murderous attacks on its territory by the terrorist group, Hezbollah,
has morphed in recent days.
First, Israel was told it must not undermine the Lebanese government,
even though the latter had not only acquiesced to what amounts to a
Hezbollah-controlled state-within-a-state in southern Lebanon. The
government in Beirut actually has two Hezbollah ministers in its
cabinet — a role al Qaeda never enjoyed in Taliban Afghanistan. This
injunction had the practical effect of limiting Israeli efforts to
press officials in Beirut to disassociate themselves from the
terrorists in their midst.
Then, the U.S. embraced the idea that Israel must reward the government
that has allowed Hezbollah to occupy and operate against the Jewish
State from the part of south Lebanon the Israelis foolishly and
unilaterally vacated in 2000. Where we destroyed the regime that
afforded safe haven to our foes, Israel has been told it must make a
further territorial concession to its counterpart by surrendering to
Lebanon a small area known as Shebaa Farms that Israel has occupied
since 1967.
Never mind that Shebaa Farms was not Lebanese territory to begin with;
Israel conquered it from Syria in the Six-Day War. The character of
this area was confirmed by none other than the United Nations. It
certified in May 2000 that Israel had withdrawn from all Lebanese
territory, that the Farms are not and have never been part of Lebanon
and that their final status would ultimately have to be settled in
negotiations between Israel and Syria.
Now, however, Israel is being told it must satisfy what amounts to a
demand of Hezbollah — a manufactured pretext for the Iranian-backed
terrorist organization to continue its war against Israel, even after
the Israelis had abandoned the security zone they had wisely maintained
in Lebanon for eighteen years (along with the erstwhile Lebanese allies
who lived there).
It is bad enough that Hezbollah will thus be rewarded for its terrorist
attacks on Israel. The implications of this concession will prove much
worse, however, to the extent the message is conveyed by it that Israel
is not entitled to — and cannot expect to enjoy — inviolable,
internationally recognized borders. To paraphrase an old saw: What
belongs to the Arabs is the Arabs'; what belongs to Israel is
extortable.
Even more problematic is the prospect that the United Nations will
shortly mandate — with U.S. backing and Israel's acquiescence — the
insertion into southern Lebanon of an armed international force. Its
purpose, ostensibly, will be to enforce a ceasefire pursuant to a new
Chapter 7 Security Council resolution. If its job is to "keep" the
peace, not make it, such a force will by definition require Hezbollah's
assent to enter. The peacekeepers will understand, moreover, that they
will be allowed to remain there in safety only if they do not interfere
with the terrorists' rebuilding and resupply activities in south
Lebanon.
The make-up of this force may compound the problem. Under discussion
are troop contributions from places like Turkey, Indonesia and France —
nations that are not likely to prove unfriendly to Hezbollah and that
are, to varying degrees, hostile to Israel. In short, this will be just
another anti-Israel UN mission, providing protection to the Free
World's terrorist foes and doing little if anything to keep them from
readying new attacks on freedom-loving peoples.
For the United States, the current phase of this War for the Free World
began on September 11, 2001. For others, like Israel it has been going
on for decades and represents an unmistakably existential threat. We
cannot afford to pretend that there is an appropriate way for the
United States to fight Islamofascist totalitarians and the terror they
wield against us, then insist that our allies must negotiate with and
try to appease such groups when they are in the Islamofascists'
cross-hairs.