Monday, December 29, 2008

"I've been asked what an appropriate Israeli response to the rockets would have been: That's my answer. Policies that direct us across that continuum"

This treatment of Ezra Klein defies belief:

"FEAR.

As expected, my inbox has filled up with e-mails accusing me of anti-semitism, and Israel hatred, and all the rest( THAT'S DISGRACEFUL ). So be it. But the danger that confronts Israel in 2009 is not the danger that confronted Israel in 1959. There will be no conventional attack. There will be no coalition of Arab armies that can face the might of the Israeli Defense Forces, much less the American armed forces. Hamas cannot push Israel into the sea. It cannot even disrupt Israel's blockade of medical supplies.

Israel's threats are asymmetric. One man with one bomb. One terrorist group able to lay its hands on one nuclear weapon. One splinter sect able to detonate one biological agent. And this threat endures as long as Israel is hated and the oppression of the Palestinians remains a central ideological cause in the Arab world. The way to secure Israel is not to firebomb the Palestinian people and flood the Arab world with photographs of maimed children and dead mothers and charred schoolyards. It is to end those images.

It may indeed be that many in the Arab world will never content themselves with the Jewish state. But many is better than most, and some would be better than many, and a few extremists would be better than some. I've been asked what an appropriate Israeli response to the rockets would have been: That's my answer. Policies that direct us across that continuum. That are strategic rather than cathartic. Instead, there is no doubt that there are more anti-Israel terrorists today than there were last week, and more plans for vengeance and destruction and death and murder than there were last month. Most of those will fade away. Most of the rest will fail. But what if one doesn't? How many chances can we take?

I agree with him.

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