Louis René Beres:AT FATAH’S SIXTH GENERAL CONGRESS WHY THERE IS STILL NO “CYCLE OF VIOLENCE” BETWEEN ISRAELIS AND PALESTINIANS

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During the presidential election campaign, then Senator Barak Obama made repeated reference to a “cycle of violence” in the Middle East. Although he no longer uses this precise term in describing ongoing conflict between Israel and the Palestinians, now President Obama continues to allege a basic symmetry between the still-warring parties. These allegations, whether explicit or couched in innuendo, are wrong and troubling. Before he can hope to make any real progress with his “Road
Map to Peace in the Middle East,” the president must first understand that there can never be any equivalence between the expressly criminal violence of terrorism, and the law-enforcing resort to counter-terrorism.

For whatever reason, Mr. Obama still accepts an erroneous symmetry between Arab terrorism and Israeli counter-terrorism. This unfortunate acceptance belies his seeming intent to embrace a fair and honorable approach to the problem. More generally, it also has the effect of eroding crucial differences between crime and punishment, between murder and self-defense.

President Obama should now speak more plainly on this vital issue. Words matter! There is no cycle of violence in the Palestinian war against Israeli civilians. All Palestinian terror groups (Fatah, Hamas – there is no real difference) argue openly that their killings of noncombatants are in “retaliation” for Israel’s so-called “occupation.” Indeed, even now, as Fatah holds its Sixth General Congress, the quasi-governmental organization explicitly refuses to renounce “armed struggle.”

President Obama still presses Israel to make further and far-reaching territorial concessions. Yet, Fatah, in its latest “Internal Order Document,” states at Article 17: “The armed popular revolution is the only inevitable way to the liberation of Palestine.” And at Article 19: “The struggle will not end until the elimination of the Zionist entity and the liberation of Palestine.” Of course, “Palestine” still includes all of Israel.

In essence, Fatah’s present position calls officially for terrorism and genocide. From the unambiguous standpoint of international law, there is no reasonable way that such a stance could ever be judged comparable to Israel’s own firm commitment to oppose terrorism and genocide. To argue otherwise – to suggest openly or even tacitly that there remains a “cycle of violence” in the Middle East – would be tantamount to accepting the following: (1) a duly constituted democratic state, and an outlawed terrorist gang, are of equivalent legal stature; and (2) terrorist leaders and defenseless civilians are equally permissible targets.

President Obama should thus make clear that he does not support such an argument. At a minimum, such clarification would greatly enhance his steadily eroding stature among Israelis. Mr. President, there are palpably vital differences between criminality and law-enforcement. Why not say so?

Even if the incessant Palestinian refrain of an Israeli “occupation” were not concocted, and even if the ritualistic claims of “stolen Palestinian land” made any historical or legal sense, there could still never be any legal justification for the deliberate Fatah and Hamas policies of terror and genocide. Significantly, on these common and unhidden policies, there is not a shred of difference between the two groups.

Palestinian “suicide” bombers will soon reemerge with new fervor. These fighters for their own personal immortality will again pack “operational” explosives with nails, screws and razor blades dipped in rat poison. They are, therefore, not “militants.” They are not revolutionaries. They are murderers.

There is no “cycle of violence” in the Middle East. Terror groups never have any right to “retaliate” under international law – no more so than does an individual criminal in domestic society have any such a right against municipal police authorities. Indisputably, on the basis of their own current statements and platforms, Fatah and Hamas are organizations that recognize absolutely no proper boundaries in the use of force. Such boundaries, however, are always a critical and binding
component of humanitarian international law.

What is Israel to do? There is no cycle of violence in the region, only a continuous and fanaticism-driven murder of Israelis on their own land. Left unchallenged by correct naming from Washington, this Jihad or coming war of extermination against Israel will also leave America unprepared for future attacks by new waves of suicide bombers. Such attacks are already being prepared, and are likely to involve chemical, biological or even nuclear materials.

For the sake of America’s safety, it is essential that we now ground our own foreign policies in a truly fair and accurate understanding of both allies and enemies. Correspondingly, it is time for President Barack Obama to finally reject any remaining notion that there is a cycle of violence in the Middle East.

LOUIS RENÉ BERES, Professor of International Law at Purdue, publishes widely on terrorism and
international law. He is author of many of the earliest major books
dealing with nuclear war and nuclear terrorism, and also with Israel’s
nuclear strategy.

Louis René Beres
Professor of International Law
Department of Political Science
Purdue University
West Lafayette IN 47907
USA
TEL 765/494-4189
FAX 765/494-0833
E-MAIL lberes@purdue.edu

Louis René Beres:AT FATAH’S SIXTH GENERAL CONGRESS WHY THERE IS STILL NO “CYCLE OF VIOLENCE” BETWEEN ISRAELIS AND PALESTINIANS

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