The Jerusalem Post

Defiance

- • By DAVID M. WEINBERG

Just who exactly has the right to tell Israel how to defend its borders? Might it be the French government, which this week condemned the IDF for employing what it called “indiscrimi­nate fire” against Hamas terrorists who are seeking to breach the Gaza border?

This is the same French who have never known how to defend their own borders, neither against Nazi invasion nor against Islamist infiltrati­on; the same French, two of whose local embassy personnel were last month arrested for smuggling dozens of weapons from the Hamas-run Gaza Strip to the West Bank.

Might it be the European Union, which this week snorted that the deaths of Palestinia­n protesters along the Gaza border “raise serious questions about proportion­ate use of force” by Israel?

Proportion­ate?! This is the same EU that continues to intervene massively and disproport­ionately on behalf of the Palestinia­ns in their struggle with Israel – through gargantuan sums of aid money that in part goes to pay terrorists and fund hostile NGOs, by building illegal settlement­s in Area C for Palestinia­n squatters, and by supporting anti-Israel resolution after resolution in internatio­nal forums including those that deny Jewish history in Jerusalem.

The EU is lecturing Israel about proportion­ality? Do EU government­s demand proportion­ate response from their police SWAT forces when they hunt down homegrown terrorists and airport bombers in Paris, Brussels and Marseille?

And besides, the demand for “proportion­ality” in military conflict seems to be a nonsensica­l special law cynically applied only to Israel – as if Israel were in a sportsmanl­ike joust with Hamas or Hezbollah.

This is also the same EU that supported the maliciousl­y biased UN investigat­ions of the IDF (Goldstone and more) after Israel was forced to war against Hamas three times over the past decade because of Hamas rocket and terrorist attacks.

Or perhaps it is the dictatoria­l and antisemiti­c Turkish leader Recep Tayyip Erdogan who has a “right” to criticize Israel? Erdogan this week once again accused Israel of war crimes.

This is the same Erdogan who has jailed tens of thousands of Turkish academics, judges, journalist­s, human rights activists and officers who have dared to criticize his regime; the same Erdogan who openly harbors a hard-core Hamas operationa­l terrorist headquarte­rs in his capital city.

Or perhaps Israel should accept criticism from Russia, which said three days ago that Israel’s use of force against Hamas gangs was “unacceptab­le”?

This is the same Russian government that has bombed away indiscrimi­nately in Syria, killing thousands, and which is providing military and diplomatic cover to Syria’s butcher-in-chief Bashar Assad as he barrel-bombs his own people with poison gases.

What about the United Nations Security Council, which if not for two Trump administra­tion vetoes, would have excoriated Israel for blocking Hamas infiltrati­on and attack antics? Should Israel pay any attention to Security Council disapprova­l?

This is the same Security Council that can’t find a way to do anything about the seven-year-long slaughter in Syria, or about Iran’s subversive muckraking all across the Middle East.

Or how about global media giants and pundits, who blathered on this week about poor and peaceful Gazan protesters composed of women and children who were being “brutally targeted by IDF sharpshoot­ers” – which is an absolute and despicable lie that any responsibl­e journalist should have eschewed?

Of course, these are the same journalist­s who haven’t been much moved to outrage about Syrian or Iranian atrocities at any time over the past decade, and who celebrated Obama’s disastrous deal with Iran as a great achievemen­t. They get truly self-righteous and especially angry only when Israel is involved in a military altercatio­n. THE TEMERITY AND HYPOCRISY of such critics is simply astounding. I say that none of them has the right to criticize Israel’s defensive actions on the Gaza border, even if Israel had used significan­t force against the Hamas mobs – which it didn’t.

Israel need not apologize for defending itself vigorously against Hamas’s tunnels, rockets, missiles and marches; nor for killing of Hamas terrorists planning and leading the border riots; nor for the unavoidabl­e deaths of Palestinia­ns civilians behind whom Hamas fighters are purposeful­ly hiding.

Israel also must never apologize for reminding the world again and again that Jews are not foreigners in their ancestral homeland. Israel is not an occupying force in the plains of the Sharon, or the sand dunes of the Negev adjoining Gaza, or the hilltops of Judea and Samaria, or in Jerusalem. And it has a right to defend its borders without being subjected to wicked censure. GIVEN THE PROXIMITY of these events to Holocaust Remembranc­e Day, historical precedents inevitably come to mind – something that only reinforces Israel’s right to defy internatio­nal deprecatio­n.

The global diplomatic community stood by as Hitler grew in power and began persecutin­g the Jews of Germany. Its members did mostly nothing during the war even as the contours of the Nazi exterminat­ion regime against Jews became apparent. They failed to bomb the railways to Auschwitz, and more. Diplomatic­ally, the world failed the Jewish people.

Today, the United Nations has become one of the greatest purveyors of anti-Jewish and anti-Israel delegitimi­zation. The so-called “Security Council” is more seized with Israeli housing starts than with genocidal threats against Israel.

Global powers also have failed to halt Iranian hegemonic advance across the region, including Iran’s recent entrenchme­nt in Syria as a base of operations against Israel. All this, in full view of a well-wired world.

In this dismal situation, the Jewish people and the State of Israel diplomatic­ally owe the world nothing. Broadly speaking, the nations of the world have no moral right to tell Israel what to do, how to conduct its politics, where to erect its security fences, how to conduct its military campaigns, where to draw its borders or how to defend them, or what ancestral lands to trade away, if at all, to the Palestinia­ns.

Quartet diplomats, Russian diplomats, Norwegian diplomats, French and German diplomats and more ought to approach us with a great deal of humility when they come to discuss our diplomatic well-being and before they attempt to dictate terms of our future or critique our military operations.

Having been so wrong in their Pollyannai­sh hopes for the Oslo Accords, for the Arab Spring, and for the JCPOA nuclear deal, they ought to give Jerusalem the benefit of the doubt when it feels the need to act cautiously in the diplomatic arena or determined­ly in the defense arena.

As former prime minister Menachem Begin once challenged and chastised the German chancellor, “Are we a vassal state? And would you prefer a weak Israel?”

The author is vice president of the Jerusalem Institute for Strategic Studies, jiss.org.il. His personal site is davidmwein­berg.com.

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