The Jerusalem Post

The illusion of cash in exchange for calm

The stick works, the carrot does not

- • By GILAD SHARON Translated from Hebrew by Sara Kitai, skitai@kardis.co.il

Beyond the furrow of the border, a sea of hatred and desire for revenge is swelling, awaiting the day when serenity will dull our path, for the day when we will heed the ambassador­s of malevolent hypocrisy who call upon us to lay down our arms... Let us not be deterred from seeing the loathing that is inflaming and filling the lives of the hundreds of thousands of Arabs who live around us. Let us not avert our eyes lest our arms weaken. This is the fate of our generation. This is our life’s choice – to be prepared and armed, strong and determined, lest the sword be stricken from our fist and our lives cut down. (From Moshe Dayan’s eulogy for Roi Rotberg, Nahal Oz, April, 1956)

More than 65 years have passed, yet despite the changes and developmen­ts that have occurred since then, Dayan’s words are as apt today as they ever were. The possibilit­y of wiping Israel off the face of the Earth may be less realistic than it once was, but the desire to do so hasn’t waned. Anyone who thinks that concession­s and economic developmen­t will take the edge off the hostility of Hamas and its desire to annihilate us doesn’t know their neighbors. In this neighborho­od, sticks work much better than carrots. Give them a carrot and they want 10 more. If they don’t get them, they resort to aggression again.

Periodical­ly, the warped idea of connecting Gaza to the West Bank is raised once more. What would we gain from it? Nothing at all. It’s best to keep our enemy divided. That’s the natural order of things in their world, and it’s better for us as well. The division among the Palestinia­ns was one of the reasons for our victory in the War of Independen­ce. As I said, their fundamenta­l desire to annihilate us hasn’t changed. There’s no point in trying to create an artificial unity where rifts naturally prevail, especially when it goes against our own interest.

The throngs of Israeli tourists streaming to Dubai might get the wrong idea. The enormous wealth, grandeur, and pursuit of money and pleasure they see there is in no way comparable to what is happening here, where what the Palestinia­ns pursue, obsessivel­y, is our demise. The nightclubs in Ramallah and Al-Bireh are not representa­tive of anything. They are merely the illusion of sanity under the aegis of the IDF. If we do not maintain a presence in Judea and Samaria, it will look like Gaza. The Palestinia­ns see the standard of living, progress, and success of Israel and it fills them with envy and loathing. They look at us and want two things: to live like us and to destroy us. Given the opportunit­y, they would jump on it. But then they would learn that without us, not only would they not live like us, they wouldn’t even have the meager standard of living they do today. It is Israel and Zionism that offer prosperity and benefits, that allow them a better life than their brothers in neighborin­g Arab countries. If it weren’t for us, they too would be impoverish­ed, backward and under the thumb of dictators.

Our government is entrapped in a flawed conception. They believe that Egypt will do us a favor and make an effort to moderate Hamas, that we will pay Hamas with economic benefits (a euphemism for protection money), and it will buy us a little calm. Meanwhile, the cement trucks continue to enter Gaza and restrictio­ns continue to be lifted, regardless of the fact that they still fire a rocket at us now and again. No one conditions this generosity on the return of the Israeli soldiers and citizens Hamas is holding, and life goes on as usual for the terrorists in the summer camp of Israeli prisons; the government grants the Palestinia­ns a huge loan while they file a suit against us with the ICC in The Hague.

The whole situation is upsidedown. Stop feeding the monster carrots. It will never get enough. It’s not carrots it wants to devour, but us. Start using the stick. It’s much more effective in our neighborho­od.

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