Bin Laden TV screens 311 R.
(photo credit: Reuters)
With the demise of Osama bin Laden, Israel and the Western world can breathe a
collective sigh of relief.
After nearly a decade of dead ends and false
leads, America finally succeeded in tracking down and eliminating al-Qaida’s
charismatic and evil founder, setting a commendable example of counterterrorism
at its best.
By decapitating al-Qaida, the US military and intelligence
services have made us all safer and more secure in a world that seems
increasingly perilous.
For Israel, however, this development raises an
interesting question: Will Washington now better understand and appreciate what
we are up against in our own war on terror? In his televised address notifying
the American people of the operation against Bin Laden, President Barack Obama
said: “As a country, we will never tolerate our security being threatened, nor
stand idly by when our people have been killed. We will be relentless in defense
of our citizens and our friends and allies.”
The next time Israel must
strike at Hamas, let’s hope Obama will take his own words to heart, and apply
the same principles to the Jewish state’s right of self-defense that he does to
America’s.
After all, the parallels between al-Qaida and Hamas could not
be clearer. Both are Islamic fundamentalist extremist groups that employ
violence and terror to further their goals, and have no qualms about murdering
the innocent.
They are deeply anti-Western and anti-Israel, and share an
abiding and inflexible opposition to any sort of peace or coexistence with the
“infidels.”
HENCE, IT should come as no surprise that even as much of the
world was commending bin Laden’s death, Hamas officials were openly criticizing
it.
On Monday, Ismail Haniyeh, prime minister of the Hamas government in
Gaza, told reporters: “We condemn the assassination and the killing of an Arab
holy warrior.” “We regard this,” he said, “as a continuation of the American
policy based on oppression and the shedding of Muslim and Arab
blood.”
Clearly, Hamas views bin Laden’s group as fellow travelers in the
all-consuming struggle against Israel and the West. With so much in common
between the two, why should Hamas be treated any differently? Indeed, if the
United States pursues an unrelenting war against al-Qaida, as it should, then
one hopes it would appreciate Israel’s need to do the same vis-à-vis
Hamas.
Note that over the past decade, the US did not try to negotiate
with al-Qaida, reason with it or reach a bargain. There were no mass releases of al-Qaida terrorists, no trading of prisoners, and no attempts to pass along
soothing and reassuring messages.
Successive American governments
realized that their country was at war with a foe that was ideologically and
theologically determined to destroy them. With such enemies, the only possible
and logical course is to defend oneself, as Americans well
understand.
This point takes on added significance in light of the unity
deal between Hamas and Fatah, which paves the way for a unified Palestinian
government and the integration of Hamas gunmen into the Palestinian security
services.
The prospect of a Hamas takeover of Judea and Samaria, in
addition to Gaza, has suddenly become very real. Should such a development come
to pass in the coming months, it would put the terrorist group in control of
territory abutting Israel’s coastal plain. This would be simply intolerable, and
would almost certainly require an Israeli military response.
When and if
that day comes, it would be nice to think that Washington will stand behind us,
fully aware that when it comes to groups such as Hamas and al-Qaida, there is no
room for appeasement.
As President Obama himself noted in his address on
Sunday: “On nights like this one, we can say to those families who have lost
loved ones to al-Qaida’s terror: Justice has been done.”
Israel and its
victims of terror deserve no less.