If you believe Israelis' claim, Hamas has been
firing rockets into their homeland, and thus endangering, injuring,
and killing Israeli civilians for more than 6 months. Accordingly,
the Israelis say they had to respond to the national security threat posed by
the hostile regime in Gaza.
If Israel is telling the truth in their claim, then, in light of such a severe security
danger, one can't help but ask, "Why did Israel wait that long
to take action against Hamas?"
One plausible answer might be that the
Israelis were reluctant to endure a repeat of the Lebanon debacle,
where the elite military all but got its butt kicked by Hezbollah in 2006,
probably because Israel sought to fight a politically correct war, according to some pundits.
Another explanation for the Israeli
longsuffering towards Hamas could have been the time needed by Israel
to thoroughly study and fully understand what Hamas is capable of.
Can Hamas fighters really go head to head with the Israeli military
in Gaza as Hezbollah did in Lebanon?
But those deep answers and others like
them may be an over-attempt to drum up something profound, when the
real answer is much more obvious than that: international opinion.
Israel knows that the international community would not accord the
Jewish nation the same nose-up treatment they gave Hamas and its
weapons against Israeli civilian targets.
Sure enough, the vast majority of the
world community has come down on the side of Hamas. In the name of
humanitarian concern, of course. Already we've seen marches around
European cities, calling on Israel to stop the carnage. Europeans
leaders demand that Israel stop the humanitarian disaster that Gaza
has become.
For his part, President G.W. Bush,
backed by Mayor Bloomberg of New York remain strongly on the side of
Israel, almost encouraging the Israelis to finish Hamas off, so that
the world does not see a repeat of this vicious cycle of Hamas provocation followed by Israeli response. President Bush's take reflects his usual
simplistic outlook: "Israel has the right to defend her citizens
from terrorist attacks."
What surprises me is that some people
are surprised American President-elect Barack Obama has observed
the silent oath since the dawn of the latest bloodshed between
Israelis and Palestinians. "Why doesn't Obama say something?"
they lament.
Frankly, I think Mr. Obama is handling
(or not handling) this one just right. Regardless of what our Arab
neighbors think, Obama was not elected to "save the world"
or to speak "peace be still" to the trouble waters of
Israeli-Palestinian turbulence. Jews and Arabs alike must understand
that they are the ones who have chosen to trade in violence in a
perpetual merry-go-round. Every American president in recent memory
has inherited this Israeli-Palestinian conflict, and it has always
taken precious time away from American business.
In lieu of the
daunting task facing America this time around, the in-coming
president does not have the luxury of investing any considerable
amount of time in the political quicksand of Middle Eastern war
negotiations, apart from the expected involvement of the US Secretary of State, which will be Mrs. Hillary Clinton.
Besides, what makes some world leaders
think that just a word or sentence from Obama is certainly and suddenly going to
bring peace to the Middle East, a bastion of ancient hatred and cradle of unburied hostility?
Barack Obama has rightly said America
has one president at a time, and until January 20, 2009, that one
president of the United States is Mr. George W. Bush. Since President
Bush and his State Department are somewhat on the ball, there is no
need for Obama to say a word, especially if he wants to walk the
middle path in the Middle East conflict. Is there any other path for
a fair-minded president when it comes to the Israeli-Palestinian
blood sport, that proven land mines known in the past to eat American
presidents alive? Even worse if any American president takes on this mess at the start of his term, and the in-coming president would be a fool to begin his regime with Palestine on his mind.
Americans elected Obama to put together
a competent team to take on the massive, crumbling twin tower that is the
American economy and the collapse of character on Wall Street coupled with the near-absent of oversight on the part of the SEC, et al. America has single handedly pulled and plunged the global economy
into a severe recession, and it's America's moral duty to reverse this. That's Obama's mandate. If Palestinians, Arabs or Israelis think
President Obama will take his eyes off the ball to voluntarily bury the prospects of his presidential prospects beneath the
rubble of their never-ending battles, then let them keep whining.
The Arab leaders that are now faulting
Obama for not speaking up... how much speaking up did they do during
those months when Israel says Hamas made a recreation out of launching rockets
into Israeli towns? And if Obama did not speak up against Hamas when
they were harassing their Jewish foes, why should Obama now denounce
Israel for returning the bloody favor?
If I were Barack Obama, I'll head to
Hawaii for a second vacation in so many weeks. And I'll wait until my
second term before I risk any serious involvement in Middle East
peace. Then from the start I'll limit my involvement to the State Department.
Is it any wonder that Jews, Muslims and Christians all agree
that it will take "the Messiah", by whatever name he's
called, to bring peace to the Middle East? Well, Obama is not that Messiah, though many wish he were.
Yes, if I'm Obama I'm biting the
pacifier on this one. It's too early to burn up political capital on
a known bottomless pit of ever-meandering negotiations that never cease to end up on the battlefield. Well, except for one nagging bother that
results from every serious gory Israeli-Palestinian conflict: the price of
gasoline is headed back up, by as much as 30 cents since Israel
started hitting back at Hamas, and it's guaranteed to remain on the
upswing if the ground war lingers. Should that hit Obama on the head to disturb his presidential snooze? A weak perhaps, if you ask me.