Grieving for peaceful Palestinians or Israelis shouldn’t make you absolve terrorism or war crimes
By: Rachel Marsden
The tragic war unfolding in the Middle East desperately needs compassion, not calls for more death and destruction
Can we denounce Hamas’ attacks without being labeled a Zionist shill and
defend Palestinian civilians without being labeled pro-terrorist? If not, then
we have a serious problem.
Israel and Hamas are locked in a shooting war. It’s understandable when Israelis
and Palestinians, as rockets rain down on their heads, take extremely and
indiscriminately aggressive positions against the respective other side in the
conflict. Those of us observing the fighting from a distance don’t have to do
the same – and the fact that a middle-ground position is often criticized as
appeasement is proof of how irrational and extreme Western discourse has become.
Ever since Gaza-dwelling Hamas attackers invaded Israel to kill and kidnap
innocent Israeli civilians, and Israel responded by dropping bombs that have
killed equally innocent Palestinian civilians, the rhetoric in support of both
Israel and Palestine has veered to the extreme. This is about the last thing
that this conflict needs. Unfortunately, those with the most power and influence
are some of the very worst offenders.
Israel has the right to defend itself from terrorism. That’s not a controversial
position to take. Terrorism is bad. We get it. Everyone gets it. Only the most
extreme radicals would ever suggest otherwise.
Hamas’ attacks on Israeli civilians were the very definition of terrorism –
an assault by non-state actors on civilians for political or ideological
reasons. Acknowledging that doesn’t mean that you’re some kind of rabid Zionist,
or that you’re in favor of giving carte blanche to Israel to react by
indiscriminately bombing civilians or by failing to take reasonable measures to
protect innocents in a proportionate response.
The initial rhetoric of Western leaders – most notably, the US president and
secretary of state, the only ones with any sort of influence on Israel – should
have included this balanced perspective. How hard is it to say that, yes, Israel
was indeed the victim of an indisputable terrorist act. However, in light of how
Israel keeps ignoring United Nations Security Council resolutions in its
treatment of Palestinians in Gaza, care must be taken to ensure that any retort
is not used as a pretext for further victimization of Palestinians. At the very
least, everyone should be concerned with not wanting to create future
generations of embittered victims ripe for radicalization.
It would also have been valuable for the US administration to have painstakingly
underscored and emphasized the difference between the Hamas terrorists who
perpetrated the attack and the Palestinian people as a whole. This could have
been particularly helpful in response to the Israeli defense minister’s
statement referencing the “human animals” that his country was fighting, while
failing to make an explicit distinction between Hamas and regular Palestinian
civilians. Where was the Western leadership with a “not all Palestinians are
animals – just the terrorists” statement? Would that really have been so
controversial that they couldn’t be bothered to speak up?
Resistance to oppression is justified. This slogan, used by pro-Palestinian
protesters in the US on the weekend of the Hamas attacks on Israel, is also not
a controversial position to take. What is not ever justified is terrorism – but
there are those among the Palestinians who see it as the only kind of resistance
left to them. And as evidenced by some of the rallies taking place thousands of
miles away from the front lines, not all who think so are actual Hamas
militants. If Washington officials continue to tilt the playing field that
desperately needs leveling, more and more people will start believing that
killing and kidnapping innocents is a “justified” form of “resistance,” and more
and more people on the other side will start thinking in terms like “human
animals.”
Uncompromising rhetoric in response to terrorism has been a Western staple
since the September 11, 2001, attacks on US soil. As then President George W.
Bush said at the time, you were either with America and its allies, or with the
terrorists. A bipartisan green light was given for total eradication. As someone
based in Washington, DC, at the time, and working at a think tank, I witnessed
how the neoconservative perspective ruled overwhelmingly – at least initially.
There was almost no one suggesting that bombing Afghanistan, killing Osama bin
Laden, and liquidating Al-Qaeda and the Taliban wasn’t likely to solve the
problem once and for all.
It was only when the bombing of Afghanistan ended up just being a gateway to the
bombing of Iraq that some dissenting voices started asking how many more
countries would need to be bombed before America and the West would consider
themselves permanently safe from terrorism.
How’d all that ultimately work out for the West? Over 20 years later, we now
know the answer. No amount of bombing is going to eradicate terrorism when many
of its perpetrators consider it an act of resistance to oppression – and that
such oppression often comes in the form of bombings or other military incursions
under the often-abused pretext of… fighting terrorism.
Acknowledging that the bombing of civilians in the Middle East risks
radicalizing enough of the survivors to perpetuate the problem doesn’t make
someone a terrorist sympathizer or apologist. It just means that you’re more
interested in a pragmatic resolution than ideological positions or actions that
risk perpetuating the problem.
While the EU and the UN have started to recognize the suffering of Palestinian
civilians by at least trying to set up a humanitarian corridor to Gaza and
warning against ethnic cleansings, all the US has done is double down on its
militant, one-sided approach to the problem. It has sent aircraft carriers to
support Israel and made threats at Iran.
But what is perhaps more chilling – and definitely more indicative of the
attitude problem at hand – is how the State Department has reportedly advised
American diplomats to avoid calling for “de-escalation,” “ceasefire,” and an
“end to bloodshed” in the current Israel-Palestine war. The people in the
perfect position to inject some reason into the ongoing madness and perhaps
foster a pragmatic resolution are instead choosing a black-and-white approach
that will only see things spin further out of control. The last thing that the
rest of us need to be doing is following their lead.
COPYRIGHT 2023 RACHEL MARSDEN