The plot-line created by Israel’s acceptance of a cease-fire plan continues to unfold. Right now, that plot-line still favours Israel.
If you
recall, yesterday morning Israel accepted a cease-fire plan proposed by Egypt. Hamas
rejected it. Then Hamas made a blunder. It immediately increased its rocket
fire against Israel (“Barrage of rockets fired from Gaza despite Israel's
acceptance of ceasefire”, Jerusalem Post, July 15, 2014).
That barrage
had all the markings of a grand gesture. Its intensity seemed designed to show
Israel how weak it was compared to the ‘bare-chested’ Hamas.
Yes, Hamas
propaganda actually used that reference to characterize its ‘resistance’ to
Israel. An Hamas official, Sami Abu Zuhri, used it on Al-Aqsa TV, on July 8,
2014, just as Israel’s attacks into Gaza began. He used that reference to boast
how brave Arabs were ‘choosing’ to serve as human shields (“Hamas rejected
ceasefire proposals and fired a barrage of rockets at Israeli towns and cities”,
the Israel Intelligence Heritage & Commemoration Center, July 10, 2014).
But such macho
Hamas responses were exactly what the Israel Prime Minister needed. The
aggressiveness of the ‘cease-fire barrage’—and the brazenness of Hamas’
posturing--was a convincing indictment of Hamas’ war intentions.
In answer to
the cease-fire proposal, Hamas fired 44 rockets (Jerusalem Post, above).
In just a few hours, those rockets rained down onto Israel’s civilians, mostly
in southern Israel (“Netanyahu: Israel Expects 'Full Support' From World
Leaders”, Arutz Sheva, July 15, 2014). Using that barrage, Netanyahu changed
both the tenor and direction of the propaganda war that Israel must fight if it
is to win international support.
Netanyahu
lost no time pointing out how aggressive Hamas’ rocket barrage was. Appearing
at a news conference with German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier ( Arutz
Sheva, ibid), he spoke forcefully—and grabbed the moral high ground.
He made the
case he needs to make to attract at least some kind of sympathy from powerful gentile
nations who have not been kind to Israel. His case was simple: Hamas has flatly
rejected ceasefire proposals (ibid). It has fired a barrage of rockets at
Israeli towns and cities (ibid). That barrage proves that Hamas is committed to
war, not peace or restraint.
For the
moment, Netanyahu has garnered at least some kind of international support.
Yes, that support could be only silence--until Israel unloads a ground attack.
But that silence does buy him some latitude. That’s certainly better for Israel
than the negative and hostile international pressure he had been looking at
only two days ago.
In less than
eight hours, Netanyahu took control of the terms used to define this
fight. With the German Foreign Minister beside him, Netanyahu said that it was
Israel's right under international law to defend itself from attacks on its
population. The German Minister did not object to that. Netanyahu also said
that he expected full support from responsible members of the international
community (Arutz Sheva, ibid). The German Minister did not object to
that, either.
This
morning, Netanyahu controls the moral battle. He has, at least temporarily,
secured the right to defend the Jewish nation. His performance right now is
masterful.
But it might
not be enough.
Despite his
current success on the international stage, angry Jews at home feel betrayed by
his ‘cease-fire’. They are not looking at his chess-like mastery on the
international stage. They are looking at those rockets. They are truly
outraged.
To the
Religious Nationalist who defends Israel’s right to exist on this Holy Land, Benjamin
Netanyahu spends too much time turning away from us. He seems instead to yearn
for the love of gentile nations who have no interesting in loving us. Worse, by
seeking to conform to gentile expectations, he appears to turn away from our Torah,
which says Israel is a nation destined to stand separate from the world.
Instead, he
wants the opposite. He wants to be like everyone else. He has even written a
book whose title suggests that goal—A Place among the Nations.
Our Torah
says, our place is not among the nations.
Pro-Israel
advocates say that Netanyahu fails to stand strong for us. While we yield to international
pressure to ‘make tough decisions for peace’, the Muslim will not yield a single
comma or semi-colon.
The world accepts
Muslim intransigence without question. But it terms our hesitation to give in
to that intransigence ‘not good enough’. For many in Israel, that’s not
acceptable.
Could
Netanyahu win at this cat-and-mouse diplomat game but lose his nation’s
support? It’s possible.
This story could
turn out to be a strange one: Prime Minister does beautiful job, loses his
constituency.
Only HaShem
could write a script like this.
You might
want to remember that—because this is Israel. In the war over who will control the
Holy Land, G-d is a player. He’s the writer, director, producer and star.
Nothing will
happen without His stamp of approval.
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