On the Right - The War Parties At Work - some in the media are urging Israel to attack the Palestinians - Brief Article
National Review, Sept 17, 2001 by William F. Buckley Jr.
NEW YORK, AUGUST 28
The bugles are sounding, to rouse not the American military, but the Israeli military. George Will, writing in his syndicated column, wants war. At greater length, in an essay in The Weekly Standard, Charles Krauthammer pleads the same case. What they have said is that Israel can't sustain the fusillade of terrorist attacks that have bloodied the state in the devastating eleven months since the breakdown of the peace negotiations. In their view, and the view of others, nothing is evolving on the long, hapless road from Oslo, save the hardening of Palestinian resolution to end the state of Israel.
The analysis is not new. Norman Podhoretz, the critic and former editor of Commentary, has said much the same thing for years. The Palestinians, as he put it, are to be likened to the Viet Cong in the Sixties. Their mission was to infiltrate and to engage in terrorism and to prepare themselves to do the same thing for year after year after year until South Vietnam, toppled by a final thrust of military force, succumbed. Israel does not suffer notably from infiltration. The enemy is over there, at the other end of the line. Within Israel, there are no Viet Cong, though that too could change if Israeli Palestinians came to believe that the land of their forefathers might one day be returned to them. Many South Vietnamese were friendlier to the north when it became plain that the north was taking over the country.
The philosopher-strategist James Burnham once remarked to his colleagues at National Review, "You know, it's simply not true that wars never settle anything." That would appear a cliche, but the words were spoken at a time when advocates of peace-at-any-price were proposing capitulation at every point on the globe where the Communists had struck a salient. Of course, wars can accomplish things, as the Carthaginians and the Nazis learned. But to generate a war requires a reasonable sense of capabilities, ours, and theirs.
Mr. Will thinks in terms of a war of three or four days, no less devastating for its brevity. Mr. Krauthammer pretty well goes along. Both agree that terrorists need to be hunted down and killed, that the infrastructure of the Palestinian Authority should be destroyed, and that to do this includes the destruction of cultural facilities through which Arafat coaxes, poisons, and deploys. Mr. Will mentions the broadcasting house, which a while back enjoined that "all weapons must be aimed at the Jews . . . whom the Koran describes as monkeys and pigs . . . We will enter Jerusalem as conquerors. . . . Blessings to he who shot a bullet into the head of a Jew." His own vitriol is directed toward home. "The State Department, that brackish and bottomless lagoon of obtuseness, where Secretary of State Colin Powell has gone native with disgusting speed . . ."
And both Will and Krauthammer insist that Sharon needs to act very quickly, before the demoralization of Israel turns fatal.
The student swoons at the force of the argumentation, athwart the dandied protocols of modern history. We're being told we can blot it out-destroy the hard Arafat-Palestinian virus. And if it regenerates? We will need a wall. A wall? Yes, a wall that would gird Israel from any future mobilization of energetic Palestinian irredentism. Build a wall to seal against its creepy aggressions. Wasn't that tried, sort of, in Vietnam? Yes, it was tried, but it proved porous, both north and west. Wasn't that tried in Berlin? Yes-and it worked, actually, but the radiations of Western thought penetrated cement and steel. The Palestinians, unless they reordered their cosmology, could hardly hope to threaten an Israeli wall with effective philosophical penetration.
The single question emerges from it all. Can Israel do something about the rain of blood that is causing life in Israel to be that of a society at war, but without such psychological reassurance as is got from the prospect of victory at war?
And the move has to be Sharon's, without any direction from the White House. This isn't, and oughtn't to be made, Mr. Bush's war, no more than the terrorist war inside Ireland should get any closer to us than George Mitchell. But Mr. Bush can provide the essential superpower cover, which Israel will need.
- 5 Rules for Immediate Annuities
- Death in the Family: 12 Things to Do Now
- Dumbest Things You Do With Your Money
- 6 Online Networking Mistakes to Avoid
- 401(k) Mistakes to Avoid
- 5 Economic Scenarios to Keep You Up at Night
- The Real ‘Best Places to Retire’
- Best Credit Cards for You
- 12 Tough Questions to Ask Your Parents
- The Real ‘Best Colleges’
- Home Buyer Tax Credit: How to Cash In
- Why You Shouldn't Bash Cash
- 8 Phony 'Bargains' and Better Alternatives
- Danger: 3 Debit Card Scams to Avoid
- 6 Myths About Gas Mileage
- 29 Fees We Hate Most
- Quick and Easy Ways to Boost Returns
- Best Stocks to Buy Now
- Lower Your Taxes: 10 Moves to Make Now
- New Jobs: 8 Lessons from Real-Life Career Switchers
- The New Job Market: Who Wins and Who Loses?
- Health Care Reform's Public Option: Everything You Need to Know
- Volunteer Work When Unemployed: Should You Work for Free?
- Whose Recovery Is This?
- Long-Term-Care Insurance: 4 Biggest Risks to Avoid
Content provided in partnership with
Most Recent Reference Articles
- A Maryland state trooper gave Erik Bonstrom an $80 ticket for driving too slowly
- In California, postal worker Dean Hudson has been found guilty
- Alec Loorz, the 15-year-old founder of Kids vs. Global Warming and recent Brower Youth Award recipient, went to Congress in November for a press conference with Senators Barbara Boxer and John Kerry, who are championing legislation to stabilize US greenho
- Foreign exchange
- The buzz on bees
Most Recent Reference Publications
Most Popular Reference Articles
- Credit card debt on college campuses: causes, consequences, and solutions
- 9 questions to ask your new lover: what you were afraid to ask, but always wanted to know
- How Tyler Perry rose from homelessness to a $5 million mansion
- Rejoice anyway - Zephaniah 3:14-20, Philippians 4:4-7 - Living by the Word - Column
- Living by the word


