What to Make of the Cease Fire?
By Sherwin Pomerantz
My first response to the question of what to make of the recent cease fire
between Israel and Hamas is simply: I don’t know. And taking into account all of the
commentaries I have read and heard over the last few days, this may be the most
honest comment you will read. Frankly,
nobody knows but let’s look at some truths.
Truth #1: It is nice to have some peace and
quiet once again and for all of us living in Israel not to have to worry about
rockets coming in from Gaza. No matter
how one feels about how this latest activity ended, everyone will agree that
quiet is much better than dealing with air raid sirens and rockets.
Truth #2: No one knows whether this latest cessation of hostilities will last. Actually everyone knows that it won’t
last. Hamas cannot control all of the
various elements that operate in Gaza and any further lobbing of rockets into
Israel from Gaza will (and should) elicit a military response from Israel. So
any thinking person will admit that while cease fires are nice, a cease fire is
not peace and, as such, there is simply no way this can last.
Truth #3: Hamas has not departed from its
stated desire to reclaim all of Palestine and to eliminate Israel as a unique
political entity. Hamas leader Khaled
Mashaal, in an interview last week with Christiane Amanpour stated clearly “How
can I accept Israel? They have occupied
my land!” While he said in the same
interview that he is ready to talk about peace based on the 1967 armistice
lines, he then goes on to say “Palestine, from the river to the sea, from the
north to the south, is my land.” (http://www.timesofisrael.com/hamas-leader-denies-his-group-was-behind-ta-bus-bombing-but-insists-israel-had-it-coming/) So it then becomes clear that any talk of
peace, if it can be achieved, is temporary and simply a step on the road to
reclaiming the entirety of what is now Israel.
Truth #4: Egypt’s President Morsi, while having been given credit for engineering
the cease fire at the urging of the U.S. on whom he is most dependent for
Egypt’s future economic growth, is himself a guiding light of the Muslim
Brotherhood, the father of Hamas. To
expect that given his political leanings he will be neutral in any adjudication
of breaches of the cease fire is to believe in fairy tales. His true colors showed themselves in full
force on Thursday when he basically took dictatorial control of Egypt’s
political structure in an effort to “save the revolution” making himself look
more like Mubarak than Mubarak himself.
So where does that leave us? At
best, in a tenuous position. On the one
hand we have developed a modern technological miracle, a society that is
more-or-less democratic in a part of the world that does not know the meaning
of the word, and have become a regional economic and military power. On the other hand our very existence is
regularly threatened by political entities on many of our borders intent on
seeing us disappear.
The only good news this morning is the fact that envoys of Israel and
Turkey are now meeting once again to try to patch up relations between our two
countries. Clearly there are more
realities in this part of the world that unite us than separate us and, long
term, it will be in our best interests to work together to stem the tide of
radicalism that threatens us first but has ramifications for every freedom
loving nation of the world. I hope this
effort is successful.
For the moment, things are quiet here and we are grateful for that. But our preparedness for further military
action must never be compromised as that is the only way to ensure the peace,
sad as that truth may be.