Some murders are different | ישראל היום

Some murders are different

The world press is hot on a story it wants to cover -- a Palestinian teenager is forced ‎into a car, and is found murdered hours later. A verdict has been rendered -- ‎the murderer had to have been an Israeli settler, seeking vengeance after the ‎kidnapping and murder of three Israeli teenagers two weeks earlier. It may well be ‎that this murder went down exactly as it is described. In any sense, it is ghastly, and ‎Israeli officials have been quick to condemn it, however it happened. ‎

The bigger story is the wave of relief this latest murder has created for the ‎international press, since it has enabled them and the rest of the "international ‎community" to turn the page from the horrific slaughter of the three young Israelis for which there is ‎little doubt about responsibility, to one that better fits their biases and beliefs.‎

The latest murder, if in fact a tit-for-tat killing, is one that will get the storyline back ‎to where it needs to be and where the international community is in its comfort ‎zone -- that settlers, and the occupation are at the bottom of all the troubles in the ‎area. The reporting in American newspapers on the kidnapping, and then the ‎discovery of the bodies of the three Israeli teens, almost never failed to mention ‎that the boys were settlers, despite the fact that only one of them lived in the West ‎Bank, and the boys were not the decision-makers in their families as to where to ‎live or study in any case. Presumably from the media coverage, it is problematic for ‎Jews to even study at a yeshiva in the area. Of course the area in which they were ‎abducted (Gush Etzion) contained Jewish villages before the partition plan passed ‎by the United Nations in 1947, and that plan allowed Jews to continue to live there ‎in the new Arab majority state that was created, as Arabs were allowed to live in ‎the Jewish majority state that was created. It was Jordan's occupation and then ‎annexation of the West Bank after that war (in which they and other Arab armies ‎invaded the new Jewish state to destroy it), a seizure and colonialist expansion ‎never recognized by anyone except Britain and Pakistan, that led to the area ‎becoming Judenrein. But Jews never lost their right to live or work or study in the ‎area, despite the media's ignorance of history, and international law.‎

Israeli officials believe they know the identity of the murderers of the three Israeli ‎teenagers -- two Hamas members from the Hebron area, who went missing the night ‎of the abduction. The kidnapping was ‎likely planned and executed to force Israel into another disproportionate prisoner ‎exchange, as occurred after five years with the captive solider Gilad Schalit, ‎exchanged for over 1,000 Palestinian prisoners, some of whom have since ‎returned to terror activities soon after their release. ‎

The participation by Hamas members in such an operation, was embarrassing to ‎the Palestinian Authority which had recently achieved the latest in a series of unity ‎deals with Hamas, this one sold as creating a new government filled with ‎technocrats, rather than say murderers of, or apologists for and planners for the ‎murder of Jews in Israel or the territories. The technocrat malarkey was enough ‎for President Barack Obama, who pledged continued U.S. aid to the Palestinian Authority ‎despite legislation that seemed on its face to bar aid to a Palestinian government ‎which included Hamas. Then again, why should compliance with established law ‎be more important for the president in this circumstance when the administration ‎had so cavalierly and consistently ignored other laws on immigration, health care, ‎recess appointments, and the operation of federal agencies (e.g., the Internal Revenue Service) when it ‎suited him? ‎

The PA, perhaps sensing a new financial risk to the international aid dollars that ‎make it the world's greatest welfare dependency, criticized the abduction, and ‎allowed some PA security forces to assist Israel in its search for the missing teens ‎‎(who apparently were killed within minutes of their abduction). Hamas applauded ‎the abduction, and its members and supporters carried on as they normally do ‎when these things occur -- celebrating and ululating, and passing out sweets, to ‎share in the joy of Israeli families' misery. Of course, these Palestinian mothers ‎include some who had willingly sent their children out to carry out mass murder ‎with suicide vests attached to them, and then pledged their devotion to providing ‎future jihadists to the noble cause of murdering Jews. ‎

Bret Stephens described the pride and joy he heard from some ‎Palestinian mothers of earlier terrorist suicide bombers and concluded:‎

‎"As for the Palestinians and their inveterate sympathizers in the ‎West, perhaps they should note that a culture that too often ‎openly celebrates martyrdom and murder is not fit for statehood, ‎and that making excuses for that culture only makes it more ‎unfit. Postwar Germany put itself through a process of moral ‎rehabilitation that began with a recognition of what it had done. ‎Palestinians who want a state should do the same, starting with ‎the mothers."‎

This rebuke to the culture of martyrdom flies in the face of the ‎conventional wisdom on what is really perpetuating the Arab-‎Israeli conflict. The font of established international wisdom on ‎these matters, New York Times columnist Tom Friedman, had ‎the answer for Stephens -- that in the Middle East, there are ‎‎"arsonists and firefighters." Arsonists include the kidnappers of the three Israelis ‎‎(to be fair, Friedman was unaware the boys had been murdered ‎at the time he wrote the column), and Israeli cabinet members ‎who back new housing for Israel's growing population (the ‎highest birth rate in the world among developed countries):‎

‎"The Palestinian extremists who recently kidnapped three ‎Israeli youths were arsonists, aiming to blow up any hope of ‎restarting Israeli-Palestinian peace talks and to embarrass ‎Palestinian moderates. But they had help. Radical Jewish ‎settler supporters in the Israeli cabinet, like Naftali Bennett ‎and Housing Minister Uri Ariel, are arsonists. Ariel ‎deliberately announced plans to build 700 new housing units ‎for Jews in Arab East Jerusalem -- timed to torpedo Secretary ‎of State John Kerry's shuttle diplomacy. And they did."‎

Kidnappers and murderers are extremist. Cabinet members ‎who support new housing in communities that would almost ‎certainly remain as part of Israel, if Friedman's beloved two-‎state solution were realized, are radicals. There is not much ‎moral difference for Friedman between kidnapping teenagers ‎and brutally murdering them, and building more apartments ‎in areas that are now and will almost certainly remain part of ‎one's country. As for the argument that the two Hamas ‎kidnappers/murderers were merely trying to blow up the non‎existent peace process, Friedman assumes that other parties ‎are as obsessed with the "process" as he is -- some working to ‎move it along (firefighters), others trying to destroy it ‎‎(arsonists). When you believe that this process is critical to ‎everything that goes on between the Muslim world and the ‎West, it makes sense to make such an argument, even if there ‎is little or no evidence to support it. ‎

Neither Friedman nor his paper would ever even consider ‎that Islamists' hatred of Jews might be an explanation for the ‎recent murders of Jews in Belgium, France, and Israel. For ‎him, it is always the occupation and settlements. The murder ‎of Jews around the world by Arabs is collateral damage for ‎the real crime, the original sin of building new housing units ‎in Jerusalem. ‎

Not surprisingly, The New York Times, which has become the ‎most reliable path to understanding the thinking of the ‎current U.S. administration, published another article‎ attempting to equate the mothers of the Israeli kidnap victims ‎with the mother of a Palestinian boy who was killed while ‎harassing and confronting Israelis searching for the three ‎teenagers. There is always moral ‎equivalence, and the suffering on the two sides will go on until ‎the new housing stops getting built. ‎

Obama condemned the murder of the three Israelis, ‎and also called for Israel to avoid any destabilizing responses. ‎Those apparently include striking back at Hamas, continuing ‎the search for the killers, and building new housing. Secretary ‎of State John Kerry wasted no time condemning the murder ‎of the Palestinian teenager, seemingly certain of the ‎perpetrator and the cause:

‎"The U.S. denounces in the strongest possible terms ‎the sickening and despicable and senseless abduction ‎and killing of Muhammad Hussein Abu Khdeir.‎ ... Those who undertake acts of vengeance only ‎destabilize an already explosive and emotional ‎situation."‎

We will find out more in the days ahead about both of the ‎abductions/murders. But the guilty parties will be seen as ‎different kind of villains for much of the world. Some murders ‎are different.‎

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