
|
Article: |
Unleash Israel and Win Peace |
|
Author: |
Rush Limbaugh |
|
Date: |
December 2001 |
The only way some form
of quiet will ever exist in the Middle East is if Israel is given the latitude
to totally defeat its declared enemies. Only then will the terrorist attacks on
Israel's civilians come to an end. Perpetual negotiations, diplomatic half
measures, or land for peace deals will not bring peace to the Middle East. For
those who believe this is an irresponsible notion, I use history as my guide.
Today marks the 60th anniversary of Imperial Japan's unprovoked attack on Pearl
Harbor, in which 2,500 Americans were killed. There are lessons to be learned
from our victory in that war.
In his April 16, 1945 address before a Joint Session of Congress, President
Harry Truman stated: "So there can be no possible misunderstanding, both
Germany and Japan can be certain, beyond any shadow of doubt, that America will
continue the fight for freedom until no vestige of resistance remains. We are
deeply conscious of the fact that much hard fighting is still ahead of us.
Having to pay such a heavy price to make complete victory certain, America will
never become a party to any plan for partial victory. To settle for merely
another temporary respite would surely jeopardize the future security of the
world. Our demand has been, and it remains, unconditional surrender."
On August 6, 1945, just 16-hours after the United States dropped an atomic bomb
on Hiroshima, Japan, Truman issued a statement which said, in part: "The
Japanese began the war from the air at Pearl Harbor. They have been repaid many
fold. … We are now prepared to obliterate more rapidly and completely every
productive enterprise the Japanese have above ground in any city. We shall
destroy their docks, their factories, and their communications. Let there be no
mistake: we shall completely destroy Japan's power to make war."
Truman understood that there could be no peace without total victory. This
lesson has not been lost on President George Bush. On September 20, 2001, Bush
also addressed a Joint Session of Congress and announced America's policy --
"the Bush Doctrine" -- in responding to the atrocities of September
11. He stated: " … Our war on terror begins with al Qaeda, but it does
not end there. It will not end until every terrorist group of global reach has
been found, stopped and defeated."
Bush stated further: " … We will starve terrorists of funding, turn them
one against another, drive them from place to place, until there is no refuge or
no rest. Every nation, in every region, now has a decision to make. Either you
are with us, or you are with the terrorists. From this day forward, any nation
that continues to harbor or support terrorism will be regarded by the United
States as a hostile regime."
Since September 11, Bush has refused all offers by the Taliban regime to
negotiate any settlement of the war -- including the status of Osama bin Laden
and his top lieutenants in the al Qaeda terrorist network -- short of outright
surrender. As Bush once eloquently put it: bin Laden is "wanted, dead or
alive." And for over two months, the U.S. has been systematically bombing
the Taliban and al Qaeda day and night. Already, the Bush administration is
planning the next phase of the war, which may involve U.S. military action in
Iraq, Somalia and elsewhere.
So, in the two most recent examples of the U.S. being attacked on its own
territory, America's predicate for peace has been the total annihilation of its
enemies. And there is every reason to expect Israel's Prime Minister Ariel
Sharon to have learned the same lesson.
Since 1948, Israel has been forced to fight 4 wars with the hostile nations
surrounding her. Despite defeating her enemies on the battlefield, the
international community has never permitted Israel to completely destroy any of
these regimes -- none of which are democracies. They've always been left largely
in tact, free to start or support another war, including the current terrorist
war now being waged against Israel's citizens. And between wars, Israel's
enemies have convinced the world, including the U.S., that her borders and
security are not only legitimate subjects of constant negotiations, but that
Israel's refusal to accept most, if not all, of her enemies' demands is an
obstacle to peace.
This week Hamas and other terrorist groups -- which, like certain of the
countries that surround Israel, seek the destruction of Israel, not co-
existence or even the establishment of a Palestinian state -- intensified their
war against the Jewish state by unleashing 5 fanatic suicide bombers against
innocent civilians, mostly children. The result: hundreds of casualties,
including 25 dead. In the past 14 months, more than 230 Israelis have been
killed -- the proportional equivalent to the U.S. losing some 11,000 people.
In addition to Hamas, which receives support from Palestinian expatriates,
wealthy Saudi Arabians, and Iran, Israel is under attack from, among others,
Hizballah, which is supported by Syria and Iran, and Islamic Jihad, which is
backed by Iran, Sudan and militant Islamic groups.
On December 4, in an address to his nation, Sharon stated: " … A war has
been forced upon us. A war of terror. A war that claims innocent victims daily.
A war of terror being conducted systematically, in an organized fashion, and
with methodical direction. … We will pursue those responsible, the
perpetrators of terrorism and the supporters. We will pursue them until we catch
them, and they will pay a price."
Ironically, the major obstacle to Sharon implementing the Bush Doctrine has been
U.S. Middle East policy. When attacked by terrorists, Israel has been urged to
show "restraint," to make more negotiated concessions and even accept
the creation of a hostile Palestinian state on its border. This week's carnage
appears to have caused some positive change in America's rhetoric and position.
The president has now pointed the finger of responsibility directly at Yassar
Arafat for ending the terrorism committed by his people. But accomplishing peace
requires more -- much more.
Truman was right to insist that peace would only be realized after the
"obliteration" of the Japanese war machine, just as Bush is right
about "defeating" the Taliban, al Qaeda and other terrorist networks.
It is, therefore, necessary that in the pursuit of real and lasting peace,
Israel also be free to destroy its enemies -- meaning the terrorists and, yes,
their sponsors, who are at war with her, and that she do so before they obtain
devastating weapons of mass destruction.
© Copyright 1997-2004 United States Committee For A Free Lebanon. All rights reserved.
| If you would like to send us your thoughts on this article, please click the button below: |
| If you would like to read feedback submitted by other visitors, please click on the button below: |
|
|
USCFL Home
Golden Circle
Membership
Mission Statement Current Views
US Testimonies
Intelligence Special
Reports Activities Action Alerts
Selected Links
Selected Readings
Guestbook
FAQs How to Contact Us
Search