RangerDave wrote:
A) Eh, there was a fair bit of violence on both sides prior to 1948, not to mention the implicit force of British colonial authorities imposing a peace while the early Jewish arrivals established themselves.
I don't see what that has to do with anything, and this highlights the arbitrariness of it all. The Jews were there thousands of years before the Arabs, and are anchored there by the Temple remains. While I'm not normally a fan of keeping ancient disputes going, the fact is that the Palestinians claim its "their land" because they were there before the modern Jews, but then want to ignore that the Jews had it way before that. After WWII a Jewish homeland was absolutely necessary, and there was no other logical place to put it.
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B) It's not an arbitrary line. It's the moment in time when actual Palestinian people came into conflict with actual Jewish people over the establishment of modern-day Israel. I don't care much about the "collective rights" or "historical claims" of either side; I care about disputes arising between actual individuals and states
That conflict wouldn't have happened without other, prior events. That's what makes the line arbitrary.
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C) I agree it's water under the dam. Israel is a fact, and the Palestinians are just going to have to accept it. I just bristle at the idea that Israel's actions are somehow justified or defensive in nature because "the Jews were there first".
It isn't defensive in nature or justified because they were there first; it's justified because they have no other realistic options to deal with Palestinian violence, and the rest of the world has found it convenient to do nothing either, because no one wants to be a target for Islamic extremism.
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Actually there is, which you'd know if you had any business at all talking about what's defensive and what isn't. By limiting the movements of the Palestinians the Israelis limit them to homemade rockets, instead of having money to purchase sophisticated weapons from Iran or wherever, meanwhile claiming its the "extremists" doing it.
Sure, it's "defensive" in the same way that Soviet control of the Eastern Bloc was "defensive".
From the Soviet perspective, it was. The Soviets had been invaded, severely, twice in the 50 years prior to the formation of the Warsaw Pact, and saw NATO as an aggressive move. That reation was unbelievably self-centered and further marred by their own aggressive actions in WWII and general attitude afterwards, but they really did believe that a Western attack was likely - and they are not a tiny country in a very weak geographical position.
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Actually, I agree that this is exactly what's happening. Israel is pursuing a de facto policy of slow motion annexation, and they're doing it for both ethno-nationalist reasons and for strategic/tactical reasons that go beyond the conflict with the Palestinians who happen to live in those territories (i.e., to reduce Israel's vulnerability to a bifurcating attack in a future war).
They are not doing it for ethno-nationalist reasons, or rather those reasons are entirely irrelevant if they exist. They took the territory intending to trade it for a peace treaty which never worked out and now they're essentially stuck with it. Any nationalist sentiment they have is essentially a non-issue because without it the strategic issues and the history of the refusal of the arab powers to negotiate its return would remain.
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So what? I hate to break it to you, but the terrorists can only operate the way they do with the support of the population around them. If that population was serious about getting rid of them, they'd be ****. Terrorists know this, and they also know that westerners are suckers for "but innocent people!" There are none.
I fundamentally disagree with that moral philosophy, DE. Nation-states should not wage war like psychopaths.
Its not a moral philosophy, and nations are not people. You can't blame "Israel" for doing what it needs to do in its national interests, then turn around and separate the Palestinians into "innocent people" and "militants". There's an incredible double standard there. It is not "Waging war like a psychopath" to understand that your enemy is hiding among a civilian population that is supporting them.
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My reference to the growth of the ultra-orthodox vote was in relation to my earlier statement that "religious extremism" was on the rise and Harris' claim that Israel is not particularly motivated by such extremism. That said, there is a great deal of overlap between the ultra-orthodox vote and the "bomb the Palestinians into oblivion" vote.
Orthodox Judaism is notable for not actually being terribly extremist. As for bombing the Palestinians into oblivion, if you were constantly getting attacked by an intractable enemy that has no chance to win but insists on slaughtering your people just because they can't let go of the idea that sooner or later Allah will give them a win, you might be pretty inclined to start bombing them into oblivion, too.
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Yeah, don't hold your breath, man. Also, "totally eradicat[ing] the threat" if the Palestinians don't accept total defeat sounds a lot like a call for genocide.
If a group chooses to fight to the last man in an untenable position, it is their own fault if they get wiped out. At any time the Palestinians can end it by simply not fighting any more. They can turn out their militants and refuse to tolerate them in their communities. Israel is nowhere near annihilating all the Palestinians and won't be any time soon at current rates. If the Palestinians insist on fighting to the point of annihilation, they've committed genocide against themselves.
One cannot simply put on the trappings of oppression, continue to fight from an untenable position, committing pointless attacks against a civilian population, and then complain your own civilian population is being attacked when you hide amongst them. If the world isn't going to do anything about the refusal of the Palestinians to adhere to negotiated peace, then they have no business criticizing what Israel does about it. I'm not really optimistic about the Palestinians having a sudden epiphany, but it is what it is.