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Israelis
are engaging en masse in the most rank American-style lunacy. Slogans like
#BringThemHomeNow, for example, demonstrate just how hollow and inflamed
Israeli public discourse has become. To whom, exactly, is this exhortation
addressed? Surely not to Hamas, the only group with the actual power to release
the hostages. Instead, it’s a bombastic bit of emotional manipulation, daring
anyone to defy it while at the same time giving cover to political movements
with unclear aims and means. Just like Black Lives Matter—and who would ever
argue that they don’t?—the Bring Them Home movement in Israel is now an
amalgam of anti-Bibi activists who’ve been marching for years under a host of
different banners, bolstered by sheer emotionalism that argues for a deal at
any cost, even if it means leaving Hamas victorious.
Thankfully, not all Israelis agree
with this defeatist madness. In recent days, a post from an unnamed reservist
in Gaza has been going viral in Israel for making a very different argument
than the one you hear parroted by self-appointed experts on TV or hear shouted
in the streets of Tel Aviv. “The Philadelphi Corridor is more important than
hostages,” wrote the reservist. “It’s more important than me and my entire
battalion, which has been fighting in Gaza since the beginning of the war.”
Approximately every 100 meters, he explained, a tunnel passes through the
fence, openings used for smuggling massive amounts of contraband. Therefore,
the reservist continued, “leaving Philadelphi for one day means a death
sentence for thousands more Israelis … Our blood is no less red than the blood
of the hostages, although we are ready to sacrifice our lives for the sake of
defeating the enemy.” Take a deep breath, the reservist concludes, “and think
again about your rhetoric. Now you are on the side of our worst enemy.”
The clashes unfurling all over
Israel these days, then, aren’t really about the hostages, or the war, or even
about Bibi Netanyahu. They’re more ontological than political, a referendum on
how Israelis see the world and their role in it. For those who can’t imagine
life outside of the global maze of governments and corporations and cultural
commissars, the chief duty is to return posthaste into alignment with the
dictates coming out of Washington. For those who understand that Zionism was
always meant to guarantee freedom, not safety, now’s the time to make difficult
choices, choices that would almost certainly lead to fresh waves of
international condemnations but that would very likely save Israeli lives. But
like with every civil war, all we can see now is how it begins, not, alas, how
it might end.
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