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A New Road Map for Peace



We've been reading about the "road map" to peace in the Middle East for many years. Anyone can see it hasn't taken us very far. It's been like trying to get to the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco using a map of Lower Manhattan. You can try harder, pray harder, and double your speed. But your efforts only succeed in getting you to the wrong place faster. The fundamental problem has nothing to do with traffic jams, diversions or delays; it has everything to do with using the wrong map.

For over a decade, Israel has navigated tirelessly to achieve peace using the Oslo map, which was built on this premise: Assuage the other side's grievances--end the occupation; give the Palestinians land, armed forces, their own state--and peace will follow. Hence in 1993, Israel brought the PLO out of exile and gave it recognition, international legitimacy, governmental autonomy and authority over 98% of the Palestinian population.

Where has this map brought us? In the past decade, terrorism has increased dramatically. Eleven years ago, Yitzhak Rabin, in his historic speech on the White House lawn, spoke of a future in which mothers no longer wept for sons lost in battle. But the weeping has not ended; it reached a deafening crescendo. Terrorists have killed more Israelis in the eleven years since Oslo began in 1993 than in the 45 years of Israel's existence before that.

Obviously we've been using the wrong map to move us toward peace. Is there an alternative?

Ludwig Wittgenstein once said that his aim as a philosopher was, "To show the fly the way out of the fly-bottle." The fly keeps banging its head against the glass in a vain attempt to get out. The more it tries, the more it fails, until it drops from exhaustion. The one thing it forgets to do is look to the sky. Like the frustrated fly, the one thing Israel has forgotten to do is look to the sky.

If Israelis were to look up, they would see an alternative map to peace, provided by El Al, Israel's renowned airline.

El Al is the gold standard in aviation security. There is a sense of safety and comfort on El Al planes felt by all of its passengers--Jews, Christians and Moslems alike--that one does not feel on any other aircraft. This is an astounding achievement, since El Al is the world's most coveted terrorist target in the sky.

Now, imagine if El Al decided that because it has been despised for decades, it is time to change its policy and methods of security. First, El Al would invite people who in the past wished to hijack and blow up its planes and passengers and give them "autonomy" on one section aboard El Al aircraft. In these sections, former hijackers could move about freely without scrutiny or supervision. Next, El Al would make these "reformed militants" responsible for the security of passengers seated in their area of the aircraft. This overture of peace would certainly demonstrate to the international community that El Al is truly committed to coexistence and liberal values. It would help put an end to the animosity felt by many toward El Al.

Some would propose that El Al show more "flexibility" and relinquish control of the cockpit to the former terrorists. Some would advocate that El Al construct a wall to enclose the autonomous aisles or to unilaterally withdraw from several seats that are in close proximity to those aisles.

All of these strategies, of course, would be suicidal for El Al. All of them miss the fundamental point. Compromising on security or granting autonomy on a single seat would spell cataclysmic disaster for the entire airline. The life of every passenger, Muslim, Jew and Christian, would be placed in mortal danger. Travelers would before long bid farewell to El Al. That would spell the end of the airline.

The only way for El Al to eradicate terror from its airplanes is not through concessions or autonomy, but rather by destroying any hope the terrorists have of achieving their objectives. El Al has adopted an uncompromising stance against terrorism, and they make no apologies. The world stands in admiration of what El Al has accomplished. The El Al road map goes by the name "peace through strength."

This is the right road map to peace in Israel.

If the last decade of the Oslo process has taught anything, it is that no responsible government can give in to terror. Such behavior does not end terror, but invites it yet more.

The Arab terror war against Israel is no more a territorial conflict than was al Qaeda's strike against America, and it can no more be resolved by the current "road map" than anti-Americanism could be appeased by yielding New Jersey to Osama bin Laden.

Hence, Israel's intent to withdraw from Gaza is profoundly misdirected. The Palestinian goal over the last decade has been to demoralize the Israeli people through terrorism and force a unilateral Israeli withdrawal from the territories. If they succeed, the relentless war against Israel will be launched far more advantageously from their newly acquired territory.

At the end of World War II, Winston Churchill quipped, "You can always rely on America to do the right thing, once it has exhausted the alternatives." Israel, which has far fewer alternatives than the U.S., has long ago exhausted them all. How much more innocent blood needs to be spilled before we abandon the failed maps of the past? How many more children have to be blown up by suicide bombers before we pursue the course El Al has bravely charted?


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By Dov Greenberg   More articles...  |   RSS Listing of Newest Articles by this Author

Rabbi Dov Greenberg is excutive director of Chabad at Stanford University

Originally posted on Algemeiner.com


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Reader Comments
Latest Comments:
Posted: Oct 2, 2005
Jews
Jews are getting dumber.
Posted By Lewis B. Sckolnick, Leverett, MA/USA

Posted: June 25, 2005
Dear Mr. Rome
The Israeli public voted by a vast majority for a prime minister who ran on a platform of no negotiation with terrorists and never compromising on the security of his country.
The fact that the said prime minister chose to change that stance (post-election) is not reflective of democracy but rather of a sad and very obvious deception of a people that are hoping for peace that will bring rather than replace security.
The Defence Ministers and Head of General Security Services (the two highest positions in the security establishment of the country) both expressed their position that this disengagement will bring a frightening increase of terror. They were both subsequently sacked (democracy?) and replaced by puppets that agreed to follow the politicaly motivated actions of the prime minister.
Yes, every price must be paid for peace as long as it will bring to that. A signed peice of paper in exchange for the kassam rockets that will increase is not peace, it's suicide.
Posted By Anonymous

Posted: June 24, 2005
Some points
Those who say, if Sharon thinks its good, then it is good enough for me What does that mean? We are too stupid to have clarity? Only a Prime Minister has clarity and everyone else is stupid?! Its time people stop being sheeple, and have some faith in your own thoughts and opinions. Sometimes the Prime Minister is WRONG! Believe it or not.

And for those who say; who are you to speak when he was one of the brightest generals Whats the connection? In the military he was great, but in politics, either he isnt an expert or knows he is messing up the country, and is betraying the Nation. Just look at The U.S. They fought a brilliant war in Iraq, but failed miserably in the politics of Iraq (the occupation of Iraq). So you see being a brilliant fighter, has no connection with being a brilliant leader of a country (I refrain from using the word politician, for I mean being a good politician in this sense, and not in the sense of only a politician and zero leadership).

And for those who say; "I'm all with the residents of Gush Katif (and Shomron), but the amount of soldiers needed to protect them" is like saying I'm all for a security system, but its just to costly. Sure it's costly but we must survive, and Gaza insures our security according to all the security experts (besides those in the Sharon government which are afraid to voice that, at the cost of losing their jobs). Besides the point that the residents of Gush Katif minimize the amount of military presence, which would otherwise be needed there).

Posted By Sam, Tzfat, Israel



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