Sunday, April 24, 2011

Why the IDF doesn't win anymore

"When your enemies do not follow the rules of war... An eye-opening interview with the man who helps set the IDF’s ethical parameters" JPost 22 April '11

(JoeSettler is apparently the first out the gate to give an analysis of David Horovitz's lengthy interview with Prof. Asa Kasher, who co-authored the first IDF Code of Ethics. Very problematic, as can be seen from this critique, and the interview should be read in full by anyone who wants to understand how we've arrived where we are today. Yosef)


JoeSettler
23 April '11

http://joesettler.blogspot.com/2011/04/why-idf-doesnt-win.html

Why is it that the IDF doesn't seem to decisively win like it used to?

We have an army far superior to that of any of our enemies. Yet in our last few battles and wars, we seem to actually and actively not be trying to win.

David Horovitz of the Jerusalem Post interviewed Professor Asa Kasher, the man who decides what is ethical for the IDF, and what isn't. Having read it, I now understand why the IDF refuses to win.

If only the man understood what is so totally unethical about the position he is taking.

Here are some relevant excerpts.

At the same time, the moral foundation of a democratic state is respect for human dignity. Human dignity must be respected in all circumstances. And to respect human dignity in all circumstances means, among other things, to be sensitive to human life in all circumstances. Not just the lives of the citizens of your state. Everybody.


This applies even in our interactions with terrorists. I am respecting the terrorist’s dignity when I ask myself, “Do I have to kill him or can I stop him without killing him?”

I don't see the morality of letting a terrorist live. Certainly not in the State of Israel where he is likely to be released in a terrorist-hostage exchange and then return to terrorism and kill more people. This is both a highly immoral and short-sighted position he is taking. I'm just at the beginning of the article, and it clear to me this man must be a Leftist.

Two things: First, you decide what is more important in the given situation. And second, you do whatever you can so that the damage to the other side is as small as possible: Maximizing effective defense of the citizens; minimizing collateral damage.

Hamas, Fatah and Hezbollah don't operate in a vacuum. They are representative of their people, the governments of their people, elected by their people, and are supported by their people.

I would propose that the reason the wars not only don't end decisively and in fact keep coming back to repeatedly haunt us is because the enemy citizens are not paying a high enough price in the war against us. There's no incentive for them to demand they stop, since they never lose.

I hear the same thing everywhere in democratic states. I’ve been to something like 15 of them, from India to Canada. There is no one who will say I don’t have to protect my civilians and to minimize the damage [to the other side]. There is no one who will say I must not harm the other side and minimize the damage to my civilians. No one will say that. No one. Nowhere.

Of course not, because no other country would put someone like this, with such a twisted ideology, in charge of military ethics. No other country wants an army incapable of decisively winning a war.

Where does this twisted ideology stem from?

But that the Palestinians have the right to be a people in their own state, in their territory somewhere between the river and the sea, goes without saying.

There we have it. Even if he didn't say it outright, I could tell from rest of the interview that he must be a Leftist from his warped worldview and ethics. But he proudly admits it outright.

There's plenty more in this interview that explains how this man prevents the IDF from winning, but you get the point.

If the IDF is to start winning again, the first thing it does is must free itself from the disturbed ideology this man has inflicted on it.

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2 comments:

  1. It's not only "this man". He represents the mainstream trend that has afflicted our combativity, from the moment the Zionist movement rose - Jabotinsky did not consider the Palestinian falakhin (peasants) dangerous, since he ends his Iran Wall by saying he is sure they can be integrated; Begin used the same "warnings" to the population in Dir Yassin. The fact is Jews came to the land filled with guilt feelings and that is what is eating our national fabric.

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  2. ב"ה

    The problem is that you can't negotiate with terrorists. You can't negotiate with people who, as you point out, have nothing to lose by attacking us. Until we show them that we can defeat them and hurt them they won't want to make peace with us. And unless we fight them soon, they may end up with more weapons than we can defend against. Hashem may not help us then......

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