26 Friday, April 25, 1986 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS PURELY COMMENTARY Continued from Page 2 the instance of Lebanon when the PLO turned that territory into a terrorist ave- nue for attacks on Israel? What has inhib- ited governments to adopt policies of firmness to outlaw and prevent terrorism? Netanyahu views the cause as due to two vices: "One is greed, or a heedless promo- tion of economic self-interest, whatever the political or moral . consequence. The other is political cowardice, which means sitting it out while your'rilly is attacked, or responds to an,rittack, so as not to in- voke the rest of the terrorists. "Both tendencies influence the un- favorable response to the American initia- tive for sanctions against Libya in 1986 following the attacks .on the Vienna and Rome airports. Neither cowardice nor greed will easily disappear. If, however, the United States persists in its firm stand, over time a common policy for the West would eventually emerge, pressur- ing, even shaming, Western states into compliance." Netanyahu wrote this considerably before th April 14 bombing of Libya. Is the Netanyahu statement mere wishful thinking or will it prove prophecy? Netanyahu justifies criticism of the media in its treatment of terrorism and terrorists. He indicated how terrorists utilize the press to gain attention for themselves and to benefit from a lack of firmness by journalists. He makes these . points, outliriing the obligations of a thoughtufl press to expose the dangers: But how do we form our opin- ions of the present? The West de- pends in large measure on its media. This is why terrorists, in their war against the West, devote so niuch of their strategy and their effort to capturing the Western press and using it for their own purposes. But this need not be a one-way street. Terrorism's unique reliance on the press and television of the democracies gives them tremendous power to amplify terrorism's message or to snuff it out. It has been said, cor- rectly, that the Western media have a penchant to legitimize ter- rorists by treating them as re- spectable political adversaries and their claims as worthy of seri- ous consideration. But the media's capacity to do such damage is the mirror image of their capacity to tlo good. They can and should refuse to broad- cast inte ! vie-Ws with terrorists un- critical' . They can and should expose the sham of terrorist claims: They can and should ex- pose their grisly acts for what they are. Should? Some say we canot use that word in relation to a free press. I fail to see why citizens cannot scrutinize and criticize journalists. Scrutiny is not censor- ship.What the public has a right to demand of journalists is the same scrupulousness and profes- sionalism, no more and no less, that they would show in the case of covering organized crime and its bosses. The proven power of a thorough press investigation to expose and repudiate such cor- ruption — indeed, to galvanize public opposition against it — is exactly the power that cap be har- nessed against terrorism. A thoughtful press can turn ter- rorism's greatest weapon against the terrorists themselves: This is the responsibility of the West's press. It is second only to the responsibility of its political leadership. For only a determined leadership can make the West overcome its three impediments — greed, cowardice, and moral con- fusion. Which leadership? It can only come from the United States, which alone has the capacity to align the West in this matter, alone can credibly threaten the offen- ders, and alone can impel the neutrals to shed their neutrality. The United States appears to be moving precisely in this direc- tion, albeit sometimes at a mad- deningly slow pace. America encountered terrorism in the mid- dle 1960s. By the middle 1970s, it realized it was its principal target. By the middle 1980s, it began thinking seriously about taking action. The more America resorts to action, such as punishing ter- rorists and their backers, the greater the number of states which will join the effort to com- bat terrorism. Allies and adver- saries alike, the entire world in fact, are waiting to see the depth of American resolve. Calling' for courage in the great battle, to be displayed by governments as well as peoples, Netanyahu states, "If we seriously want to win the war against ter- rorism, people must be prepared to endure sacrifice and even, should there be the loss of loved ones, immeasuitible pain." Netanyahu provides these admoni- tions and guidelines in his superb study of the serious issues: Terrorism is a phenomenon which tries to evoke one feeling: fear. It is understandable that the one virtue most necessary to de- feat terrorism is therefore the an- tithesis of fear: courage. Courage, said the Romans, is not the only virtue, but it is the single virtue without which all the others are meaningless. The terrorist challenge must be answered. The choice is be- tween a free society based on law and compassion and a rampant barbarism in the service of brute force and tyranny. Confusion and vacillation facilitated the rise of terrorism. Clarity and courage will ensure its defeat. The publishers of the highly- provocative Netanyahu volume provide a significant summation of the obligations to fight terrorism as a human obligation: The war against terrorism can be won by the West if the United States and its allies will: 1) Adopt a no-concessions policy and be prepared to apply force. 2) Conduct continuous cam- paigns against the sponsors of ter- rorism; avoid erratic responses to individual terrorist acts. If a gov- ernment has harbored, trained, or launched terrorists, it becomes a legitimate target of military re- sponse. 3) Systematically coordinate Western anti-terrorist forces, and adopt a common doctrine against terrorism. The United States should initiate, with two or three countries, such an anti-terrorist affiance. 4) Apply political pressures against states that collaborate with terrorists: from international condemnation to severing dip- lomatic relations. Shut down em- bassies when irrefutable proof links the' li to terrorists. 5) Apply economic sanctions, including boycott and embargo. Deny landing and docking rights to the planes and ships of offend- ing states; withdraw all economic aid or other benefits. 61 Put "neutral" nations on notice; tell states which provide safe passage to terrorists, accept a hijacked plane without assisting it in the rescue of the hostages or preventing the hijackers' escape, or •refuse to extradite or punish terrorists, that they are colluding with terrorism. 7) Make even lesser forms of tolerating terrorism costly: such lapses as laxity in airport security should be considered tacit forms of collusion with terrorists. Gov- ernments that do not uphold their security obligations should have their airports cut off from the rest of the inernational aviation system. 8) Educate the press: ter- rorists rely on the media, which often legitimize them by treating them as respectable politicians. Rule of thumb: the press should treat terrorists the way it treats organized crime and its bosses — exposing and repudiating their crimes and galvanizing public opinion against them. The world's most serious scourge has induced the compilation of a great book by a distinguished statesman and scholar. Terrorism: How the West Can Win is must reading for statesmen and the citizens of the Free World. It is an expose and a guide to human duties, inspiring actions against the horrors that have thrown the world into fright. Netanyahu has earned the gratitude of free peoples everywhere for exposing the horrors and providing guidelines on how to combat the terrors. 19 c- V.41411,710.81.11.41=.7.,..." cer,tamkzax. Jewish Unity: Compelling Need, Difficult Road Pope And The Jews: How Good, PleasOnt To Dwell In Un• Even in the darkest days of Vat- icanized anti-Semitism, official Catholi- cism never denied its origin in Judaism. Christianity always treated the Holy Scriptures, their inheritance from Judaism, as their own treasure. The Psalms especially always predominated in worship. How normal, therefore, for the Pope of our modernity, John Paul II, to reach a new height in fraternizing with Jews, in embracing the Chief Rabbi of Rome, and for the congregants to recite Psalm 133! Jewish gatherings everywhere, espe- cially the Zionist, to emphasize Jewish unity and the need for it, always recited or sang the shevet ahim gam yahad . . . "how good and how pleasant for brethren to dwell together in unity." Now the Jewish congregation in Rome, welcoming the Pope, the first such visit by a Roman Potentate to a synagogue, recited Psalm 133: A Song of Ascents; of David. Behold, how good and how pleasant it is For brethren to dwell together in un- ity! It is like the precious oil upon the head, Coming down upon the beard; Even Aaron's beard, That cometh down upon the collar of his garments; • 11111111111 Like the dew of Hermon, That cometh down upon the moun- tains of Zion; For there the Lord commanded the blessing, Even life for ever. How appropriate that Pope John Paul II should have condemned anti-Semitism in his appeal for unity! Will the world hearken to that voice? Will the' hatred for Jews, whick continues in evidence in too many places, serve to bring brethren to- gether in unity against all forms of hatred? What the Pope did must result in some benefits. The Vatican could have signaled recognition of Israel. Hopefully that will come soon. An end to or drastic reduction of prejudice against Jews will surely contribute to it. Meanwhile, an embrace of friendship helps create the unity of Brotherhood. It is a message that can serve well the universal needs as well as the international Jewish and non- Jewish relationships. Rabbi Emanuel Backman Rabbi Alexander Schindler ' Jewish leadership, especially in the religious spheres and among theologians as well as in major Jewish activism, is manifesting an impressive concern with the need to establish unity in Jewish ranks. Unity does not and must not spell uni- formity. It does call for a tolerating ap- proach of Jew to Jew, even while they dif-