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PEACE page 17
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1/2 Block West Of Telegraph
1
MAPLE ROO
AMERICAN
LEGION
BiR T
Ay
II MR
13 NU
MARCH 1 5 — 17
11 OAIS
1695
1996
Maple Rd. West of Haggarty
624-0400
CALL : 624 0400
1 55/LE
1-96 JEFFR1ES
The
American
Legion
senting Hebron's Jews came to
visit me in my office. They want-
ed to talk about the scheduled
late-March turnover of the set-
tlement city to the Palestinians.
They were concerned about Is-
raeli security.
The Palestinians still haven't
gotten around to taking the de-
struction of Israel out of their
charter. The Hebron Jews' words
of concern seemed more valid
than ever after four days of ter-
- rorist attacks.
Israel should not give back
anything more. Instead of being
so conciliatory, the Jewish state
needs to lay down the law. Israel
used to be the place terrorists
feared.
I'm just an "average" guy, but
if "peace" means citizens fear
getting near a bus, I'll take
closed borders and intense se-
curity for now.
With the borders closed, Arab
governments, along with the
PLO, need to figure out what
they can do for Israel, how they
can make Israel buy into any
peace at this point. If real peace
is what they will work for, then
they can approach Israel with
their proposals.
But it is Israel who needs to
decide its future, not Hamas, not
the PLO, not the United States,
not me, not anyone outside of Is-
rael. For it is Israelis who are dy-
ing. And the cost they are paying
for this "peace" is way too ex-
pensive.
Now, Israel needs to protect
its "neighborhood" with a
show of force, strength and
savvy.
It's Tuesday when this column
is being written. By the time Fri-
day comes around, the situation
in the Middle East may have
seen more blood, more changes,
more sadness. But whatever the
news, Israel needs to make de-
cisions that are right for Israel,
not for the Palestinians or any-
one else.
In the American Civil War,
what permitted the Confedera-
cy to wage successful battle was
the term "hard war." The North,
under the command of Gen.
George McClellan, fought not to
lose. McClellan marched his
men evasively. General Lee and
his command fought to destroy
the enemy. And they almost won
the war.
Were it not for Abraham Lin-
coln's eventual transfer of mili-
tary command to Gen. Ulysses
Grant, a man who understood
the tactics of "hard war," we
might be living in two separate
countries.
Israel needs to regain its game
face. It needs to fight the "hard
war." This is not about popular-
ity, peace rallies or being any-
one's best friend anymore.
And if peace is truly the goal,
then the Palestinians need to get
there on Israel's terms. ❑