points of view EDITORIAL BOARD: Publisher: Arthur M. Horwitz Chief Operating Officer: F. Kevin Browett Contributing Editor: Robert Sklar >> Send letters to: letters@thejewishnews.com News Analysis Editorial Shalit's Release Demands Stricter National Security VVashington/JTA R epublican presidents have been guiding Israel toward the peace table — some- times not so gently — almost since the Jewish state was born more than six decades ago. But in the recent round of debates, the crop of candidates vying for the GOP nom- ination have been chid- ing President Obama for forcing Israel's hand — usually to great cheers from the audience. "You don't allow an inch of space to exist between you and your friends and allies',' former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney said at a Sept. 22 debate in Orlando, Fla., earning thunderous applause. The GOP has moved a consid- erable distance since President Dwight Eisenhower banged Israeli heads until the Jewish state agreed to relinquish the Sinai Peninsula captured in the 1956 Middle East War — or even since President George W. Bush cajoled Israelis and Palestinians into the ill-fated 2007 Annapolis talks. Romney and Texas Gov. Rick Perry, the frontrunners, dis- agree on many issues — Social Security as a federal program, the utility of health care man- dates, immigrant rights — but they trip over each other in assailing the Obama admin- istration for pressuring or criticizing Israel. Romney coined the phrase "threw Perry Israel under the bus" when Obama in May called for peace talks based on the 1967 lines, with land swaps. Not to be outdone, Perry traveled to New York for the opening of the United Nations General Assembly and accused Obama of "appease- ment" and said he backed Israel because he was a Christian. Whereas previous Republican adminis- trations have opposed, with varying degrees of vehemence, Israeli settlement build- ing and remained cool to Israeli claims to sovereignty over eastern Jerusalem, Perry departed from these positions at his New York news conference. Standing beside right-wing Jewish activists, Perry expressed support for Israeli settlement building and said he favored Jerusalem "being united under Israeli rule' Changing Culture Current and former GOP opera- tives and veterans of Republican administrations have identified a number of factors in explaining why the Republican Party, which until a decade or so ago tolerated a faction that advocated keeping Israel at a friendly distance, is now hewing almost exclusively to a policy of no daylight between the United States and the Jewish state. The chief reason they cite is the growth of the evangelical move- ment as a cornerstone of the party, but other factors include the changed attitudes toward the Middle East in the wake of the 9-11 terrorist attacks, the significance of the Jewish vote in certain swing states and the emergence of a Jewish Republican Neusner donor base in Photo courte sy IDF GOP Learned To Love Israel Unconditionally a community that for decades has given mostly to Democrats. "Israel is not just for Jews anymore said Noam Neusner, a former domestic policy adviser to President George W. Bush and now a communications consultant to Christians United For Israel. (He also was once a Jewish News intern). "There are 5 million American Jews and 50 million evangelicals, some of whom are Hispanic, African American, Korean," he said. "Every Sunday morning, they are reading scripture and reading it seriously. "What the candidates all understand implicitly is that you demonstrate a sense of America's unique role in the world and moral force by supporting Israel:' Matthew Brooks, executive director of the Republican Jewish Coalition, said that while evangeli- cals had a role, the changed post 9-11 world should not be under- estimated as a factor. Republican presidents such as Eisenhower, Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan and George H. W. Bush operated in a Cold War arena in which cultivating allies among Israel's rivals and ene- mies may have made sense — but that is no longer the case, he said. "There were elements in the realist camp who may have seen Israel not as a strategic ally:' Brooks said of the presidency of the first George Bush. "Given how things have developed — the global war on terror, the rise of militant Islam — that doesn't make any sense anymore' Neocon Influence Marshall Breger, an adviser to Reagan who now teaches law at Catholic University, noted that the post 9-11 atmosphere tended to favor the neoconser- vatives within Breger News Analysis on page 37 36 October 27 20 1 Defense Minister Ehud Barak, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Sgt. Maj. Gilad Shalit and Shalit's father, Noam, shortly after the Israeli soldier's release from the Gaza Strip. srael has an unwritten social contract with its citizens that vows the government will go to great lengths to free captured soldiers. So Israel's swap of 1,027 Palestinian security prisoners for Hamas-held Israeli sol- dier Gilad Shalit isn't surprising. Shalit, now 25, returned to Israel on Oct. 18 – more than five years after his kid- napping in a cross-border Hamas raid at an Israeli check- point. His Gaza Strip release marked the first return of a captive Israeli soldier in 26 years. Israel has a checkered history of overly unbalanced pris- oner exchanges with Arab enemies going back to the War for Independence in 1948-49 and up to the Second Lebanon War in 2006. The most lopsided proposal came in 1985; Israel let go 1,150 Arab prisoners for three soldiers held in Lebanon following Israel's 1982 invasion. A sense of family permeates Israeli culture. This tight-knit feeling drives Israeli society amid the daily onslaught of physical and verbal enemy threats. Shalit, gaunt and weary yet proud, was handed over by masked Hamas gunmen to Egyptian mediators and arrived back on Israeli soil a national hero – everyone's son. Israel strives not to leave a soldier, everyone's son or daughter, on the battlefield. Its intent is to not sacrifice a captured soldier, presumably Jew, Arab or Druze, even if 1,000 prisoners go free as part of a deal. Gazans, meanwhile, cheered their just-released brethren whose "deeds" included a 1989 bus hijacking that killed 16 and a 2001 Jerusalem pizzeria bombing that killed 15. The math won't jive in the Shalit deal, especially when elements of the newly released resume their violent ways against Israel, which will happen as sure as Hamas rockets pepper Negev towns. One of the liberated, Yehia al-Sinwar, a founder of Hamas' military wing, under- scored that. He took part in the 1994 kidnapping of Sgt. Nachshon Wachsman – killed by his captors in a rescue attempt by Israeli commandos. You can argue the life of one Israeli soldier, cherished as life is to Jews, isn't worth the risk posed by freeing hun- dreds of Islamist terrorists, who certainly didn't lose their jihadist stripes in Israeli captivity. But the redemption of Gilad Shalit reaffirms the Israeli ethical code, if not the Talmud's lack of clarity on "redeeming of the captive." Israel's challenge now is to ultra-protect its borders, streets and soldiers. Daunting danger lurks in the midst of Islamist terrorists frothing over the huge dividends exact- ed by taking hostage Israel Defense Forces fighters. L i