No Israel, No Palestine: A Thought Experiment
On October 5, 2005, former Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad declared that Israel was a “disgraceful blot” that should be “wiped off the face of the earth.” Despite the genocidal nature of his statement, the world did not respond by isolating him or Iran. Instead, in 2011, Ahmadinejad was invited to address the United Nations, reflecting a disturbing tolerance for such rhetoric.Jonathan Tobin: Liberal media mainstreams a blood libel about Israeli ‘apathy’
On October 7, 2023, just eighteen years later, or roughly one generation, Iran attempted to make good on their promise, as Hamas, their proxy, carried out the deadliest massacre of Jews since the Holocaust. Their explicit aim? Murdering as many Israelis as possible to eradicate the Jewish state “from the river to the sea.”
Given this continuing obsession with destroying the Jewish state, and the global obsession with a “free Palestine,” it’s worth conducting this thought experiment: Imagine if Israel is no more. We can start with the War of 1948 and the Armistice borders of 1949, which reveal much about an Israel-free Middle East. Indeed, when five Arab armies attacked the fledgling Jewish state, there was no call to “liberate” an Arab Muslim Palestine.
On the contrary, Jordan expanded and amassed Judea Samaria and Egypt annexed the entire Gaza Strip. Paramount to the lie of the “Disappearing Map of Palestine” is the certainty that from 1949 to 1967, neither Jordan nor Egypt “freed” these territories and helped to create an Arab Muslim Palestine. Indeed, variations of the phrase “from the River to the Sea” appeared only after 1967, documented in graffiti and used in protest chants. Put differently, when Jordan and Egypt “occupied” the region of Palestine, Arab Muslims did not consider themselves living under occupation.
If Israel had lost the First Arab-Israeli War of 1948, the five Arab countries would likely have further divided up the region. While we cannot be certain who would have gotten what, what is certain, as evidenced by the 1949 Armistice Lines, no Arab Muslim Palestine would have ever been created.
The result of a sovereign Jewish vacuum from the river to the sea will be fought over between Hamas and the Fatah Party, the Palestinian Authority that governs Areas A and B in Judea Samaria. The bloodbath that would ensue would be colossal but would not, of course, garner the world’s attention as Jews will no longer be part of the equation.
Just ask the Kurds, or Sudanese, or Nigerians what happens when there is actual slaughter but no Jews. The most stunning case, perhaps, is the silence of the world, especially the human rights world as Bashar al-Assad, the Syrian former dictator, gassed half a million of his own population. Mass graves are being discovered in Syria, yet the International Criminal Court (the ICC) makes no demand that Assad be tried for crimes against humanity.
That is why to all but a small minority of Israelis, the events on Oct. 7 and the widespread support it received from Palestinians in Gaza and elsewhere remains a conclusive argument that a two-state solution is a formula for endless war and the slaughter of Jews. That is also why—whether or not they wish to replace Netanyahu as prime minister—they are fully in favor of the war against Hamas in Gaza.Commemorate Auschwitz liberation at Western Wall if Poland honors ICC blood libel
In adopting such an attitude, Israelis are behaving no differently than any country that has been assaulted by a deadly foe led by extremists like the fanatics that run and fund Hamas would have done.
Yet contrary to the “apathy” argument that portrays them as indifferent to the suffering of the Palestinians sacrificed by Hamas, the Jewish state has demonstrated great humanity with respect to their foes.
From the beginning of the current war, Israel has allowed a steady stream of supplies of food, fuel and other essential goods to be shipped into Gaza, including those areas where Hamas still prevails. The difficulty in getting food to Gazans is not due to hard-hearted Israelis obstructing the flow of aid but to the fact that Hamas and criminal Palestinian gangs have stolen the majority of the aid brought in by humanitarian groups, most of which are compromised by their connections to the terrorists.
What country would be expected to feed and aid those trying to kill their citizens while those enemies were still in arms and “resisting” its existence?
Hamas could have ended this war at any point since October 2023 by releasing the hostages and accepting Israeli offers in which the terrorists would be allowed safe passage out of Gaza. They hold on because they believe that their propaganda will convince the West to turn on Israel and someday hand it to them on a silver platter. Those who participate in pro-Hamas demonstrations are not just engaging in antisemitism with their “from the river to the sea” and “globalize the intifada” chants. Like the journalists who accept the false narrative in which Israel is branded as the villain in the war that began on Oct. 7, they are helping to prolong the war.
Progressives believe that they can turn America against Israel. Through their dominance of the education system, culture and much else, they have tried to indoctrinate a generation of youth to accept the toxic myths of intersectionality and critical race theory. In doing so, they have sought to convince the country that not only was America an irredeemably racist nation but that Israel and the Jews were “white” oppressors. Those who accept this false ideology wrongly believe that Israel is a “settler-colonial” and “apartheid” state that has no right to exist. That leads them to ignore the truth about the conflict and to think that Israel is always in the wrong and the Palestinians are always right, no matter what either side actually does. That is a prime factor in enabling the slanders of Israel as well as the whitewashing of Palestinian brutality and intransigence.
Antisemites are frustrated
Israel’s foes are not only deeply frustrated by the military success of the IDF against the Iranian-sponsored terrorists of Hamas and Hezbollah as well as the defeat that Tehran has suffered (largely as a result of the Jewish state’s actions against its proxies in Lebanon) in Syria. They are also unhappy about the victory of President-elect Donald Trump. The prospect of Trump and a host of other ardent supporters of the Jewish state taking office in two weeks is a decisive defeat for those who seek to isolate Israel.
But as another Times article recently noted, Palestinians and their foreign cheerleaders have not lost hope. This doesn’t mean that they are ready to live in peace with Israel or reject a vision of their national identity that is firmly linked to endless war on the Jews. Rather, they believe that sooner or later their victories in a propaganda war in which Israel is delegitimized will ultimately allow them to fulfill their fantasy of extinguishing the one Jewish state on the planet.
Corporate media and other outlets that spread the claim that Israelis are immoral for supporting their country’s defensive war against genocidal terrorists are engaging in antisemitism. But they are also helping to perpetuate a self-destructive mindset that means more bloodshed and suffering for both Jews and Arabs.
The United States should boycott the upcoming international ceremony on Jan. 27 marking the 80th anniversary of the liberation of the Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration and death camp unless Poland renounces its support of the International Criminal Court’s warrant against Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and guarantees his safe transit. Poland’s threat to arrest Israel’s leader if he attends the memorial labels the Jewish state as today’s Nazi regime, mocking the 6 million Jews murdered by the Nazis and their collaborators, along with the victims of Oct. 7, 2023.
Poland’s stance is also a direct threat to America’s national security, as the ICC threatens to use the same lawless playbook to have countries seize American service members on trumped-up charges.
The ICC criminal charges are a blood libel demanding that Jews not defend themselves and attempting to erase a key lesson of the Holocaust: Never again will Jews be defenseless against genocidal enemies.
“Operation Al-Aqsa Flood,” the worst massacre of Jews since the Holocaust, was perpetrated by Palestinian Arabs in the Gaza Strip (from where Israel completely withdrew in 2005), which is governed by Hamas and whose charter calls for genocide against the Jewish people. Fatah, which controls the Palestinian National Authority (P.A.), joined the attack, as did ordinary Gazans. The vast majority of Gaza residents and Arabs living in Judea and Samaria supported the Oct. 7 invasion and resulting atrocities.
The name Al-Aqsa Flood emphasizes the goal of destroying Israel, not creating a state alongside it. Al-Aqsa is the Muslim name for Jerusalem and derives from the Jewish Beit Hamikdash (Holy Temple). Islamists recognize the historic Jewish link to Jerusalem but are determined to supplant that connection. Yasser Arafat—the chief of the Palestine Liberation Organization, and the founder of Fatah and the Palestinian Authority—hailed Nazi collaborator Grand Mufti Haj Amin Al-Husseini as his role model and similarly styled his five-year war against Israel that began in September 2000 as the “Al-Aqsa Intifada.”
On Oct. 7, in the worst massacre of Jews since the Holocaust, the invaders murdered more than 1,200 Israelis and foreigners, mostly civilians, and also dragged as many as 251 men, women and children back into Gaza. The attack was also reminiscent of the Holocaust because of the unspeakable atrocities motivated by blind hatred of Jews.