Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, under pressure from U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, uttered a few words on Tuesday that appeared to condemn the barbaric attack by two Palestinians in a synagogue in Jerusalem. (The killers, of course, will soon be recognized as martyrs by Abbas’ political party Fatah, and all the other Palestinian groups, which are even more extreme).
The attack, which has so far killed five Israelis, as well as the two murderers (a mild term, really for those who slaughter rabbis and others with an axe or knife while they are praying), could have had a far worse outcome, though others in the hospital on life support or in critical condition may soon be added to the death toll.
Some 30 people were praying at the time of the attack, and the goal of the killers was to murder them all. Israeli police prevented a worse bloodbath, and it is a virtual certainty now that synagogues will be added to other institutional venues in Israel that require more security. Had the monsters been more ”successful” before they were shot to death by the Israeli police, then CNN could have headlined “32 dead in mosque attack in Jerusalem,” and the BBC could have shown pictures of the two dead Palestinians while refusing to show any of the 30 Jewish or Israeli casualties, and The New York Times could have used its typical passive voice to describe the attack this way: “Violence breaks out in Jerusalem, 32 dead.” Someone needs to have a heart-to-heart talk with violence and keep him from breaking out in this way. That is the road to peace.
The attack clearly had no impact in preventing or delaying the latest disgrace from Europe, where Spanish legislators showed their concern for the dead and wounded by voting to recognize the nonexistent state of Palestine.
Kerry has hardly been an innocent party in recent months, repeatedly blaming Israel for the breakdown of peace talks that due to Palestinian lack of interest in even participating in a peace process, never got to a stage where they could break down. His spokespeople at the State Department, amateur-hour incompetents Jen Psaki and Marie Harf, have treated Israel like a pinata, particularly during the recent Gaza war, when Israel just could not do enough in their eyes to protect Palestinian civilians (despite their being regularly used by Hamas as human shields, and with 12-year-olds sent off to fight). Better it seems that Israel had a right to defend itself (all criticisms of Israel begin this way), but did nothing, since any Israeli attack or bombing might involve civilian casualties, presumably something new in the history of war. Yesterday, Psaki criticized Israel’s demolition of the houses of the mass-murdering duo, since it was an obstacle in the path to peace. That path, in the minds of some in the Obama administration, including possibly President Barack Obama, himself, involves the eventual disappearance of Israel as a Jewish state.