RUTHIE BLUM: SWEET WHILE IT LASTED

http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_opinion.php?id=9463

A funny thing happened on the way to the demolition of 32 terror tunnels in Hamastan: ‎Israeli society experienced nearly a solid month of internal unity. This would not be worth ‎mentioning if it weren’t so extraordinary. Indeed, in the 37 years that I have lived in the ‎Jewish state, I have never witnessed anything like it, even during wartime.‎

One could argue that the reason public support for Operation Protective Edge reached a ‎whopping 95 percent was the utter justice of its cause; that the incessant rocket-‎fire from Gaza, now hitting the center of country, was too much even for the peace ‎utopians to bear. ‎

One could assume that no matter what an Israeli’s personal political leanings, he would ‎see the virtue in defeating an enemy that glorifies death; uses children as canon fodder; ‎abuses women; tortures homosexuals and the disabled; and vows to annihilate the world’s ‎Jews while converting or slaughtering its Christians. ‎

Nevertheless, it is usually impossible to get even those Israelis with similar outlooks to ‎agree on anything, including where to hang a communal clothesline, for more than five ‎minutes. Hence the quip, “Two Jews, three opinions.”‎

As a result, when almost everyone across the ideological spectrum began to defend the ‎government, it felt as though we were witnessing a miracle. ‎

True, the far Left held demonstrations in which they waved placards calling Israeli Air ‎Force pilots murderers, while the riffraff Right got violent and screamed for “death to ‎the Arabs.” But neither of these expressions of extremism was representative of the ‎general population. On the contrary, the overall sanity, rhetorical restraint and accord of ‎the populace were as palpable as the international community’s condemnations of Israel ‎were predictable.‎

To add wonderment to the mix, Egypt, Jordan and Saudi Arabia were practically begging ‎Israel to finish off Hamas. And since none of those regimes would give a hoot about ‎civilian casualties in Gaza, it’s too bad they didn’t do the job themselves. In such an ‎event, as is apparent from every conflict in the Middle East that involves Arabs killing ‎Arabs, the United States, Europe and the United Nations would have looked the other ‎way, at best, and assisted the wrong side at worst.‎

Still, the acknowledgement on the part of some of Israel’s neighbors that Hamas is an evil ‎regional threat with backing from Iran was not only ironic; it was also comforting.‎

In short, though Israelis have been spending time in bomb shelters, burying dead soldiers ‎and worrying about what appears to be a brewing intifada in Judea and Samaria (aka ‎the West Bank), we have felt like a family. We have had a sense of being in this together.‎

Though such solidarity has characterized the very beginning of previous battles, it never ‎lasted more than a few days. This is because the local media — always quick to focus on ‎Israel’s flaws — harbor and promote the notion that none of Israel’s defensive wars would ‎be necessary if Israel would only make peace with the Palestinians. When presented with ‎the inconvenient fact that Israel has done little else since its inception than attempt to do ‎live in peace alongside its neighbors, and has a proven record of withdrawing from ‎territory to achieve this, the pundits claim that Israel hasn’t done enough. (You know, like ‎the Obama administration chiding Israel for not doing enough to prevent civilian deaths ‎in Gaza; making any greater effort in either endeavor would have entailed holding up a ‎white flag before drowning ourselves in the Mediterranean.)‎

But during the current war, even the mainstream media have been keeping their knees ‎from jerking too far in their usual direction. ‎

Most astonishing of all is that this sweeping unity has occurred under the stewardship of ‎Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Normally disdained by the Right as a weak leader ‎who betrayed his Likud party’s platform by favoring a two-state solution, and reviled by ‎the Left as an intransigent obstacle to peace and international acceptance, Netanyahu has ‎managed to steer the ship with almost no serious opposition at home.‎

At 8 a.m. on Tuesday morning, a 72-hour cease-fire went into effect, just as the Israel Defense Forces ‎announced it had completed the political echelon’s mission of eliminating those tunnels ‎leading from Gaza into Israel. Prior to agreeing to this particular halt in fighting — after ‎Hamas violated each previous one — Netanyahu assured the Israeli public that troops were ‎on the border, ready to go back in if it were to become necessary.‎

And thus ended the honeymoon.‎

The dysfunctional family that constitutes Israeli society has resumed its bickering and ‎dissatisfaction. From those enraged that Netanyahu pulled out of Gaza too soon, to those ‎already picking at the carcass of his coalition — gleefully praying for it to be toppled ‎before the next election — the vultures didn’t miss a beat. ‎

It is too early to assume that the war is finally over, with a questionable victory for Israel. ‎Nor can one judge whether Netanyahu has been doing a dance of accepting cease-fires ‎and then gaining the moral backing of the public that he needs to proceed in order to ‎continue pummeling the terrorists and their infrastructure. ‎

This is a marathon, not a sprint. And Hamas is a tiny piece of a much larger puzzle with ‎which Israel, as a part of the West, has to contend.‎

This is why I am urging my fellow Israelis to pause before coming to literal and figurative ‎blows. It won’t do any good, of course. The morning-after pill has been swallowed, and it ‎is impossible to reverse its course.‎

But the glimpse of consensus was truly sweet while it lasted.‎

Ruthie Blum is the author of “To Hell in a Handbasket: Carter, Obama, and the ‘Arab ‎Spring.'”‎

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