July 29, 2006
COMMENTARY: Why the World Should Stand Back and Let Israel Do What It Has to
Do
By Dave Wilson
Captain (Ret.) U.S. Navy
When I was in the Navy, I once witnessed a bar fight in downtown
Olongapo (Philippines) that still haunts my dreams. The fight was between a
big oafish Marine and a rather soft-spoken, medium
sized Latino sailor from my ship.
All evening the Marine had been trying to pick a fight with one of us
and had finally set his sights on this diminutive shipmate of mine...
figuring him for a safe target. When my friend refused to be goaded
into a fight the Marine sucker punched him from behind on the side of the
head so hard that blood instantly started to pour from this poor man's
mutilated ear.
Everyone present was horrified and was prepared to absolutely murder
this Marine, but my shipmate quickly turned on him and began to
single-handedly back him towards a corner with aseries of stinging jabs and
upper cuts that gave more than a hint to a
youth spent boxing in a small gym in the Bronx.
Each punch opened a cut on the Marine's startled face and by the time
he had been backed completely into the corner he was blubbering for someone
to stop the fight. He invoked his split lips
and chipped teeth as reasons to stop the fight. He begged us to stop
the fight because he could barely see through the river of blood that was
pouring out of his split and swollen brows.
Nobody moved. Not one person.
The only sound in the bar was the sickening staccato sound of this
sailor's lightning fast fists making contact with new areas of the Marine's
head. The only sound I have heard since that was remotely similar was from
the first Rocky film when Sylvester Stallone was punching sides of beef in
the meat locker.
Finally the Marine's pleading turned to screams.... a high, almost
womanly shriek. And still the punches continued relentlessly. Several people
in the bar took a few tentative steps as though they wanted to try to break
it up at that point, but hands reached out from the crowd and held them
tight. I'm not ashamed to say that mine were two of the hands that held
someone back. You see, in between each blow the sailor had begun chanting a
soft
cadence: "Say [punch] you [punch] give [punch] up [punch]... say [punch] you
[punch]were [punch] wrong [punch]".
He had been repeating it to the Marine almost from the start but we
only became aware of it when the typical barroom cheers had died down and we
began to be sickened by the sight and sound of the carnage.
This Marine stood there shrieking in the corner of the bar trying
futilely to block the carefully timed punches that were cutting his head to
tatters... right down to the skull in places. But he refused to say that he
gave up... or that he was wrong.
Even in the delirium of his beating he believed in his heart that
someone would stop the fight before he had to admit defeat. I'm sure this
strategy had served him well in the past and had allowed him to continue on
his career as a barroom bully.
Finally, in a wail of agony the Marine shrieked "I give up", and we
gently backed the sailor away from him.
I'm sure you can guess why I have shared this story today.
I'm not particularly proud to have been witness to such a bloody
spectacle, and the sound of that Marine's woman-like shrieks will haunt me
to my grave. But I learned something that evening that
Israel had better learn for itself if it is to finally be rid of at
least one of its tormentors:
This is one time an Arab aggressor must be allowed to be beaten so
badly that every civilized nation will stand in horror, wanting desperately
to step in and stop the carnage... but knowing that the fight will only
truly be over when one side gives up and finally admits defeat.
Just as every person who had ever rescued that bully from admitting
defeat helped create the cowardly brute I saw that evening in the bar, every
well-intentioned power that has ever stepped in and negotiated a ceasefire
for an Arab aggressor has helped create the monsters we see around us
today.
President Lahoud of Lebanon, a big Hezbollah supporter and a close
ally of Syria, has been shrieking non-stop to the UN Security Council for
the past two days to get them to force Israel into a cease fire.
Clearly he has been reading his autographed copy of 'Military Success
for Dummies Arab Despots' by the late Gamal Abdel Nasser of Egypt. Ever
since Nasser accidentally discovered the trick in '56, every subsequent Arab
leader has stuck to his tried and true formula for military success:
Instigate a war.
Once the war is well underway and you are in the process of having
your ass handed to you... get a few world powers to force your western
opponent into a cease fire.
Whatever you do, don't surrender or submit to any terms dictated by
your enemy. That would ruin everything! All you have to do is wait it out
and eventually the world will become sickened at what is being done to your
soldiers and civilian population... and will force a truce.
Once a truce has been called you can resume your intransigence (which
probably caused the conflict in the first place), and even declare victory
as your opponent leaves the field of battle.
This tactic has never failed. Not once.
In fact it worked so well for the Egyptians in 1973, that to this day
they celebrate the Yom Kippur War -- a crushing defeat at the hands of
Israel -- as a military victory! No kidding... it's a national holiday over
there!
President Lahoud has already begun to shriek like a school girl to
the UN Security Council to "Stop the violence and arrange a cease-fire, and
then after that we'll be ready to discuss all matters."
Uh huh. Forgive me if I find that a tad hard to swallow. He allowed
Hezbollah to take over his country. He allowed the regular Lebanese army to
provide radar targeting data for the Hezbollah missile that struck the
Israeli destroyer.
He has turned a blind eye while Iranian and Syrian weapons, advisers and
money have
poured into his country. And now that his country is in ruins he wants to
call it a draw.
As much as it may sicken the world to stand by and watch it happen,
strong hands need to hold back the weak-hearted and let the fight continue
until one side finally admits unambiguous defeat.