Josh Hammer
Just as the Israel Defense Forces encircle the Hamas stronghold of Gaza City, calls for a "ceasefire" are accelerating.
For the first week or two after the Hamas Holocaust of Oct. 7, which saw the most Jews massacred in a single day since Hitler and hundreds more taken hostage into Gaza, calls for a ceasefire were mostly relegated to far-left, self-hating "Jewish" groups such as IfNotNow and so-called Jewish Voice for Peace, along with the fifth column, jihad-sympathizing congressmen who comprise the House "Hamas Caucus," such as Reps. Rashida Tlaib (D-Mich.) and Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.). In those halcyon days just a short while ago, even White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said that Hamas Caucus calls for a ceasefire were "repugnant" and "disgraceful."
How the times have changed.
During a campaign event Wednesday evening in Minnesota, Jean-Pierre's boss, President Joe Biden, announced his support for an IDF "pause" in Gaza. (Notably, Biden's pronouncement came in response to a question from JVP activist Jessica Rosenberg, a seemingly transgender woman who introduced herself as a "rabbi" despite Jewish law's clear stance against female or LGBT rabbis.) There is no way to square Biden's newfound equivocation with his clearer stance toward the beginning of the war. As Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.) tweeted on Thursday, "The Biden administration is mincing words. Calling it a 'pause' instead of a 'ceasefire' makes no difference to Hamas and only gives the terrorists the advantage."
Exactly right.
Biden's obfuscation aside, the reality is that his call for a "pause" represents a 180-degree turn from his earlier, surprisingly clarion remarks standing with Israel. To be sure, everyone should have seen this coming; Biden must secure the Democratic Party's left flank, and polls have suggested Biden's strong initial support for Israel has cost him among Muslim Americans, a reliable Democratic voting bloc. But the president's reversal came quicker than expected. And early evidence suggests Biden's call for an IDF "pause" in Gaza has quickly percolated throughout the Democratic ecosystem; anti-Israel Sen. Chris Murphy (D-Conn.), for instance, released a statement on Thursday "urg[ing] Israel to immediately reconsider its approach" in Gaza.
How soon the blood of 1,400-plus slain by a medieval Islamist death cult is forgotten.
Tanks move across a field on November 01, 2023 in Southern Israel. As Israel's response to Hamas's Oct 7 attacks entered its fourth week, the Israeli PM said the current war would be a long one and would amount to a "second war of independence." In the wake Hamas's attacks that left 1,400 dead and 230 kidnapped, Israel launched a sustained bombardment of the Gaza Strip and began a ground invasion to vanquish the militant group that governs the Palestinian territory.
Some of those who have been calling for a "ceasefire" or "pause" in Gaza just want to see more Jews slaughtered. They want Hamas to remain functionally intact and they want Hamas to replicate in the future its barbaric pogrom of Oct. 7, which Hamas official Ghazi Hamad openly said this week the terrorist outfit would do until Israel is annihilated. They want to see the (primarily Jewish) hostages currently held in Gaza rot. Tlaib, for instance, who once infamously said that thinking about the Holocaust gives her a "calming feeling," is squarely in the "want more dead Jews" category. There is an old Yiddish expression that is the only proper response to these absolute scumbags: Gai kaken oifen yam! Google it.
Other "ceasefire" or "pause" advocates, such as Biden, are of a less nakedly genocidal bent. These leftists, à la John Lennon crooning in the abysmal song "Imagine," foolishly think that all sides laying down their arms will lead to peace. Never mind, as Dennis Prager has long pointed out, that if Israel were to ever lay down its arms, it would cease to exist the very next day. Never mind, furthermore, that there will never, ever be peace in the Levant with Hamas, a fundamentalist Sunni jihadist organization indistinguishable from al-Qaeda or ISIS, as part of any "solution."
In reality, there is an extraordinarily simple way to expedite the end of all hostilities in Gaza: Hamas releases all hostages taken on Oct. 7 and unconditionally surrenders to Israel, just as Germany and Japan unconditionally surrendered to the Allied Powers to end World War II. If Hamas did that, the war would end tomorrow. There would be no further casualties. The conversation would instead shift to what the Gaza Strip will look like once freed from Hamas' jackboot.
Surely, all reasonable people can agree that is something to look forward to.
Across two successive Democratic presidential administrations, left-wing foreign policy has been besotted with the notion of "balancing" powers in the Middle East. Under President Barack Obama, this took the form of undermining America's regional allies, such as Israel, Saudi Arabia, and Egypt, and bolstering its regional foes, such as the Iranian regime and the Muslim Brotherhood. Now, under President Biden, with many of the same goons once again running foreign policy, it has taken the form of hamstringing Israel and offering aid and comfort to Hamas. At some point, such delusions cease being merely naive and become outright evil.
It has been a long time since the surrender of Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan. Many in the West have forgotten what it actually takes, and what it actually means, to win a war. It is time for Israel to provide a helpful reminder.
Josh Hammer is Newsweek senior editor-at-large, host of "The Josh Hammer Show," a syndicated columnist, and a research fellow with the Edmund Burke Foundation. Subscribe here for "The Josh Hammer Report," a Newsweek newsletter. X: @josh_hammer.
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