Palestinian terrorism verdict
shatters long-held myths and illusions
By Stephen M. Flatow/JNS.org
The illusion is shattered. When confronted with claims of
complicity in terror attacks, the Palestinian Authority (PA) and the Palestine
Liberation Organization (PLO) can no longer lift their hands and say in
puzzlement, “Who,
me?”
The jury in the just-decided
terrorism case—Sokolow
v. Palestine Liberation Organization, which awarded $218.5 million to 10
American families victimized by Palestinian terrorism in Israel—has said the opposite. “Yes,” the PA and the PLO do bear responsibility for the death,
pain, and suffering brought about in a series of terror attacks against
innocent civilians a decade ago. The myth of PA and PLO innocence has been shattered, I hope
for all time.
Some other myths have been shattered,
including the myth that suicide bombers are “lunatics”—in the words of Israel’s
late prime minister Yitzhak Rabin, as he told my wife and I when he visited us
in our home a month after Islamic Jihad’s murder of our 20-year old daughter Alisa in April 1995.
A lunatic is mentally ill and does
not know right from
wrong, or cannot appreciate the consequences of his or her actions. The “lunatics” who carried out Palestinian terror attacks didn’t design
and manufacture the bomber vests, or stuff a backpack with explosives and then
conduct the attack on their own. The bomber vests and backpacks were designed and made by
terrorists of Hamas, Islamic Jihad, Fatah, and the Popular Front for the
Liberation of Palestine—the
last two being the largest groups in the PLO, and the first two aided by the
PLO.
The men and women who strapped
explosives impregnated with ball bearings, nuts, bolts, and screws to their
bodies, and shouted “Allahu
Akbar” (God
is greater) as they pushed the detonator, fully appreciated the consequences of
their actions—they
wanted to kill Israelis. As
many as they could, in any location they could find. So what if it was a pizza shop, or a
bus, or a university cafeteria? So what if an American citizen or an Arab Israeli got
caught in the attack? Who
cared? They
didn’t, and neither did those who recruited them and then drove
them to the target.
When the FBI went to Gaza to
investigate the murder of my daughter, what cooperation did the PA provide?
None. And when the PA had the ability to arrest Alisa’s murderers,
what did it do? Only
because it wanted to relieve the pressure America brought to bear, it arrested
and then furloughed her killers.
And what else has the PA done to
combat terrorism in the years since the 1993 Oslo Accords? It refused Israeli
requests, required under the Oslo Accords, to turn over to Israel those
Palestinians wanted by Israel in connection with terror attacks. It pays
terrorists who serve time in Israeli prisons and send a monthly pension payment
to the families of so-called martyrs. It honors the murderers
of innocent civilians by naming parks and sporting events after them. It turns
a blind eye to those who planned and carried out terror attacks from within
PA-controlled territory until the construction of the security fence by Israel
put an end to them.
And what will the court ruling do?
First, it will help the Western world
to understand that the long-held fiction that the Palestinians are not
responsible for their actions must be discarded. He didn’t get many things right about the
Middle East, but what Edward Said called the “orientalism” of the West—the treatment of Palestinians as children who did not know
better—allowed
the PA and PLO to duck from responsibility for terrorist acts carried out under
their watch, and worse, with their supervision and/or material support.
Second, it should convince the U.S.
government that the victims must be allowed to collect their financial awards.
If not out of the of the $400 million in U.S. aid money sent annually to the
PA, the reparations should come out of other assets of the PA in the U.S. and assist the victims to
reach PA money in Europe.
Third, hitting the PA hard—in the pocketbook—should force the Palestinian
leadership of Mahmoud Abbas, et al., to accept
the fact that they cannot continue to pay terrorists sitting in prison or
provide stipends to the families of murderers. More importantly, it might force the Palestinians living
under their thumbs to say, once and for all time, “no” to the continued sponsorship and glorification of
terrorists.
While no amount of money will ever
bring back the murdered children, fathers, mothers, and loved ones, nor
adequately compensate the survivors, the jury’s
message was clear: terrorism
has a price, and the terrorists and their sponsors must pay for it—not with lip service, but in hard, cold
cash.
Stephen M. Flatow, an attorney in New
Jersey, is the father of Alisa Flatow, who was murdered in a Palestinian
terrorist attack in 1995. He is a candidate on the Religious Zionist slate (www.VoteTorah.org) in the World Zionist Congress elections.
4 comments:
The Clery Act has been in effect since 1990. If you file a police report on the gang activity that advocates for serial killers on an American-associated campus, then shouldn't the Clery Act require the universities to disclose these police reports?
The universities with joint programs abroad ought to disclose which programs are exempt from crime reporting.
http://www.nccpsafety.org/assets/files/library/jeanne_clery_disclosure.pdf
You need only report incidents or crimes on programs where you own or control housing,
classroom space, office space etc.
http://www.nccpsafety.org/assets/files/library/Reporting_on_Student_Safety_and_Security_Abroad.pdf
The Department has never officially drawn the lines for when an international location
must be counted as non campus property.
This is from a state-supported university.
https://universitypolicy.gmu.edu/policies/reporting-of-clery-act-crimes-andor-prohibited-sexual-conduct/
hate crimes (including larceny-theft, simple assault, intimidation, or destruction/damage/vandalism of property that are motivated by bias);
http://police.gmu.edu/clery-act-reporting/clery-crime-definitions/
Note about Study Abroad trips: If there is an agreement, even a written agreement, to send students to an overseas location for a study abroad program, but that written agreement is for the program rather than for use of the physical space, Mason does not have control of the location and does not have to disclose statistics for crimes that occur there. However, these trips may have Clery reportable Noncampus buildings or property if Mason has entered written agreements to rent or lease physical space for students in a hotel or student housing facility for a period of three (3) or more days. Clery crimes are reportable if they occur in physical spaces that Mason controls (e.g., hotel rooms, apartments, etc.) or areas used to access those physical spaces for the period of time specified in the agreement.
http://police.gmu.edu/clery-act-reporting/csa-form/ Study Abroad program (please list City and Country in the notes below)
https://police.wayne.edu/contact.php
http://security.jhu.edu/services-for-you/online-anonymous-tip-form/index.html
https://police.gwu.edu/clery Clery Incident Report Form
http://ucpd.berkeley.edu/our-divisions/administration/community-outreach/clery-act/csa-report-form requires an email account at berkeley.edu
https://police.gwu.edu/clery-incident-report-classifications
Intimidation: To unlawfully place another person in reasonable fear of bodily harm through the use of threatening words and/or other conduct, but without displaying a weapon or subjecting the victim to actual physical attack.
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