Stephen Harper: Israel’s war is just, Hamas must surrender or be eliminated

Peloni:  Harper is one of the greatest statesmen of our age, and his focused support of the Jewish people endures to this day, as does his sense of decency, justice and reason.

It is foolish to think a two-state solution will emerge while so many Palestinians still reject the existence of a Jewish state.

Stephen J. Harper, National Post Feb 18, 2024

Photographs of Israeli hostages being held in the Gaza Strip are placed on a house that was destroyed by Hamas in Kibbutz Be’eri, Israel, Wednesday, Dec. 20, 2023. (AP Photo/Ohad Zwigenberg)

During the night of Oct. 7, my wife Laureen woke me to show horrifying images from Israel appearing on her cellphone. Like millions in Israel and around the world, we were shocked and sickened on multiple levels.

We had already spent a year and a half watching the unprovoked onslaught of the Russian military on its peaceful Ukrainian neighbour. We had seen the dead bodies, the broken families, and the shelled-out communities. It is sadly, only one of many violent conflicts in the world today. Each such image wounds our hearts.

Yet, this was different. The systemic nature of the killing and the evident glee with which it was being undertaken by its participants betrayed something darker than war itself. It recalled the things my father’s world had witnessed.

This was not random murder. It was more than some settling of inter-communal scores. It was beyond even brutal military action. These were acts of extermination — the killing of no mere enemy, but of those who, in the killers’ eyes, were less than human, whose very existence was to be viewed as a scourge. It was, in short, the urge to commit genocide at its most evil.

This may not have been a Holocaust in scale, but it was in kind. And, for the Israeli nation, born as it was in the shadow of the Holocaust, it can be interpreted no other way.

Nor can this be regarded as some isolated episode of anti-Israeli violence. It was the consequence of decades of institutionalized antisemitic indoctrination of a population — indoctrination to the point where such murderous acts become regarded as not merely expedient or tolerable, but as necessary and praiseworthy.

The world — at least we in the West — said of the Holocaust and the forces which unleashed it “never again.” Back then, only we could make that pledge. The Jewish people, half-annihilated and stateless, could not make it on their own behalf. Today, they can act on that pledge. And they rightly ask whether we will honour our own.

From that perspective, Israel’s war objective — the elimination of Gaza’s Hamas regime — is essential. Leaving the job unfinished, with Hamas’s existence tolerated and its actions contained, has been tried, and it has failed. The Israeli people cannot be reasonably asked to return to the pre-war status quo. That is the position our own nations took toward the attacks launched by Nazi Germany against us. Israel has as absolute a right to absolute security now as we did then.

Of course, we all wish the war to end. From the ongoing suffering of Israeli hostages and their families to Palestinian children caught in the crossfire, innocent people on both sides have suffered horribly. So, this war should end. And it should end the same way our war with the Nazis did — by the unconditional surrender of its perpetrators. I say to Israel’s friends, stop asking it to stop short of victory. Instead, bring pressure to bear on Hamas, directly and through its allies and partners, to force its capitulation.

After that, as the Second World War also taught us, even harder work begins — making sure we win the peace. Once again, our own experiences as Western democracies should provide guidance. Yes, we helped Germany to re-build. But we also insisted it de-construct the ideologies that led to its aggression. And we demanded it fully embrace the ethics of peaceful coexistence. Only then was its sovereignty restored and its membership in the family of free nations affirmed.

By that standard alone, suggestions that a victorious Israeli army should simply walk out of Gaza and assume some harmonious “two-state solution” will emerge out of thin air is insincere and hypocritical. I dare say it is also beyond foolish. That is precisely what Israel was persuaded to do in 2005, and it is why we ended up where we are today.

A two-state solution will not magically take root now for the same reason it has not happened in every year since 1947 — it is rejected by way too many Palestinians. The core problem is not Israel. Yes, there are obstacles in Israel that must someday be overcome. But Israel could have incorporated all Palestinian territory long ago, and it has not done so.

In contrast, generations of Palestinians have been inculcated with one-state mantras — “from the river to the sea,” “the right of return,” “settler occupation,” and so on. At their heart they categorically reject the right of a Jewish state to exist on any piece of the land of the former Mandate for Palestine. We must stop pretending that a two- state solution can be pursued in the face of the continued propagation of such a view. Yes, we must develop a roadmap that will lead to a Palestinian state, and Israel needs to contribute to that. But Israel should not be asked to go down that path as long as such ideologies are allowed to flourish on the Palestinian side.

There is an even bigger picture, however, that we in the West must grasp. This war is not an isolated conflict between Israelis and Palestinians. It is the product of a much larger and more dangerous force.

Before Oct. 7, we were on the cusp of a new Middle East. It was being created by a new generation of Arab leaders. Determined to be world-leading societies, they were setting aside the religious hatreds of the past and putting the Abraham Accords in their place. The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia itself was deepening its relationship with Israel while continuing an ambitious modernization agenda that remains sadly underappreciated in the West.

Yet, even with these developments, some in western capitals chose to continue seeking reconciliation with an Iranian regime whose vision could not be more different. And so, we turned a blind eye to Tehran’s continued preaching of medieval jihad and its ongoing construction of a theocratic empire. We watched as it slowly took over Iraq, Lebanon, Syria, Yemen, and, of course, Gaza. We ignored advice from both Arab and Israeli allies to counter these threats, and even criticized actions designed to do so.

In this context, the West’s support for Israel’s war effort goes beyond moral obligations. It is but a small step in responding to a much larger challenge coming at us. I am not talking just about reoccurrences of 9-11-style terrorism. Nor am I referring only to the growing attacks on key international shipping lanes, as alarming as they are. I mean the real, potentially global, threat of a powerful regional state that mixes an aggressive and malevolent ideology with the pursuit of nuclear weapons capability. I am hoping that we understand this bigger picture before it is too late.

Almost exactly 10 years ago, I addressed the Israeli Knesset. I said that the Canada I represented would stand with Israel “through fire and water.” I meant it, and the Canadians I spoke for believe it still, as do hundreds of millions like us all over the world.

For we know what history has shown us: that antisemitism and anti-Zionism are always the proverbial canaries in the coalmine. Those who embrace such tribal and sectarian hatreds will invariably, in time, aim their guns well beyond the Jewish people. Indeed, if we open our eyes, we will see that they are already doing so.

This is, in short, a time to support Israel with clarity, consistency, and strength, not only because it is right, but because it is in the best interests of global peace and security.

February 19, 2024 | 16 Comments »

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16 Comments / 16 Comments

  1. Israel’s war is just, Hamas must surrender or be eliminated

    I don’t understand why letting Hamas surrender should be an option.

  2. @Harris Good one. That song is from 1968. In 1986, Whoopie Goldberg starred in a romantic comedy spy movie also called, “Jumpin Jack Flash.”

  3. Dogan Akman

    I don’t believe we’re thinking of the same mamzer. You are visualising a saint Trudeau with a halo and wings, I’m actually seeing a very acerbic Trudeau who used to travel on a motor bike, all over the Eastern Canada dressed in a Nazi uniform and helmet.

  4. @mirib I don’t know if he really believes that or not but I’m guessing he’d be arrested if he didn’t say that just like Bill Maher would be canceled if he didn’t periodically smear Trump.

  5. Wait..what? I couldn’t get past the 2 nd paragraph when this fool said
    the unprovoked onslaught of the Russian military on its peaceful Ukrainian neighbour.

  6. Apropos of nothing, Hochul’s remarks remind me of one of the most under-rated and prophetic satires of all time. “Canadian Bacon” (1995) (directed by Leftist Michael Moore who now actually said he wants to start WWIII over Ukraine on Twittter.) trailer with regard to the war with Russia over the Ukraine:

    https://twitter.com/MMFlint/status/1506112168781135875?lang=en
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4jf8Bt4gD9Y

    Do you ever get the feeling that the Deep State is getting its ideas from Hollywood?

    Longer clip. So on point. from 1995: “Canadian Bacon: restart the cold war”

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ETNSVEumyJk

  7. Gov. Hochul was right about Israel — until the left forced her to apologize
    By Social Links forBob McManus
    Published Feb. 18, 2024, 2:02 p.m. ET

    https://nypost.com/2024/02/18/opinion/gov-hochul-was-right-about-israel-until-the-left-forced-her-to-apologize/

    “…Speaking to the United Jewish Appeal-Federation of New York at Gotham’s venerable Pierre Hotel Thursday, Hochul had sharply called out Iranian cat’s-paw Hamas while underscoring her support for Israel post-10/7.

    The bloody-fisted terrorist organization “must be stopped” she said. And Israelis couldn’t be expected to live with “that threat, that specter, over them.”

    ‘Anodyne words, to be sure – but so far, so good.

    Then she told the truth, which so many New Yorkers can’t handle.

    “If Canada ever attacked Buffalo,” she projected, “I’m sorry, my friends, there would be no Canada the next day. You have a right to defend yourself, and to make sure that it never happens again. And that is Israel’s right.”

    No equivocation there. Nor should there have been.

    But the comment was on video, which went viral, with entirely predictable impact – and then there was Hochul, tendering an apologetic back-track to the New York Times:

    “While I have been clear in my support of Israel’s right to self-defense,” she weaseled, “I have also repeatedly said and continue to believe that Palestinian civilian casualties should be avoided . . .” and blah, blah, blah…”

    https://nypost.com/2024/02/18/opinion/gov-hochul-was-right-about-israel-until-the-left-forced-her-to-apologize/

    I don’t think any governor would have had a choice but to backtrack. But, her heart is in the right place. I’m glad I voted for her.

  8. Re Gordo
    The shame is on you.
    Re Dalgliesh
    Trudeau is far from being popular and this has been the case since the last year as he trails poorly behind the Conservative Party in the opinion polls.
    Re Belman
    Trudeau’ father did not embrace China and Cuba.In the case of China he corrected a historical anomaly and wisely established diplomatic relations with China as did the U.S and most members of NATO and of the EU. As to Cuba, again he did the right thing compared to the oppressive imperialist treatment of Cuba by the U.S.

  9. Very disappointed in a generally thiughtful article being tainted with ignorance on the Ukraine situation with the comment “unprovoked onslaught of the Russian military on its peaceful Ukrainian neighbour. We had seen the dead bodies, the broken…” Shameful that former PM Harper has not studied the history and prefers to recite the MSM.

  10. God bless Mr. Harper, I wish he could become Prime Minister again. But since hi s party has a new leader, that won’t happen. But if the Conservatives were to return to power after the next national election (unfortunately that seems unlikely now because that jerk Trudeau is popular) he could certainly appoint Harper as foreign minister or minister of defense. Let’s hope.

  11. An excellent, wonderful “direct from the shoulder” view of the present and future ideal situation between Israel and the Arabs.

    But, you may notice I do not include YESHA Arabs the “Palestinians” so-called.

    This is Harper’s single flaw in his superb article. This 100% true friend of Israel and Jews, is is deep error here.

    There can never be a “Palestinian” State on Land Owned by Israel. And it IS Owned by all legal Moral and Historical evidence. Signed sealed and fully documented.

    I wish Harper would cme back into politics a Conservative Leader of true merit is sorely needed.

  12. A good article when viewed in the scenario of Israel being coerced to accept the TSS. What we should also review is the story about 9/11. There are too many leads to the possibility that the stories about Muslim terrorists was conveniently made up to help us believe that they were to blame. I have no doubt that they are pleased to be shown as heroes but the latest disclosures show the bringing down of the twin towers as a desired result.
    I suggest we circumvent 9/11, however painful it may be, before the truth is shown.

  13. pELONI
    You are so right.Canadians were very proud of him.The contrast between Trudeau and Harper is beyond beflief, I left Canada in 2009 6 years before Trudeau was elected. He haP transformed Canada in the same way Obama transformed the US. His father Pierre Trudeau embraced China and Cuba and introduced multiculculuralism. which was the beginning of our decline.