Winning the Moral High Ground is a Loser's Game
By Daniel Greenfield
SultanKnish.Blogspot.com
In our modern age, things no longer exist to perform their function. Washing machines aren't designed to clean clothes, but to save water and energy. Food isn't there to be eaten, but not eaten. And armies aren't there to win wars, but to be moral. And the truly moral army never fights a war. When it must fight a war, then it fights it as proportionately as possible, slowing down when it's winning so that the enemy has a chance to catch up and inflict a completely proportional number of casualties on them.
Forget charging up a hill. Armies charge up the
slippery slope of the moral high ground and they
don't try to capture it from the enemy, because that
would be the surest way to lose the moral high
ground, instead they claim the moral high ground by
refusing to try and capture it, to establish their
moral claim to the moral high ground, which they
can't have because they refuse to fight for it.
Israel has been engaged in a long drawn out struggle
for the moral high ground. The moral high ground is
to the modern Israeli what the land of Israel was to
their pioneer ancestors who drained swamps, built
roads and shot bandits. Then some of the bandits
were discovered to be the oppressed peoples of the
region, fresh from Syria or Jordan, who then got
busy retroactively protesting the settlements built
on that stretch of swamp that had been set aside in
their revisionist history as belonging to their
great-grandparents while dangling oversized house
keys to the swamp.
Sadly the only way to win the moral high ground is
by losing. Just look at the massive Arab armies who
repeatedly invaded Israel, did their best to
overwhelm it with the best Soviet iron that the
frozen factories of the Ural could turn out, and
lost the bid to drive the Jews into the sea, but won
the moral high ground. Then their terrorist catspaws
spent decades winning the moral high ground by
hijacking airplanes full of civilians, murdering
Olympic athletes and pushing old men in wheelchairs
from the decks of cruise ships.
All these killing sprees accomplished absolutely
nothing useful, aside from the killing of Jews,
which to a certain sort of mind is a useful thing in
and of itself, but that failure won the terrorist
catspaws the moral high ground. Their failure to win
a war by hijacking buses full of women and taking
the children of a school hostage conclusively
established their moral superiority and nobility of
spirit.
The world was deeply moved when Arafat waddled up to
the UN podium, with his gun, wearing a mismatched
cotton rag on his head that would decades hence
become the modish apparel of every third hipster
standing in line with a can of 20 dollar fair trade
Lima beans at Whole Foods, because his commitment to
killing people in a failed cause that even he didn't
believe in, in exchange for money from his backers
in the Muslim world showed his deep commitment to
the moral high ground.
In the seventies, after Israel had won a few too
many wars, Henry "Woodcutter" Kissinger, suggested
that it lose a war to gain the sympathy of the
world. Golda wasn't too enthusiastic about the idea,
but with the old woodcutter in charge of handing out
the axes, there wasn't much choice about it. Israel
came close to being destroyed in '73, but just when
it might have won the sympathy of the world, its
armies of young men dashing from synagogues into
overcrowded taxis to get to the front lines, turned
the tide. Israel won. The woodcutter of Washington
lost and Israeli scrapyards filled up with piles of
Soviet steel, which was good news for the big sweaty
guys who ran them, but bad news for those pining for
the lofty fjords of the moral high ground.
In '91 the Israelis went nuclear and decided to beat
Arafat at his own game. Rabin and Peres talked the
old terrorist out of retirement and down to
Washington D.C. where they surrendered to him in an
official ceremony at the Rose Garden overseen by a
beaming Bill Clinton. Finally Israel had won the
moral high ground. And the United States had carved
off a chunk of that delicious moral high ground,
even though Clinton was forced to fidget in his
chair at Oslo when his Nobel Peace Prize went to the
greasy terrorist, though perhaps he should have
considered that defeat to be another victory of the
moral high ground.
But the moral high ground proved notoriously
elusive for the Jewish State. There was a brief lull
when it seemed that the original sin of kicking ass
had been atoned for in the Rose Garden, but then the
terrorists started killing Israelis again and the
Israelis insisted on fighting back. In no time at
all the moral high ground was roped off with a
special reserved section for terrorists and a sign
reading, "No Israelis Will Be Admitted Unless They
Renounce Their Government, Zionism and the Right of
Self-Defense."
Peace was the last best hope of the new Israeli
Hatikvah, not to be a free people in their own land,
but to be a moral people in a land that didn't
really belong to anyone in particular, but that they
were optimistic everyone could live in harmony in.
But peace with terrorists meant not fighting back
and there was a limit to what the 70 percent of the
country that didn't go to sleep fantasizing about
peace would accept in the name of peace.
And so, terrorists killed Israelis, Israelis killed
terrorists, that part of the world located in an
ugly modernist building overlooking Turtle Bay,
which the turtles would like to have back, condemned
Israel and demanded that it resolve things
peacefully by surrendering more land to the
terrorists in order to build up their confidence in
Israel's commitment to a peaceful solution.
The terrorists were not expected to reciprocate and
build up Israel's confidence in their commitment to
a peaceful solution because they already had the
moral high ground by way of losing the last thirty
engagements with the IDF, including the battle of
the school they set up snipers in, the church they
took over and the hospital that they used as an ammo
dump.
The great quandary for Israeli leaders is how to win
a war without losing the moral high ground. This is
a tricky matter because it requires winning the war
and winning the peace. And you can't do both at the
same time.
Israel's solution has been to fight limited wars
while remaining absolutely committed to peace. No
sooner does a war begin, then it is pressed to
accept a ceasefire. To show its commitment to peace,
Israel is expected to accept the ceasefire. At which
point Hamas will begin shooting rockets again and
the whole dance will begin all over again. But
Israel has trouble refusing a ceasefire because its
leaders still believe that they can get at the moral
high ground by showing that they are more committed
to peace than the other side.
The peace is however unwinnable. It's not even
survivable in the long term. Peace either exists as
a given condition or it is maintained by strong
armies and ready deterrence. Peace cannot be found
on the moral high ground, only the mountains of the
graves of the dead.
Seeking the moral high ground is a fool's quest.
Wars cannot be fought without hurting someone and
trumpeting your morality makes it all too easy for
your enemies to charge you with hypocrisy. The man
who spends the most time vociferously protesting
that he isn't a thief, that he has never touched a
penny that belonged to anyone else and that he will
swear on a floor-to-ceilling stack of bibles to that
effect, looks far guiltier than the man who scowls
and tells his accusers to mind their own business.
The more Israel defends its own morality, the more
it winds the chains of the accusers around its own
neck.
Refining its warfighting with the object of fighting
a truly moral war leads to refined techniques that
kill terrorists but still cause some collateral
damage, and to soldiers that are more afraid of
shooting than of being shot at. And all this
painstaking effort goes for naught since it really
makes very little difference to Israel's enemies
whether they have one photo of a dead Muslim
civilian to brandish or a thousand. Either one makes
for the same manner of indictment. In aiming to win
the peace, Israel instead, like all modern states,
loses the war.
The father of an Israeli soldier told his son after
he was called up for duty that he would rather visit
him in prison than visit him in the cemetery. "If
you are fired on, fire back." That is good advice
not just for that young man, but for his entire
country, and for the civilized world. It is better
to fire than be fired upon. It is better to be
thought a criminal, than mourned in Holocaust
museums. It is better to leave the moral high ground
to those who worship the romance of endless
bloodshed and defeat. It is better to lose the peace
and win the war.