Sparing Agag: Hard Truths About Israel’s Inhibited War vs. Terror

August 29, 2012 11:45 am 1 comment

Hezbollah rockets.

Bordered by Hamas, Hezbollah, and the Syrian Regime, Israel Allows Aggressive Enemies to Endure

“Now go and smite Amalek, and utterly destroy all that they have, and spare them not…”

With these words the biblical prophet Samuel adjures Israelite King Saul in the divine name to punish the nomadic tribe of Amalek for their perfidy.

“But Saul and the people spared Agag…and would not utterly destroy them…”

Saul’s regal prerogative was to spare the Amalekite monarch Agag, a gesture of clemency upon his defeated foe. Yet Saul’s act of mercy in the 11th century B.C.E. had grave repercussions: Haman, a descendant of Agag, plotted to annihilate Jewry in the 5th century B.C.E. It fell to Mordechai, a descendant of Kish – Saul’s father – to counter the edict of genocide. This poignant connection means that Saul spared more than just Agag, who was killed by Samuel, and that his failure to eradicate Amalek in his day almost resulted in the eradication of his own people…600 years later.

Can this episode shed light on the current conflict in the Middle East?

The prophetic message in this peculiar instance is uncompromising, and intrinsically troubling to contemporary sensibilities. All civilized persons eschew violence and overkill, and healthy consciences should instinctively recoil from such an extreme injunction. But from this seminal episode can be gleaned a timeless reality that resonates particularly at present.

Why was Amalek singled out for elimination? Amalek was a roving tribe of Edomite stock engaging in guerrilla warfare, which attacked the rearguard of the Israelites during their desert sojourn following the exodus from Egypt. They cut down stragglers, the feeble and aged. They were ruthless vagabonds, preying on the weak, seizing an opportune chance to murder and plunder. Today, they would be called terrorists (‘militants’ by amoral media outlets). They had no respect for life or rules of engagement, and did not hesitate to spill innocent blood.

The injunction against Amalek would not withstand the scrutiny of modern standards of warfare, contemporary rules of engagement, or the Geneva Conventions. Exterminating the enemy is disproportionate (to say nothing of being poor optics and politically incorrect). Yet when dealing with an implacable, fanatical enemy – say, terrorists – the alternatives are neatly narrowed down to four: offer surrender, accept surrender, strike or be struck.

As difficult a truth as it may be, in wartime there is a profound difference between responding accordingly, and acting decisively. Significant is the distinction between proportionality, and finality.

Harsh as it may seem, war is no time for mildness. One must be in it to win it.

No society or civilization which values the gift of life can tolerate having a Hamas and Hezbollah encamped and entrenched on its doorsteps, willing and able to strike at whim, in the manner, time, and place of its choosing. The responsibility to protect requires a serious and sustained effort against those who target innocents. It demands tremendous resolve and bold leadership, yet empowers and enables those targeted to mount a concerted campaign against their adversaries. Israel allowing Hamas and Hezbollah to thrive on its frontiers is Saul sparing Agag all over again…with predictable consequences.

To win the war on terror, terrorist groups must be methodically uprooted and denuded – root and branch – their perpetrators purged, their ranks razed to the ground. Each terror mastermind, lieutenant, unit commander, bomb engineer, weapons smuggler, recruiter, handler, and foot soldier must be held accountable to swift and summary justice by defensive forces committed to protect a civilian citizenry. Every member of every echelon must be neutralized, so that no promotion or replacement is possible. All artificial ticking clocks must be definitively discarded; no UN resolution should be allowed to circumscribe operations underway until the mission is accomplished and the job is done, once and for all.

In this 21st century, there is a great need for such a Decisive Doctrine, a policy of dealing with determination against terrorist groups and individuals. Wars against these elements must be fought with finality. This is a fundamental differentiation between a tit-for-tat ‘price-tag’ policy; the Decisive Doctrine stipulates that terrorists will be altogether denied access to the civilian merchandise and banned from the store. It replaces short-term reactive conduct with long-term proactive measures.

Modern history offers another telling example of decisiveness in wartime: In WWII, the Japanese were suicidal foes of the Allies bent on their obliteration. It took the tragic atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki to shock them from their stupor…but that brought the war to a swift conclusion and the Japanese have maintained a profoundly docile character ever since. Use of non-conventional weapons is absolutely abhorrent, but the lesson is evident. And indeed, in the long run their use in WWII may well have saved countless lives had that unrelenting bloodbath continued.

Warrior beware: When you fight decisively, you fight once. When you fight indecisively…you fight indefinitely.

1 Comment

  • Very True. This is the terribly irresponsible mistake, made time and time again all the way back to 1948. Israel’s “leaders” restrain its military in every single conflict from achieving their objectives. Not only is the enemy spared “finality” but the population that supports that enemy, be it Syria, Hamas, Egypt, et al, is led to believe that they are the victor in the war. This, in turn, motivates them to further aggression. But the mistake of Israel is far more than this. It has tacitly (or not so tacitly) accepted most of the false claims of the so-called Palestinians. In so doing, it has aroused latent anti-semitism on a global level

Leave a Reply

Please note: comments may be published in the Algemeiner print edition.


More...

  • Personalities Sports NBA Finals a Time to Remember Legendary Jewish Coach Red Auerbach

    NBA Finals a Time to Remember Legendary Jewish Coach Red Auerbach

    JNS.org - At the start of each nationally televised game of the 2013 NBA Finals between the San Antonio Spurs and the Miami Heat, ABChas aired a film-clip montage of basketball’s great players and coaches—a montage that includes Jewish coach Arnold “Red” Auerbach, the mastermind behind nine championship teams for the Boston Celtics. Red was one of four children of Marie and Hyman Auerbach. Hyman was a Russian-Jewish immigrant who left Belarus when he was 13. The couple owned a deli and [...]

    Read more →
  • Arts and Culture Jewish History The Marx Brothers and Jewish Identity

    The Marx Brothers and Jewish Identity

    JNS.org - The sons of Jewish immigrants from Germany and France, the Marx Brothers became zany masters of stage and screen who continue to captivate audiences. But in addition to providing comic relief, their films captured the drama of the entry of their marginalized religion into the U.S. Wayne Koestenbaum, author of the 2012 book The Anatomy of Harpo Marx, explains that the Marx Brothers’ Jewishness as a family “was evident, marked, thoroughly legible.” “Within a family already marked as Jewish within [...]

    Read more →
  • Arts and Culture Jewish Identity SuperJew

    SuperJew

    For my shekels, the question of whether the comic book character Superman, is Jewish or not shouldn’t even be questioned. Born and named Kal-El by his father Jor-El, “El” is one of the ancient names for God used throughout the bible and found in great prophets such as Samue-el, Dani-el and angels Micha-el and Gavri-el and of course, Isra-el. As Simcha Weinstein in his entertaining book, “Up, Up And Oy Vey” points out, “Kal” is the root of several Hebrew [...]

    Read more →
  • Israel Sports Formula 1 Road Show Thrills Jerusalem

    Formula 1 Road Show Thrills Jerusalem

    JNS.org – Some 100,000 people attended Israel’s first-ever Formula 1 Road Show in Jerusalem on Thursday and Friday. For several hours, the controversies that normally characterize Jerusalem were put aside, and a diverse mosaic of Israelis watched up close as the motor-sport stars temporarily conquered the city. “It was an amazing experience, the most fast and furious thing I have seen,” spectator Masada Porat told Israel Hayom. “It was a rare, extreme event that explodes in your face.” Spectator Irena [...]

    Read more →
  • Book Reviews Jewish Identity Klara’s Journey Casts Jews in Fast-Paced Adventure Through Russian History

    Klara’s Journey Casts Jews in Fast-Paced Adventure Through Russian History

    JNS.org – “If you’re sick, move away. Have some consideration for others,” a red army soldier scolds a slow-moving old man selling train tickets. “No, fires back the old man, proud, haughty, not realizing it’s a new country, a Bolshevik country where force heads the list instead of civility,” reads the following line in Ben G. Frank’s new novel, Klara’s Journey, released June 1. Reminiscent of Boris Pasternak’s Dr. Zhivago—whose backdrop is also a train ride across the Russian frontier during the [...]

    Read more →
  • Personalities Theater Nora Ephron, Famed Jewish Screenwriter, Remembered Through Tribeca Film Festival Prize

    Nora Ephron, Famed Jewish Screenwriter, Remembered Through Tribeca Film Festival Prize

    JNS.org – For filmmaker Meera Menon, no honor could have been more fitting than winning the inaugural award named after famed Jewish screenwriter and novelist Nora Ephron, the woman whose work inspired her. At the recent 2013 Tribeca Film Festival, Menon was named the first recipient of the $25,000 Nora Ephron Prize, given to a writer or director whose work embodies that of the late Ephron, who wrote the scripts for a number of hit films, including “When Harry Met [...]

    Read more →
  • Book Reviews Personalities Book Review: ‘Jewish Jordan’ Memoir an Important Guide for Players and Coaches

    Book Review: ‘Jewish Jordan’ Memoir an Important Guide for Players and Coaches

    JNS.org – Despite his friends’ and family’s doubts that a young Orthodox Jewish athlete could ever play college or professional basketball without compromising his religious values, between 1999 and 2009 the “Jewish Jordan” defied conventional wisdom and found his place on the court. In his new memoir, Jewish Jordan’s Triple Threat, Tamir Goodman describes his triumphs and disappointments in life, crediting his practice of Judaism for shaping his identity as an athlete and his understanding of basketball as a team sport. [...]

    Read more →
  • Blogs Sports Omri Casspi, ‘Jewish Jordan’ Partner on Basketball Camps to Inspire Youths On and Off the Court

    Omri Casspi, ‘Jewish Jordan’ Partner on Basketball Camps to Inspire Youths On and Off the Court

    Tamir Goodman (left) and NBA forward Omri Casspi—pictured on the court of the United Center, home of the Chicago Bulls—together run basketball camps that seek to inspire youths on and off the court. Photo: Courtesy Tamir Goodman. JNS.org – Before last year, basketball camps for Jewish youths never had an instructor quite like Omri Casspi, a forward for the National Basketball Association’s (NBA) Cleveland Cavaliers and the first Israeli-born player in NBA history. Casspi is a de facto ambassador for [...]

    Read more →
Sign up now to receive our regular news briefs.