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ISRANET DAILY BRIEFING ON
For years,
The politicians—more than 20 Hamas members of parliament plus eight cabinet ministers—were seized in the
In this case, however,
The result is that almost all of the arrested politicians were sentenced only to short prison terms, generally ranging from two to three and a half years. Some have thus already been released, and almost all the rest are slated for release over the course of 2009—even if Schalit continues to languish in captivity. This fact helps explain why Hamas has felt free to make such outrageous demands for his release. According to media reports, it is currently insisting that 1,400 Palestinian prisoners be freed in exchange for Schalit, including several hundred vicious murderers responsible for some of the worst terror attacks of the intifada.… But Hamas has no reason to settle for anything less than the “highest-ranking” prisoners, meaning those convicted of the worst crimes, because Israel’s own laws will force it to release all the others in a relatively short time anyway. What incentive could it possibly have to trade Schalit for the arrested politicians when they will all be released next year regardless of whether or not Schalit is freed? Or for low-ranking members of its military wing, who will similarly be freed once their relatively short criminal sentences have been served? The only people whom the country will not eventually release on its own are the murderers sentenced to life. Hence they are the only ones worth trading for. Israel got it right in its EU campaign: A terrorist organization’s political wing is indeed inseparable from its military wing; they are two sides of the same coin, working together to achieve a common goal. And this is especially true for organizations such as Hamas and Hizbullah, whose political wings actually control territory, as this gives them access to resources essential for their military wings’ operations. Hamas’ political control of
Thus while Hamas politicians are generally not involved in actually planning terror attacks, they knowingly and actively facilitate them via their political activity… [a]nd they should therefore be held responsible for the military wing’s activities, rather than being let off on the grounds that they never actually pulled a trigger. If releasing Schalit were the only way to secure its politicians’ freedom, Hamas might be under pressure to do so: Aside from any sense of obligation it might feel, letting them languish for years with no hope of release would probably deter many suitable people from being willing to fill these vital posts. But because
Thus far, successive governments have simply accepted this distinction as immutable fact. Yet it is the Knesset that enacts the laws; hence any government ought to be able to use its Knesset majority to enact legislation that would remove this distinction from the law books. And it is long past time to do so—because until this distinction is eradicated, we will be fighting terrorist organizations with one hand tied behind our back. |
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