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Al Aksa made any real attempt to kill military figures at home in the manner you suggest, my attitude toward civilian casualties incidental to such attacks would be no different than my attitude towards such casualties in an Israeli army operation against Al Aksa leaders. But they do not make any such attempt, and so it cannot be raised as a consideration in analysis of the situation that actually exists. What actually happens is that the various Arab Palestinian irregular bodies aim the great bulk of their operations specifically to kill civilians, and only occassionally direct them against Israeli soldiers, while Israeli military operations are aimed at the various irregular combatant bodies, although there is a good deal of injury done to civilians in their execution, some of it unavoidable, and a portion of it wanton. These facts are inconvenient to some political views and outlooks, but that is no concern of mine.
Again, Sir, if it were not for the operations of the irregular armed bodies, the armored column would not be coming into the neighborhood. The irregulars are not an attempt to defend the neighborhood against intrusion, but the cause of the intrusion, and without them, there would be no such intrusions. No one has yet proposed to me any practicable way for the Israelis to deal with the armed irregular bodies under the present circumstances that differs much from the course the Israelis follow already; so long as these continue to proclaim their rejection of the existance of Israel, and their intention to attack its citizenry, the government of Israel must take action against them, for it is clear they cannot be negotiated with to any good effect.
On a more minor note, Sir, it is precisely the language of "meekly kneel and accept their fate" that seems to me to originate in pride and honor, rather than a sound appreciation of circumstance. There are limits to what violence can accomplish, and circumstances in which it is foolish to pursue a violent course. It can hardly be denied that the political leadership of Arab Palestine has adopted a course of violence for decades, and it is time to recognize and accept that course has failed. Throughout the period of time that course has been persisted in, the situation, and the prospects, of the people of Arab Palestine, have deteriorated. They have less land, less liberty, and less prospect of statehood, than they had three years ago, or ten years ago, or fifty or sixty or eighty years ago. A choice must be made, and that choice is whether statehood and land and liberty are be pursued seriously, or emotional gratifications of pride and honor and vengeance are to be pursued instead. If the latter is chosen, the result will be that statehood, land, and liberty will never be achieved.
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