You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
Israel-Palestine
Israel's Beslan 30 years ago was sponsored by the Russians
2004-09-16
Chechen terrorist techniques have undoubtedly borrowed not a few tricks from Russia's terrorist training schools.
By EHUD OLMERT
Mr. Olmert is the vice prime minister of Israel.

One might have imagined that we Israelis, after having endured more than four years of brutal terrorist attacks carried out by Palestinians, would have become immune to the horrific tragedy that unfolded in Beslan. Indeed, the televised scenes of the tiny coffins and grieving families seem far too familiar, just as the boilerplate speeches of the politicians and standard condemnations by world bodies feels like the routine drill. Yet the fact that we still find ourselves distraught, and can so readily identify with the suffering of the Russian victims, shows that the world today is divided into two distinct camps -- the first which seeks to affirm life, the second hell bent on avowing vengeance, martyrdom and death regardless of its victims.

In 1974, as a newly elected Knesset member, I watched the terrorist assault on a school in Ma'alot as it played out along Israel's northern border. Palestinian gunmen, ironically from a PLO faction funded by the Russians, infiltrated a high school and took dozens of students hostage. Before the army could free the children, the terrorists managed to kill 26 of them. At the time, the idea that a ruthless terrorist could deliberately murder Israeli children seemed almost beyond even our belief. What sort of desperate animals, we demanded, seek to advance their political agendas by slaughtering children? Surely the international order would insist that all the culprits be hunted down and punished.

But the world voiced only silence, and business went on as usual. Israelis were forced to learn that our tragedies were always going to be personal affairs, and that there would be no united international response to terror. Indeed, the democratic states in Europe provided the first cracks in the front, insisting on maintaining relations with the PLO after Ma'alot while accepting that there were no real consequences when it comes to Arab terror.
Posted by:Zhang Fei

#6  BAR,

Always remember the Navy motto (probably shared by every branch of the service):

All safety regulations are written in blood.

That's the adult version of: It's funny until somebody gets an eye put out.
Posted by: Dreadnought   2004-09-16 4:01:38 PM  

#5  American could learn a thing or two from the Israeli model.

They could, but won't. That lesson will only happen after more lives are lost.
Posted by: Bomb-a-rama   2004-09-16 3:07:26 PM  

#4  oops...the joke was...that if Colombine happened in LA city schools...then ....(see above) duh.
Posted by: 2B   2004-09-16 12:05:55 PM  

#3  A joke retold after Colombine was that the killers would have only been able to get off maybe one or two shots, before their classmates gunned them down.
Posted by: 2B   2004-09-16 12:04:21 PM  

#2  Doug's correct...
Posted by: jawa   2004-09-16 9:11:47 AM  

#1  One thing that happened after Ma'alot was that the schools became hard targets and they passed out weapons to teachers.

American could learn a thing or two from the Israeli model.
Posted by: Douglas De Bono   2004-09-16 1:19:24 AM  

00:00