Michael Ledeen
PJM
Both the Israeli
release of more than a hundred Palestinian killers and the American
release of five Taliban killers from Guantanamo are US policy
decisions, so it’s fair to treat them as part of a single mindset.
There are many possible reasons for releasing prisoners, but most of the
time, and especially in recent years, such actions are part of a bigger
issue, as are these two examples. The prisoners are typically pawns on a
geopolitical chess board. Both Israel and the United States have been
involved in this game for decades. It all started as barter, but it has
now become an embarrassing form of appeasement.
The Israelis
have frequently released Palestinian prisoners [1], as a component in
efforts to reach a stable agreement between the two enemies, but the
practice began in 1971 as a simple one-on-one swap, when a terrorist
from al Fatah was released in exchange for an Israeli night watchman who
had been abducted by the Palestinians.
–The next known deal was in 1979, when an Israeii soldier was ransomed for 76 Palestinians.
–In
1983 the numbers got bigger. After the war in Lebanon, Israel released
65 terrorists held in Israeli prisoners, plus 4,700 Palestinians and
Lebanese POWs, in exchange for six IDF soldiers.
–In 1985 Israel
sent 1,150 prisoners to the Palestinians to gain the release of three
soldiers. This deal was the first of two times Israel released Sheikh
Ahmed Yassin, a prolific killer who became the founder of Hamas. He was
released a second time in 1997, swapped for two Mossad agents arrested
in Jordan in a failed operation to assassinate Khaled Mashaal, Hamas’s
current leader. Yassin promised to give up suicide bombing, but almost
immediately resumed the practice. He was killed in 2004.
–2004
saw the celebrated deal with Hezbollah, negotiated by German Government
officials, which sent 435 prisoners from Israel to the Shi’ite terrorist
group, in exchange for one live Israeli (Elhanan Tannenbaum) and the
bodies of three others.
–More than six hundred Palestinian
prisoners were released between 1993 and 2000, some as part of deals
like the Oslo Accords, others as good-will gestures in the context of
other negotiations, such as the Wye River Agreement.
–The
biggest recent deal was with Hamas: the release of more than a thousand
Palestinians in exchange for the safe return of captured Israeli
soldier Gilad Schalit, in 2011.
It’s easy to see that there is
nothing very new in the latest Israeli prisoner release, neither in the
fact itself, nor in the role American pressure undoubtedly played in
bringing it about. In the eighties and nineties, Israel released
prisoners in response to American pressure, and as a way of fending off
other American demands, such as yielding territory or shutting down
settlements.
As for the American liberation of terrorists, that,
too has been going on for some time. There has been a steady flow from
Camp Gitmo; the number of prisoners held there has fallen [2] from well
over seven hundred to 167 as of a year ago. Some have been released
outright, others have been transferred to other countries. Many of them
have returned to the battlefield.
–When we left Iraq, more than
300 Iranian prisoners under US military control were turned over to the
Iraqi Government, which promptly sent them home. Many of them were
known to have been involved in lethal terrorist attacks against American
troops in Iraq, and there was no doubt that the Iraqis were going to
release them. Thus, despite the many claims–most recently by the
estimable Jonathan Tobin [3], whom I admire– that the United States
“would never” release killers of Americans, we’ve done it repeatedly.
Does the name Ali Daqduq mean anything to you? Here’s [4] what I wrote
about the disgusting appeasement of Iranian terrorism in late 2011-2012.
–In
April of this year, an Iranian scientist, Mojhtaba Alarodi, was
released from prison in California, where he was accused of
sanctions-busting regarding technology useful in building nuclear
weapons. According to information I have received from usually reliable
foreign sources, he was swapped for an American CIA officer who had
been arrested in Iran.
–The United States has been negotiating,
and paying ransom, for the release of American prisoners for a long
time. The most celebrated example is the Iran-Contra Affair, in which
several American hostages held by Hezbollah were released at Iran’s
direction, in tandem with the sale of American arms and the provision of
American intelligence to Iran. This was all part of an effort to
“reset” the US-Iranian relationship, as well as a more narrow attempt to
ransom US officials–notably the CIA officer William Buckley–from
torture (he was murdered, in fact).
The two recent prisoner
releases in Israel and Cuba are part of a longstanding pattern. Both
are part of broader efforts to achieve diplomatic progress with enemies,
on the one hand the Palestinians, on the other the Taliban. So there’s
a history on the basis of which we can anticipate the most likely
result: failure. These releases are pure gestures, they aren’t part of
any (known) trade. All we and the Israelis get for the gestures is the
possibility of negotiations. We don’t get any of our hostages, we
don’t even get a gesture from them.
The only thing we get is
contempt, for giving up something they want without advancing our own
interests or gaining anything–substantive or even symbolic–in return.
That’s not even amoral maneuver of human lives in the name of saving our
citizens or paying off those who seize them. It’s a textbook case of
appeasement.
Truly leading with the behind.
Article printed from Faster, Please!: http://pjmedia.com/michaelledeen
URL to article: http://pjmedia.com/michaelledeen/2013/08/04/releasing-prisoners-appeasing-enemies/
URLs in this post:
[1]
frequently released Palestinian prisoners:
http://www.jpost.com/Opinion/Op-Ed-Contributors/A-brief-history-of-Palestinian-prisoners-releases-310960
[2] he number of prisoners held there has fallen: http://www.longwarjournal.org/archives/2012/09/34_high_risk_guantan.php
[3]
by the estimable Jonathan Tobin:
http://www.commentarymagazine.com/2013/07/28/would-americans-release-terrorist-killers-palestinians-kerry-netanyahu/
[4] Here’s: http://pjmedia.com/michaelledeen/2011/12/13/returning-the-terrorists-to-tehran/?singlepage=true
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