According to
recent intelligence reports, the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) killed 40
Hamas terrorists in Gaza this past December without inflicting a single
civilian casualty. In fact, over the past five years collateral damage
and civilian casualties caused by Israeli military actions have
decreased dramatically. Meanwhile, Hamas continues to fire Kassam
rockets indiscriminately at the working-class town of Siderot and into
the suburban areas of the nearby seaside city of Ashkelon.
In the summer of 2006, while operating
primarily in southern Lebanon, the Shiite terrorist group Hezbollah
fired hundreds of Katushua rockets indiscriminately into Israel—rockets
loaded with ball bearings designed to kill as many people as
possible. Unlike Hezbollah, the IDF employs precision strikes against
terrorists, attacks designed to minimize collateral damage and civilian
casualties. In 2003, for instance, the ratio of Palestinian or Shiite
terrorists killed to civilian casualties was approximately 1-to-1. Last
month it was 40-to-0. Over the last five years the trend has been in
that direction.
In 2004, while visiting with the IDF, I was
present in a control van where Israeli Air Force technicians guided a
drone tracking a known Hamas terrorist. I looked on as the drone
orbited near the terrorist’s Gaza house then watched as he emerged with
his children and got into the family car. Meanwhile, an Israeli AH-64
attack helicopter armed with Hellfire missiles orbited off shore and
out of sight. The Hellfire is an American-made, precision-guided
anti-tank weapon that the Israelis modified by reducing the size of the
warhead down to 20 pounds of projectiles and explosives, which, while
still deadly, minimizes collateral damage. The Israelis could have
obliterated the car along with the terrorist and his children, but they
didn’t. Instead they waited, hoping for a clean shot after he left off
the children. Even after the terrorist dropped off the children, the
Israelis held their fire. Knowing the Israelis have this capability,
the Hamas terrorist purposefully drove in heavy traffic, using fellow
Palestinians as a personal human shield. Meanwhile, the drone tracked
the terrorist back to his home. After a few minutes he emerged, hopped
on a motorcycle and sped away, the drone shadowing his every move. When
the terrorist turned onto a relatively deserted section of the coastal
road, the AH-64 fired a Hellfire that killed the terrorist without
causing collateral damage or civilian casualties.
Why do we never hear about Israeli efforts to
minimize casualties? Even the anti-infiltration barrier, which reduced
Palestinian suicide bomber attacks to a mere handful per year, is
derisively dubbed “the wall” by left-wing Christian organizations like
the Palestinian Jerusalem-based Sabeel Ecumenical Liberation Theology
Center, its American cohort, Friends of Sabeel North America, and the
Presbyterian Witherspoon Society.
Meanwhile in Iraq, this past December U.S.
forces suffered 107 total casualties, counting a small number of
killed-in-action (KIA) and those wounded (WIA). That is down from 817
casualties suffered in December 2006. The “butcher’s bill” for 2007 was
6,801 Americans KIA and WIA, most of which were incurred after U.S.
forces went on the offensive as part of the “surge strategy” instituted
last spring. By contrast, in 2006, before the surge when American
forces fought on the tactical defensive, the United States suffered
7,221 casualties. Absent a desperate “Tet-style” terrorist offensive,
casualty figures should decline significantly in 2008.
Superbly trained and led American forces keep
the bloodshed low by employing tactics and weapons designed to
accomplish their mission with the fewest possible U.S. military and
Iraqi civilian casualties. With much of the media focused on mostly
imagined atrocities in Iraq, the fact is that more than 90 percent of
civilian casualties result from Islamist terrorists attacking their
Muslim co-religionists. Meanwhile, compared to all other major
conflicts during the past century, U.S. forces have kept both military
and civilian casualties down to historic lows. The Iraqi people, many
of whom initially saw American efforts at minimizing casualties as
signs of timidity or weakness, are beginning to understand this
sensibility for the kind of humanity often lacking in Middle Eastern
conflicts.
By way of historical perspective, U.S. forces
conducting Operation Desert Shield/Desert Storm in 1991, while
trouncing the Iraqi Army and liberating Kuwait, suffered 148 military
personnel deaths, 92 of which resulted from one SCUD missile strike on
a barracks in Riyadh. By comparison, on Sept. 11, 2001, al Qaeda
inflicted approximately 20 times as many deaths on innocent civilians.
It is worth noting that terrorists murdered approximately 400 more
people on 9/11 than the Japanese killed at Pearl Harbor on Dec. 7,
1941—and almost all of those were American military personnel!
We Americans and our Israeli allies are the
good guys! And if we have the will and stay the course, we can—indeed
we must—win this war.