From: joedees@bellsouth.net
Date: Fri Aug 16 2002 - 23:51:22 MDT
With President Bush committed to finishing the job his father 
started in Desert Storm, it might do us all good to review what 
little Israel was able to do in 1981 to get rid of the nuclear threat 
being built by Saddam Hussein twenty years ago. All agreed that 
Israel's pre-emptive strike against Iraq's nuclear facility was an act 
of great daring, courage, and intelligence. But, of course, Israel 
was roundly criticized and condemned for its "aggression."
Yet, that pre-emptive strike eliminated in one fell swoop the 
threat of nuclear holocaust in the volatile Middle East, and it gave 
the nations in that area a few more years of breathing space in 
which to consider alternatives to nuclear war. That there is still no 
peace, and knowing that the Iraqi dictator is determined to get his 
nuclear bomb, means that Bush must act soon to prevent the worst 
from happening. And apparently, Saddam Hussein has skillfully 
hidden the facility in which the bomb is being manufactured. 
Thus, President Bush's task will be infinitely more difficult than 
the pre-emptive strike by Israel.
The Israeli attack was amazingly skillful. "The central building is 
entirely collapsed," said one of the French technicians who flew 
back to Paris after the attack. "The atomic reactor is unreachable 
and the anti-radiation shield has disappeared." The Frenchman 
also reported that one of the bombs did not explode, thereby 
making it impossible to rebuild the reactor without first destroying 
everything that remains. The technician complimented the Israelis 
on their skill. "The precision of the attack was stupefying. The 
Israelis chose their hour perfectly to avoid the maximum loss of 
human life."
Was the pre-emptive strike justified? Was it an act of aggression? 
First of all, Iraq took part in the Arab assault on Israel in 1948 
shortly after the Jewish state declared its independence. The Iraqi 
attack was an act of war, and no peace treaty has been signed 
between Israel and Iraq since then. So, technically, they are still at 
war. In fact, Iraq felt free to launch missiles against Israel during 
the Gulf War, even though Israel took no part in that war and was 
restrained by the United States from retaliating. 
But if you know that your enemy is preparing to destroy you, must 
you wait until he attacks first before fighting back? Large 
landmass countries like the U.S. and Russia can afford the luxury 
of waiting if they want to. But a tiny country like Israel, with long 
vulnerable frontiers and mortal enemies in the region has no 
choice but to strike first if it is to survive.
We all know what happened when Israel permitted itself to be 
caught by surprise by Syria and Egypt in 1973. That two-week war 
cost Israel proportionately more casualties than the entire ten-year 
Vietnam War cost Americans. Unlike the United States, Israel 
cannot afford long, passive, fruitless military operations that 
squander resources, drain the nation's will, cripple the morale of 
its soldiers, and end in defeat. So we can understand why Israel 
made its move against the Palestinians in the West Bank with 
sudden and overwhelming force. Even without Bush's urging them 
to get out, they were determined to destroy the terrorist 
infrastructure as quickly and effectively as possible. 
The international community, instead of condemning Israel, 
should have thanked it for taking out that nuclear facility in 
Baghdad. The attack had awakened the world to the dangers of 
nuclear proliferation, particularly among small countries with 
ambitious dictators. When John Phillips, a Princeton student who 
had written a paper on how to build an atomic bomb, was 
approached by a Pakistani who wanted to buy his plan, he 
reported the incident to the FBI. He had no doubt that Iraq was 
building an atomic bomb with French technical help. "France is 
the whore of nuclear proliferation," he said bluntly.
We know that Osama bin Ladin has been trying to get his hands 
on nuclear weapons. Does Saddam Hussein have a secret deal to 
supply them to him-at a price? What we do know is that George 
Bush wants to get rid of Saddam Hussein and his nuclear 
weaponry as soon as he can. How he will do it is no doubt the best 
kept secret in Washington. But we hope and pray that it is as 
surgical and efficient as the Israeli strike in 1981.
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