July 13, 2004
Published in the The New York Times
Why Israel Needs a Fence
By Benjamin Netanyahu.
While
the advisory finding by the International Court of Justice last
week that Israel's barrier in the West Bank is illegal may be
cheered by the terrorists who would kill Israeli civilians, it
does not change the fact that none of the arguments against the
security fence have any merit.
First, Israel is not building the fence on territory that under
international law can be properly called ''Palestinian land.''
The fence is being built in disputed territories that Israel won
in a defensive war in 1967 from a Jordanian occupation that was
never recognized by the international community. Israel and the
Palestinians both claim ownership of this land. According to Security
Council Resolution 242, this dispute is to be resolved by a negotiated
peace that provides Israel with secure and recognized boundaries.
Second, the fence is not a permanent political border but a temporary
security barrier. A fence can always be moved. Recently, Israel
removed 12 miles of the fence to ease Palestinian daily life.
And last month, Israel's Supreme Court ordered the government
to reroute 20 more miles of the fence for that same purpose. In
fact, the indefensible line on which many have argued the fence
should run -- that which existed between Israel and the Arab lands
before the 1967 war -- is the only line that would have nothing
to do with security and everything to do with politics. A line
that is genuinely based on security would include as many Jews
as possible and as few Palestinians as possible within the fence.
That is precisely what Israel's security fence does. By running
into less than 12 percent of the West Bank, the fence will include
about 80 percent of Jews and only 1 percent of Palestinians who
live within the disputed territories. The fence thus will block
attempts by terrorists based in Palestinian cities to reach major
Israeli population centers.
Third, despite what some have argued, fences have proven highly
effective against terrorism. Of the hundreds of suicide bombings
that have taken place in Israel, only one has originated from
the Gaza area, where Hamas and Islamic Jihad are headquartered.
Why? Because Gaza is surrounded by a security fence. Even though
it is not complete, the West Bank security fence has already drastically
reduced the number of suicide attacks.
The obstacle to peace is not the fence but Palestinian leaders
who, unlike past leaders like Anwar Sadat of Egypt and King Hussein
of Jordan, have yet to abandon terrorism and the illegitimate
goal of destroying Israel. Should Israel reach a compromise with
a future Palestinian leadership committed to peace that requires
adjustments to the fence, those changes will be made. And if that
peace proves genuine and lasting, there will be no reason for
a fence at all.
Instead of placing Palestinian terrorists and those who send
them on trial, the United Nations-sponsored international court
placed the Jewish state in the dock, on the charge that Israel
is harming the Palestinians' quality of life. But saving lives
is more important than preserving the quality of life. Quality
of life is always amenable to improvement. Death is permanent.
The Palestinians complain that their children are late to school
because of the fence. But too many of our children never get to
school -- they are blown to pieces by terrorists who pass into
Israel where there is still no fence.
In the last four years, Palestinian terrorists have attacked
Israel's buses, cafes, discos and pizza shops, murdering 1,000
of our citizens. Despite this unprecedented savagery, the court's
60-page opinion mentions terrorism only twice, and only in citations
of Israel's own position on the fence. Because the court's decision
makes a mockery of Israel's right to defend itself, the government
of Israel will ignore it. Israel will never sacrifice Jewish life
on the debased altar of ''international justice.''