Terrorism and terrorist mentality can take many forms.
However, in all cases any terrorist acts according to the same strategy: using violence and intimidation to get concessions from their opponents. Their opponent gives the terrorist what they want but this not only does not quench the terrorists’ thirst but increases it. Every demand that is heeded to the terrorists, the terrorists would up their demand and ask for more. Dealing with terrorists by agreeing to pay the requested ransom is akin to cutting off the hydra’s head – two more heads would grow instead.
The Pro-Hamas protesters on US college campuses are one kind of such terrorists. They may not murder people, but they have the same mentality, and their actions are guided by straightforward principles. They are more than willing to use force and intimidation to force the university to heed to their demands. They are willing to break the university code of conduct, break the state law and create an environment of terror for Jews and dissenting voices. Their strategy is to wait for the university to kowtow to their violent actions as the university is eager to return to normalcy with minimal friction with them. The terrorist relies on their comparative advantage against their stronger opponent, their patience and willingness to create chaos, hoping that the opponent would be the first one to “flinch” and lose their grounds in the “chicken fight”.
University administrators were unable to deal the encampments, that started popping on campuses like mushrooms after the rain, because they chose a strategy of appeasement. Acting out of foolishness or cowardice, University presidents pretended that negotiating with the very people who are violating the universities’ code of conduct would be a way to reach an understanding.
Minouche Shafik, President of Columbia, said that they “tried very hard to resolve the issue of the encampments through dialogue”, and added that many people that gathered there were largely “peaceful”. She added that she was heartened by the protesting students’ “intelligence, thoughtfulness, and kindness”. In her address she spoke on two sides of her mouth – presenting the violent protesters and the intimidated Jews as part of “parallel realities and paralleled conversations” that “walled us off from other perspectives”. This Orwellian language that attempts to present the violent mob that took over Columbia as a reasonable “side” in a debate using very delicate and exalting phrases is an indication to the moral rot that Ivy League campuses have reached. This groveling to the demands of hooligans makes the Universities look even weaker from before and only incentives further chaos.
Another noteworthy incident was Brown University’s decision to reward the student agitators who broke the university’s code of conduct and allow 5 of them to meet members of the Corporation of Brown University “to present their arguments to divest Brown’s endowment from ‘companies that facilitate the Israeli occupation of Palestinian Territory’”. The University sends the message that it is willing to avoid conflict at all costs which is an invitation to the next agitators to create chaos to get their way without facing any consequences. The University said in a statement “Students agreed to remove the encampment and refrain from further actions that would violate Brown’s conduct code through the end of the academic year”. In other words, the terrorist students engage in racketeering in broad day light and the university is willing to obsequiously agree to the demands hoisted on it.
The message that the Universities are sending out to mobs of brats who enjoy to cosplay would be revolutionaries is “you can violate the rules and create chaos if you are protesting for a cause you believe in, we will accommodate you if cause enough trouble for us and you won’t face any consequences for your actions.
Universities that have showed a stronger hand managed to kill the beast at its infancy. The University of Florida spokesperson, Steve Orlando, said in a statement that the University is “not a day care, and we do not treat protestors like children- they knew the rules. And they’ll face the consequences” and quickly invited law enforcement to remove all sorts of encampments. The University made it very clear that it will not tolerate any instance of violation of the university’s code of conduct. These actions prevented the images of a situation that spiraled out of control in other universities which involved students taking over university buildings. The situation never needed to reach this point at the first place- images of altercation with law enforcement only serve the protestors who want to show images of the “oppressive” police and administration that is violent towards them.
The protesters’ tactic is mirroring Hamas’ playbook- first attack, then start negotiations, stand your ground while your opponent makes concessions, increase your demands and when you face opposition play the victim card with no accountability for your actions. This strategy works only because Universities have incentivized protestors to use it in the first place.
Just like war, the quickest and shortest way to face the issue of terrorism is understanding the opponent that is facing us. A terrorist is not someone reasonable that could be negotiated with in a civil discourse, they are barbarians who will break every written and unwritten law to get their way and use the West’s liberalism, tolerance and openness against itself. There is no way out of facing the terrorist head on, because ironically this is the way of least resistance. Any attempt at negotiation and avoiding a head on collision on puts the terrorist in a better bargaining position and makes the problem much more difficult to solve. A terrorist threat is like a debt that needs to be paid, the sooner one makes the payment the less interest and extra payments one would make by dragging out the problem.
There may be one silver lining from this situation- more and more Americans are waking up to the nature of terrorism and realize that with this kind of foe there is no other strategy other than use of force, even if it goes the liberal instinct of diplomacy and negotiations.
The article was originally published on ynetnews
The views expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily represent the views of the movement