The Folly of Negotiation
The world clings to the delusion that negotiating with terrorists will secure peace, but history screams otherwise. From ancient Rome to modern crises, the lesson is clear: appeasing those who take hostages only emboldens them. When will we learn that the only effective response to such evil is a brutal, uncompromising strike? Terrorists thrive on weakness, exploiting our compassion to fuel their violence. Negotiation is not a solution—it’s surrender.
Rome’s Iron Fist
In ancient Rome, the molestation of a Roman citizen by foreign powers was met with unrelenting force. The Roman Republic viewed such acts as an attack on the state itself. When pirates or hostile tribes dared to seize Romans, the response was swift and merciless, entire regions were razed, populations subdued, and perpetrators annihilated. Rome’s message was unmistakable: harm our people, and you will pay a catastrophic price. This deterrence worked because it instilled fear, not hope, in the hearts of would-be aggressors.
The Soviet Hammer in Beirut
In 1985, the Soviet Union demonstrated a modern echo of Rome’s resolve during the Beirut hostage crisis. When four Soviet diplomats were kidnapped by the Islamic Liberation Organization, a radical Shia group, one was killed. The KGB’s response was chilling: they kidnapped a relative of a prominent militant leader, castrated him and sent his severed body parts to the group, that had killed their diplomat. The message was clear, release the hostages or face unimaginable consequences. The remaining three diplomats were freed shortly after. Brutality, not bargaining, secured their release.
The Gaza Hostage Trap
Today, we see the same mistake repeated in the Middle East. Hamas and other terrorist groups have learned that kidnapping Israelis guarantees concessions. The recent peace plan, celebrated with naïve optimism, has led to the release of thousands of Palestinian prisoners, including murderers, in exchange for a handful of Israeli hostages. The chants in Gaza—“Khaybar, Khaybar, O Jews, the army of Muhammad will return”—reveal their true intent: not peace, but annihilation. By trading terrorists for hostages, Israel rewards violence, ensuring more kidnappings and bloodshed.
Lessons from History’s Blunders
The 1938 Munich Agreement is a stark reminder of negotiation’s failure. Neville Chamberlain’s “peace for our time” crumbled when Hitler invaded Poland a year later, plunging the world into war. Today’s Middle East deal risks a similar fate if it’s merely a pause for terrorists to regroup. Hamas is already rebranding its fighters as “Gaza Security Forces,” blending into civilian life to strike again. History warns us: appeasement invites aggression.
A Call for Change
Israel must break this cycle by adopting a Romanesque approach. Terrorists must know that kidnapping will not yield rewards but annihilation. Implementing the death penalty for convicted terrorists would eliminate the leverage of hostage-takers. As critics of the current policy argue, Israel’s social contract must evolve from trading captives to destroying captors. Only then will the infrastructure of terror collapse. The moral imperative is clear: protect the nation, not the feelings of those who exploit humanity.
Bottom Line: Hope Tempered by Reality
While President Trump’s peace efforts are commendable, we must remain vigilant. The release of hostages brings joy, but as Dr. Hagai Ben-Artzi noted, each deal signs the warrant for the next kidnapping. If Israel continues to prioritize hostages over national security, it hands victory to its enemies. The world must learn from Rome and the Soviets: only overwhelming force, not negotiation, will end the scourge of hostage-taking.
We are so screwed.
— Steve