Originally posted by Sandwich
Allow me.
As most of us know, the current intifada started in the fall of 2000. Things really escalated drastically at the end of 2001 / beginning of 2002. Then the IDF sent soldiers - myself among them - into Jenin, to eradicate the terrorist infrastructure.
The results? A couple of dozen IDF reservists (legitimate targets, however, as am I when drafted) killed during house-to-house operations. Around twice that many Palestinian "millitants" killed as well - the final number was between 50 and 75, IIRC. And the results? Goals attained? Look here. Even the graph of a person who openly is not "in love" with Israel shows clearly an immense drop in attacks after the operation in Jenin, which ended around April 2002.
Terrorism CAN be eradicated through wise and careful use of force. Overwhelming force, such as bombarding a building to get one sniper (*ahem*) isn't required. Simply tender loving care when planning things.
But - does that graph also account for changes in the living standards of the Palestinian population? Or, for example, how the civillian casualties due to IDF operations correlate to civillian casualties due to terrorist attacks? (as a matter of interest) I feel these may be important with regard to the long-term 'success' of stopping terrorism; as that graph shows, the frequency of attacks does have a tendency to wax & wane.
Because, to be clear, what it'd like to see is a solution of some sort which is mutually beneficial. Now, I know that this big wall thing is credited in particular with reducing attacks, but it's also been condemned as a breach of human rights-stroke-international law in the effect it has on ordinary Palestinians. Because I think that the situation is that you will always have terrorism if it's only a military response; even if that terrorism is reduced to a comparative trickle. I realise this will need to be on the part of whoever takes control of the PA, of course.
I have to be honest; regardless of frequency of attacks, all I've seen - again from my own distant perspective - is a constant spiral of tit-for-tat reciprocal violence that appears to be perpetual. i.e. no long term solution or peace.
I hope I'm wrong.
EDIT; what i mean is, even if the wall or the mentioned op in Jenin reduced terrorist attacks then, have they actually done anything which still stop would be terrorists wanting to join up?