The humiliating Gilboa prison escape is nothing but a symptom. The flaws that led to it will be investigated, found and corrected, but to rectify the broader structural failure will require us to shake up the current law enforcement system and its security policies.
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What constitutes this structural failure is the system's addiction to maintaining "industrial peace" and quiet ─ at the expense of the appropriate response exhibited by a society that cherishes life ─ in the face of reckless and violent citizens, criminals, terrorists, and enemies abroad.
Israel is failing on multiple fronts: from anti-vaxxers and pedophiles, the extreme right-wing Hilltop Youth, the staggering crime rate in the Arab sector, the violent ultra-Orthodox to the pogroms in Acre and Lod and the Knesset members who justify their violence, the pampering of terrorists in prison and attempts to appease Hamas.
In each and every case, a much more resolute and uncompromising response is required from the judiciary and security forces. Instead, the police specialize in helplessness, misery and cowardice: the judicial system treats the cruel compassionately, which is cruel to the Israeli public; the prison service indulges terrorists as part of their "quiet at all costs" deal, instead of quelling them; the IDF is too restrained in its treatments of the Jewish rioters in Judea and Samaria; and the defense establishment is chasing fantasies about long-term agreements and rehabilitating the Gaza Strip instead of making sure Hamas does not regain its military prowess.
The roots of this structural failure – which has recently come to characterize much of democracy – lies in diverting public discourse from the common good to appearances: from that which is beneficial for the public to that which sounds good in front of the cameras.
Violence does not look good.
Therefore, the police avoid confrontations and are easy on criminals, Arab lawbreakers and extremist Haredim. The Prison Service prefers autonomy and supervises terrorists loosely instead of breaking their will. Construction materials sent to "rehabilitate Gaza" looks better in the media than wounded Palestinian rioters and dead terrorists. That is how "quiet" will supposedly be maintained.
This fake quiet comes at a price: it encourages terrorism, crime and lawlessness, and causes even greater violence. Law-abiding citizens have already lost their faith in the police and the judiciary. Unless Israel steps up its game, they will soon lose faith in the state as well.
The rioters and terrorists in prisons, Jenin, Gaza and threats by Israeli Arabs are an opportunity for Israel to wean off its addiction to fake quiet. Prisons can finally have proper security, not just the bare minimum, and Islamic Jihad members can be brought back to the cells they had burned down.
The dissolution of the terrorist organizations from inside the prisons will return control to the Prison Service, instead of the autonomy that brought about the quiet at too high a price.
In Jenin, we must take advantage of the concentration of armed terrorists in order to eliminate as many of them as possible. And in Gaza, taking out Hamas targets will severely damage its ability to recover and help us get rid of the permanent agreement illusion. If violent riots break out by Israeli Arabs, an escalation can be prevented by accusing the protesters of aiding terrorism and hoping that Israel's courts will not rule in their favor.
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