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Politics & Policy

Ta-Nehisi Coates Doesn’t Want to Ask ‘Why?’

Writer Ta-Nehisi Coates speaks during a House Judiciary Subcommittee hearing on reparations for slavery on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., June 19, 2019. (Aaron P. Bernstein/Reuters)

Ta-Nehisi Coates resumed his media tour on the Ezra Klein Show on Friday in promotion of his most recent book, which aims to tackle the Israeli-Palestinian conflict (after just a ten-day trip to the region by the author) and has captured national attention.

Coates was rather dismissive in confronting the routine acts of Palestinian violence faced by Israelis. To him, it seems no level of terror could ever justify a systematic response.

“I don’t know man, when you start dropping bombs . . . on the people that are caged in, I don’t care what their leadership did,” Coates told Klein.

Well, that’s the problem. Few challenge that the Gazans live under abhorrent conditions. But like most things, the complexity begins with asking the question: Why?

Peace overtures throughout the 1990s were met with routine suicide-bomb attacks inside Israel. The unilateral disengagement of every Israeli from the Gaza Strip in 2005 was similarly met with the democratic election of an Islamist mafia we now know as Hamas. The current multifront war, of course, began with Hamas’s October 7 atrocities.

Coates argued that Palestinian violence doesn’t justify Israel’s administration of the West Bank. But shaking your finger at the Jewish state for simply trying to preserve its existence is less than convincing, especially when you don’t want to explore why the Israelis fight back in the first place.

Alex Welz is a 2024 fall College Fix Fellow at National Review. He holds a BA in intelligence studies from Mercyhurst University and recently completed his master’s degree in national security at the University of Haifa’s International School in Israel.
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