ISRAEL IN GAZA: A CRITICAL REFRAMING
hibat mahrom info@icahd.org
Israel's core messages, listed
below, argue for the justice of its
invasion of Gaza in late December, 2008, cast Israel as the
victim and
endeavor that its "war on Hamas" not be seen against
the background of
prolonged occupation, closure and sanctions, but of the broader
Western "War on Terror."
The alternative view presented below argues otherwise. As
Israelis committed to human rights, international law and
a just peace as the only way out of our interminable and bloody
conflict with the Palestinians, we contend that security cannot
be achieved unilaterally, especially as Israel shows no signs
of fully relinquishing its 41 year Occupation so that a truly
sovereign and viable Palestinian may emerge. In that context,
Israel's attack on Gaza can be considered merely another attempt
to render its Occupation permanent by destroying any source
of effective resistance. The immediate pretext of Israel's
attack, rocket fire from Gaza into Israel, does not explain
the disproportionality of its attack, especially given the
unrelenting sanctions, attacks and assassinations carried
out by Israel throughout the cease-fire. Indeed, we argue
that Israel could have avoided all attacks upon it over the
last twenty years, as well as the rise of Hamas to power,
if it had accepted the PLO's offer of a two-state solution
proffered already in 1988 and has entered into negotiations
in good faith. Instead, Israel, the strong party in the conflict
and the sole Occupying Power, chose to dramatically increase
its settler population, construct a permanent infrastructure
of separation and control, remove "Greater Jerusalem" from
Palestine and encircle the West Bank with its expanded borders:
that of the Separation Barrier incorporating Israel's major
settlement blocs and the "security border" of the
Jordan River. Israel is not a victim; it is the active perpetrator
of a permanent apartheid regime over all of Israel/Palestine.
It is toward that goal that Gaza is being violently pacified
today, Israel's killing with impunity scores of Palestinian
civilians constituting nothing less than State Terrorism.
The following pages present the essential elements
of the Israeli government's framing of its assault on Gaza, followed
by a critical re-framing that introduces
context, policies and aims which the government's version purposely omits.
Israeli PR: Like all countries, it has a right and duty to defend its citizens.
An alternative framing: To pursue offensive policies of prolonged occupation
as well as sanctions, boycotts and closures which rob another people of its rights,
aspirations and very livelihood, and to then refuse to truly engage with that
people's elected leaders (a policy preceding Hamas's rise to power), is what
puts your own people at risk. To expect your citizens to live in security while
a million and a half subjugated people just a few kilometers away live in misery
is both unrealistic and presumptive. Israel will only be able to defend its citizens – which
is indeed its duty – if it addresses the causes of their insecurity, which
is a 41 year-old occupation which the oppressed will resist, by "legitimate" means
or not.
Israeli PR: Israel had no choice but to attack in response to the
barrage of 8,500 Hamas rockets fired from Gaza into Israel over the
past eight years that have killed 20 Israeli civilians.
An alternative framing: Israel had a choice. In the past three years alone Israel – together
with the US, Europe and Japan – imposed an inhumane siege of Gaza while
conducting a campaign of targeted assassinations and attacks throughout the cease-fire
that left 1,700 Palestinians dead. This war is no "response:" it is
merely a more deadly round of the tit-for-tat arising out of a political vacuum.
Hamas firings on Israel were for the most part, if not exclusively, responses
to Israeli actions either not reported in the press or discounted as legitimate
unilateral action – such as assassinating leaders of Hamas and other Palestinian
organizations, often with a high toll in civilian casualties. To present the "barrage" as
an independent variable disassociated from wider Israeli policies that led to
them is disidiguous. Indeed, had there been a genuine political process which
offered the Palestinians hope for self-determination, the rocket firings could
have been avoided altogether.
Israeli PR: Hamas is a terrorist organization that refuses to recognize Israel
or enter into a political process.
An alternative framing: "Terrorist" is a problematic term. States always
use it to delegitimize and demonize non-state actors who resist their oppressive
policies, as apartheid South Africa did, for example, with the ANC. The term
assumes that states, bad as they may be, have the right to employ military force
as they see fit. If, however, we take "terrorism" to mean the killing,
harming or intimidation of non-combatant civilian populations, then states are
far more terroristic, kill far more innocent civilians, than do non-state groups.
In the eight years since the second Intifada broke out (September 2000), almost
500 Israeli civilians have been killed by Palestinians while almost 5000 Palestinians
have died at the hands of Israelis. All attacks on civilians are unacceptable,
no matter how just the cause. Yet it is only the Palestinians to whom the term "terrorist" is
applied.
An alternative framing: Presenting Hamas as merely a "terrorist
organization" removes the political element from their struggle and presents
them as a criminal organization. This not only distorts reality in a fundamental
way but, by preventing negotiations, it ensures the perpetuation of mutual suffering.
Hamas has its military wing – though nothing compared to the Israeli army – but
it is essentially a grassroots religious-political movement that democratically
won the Palestinian elections in 2006 and earned the right to establish a government – which
was denied it by Israel, the US…and the Fatah part of the Palestinian Authority.
It does deny Israel's legitimacy, as any colonized people would, and there is
no reason why it should accept the loss of 78% (or more) of its historic homeland.
But Hamas has agreed, as a signatory to the "Prisoners' Document" and
in repeated public pronouncements, to respect the outcome of negotiations of
other Palestinian parties (like Fatah) with Israel, if they result in a complete
withdrawal from the Occupied Territories. So despite its militant and scary image,
despite the fact that it will not legitimize what it considers another people's
colonization of its homeland, Hamas does accept, as a practical political matter,
a two-state solution. Given the fact that negotiations with Israel since the
Madrid Conference of 1991 have yielded nothing – indeed, Israel's massive
settlement enterprise has perhaps eliminated the possibility of a viable Palestinian
state alongside Israel – Hamas's resort to armed resistance is understandable.
All attacks on civilians are prohibited in international law. In this regard
both Hamas and Israel engage in terrorism, with the later taking by far the greatest
of civilian dead, injured and traumatized.
Israeli PR: There is no occupation – in general, but specifically
in Gaza. Israel ended its occupation of Gaza in 2005 with the "disengagement." Gaza
could have flourished as the basis of a Palestinian state, but its
inhabitants chose conflict.
An alternative framing: Israel claims there has never been an
occupation of the West Bank, East Jerusalem and Gaza; instead, these
are "disputed" territories with no clear claimant – and
certainly not the Palestinians who, in Israel's view, do not constitute
a people with rights of self-determination in the Land of Israel and
who never exercised sovereignty over any part of Palestine. This position
is rejected utterly by the international community. Indeed, the Road
Map initiative uses the term "occupation" explicitly. Neither
does it accept Israel's claim that the occupation of Gaza really ended
with "
disengagement" in 2005, since occupation is defined in international
law as exercising effective control of a foreign territory, which Israel
obviously does over Gaza.
To then argue that Gaza could have developed under these conditions
is
unfair and unreasonable. Neither Israeli control exerted over Gaza
since 1967 nor the economic closure imposed upon it in 1989 ever ceased,
even if Israel removed its settlers and army. Gazans were never allowed
to open their sea or air ports, nor were any conditions conducive to
economic development allowed to develop. And then, in early 2006, less
than six months after "disengagement," Gaza was sanctioned
and hermetically isolated by Israel and the international community
as punishment for voting the wrong way. John Dugard, the UN Special
Rapporteur for Human Rights in the Occupied Territories, wrote that
this was the first time in history the oppressed was sanctioned and
the Occupying Power freed of any responsibility. Economic
development, not to mention a political process which might have
prevented the violence on both sides, was actively prevented by both
Israel and its international supporters, which share responsibility
for the present tragedy in Gaza.
Let us also remember Israel's special responsibility towards the people
of Gaza. These "civilians" are, for the most part, refugees
driven from their homes in Israel in 1948 and their descendants, people
dying and suffering at the hands of Israel for the past 41, if not
60, years. This adds a particular poignancy to the assault – yet
another assault.
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Israeli PR: Only Hamas violated the cease-fire, and thus it carries
full responsibility.
An alternative framing: Israel and Hamas agreed to a truce (through
Egypt) by which Israel would allow the opening of the Gazan border
crossings (at least partially) in return for a end to rocket fire on Israel.
Hamas largely, though not entirely, kept its part of the bargain; Israel almost
never did. Killings of Palestinias from the air continued, and on the American
election day in early November it attacked the tunnels (which functioned as
alternative means of supplying Gaza in the absence of open borders, which would
have allowed control over the movement of arms), killing a number of Hamas
people. In response Hamas launched rockets and….the truce began breaking
down.
Israeli PR: There is no humanitarian crisis; Israel is only attacking the "infrastructure
of terror."
Alternative View: Being the elected government, all the infrastructure, from
traffic cops (non-combatants under international law) to schools to military
installations, "belong" to Hamas. It is clear that Israeli attacks
go beyond "the infrastructure of terror." Gazan sources claim that
some 5000 homes have been demolished and the Islamic University has been severely
damaged. According to the UN OCHA report of January. 5, the tenth day of the
war: "More than a million Gazans still have no electricity or water, and
thousands of people have fled their homes for safe shelter;.
Gaza's water and sewage system is on the verge of collapse, 75% of
Gaza's electricity has been cut off;
The sewage situation is highly dangerous, posing serious risks of the
spread of water-borne disease;
Hospitals are unable to provide adequate intensive care to the high number
of casualties. There is also an urgent need for more neuro-, vascular-, orthopedic-
and open heart surgeons.
Israeli PR: Israel only targets Hamas fighters. An alternative framing: Who's
a "Hamas fighter?" The graduating class of traffic cops that was
slaughtered in the first aerial attack on Gaza? Professors and students who
attend the "Hamas" Islamic University? Family members of Hamas military
figures? People who voted for Hamas? Attacking a grassroots political-religious-social
movement engaged in military resistance to occupation in densely crowded urban
settings makes it either impossible or inconvenient for an invading
army to distinguish between civilians and fighters.
Israeli PR: Civilians may die, but it's because Hamas hides its fighters and
weapons factories among ordinary people. An alternative framing: Gaza being
such a barren, exposed and tiny area (360 sq.km./223 sq. miles, half the size
of London), separating civilian from military areas, though desirable, is impossible,
especially since, in concept, Hamas is a people's militia. It's worth
noting, however, that Israel's military headquarters are located in the center
of Tel Aviv, the military headquarters over the West Bank are in the densely
populated Neveh Ya'akov neighborhood of Jerusalem, Israel's center for biological
and chemical warfare is located in the town of Ness Tziona, close to Tel Aviv,
its main weapons development centers or in Haifa, and most settlements in the
West Bank have military camps embedded within them – or vice versa.
Hamas, of course, as both a government and a military organization, carries
responsibility for protecting the civilian population and keeping the fighting
away from them. In a situation where this is impossible, as in Gaza, an invading
force like Israel should avoid engagement, or engage only when legitimate military
and political aims (such as defense) are genuinely endangered – which
is not the case here. Israel has political and negotiating options that can
end both the immediate threat of rockets and the longer-term conflict, but
it chooses not to use them.
A terrifying development: According to the Israeli press, Israel
has decided to ignore the distinction between civilians and combatants
which lies at the root of international laws of warfare. Citing what
the IDF calls the "Georgia rules," the two military correspondents
of Ha'aretz (Jan. 6 and 7) explain:
[IDF Chief of Staff Gabi] Ashkenazi had said in earlier discussions
that use of major fire power would be inevitable even in the most densely
populated areas. The Israeli solution was thus to be very aggressive
to protect the lives of the soldiers as much as possible. These are
'Georgia rules,' which are not so far from the methods Russia used
in its conflict last summer. The result is the killing of dozens of
non-combatant Palestinians. The Gaza medical teams might not have reached
all of them yet. When an Israeli force gets into an entanglement, as
in Sajaiyeh last night, massive fire into built-up areas is initiated
to cover the extraction. In other cases, a chain of explosions is initiated
from a distance to set off Hamas booby-traps. It is a method that leaves
a swath of destruction taking in entire streets, and does not distinguish
military targets from the homes of civilians….
The incident in which some 40 Palestinian civilians were killed when
Israel Defense Forces mortar shells hit an UNRWA school in the Jabalya
refugee camp Tuesday surprised no one who has been following events
in
Gaza in recent days. Senior officers admit that the IDF has been
using
enormous firepower. "For us, being cautious means being aggressive," explained one. "From
the minute we entered, we've acted like we're at
war. That creates enormous damage on the ground ... I just hope those
who have fled the area of Gaza City in which we are operating will
describe the shock. Maybe someone there will sober up before it continues."
What the officer did not say explicitly was that this is deliberate
policy. Following the trauma of the war in Lebanon in 2006, the army
realized that heavy IDF casualties would erode public (and especially
political) support for the war and limit its ability to achieve its
goals. Therefore, it is using aggressive tactics to save soldiers'
lives. And the cabinet took this into account when it approved the
ground operation last Friday, so it has no reason to change its mind
now.
Nor is it likely that Tuesday's incident, with its large number of
civilian deaths, will result in an immediate cease-fire…. Until
Tuesday's incident, the world appeared relatively indifferent to Palestinian
civilian casualties. On Monday, 31 members of the Samouny family were
killed when a shell hit their house in Gaza City; that same day, 13
members of the Al-Daiya family where killed by another Israeli bomb.
Yet international media coverage of these incidents was
comparatively restrained. This is an absolutely unacceptable development
in modern warfare – particularly urban warfare which involves
and entraps large
populations of civilians – and must be condemned and rejected
by the
international community. If the Israeli-Georgian "rules" become
a de
facto norm of warfare, the entire edifice of human rights and international
which has been constructed over the past 60 years will collapse and
we will enter into a new age of barbarism. Again, All attacks on civilians
must be opposed, whether sanctioned or not by military doctrine.
Israeli PR: Hamas is a global problem, part of Islamist fundamentalism
together with Iran and Hezbollah.
An alternative framing: Hamas was allowed by Israel to develop as
a political force in Occupied Palestine in the late 1980s in order
to counterbalance the secular PLO, which Israel regarded then as its
real enemy but today considers a "moderate" force which should
be supported in order to counterbalance Hamas(!). It has roots in the
Muslim Brotherhood of Egypt, but is a particularly Palestinian phenomenon
that arose in response to increasing Israeli repression, the loss of
Palestinian land, rights and honor, and the corruption and high-handedness
of the ruling Fatah party. It cannot be conflated with the Shi'ite
Hizbollah (which emerged in Lebanon only in the wake of threw 1982
war), al-Qaida (which has a completely different global agenda and
ideology) or Iran (in which the theocrats were an organized but quite
small political force until the U.S. overthrew Iran's democracy in
1954 and installed the repressive regime of the Shah – for whom
Israel trained his dreaded SAVAK security police, noted for their widespread
torture of "dissidents"). Painting Hamas as part of a global
conspiracy when it's a product of the Occupation itself is disingenuous
and a gross distortion of history. Indeed, as the history of Hamas,
Hizbollah and the Iranian clerics shows, Israel itself had played a
significant role in the rise of political Islam.
An alternative framing: have to get beyond such simplistic and self-serving
terms as "terrorists" and "terrorism" – especially
since the Western politicians that use them refuse to apply them
to themselves, as in the case of Israel in Gaza. It will do no good
to dismiss Hamas as a "terrorist organization." The issues,
grievances and demands upon which it arose must be addressed. From
the point of view of its voters, who include many who do not share
Hamas's religious or political agenda, Hamas is a quintessential
liberation movement, a Palestinian liberation movement. Attempts
by Israel to delegitimize Hamas and disassociate it from the Palestinian
people, even to have the gall to suggest that the carnage created
by Israel in Gaza will benefit the people by "releasing them
from Hamas's grip," only serve – as they are intended
to do – to neutralize Hamas as an effective source of resistance
to Israel's Occupation.
Israeli PR: In attacking Hamas in Gaza, Israel is only doing its
part
in the West's War on Terror.
An alternative framing: This brings us to why Israel actually attacked
Gaza and why the slaughter has gone on far beyond Israel's declared
goal of ending the rocket fire through negotiations. Immediate causes
played their role, to be sure. Public pressure to end the rocket fire,
especially in an election period, could not be ignored, nor the need
to assert national pride. But this does not explain the immense scale
of the operation; the rocket firings were the immediate trigger (and
Hamas may have erred in its brinksmanship), but not the true reasons,
which were several. First, the invasion of Gaza was an exercise in
pacification. On one level, it is an attempt to destroy Hamas as a
political force, the only effective Palestinian resistance to Israel's
ability, through the Annapolis Process, of imposing an apartheid regime
on Palestine. On another level it seeks to pacify the Palestinian people
by delivering "a message:" If you keep resisting, this is
what is waiting for you. You have no hope to force Israel to withdraw
from its settlements and expanded borders. Second, it is an attempt
to resuscitate Israel's image as an effective ally in the War on Terror
after the humiliation of the Second Lebanon War in 2006. This is crucial
for Israel's security politics, especially vis-à-vis the US,
and the Palestinians are paying the price for Hizbollah's success.
Third, it is an exercise in urban warfare, an opportunity to field-test
new weaponry and
tactics of counterinsurgency in dense urban environments that can be
exported – both as part of Israel's security politics (earning
its place with the Big Boys at the table of the War Against Terror)
and as part of its economic export strategy (60% of Israeli export
firms deal in security). "Tested in Gaza" (or Nablus or Fluja)
is one of Israel's most effective marketing pitches.
Gaza demonstrates in microcosm the shift in Israeli priorities and
policies as its long-standing commitment to hold onto the Occupied
Territories for both nationalist and security reasons comes into conflict
with its broader regional and global agendas, centered today around
its campaign to neutralize Iran's nuclear potential. The Saudi Initiative,
endorsed by the Arab League, holds out the tantalizing offer of Israeli
integration into the Middle East – meaning that Israel, whose
foreign policy interests match those of the "moderate" Arab
states, could assume a regional role. But because of public opinion
in the Arab and Muslims worlds, this offer is good only if Israel relinquishes
enough of the Occupied Territories that the Palestinian leadership
could sign off on an agreement. Hence Israel's courting of PA President
Mahmoud Abbas, Egyptian President Mubarak and even Assad of Syria and
the Saudis. And hence Israel's readiness to offer Abbas yet another "generous
offer – short, however, of dismantling its major settlement blocs,
relinquishing control over "greater" Jerusalem or giving
up control of the border with Jordan, for which no Israeli government
has a mandate. Caught between the necessity of maintaining its settlements – a
position Netanyahu still endorses – and its desire to assume
a role as one of regional hegemons, Israel is trying to find a way
to finesse its way through. This explains Olmert's sudden readiness
to change direction and talk of the necessity for a two-state solution,
as well as the hasty Annapolis Process. Hence Abbas and Mubarak's support
for Israel's action in Gaza (with mild, perfunctory criticism of its
excesses). Their virtual collaboration with Israel raises even further
in the eyes by many Palestinians and other Arabs the standing of Hamas
as the only genuine source of resistance.
So there are high stakes involved in the Israeli-Hamas war, which diminish
the seemingly decisive role the firing of rockets into Israel had.
We do not believe that Israel can either impose an apartheid regime
on the Palestinian people nor sustain its Occupation. If anything,
as is becoming obvious, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, emblematic
as it is throughout the entire Muslim world and beyond (among, for
example, progressives civil society on every continent), will impact
negatively on European and especially American efforts to stabilize
the global system, and in particular the volatile Middle East where
the US remains bogged down. It is our role as proponents of human rights,
international law, decolonization, the integrity of cultures and a
just peace in Israel/Palestine and elsewhere to highlight the injustice
and unsustainability of Israel's Occupation both on the ground and
globally, the quicker to bring it to an end. May the suffering of the
both peoples in this war on Gaza, one oppressed and the other held
hostage to an image of the Palestinians as "permanent enemies," be
the last straw. A just peace in Palestine will relieve a major obstacle
towards global justice.
Israeli PR: Israel, acting as any life-loving nation would, has a right
to be a normal country living in peace and security.
An alternative framing: By now you should be empowered to provide a
critical response of your own.
The Israeli Committee Against House Demolitions is based in Jerusalem
and has chapters in the United Kingdom and the United States.
Please visit our websites:
www.icahd.org
www.icahduk.org
www.icahdusa.org
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