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Israelis Get Truth About Gaza Attack
December 29, 2008, 6:33 pm
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Israelis Get Truth About Gaza Attack

by Ira Chernus

If you get your news from the American mass media, you know that there’s a nice simple explanation for the massive Israeli attack on Gaza. That explanation comes straight from the Israeli government, via the White House: Hamas, the group that controls Gaza, is responsible for all the violence. “These people are nothing but thugs,” a White House spokesman said. “Israel is going to defend its people against terrorists like Hamas.” End of story. As usual, Israel is depicted as the innocent victim of an evil it did nothing to provoke.But if you read Israel’s most respected newspaper, Ha’aretz, you find out that things are rather more complicated. (All the quotes below come from Jewish journalists writing in recent editions of Ha’aretz.)

You know the reality of Gaza today: “The tremendous population density in the Gaza Strip does not allow a ’surgical operation’ over an extended period that would minimize damage to civilian populations.” “There are many corpses and wounded, every moment another casualty is added to the list of the dead, and there is no more room in the morgue. . A mother whose three school-age children were killed, and are piled one on top of top of the other in the morgue, screams and then cries, screams again and then is silent.”

And you know that some Israelis are outraged: “Israel’s violent responses, even if there is justification for them, exceed all proportion and cross every red line of humaneness, morality, international law and wisdom.”

The justification Israel offers is the increased firing of rockets from Gaza. But Israelis can read that Hamas is responding to Israeli provocation. “Six months ago Israel asked and received a cease-fire from Hamas. It unilaterally violated it.” “On November 4, an Israeli operation sparked a new round of dangerous, if controlled, violence,” “when it unnecessarily bombed a tunnel.”

About the same time, Israel cut off transport of food, medical supplies, and electricity to Gaza. “Food insecurity in Gaza currently runs at 56 percent and is deteriorating rapidly, 42 percent of the Strip’s population is unemployed and 76 percent is receiving humanitarian assistance (all UN figures).” “A million and a half human beings . live in the conditions of a giant jail.” “Why should Gazan citizens tolerate such a long and severe siege for so long?”

General Shmuel Zakai, former commander of Israel’s troops in Gaza, says: “We could have eased the siege over the Gaza Strip, in such a way that the Palestinians, Hamas, would understand that holding their fire served their interests. But when you create a tahadiyeh [cease-fire], and the economic pressure on the Strip continues, it’s obvious that Hamas will try to reach an improved tahadiyeh, and that their way to achieve this, is resumed Qassam [rocket] fire. . You cannot just land blows, leave the Palestinians in Gaza in the economic distress they’re in, and expect that Hamas will just sit around and do nothing.”

Nevertheless, just a few days before the attack, “Palestinian sources said they do not believe Hamas plans to launch a massive rocket strike on Israel unless the IDF begins offensive operations in the Strip.” Israel claims it wants peace, yet it “did not exhaust the diplomatic processes before embarking on another dreadful campaign of killing and ruin.” And “no military operation has ever advanced dialogue with the Palestinians.”

In fact military force is self-defeating, because “no Palestinian will consent to having his people and his homeland destroyed in this way.” “Hamas will not be weakened due to the Gaza war; to the contrary.” If predictions of a strengthened Hamas prove wrong, the other possibility is obvious: “A siege designed to depose Hamas rule . risks triggering a social collapse that would have devastating consequences for all concerned. . An Israeli military escalation would likely accelerate the splintering of Hamas’ leadership and the emergence of more radical alternatives.”

One way or another, more rockets are sure to fall on Israel. Of course that might be one goal of the attack. Israeli leaders may be trying to avoid dialogue. More intense fighting would let them claim they have no one to negotiate with, especially if Gaza breaks down in chaos. Israeli leaders may also have an eye on Palestinian elections coming up soon. They want to persuade the Palestinians to support the more conciliatory Fatah party by destroying Hamas, or at least showing what happens to its supporters.

But “working toward long-term goals that would completely change the landscape in the region, like toppling Hamas from power in Gaza, is liable to turn out to be a wild fantasy.” “Israel must understand that Hamas rule in Gaza is a fact, and it is with that government that we must reach a situation of calm. . We can’t impose regimes on the Palestinians.” The idea “that a military operation would suffice in toppling an entrenched regime and thus replace it with another one friendlier to us is no more than lunacy.”

Why would Israeli leaders pursue such a dangerous fantasy? When Ha’aretz journalists want to explain it, they (like all other Israeli journalists) focus most on politics — not Palestinian, but Israeli. Israel, too, will hold elections in just a few weeks. “Israelis are being treated to a predictable dose of political posturing and chest-thumping.”

The polls show the hawkish Likud party ahead, partly because “Likud Chairman Benjamin Netanyahu pledged to topple the Hamas leadership in the Gaza Strip if elected prime minister. . Under his leadership, Israel would move from a policy of absorbing blows to a policy of being on the offensive.”

Perhaps that’s why the current (soon to retire) prime minister, Ehud Olmert, launched this week’s offensive, cheered on by his party’s candidate to replace him, Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni. She’s now talking tough, too. “‘The state of Israel, and a government under me, will make it a strategic objective to topple the Hamas regime in Gaza,’ Livni told members of her centrist Kadima party.” “We cannot allow Gaza to remain under Hamas control.” “Vice Premier Haim Ramon also said . that Hamas must be removed from power.”

“Ramon, Transportation Minister Shaul Mofaz and others harshly criticized Defense Minister Ehud Barak’s handling of the situation” — because Barak, a former prime minister, is also running to regain that post, trying to resurrect his once-powerful Labor party. “The beginning of the raid in Gaza bears the wily and deceptive fingerprint of Barak. . It may deliver him and his party from the humiliating defeat the polls are predicting.” “If Hamas is beaten and Israel receives some peace under favorable terms, Labor and Barak may gain force.”

Politicians of every party want to prove that they are “not a bunch of wimps.” So they’ve staked their future on the same goal: one way or another, topple the democratically-elected government of Gaza.

But Israel is also a democracy. The politicians are catering to public opinion: “This war was preceded by a frighteningly uniform public dialogue in which only one voice was heard — that which called for striking, destroying, starving and killing.” “The hysterical reaction by the public as a whole and politicians in particular stems mainly from the fact that the country is in an election period. And when elections are in the offing people speak from the gut rather than the brain. . They’re suddenly strutting their macho stuff.”

“Politicians and the public at large have been enthralled by a new prospect: that of a wide-scale military operation in the Gaza Strip. Such a prospect answers all their heart’s secret wishes. . The public’s imaginations are let loose as they chant a battle-cry.” “Speeches have a tendency to identify goals that are by nature unreachable: phrases like ‘destroying the Hamas government’ (which is actually likely to be strengthened).”

With so many Israelis pointing out how self-defeating this attack on Gaza is, why would a majority of Israeli voters still push their leaders to more military action?

One theory looks to an inflated self-image: “Israel is striking at the Palestinians to ‘teach them a lesson.’ That is a basic assumption that has accompanied the Zionist enterprise since its inception: We are the representatives of progress and enlightenment, sophisticated rationality and morality, while the Arabs are a primitive, violent rabble, ignorant children who must be educated and taught wisdom — via, of course, the carrot-and-stick method, just as the drover does with his donkey.”

But there’s an opposite theory: The failed war in Lebanon two years ago deflated Israelis’ self-image, and now they are out to inflate it again. “The pictures of blood and fire are designed to show Israelis, Arabs and the entire world that the neighborhood bully’s strength has yet to wane. When the bully is on a rampage, nobody can stop him.” “Israel goaded its enemies to provoke it because [the enemies] ceased believing that Israel would agree to pay the price of using force.”

Eventually, though, “after the politicians flex their muscles, the analysts blow smoke and the citizens of Israel have their ‘honor restored,’ a new exit from Gaza must be sought.” “Most dangerous of all is the cliche that there is no one to talk to. That has never been true. There are even ways to talk with Hamas.”

“Hamas would have — and still would — accept a bargain . [to] halt the fire in exchange for easing of the many ways in which Israeli policies have kept a choke hold on the economy of the Strip.” “Hamas leader, Mahmoud Zahar, has said that his Palestinian militant group is willing to renew the recently ended truce in Gaza with Israel.”

“Hamas has clear conditions for its extension: The opening of the border crossings for goods and cessation of IDF attacks in Gaza, as outlined in the original agreement. Later, Hamas wants the cease-fire to be extended to the West Bank. Israel, for its part, is justifiably demanding a real calm in Gaza; that no Qassam or mortar shell be fired by either Hamas, Islamic Jihad or any other group. Essentially, Israel is telling Hamas it is willing to recognize its control of Gaza on the condition that it assumes responsibility for the security of the territory, like Hezbollah controls southern Lebanon. It is likely that this will be the outcome of a wide-scale operation in the Gaza Strip.”

“In a short time, after the parade of corpses and wounded ends, we will arrive at a fresh cease-fire, as occurred after Lebanon, exactly like the one that could have been forged without this superfluous war.” “Why, then, not forgo the war and agree to these conditions now?”

Ira Chernus, a Professor of Religious Studies at the University of Colorado at Boulder, is the author of American Nonviolence: The History of an Idea. Having written extensively on Presidents Dwight D. Eisenhower and George W. Bush, he is now writing a book tentatively titled “Franklin D. Roosevelt and the Origins of the National Insecurity State.” He can be contacted at chernus@colorado.edu.

 


5 Comments so far
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A very dissapointing analysus when qouted by a professor. Just exchange “Palestinians” and “Israel” and then you how the same can be said about any side, no matter the facts.

And you just can explain everything by election insterest and injured pride. The Israeli-Arab conflict exists for more than 80 years, long before election year. Not many know that Israel is a very small country, surrounded by much larger arab nations (hundreds of times it’s size, see attached website link, Israel is in blue. btw – Iran, is the “small” nation East of Iraq, that threatens to delete Israel from the map. ). Hamas is just part of the wider conflict, and it’s naive to assume that election year guides this decision given much heavier justifications for it.

Gaza strip is an example of the conflict. Israeli settlements were dismantled and all control of Gaza was given a present to the Palestinians, as a first attempt of good will diplomacy. What happened later? Hamas, an organization that the entire world deems terrorist, decided to use palestinian cities as launching ground for Kasam missiles. Those missles are not aimed at any military. They are fired at population centers.

This has been going on not since election year. This has been going on for more than 8 years. I wonder how your government would respond if your population was under rocket attack by a terrorist neigbour. I wonder what you would be demanding from your president after Hamas rockets start falling on you from the sky.

Israel was very patient with Hamas. 8 years. The timing of the IDF responce? Not election year, but the end of the cease fire by Hamas. Approx. qoute of a Hamas representative: “It is no longer in our interest to continue the cease fire”. Israel offered to continue. Hamas decided that 50 rockets on Israeli population a day (!) is a good answer and perfect show of intentions.

Stop seeing Israel as the source of all evil. Walk in our shoes, come to Israel and see for yourself. It’s a small (and only) democracy in a very difficult region trying to survive and protect it’s citizens.

It’s the only country in the region where free speech exists, and allows for such superficial and context-less interpretations as the one you qouted.

Roman

Comment by Roman

Dear Roman,

Thank you for leaving your comment.

I personally think both sides have truth on their side and both sides have wrong on their side. Both sides have made mistakes and both sides are to blame for what is happening.

Yes, rockets have been fired at Israel and this is wrong. And yes I do agree with you that it seems that Israel is the only one who is being demonized here. At the same time Israel was wrong to do some of the actions that they did in closing the border to food and medicine being allowed to help the innocent people who are living in terrible conditions.

At the same time Egypt has also closed their border to Gaza and is not allowing food, medicine and other humantarian needs to be shipped in too and yet no one is condemning Egypt for also not allowing the needed supplies into Gaza either.

I don’t know what the answer is. I do know that both sides should be treated fairly by the world community and that is not happening right now.

Israel has a right to be their own nation and shouldn’t have to live in fear. Gaza Strip should also be allowed to have the right to be able to live in peace without fear too. Why is it that both Israel and Egypt control the only way in and out of the stip and that if either one of those nations decides to close the border to much needed supplies of food and medicine that the people there have to suffer? Why is it that Israel blocks boats coming in with food and medicine from people all around the world who care about the innocent people who are stuck there because they aren’t allowed to leave.

Yes, you are right this situation has been going on for many years and no long lasting solution has been found yet.

My question to you is do you honestly think that military action of this type is the best way to stop the rockets from being fired on Israel? Or do you think that it will only lead to more anger and more rockets being fired?

I would like to think that Israel would have learned something from the mistake that America made in invading Iraq. People talk about an International Peace keeping force there, who will that be. Americans? Will we have to send American Soldiers to the Gaza as part of this peace keeping force? That wouldn’t be the best thing for America. We have troops in Iraq, Afganistan, and we don’t want our troops patroling the Gaza Strip. Well you send your troops to fight in Iraq?

Instead of putting more fuel on the fire by invading Gaza there are those of us in the world who would like to see if there is someway to cool the fire down and bring both sides to the table and be honest and make them be honest with each other. So far that hasn’t happen.

You say your goal is to stop Hamas. The rest of the world can agree with that statement of stopping Hamas from firing rockets on you. We can agree that they are terriorists, but don’t you think that by you invading and acting the way you have acted only brings the people to support them because they are suffering. When one is suffering because they live in living conditions that are so bad they are going to support the ones who say we are going to fight back the people who have caused their suffering by closing them in that ghetto and not letting them our or letting food and water in. It is a vicious circle.

Don’t you think that if you played your cards differently that you might be able to work with the people inside of Gaza who are not terriorists and don’t want Hamas to be in charage there.

America will be on Israel’s side. That is not going to change. Right or wrong we will support Israel. The question is where is Israel going to lead us?

Comment by chrisy58

Hi Crissy,

Thank you for keeping a real dialogue, it seems as the exception these days.

First, on the humanitarian condition. Honestly, I have no direct knowledge of the situation. I do believe that life in Gaza is unberable right now. I do believe some restrictions are in place in the borders. I do know though that aid is flowing in, contrary to some reports. Also, I know that HAMAS has in many cases taken over the aid, stole supplies to feed it’s men first, fuel it’s vehicles, and give medical care to it’s militants. From direct conversations with soldiers in different arenas in the palestinian territories, I know that the practice of using an ambulance to transport militants, weapons, and even conduct bombings is nothing unusual. By the way, this is the exact reason why ambulances are stopped at checkpoints in the west bank.
My point is that the humanitarian situation, if as grave as we think, has it’s roots in the fighting and in Hamas’s interest (to create a crisis and thus pressure Israel for cease fire). Israel is possibly not doing enough to fix this, but I do know that some aid is going through.

Clothing the borders is due to a simple fact. Most “import” us weapons. Those Grad missiles fired at 1 million Israeli citizens are not home-made. Nor are anti-tank weapons, ammunition, explosives, training. Karine A is a good example – 50 tons of weaponry, that was supposed to go through the sea. In this case I think it’s hard to blame Israel (and Egypt) for keeping a strict control of the borders.

I do agree that both populations have the right to leave in peace. Hamas, does not. A military operation is always a bad choice. Our soldiers are beeing killed and injured too. Our image in the world is ruined. And no Israeli is proud when a palestinian school is hit and there are dead children. It tears us apart from the inside, in a much more meaningful way that any external pressure can exert.

War will not produce love. Theories about the relation between well-being and pacification have proven false. The rhetoric used to incite the palestinian population is not a socio economic one, but one of demonization, of religious extrimism, and of hate speech. Most terrorists are actually students, not exactly low class poor people. It is ideology that fuels the conflict with the Palestinians.

I don’t know how Israel could have played it’s cards differently in this case. Obviously the voices of the silent majority are not heard. Hamas, like Arafat before them, rules with force and coercion, worse than anyone. I don’t know how to empower the majority. Reaching truce accords, freeing prisoners as a gesture, evacuating settlements in a one sided manner has not helped. Empowering the *relatively* rational Fatah and Ashaf has done little to help (although the weapons given to them were later turned against Israel, when Arafat incited the intifadah after peace talks were stuck). Arafat died a very rich man, but not his people.

War might not bring about love, it might topple Hamas and produce an understanding that their current behaviour will not pay off. Peace accords with Egypt and Jordan were reached after very costly wars, when they realised that destroying Israel is no longer a real option. It might work the same with the Palestinians. In want of a better option, direct attack on Hamas is the least-worst one.

Roman

Comment by Roman

Hi Chrisy,

Here’s a one support for my thoughts on the reasons behind the palestinians hate for Israel:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bra53uzgPDk

It’s sad that the world does not take account of this. It’s even sadder that none of the truce or milestone accords start with the elimination of incitementas the most basic article. And this lack of emphasis is unfortunatly the blame of Israel and the international community, for not demanding it before weapons and borders issues.

Roman

Comment by Roman

Dear Roman,

My fibro is acting up so I haven’t been on the site as much as I have been. If I am slow in approving your comments I am sorry.

On Democracy Now they had a young man whose father was killed. He was not a member of Hamas and in fact resigned when Hamas took power and didn’t like the way that Hamas was governing. He was one who sought peace with Israel and finding a way for a two state solution where both states could live in peace and security.

Yes, there are innocent people who are truly caught between the actions of Hamas and Israel. Israel has actually allowed more needed food and medical supplies in than Egypt but yet Egypt isn’t condemned for their closing the border to humanitarian supplies going into Gaza Strip when Israel has opened an Humanitarian supply line.

Why is Israel condemned so strongly and Egypt isn’t? Are we as a world society being fair or one sided. Roman, I will even admit I see an unfairness in how the world press is painting Israel as the monster and the Hamas who is firing rockets as the innocent victim.

Let’s be fair and say both sides have made mistakes. The difference is that Israel does want to really try and seek a solution to the problem in such a way that the innocent people caught in the crossfire can be safe. Yet where are the people in Gaza to go to be safe? There is no way out for them and they are stuck there.

Yesterday Israel hit a UN School that people used for shelter and 40 people at least were killed. It is my understanding that Hamas fired a rocket from that school and Israel responded to the point that the rocket came from. I don’t believe one minute that Israel targeted that school, but they typed in the location of where the rocket came from and that is where their rocket landed. I would even guess that they feel terrible, but at the same time, Hamas is using women and children to hide behind.

Let me ask you Roman, what real man hides behind women and children to fire rockets? Hamas must know that they are using women and children as human shields and has no regard for innocent life. They strap bombs on them and use them as sucide bombers. From the time these children are born they are taught to hate Israel and the West.

I am a Catholic and the difference of what we are taught as Catholics and what Muslims are taught is as different as day and night. The Pope would never tell us to strap bombs on ourselves and go blow up innocent people for a Holy War. That by doing this we will get a ticket to heaven. Our pope is a man of peace and love.

I know a couple of Jewish people from my writers group. Their God is the same God that we as Catholics believe in. We just believe that Jesus was the Son of God, but we came from the Jewish faith as Jesus was Jewish. I don’t think Rabbi’s are telling their flocks to strap bombs on themselves to kill innocent people so they can go to paradise.

So out of the three main religions we seem to have only one who believes in violence to reach heaven.

Roman, I don’t know what the answer is to finding lasting peace, but I do know that we are going to have to keep trying and while we are seeking peace to try and be fair to the innocent who are stuck there between the crossfire.

I don’t think we should just blindly follow one side, but we must seek the truth and speak the truth. So far that is not happening.

On Anderson Cooper last night they had a story about where Hamas is keeping a tight reign on what the reporters in Gaza are saying to the outside world. Israel is keeping reporters out too. Why is Hamas trying to hide what is really going on? Israel I think is thinking of the safety of the reporters because it is such a small area and there are already to many innocents stuck there who are getting hurt. I would like to think that the reason Israel is keeping reporters out is for their safety. Hamas the reporters are already there, so why are they restricting what they report and not allowing the whole truth to come out?

My fibro is really acting up so I will end now. I will approve your other comments and respond more later.

Best Wishes
Chrisy

Comment by chrisy58




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