Massacre in Gaza
S P SETH
Whether or not the ceasefire to stop the Israeli
bombing of Gaza, and the retaliatory rockets on Israel, will hold is anybody’s
guess. If the past is any guide, the prospects of any durable truce are not too
bright. At the same time, all the rhetoric about terrorist rockets falling and
Israel simply defending by letting leash bombs and missiles on Gaza from air,
sea and land, takes one’s breath away. Israel’s so-called defensive and
“precision” bombing of Gaza in eight days killed about 160 people with more
than 1,000 injured, while the “terrorist” rockets killed 6 Israelis.
And why did the Hamas and its allied groups persist
with their rocket throwing until the ceasefire, knowing that it would cost them
dearly? Simply because if they don’t react forcefully, they will simply be
forgotten by the world, as they almost already are. This is their way of
keeping their cause alive on the regional (Middle East) and global map. At the
same time, despite Israel’s unbearable arrogance of invincibility, even the
firing of admittedly not terribly effective rockets tend to unsettle Israel
psychologically, with the rockets occasionally reaching deep into the country.
Gaza is essentially a large prison camp of nearly
1.7 million people (many of them refugees from, what is now, Israel),
surrounded by Israeli forces that attack and kill at will to force them into
submission. Their supplies of daily provisions and needs are rationed subject
to Israeli blockade of their territory. The only wonder is that that they are
still able to fight for their dignity and basic human rights. And it is this
‘stubbornness’ on their part that riles Israel. Even when there is the
slightest gesture of some support from any international humanitarian group, as
in the case of a flotilla of peace activists in 2009 that sought to bring
relief supplies into Gaza for its besieged citizens, Israel goes berserk.
Israeli soldiers, at the time, killed nine Turkish citizens on board the ship
carrying relief supplies to Gaza.
Any decent human being, with no political agenda,
will be appalled at the Israeli inhumanity towards Gaza’s citizens, as during
the 8 days bombing of the territory. Jepke Goudsmit, a Jewish citizen of Australia
who might invite the label of a self-hating Jew, was so appalled to write a
letter to the Sydney Morning Herald. He wrote. “…Being of Jewish descent
myself, I had hoped that a people who have suffered as much as the Jews would
not become perpetrators of the same wrongs done to them in the past….” Well, he
is in a hopeless minority in his community.
The
killings in Gaza this time, as in the earlier bombings like the 3-week Israeli
invasion in 2008-2009 when 1400 Gazans were killed, seem like a normal military
excursion for the Israeli armed forces. The obvious question is: How does
Israel get away with all these murders? And the simple answer is the
unqualified support it receives, politically, economically and militarily, from
the United States and, for the most part, from European countries that follow
the US lead. The statement of the US President Barack Obama supporting Israeli
bombing raids on Gaza was almost identical to Prime Minister Netanyahu’s angry
outbursts rationalizing Israeli attacks.
Netanyahu said that no country could tolerate its
citizens being targeted by rockets. But he forgot to mention that it was his
country that started the process by killing a Hamas commander, Ahmed Jabari,
travelling in his car. Jabari had earlier been instrumental in having the
captured Israeli soldier, Gilad Shalit, released from a Gaza prison. In a cruel
twist, Jabari was reportedly working to bring about an effective and durable
truce between Israel and Gaza.
Regarding Obama’s support for Israeli bombing, he
said, “…there’s no country on Earth that would tolerate missiles raining down
on its citizens from outside its borders”, virtually echoing Netanyahu. The
Palestinians in Gaza are simply fighting for their freedom from a horrifying
Israeli blockade of their territory from land, sea and air, and they are rained
with bombs when they seek to exercise that right.
An important question is: why do Europeans so
supinely follow the US? One simple answer is that they follow the US as part of
their strategic alliance. But at a deeper level, their commitment to Israel is
born of a collective guilt of treating Jewish Diaspora inhumanely through
pogroms and Hitler’s Holocaust. And they want to expiate their crimes by
creating a new bogeyman, the Palestinians who resist Israeli occupation. Even
at the height of the killing of Jews by the Hitler regime, known in the US and
Europe, the pleas from Jewish groups to bomb railway lines and trains
transporting Jews to their death camps, were ignored. Not only that, those Jews
seeking refuge in these countries, including the United States, were simply
ignored or turned away. With this kind of record, to turn on the Palestinians
by supporting Israel’s killing machine is unconscionable.
Another problem is internal to the Palestinian
movement. It is divided and badly fractured giving Israel enough scope to play
one group against the other. For instance, the Palestinian Authority based in
West Bank and the Hamas controlling Gaza have been at each other’s throat ever
since the Hamas won Palestinian elections in 2006. Since the Hamas is branded a
terrorist organization by Israel, the US and the western world, it was outlawed
as a legitimate government, forcing it to withdraw to Gaza where it has a
powerful base. In the ensuing infighting
between the Fatah organization and Hamas in 2007, the latter succeeded in
ousting the Mahmoud Abbas’s organization from Gaza.
All attempts to bring the two warring factions
together have failed, principally because Israel and its international backers
would not accept a unity government with Hamas as its component. In other
words, Israel has plenty of scope to play politics in the Palestinian movement.
Hence, Palestine continues to be the orphan child of the international
community, letting Israel play havoc with their lives.
And this will continue to happen unless the new
political forces unleashed by the Arab Spring put up a joint front to help
Palestinians. And to some extent, this has already happened with Egypt’s
President Mohammed Morsi playing an important role in bringing about the recent
truce, winning plaudits from both President Obama and the Hamas leadership.
Incidentally, Morsi has immediately used his enhanced status to assume
unlimited powers in Egypt. He obviously hopes that his new found usefulness for
the Americans will still their criticism of his “popular” dictatorship. But
political developments in Egypt, following Morsi’s decree and plunging the
country into political turmoil, might not be helpful for the Palestinian cause.
In other words, they are likely to remain paws on international chessboard.
Note: This article was first published in the Daily Times.