Tuesday, August 5, 2014

Israel-Palestine: When Civilians Die, the Killer Is to Blame


In the Six Day War of 1967, a war Israel fought against Egypt, Syria, Iraq and Jordan--not Palestine--Israel occupied Gaza and the West Bank and decided to stay. In the years since, Israel has relinquished control of some areas, but settlements continue to expand onto Palestinian lands, and since 2007 a blockade has turned Gaza into what some have labeled an open-air prison. To make matters worse, Israel’s military--one of the most advanced and effective militaries in the world, backed by the world’s most advanced and largest military--occasionally conducts airstrikes and ground incursions against the destitute, jobless and hungry imprisoned there.

In a statement on July 21, 2014, President Obama took little to no stand:


“Israel has a right to defend itself against rocket and tunnel attacks from Hamas. And as a result of its operations, Israel has already done significant damage to Hamas’s terrorist infrastructure in Gaza. I’ve also said, however, that we have serious concerns about the rising number of Palestinian civilian deaths and the loss of Israeli lives.”


Meanwhile, this from The Guardian on Monday, August 4:


“A hospital near the site of Sunday’s attack [on a UN school], in the southern town of Rafah, was overwhelmed with the dead and injured. Children’s bodies were stored in an ice cream freezer as the morgue ran out of space.”


I don’t mean to ignore Hamas. As every good American knows, Israel has a right to defend itself against terrorists and Hamas’s charter does state the group’s intention of destroying Israel. We all know Hamas fires rockets that sometimes kill noncombatants, and even a cursory investigation of the group turns up a long list of ideological and methodological sins, including the use of human shields.

On the other hand, if I remember my Noam Chomsky right from Hopes and Prospects, Hamas has shown a willingness to negotiate when Israel has not, its rockets are often ineffective, and its attacks show a focus on military targets often ignored by Western politicians and news organizations. Hamas is also part of the democratically elected government of a sovereign state under continuous occupation, siege and military aggression by a neighbor.

Good Americans also know you have the right to bite when tread upon.

For decades, many in America have looked at the historical and political complexities I’ve outlined above and decided, like President Obama, that the fence is a comfortable place to sit, but if anything should have the power to inspire them to climb down, it is the brutality of Israel’s recent invasion of Gaza.

Consider these numbers from The Guardian on August 4:


“Palestinian deaths pass 1,800, while 64 Israeli troops have died.”


Note the numbers, but also the choice of words. “Palestinians” and “Israeli troops”--that’s because overwhelmingly, the ones dying are Palestinian civilians. (chart, article) Not terrorists, not combatants, just kids going to school, parents going to work, couples getting married--everyday folk going about everyday lives and getting bombed while they’re at it.

The horror stories are numerous and you can find plenty of them on any major news site that claims to be objective and takes an honest stab at it. Just today, after international outrage at multiple attacks on schools, Israel declared a “humanitarian window” of decreased attacks, which it then broke by bombing a refugee camp (article). In a recent interview (which I can’t find right now) on Democracy Now!, Noam Chomsky discusses a document from some years back in which the Israeli government explicitly states that it will target everyday people as a matter of strategy: exact such a toll that no one will fight back or support anyone who does.

That is what we have just seen, and what may resume if the ceasefire underway as I write this doesn’t hold.

Surely, there can be no sitting on the fence about the wholesale slaughter of innocents, even in a war against terror. President Obama should grow a spine on this issue (previous blog) and join the rest of the world--save Israel’s government--in strongly condemning Operation Protective Edge. And to the extent you have a voice, you should condemn it, too. On occasion, politicians listen to their electorate, and on occasion, they broker better will between warring states.


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Recommended reading:
Palestine: Peace Not Apartheid by Jimmy Carter
“9 questions about the Israel-Palestine conflict you were too embarrassed to ask” on Vox

 

 

 

2 comments:

  1. You wish President Obama to grow a spine and put his foot down, but history has proved that the only issues that can get him to get aggressive are those issues that are against American citizens and the constitution he swore to protect. I don't expect anything from him and have grown surly when it comes to discussing the leader of my country. I wish people would stand against his continued leadership, but it seems the majority consensus is to wait out the term and see what the next election brings. I find this attitude very dismaying. I don't think that the current way the government is run and the focus of the constituents bodes well for our electoral decision making skills. It also causes me distress to see how uninformed my fellow voters are on the world situation and politics, especially considering how much information is readily available to them on the internet. It doesn't take a great deal of research to see what is happening and why, it just takes a little desire and less self interest in how many selfies can be posted on instagram and facebook. I will have to end my rant and try to get my blood pressure down before returning to work, so this is Davey the Angry, signing off and saying open your eyes and your minds before it is too late to be heard......

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  2. I am, broadly speaking, a supporter of President Obama, but this is one of those issues (among several--some very big, like the NSA scandal) in which I wish he would show more leadership. I don't expect him to end the Israel-Palestine conflict, and I know there are political factors that limit what he can do, but it the face of slaughter, you would think he could put a little more pressure on Israel.

    You mention the next presidential election... Ugh. As someone who follows politics, I look forward to it. As someone who hopes for a decent leader, I am very skeptical. Honestly, I don't expect the Republicans to come up with anyone even remotely attractive, and Democrats seem focused on Hillary, which just makes me shudder. We'll see.

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