Oct
15, 2023
“In
a few days,” writes Amira Hass, the veteran Israeli correspondent who has
reported for decades from the Occupied Territories, “Israelis went through what
Palestinians have experienced as a matter of routine for decades, and are still
experiencing,” including “military incursions, death, cruelty, slain children,
bodies piled up in the road, siege, fear, anxiety over loved ones, captivity...
and searing humiliation.”
The
Hamas-led attack on Israeli military bases and civilian neighborhoods
reportedly killed more than 1,300 Israelis, along with at least 120 taken
hostage. While enduring that type of violence may be routine for Palestinians,
Gaza is now facing the most calamitous Israeli military assault to date.
In
less than one week, as of this writing, Israel has killed more than 2,300
people, including 724 children. Israeli strikes have hit residential buildings,
mosques, schools, hospitals, universities, and fleeing civilians. Israel has
intensified its already crippling blockade by cutting off all food, water, and
electricity. It has ordered the expulsion of 1.1 million residents of northern
Gaza, “a death sentence for the sick and injured,” the World Health
Organization warns. If Israel does not restore Gaza’s water supply, the United
Nations Palestinian refugee agency says, “people will start dying of severe
dehydration.”
With
a ground invasion looming, Israel is threatening atrocities on an even larger
scale, all while espousing rhetoric that calls for ethnic cleansing or even
genocide.
Justifying
what he called the “complete siege” of Gaza, Israeli defense minister Yoav
Gallant declared that his government is “fighting against human animals.”
According to former Israeli Deputy Foreign minister Danny Ayalon, the Israeli
plan is to force Palestinians into the “almost endless space in the Sinai
desert, just on the other side of Gaza,” where they can live in “tent cities.”
Israeli president Isaac Herzog effectively declared that there are no innocent
civilians in Gaza, home to “an entire nation… that is responsible.” Invoking
the ethnic cleansing of hundreds of thousands of Palestinians before and after
Israel’s founding in May 1948, known as the Nakba (“catastrophe”), Ariel
Kallner, an Israeli parliamentarian, said that Israel has “one goal”: a “Nakba
that will overshadow the Nakba of ‘48.”
Even
as the threat of regional escalation grows, the Biden administration fully
endorses Israel’s blood lust. Calls for a ceasefire, the White House press
secretary declared, are “repugnant.” State Department employees have even been
instructed to avoid mentioning the terms “de-escalation/ceasefire,” “end to
violence/bloodshed” and “restoring calm.”
Biden’s
stance is shared across both political parties, with only a handful of
lawmakers demanding a ceasefire. As the US backs Israel’s assault, “we may be
about to see massive ethnic cleansing” in Gaza, one European Union official has
warned.
As
in previous cases, the Western media and political establishment justifies the
prevailing support for attacking Gaza by asserting that Israel has “the right
to defend itself”, and has no other option against Palestinian militants who
refuse to accept its existence.
As
a legal matter, the former assertion is false: while Israel has an
internationally recognized right to defend itself from an attack, it does not
have the right to commit war crimes against a besieged civilian population.
Moreover, Israel is not “defending itself” against an external aggressor, but
an imprisoned internal population that also has a recognized right to resist
military occupation (but not, as is evident, to kill and kidnap Israeli
civilians). To adopt the Israeli-US narrative, therefore, requires “ignoring
Israel’s structural violence and cruelty,” Amira Hass writes, “and the context
of the Palestinian people’s ongoing dispossession from their land.”
That
Israel is “defending itself” from a people that it has colonized has long been
acknowledged at the highest levels. At a 1956 funeral for an Israeli soldier
killed by Palestinians in Gaza, Gen. Moshe Dayan, one of Israel’s most famed
military leaders, advised the following:
Let
us not cast the blame on the murderers today. Why should we deplore their
burning hatred for us? For eight years they have been sitting in the refugee
camps in Gaza, and before their eyes we have been transforming the lands and
villages, where they and their fathers dwelt, into our estate.
Dayan,
having led Israeli forces in the military campaign during Israel’s founding in
1948, recognized that his country originated with the dispossession of
Palestinians and theft of their homes. Yet his acknowledgment was not an act of
remorse. Rather than attempt to reverse or redress the forced expulsion of
Palestinians, Dayan went on to decree that Israel should maintain the
colonization with even more aggression:
We
are a generation that settles the land and without the steel helmet and the
cannon's maw, we will not be able to plant a tree and build a home... Let us
not fear to look squarely at the hatred that consumes and fills the lives of
hundreds of Arabs who live around us. Let us not drop our gaze, lest our arms
weaken. That is the fate of our generation. That is our choice – to be ready
and armed, tough and hard – or else the sword shall fall from our hands and our
lives will be cut short.
In
the nearly 70 years since Dayan spoke those words, Israel has heeded them by
expanding its theft of Palestinian land and creating new generations of
refugees. As B’Tselem, the leading Israeli human rights group, acknowledged in
2021, this has turned Israel into “an apartheid regime” that “promotes and
perpetuates Jewish supremacy between the Mediterranean Sea and the Jordan
River.”
A
foundational moment for Israel’s apartheid regime was its 1967 conquest of the
West Bank and Gaza Strip, which brought millions of Palestinians under Israeli
military occupation. As he did in 1956, Dayan candidly articulated what became
the guiding policy: “You Palestinians, as a nation, don’t want us today, but
we’ll change your attitude by forcing our presence on you.” Under Israeli rule,
the Israeli general said, occupied Palestinians will “live like dogs, and
whoever will leave, will leave.”
For
Gaza, one of the world’s most densely populated areas, this forced Israeli
occupation has confined a population of 2.3 million, more than half of them
children, to what former UK Prime Minister David Cameron has described as “an
open-air prison,” or what Hebrew University Professor Baruch Kimmerling called
“the largest concentration camp ever to exist.”
Israel’s
famed 2005 “disengagement” has been falsely described as an end to the
occupation of Gaza when, in fact, it only deepened the torment. After years of
de-facto blockades, Israel imposed a full siege in 2007. This was Israel and
Washington’s response to Hamas’ surprise victory in Palestinian legislative
elections the previous year, when voters shunned the corrupt and inept
Western-backed Palestinian Authority. Hamas then took full control of Gaza in a
preemptive operation against a US-backed coup plot that sought undermine its
electoral gains. Hillary Clinton later lamented that the US failed to rig the
Palestinian vote. “If we were going to push for an election, then we should
have made sure that we did something to determine who was going to win,” she
said.
Because
it failed to thwart Palestinian democracy, Israel, again with US backing,
turned to punishing Gazan civilians for voting the wrong way. Controlling the
flow of goods and energy to Gaza, Israel restricted food imports based on a
calculation of the precise number of calories that would be needed to ravage
them without triggering a full-blown malnutrition crisis. “The idea,” Israeli
advisor Dov Weisglass explained, “is to put the Palestinians on a diet, but not
to make them die of hunger.”
Under
Israeli control, over 90% of Gaza's water became unfit for human consumption.
In 2018, the United Nations declared conditions to be so dire that the
territory could become “uninhabitable” within years. The Israeli siege has been
accompanied by periodic military assaults that killed, wounded, and displaced
tens of thousands of Palestinians.
Israel’s
commitment to enforcing the dispossession and occupation of Palestinians has
also led it to undermine any prospect of the two-state solution that it claimed
to support.
The
1993 Oslo Accords between Israel and the Palestinian Liberation Organization
(PLO) were “founded on a neo-colonialist basis,” in the words of former Israeli
Foreign Minister Shlomo Ben-Ami. “One of the meanings of Oslo,” Ben Ami
explained, “was that the PLO was eventually Israel's collaborator in the task
of stifling the intifada,” – a grassroots and largely non-violent uprising
against Israeli occupation – thereby “cutting short what was clearly an
authentically democratic struggle for Palestinian independence.” Oslo’s Israeli
architects, including Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin, never “wanted the autonomy
to usher in a Palestinian state.”
As
a neo-colonial endeavor disguised as a “peace process,” the Oslo era saw a
doubling of the Israeli settlement population in its first eight years.
Israel’s so-called “generous peace offer” at Camp David in July 2000 – widely
cited by Israeli officials and Western pundits as proof of an Israeli
willingness to “compromise,” and a Palestinian refusal to “co-exist” – was in
fact a perpetuation of Oslo’s neo-colonial ruse. As Ben-Ami, who took part in
the summit as a top Israeli negotiator, himself acknowledged years later: “If I
were a Palestinian I would have rejected Camp David, as well.”
In
2002, the Arab League offered Israel full normalization in return for a
withdrawal from all Arab territories (Syrian, Lebanese, and Palestinian) that
it occupied in 1967; the creation of a Palestinian state in the West Bank and
Gaza, with East Jerusalem as its capital; and a “just resolution” to the
refugee issue. The initiative was subsequently endorsed by Iran, which signed
on to a December 2017 declaration calling for a “two-state solution with east
Jerusalem as the capital of the State of Palestine.”
The
proposal would require Israel to end its occupation of the West Bank and
abandon the illegal settlement blocs, which carve up Palestinian land and
disproportionately consume precious water reserves. Later on, the Arab League
signaled that it would accept mutually agreed land swaps, as the Palestinian
Authority had already done, that could keep some settlement areas under Israeli
control. But even the most far-reaching Israeli offer, presented by lame-duck
Prime Minister Ehud Olmert in 2008, rejected parity in any territorial
exchange. As veteran Israeli negotiator Michael Herzog wrote in 2011: “No
Israeli government to date has accepted the Palestinian stipulation that land
swaps be fully equal in size and ‘quality.’”
Israel
has repeatedly rejected the Arab League’s diplomatic initiative and even
refused to accept it as a basis for further negotiations. In shunning the
two-state solution based on the 1967 borders, Israel has shown a less
accommodating position than even what Hamas, at one point, claimed to support.
In
a March 2008 interview, Khalid Mishal, head of Hamas’s political bureau, stated
that “most Palestinian forces, including Hamas, accept a state on the 1967
borders.” In 2013, Ghazi Hamad, Hamas’ deputy foreign minister, reaffirmed this
stance: “We agree to the establishment of a Palestinian state with Jerusalem as
its capital, within the 1967 borders, and that this would include a solution to
the refugee problem.”
While
Hamas explicitly rejected any recognition of Israel, its acceptance of a
Palestinian state within the boundaries the Occupied Territories – about 22% of
historic Palestine -- constituted a tacit recognition of Israel’s
internationally recognized borders on the other side. This contrasted with
Israel’s position, which nominally accepted the notion of a Palestinian state,
but remained committed to keeping the large West Bank settlement blocs that
would make such a state non-contiguous and therefore untenable.
Having
thwarted the prospect of a two-state solution, Israel has also violently
crushed any hope of non-violent Palestinian resistance. In March 2018, tens of
thousands of Palestinians launched the Great March of Return, a campaign to
break the Gaza siege. “Gaza is a ghetto and what’s happening... is a ghetto
uprising,” veteran Israeli journalist Gideon Levy wrote. Israel responded to
the ghetto uprising by gunning down at least 214 Palestinians, including 46
children, and wounding over 36,000. Western pundits who had loudly implored
Palestinians to take up Gandhian non-violence fell resoundingly silent.
The
Netanyahu government, meanwhile, returned to a longtime policy of propping up
Hamas’ rule, recognizing that the group’s global isolation and internal divisions
could be exploited to undermine the possibility of the Palestinian state that
some Hamas leaders had claimed to accept. “Anyone who wants to thwart the
establishment of a Palestinian state has to support bolstering Hamas and
transferring money to Hamas,” Netanyahu explained to Likud Party members in
March 2019. “This is part of our strategy – to isolate the Palestinians in Gaza
from the Palestinians in the West Bank.”
Having
successfully deepened Palestinian isolation, Netanyahu’s government has intensified
the oppression. The guiding Israeli policy, Netanyahu’s government declared in
December 2022, is that “the Jewish people have an exclusive and inalienable
right to all parts of the Land of Israel.” This included Gaza, Cabinet Minister
Orit Strock explained in March of this year. “I believe that, at the end of the
day, the sin of the [Gaza] disengagement will be reversed,” Strock said.
“Sadly, a return to the Gaza Strip will involve many casualties... But
ultimately it is part of the Land of Israel, and a day will come when we will
return to it.”
Tareq
Bacouni, a former senior analyst for the International Crisis Group, summarizes
how Netanyahu’s supremacist rule has recently trampled the inalienable rights
of Palestinians:
Under
the most right-wing government in its history, Israel has carried out
large-scale invasions of Palestinian refugee camps and towns in the West Bank,
killing and wounding scores of people. Armed Israeli fighters have burst into
Palestinian streets and homes on an almost nightly basis, often picking
children out of their beds in the middle of the night to be taken into
administrative detention—acts of terror that have gone largely unreported in
the Western press.
The
state has accelerated its expulsions of Palestinians from their homes in
Jerusalem and the West Bank and expanded the construction of illegal
settlements. Settlers have waged weekly assaults on Palestinian villages,
attacking and in some cases killing Palestinians, setting fire to their homes,
and destroying their property, often under the protection of Israeli soldiers.
The domestic secret police has facilitated and fomented violence against
Palestinian citizens. Senior members of Israel’s government and messianic
Jewish extremists have been increasingly aggressive in their provocations in
and around the Noble Sanctuary Mosque complex in occupied East Jerusalem. In
the weeks leading to Hamas’s offensive, the state tightened the blockade on
Gaza by still further restricting movement in and out.
Having
always chosen occupation and supremacy over peace and security, Israel has now
opted to further devastate, displace, and murder occupied Palestinians in
retaliation against those who have fought back.
Zaha
Hassan and Daniel Levy, former advisers for their respective Palestinian and
Israeli governments, offer three points of agreement that could help end the
current crisis:
First,
the militant attack on Israeli civilians was unconscionable, inhumane and in
violation of international law. Second, Israel’s collective punishment against
Palestinian civilians and its actions in Gaza are unconscionable, inhumane and
a violation of international law. And, third, one must address the context of
occupation and apartheid in which this is unfolding if one is to maintain integrity
and be able to plot a strategy going forward in which both Palestinians and
Israelis can live in freedom and security. If we can hold these three truths,
then it will be possible to prevent further casualties, secure the release of
prisoners and step back from the precipice.
Hassan
and Levy condition their guidance on the principle that “one accepts the
humanity and equality of all people without discrimination or distinction.”
Israel has explicitly rejected this principle since its founding. And with Washington’s
support, Israel’s determination to enforce the dispossession and subjugation of
Palestinians is yielding a new ethnic cleansing campaign before our eyes.
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