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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Middle
East
Israeli attacks on Palestinians aimed at provoking all out
war
By Jean Shaoul
28 July 2001
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The past two weeks have seen a series of Israeli provocations
against the Palestinians aimed at inciting retaliatory attacks.
The Sharon government hopes any such suicide missions
would generate sympathy for Israel and provide the excuse for
a full-scale military offensive and re-occupation of the West
Bank and Gaza Strip.
On July 17, following a suicide bomb attack in Binyamina that
killed two Israeli soldiers, Israel sent in two armoured battalions
and a paratrooper company to reinforce its positions on the outskirts
of Bethlehem and Jenin in the West Bank. This followed the July
12 publication by defence experts Janes Information Group
in London of Israeli war plans to re-invade the West Bank and
Gaza and resume its military occupation of these areas it originally
seized in the 1967 Six-Day War.
Later the same week, in a helicopter gunship attack on a house
in Bethlehem, Israel assassinated five Hamas members and wounding
ten other Palestinians, including a number of children. Israeli
security forces have re-entered territory formally under Palestinian
Authority (PA) control and deployed tanks and bulldozers to demolish
at least a dozen houses in the Rafah area in the southern part
of the Gaza Strip, making whole families homeless. This came less
than 24 hours after the demolition of a similar number of houses
in a refugee camp in East Jerusalem made scores of people homeless.
Also last week, a vigilante group of Israeli settlers from
the 400-strong Zionist enclave in the city of Hebron in the West
Bank killed three Palestinians, including a baby. Violence continued
over the weekend when Israeli soldiers killed a Palestinian in
a gun battle in the Gaza Strip. There were further sporadic outbreaks
of shooting and explosions in both the West Bank and Gaza.
Earlier this week, security forces assassinated a senior member
of Hamas in the West Bank town of Nablus. The attack was the latest
instance of Israels policy of assassinating those it claims
are engaged in terrorism, a term Israel routinely
uses to describe the actions of anyone resisting its occupation
and suppression of the Palestinians in the territories captured
in 1967.
Israel has not only targeted Hamas but also Arafats own
supporters. Security forces arrested Enis Mahmoud Namoura, one
of Yasser Arafats bodyguards and a lieutenant in one of
the Palestinian security forces, claiming that he was an expert
bomb-maker who had denoted devices using cellular phones.
Following the June 1 suicide bombing at a disco in Tel Aviv
that killed 19 young Israelis, the Sharon government claims to
be acting with restraint. However, since the subsequent
CIA-brokered cease-fire of June 13, Israeli security forces have
killed more than 60 people, including 11 children, and injured
more than 200. They have demolished more than 160 homes and shops,
leaving more than 500 Palestinian men, women and children homeless.
This has taken place while Israel has imposed widespread curfews
and tightly closed off the West Bank and Gaza Strip, meaning that
hundreds of thousands of Palestinians are unable to travel, either
to work or to obtain basic requirements such as healthcare.
The Israeli security cabinet has approved a plan costing an
estimated $477 million to deploy patrols, dogs and electronic
sensors to effectively imprison all Palestinians within the areas
under PA control and prevent them from crossing into Israel. According
to the cabinet, the plan entails stepped up actions to foil
infiltration and prevent people from staying in Israel illegally.
These actions will include increased operational activity and
vigorous enforcement efforts in the seam line area, with an emphasis
on dealing with infiltrators and employers, as well as people
in Israel illegally and Israelis who provide lodging for them.
Israeli Defence Force Chief of Staff Shaul Mofaz welcomed the
plan, describing the Palestinian Authority as a terrorist
entity and that many of the PAs security branches
were participating in terrorist activities.
Prime Minister Sharon has been confronted with increasingly
vocal demands for all-out war from the more fascistic layers of
Zionist settlers within the Occupied Territories and his own Likud
party. Last week, the self-styled Rabbinical Council of the Occupied
Territories said it was overturning a religious ban on visits
by Jews to the Temple Mount. It called on Israelis to join a mass
visit to the Wailing Wall on the Temple Mount on the July 29 Jewish
religious holy day. It was last Septembers provocative visit
by Sharon to the Temple Mount, a shared holy site for Jews and
Muslims, which sparked the popular uprising of the Palestinians,
the intifada.
A further provocation came last Friday, when the rightwing
Zo Artzaeinu group placed an advertisement signed by the groups
leader and three colleagues in the Makor Rishon newspaper
calling on anyone who has the opportunity, to murder the Palestinian
Authority Chairman Yasser Arafat.
Sharon undoubtedly agrees with the aims of the settlers, but
must seek to placate the fears of the US and European powers regarding
the regional implications of a further escalation in the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict. Last week, Washington put US troops in the Arabian Peninsula
on heightened alert, and both the US and European leaders at the
G8 summit in Genoa called for international observers to go to
Israel-Palestine.
It is for this reason that Sharon finds himself in the unusual
position of coming under attack from the right. He faced sharp
criticism during a raucous Likud Party conference earlier in the
week, with former Prime Minister Benyamin Netanyahu, a possible
challenger to Sharon, calling for stronger military action to
end the conflict. Restraint causes more escalation,
Netanyahu said. Sharon faced constant heckling and interruptions
throughout his televised speech. He said when he came to power,
he had two choices: war with the Palestinians (which prompted
cheers from the audience) or a policy of active defence,
military strikes at terrorist suspects and the securing of roads
through Israeli-controlled territory. He spoke of his plan to
react decisively to each incident in turn, rather than leading
Israel into a conflict that could threaten regional stability.
The Labour Party has sought to justify its entry into coalition
with Likud, on the grounds that it can act as a moderating
influence on Sharon. In recent weeks, Labour has emerged
as the most vocal defenders of the war criminal Sharon. Responding
to right wing criticism that the government had been too restrained
in dealing with the Palestinians, Transport Minister Ephraim Sneh
(Labour Party) boasted that the success the Israeli Defence Forces
had enjoyed in fighting terror over the previous three
weeks had no parallel anywhere in the world. The governments
policy of "intercepting terroristsrightfully
regarded as state-ordered assassinations in other countries
is the right way to fight terror, and is not a policy of restraint.
Foreign Secretary Shimon Peres, the 77-year-old veteran Labour
leader, has played the key role in deflecting criticism and legitimising
the Sharon government. In doing so he is inexorably paving the
way for war. When the Israeli Defence Forces sent reinforcements
into the occupied territories, Peres issued a statement saying,
We do not intend to re-conquer the territories.
Arafats own authority is being undermined by the continued
Israeli attacks, and the demands he police the Palestinians, stop
the resistance to the 34 year Israeli occupation, and arrest suspected
terrorists, and threatens to lead to civil war among the Palestinians.
The leadership of the intifada, made up of 14 Palestinian
factions including Arafats own organisation Fatah, Hamas
and Islamic Jihad, has issued a statement vowing to target every
soldier and settler in revenge for the killing of the five
Hamas men last week, and proclaiming the end of the cease-fire
declared by Arafat.
Last Monday, violent clashes broke out in the Gaza Strip between
Palestinian police and demonstrators protesting outside the home
of military intelligence chief Moussa Arafat. About 20 of the
demonstrators, including members of Fatah and Hamas, fired shots
at Moussas house as about a thousand people, many of them
supporters of the Hamas-dominated Popular Resistance Movement
(PRM) protested against the arrests of eight of their members
by PA security forces. It appears that at Israels insistence,
Arafat had sought to dismantle the PRM Committees established
to fight the Israeli occupation. The previous day, Palestinian
police had shot and wounded three members of the PRM at a Palestinian
checkpoint. The PRM called on Palestinians not to accept the Palestinian
Authority crackdown and accused the PA of collaborating with Israel.
But popular antipathy towards the PA and Arafat goes much deeper
than opposition to the CIA brokered cease-fire. The incident undoubtedly
reflects the widespread opposition to Arafats role as Israels
proxy policeman of the Palestinians.
Autonomy and ultimately independence were expected to alleviate
the wretched living conditions of the Palestinian masses. Instead,
only a handful of businessmen and bureaucrats around Arafat have
prospered, while the majority of Palestinians face increasing
impoverishment. More than 30 percent of Palestinians now live
below the poverty line. More than 45 percent of the total population
are living in squalid refugee camps and shantytowns, without access
to clean running water or sanitation. The border closures, curfews
and blockades imposed by Israel ten months ago have brought the
economy to a halt, food has become scarce and many are now close
to starvation. Rather than being the first step on the road to
liberation, the Palestinian Authority more resembles a massive
prison camp.
See Also:
Sharon makes clear his expansionist policies
for Israel
[7 July 2001]
Israels war
measures and the legacy of Zionism
[16 October 2000]
Zionisms legacy of ethnic
cleansing
Part 1Israel and the Palestinian right of return
[22 January 2001]
Part 2Israeli expansion
creates more Palestinian refugees
[23 January 2001]
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