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WSWS : News
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East
Sharon makes clear his expansionist policies for Israel
By Chris Marsden and Jean Shaoul
7 July 2001
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Israels Prime Minister Ariel Sharon is intent on crushing
any remaining hope of a negotiated settlement with the Palestinians,
short of total surrender to his expansionist drive for a Greater
Israel, the traditional policy of his Likud party.
Sharon has just completed a two-day visit to Germany and France,
seeking to secure backing for Israel in its conflict with the
Palestinians. He received a fairly warm welcome from Chancellor
Gerhard Schroeder because Germany is seeking to challenge the
US as Israels favoured trading and investment partner and
supplier of military hardware. In France, however, which has long-established
diplomatic relations with the Arab regimes, Sharon was given a
cold reception. President Jacques Chirac warned Sharon not to
weaken the position of the Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat, saying
that this would be counter-productive, while a march
in Paris of around 1,000 protesters chanted Sharon, assassin!
and called for him to be tried for war crimes. Sharon did not
visit the European Unions headquarters in Belgium, because
of a Belgian judicial investigation into possible war crime charges
over his role as defence minister in the 1982 massacre of Palestinian
refugees in Beirut by Israels allies in the Lebanese Christian
militia.
It is only the necessity of fending off international criticism
of Israeli repression in the West Bank and Gaza strip that has
so far prevented Sharon from pronouncing the latest truce organised
by CIA Director George Tenet as having failed. In reality, Sharon
is steering Israel towards a full-scale military offensive against
the Palestinians.
As Sharon arrived in Berlin, a fierce battle raged in Rafah,
in the southern Gaza Strip, with at least 20 houses damaged by
Israeli tank fire. The same day, a Palestinian was killed in the
West Bank city of Ramallah, during a clash with Israeli soldiers.
In a further punitive action in response to the killing of a Jewish
settler woman near Jenin last week, Israeli soldiers demolished
30 Palestinian shops in the town.
Sharons kitchen cabinet accepted the Tenet
cease-fire three weeks ago on the basis that they had nothing
to lose. The arrangement, drawn up by Israels main sponsors
and protectors, placed the entire onus for ending violence onto
the shoulders of Palestinian Authority leader Yasser Arafat. Any
action Arafat failed to stem could then be used by Israel to proclaim
that its own efforts to resolve the situation peacefully had failed
and that no possibility was left outside of a full-scale military
operation against the Palestinians.
In the meantime, Israel has done everything in its power to
make sure the cease-fire collapses. Despite an intense round of
diplomatic activity that has drawn in US President George W Bush,
Secretary of State Colin Powell and United Nations Secretary General
Kofi Annan, All the indications are that [the cease-fire]
will not hold, said UN Middle East envoy Terje Roed Larsen.
Sharon has refused point blank to negotiate with the Palestinians
before they end, unconditionally and unilaterally, their resistance
to Israels brutal occupation. Israel has insisted that the
agreed seven-day test period before the ceasefire
could be declared effective would not start until there was total
quiet. Moreover, any violence during the subsequent six-week
cooling off period would set the clock back to the beginning
of the six weeks time frame. It has now been three weeks
since the Tenet cease-fire was formally accepted, though more
than 25 people, mainly Palestinians, have been killed since then.
In an indication of how hostile Likud is to a cease-fire, whereas
the Palestinians have urged Israel to accept that the seven
day test period is over, the Israeli government has said
it has not even begun!
Israel has also maintained the blockade in the occupied territories,
completely encircling the major Palestinian towns of Nablus, Hebron
and Tulkram. It has given the Jewish settlers a free rein to exact
their own revenge, setting up outposts near Palestinian villages
and burning crops. On June 25, a full-scale battle broke out at
Hebron, where 400 settlers live in a military enclave within the
town. Aside from Jerusalem, there are an estimated 200,000 settlers
in the West Bank and Gaza that occupy some of the best land and
consume most of the areas water supply.
The proposals for a peace settlement outlined in the report
by former US Senator George Mitchells committee included
a recommendation for freezing construction of Zionist settlements
in the West Bank and Gaza. But Sharon has ruled out any removal
of settlements and announced that 700 new homes in the West Bank
would be built in addition to the 6,000 already under construction.
He submitted a formal request for $500 million to the Israeli
parliament to meet the cost.
While Israel routinely talks about the Palestinians rejection
last year of its supposedly generous offer to return 90 percent
of the occupied territories, it never explains, and neither does
the Mitchell committee, how it arrives at this figure. Greater
Jerusalem, whose boundaries have been extended to include new
Jewish suburbs in what was East Jerusalem, constitutes 30 percent
and the very heart of the West Bank. It is left out of the equation.
So too are the Jewish settlements that make up a further 15 percent,
and the military roads that connect them, cutting off Palestinian
towns and villages from each other and making what remains entirely
unviable.
Sharon has made it quite clear in a number of statements that
his government intends to continue Israels occupation of
the West Bank, Gaza and East Jerusalem. On a recent cabinet visit
to the area, Sharon declared The Jordan Valley will remain
forever under Israeli sovereignty. Just so that his meaning
was entirely clear, he added, When I talk about the valley,
I dont just mean a narrow strip but the eastern security
strip whose western border is the ridge of hills west of the Allon
Road. This effectively means that Sharon has no intention
of giving up any of the West Bank.
Sharon has backed this up with a major air assault on Syrian
positions in Lebanon. On June 29, Hezbollah guerrillas shot and
wounded two Israeli soldiers in the Shaaba farms. This is a tiny
area that Israel did not give back to Lebanon when it pulled out
last year, claiming that it was part of Syria and that Israel
needed it to help protect the Golan Heights, which it had seized
from Syria in 1967.
Israel responded by sending in war planes with laser-guided
bombs to strike at Syrian positions in Lebanon. This is the second
time Sharon has attacked Syrian positions since becoming prime
minister. A Hezbollah attack in mid-April that killed one Israeli
soldier led to Israeli air raids against a Syrian radar station
in the Bekaa valley. Israel responded to a May 14 Hezbollah assault
on its army positions with a heavy artillery attack, while Israeli
Deputy Chief of Staff Major General Moshe Yaalon warned of a possible
war between Israel and Syria.
Israeli aggression has also been constantly stepped up against
the Palestinians. On Saturday June 30, two Palestinians were shot
dead in the West Bank. On Sunday July 1, Israel launched a helicopter
missile attack on a car that it claimed was carrying members of
the Islamic Jihad movement, killing three.
The militant groups Islamic Jihad and Hamas responded by announcing
that the Tenet cease-fire was null and void. On Monday, the Israeli
army killed a Palestinian taxi-driver on the West Bank, whom it
said was suspected of planting explosives by the roadside. The
parcel contained groceries.
The most provocative action to date came on the very eve of
Sharons visit to Europe. The Israeli security cabinet was
called into session in order to give the army greater licence
to carry out targeted assassinations of Palestinian activists.
To attend, Israeli Army chief General Shaul Mofaz even cut short
a visit to the US, where he was holding talks with Powell and
National Security Advisor Condoleezza Rice. After the meeting,
Sharon likened Arafat to Americas most wanted figure Osama
bin Laden, and warned that his government was holding on to the
option of launching an all-out attack on the Palestinian
Authority should the need arise. He asked rhetorically, Would
anyone in the world debate with bin Laden... Arafat is our bin
Laden.
The security cabinet decision was immediately criticised by
the US, Europe and the United Nations, who fear that Sharons
recklessness in pursuit of the expansion of the Zionist state
threatens to increase the violence, draw neighbouring countries
into the conflict and destabilise the entire Middle East.
But the next day, Defence Minister Binyamin Ben-Eliezer, a
Labour Party Knesset (parliament) member, told Israeli
Army Radio, No one can prevent us. He went on to warn
the Israeli public that they were heading towards a long
conflict that would continue until the Palestinians recognised
the futility of their struggle. The army has let it be known that
26 Palestinian militants are on a list to be killed and another
250 face arrest. So far the Palestinians accuse Israel of having
assassinated about 40 activists since the Intifada erupted
last September.
See Also:
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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