|
WSWS
: News &
Analysis : Middle
East
Israeli siege aimed at driving Arafat into exile
By Chris Marsden
26 September 2002
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
Israels ongoing siege of Yasser Arafats headquarters
has nothing to do with efforts to clamp down on suicide bombers.
Ariel Sharons Likud-Labour government is not acting in self-defence
but waging a war of aggression with the eventual aim of destroying
the Palestinian Authority. At the very least, Sharons aim
is to drive Arafat into exile.
The official pretext for the siege of the Muqataathe
devastated compound where only one building remains standing in
which Arafat and more than 200 aides and security officials are
trappedwas provided by two suicide bombings last week that
killed seven people.
Hamas claimed the bombings, but Israel first imposed round-the-clock
curfews on five West Bank centresNablus, Ramallah, Tulkarem,
Qalqiliya and Jeninand sent in tanks and bulldozers to destroy
the buildings around Arafats office. Sharon then began to
pile on the pressure, making increasingly impossible demands on
Arafat. At first Israel claimed there were 20 wanted men in the
compound who must be handed over, including the Palestinian West
Bank intelligence chief, Tawfik Tirawi. Then the number rose to
50. Finally Israel demanded the surrender of all 200 people inside
Arafats office before they would end the siege, saying that
most would probably be released.
On September 22, the Israeli Defence Forces announced over
loudspeakers that troops were about to blow up Arafats office,
prompting demonstrations throughout the Occupied Territories in
defiance of Israeli curfews.
Cabinet minister Tzachi Hanegbi of Sharons ruling Likud
commented on September 23 that Matter of Timethe
name given to the military operation referred as much to
an impending Israeli expulsion of Arafat as it did to a dragnet
for wanted terrorists. He said Arafat will be deported.
This man is finished.
That night, Sharon again upped the ante when troops backed
by around 60 tanks and armoured vehicles raided Gaza City, killing
nine Palestinians. Sharon has warned that Israel was intent on
mounting a major offensive against Hamas, stating, We of
course havent completed our work in the Gaza Strip. The
day will come, as soon as we can get the necessary troops together,
that we will of course have to do this to strike at Hamas and
prevent its ability to act.
An Israeli official told the media that the military is considering
expelling the Hamas spiritual leader, Sheik Ahmed Yassin. No action
could have a greater destabilising effect on the Occupied Territories,
and Sharon knows this.
Israels actions have met criticism from France, Denmark
and other European countries, as well as Russia and the Arab regimes,
which fear that Sharon will ignite the simmering discontent of
the Arab masses on the eve of a US war against Iraq. But Sharon
has been encouraged to take a defiant stance by the Bush administration
in the United States, which for days did not issue a word of criticism
while senators and congressmen from both the main parties expressed
sympathy with Israels own war against terrorism.
It was only on September 22 that White House spokesman Ari
Fleischer issued a mild warning, emphasising, Israel has
a right to defend itself and to deal with security, while
urging consideration of the consequences of action and Israels
stake in the development of reforms in the Palestinian institution.
The US then abstained on a United Nations Security Council
resolution demanding Israel cease operations around Arafats
compound and that troops withdraw from Palestinian cities on the
spurious grounds that the resolution failed to explicitly condemn
Palestinian suicide bombings.
It is by no means the case that Washington is unambiguously
supportive of Sharons efforts to blow up the PA. It could
have blocked the UN resolution, but allowed it to go through by
abstaining. Later that day, President Bush personally criticised
Israels siege for the first time, but again did not call
on Israel to withdraw.
There are major tactical disagreements within Washington over
US policy towards Israel. Secretary of State Colin Powell and
others have repeatedly cautioned that a full-scale Israeli offensive
is detrimental to US efforts to secure Arab and European support
for the upcoming war against Iraq. The State Department has been
working to isolate Arafat and install a puppet regimewith
some success. In recent weeks leading figures, including the previously
loyal Nabil Amr, have distanced themselves from Arafat, criticising
him for failing to take advantage of the opportunity to secure
peace with Israel at Camp David two years ago. On September 10,
Arafats cabinet resigned in order to assert parliaments
right to be consulted on the makeup of the cabinet. The
head of Israeli military intelligence, General Aaron Zeevi,
described this as an earthquake in the Palestinian Authority.
But Sharon gives no impression of being satisfied with creating
a more servile Palestinian regime. He views the weakening of Arafats
authority as a means of encouraging the more hardline elements
such as Hamas to attack Israel and thereby justifying further
Israeli military aggression.
His decision to target Arafats headquarters was not his
only effort to stoke up conflict. On September 10, Sharon warned
that a planned Lebanese initiative to divert water from a river
feeding Israels largest reservoir constituted a casus
belli, or grounds for war. Lebanon opened a
pumping station on the River Hasbani in the spring of 2001, which
supplies between 20 and 25 percent of the water flowing into the
Sea of Galilee, to irrigate a drought-stricken village. Army radio
said Sharon had notified Washington that Israel could mount military
operations should Lebanon begin pumping water out of the Hasbani
or its tributary, the River Wazzani. The US has been forced to
send in mediators in efforts to calm down the dispute.
Sharon is not in a position to defy the US, should Washington
have the political will to rein him in. Rather he is gambling
that the hawks within the administration that support his general
aim of creating a Greater Israel will win the day as war with
Iraq draws nearer.
An article in the September 26 edition of the New York Review
of Books by Frances Fitzgerald draws attention to the ascendancy
of the faction led by Vice President Dick Cheney, Secretary of
Defense Donald Rumsfeld, his deputy Paul Wolfowitz, Undersecretary
of Defense Policy Douglas Feith and Richard Perle, chair of the
Defence Policy Board, who have long expressed a desire to overturn
the 1993 Oslo Accords and destroy the PA.
The article notes that in 1996 Perle and Feith wrote an advisory
paper for the new Likud prime minister and contemporary rival
of Sharon, Benyamin Netanyahu, calling upon him to make
a clean break with the Oslo peace process and reassert Israels
claim to the West Bank and Gaza. When Netanyahu did not oblige,
Feith published an article calling upon Israel to reoccupy the
territories controlled by the Palestinian Authority. The
price in blood would be high, he wrote, but it would be
a necessary form of detoxificationthe only way out
of Oslos web.
Even amongst Sharons most steadfast Republican allies,
however, the recklessness of his policy must create difficulties
given its impact on public opinion in the Middle East. A September
21 report in the New York Times stated that he had informed
the Bush administration that he plans to strike back if Iraq attacks
Israel, which would make it all but impossible for Washington
to maintain any alliance with the Arab regimes. Sharons
threat prompted Rumsfeld to publicly warn in Congress last week
that it would be in Israels overwhelming best interests
not to intervene if the US went to war with Baghdad.
More importantly, Sharon has succeeded in polarising Israeli
society as never before. He does not act out of strength, but
with a viciousness born of desperation. He presides over a regime
that rests on a narrow base of support made up of right-wing settlers
and religious extremists, who have a vested interest in maintaining
Israeli control of the Occupied Territories and a theological
belief that it is ordained by god. But for the majority of Israelis,
Sharons military adventure has been a disaster that has
exacerbated the social crisis created by his pro-big business
policies. His war has thrown Israel into an economic slump that
demands ever more savage cuts in public spending. This in turn
has led to an upsurge in strike activity, while there are signs
that political opposition to the war is developing despite the
servility of the Labour Party to Likud.
See Also:
Israel expels relatives of assassinated
Al-Aqsa Brigades member
[18 September 2002]
UN report on Jenin: A whitewash
of Israeli war crimes
[8 August 2002]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |