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Analysis : Middle
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Israel assassinates Hamas leader
By David Cohen
23 August 2003
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An August 19 suicide bombing by an Islamic militant killed
20 Israelis and wounded more than 100. The action was carried
out in a bus traveling from the Western Wall to the religious
neighbourhood of Har Nof. The victims were ultra-Orthodox Jews,
many of them children. Two buses were hit by the blast. The one
on which the suicide bomber set off his explosive device was completely
devastated, while the other traveling behind had its windows blown
out.
The Bush administration immediately denounced the attack and
its National Security Council spokesman Sean McCormack called
upon the Palestinian Authority (PA) to act to dismantle
terrorist networks.
The Israeli government of Ariel Sharon duly suspended talks
with the Palestinian Authority, put on hold its plans to hand
over Jericho and Qalqilyah to Palestinian control, and demanded
that the PA clamp down on terrorist groups.
Then on August 21, an Israeli helicopter missile strike on
a car in Gaza City killed senior Hamas militant leader Ismail
Abu Shanab and two bodyguards. Hamas and Islamic Jihad responded
by stating that they no longer felt bound by a three-month unilateral
cease-fire they declared on June 29 and threatened retaliation.
Now Prime Minister Sharons security cabinet are said
to have agreed in principle to resume the practice of targeted
killings of militant Palestinian suspects.
This roughly is how the media has presented recent events in
Israel and the Occupied Territoriesfirst a Palestinian atrocity,
then a response by the Israelis, after which the supposedly sincere
efforts of the Bush administration to secure peace
under its so-called Road Map are in danger of collapse.
Everything is then said to depend on the readiness of the PA to
curb the terrorist groups.
This official story, however, turns reality on its head. In
truth, it has always been Sharons intention to escalate
the conflict with the Palestinians and to do so by recourse to
provocations aimed at eliciting a terrorist action by Hamas or
Islamic Jihad that can then be used to justify further and more
severe repression by Israeli forces.
The claim that the security cabinet is reanimating
its policy of targeted killings is a fraud. It has never abandoned
the practice. The bus bombing was in fact carried out in retaliation
for the August 14 killing of Islamic Jihads senior official
Mohammed Sider during attempts by the Israeli Defence Forces (IDF)
to arrest him in the West Bank city of Hebron.
And in June, Israel fired missiles at the car of top Hamas
leader Abdel Aziz Rantisi, who escaped with minor injuries.
Now it has assassinated Shanab and his bodyguards, thus precipitating
a declaration by the Islamic militant groups that their cease-fire
is at an endwhich was always the intended result of the
actions of the IDF.
In this way, a stick is fashioned with which the Sharon government
can beat the PA and drive it towards measures to suppress opposition
to Israeli occupation, with the full support of the media.
The claim is then made that the US-backed Palestinian leadership
has done nothing against the Islamic militant factions. The aim
here is to justify the ongoing violation of the cease-fire by
Israel and its continued repression of the Palestinians by portraying
Sharon as responding to rather than instigating violence.
Typical is the ostensibly liberal Israeli daily Haaretz,
which argues in its August 20 editorial that whereas Palestinian
prime minister Mahmoud Abbas has correctly denounced the
terror attack in Jerusalem as an evil act that also harmed the
national interests of his own people...during the last two months
of the fragile cease-fire, despite US support and encouragement,
Abbas did not prove that he is determined enough to translate
that recognition in principle into the language of practice.
Haaretz goes on to complain, No significant steps
have been taken against Hamas and Islamic Jihad activists in Gaza,
where the security forces are subordinate to Abbas and his security
minister, Mohammed Dahlan. The terrorists train without interference,
occasionally firing light weapons and mortars at Israeli targets,
and sometimes even test launching their Qassam rockets in an attempt
to increase their range and improve their accuracy. In the West
Bank, as well, even though security responsibility has not been
transferred in most of the cities to the Palestinian Authority,
there has been no sign from the PA that it is preparing or intends
to prepare to deal with the terror organisations.
Or as the Jerusalem Post wrote in its editorial, The
Palestinian Authority, whatever that now means, must choose. It
cannot have unity based on terror and found a Palestinian state.
Whether it is the secular Fatah or the Islamic fundamentalists
of Hamas, none of the existing Palestinian political tendencies
are capable of liberating the Palestinians from Israeli oppression
and occupation. The only way forward is a brave decision to make
a genuine political appeal for unity between the Jewish and Arab
working classes based on a socialist perspective elaborating a
common defence of their social and democratic rights. The organic
hostility of the Islamic reactionaries to the idea of Arab-Jewish
unity finds its expression in terrorist bombings targeting Israeli
innocents. But those Arabs and Jews who wish to stop the bloodbath
must strive to build a class-based movement that cuts across national,
ethnic and religious divisions rather than be sucked in by the
propaganda of the media.
See Also:
US, Israel push Palestinian
prime minister to launch crackdown
[8 July 2003]
Sharon blows up the Road
Map
[19 June 2003]
Opposition to US Middle East
Road Map escalates
[11 June 2003]
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