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Why did Bush give Israel a green light to assassinate Hamas
leader Rantisi?
By Chris Marsden
21 April 2004
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The question that must be asked is not if, but why Washington
gave either explicit or tacit approval for the April 17 assassination
of Hamas leader Abdel Aziz al-Rantisi by an Israeli gunship.
In the face of vocal criticism from the Arab states, President
Bushs National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice was obliged
to deny having received advance warning of the assassination.
But this is barely credible, given that Israeli Prime Minister
Ariel Sharon was in intensive discussions with Bush only three
days earlier.
Even if the specific intent had not been made known, the US
knew that such actions had taken place before and would take place
again. Yet, Bush never warned Sharon against further assassinations
or threatened him with serious consequences, as he could easily
have done.
Instead, the US once again stood virtually alone in failing
to issue so much as a formal condemnation of the assassination,
stressing, as it did last month in relation to the killing of
al-Rantisis predecessor, Sheikh Ahmed Yassin, that Israel
had a right to defend itself from terrorist attacks.
Palestinian Prime Minister Ahmed Qureia justifiably concluded,
The Palestinian cabinet considers this terrorist Israeli
campaign is a direct result of American encouragement and the
complete bias of the American administration towards the Israeli
government.
Rantisis murder is only the first fruit of Washingtons
official backing of Sharons proposal for unilateral
separation from the Palestinians. Bushs endorsement
of Sharons scheme for the annexation of West Bank territories
is a turning point in Middle Eastern and world affairs. It signals
the abandonment of the attempt by Washington to portray itself
as an honest broker in the Israeli Palestinian conflict.
It can only mean an escalation of political tensions throughout
the Middle East.
As Palestinian Authority negotiator Yasser Abed Rabbo warned,
Bushs latest turn has the potential to destroy the
whole foundation of the Middle East peace process.
This is undeniable. The US has endorsed demands that flout
international law and cannot possibly be accepted by the Palestinians.
Bush has supported the building of a security wall that slices
into 55 to 60 percent of the West Bank, including East Jerusalem.
He has also backed Sharon in rejecting the internationally recognised
right of Palestinian refugees to return to their homes in Israel.
The so-called Palestinian state envisioned by Washington, in so
far as the US seriously supports such a development, is to consist
of apartheid-style Bantustans that are not territorially contiguous,
while Israel continues to control the airspace, territorial
waters and land passages of both the West Bank and Gaza.
In line with this aggressive turn, the Israeli Defence Forces
and Shin Bet are escalating their efforts to behead the leadership
of the Palestinians. This terror campaign will not be confined
to the West Bank and Gaza, or even to the initial target, Hamas.
Hamass overall leader, Khaled Meshaal, is based in Damascus,
and Israeli Cabinet Minister Gideon Ezra has warned, The
fate of Khaled Meshaal is the fate of Rantisi.
The clear implication of such statements is an attack on an
Arab capital, which would be an unambiguous act of war.
Sharon has also made repeated threats against the life of Palestinian
Authority President Yasser Arafat. On April 4, he told the Maariv
newspaper that both Arafat and Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah
were not safe. Anyone who kills a Jew or harms an Israeli
citizen, or sends people to kill Jews, he declared, is
a marked man. Period.
An attack on Nasrallah would mean a strike on Lebanon, and
would constitute a belligerent act against Hezbollahs backers
in both Syria and Iran.
The assassination of Arafat would have no other purpose than
to plunge the West Bank and Gaza into convulsive conflict, aimed
at creating the pretext for brutal retaliation by Israel and the
launching of a drive to liquidate any Palestinian presence in
the occupied territories. As Uri Avnery of the Israeli peace movement
Gush Shalom has warned, Sharons maximum plan is to
turn all of the land between the Mediterranean Sea and the Jordan
River into a Jewish state, with no non-Jewish population.
What the Israeli prime minister does today is nothing other than
a step towards this final goal.
Given that all of this is well understood by Washington strategists
and political advisers, why has the White House abandoned all
attempts to restrain its stooge in Tel Aviv? In large part, it
is a response to the deepening political crisis of the Bush administration.
The US occupation of Iraq was meant to be only the first act
in a campaign to secure Americas undisputed hegemony over
the oil-rich Middle East and to assert global supremacy over its
European and Japanese rivals. But things have not gone according
to plan.
The US faces mounting resistance in Iraq, which is encouraging
Washingtons European rivals to assert their own interests
in the region. It is simultaneously fuelling popular opposition
at home, both to the continued occupation of Iraq and to the ongoing
offensive against workers living standards and democratic
rights, increasing the chances that Bush might lose the November
presidential election.
It would be entirely wrong to believe that the Republicans
are inclined to back down in the face of their mounting difficulties.
The domestic and foreign policy agenda of the Bush administration
is shaped by the dictates of a semi-criminal financial oligarchy
that has risen to the pinnacle of US society, and which will not
tolerate a retreat by the White House.
There is every reason to conclude that powerful voices within
the Bush administration not only welcome the destabilisation of
the Middle East, but are working deliberately toward that end.
First, there is the political mileage to be gained from supporting
Israel in what a pliant and pro-Zionist media will depict as Israels
own war against terror.
Second, there is the possibility, if not likelihood, that the
far-right clique around Vice President Dick Cheney and Defence
Secretary Donald Rumsfeld have decided to encourage Sharon to
provoke a war with Syria or Iran, just as they worked for months
to engineer a war with Iraq. Both of these countries have been
targeted as part of Bushs axis of evil, and
the advisers to the self-proclaimed war president
could well decide that the only way for him to be re-elected is
to foment another war.
Finally, the Bush administration could conclude that an event
closer to home is necessary, either to swing the election Bushs
way, or prevent one from being held. It can by no means be ruled
out that Bushs inner circle would seek to manufacture some
sort of incidentone that would provide the administration
with an opportunity to whip up once again the atmosphere of fear
and patriotic sentiment they employed to drag the American people
into two wars in the aftermath of the 9/11 terrorist attacks on
New York and Washington.
In a television interview on Sunday, Condoleezza Rice warned
that terrorists might try to take advantage of the November election.
I think we also have to take seriously that they might try
during the cycle leading up to the election to do something,
she said. Rice linked the terrorist threat with a barely veiled
attack on those opposing the Iraq war, stating that the popular
rejection of the pro-war Aznar government in Spain following the
March 11 Madrid bombings could send the wrong message.
A worsening situation in the Occupied Territories and the angry
reaction of Hamas and other Islamist groups to Israeli targeted
killings would provide the Bush administration with ample opportunities
to engineer a terrorist outrage, or allow one to occur. Such a
possibility cannot be excluded, given the fact that Bush came
to power in a stolen election, has ruled ever since through provocation
and deceit, and has refused to provide any explanation for its
refusal to heed repeated warnings of an imminent Al Qaeda attack
on the US in the months leading up to the attacks of September
11, 2001.
What makes the situation more dangerous still is that Bush
and Sharon do not face a shred of opposition from the Democrats.
The presumptive Democratic presidential nominee, Senator John
Kerry, has followed his endorsement of Sharons land grab
by declaring that the killing of Rantisi was justified because
Israel has every right in the world to respond to any act
of terror against it.
See Also:
Bush backs Sharons West Bank land
grab
[16 April 2004]
Egypts President Mubarak comes
to the aid of Bush
[15 April 2004]
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