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Israels collective punishment of Gaza
By Chris Marsden
22 September 2007
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Declaring the Gaza Strip as a hostile entity and
limiting its supply of fuel and electricity is an act of collective
punishment by Israel. The Kadima-led coalition government has
also said it will further restrict the transfer of goods and people
in and out of Gaza. The moves are part of an escalating offensive
against Gazas one-and-a-half million residents that could
culminate in an armed attack.
The pretext used by the security cabinet for taking these measures
was provided by cross-border rocket attacks, one of which hit
an army base last week, injuring 69 soldiers. Israel has blamed
the Hamas-led authority deposed with the support of the western
powers by President Mahmoud Abbass Fatah, based in the West
Bank. This is despite reports by Israel Radio that the deposed
Palestinian Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh of Hamas has met with
Islamic Jihad leaders to try and halt the rocket fire.
The Israeli government considered cutting off electricity totally
in response to every rocket, but decided instead to reduce the
amount of megawattage provided to the Strip. Claiming that this
was a legal move, an official stated that Hamas will have
to decide whether to provide electricity to hospitals or weapons
lathes.
The government also decided to cut off all fuel, with the exception
of that needed by hospitals and other functions deemed to have
a humanitarian purpose. Diesel will be allowed in
to fuel ambulances, sewage pumps, generators and garbage trucks,
but gasoline will be restricted.
According to estimates, Israel still exports approximately
US$500 million worth of goods and services into the Gaza Strip
each year.
All attempts to dress up a tightening of the siege on Gaza
in legal-sounding terms and to apply humanitarian caveats are
lies. Gazas people are already on the brink of starvation,
with more than 1.1 million totally reliant on food from the United
Nations. Israel supplies almost two thirds of its electricity.
Cutting power for even a matter of days will halt water supplies
to the apartment blocks in which most people live. Refrigerators
will not work, and it will be impossible to store food.
There are no substantial fuel reserves in Gaza.
Israel, as the occupying power, is responsible for the well-being
of Gazas civilian population. Declaring Gaza a hostile
entity alters nothing regarding international law. The term
has no legal meaning. As Dan Izenberg admitted in the right-wing
Jerusalem Post, the governments decision on
Wednesday was a unilateral act, spoken in terminology that no
one else in the world uses.
The move met with formal opposition from United Nations Secretary-General
Ban Ki-moon as being contrary to Israels obligations
towards the civilian population under international humanitarian
and human rights law, as well as from the European Union
and the European Commission.
Nevertheless, Israel calculates that, verbal reprimands aside,
it can take such action without serious sanctions being taken
against it. It is strengthened in this belief because it is only
building on the punitive measures against Gaza already taken by
the major powers. Bradley Burston noted in Haaretz that
ministers may also have been emboldened in taking the step
in the wake of an incident last month in which the [European Union]
briefly cut off aid for fuel to Gaza, causing an electrical blackout
for much of the population. International condemnation was minimal,
a reflection, to a degree, of the widespread diplomatic freeze
against the Hamas government....
Israel also believes it can act as it does because of the resort
to similar illegal acts by the United States and others in pursuit
of the so-called war against terror. Declaring Gaza
as a hostile entity has a similar pedigree to Bushs
defining of alleged members of Al-Qaeda detained by the US as
enemy combatants in order that they can be tried by
the so-called military commissions and deprived of their legal
rights. Izenberg gave his own pseudo-legal justification for Israels
actions, similar in all respects to the rhetoric employed by the
White House, writing: The laws of war deal almost exclusively
with regular armies fighting one another. There are no international
rules of the game for a war against terrorism. Unless and until
that changes, Israel essentially has not [sic] choice but to create
its own laws, for better or for worse.
Hamas described Israels move as a declaration of
war. They aim to starve our people and force them
to accept humiliating formulas that could emerge from the so-called
November peace conference, said a spokesman.
The media has stressed that Israels moves were an embarrassment
and a surprise for Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, who was
in Israel at the beginning of a Middle East tour to drum up support
for the November Peace Conference announced by President George
Bush. A senior US official stated, We did not know about
this particular decision beforehand, while Rice herself
insisted that the November conference has to, in a substantive
way, support efforts to lay the foundations for the
negotiation of a Palestinian state as soon as possible.
Whether Israels moves were a surprise is hard to believe,
given the close collaboration between Washington and Tel Aviv.
They were so clearly provocative and illegal that denial of foreknowledge
by the US was required, but Rice, speaking alongside Israeli Tzipi
Livni, nevertheless endorsed the action.
Hamas is indeed a hostile entity. It is a hostile entity
to the US as well, Rice said.
This only reinforces Israels efforts to equate the entire
population of Gaza with Hamasa fact changed not one iota
by her pledge to not abandon the innocent Palestinian in
Gaza and to make every effort to deal with their humanitarian
needs.
Such differences as do exist between Israel and the US are
tactical in character. The Bush administration is keen to pave
the way for Abbas to sign up to some kind of rotten settlement
with Israel sometime following the November conference. Israels
actions make that increasingly difficult, reinforcing the popular
view of him as a stooge and a traitor. That is why Abbas was forced
to condemn Israels plan as an oppressive decision
that will only strengthen the choking embargo imposed on
1.5 million people in the Gaza Strip, increase their suffering
and deepen their tragedy. Palestinian Information Minister
Riyad al-Malki added that We are going to ask the Americans
to pressure Israel to refrain from taking such action.
The Jerusalem Posts West Bank and Gaza correspondent
Khaled Abu Toameh called the governments actions a decision
that will backfire because it would rally more Palestinians
around Hamas and other radical groups, while they would
vent their frustration and despair against Israel and Palestinian
Authority President Mahmoud Abbas and his Fatah faction.
Where Toameh is wrong is to assume that this is not the governments
desired outcome.
For years, Israel insisted that it had no negotiating partner
for peace. Even after the death of Yasser Arafat, it took
the same attitudeto Hamas and also Abbasbased on the
claim that he had not moved with sufficient resolve against Hamas.
This stance is no longer possible, but this does not mean that
an agreement will be struck. Abbas is indeed a US stooge, and
it is in Israels interests to collaborate with him in suppressing
Hamas and all resistance amongst the Palestinians. However, it
has no intention of rewarding Abbas by granting some form of state,
however truncated.
Toameh himself quotes a senior Abbas adviser complaining, The
Israeli government is doing everything to embarrass us and make
us look bad in the eyes of our people, and paraphrasing
Abbas himself as saying, How can I go and talk peace with
Israel while hundreds of thousands of Palestinians are living
without water and electricity? My people will never support me
or any deal I bring back.
It would be more correct to say that there is no deal for him
to bring back, given that Israel is determined to
permanently annex the whole of East Jerusalem and all the major
settlement blocks on the West Bank. Prime Minister Ehud Olmert
has stressed repeatedly that Israel and the Palestinians are working
on a joint declaration, rather than an accord of principles.
It would be a mistake to believe that sabotaging a negotiated
settlement is as far as the government wants to push hostilities
against Gaza. Several commentators have noted that it would be
reluctant to take military action at a time of escalating tensions
with Syria to the north. However, that only counts as to timingdelaying
things until possibly after the November summitand not to
intent.
Calls to cut off Gazas electricity were once the province
of the most right-wing parties. Now, it has become government
policy. There is every possibility that the government will take
military action in due course.
The Israeli Defence Force (IDF) is already mounting constant
operations against Hamas and other groups in refugee camps in
the West Bank city of Nablus. On Thursday, dozens of tanks, bulldozers
and jeeps moved 1.5 kilometres into Gaza.
During the security cabinet discussions, Olmert and Defence
Minister Ehud Barak both said that the time was not yet right
for full-scale military action. However, Barak added that every
day that passes brings us closer to an operation in Gaza; we will
decide on the means of an operation and the goals when the time
comes.
The Jerusalem Posts correspondent with the IDF,
Yaakov Katz, made clear his belief that that time will come sooner
rather than later. He described the security cabinets decisions
as only an attempt by Israel to delay what everyone in the
IDF has realised is inevitablea large-scale ground operation.
He cites the IDFs Southern Command and Major General
Yoav Galant as having been pushing for a massive operation
for the past year.
A high-ranking defence official explains, The first step
is to weaken Hamass ability to govern. If that doesnt
work, then the second stage will be to weaken Hamas physically.
Some Defence officials have already made clear their view that
the actions taken against the Gaza Strip do not go far enough.
Major General Yosef Mishlav, the coordinator of government activities
in the territories, had asked for special permission to appear
before the security cabinet. He said by not cutting off supplies
altogether, Israel was still allowing Hamas to govern. The only
way to really pressure Hamas was to completely cut off supplies
and allow a humanitarian crisis to develop, he insisted.
See Also:
Israel's air raid on Syria: another threat
to Iran
[18 September 2007]
Bush's international peace
conference: A conspiracy against the Palestinian people
[27 July 2007]
The Gaza crisis and the failure
of Palestinian nationalism
[20 June 2007]
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