Massacre on a Beach in Gaza
By Mike Whitney
06/15/06 "Information
Clearing House" -- --
Israel doesn’t bother with low-intensity warfare anymore. It
goes straight for the jugular. Day after day Israel has launched
unprovoked attacks on Palestinian civilians only pausing long
enough to assemble the requisite lies to fend off the media.
It’s quite extraordinary. One day they blow up a family
peacefully touring in their new car; killing 3 generations with
one mighty blast, and then a few days later they fire a mortar
round at a beach in Gaza wiping out 7 members of another family.
The entire incident in Gaza was
captured on video providing a
heart-wrenching visual-account of a traumatized 12 year old girl
running around while the limp and bloodied bodies of her parents
are carted off to the morgue.
Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert’s response to the tragedy was
astonishingly bland:
”The IDF is the most moral military in the world. There has
never been, and there isn’t now, a policy of attacking
civilians.”
Olmert’s proclamations are meaningless; the IDF is neither more
nor less “moral” than any other “organized killing-machine”. The
IDF simply reflects the prevailing ethos of the Israeli
leadership; a leadership steeped in arrogance and racism. If we
look at the recent American massacre in Iraq, we see that
there’s a straight line between the “execution-style” killing of
women and children in Haditha and the Bush administration’s
promiscuous attitude towards torture and cruelty. A fish rots
from the head; so it is with the military as well. The culture
of impunity begins at the leadership level, not with a few “bad
apples”.
This explains why the very next day Israel fired off another 3
rockets into Gaza killing 9 more Palestinians including two
children and one medic who was attending to the wounded. The
policy hasn’t changed a lick. The only difference is that the
backlash from the Gaza massacre is now be managed by an Israeli
public relations team.
According to the Jerusalem Post, “The Israeli Foreign Ministry
has launched an information campaign to change the minds of the
world that has already blamed Israel….Israel’s message is
simple: The Palestinians are responsible”.
Once again, Israel has decided to invoke the familiar strategy
of “blaming the victim”. Fortunately, forensic evidence has
already proved beyond a doubt that the shrapnel came from a “155
millimeter howitzer shell from a land-based Israeli firing
device”. On top of that, the last surviving member of the
family, 12 year old Huda Ghalia, has provided a lurid
description of the Israeli shelling of the beach.
“We were sitting and all of a sudden the shells just started
falling on our heads,” she said. What could be clearer?
There’s no doubt that Israel is responsible. Their PR blitz is
bound to fail. Never the less, Israel has drawn up 6 “talking
points” that will be reiterated by government officials and
agents in the media. The public relations campaign focuses on
three main themes:
1 Deny everything
2 Blame the victim (Say that Hamas had land-mined the beach)
3 Create the appearance that Israel was just defending itself.
The Foreign Ministry has added 6 “bullet points” to these
general ideas, but they’re hardly worth going over except as a
way of measuring the real depth of human cynicism. After all,
we’re talking about the life of one despondent, terrified girl
whose parents have just been murdered in a senseless act of
violence. Olmert has taken that tragic event and transformed it
into an exercise for manipulating public perceptions. That’s
really scraping the bottom of the barrel.
The broader question that arises from the Gaza Beach Massacre is
whether Israel is deliberately killing civilians or not?
Certainly Israel has never backed away from its defense of
“targeted assassinations”, but does that imply that killing
innocent Palestinians can be rationalized as a matter of policy?
Here’s a statement issued by the Israeli Foreign Ministry on
this point:
“Israel does not target innocents, yet must fight terrorists who
willingly shield themselves behind their own population in their
ongoing campaign to kill and maim Israeli civilians”.
The Israeli statement actually creates more questions than
answers. It is clear, however, that the fight against terrorism
is given priority over the lives of civilians, and that the
state claims the right to kill “terror suspects” whether
innocent people are sacrificed or not. This is a radical idea
and it overturns long-held precedents about the “inalienable”
right to life.
But how can the state authorize “targeted assassinations”?
Government officials are required to comply with the law.
Targeted assassinations are “extra-judicial” by their very
nature; it is the deliberate killing of someone who has never
been charged with a crime and has been deprived of all due
process. The victim has no way to defend himself from completely
arbitrary allegations. In Israel’s case, the decision for these
summary executions is placed in the hands of unreliable
militarists, like Sharon, who have a long pedigree of lying and
war crimes.
Are these people who can be trusted pronouncing death sentences
on Palestinian “suspects”?
Targeted assassination is premeditated slaughter; it has no
place in civilized societies. There’s no link between justice
and murder; the two are polar opposites. Security concerns
should not be allowed to transform the law into a weapon for
autocrats.
Never the less, targeted assassination is a central part of
Israeli policy in the territories. As a result, incidents like
the one on the beach in Gaza occur with increasing frequency.
This leads us to question whether or not Israel has a policy of
killing civilians.
The fact that 12 year old Huda Ghalya and her family were not
intentionally fired on makes no difference. The issue is whether
Israel has made reasonable assumptions about how many innocent
people will be sacrificed in executing their policy.
We assume they have. We assume that Israel knows that from 2001,
552 Palestinians have been killed in Israeli assassinations, and
that, 181 of these have been people who just happened to be in
the vicinity or tried to help the victims when other missiles
were fired. These figures prove that Israel knows “exactly” what
the effects of its policy are, and that they still believe it is
worth the outcome. Therefore, we can say with certainty that the
killing of innocent people is a fundamental part of Israel’s
calculation. Whether it is intentional or not, makes no
difference.
In Nigel Parry’s “Does Israel have a Policy of Killing
Palestinian Civilians?” the author digs into the larger issues
surrounding targeted assassinations.
“After you see someone kill a child, you perceive humans very
differently after that. We like to assume that when such a
completely inexcusable event takes place that the deaths
happened by some kind of “accident” or “error”.
“Crossfire” was
perhaps Israel’s most successful lie at the onset of the Second
Intifada, and
no amount of statistics showing otherwise
really seemed to penetrate our consciousness and make a
difference.
It made no difference because inside we desperately want to
believe that the murderers and serial killers of this world are
aberrations, rare, that they are sick or somehow different. This
conclusion is not possible when you witness a common, recurring
pattern with your own eyes, across an entire army. At some point
something gives way inside, and your fantasies about basic human
decency crumble.” (Electronic Intifada)
Parry draws from his years of first-hand experience living in
the occupied territories and witnessing the violent reaction of
the IOF to Palestinians protests. In the many cases when he saw
young Palestinians shot dead by Israeli soldiers, he never
remembers an incident when any of the soldiers were in a
life-threatening situation. Parry continues:
“Out of nowhere, when the energy of the clashes
seemed to be dissipating, a soldier would suddenly
shoot a child or teenager,
100 feet away from them or more ….
Let me be clear. The events I am describing, in
the clashes where people died, were not the
exception. They were the rule. And not
one soldier was ever punished.” |
Parry’s description is revealing on many levels. The violence
against Palestinians is oftentimes gratuitous, tribal, and
steeped in racism. No one was punished in the confrontations he
witnessed and no one will be held accountable for the deaths of
8 family members on the beach in Gaza. It is all part of a
culture of impunity which has saturated every aspect of the
Israeli leadership and trickled down to the soldiers in the
field.
Israel’s obfuscations mean nothing. They simply reinforce the
belief that Israel will not conform to internationally-accepted
standards of justice until it elects leaders who are committed
to following the rule of law. Targeted assassination is never
acceptable. It is a violation of the most essential principle of
law; the right to life. No amount of public-relations wizardry
or buck-passing can justify firing missiles into crowded areas
or the random killing of blameless civilians. The law is written
to protect civilians against disasters like the tragedy in Gaza,
where a girls’ life was ruined in a flash by an errant
mortar-round. If the law had been applied, the order would never
have been given and young Huda would not have been left wailing
inconsolably on the sand.
The law is our only refuge from the terror of the state. We
should make sure our leaders comply.
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