Another Escalation from the Palestinians
Israeli "Retaliation" and Double Standards
By JONATHAN COOK
06/28/06 "Counterpunch"
-- -- The killing by Palestinian militants of two Israeli
soldiers and the capture of a third from an army post close to the
Gaza Strip set the scene for Israeli "reprisals" and "retaliation",
according to the reports of BBC correspondents in Israel and Gaza
yesterday.
The attack by the Palestinians, who sneaked through tunnels under
the electronic fence surrounding Gaza, marked a "major escalation in
cross-border tension" (Alan Johnston) that threatened to overturn "a
week of progress on two fronts" (John Lyon): namely, the recent
talks between Israeli prime minister Ehud Olmert and Palestinian
president Mahmoud Abbas in Jordan, and between rival Palestinian
groups Fatah and Hamas.
Thus, according to the BBC's analysis, this attack ends the
immediate chances for "peace" negotiations and provides the context
for the next round of the conflict between the Israeli army and the
Palestinians of Gaza. We are left to infer that all the suffering
the army inflicts in the coming days and weeks should be attributed
to this moment of "escalation" by the Palestinians.
We can ignore the weeks of shelling by the Israeli army of Gaza, the
firing of hundreds of missiles into the crowded Strip that have
destroyed Palestinian lives and property, while spreading terror
among the civilian population and deepening the psychological trauma
suffered by a generation of children.
We can ignore the deaths of more than 30 civilians, and dozens of
horrific injuries, in the past few weeks at the hands of the Israeli
military, including three children hit in a botched air strike last
week, and a heavily pregnant woman and her doctor brother killed a
day later as a missile slammed into the room where they were eating
dinner.
We can ignore the blockade of Gaza's "borders" by the Israeli army
for months on end, which has prevented Palestinians in the Strip
from trading goods at crossing points with Israel and from receiving
vital supplies of food and medicines. As a captive population
besieged by Israeli soldiers, Gazans are facing a humanitarian
catastrophe sanctioned by Israeli government policy and implemented
by the Israeli army.
We can ignore Israel's bullying of the international community to
connive in the starving of the Hamas-led government of funds and
diplomatic room for manoeuvre, thereby preventing the elected
Palestinian leadership from running Gaza. So desperate is the
situation there that Hamas officials are being forced to smuggle in
millions of dollars of cash stuffed in suitcases to pay salaries.
And finally we can ignore the violation of Palestinian territory by
Israeli commandos who infiltrated Gaza a day before the Palestinian
attack to kidnap two Palestinians Israel claims are terrorists. They
have been "disappeared", doubtless to be be held in administrative
detention, where they can denied access to lawyers, the courts and,
of course, justice.
None of this provides the context for the Palestinian attack on the
army post -- any more than, in the BBC's worldview, do the previous
four decades of occupation. None is apparently relevant to
understanding the Palestinian attack, or for judging the legitimacy
of Israel's imminent military "reprisals".
In short, according to the BBC, we can ignore Israel's long-standing
policy of unilateralism -- a refusal to negotiate meaningfully with
the Palestinians, either the old guard of Fatah or the new one of
Hamas -- with its resort to a strategy of collective punishment of
Gaza's population to make it submit to the continuing occupation.
In the skewed moral and news priorities of the BBC, the killing of
two Israeli soldiers by Palestinian militants -- the "escalation" --
provides a justification for "fierce retaliation" against Gaza, with
the inevitable toll on Palestinian civilians and militants alike.
The earlier killing of tens of Palestinian civilians by the Israeli
military, however, is not presented as justification for yesterday's
Palestinian retaliation against the army.
In other words, on the scale of moral outrage the BBC ranks the
deaths of Israeli soldiers enforcing an illegal occupation far above
those of Palestinian civilians enduring the illegal occupation.
There is another notable asymmetry in the BBC's assessment of the
"escalation". Participation by the military wing of Hamas in the
attack is evidence, suggest the reporters, of the role of the
Palestinian leadership in "escalating tension". But the killing by
the Israeli army of a Palestinian family of seven on a Gaza beach on
June 9, and many more civilians since, was apparently not an
"escalation", even though it provoked Hamas to renounce a ceasefire
it had maintained for 16 months in the face of continuous Israeli
military assaults.
So how is the ordinary viewer to make sense of these events -- the
endless "cycle of violence" -- with the BBC as guide. (And the BBC
is no worse, and possibly better, than most of other Western
broadcasters. At least its reporter Alan Johnston is based in Gaza.)
Not only do its reporters exhibit the biases associated with its
institutional racism -- as an organisation, the BBC chooses to
identify with Israeli concerns before Palestinian ones -- but they
then compound this distortion by repeating uncritically Israel's own
misrepresentation of events.
The reporters, like so many of their colleagues, fall into the trap
of presenting the conflict through the eyes of the Israeli
government, the same government whose prime minister, Ehud Olmert,
last week proudly displayed his ethnic chauvinism by setting the
suffering of the Jewish residents of Sderot, who face a mostly
non-lethal smattering of Palestinian home-made Qassam rockets, far
above the rising death toll of Gaza's civilians from the army's
constant aerial and artillery bombardment. "I am sorry with all my
heart for the residents of Gaza," Olmert said, "but the lives and
well-being of Sderot's residents are more important than those of
Gaza residents." In other words, a potential threat to a single Jew
is more important than the deaths of dozens of Palestinian
innocents.
Thus we learn without comment from the BBC that Olmert has denounced
the killing of the two soldiers as "terrorism", even though the word
cannot describe an attack by an occupied people on an occupying
army. How is it possible for a few men with light arms to terrorise
one of the most powerful armies in the world? What next: are we to
listen sympathetically to claims by the US that its soldiers are
being "terrorised" by Iraqi insurgents?
The defence that the BBC is simply reporting Israel's position does
not stand up to scrutiny. Is it even conceivable that we might hear
a BBC reporter neutrally repeat a Hamas statement that the Israeli
army is terrorising Palestinians by reckless shelling civilians in
Gaza, even though the word's usage in this case would better satisfy
the dictionary definition? The shells most certainly do spread
terror among Gaza's civilian population.
We hear too without comment that Olmert is holding both Hamas and
the Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas responsible for the attack.
The BBC dutily repeats Israeli claims that Abbas has the resources
to fight "terror" even as the money to pay Palestinian security
forces is held by foreign banks unwilling, at Israeli and American
behest, to hand it over, and as Hamas and Abbas are locked in battle
for control of the Palestinians' shrinking government.
Does common sense not recoil from the suggestion that both Hamas and
Abbas can be equally blamed for the attack when the two are bitter
rivals for power? Or that either can be held accountable when Israel
has refused to negotiate with them or treat them as the genuine
representatives of the Palestinian people?
Again, would the BBC report with due solemnity claims by the
Palestinians that they hold Olmert and Peretz personally guilty for
the civilian deaths in Gaza over the past fortnight, even though in
an enlightened world both should be standing trial for war crimes?
Instead, however implausible the Israeli version of reality, the BBC
happily sows confusion on behalf of the Israeli army. Like other
broadcasters, it credulously reports preposterous arguments seeking
to exonerate the Israeli army of responsibility for the shelling of
the beach in Gaza that killed a Palestinian family of seven. It
treats as equally credible the army's belated version in which
Palestinian militants are said to have laid a single mine at a
favourite seaside picnic spot in the futile hope of preventing the
Israeli navy landing along the Strip's miles of coastline. (In
consequence, the BBC excludes the seven dead and dozens of
Palestinian injured in that Israeli attack from its list of recent
civilian casualties in Gaza).
And both BBC reporters note gravely Israel's concerns that this is
the first time Palestinian militants have broken out of the
fenced-off Strip since Israel withdrew from Gaza nearly a year ago.
Somehow the fact that the Palestinians have briefly escaped from
their cage appears to make the attack all the more shocking not only
for Israel but for the two reporters.
This attack in Israel, they tell us, is the most serious to date,
with the implication that it is therefore illegitimate and part of
the same "escalation". Even ignoring the fact that this attack was
against Israeli soldiers besieging, imprisoning and shelling the
Palestinians of Gaza, does the BBC not to pause to consider the
double standard it is applying?
Was the Israeli army's incursion into Gaza a day earlier to capture
two alleged Palestinian militants not an equal escalation? Was it
not an equal violation of Palestinian sovereignty? Of course not.
The BBC knows, as do the rest of us, that the army never really left
Gaza and the occupation never really ended. But you won't hear that
from any of its reporters.
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