It's Time to End the "Last Taboo"
By Stephen Lendman
07/05/06 "Information
Clearing House" -- -- The "Last Taboo" was the title
of eminent Palestinian-born writer, scholar and activist Edward
Said's essay written shortly before his death in September, 2003. It
was also the title of distinguished author and documentary filmmaker
John Pilger's chapter about Palestine in his important new book
Freedom Next Time that's reviewed and can be read at
www.sjlendman.blogspot.com. Said explained his title in what he
wrote: "The extermination of the Native Americans can be admitted,
the morality of Hiroshima attacked, the national flag (of the US)
publicly committed to flames. But the systematic continuity of
Israel's 52-year oppression and maltreatment of the Palestinians is
virtually unmentionable, a narrative that has no permission to
appear." It appeared boldly and courageously in Pilger's book, and
it's long past time for it be prominent in the mainstream as well to
finally expose Israeli crimes and demand they end. It's especially
important now as Israel just began an intensive military assault
against the defenseless people of Gaza, which, before it ends, may
result in many deaths, great destruction of property and an
overwhelming humanitarian disaster even beyond the one already
existing in The Occupied Territories.
Few people anywhere have suffered more or longer than the
beleaguered Palestinians. For nearly four decades they've lived
under a harsh and unending Israeli occupation of their land. They've
endured a continued assault to seize it, a loss of their personal
and economic rights and a denial of any chance for justice or their
very humanity. These courageous people remain isolated in their own
land with little support from the outside. Yet it's never broken
their spirit as they continue their heroic efforts to survive and
struggle to gain their freedom.
The Israeli Assault on Gaza
This article documents events in besieged and now reoccupied Gaza
since the Palestinians responded to continued Israeli Defense
Forces' (IDF) attacks against them by striking at an Israeli
military post near Kerem Shalom crossing, southeast of Rafah, on
June 25 killing two IDF soldiers, injuring several others and
capturing a third. The Israeli response was swift and deadly but has
not yet been unleashed fully as the IDF decides when to enter Gaza
full force to launch an assault against the defenseless people there
already under seige. The Palestinian strike followed a series of
bloody June Israeli attacks on Gaza including the widely reported
beach shelling that killed 8 Palestinians and injured 32 others
including 13 children. The Israelis admitted shelling the beach but
denied responsibility for the deaths. They falsely claimed a
Palestinian planted mine killed the civilians there despite the
forensic evidence clearly proving otherwise. The corporate media
reported the Israeli version of events but ignored the evidence
refuting it preventing the public from knowing the truth. It also
never reported that the so-called Israeli Gaza withdrawal of its
8,500 settlers in 21 settlements last August wasn't that at all.
That staged media event was little more than the resettlement of
Gaza's Jewish residents to new homes in Israel proper and the West
Bank on other seized Palestinian land. Furthermore, the IDF didn't
withdraw. It merely redeployed away from the settlements it was
guarding to new positions on the border. Gaza continued to be under
de facto occupation and sealed off whenever the IDF wished, as it's
now done, and along with the West Bank remains one of the world's
two largest open air prisons.
The Palestinian June 25 raid was its response to continued IDF daily
attacks against Gaza throughout June that killed about 30 people,
injured many more and caused much destruction of property. Following
the incident, the IDF launched "Operation Summer Rain" that included
closing all border crossings, sealing off the territory to restrict
movement in and out including humanitarian supplies such as food and
medicine, and surrounding the territory awaiting orders to launch a
major assault which it's now begun. The IDF has also stepped up its
artillery shelling that has gone on continually for months. It's
been firing 200 - 300 or more shells per day into northern Gaza,
many close to civilian homes. It's also launched round the clock air
attacks with F16 fighter jets and helicopter gunships firing
air-to-surface missiles and dropping one-ton bombs on civilian
facilities; it's conducting mock air raids; and it's aircraft are
breaking the sound barrier over Gaza at low altitudes deliberately
inflicting eardrum shattering and terrifying sonic booms against the
helpless people.
In addition, air strikes destroyed the three main bridges in the
Gaza Valley cutting off the northern part of the Strip from its
center and southern parts, preventing vital transportation from
moving normally to provide essential needs to the people. The
bombardment also destroyed the main pipe providing water for the
Nusairat and al-Boreij refugee camps and knocked out the Strip's
only electricity generation plant cutting off power for 80% of the
population and preventing water pumps and sanitation facilities from
operating. These actions increase the likelihood of a growing
humanitarian crisis becoming worse with food shipments, medical
supplies and other essentials cut off which may lead to starvation
and a major health disaster. They're also a form of collective
punishment against Gaza's civilian population which is a violation
of international law according to the 1949 Geneva Convention
Relative to the Protection of Civilian Persons in Time of War.
Israel now and in the past has routinely ignored this Convention,
including article 33 under it that prohibits reprisals against
protected persons and their property. The world community so far has
yet to take notice or speak out against what's ongoing other than
weak-kneed and disingenuous calls by world leaders and UN Secretary
General Kofi Annan for both sides to show restraint. It's hard
finding the right words to respond properly to such an outrageous
statement, what little else has been said, and most importantly to
what hasn't been but should be.
Israeli warships also went further committing a hostile act by
entering Syrian airspace and buzzing President Bashar al-Assad's
home in Latakia in a deliberately provocative act before being
intercepted and forced to turn back. This illegal incursion reflects
Israel's continued hostility toward Syria's leadership which it
accuses of harboring and supporting Hamas leaders the IDF has
targeted for assassination. It may signal further Israeli action to
come, with the Bush administration's full support, against a
government both countries see as an enemy. An ominous sign of such
potential action came in a veiled threat Israel just made against
Syria vowing to strike against "those who sponsor" the Palestinian
resistance.
The West Bank hasn't been spared either as the IDF conducted nearly
50 incursions into Palestinian communities, razing farmland, raiding
homes, seizing five of them for military sites and arresting dozens
of civilians including children. In addition, on June 29 the IDF
arrested most of the Hamas leadership including eight cabinet
ministers, 25 PLC members from the Change and Reform Party
affiliated with Hamas, and other Hamas officials claiming they were
responsible for the assault against its military post. All these
actions are further illegal collective punishment reprisals against
Palestinian civilians as are Israeli threats to extra-judicially
assassinate Hamas leaders. Middle East correspondent Martin Chulov
of The Australian, in fact, reported on July 1 that in a letter to
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas Israel threatened to kill
democratically elected Prime Minister Ismael Haniyeh if the captured
Israeli soldier isn't released. The Prime Minister now fears for his
life and has gone into hiding. What will it take to finally get
world leaders to take note, show a semblance of courage and
rectitude, speak out forcefully against this outrageous threat, and
condemn Israel for what it's now inflicting on nearly four million
defenseless civilians living under its oppressive heel.
This is a particularly desperate time in the lives of the 1.45
million Gazans who live in 140 square miles of the most densely
populated place on earth. Daily life for them has been almost
unbearable as they've had to endure continued Israeli oppression
without letup. With only their spirit to enable them to resist and
armed with little more than rocks, small arms and crude homemade
rockets, they're pitted against the world's fourth most powerful
military assaulting them at will. The toll has been devastating.
The IDF Assault on Gaza Was Planned Well in Advance
What's now unfolding in Gaza was planned months ago by the Israelis.
They've just been waiting for a plausible excuse to unleash it. The
capturing, not kidnapping, of one of their soldiers as a POW
provided it. So far the US, world community and UN Secretary General
support the Israeli action by their near silence. And nothing is
said in the major media to condemn a clear crime or report anything
about the 9,000 or more Palestinian civilians forcibly arrested, now
held in indefinite detention and grievously abused or tortured by
the only country in the world to effectively legalize torture
according to Amnesty International (the US, of course, now also
has). Many of those in custody are political prisoners held
administratively without charge, and Israeli human rights monitoring
group B'Tselem reports Israel's use of torture is widespread and
routine against them.
It must be asked why world leaders aren't speaking out to condemn
this practice. International law on it is explicit and
long-standing. It forbids the use of any form of torture or
degrading treatment under any circumstances. The Universal
Declaration of Human Rights outlawed it in 1948. The Fourth Geneva
Convention then did it in 1949 banning any form of "physical or
mental coercion" and affirming detainees must at all times be
treated humanely. The European Convention followed in 1950. Then in
1984 the UN Convention Against Torture became the first binding
international instrument dealing exclusively with the issue of
banning torture in any form for any reason.
Israel ignores international law (as does its US ally), treats all
Palestinians it holds in detention with contempt, and feels free to
abuse them at will. The dominant media in the West pay no attention
and have no interest. These are the ones John Pilger calls "unworthy
victims" in his new book Freedom Next Time. The Israeli soldier, on
the other hand, is a "worthy" one, and reports or just hints of his
mistreatment would be headline news. He also deserves lengthy front
page coverage in our newspaper of record The New York Times which
names him so we all know and displays his picture. No Palestinian
warrants any attention at all in the Times or the rest of the
corporate media. They all remain nameless and faceless.
What's now unfolding in Gaza and the West Bank has been in the works
for months. Since the staged summer, 2005 Gaza withdrawal, the IDF
has been training for a large-scale incursion and reoccupation of
the territory. This was reported earlier this year in Israel's
Maariv daily in an interview the paper did with IDF Southern Command
General Yoav Galant whose unit is responsible for Gaza. He clearly
stated the IDF would employ "more aggressive military
activity.......including (re)occupying the Gaza Strip......as a
result of increased (Palestinian) attacks." The general may have
forgotten to explain those "attacks" with crude weapons were
Palestinian responses to daily Israeli attacks on them with the most
sophisticated weapons the IDF has short of nuclear ones. He also
forgot to explain how Gazans have suffered as a result of these
attacks and near daily killings as well as from the effects of a
near forty-year brutal occupation of their territory. The general,
however, was very clear that "we (the IDF) have a plan to (re)occupy
the Strip" (and) "We are in advanced states of preparing forces for
readiness." Another IDF official added that "The only way Israel can
stop the rockets is by occupying Gaza. It is elementary. The
leadership knows it." The official explained further that in recent
weeks the IDF completed its training to reenter Gaza and informed
its soldiers to prepare and be ready for orders to move in.
It's quite true that the Palestinian resistance has fired about 250
crude homemade rockets from Gaza into Israel in recent months. It's
also true these have been in response to the many thousands of
unprovoked IDF artillery shells fired at them as well as frequent
air attacks and other assaults against them. Little of this is ever
reported by the western corporate media, especially in the US, and
never with any context to explain the true situation on the ground.
It's also not reported that the IDF trained to be ready to react
once it got an excuse to do it which the June 25 incident gave it.
And it would never be reported or even considered that if the
Israeli leadership and IDF seriously wanted to end retaliatory
attacks against them including suicide bombings, an easy way to do
it would be to stop attacking defenseless Palestinians. The fact
that it hasn't shows it won't and doesn't want to. Those
"elementary" considerations are never reported or suggested in the
mainstream. Apparently the dominant media never thought of it, but
their mission isn't to think. It's only to report what government
officials say.
The Gaza Assault Bears Similarity to Lebanon in 1982
The ongoing Israeli assault against Gaza may be following the same
pattern as the 1982 invasion of Lebanon to destroy the PLO
leadership that resulted in the deaths of about 18,000 mostly
Lebanese and Palestinian civilians. Back then Israel needed a
pretext to invade to counter the growing respectability the PLO was
gaining by observing a cease-fire and preferring to pursue
negotiations instead of terror attacks. This was a catastrophe for
the Israeli government as it threatened to undermine its hardened
position to oppose any political settlement which it could only
prevent by portraying the PLO as terrorists. To do it Israel had to
find a way to get the Palestinians to reengage in terrorism or at
least to defend itself to make it look like terrorism.
Why would the Israeli government then or any other one want to do
this? It would seem logical to assume they all would prefer peace
and security to continued conflict. Sadly, it didn't then, never did
earlier, hasn't since, and clearly doesn't now. The reason why goes
to the root of Zionists' aims, especially the most extreme ones.
Many Zionists want all the land of "Eretz Israel," the biblical
Jewish homeland many Jews believe God gave to the 12 tribes of
Israel. It includes much more than present day Israel and the
Occupied Territories - Lebanon, most of Syria, part of Egypt and a
large portion of Jordan.
Unlike other countries, Israel has no fixed borders - deliberately.
It's been that way so Israeli governments have lots of wiggle room
to establish them one day as they choose or are able to do. Most
important is the plan to include as part of Israel the ancient lands
of "Judea" and "Summaria," the West Bank biblical parts of Israel
the Palestinians call the Occupied Territories and claim as their
homeland. Israel has maintained the pretense of being willing to
allow the Palestinians an independent state. But by refusing to
negotiate seriously and continuing to encroach on Palestinian land
with new and expanded settlements as well as erecting its
"separation" wall, it's clear Israel's real intent is to seize all
the land it wants for its own use leaving the Palestinians only some
isolated bantustan-like less valuable parts.
To achieve its aims, Israel has always sought to avoid a political
solution with the Palestinians. That position was explained by its
Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir in the 1980s when he admitted his
nation went to war with Lebanon because there was "a terrible
danger....not so much a military one as a political one." But Israel
couldn't attack without good reason to do it. It found none so it
manufactured one after the terrorist Abu Nidal organization
attempted to assassinate the Israeli Ambassador to the UK in London.
The Israelis blamed it on the PLO that had nothing to do with it. It
also went unnoticed or reported that the PLO had been at war with
the Nidal group for years. It didn't matter, and the western media,
particularly in the US, reported that the "Operation Peace for
Galilee" Lebanon invasion was undertaken to protect Israeli
civilians from PLO attacks even though there were none. Who would
know the difference except the people living there, and the western
media don't speak to them unless it's to affirm Israeli positions.
The situation today in Gaza bears similarity to 1982. Israel was
horrified when Hamas won a clear majority of the seats in the
January, 2006 elections for the Palestinian Legislative Council
(PLC). Without the larger than life figure of Yasser Arafat to lead
it, the Palestinian people finally rejected his Fatah party and its
long record of corruption and subservience to Israeli dominance.
Since the election, the Olmert led government has clamped down hard
on Hamas, calling it a terrorist organization. It's refused to
negotiate with it, withheld Palestinian tax revenues, and succeeded
in getting an international political boycott of the democratically
elected Hamas government as well as most outside aid to it cut off.
All this has created an unbearable hardship on the already desperate
Palestinian population.
It didn't matter that Hamas declared a unilateral cease-fire, wanted
negotiations and was willing to recognize Israel as a legitimate
state provided Israel gave the Palestinians equal recognition, was
willing to return to the pre-1967 borders, released Palestinian
prisoners and stopped killing and abusing Palestinians without
provocation. Israel refused and, in fact, was as concerned about the
Hamas cease-fire as it was about the one the PLO observed in 1982
which Prime Minister Shamir explained was the reason Israel invaded
Lebanon. Back then, the provocation was the incident in London
against the Israeli Ambassador and today it's the capturing of an
Israeli soldier. These are hardly reasons for going to war unless
the Israelis planned to wage one anyway and only needed a reason to
do it. The reasons for Israeli actions today are much the same as in
1982 - to avoid a political solution and destroy the Hamas-led
government as it did the PLO then and to reinstitute one again
subservient to its wishes. Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas (aka
Abu Mazen) is that kind of leader, has always been in his past
dealings with Israel, and is the one Olmert wants to lead a future
Palestinian government or someone just like him.
The current situation in Gaza also has echos of the IDF's Operation
Defensive Shield in the West Bank in 2002. It included Israel's
infamous assault against the people of Jenin, a city of 35,000,
retaliating against suicide bombings that occurred during the Second
Intifada that began after Knesset member Ariel Sharon's provocative
visit to the holy Al Aqsa Mosque in September, 2000. The suicide
bombings, in turn, began in response to extreme Israeli violence
against the Palestinians which by March, 2002 Amnesty International
reported had killed over 1,000 of them including more than 200
children. During that Operation, Israeli forces invaded and attacked
all West Bank cities causing an unknown number of civilian
casualties and deaths. But the harshest assault occurred in April,
2002 against Jenin, including its refugee camp. The IDF cut the city
off from any outside help, destroyed hundreds of buildings (many
with people inside buried under the rubble), cut off power and water
plus food and other essential needs from the outside, refused to
allow any help to enter the city (including medical aid), and killed
an unknown number of mostly civilian Palestinian men, women and
children. No Israeli was ever held to account for these crimes.
Conditions in Jenin today remain grave as they do throughout the
Occupied Territories as Palestinians now await the full impact of
what an IDF reoccupation may inflict on them. As mentioned above,
the Lebanon invasion killed many thousands of innocent Lebanese and
Palestinians. It also resulted in what noted British journalist and
Middle East expert Robert Fisk called "one of the most shocking war
crimes of the 20th century." He referred to what happened at the
Sabra and Shatila camps when Israeli Defense Minister at the time
Ariel Sharon in command of the IDF sent a proxy Lebanese Phalange
militia force into the camps and allowed them to massacre as many as
3,000 or more innocent mostly civilian men, women and children.
Beyond a brief and unconvincing censure for his actions, Sharon
never was held to account for his crime and, of course, later became
Israeli Prime Minister serving until Ehud Olmert succeeded him after
his disabling stroke.
It now remains to be seen what the final result of the current
Israeli assault against Gaza, the West Bank and the Palestinian
leadership will be. It may be some time before we know as it's just
beginning. But if the Lebanon and Jenin experiences are examples to
go by, many innocent Palestinian lives will be lost, and the state
of the Palestinian people will only get worse before it ever has any
chance to become better. Will the world community finally take note
and act to stop a likely impending slaughter. The past record
indicates it won't. It's the purpose of this writing to demand it
does so and quickly and to hold a criminal Israeli leadership
accountable for its war crimes and crimes against humanity against
the long-suffering Palestinian people who deserve the same freedoms
as all Israelis and everyone else.
Stephen Lendman lives in Chicago and can be reached at
lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net. Also visit his blog site at
sj.lendman.blogspot.com. Authors Website:
http://www.sjlendman.blogspot.com
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