Aggression Under False Pretenses
By Palestinian Prime Minister Ismail
Haniyeh
07/11/06 "Washington
Post" -- -- GAZA, Palestine -- As Americans
commemorated their annual celebration of independence from colonial
occupation, rejoicing in their democratic institutions, we
Palestinians were yet again besieged by our occupiers, who destroy
our roads and buildings, our power stations and water plants, and
who attack our very means of civil administration. Our homes and
government offices are shelled, our parliamentarians taken prisoner
and threatened with prosecution.
The current Gaza invasion is only the latest effort to destroy the
results of fair and free elections held early this year. It is the
explosive follow-up to a five-month campaign of economic and
diplomatic warfare directed by the United States and Israel. The
stated intention of that strategy was to force the average
Palestinian to "reconsider" her vote when faced with deepening
hardship; its failure was predictable, and the new overt military
aggression and collective punishment are its logical fulfillment.
The "kidnapped" Israeli Cpl. Gilad Shalit is only a pretext for a
job scheduled months ago.
In addition to removing our democratically elected government,
Israel wants to sow dissent among Palestinians by claiming that
there is a serious leadership rivalry among us. I am compelled to
dispel this notion definitively. The Palestinian leadership is
firmly embedded in the concept of Islamic shura , or mutual
consultation; suffice it to say that while we may have differing
opinions, we are united in mutual respect and focused on the goal of
serving our people. Furthermore, the invasion of Gaza and the
kidnapping of our leaders and government officials are meant to
undermine the recent accords reached between the government party
and our brothers and sisters in Fatah and other factions, on
achieving consensus for resolving the conflict. Yet Israeli
collective punishment only strengthens our collective resolve to
work together.
As I inspect the ruins of our infrastructure -- the largess of donor
nations and international efforts all turned to rubble once more by
F-16s and American-made missiles -- my thoughts again turn to the
minds of Americans. What do they think of this?
They think, doubtless, of the hostage soldier, taken in battle --
yet thousands of Palestinians, including hundreds of women and
children, remain in Israeli jails for resisting the illegal, ongoing
occupation that is condemned by international law. They think of the
pluck and "toughness" of Israel, "standing up" to "terrorists." Yet
a nuclear Israel possesses the
13th-largest military force on the planet, one that is used to rule
an area about the size of New Jersey and whose adversaries there
have no conventional armed forces. Who is the underdog, supposedly
America's traditional favorite, in this case?
I hope that Americans will give careful and well-informed thought to
root causes and historical realities, in which case I think they
will question why a supposedly "legitimate" state such as Israel has
had to conduct decades of war against a subject refugee population
without ever achieving its goals.
Israel's unilateral movements of the past year will not lead to
peace. These acts -- the temporary withdrawal of forces from Gaza,
the walling off of the West Bank -- are not strides toward
resolution but empty, symbolic acts that fail to address the
underlying conflict. Israel's nearly complete control over the lives
of Palestinians is never in doubt, as confirmed by the humanitarian
and economic suffering of the Palestinians since the January
elections. Israel's ongoing policies of expansion, military control
and assassination mock any notion of sovereignty or bilateralism.
Its "separation barrier," running across our land, is hardly a
good-faith gesture toward future coexistence.
But there is a remedy, and while it is not easy it is consistent
with our long-held beliefs. Palestinian priorities include
recognition of the core dispute over the land of historical
Palestine and the rights of all its people; resolution of the
refugee issue from 1948; reclaiming all lands occupied in 1967; and
stopping Israeli attacks, assassinations and military expansion.
Contrary to popular depictions of the crisis in the American media,
the dispute is not only about Gaza and the West Bank; it is a wider
national conflict that can be resolved only by addressing the full
dimensions of Palestinian national rights in an integrated manner.
This means statehood for the West Bank and Gaza, a capital in Arab
East Jerusalem, and resolving the 1948 Palestinian refugee issue
fairly, on the basis of international legitimacy and established
law. Meaningful negotiations with a non-expansionist, law-abiding
Israel can proceed only after this tremendous labor has begun.
Surely the American people grow weary of this folly, after 50 years
and $160 billion in taxpayer support for Israel's war-making
capacity -- its "defense." Some Americans, I believe, must be asking
themselves if all this blood and treasure could not have bought more
tangible results for Palestine if only U.S. policies had been
predicated from the start on historical truth, equity and justice.
However, we do not want to live on international welfare and
American handouts. We want what Americans enjoy -- democratic
rights, economic sovereignty and justice. We thought our pride in
conducting the fairest elections in the Arab world might resonate
with the United States and its citizens. Instead, our new government
was met from the very beginning by acts of explicit, declared
sabotage by the White House. Now this aggression continues against
3.9 million civilians living in the world's largest prison camps.
America's complacency in the face of these war crimes is, as usual,
embedded in the coded rhetorical green light: "Israel has a right to
defend itself." Was Israel defending itself when it killed eight
family members on a Gaza beach last month or three members of the
Hajjaj family on Saturday, among them 6-year-old Rawan? I refuse to
believe that such inhumanity sits well with the American public.
We present this clear message: If Israel will not allow Palestinians
to live in peace, dignity and national integrity, Israelis
themselves will not be able to enjoy those same rights. Meanwhile,
our right to defend ourselves from occupying soldiers and aggression
is a matter of law, as settled in the Fourth Geneva Convention. If
Israel is prepared to negotiate seriously and fairly, and resolve
the core
1948 issues, rather than the secondary ones from 1967, a fair and
permanent peace is possible. Based on a hudna (comprehensive
cessation of hostilities for an agreed time), the Holy Land still
has an opportunity to be a peaceful and stable economic powerhouse
for all the Semitic people of the region. If Americans only knew the
truth, possibility might become reality.
The writer is prime minister of the Palestinian National
Authority.
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