Writing with their children’s blood.
The Israeli-Palestinian peace charades ended with Israel’s
aggression on Gaza and Lebanon. Now, peace with justice is the only
way out.
By Sam Bahour
07/18/06 "Information
Clearing House" -- -- In case anyone had any remaining doubts, the
flawed Middle East peace process and the international community’s
half-hearted efforts have miserably failed, culminating in Israel’s
most recent aggression in Gaza and Lebanon. Following the
Palestinian’s democratic legislative elections which brought Hamas
to power, Israel announced that its goal was to topple the
Palestinian government at any cost. When that misguided plan proved
harder than expected, Israel did what any good Western ‘democracy’
would do; it sought to turn world attention elsewhere: Hezbollah
provided the perfect pretext for this by violating Israel's
sovereignty, allowing Israel to claim its all-out aggression against
Lebanon is justified.
Some may pronounce the beginning of the end of the Oslo Peace
Accords was the very day they were signed, given the lopsided
agreements put Palestinians at a structural disadvantage that
provided a perfect and sophisticated framework for failure. However,
having lived through the agreements from the start of there
implementation – or attempt thereof – I believe that the beginning
of the end of the peace process started on November 4, 1995, when an
extremist Israeli Jewish student assassinated then Prime Minister
Yitzhak Rabin. Throughout his bloody career, Rabin surely did his
part to add to the Palestinian’s disadvantage, but upon his
assassination – by one of Israel’s own products of extremism -
Israel started spiraling out of control.
Five successive Israeli governments in a short 10 year period have
all miserably failed to address the source of the Middle East
conflict, Israel’s 39 year old military occupation of the
Palestinians in Gaza and the West Bank, including East Jerusalem.
Furthermore, each and every Israeli government slapped humanitarian
and international law in the face by refusing to implement scores of
UN resolutions and internationally agreed upon rules of engagement.
Israel made a mockery of the rule of law while claiming to be the
only democracy in the Middle East.
Now, as we listen to the Israeli military publicly calling for
Lebanese civilians to leave their homes and we painfully watch
entire families flee the fighting by crossing the border into Syria,
carrying their children and what little belongings they can on their
backs, it reminds anyone who has any inkling of knowledge of the
Middle East conflict of how Israeli military aggression forced
Palestinians from there homes in 1948, 1967, 2000 and continues to
do so even today. Jonathan Cook, a writer and journalist based in
Nazareth, Israel, recently wrote in the newsletter Counterpunch of
how the naked Israeli onslaught of Gaza, which provoked the
Hezbollah capturing of the two Israeli soldiers may be read in the
larger context. He wrote, “This is how ethnic cleansing looks when
it is designed not by butchers in uniforms but by technocrats in
suits.” Israel’s continuous collective punishment of Palestinians
and Lebanese is a blatant war crime, and should be treated as such
by the US and international community.
Israel’s disregard for the rule of law, let alone the well-being of
its own captured soldiers, coupled with the US’s blind and public
support of every Israeli violation of UN resolutions and acts of
aggression is the foundation that was poured to allow for Israel’s
current rampage. If Israel was a person, she would be admitted into
the psychiatric ward of the nearest hospital, but it is not. Rather,
Israel is a nuclear and regional military superpower that has chosen
time and again to attempt to forcefully instill a ‘might is right’
equation to further its skewed national interests. Israel has been
unable to internalize the simple fact that there is no military
solution to the Arab-Israeli conflict. Justice, historical and
otherwise, must be served if a lasting peace is to be realized.
As in all formal military funerals, Israel’s attack on Lebanon is
equivalent to a 21 gun salute announcing the formal end to any
remaining hope that the peace process could be restarted on the same
terms of Oslo. The Palestinian leadership should finally wake up to
this reality and dismantle Palestinian Authority and demand Israel
assumes its full legal responsibilities to those it occupies.
The official Israeli and US government lines are that the
destruction of Lebanon and Gaza are happening because Israeli combat
soldiers were taken prisoners, 3 in total. The international
community’s state of amnesia seems to forget the 9,000 Palestinians
that are currently lingering in Israeli prisons, of which over 1,000
had no charges brought against them. If so many civilians were not
being killed in Lebanon, Palestine and Israel, the Israeli and US
positions would be laughable. Even small town USA newspaper
editorials are becoming aware of the US being on the wrong side of
history in this conflict. The editorial of the Youngstown Vindicator
of July 14 noted, “…the United States should have thought longer and
harder before giving Israel unqualified support.”
The words of Arik Diamant, an Israeli military reservist and the
head of the Courage to Refuse organization, sheds light on a growing
sentiment within Israeli ranks that mainstream media is refusing to
cover. Mr. Diamant recently wrote of his experience in arresting one
of the thousands of Palestinians that the Israelis have illegally
imprisoned over the years, he said, “No one wrote about it in the
paper. European diplomats were not called to help him. After all,
there was nothing out of the ordinary about the kidnapping of this
Palestinian kid. Over the 40 years of occupation we have kidnapped
thousands of people, exactly like Gilad Shalit was captured:
Threatened by a gun, beaten mercilessly, with no judge or jury, or
witnesses, and without providing the family with any information
about the captive.”
Provocation clearly comes in many sizes and shapes. Israel’s mere
refusal to end its military occupation of Palestinians is a level of
provocation that most of the world could never even imagine. Taking
prisoners of war, if this can even be called a war, is yet another
provocation. There was no international outcry in 1989 when Israeli
commandos crossed the Lebanese border and snatched Sheikh Abd al-Karim
Obeid, a Hizballah leader of south Lebanon, and imprisoned him in
Israel. The Israeli government even introduced legislation to
maintain his imprisonment and called him a pawn to be used later.
Israel repeated this again in 1994 when Mustafa Dirani was kidnapped
from his home in Lebanon by Israeli commandos during the Muslim
holiday of Eid Al-Adha. Although provocations vary and are made by
all sides in this conflict, no action, whatsoever, justifies the
destruction of a civilian population’s infrastructure and wonton
killing of civilians. Such acts only breed more violence and more
hatred.
Lebanon is only the latest bloody chapter of Israeli aggression in
the region. Immediately preceding this latest bout of Israeli
military adventurism, and continuing to this day, albeit buried from
the media due to the extremity of Lebanon, is the destruction of the
civilian infrastructure of Gaza, yet again. Hopefully, the scenes of
horror and sheer magnitude of death and destruction emerging from
Lebanon will shock the international community to acknowledge their
collective failure and emerge from their coma to finally and
unequivocally impose international sanctions and a global boycott on
Israel until it brings itself in line with the international rule of
law. Anything less, would be tantamount, to merely turning a page of
history in a blood-stained textbook that Palestinians and Lebanese,
and now Israelis, are writing with their children’s blood.
Sam Bahour is a Palestinian-American businessman living in the
Israeli-occupied Palestinian city of El-Bireh, currently visiting
his hometown of Youngstown, Ohio. He is co-author of HOMELAND: Oral
Histories of Palestine and Palestinians (1994) and can be reached at
sbahour@palnet.com