Genocide in Gaza
Nothing apart from pressure in the form of sanctions, boycotts
and divestment will stop the murdering of innocent civilians in
the Gaza Strip.
By Ilan Pappe
09/04/06 "PC"
-- - 09/02/04 - -A genocide is taking place in Gaza. This
morning, 2 September, another three citizens of Gaza were killed
and a whole family wounded in Beit Hanoun. This is the morning
reap, before the end of day many more will be massacred. An
average of eight Palestinian die daily in the Israeli attacks on
the Strip. Most of them are children. Hundreds are maimed,
wounded and paralyzed.
The Israeli leadership is at lost of what to do with the Gaza
Strip. It has vague ideas about the West Bank. The current
government assumes that the West Bank, unlike the Strip, is an
open space, at least on its eastern side. Hence if Israel, under
the ingathering program of the government, annexes the parts it
covets - half of the West Bank - and cleanses it of its native
population, the other half would naturally lean towards Jordan,
at least for a while and would not concern Israel. This is a
fallacy, but nonetheless it won the enthusiastic vote of most of
the Jews in the country. Such an arrangement cannot work in the
Gaza enclave - Egypt unlike Jordan has succeeded in persuading
the Israelis, already in 1948, that the Gaza Strip for them is a
liability and will never form part of Egypt. So a million and
half Palestinians are stuck inside Israel - although
geographically the Strip is located on the margins of the state,
psychologically it lies in its midst.
The inhuman living conditions in the most dense area in the
world, and one of the poorest human spaces in the northern
hemisphere, disables the people who live it to reconcile with
the imprisonment Israel had imposed on them ever since 1967.
There were relative better periods where movement to the West
Bank and into Israel for work was allowed, but these better
times are gone. Harsher realities are in place ever since 1987.
Some access to the outside world was allowed as long as there
were Jewish settlers in the Strip, but once they were removed
the Strip was hermetically closed. Ironically, most Israelis,
according to recent polls, look at Gaza as an independent
Palestinian state that Israel has graciously allowed to emerge.
The leadership, and particularly the army, see it as a prison
with the most dangerous community of inmates, which has to be
eliminated one way or another.
The conventional Israeli policies of ethnic cleansing employed
successfully in 1948 against half of Palestine’s population, and
against hundreds of thousands of Palestinians in the West Bank
are not useful here. You can slowly transfer Palestinians out of
the West Bank, and particular out of the Greater Jerusalem area,
but you cannot do it in the Gaza Strip - once you sealed it as a
maximum-security prison camp.
As with the ethnic cleansing operations, the genocidal policy is
not formulated in a vacuum. Ever since 1948, the Israeli army
and government needed a pretext to commence such policies. The
takeover of Palestine in 1948 produced the inevitable local
resistance that in turn allowed the implementation of an ethnic
cleansing policy, preplanned already in the 1930s. Twenty years
of Israeli occupation of the West Bank produced eventually some
sort of Palestinian resistance. This belated anti-occupation
struggle unleashed a new cleansing policy that still is
implemented today in the West Bank. The Gaza imprisonment in the
summer of 2005, which was paraded as an Israeli generous
withdrawal, produced the Hamas and Islamic Jiahd missile attack
and one abduction case. Even before the abduction of Giald
Shalit, the Israeli army bombarded indiscriminately the Strip.
Ever since the abduction, the massive killing increased and
became systematic. A daily business of slaying Palestinians,
mainly children is now reported in the internal pages of the
local press, quite often in microscopic fonts.
The chief culprits are the Israeli pilots who have a field day
now that one of them is the General Chief of Staff. In the 1982
Lebanon war, the Israeli airforce issued orders to its pilots to
abort missions if within 500 square meters of their target they
spotted innocent civilians. Not that these orders were kept, but
the pretense for internal moral consumption was there. It is
called in the Israeli airforce, the “Lebanon Procedure” [Nohal
Levanon]. When the pilots asked a year ago if the “Lebanon
procedure” is intact for Gaza, the answer was no. The same
answer was given to the pilots in the second Lebanon war.
The Lebanon war provided the fog for a while, covering the war
crimes in the Gaza Strip. But the policies rage on even after
the conclusion of the cease-fire up in the north. It seems that
the frustrated and defeated Israeli army is even more determined
to enlarge the killing fields in the Gaza Strip. There are no
politicians who are able or willing to stop the generals. A
daily killing of up to 10 civilians is going to leave a few
thousand dead each year. This is of course different from
genociding a million people in one campaign - the only
inhibition Israel is willing to undertake in the name of the
Holocaust memory. But if you double the killing you raise the
number to horrific proportions and more importantly you may
force a mass eviction in the end of the day outside the Strip -
either in the name of human aid, international intervention or
the people’s own desire to escape the inferno. But if the
Palestinian steadfastness is going to be the response, and there
is no reason to doubt that this will be the Gazan reaction then
the massive killing would continue and increase.
Much depends on the international reaction. When Israel was
absolved from any responsibility or accountably for the ethnic
cleansing in 1948, it turned this policy into a legitimate tool
for its national security agenda. If the present escalation and
adaptation of genocidal policies would be tolerated by the
world, it would expand and used even more drastically.
Nothing apart from pressure in the form of sanctions, boycotts
and divestment will stop the murdering of innocent civilians in
the Gaza Strip. There is nothing we here in Israel can do
against it. Brave pilots refused to partake in the operations,
two journalists - out of 150 - do not cease to write about it,
but this is it. In the name of the holocaust memory let us hope
the world would not allow the genocide of Gaza to continue.
Ilan Pappe is senior lecturer in the University of Haifa
Department of political Science and Chair of the Emil Touma
Institute for Palestinian Studies in Haifa. His books include
among others The Making of the Arab-Israeli Conflict (London and
New York 1992), The Israel/Palestine Question (London and New
York 1999), A History of Modern Palestine (Cambridge 2003), The
Modern Middle East (London and New York 2005) and forthcoming,
Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine (2006)
Copyright © 2006 palestinechronicle.com
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