Palestine
2007: Genocide in Gaza, Ethnic Cleansing in the West
Bank
By Ilan Pappe
01/18/07 "Electronic
Intifada" On this stage, not so
long ago, I claimed that Israel is conducting genocidal
policies in the Gaza Strip. I hesitated a lot before
using this very charged term and yet decided to adopt
it. Indeed, the responses I received, including from
some leading human rights activists, indicated a certain
unease over the usage of such a term. I was inclined to
rethink the term for a while, but came back to employing
it today with even stronger conviction: it is the only
appropriate way to describe what the Israeli army is
doing in the Gaza Strip.
On 28 December 2006, the Israeli human rights
organization B'Tselem published its annual report about
the Israeli atrocities in the occupied territories.
Israeli forces killed this last year six hundred and
sixty citizens. The number of Palestinians killed by
Israel last year tripled in comparison to the previous
year (around two hundred). According to B'Tselem, the
Israelis killed one hundred and forty one children in
the last year. Most of the dead are from the Gaza Strip,
where the Israeli forces demolished almost 300 houses
and slew entire families. This means that since 2000,
Israeli forces killed almost four thousand Palestinians,
half of them children; more than twenty thousand were
wounded.
B'Tselem is a conservative organization, and the numbers
may be higher. But the point is not just about the
escalating intentional killing, it is about the trend
and the strategy. As 2007 commences, Israeli
policymakers are facing two very different realities in
the West Bank and the Gaza Strip. In the former, they
are closer than ever to finishing the construction of
their eastern border. Their internal ideological debate
is over and their master plan for annexing half of the
West Bank is being implemented at an ever-growing speed.
The last phase was delayed due to the promises made by
Israel, under the Road Map, not to build new
settlements. Israel found two ways of circumventing this
alleged prohibition. First, it defined a third of the
West Bank as Greater Jerusalem, which allowed it to
build within this new annexed area towns and community
centers. Secondly, it expanded old settlements to such
proportions so that there was no need to build new ones.
This trend was given an additional push in 2006
(hundreds of caravans were installed to mark the border
of the expansions, the planning schemes for the new
towns and neighborhoods were finalized and the apartheid
bypass roads and highway system completed). In all, the
settlements, the army bases, the roads and the wall will
allow Israel to annex almost half of the West Bank by
2010. Within these territories there will be a
considerable number of Palestinians, against whom the
Israeli authorities will continue to implement slow and
creeping transfer policies -- too boring as a subject
for the western media to bother with and too elusive for
human rights organizations to make a general point about
them. There is no rush; as far as the Israelis are
concerned, they have the upper hand there: the daily
abusive and dehumanizing mixed mechanisms of army and
bureaucracy is as effective as ever in contributing its
own share to the dispossession process.
The strategic thinking of Ariel Sharon that this policy
is far better than the one offered by the blunt 'transferists'
or ethnic cleansers, such as Avigdor Liberman's
advocacy, is accepted by everyone in the government,
from Labor to Kadima. The petit crimes of state
terrorism are also effective as they enable liberal
Zionists around the world to softly condemn Israel and
yet categorize any genuine criticism on Israel's
criminal policies as anti-Semitism.
On the other hand, there is no clear Israeli strategy as
yet for the Gaza Strip; but there is a daily experiment
with one. Gaza, in the eyes of the Israelis, is a very
different geo-political entity from that of the West
Bank. Hamas controls Gaza, while Abu Mazen seems to run
the fragmented West Bank with Israeli and American
blessing. There is no chunk of land in Gaza that Israel
covets and there is no hinterland, like Jordan, to which
the Palestinians of Gaza can be expelled. Ethnic
cleansing is ineffective here.
The earlier strategy in Gaza was ghettoizing the
Palestinians there, but this is not working. The
ghettoized community continues to express its will for
life by firing primitive missiles into Israel.
Ghettoizing or quarantining unwanted communities, even
if they were regarded as sub-human or dangerous, never
worked in history as a solution. The Jews know it best
from their own history. The next stages against such
communities in the past were even more horrific and
barbaric. It is difficult to tell what the future holds
for the Gaza population, ghettoized, quarantined,
unwanted and demonized. Will it be a repeat of the
ominous historical examples or is a better fate still
possible?
Creating the prison and throwing the key to the sea, as
UN Special Reporter John Dugard has put it, was an
option the Palestinians in Gaza reacted against with
force as soon as September 2005. They were determined to
show at the very least that they were still part of the
West Bank and Palestine. In that month, they launched
the first significant, in number and not quality,
barrage of missiles into the Western Negev. The shelling
was a response to an Israeli campaign of mass arrests of
Hamas and Islamic Jihad activists in the Tul Karem area.
The Israelis responded with operation 'First Rain'. It
is worth dwelling for a moment on the nature of that
operation. It was inspired by the punitive measures
inflicted first by colonialist powers, and then by
dictatorships, against rebellious imprisoned or banished
communities. A frightening show of the oppressor's power
to intimidate preceded all kind of collective and brutal
punishments, ending with a large number of dead and
wounded among the victims. In 'First Rain', supersonic
flights were flown over Gaza to terrorize the entire
population, succeeded by the heavy bombardment of vast
areas from the sea, sky and land. The logic, the Israeli
army explained, was to create pressure so as to weaken
the Gaza community's support for the rocket launchers.
As was expected, by the Israelis as well, the operation
only increased the support for the rocket launchers and
gave impetus to their next attempt. The real purpose of
that particular operation was experimental. The Israeli
generals wished to know how such operations would be
received at home, in the region and in the world. And it
seems that instantly the answer was 'very well'; namely,
no one took an interest in the scores of dead and
hundreds of wounded Palestinians left behind after the
'First Rain' subsided.
The bar set continually higher: Palestinians pass by a
pool of blood after the Israeli shelling of a
residential area in Beit Hanoun in the northern of Gaza
Strip in which at least 18 people were killed, 8
November 2006. (MaanImages/Wesam Saleh)
And hence since 'First Rain' and until June 2006, all
the following operations were similarly modeled. The
difference was in their escalation: more firepower, more
causalities and more collateral damage and, as to be
expected, more Qassam missiles in response. Accompanying
measures in 2006 were more sinister means of ensuring
the full imprisonment of the people of Gaza through
boycott and blockade, with which the EU is still
shamefully collaborating.
The capture of Gilad Shalit in June 2006 was irrelevant
in the general scheme of things, but nonetheless
provided an opportunity for the Israelis to escalate
even more the components of the tactical and allegedly
punitive missions. After all, there was still no
strategy that followed the tactical decision of Ariel
Sharon to take out 8,000 settlers whose presence
complicated 'punitive' missions and whose eviction made
him almost a candidate for the Nobel Peace Prize. Since
then, the 'punitive' actions continue and become
themselves a strategy.
The Israeli army loves drama and therefore also
escalated the language. 'First Rain' was replaced by
'Summer Rains', a general name that was given to the
'punitive' operations since June 2006 (in a country
where there is no rain in the summer, the only
precipitation that one can expect are showers of F-16
bombs and artillery shells hitting people of Gaza).
'Summer Rains' brought a novel component: the land
invasion into parts of the Gaza Strip. This enabled the
army to kill citizens even more effectively and to
present it as a result of heavy fighting within dense
populated areas, an inevitable result of the
circumstances and not of Israeli policies. With the
close of summer came operation 'Autumn Clouds' which was
even more efficient: on 1 November 2006, in less than 48
hours, the Israelis killed seventy civilians; by the end
of that month, with additional mini operations
accompanying it, almost two hundred were killed, half of
them children and women. As one can see from the dates,
some of the activity was parallel to the Israeli attacks
on Lebanon, making it easier to complete the operations
without much external attention, let alone criticism.
From 'First Rain' to 'Autumn Clouds' one can see
escalation in every parameter. The first is the
disappearance of the distinction between civilian and
non-civilian targets: the senseless killing has turned
the population at large to the main target for the
army's operation. The second one is the escalation in
the means: employment of every possible killing machines
the Israeli army possesses. Thirdly, the escalation is
conspicuous in the number of casualties: with each
operation, and each future operation, a much larger
number of people are likely to be killed and wounded.
Finally, and most importantly, the operations become a
strategy -- the way Israel intends to solve the problem
of the Gaza Strip.
A creeping transfer in the West Bank and a measured
genocidal policy in the Gaza Strip are the two
strategies Israel employs today. From an electoral point
of view, the one in Gaza is problematic as it does not
reap any tangible results; the West Bank under Abu Mazen
is yielding to Israeli pressure and there is no
significant force that arrests the Israeli strategy of
annexation and dispossession. But Gaza continues to fire
back. On the one hand, this would enable the Israeli
army to initiate more massive genocidal operations in
the future. But there is also the great danger, on the
other, that as happened in 1948, the army would demand a
more drastic and systematic 'punitive' and collateral
action against the besieged people of the Gaza Strip.
A source of satisfaction for Israel: Palestinians
inspect a burnt vehicle belonging to Colonel Mohammad
Ghareeb, the deputy chief of preventive security in
Jabalia refugee camp in the northern Gaza Strip. The
vehicle was burnt during factional clashes between Fatah
and Hamas. (MaanImages/Wesam Saleh)
Ironically, the Israeli killing machine has rested
lately. Even relatively large number of Qassam missiles,
including one or two quite deadly ones, did not stir the
army to action. Though the army's spokesmen say it shows
'restraint', it never did in the past and is not likely
to do so in the future. The army rests, as its generals
are content with the internal killing that rages on in
Gaza and does the job for them. They watch with
satisfaction the emerging civil war in Gaza, which
Israel foments and encourages. From Israel's point of
view it does not really mater how Gaza would eventually
be demographically downsized, be it by internal or
Israeli slaying. The responsibility of ending the
internal fighting lies of course with the Palestinian
groups themselves, but the American and Israeli
interference, the continued imprisonment, the starvation
and strangulation of Gaza are all factors that make such
an internal peace process very difficult. But it will
take place soon and then with the first early sign that
it subsided, the Israeli 'Summer Rains' will fall down
again on the people of Gaza, wreaking havoc and death.
And one should never tire of stating the inevitable
political conclusions from this dismal reality of the
year we left behind and in the face of the one that
awaits us. There is still no other way of stopping
Israel than besides boycott, divestment and sanctions.
We should all support it clearly, openly,
unconditionally, regardless of what the gurus of our
world tell us about the efficiency or raison d'etre of
such actions. The UN would not intervene in Gaza as it
does in Africa; the Nobel peace laureates would not
enlist to its defense as they do for causes in Southeast
Asia. The numbers of people killed there are not
staggering as far as other calamities are concerned, and
it is not a new story -- it is dangerously old and
troubling. The only soft point of this killing machine
is its oxygen lines to 'western' civilization and public
opinion. It is still possible to puncture them and make
it at least more difficult for the Israelis to implement
their future strategy of eliminating the Palestinian
people either by cleansing them in the West Bank or
genociding them in the Gaza Strip.
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 his latest,
Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine
(2006).
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