Starving Gaza
By Chris Hedges
08/20/07 "Truthdig" -- -- -Gaza has become the Sarajevo of
the Middle East. Israel, in an action similar to that of the
Serbs in Bosnia, has surrounded and cut off nearly a million
and a half Palestinians in the Gaza Strip since the Islamic
militant group Hamas took control in June. Electric fences
and watch towers manned by Israeli soldiers keep the
Palestinians trapped inside the strip. The land and sea
blockade, the halting of all but minimal humanitarian aid
and the refusal to allow Gaza to receive financial support
are crushing Gaza’s industry, farming and infrastructure.
The tactic is clear: Israel and the United States will
strangle Gaza by cutting off all money and goods, including
fuel and most food, to reduce one of the most densely
populated places on the planet to an impoverished ghetto.
Hunger and anarchy, they hope, will motivate Gazans to turn
on Hamas, and the anarchy will perhaps be used to justify a
reoccupation by the Israeli military and see the return of
the quisling President Mahmoud Abbas, who was ousted after
he led an abortive coup to overthrow the democratically
elected Hamas government. He is now in the West Bank.
The Bush administration has, in an effort to bolster the
credibility of Abbas, promised to provide his government
with $190 million in aid and $80 million in security
assistance. And the Israeli prime minister has traveled to
Jericho to tout Abbas as a partner for peace.
The effects of the siege are disastrous. Palestinians in
Gaza are not allowed to travel abroad. They cannot enter
Israel for work. They do not fish off the coast because
Israeli gunboats open fire at any vessels that are more than
a mile offshore. Gaza has seen 75 percent of its factories
closed since June, with the loss of 68,000 jobs, according
to the World Bank. There is a 70 percent unemployment rate,
and 1.1 million of the 1.5 million Palestinians in Gaza
depend on U.N. assistance to survive. The boycott has forced
the United Nations to suspend $93 million worth of
construction projects for homes, schools and sewage
treatment in Gaza because cement and other building supplies
have run out. These U.N. projects once employed 121,000
people. About 80 percent of the Palestinians in Gaza survive
on $2 a day. Basic foodstuffs such as milk powder, baby
formula, vegetable oil and medical supplies are running out.
Families, unable to get food or find work, are living on
little more than tea and bread.
The instability is compounded by the internecine violence
among Palestinian factions, gangs, clans, militias and
criminals, as well as the Israeli warplanes that bomb
refugee camps in an effort to strike at militants and
Israeli patrols that make incursions into the strip to round
up suspects. It is impossible for nearly all Palestinians to
enter or leave Gaza. The only connection the trapped
population has with the outside comes through deep tunnels
that Palestinians dig across the border into Egypt. These
tunnels are used to smuggle goods, weapons and people, as a
tunnel under the airport in Sarajevo was during the war in
Bosnia.
The looming humanitarian crisis, manufactured and
orchestrated by the Israeli government, in violation of
international law, is a brutal form of collective
punishment. It has, however, the support of the compliant
Abbas government. Abbas has ordered all government officials
in Gaza, including the police, to refuse to go to work and
government offices to shut their doors. Those who do go to
work, he says, will no longer receive their salaries. He
suspended the Gaza Strip attorney general’s office and, in
order to keep money out of the hands of the Hamas
government, led by Ismael Haniyah, he told government-run
hospitals not to collect fees. Abbas has even threatened not
to recognize high school exam results in Gaza because the
education system is being administered by what he called an
illegitimate government.
On the public relations front, Abbas, knowing what buttons
to push in Washington, has linked the Hamas government with
al-Qaida and branded its military wing “a terrorist
organization.”
“Yes, through Hamas, al-Qaida has entered Gaza and through
Hamas, al-Qaida is protected,” he told Italian RAI TV in
Rome on July 10.
The decision by Israel and the United States to widen the
schism and increase tensions between Hamas and Abbas is a
blunder of catastrophic proportions. The hatred for Israel
and the United States, which already runs deep among
Palestinians, will only grow the longer the siege continues.
Abbas, by dancing to the tune of those seen by the
Palestinians as the enemy, is becoming a reviled, weak and
discredited figure. The schism makes a peace agreement and
future cooperation only more elusive. Hamas is an unsavory
organization, but as long as it has broad support among the
Palestinians, and it does, it is going to have to be
included in any eventual settlement if civility and peace
are to be restored in Gaza and the West Bank. The ham-fisted
attempt to make Hamas go away by meting out draconian
punishments on the Palestinians in Gaza will radicalize more
Palestinians and see the civil war spill into the West Bank.
Despite all the aid Abbas gets, he may soon be battling
Hamas militants in Ramallah.
Violence begets violence. Iraq should have taught us that.
The road chosen by the Bush administration and the Israeli
government is one that failed in Iraq, failed in Lebanon and
will fail in the Palestinian territories. It will only
increase the chaos, suffering and death. Hamas is not going
to vanish because of Israeli repression. Radical
organizations, on the contrary, count on this repression to
build a militant base and silence the voices of reason
within their own societies. These two apocalyptic
extremes-represented by Hamas and the Israeli right
wing-need each other to further their frightening visions.
The Israeli right wing dreams of a broken and compliant
Palestinian population living on impoverished reservations
surrounded by the Israeli military. Hamas dreams of
destroying the Jewish state. Neither dream is based on
reality. Neither dream will work. But a lot of people will
suffer and die to find this out.
Chris Hedges, who graduated from Harvard Divinity
School and was for nearly two decades a foreign
correspondent for The New York Times, is the author of “American
Fascists: The Christian Right and the War on America.“
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