Gresham’s Law briefly states, “Bad money drives out good
money.” A corollary has: “Bad news analysis drives out good news analysis.”
Reports and dialogues on the events in Gaza give the
impression that a mighty Hamas has wantonly attacked Israel, pulverized its
southern cities with missiles and a patient Israel ran out of patience and
finally retaliated.
The drama has subtext; undisclosed reasons for Israel’s
attack, unstated significance of the escalated conflict, and a non-clarified
future for its final denouement. Search the entire landscape and we encounter
happenings beyond the horizon. Missing from the debate are the disastrous
consequences to the world community due to Israel’s aggressive actions.
Media references to President-elect Barack Obama’s July 2008
speech during a visit to Israel in which he stated, “If somebody was sending
rockets into my house where my two daughters sleep at night, I would do
everything to stop that, and would expect Israel to do the same thing,”
incorrectly inferred he was speaking in late December 2008.
If the president-elect expressed himself in late December
2008, he might have said: “If my land was being blockaded so that my children
were being impoverished and intermittently starved, their parents unable to
find employment, all of them caged in a fenced area and not permitted to fish,
fly or travel more than a few miles, while supersonic planes disturbed each
night of their sleep and created a daily fear of a military incursion that
could kill them, I would do everything to stop that and expect the Palestinians
to do the same.”
The media has not properly related the fact that Hamas did
not stop the truce; the truce expired and not solely due to Hamas.
In order to continue the truce, Hamas issued two responsible
demands: (1) Israel halt its devastating economic blockade of Gaza, and (2)
Israel observe a truce in the West Bank as well as Gaza. When Israel refused to
meet these humanitarian demands, Hamas refused to continue the truce, an event
Israel, which reluctantly agreed to the first truce, knew would happen.
During the years 2001-2007, the PLO and Fatah, which
controlled Gaza, fired unguided rockets and mortars at Israel and increased the
number of launches each year. Those same years witnessed Israeli incursions
into Gaza that destroyed Palestinian infrastructure; Arafat’s headquarters,
airport, roads, factories, homes and also lives. Sanctions and a crippling blockade
followed the mayhem. So, why did Israel accuse Hamas of incitement and escalate
its punishment when the pattern had been the same for years? Did Israel welcome
the aggressive behavior so its military could have reasons for more aggressive
retaliation? Certainly seems that way. In addition to the casualties, the
shocking Israeli actions have had a disastrous political consequence.
The Bush administration heralded a new dawn for a Middle
East that was willing to accept the democratic process. The Palestinians
responded with the election of Hamas. And what happened? Hamas faced a “heads”
you lose and a “tails” you cannot win game, engineered by the Western
democracies. If Hamas remained out of the political process, its cadres might
have been routinely attacked. By being part of the democratic process and
winning an election, Hamas and the Palestinians have been pulverized, which tells
the Arab world and its Islamic organizations: No matter what you do, whether
you stay out of the political process or enter the political process, you will
be pulverized. What behavior can we expect from people who know they are going
to be pulverized? Noting the decimation of Hamas after its application of
Bush’s concept of democratic participation, won’t they react more aggressively?
Due to Israel’s aggressive attacks, the world can expect to suffer increases in
terrorism and rebellion. Jewish communities will be targeted. Without
neglecting the intensive killing, this is the major detrimental result of
Israel’s war on Gaza.
The launching of 200 unguided rockets and mortars into
Israel, although they did not inflict human casualties and did not have Hamas’
name on them -- the projectiles are fired by several militant organizations --
is inexcusable. Isn’t there a question here that demands an answer? Why were
projectiles that inflicted no great damage fired into Israeli territory?
Showing potential force without inflicting damage signals a threat. The strong
signal intends to force an adversary to a negotiating table to negotiate a
truce and serves as a call to the world to note the seriousness of the
situation. Why didn’t Israel try some form of negotiation, some form of
indirect contact that would have not compromised Israel’s security? Would it
not have made its people more secure by signifying it did not intend to
suffocate the Palestinians with an illegal embargo and was willing to
compromise? Why didn’t the world bodies immediately intervene and propose a
compromise that would ameliorate the explosive situation? The reason: Nobody
recognizes Hamas and therefore won’t talk with it. TherResult: The only other
route to resolve the situation is violence and casualties.
An honest presentation would include the observation that
the initial 200 launches after the ‘truce’ ended caused no human casualties and
insignificant physical damage. Nevertheless, more emphasis has been given to
artillery shells that damaged Israeli sidewalks than those that tore apart the
bodies of some 3,800 Palestinians. Videos show the rockets from Gaza mainly
puncture without generating much explosive power. Secondary damage results from
shrapnel and some structure collapse. A single Israeli missile has reduced
buildings and their occupants to dust.
Israel’s Ha’aretz newspaper on January 2, verified the
observations: “The threat that Hamas’ ballistic capabilities pose to the people
of the Negev is less serious than initially presumed and the residents of the
targeted areas are not demonstrating signs of panic, according to an interim
analysis by the Israel Defense Forces of the situation nearly a week after the
launching of Operation Cast Lead in the Gaza Strip.”
Too often, we have mendacious and “plugged in” reports, such
as that from Bob Joseph of CNN. From a CNN transcript;
BOB JOSEPH, REPORTER: As strategically targeted as Israel
is, because of what Hamas is doing and because of them putting their missiles
in playgrounds, near schools and hospitals, they have created an environment
where they ensure that some civilians can get hurt. And what they target
themselves is, they target children and schools and hospitals. That is what
makes Hamas the most evil entity -- one of the most evil entities on this
planet.
According to Bob Joseph, rockets and mortars that have no
guidance system or explosive power and have not struck any hospitals or
playgrounds and might have slightly damaged one school, are targeted missiles.
Israel’s massive number of well guided missiles that have hit universities,
mosques, UN schools, children playing in fields and apartment buildings are not
evil and are excusable.
In one attack on a UN school, The Guardian, 6 January,
reports, “The civilian death toll in Gaza increased dramatically today, with
reports of more than 40 Palestinians killed after missiles exploded outside a
UN school where hundreds of people were sheltering from the continuing Israeli
offensive.”
Israel insists that mortars were being launched from the
school courtyard. Despite the threat and charged emotions, wouldn’t a humane
invading military exercise care before sending shells into a school because
some person was supposedly shooting from a schoolyard adjacent to where
hundreds of innocent persons had taken shelter? Israel has lowered the bar to
where completely one-sided warfare that includes harming and terrifying
innocent civilians becomes acceptable. A world composed of mad leaders has now
made us all potential victims to any transgression by the all-powerful.
Israel, for 60 years, has used security considerations as a
reason for warfare and has not gained ‘security.’ Either Israel is using the
wrong tactics to achieve security or security is a cover for other objectives.
Considering that Israelis, most of whom only arrived in the last 40 years, live
prosperously while Palestinians who tilled the land for generations live at
subsistence levels, something must be skewed in the debate of who is doing what
to whom. A militarily and economically strong Israel, which shows no damage to
its infrastructure or property, poses as the victim, while the militarily and
economically powerless Palestinians, who have had their infrastructure and
property expropriated and often reduced to rubble by Israeli attacks, are
labeled the aggressor.
Hamas might be an obstacle to peace, but the organization is
not the principal obstacle. The principal impediments to peace are the illegal
occupation and settlements, seizures of Palestinians lands, abusive checkpoints
“and the blockade of Gaza. Does Israel have a security problem that can only be
ameliorated by overpowering military force or is Israel using security
considerations as an opportunity to humble the Palestinian people before
consolidating its territorial gains and expansionist aims?
Every day it becomes clearer that the Gaza engagement is
only a stage in Israel’s testing of new weapons and new strategies for its
predictable battles with Hezbollah, Syria, Iran and who knows who else. Israel
has more serious enemies then all other nations combined. The attack on Gaza
explains that situation. We await endless wars by an apparent out of control
military machine that will be followed by escalating threats to the world due
to the increasing violence.
Designated by critics as the Prussia of the Middle East, an
army that has a nation, Israel must recognize that a population already under
siege due to sanctions and embargo while living precariously with lack of food,
water, electricity and other essentials of life, is at the tipping point of
total destruction. The only way for the Gaza Palestinians to leave the fenced
and blockaded Gaza and escape the onslaught is by death. Can we assume that
many Palestinians, the oxygen sucked from their lungs by the missile blasts, in
their last gasp note a relief in their intensive suffering and murmur the words
once spoken by Martin Luther King, “Free at last, free at last, thank God, I’m
finally free at last?”
How many of the world’s peoples are scheduled to utter
similar words in the near future?
Dan Lieberman is editor of Alternative
Insight, a monthly web based
newsletter. Dan’s many articles on the Middle East conflicts have been
published on websites and media throughout the world. He can be reached at: alternativeinsight@earthlink.net.