Barack Obama on Israel’s deadly attacks on Gaza: ‘No comment’
By Joshua Frank
Online Journal Contributing Writer
Dec 29, 2008, 00:19
As President-Elect Barack Obama vacationed in Hawaii on
December 26, stopping off to watch a dolphin show with his family at Sea Life
Park, an Israeli air raid besieged the impoverished Gaza Strip, killing at
least 285 people and injuring over 800 more.
It was the single deadliest attack on Gaza in over 20 years
and Obama’s initial reaction on what could be his first real test as president
was “no comment.” Meanwhile, Israel has readied itself for a land invasion,
amassing tanks along the border and calling up 6,500 reserve troops.
On Sunday’s Face the
Nation, Obama’s senior adviser, David Axelrod, explained to guest cost Chip
Reid how an Obama administration would handle the situation, even if it turns
for the worst.
“Well, certainly, the president-elect recognizes the special
relationship between United States and Israel. It’s an important bond, an
important relationship. He’s going to honor it . . . And obviously, this
situation has become even more complicated in the last couple of days and
weeks. As Hamas began its shelling, Israel responded. But it’s something that
he’s committed to.”
Reiterating the rationale that Israel’s bombing of Gaza was
an act of retaliation and not of aggression, Axelrod, on behalf of the Obama
administration, continued to spread the same misinformation as President Bush:
that Hamas was the first to break the ceasefire agreement, which ended over a
week ago, and Israel was simply responding judiciously.
Aside from the fact that Israel’s response was anything but
judicious, the idea that it was Hamas who broke the six-month truce is a
complete fabrication.
On the night of the U.S. election, Israel fired missiles on
Gaza that were aimed at closing down a tunnel operation they believed Hamas was
building in order to kidnap Israeli soldiers. The carnage left in the wake of
Israel’s bombing of Gaza over the past six weeks has killed dozens of Palestinians.
“The escalation towards war could, and should, have been
avoided. It was the State of Israel which broke the truce, in the ‘ticking
tunnel’ raid . . . two months ago,” the Israeli peace group Gush Shalom wrote
in a press release. “Since then, the army went on stoking the fires of
escalation with calculated raids and killings, whenever the shooting of
missiles on Israel decreased.”
Over the last seven years only 17 Israeli citizens have been
killed by Palestinian rocket fire, which makes it extremely difficult for
Israeli politicians, which are in the midst of an election, to argue that their
response has been proportionate or defensible in any way.
The asymmetry of the conflict leaves an opening for harsh
criticism from the soon-to-be president Barack Obama. He has every right to
oppose Israel’s belligerence. The international community and the majority of
public opinion are on his side. Certainly he knows Israel’s disproportionate
response has inflicted insurmountable pain on Palestinians, as well as what the
blockade has done by keeping vital medical and other supplies from reaching
Gaza, where hundreds have died as a result of inadequate medical treatment.
While bombs fall on a suffocating Palestinian population and
Israeli forces prepare for a ground invasion, Obama is monitoring the situation
from afar after a talk with Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and other Bush
administration officials. This isn’t leadership; it’s a continuation of a
policy that has left Palestinians with little recourse, let alone hope for
lasting peace.
“The president-elect was in Sderot last July, in southern
Israel, a town that’s taken the brunt of the Hamas attacks,” David Axelrod told
Chip Reid on Face the Nation. “And he
said then that, when bombs are raining down on your citizens, there is an urge
to respond and act and try and put an end to that. So, you know, that’s what he
said then, and I think that’s what he believes.”
If Axelrod is correct, and Barack Obama does indeed support
the bloodshed inflicted upon innocent Palestinians by the Israeli military,
there should be no celebrating during Inauguration Day 2009, only mass protest
of a Middle East foreign policy that must change in order to begin a legitimate
peace process in the region.
Joshua Frank is co-editor of Dissident Voice and
author of “Left Out! How Liberals Helped Reelect George W. Bush” (Common
Courage Press, 2005), and along with Jeffrey St. Clair, the editor of the new
book “Red State Rebels: Tales of Grassroots Resistance in the Heartland,” published
by AK Press in July 2008. He can be reached at brickburner@gmail.com.
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