Why did Israel attack Gaza with such brutality? Did Israeli
officials think, even for a fleeting moment, that their army's attacks could
halt, as opposed to intensify, Palestinian rockets or retaliatory violence?
Indeed, was Palestinian violence at all relevant to the Israeli action? Was the
Israeli bloodletting in Gaza solely relevant to the Gaza/Hamas context, or is
there a regional dimension that is largely being overlooked?
In an al-Jazeera English TV discussion, Israeli journalist
Gideon Levy and al-Quds al-Arabi Editor-in-Chief Abd al-Bari Atwan attempted to
decipher Israel's actions in Gaza which have, since February 27, killed more
than 120 Palestinians and four Israeli soldiers. These attacks were followed by
incursions and further violence, including an attack on a Jewish seminary
school in Jerusalem.
Levy explained that Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak
wanted to demonstrate to the Israeli public that he was "doing
something" about the regular launching of rockets from Gaza. Although Levy
wasn't justifying the Israeli government's inhumane and misguided logic, he
disagreed with Atwan over the use of terminology. The latter (who is also an
outstanding journalist) had asserted that the killings in Gaza represented a
form of "genocide" and "ethnic cleansing."
Arab intellectuals, often wary of the use of certain
terminology -- since Western sensibilities don't accept associating Israel with
genocide and ethnic cleansing -- became less hesitant after Israeli Deputy
Defense Minister Matan Vilnai warned Palestinians in a radio interview to
expect a "bigger holocaust."
But terminology aside, are we to really believe that the
wanton killing in Gaza -- a major violation of international and humanitarian
laws -- was meant to send a message to the Israeli public, or to carry out
genocide for its own sake?
Initially, albeit unsurprisingly, the Palestinian Authority
of Mahmoud Abbas seemed oblivious, and then at best neutral, to the carnage.
First, it asked both Israel and Hamas to cease their violence, and then it
accused Israel of attempting to "derail" the peace process (what
peace process?). Finally, and only after the Vatican, thankfully, decried the
Israeli killings, Abbas announced the halt of all contacts with Israel.
A few days later, following a trip by US Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice to the region, Abbas reversed his position. Nabil Abu
Rudeineh, spokesman for the president, quoted Abbas as stating that "we
intend to resume the peace talks with Israel which reserve the aim of ending
the occupation."
Considering the heavy toll that Palestinians endured by a
deliberate Israeli attempt to cause a "bigger holocaust," Abbas'
agreement to the resumption of futile chats with the same men who ordered the
death of scores of his people is a mockery to say the least.
While Palestinian, Israeli and international responses to
violence remain predictable, this view still doesn't explain the timing or the
underlying objectives.
In my view, historically, Israel's behavior, regardless of
its outcome, is always politically motivated, and it never fails to keep a
regional picture in mind.
There are two lines of military logic that Israel resorts
to. One is motivated by the "chaos theory," the idea that seemingly
minor events accumulate to have complex and massive effects on dynamic natural
systems. For example, Gaza might have been attacked with the hope of provoking
a streak of suicide bombings that would eventually be blamed on Syrian planning
and Iranian financing -- thus provoking a major showdown in Lebanon. The
history of Israeli-Arab conflicts demonstrates how many major invasions are
justified by seemingly irrelevant events, such as the 1982 Lebanon War.
But is Israel capable of sustaining another conflict in
Lebanon after its miserable -- and costly -- failure in July-August 2006?
That's when the US becomes even more relevant. Just as
Israeli attacks occupied major headlines around the world, the USS Cole and two
additional ships -- including one amphibious assault vessel -- were quietly
making their way from Malta to the shores of Lebanon. The ships were dispatched
as a "show of support for regional stability," according to US Navy
officials.
With the gung-ho George W Bush administration's time in
office coming to an end and waning public enthusiasm for war against Iran,
Israel cannot afford allowing the regional setup to be stacked in the following
way: Hezbollah dominating south Lebanon, Hamas dominating Gaza and Iran
becoming an increasingly formidable regional power.
This leads to the other line of Israeli military logic, the
"big bang" theory. The self-explanatory logic of this theory is
applicable in the sense that a regional war -- accompanied by mini civil wars
in Palestine and Lebanon, along with other attempts at destabilizing Iran and
Syria -- could work in Israel's favor.
Under no condition would the US be able stay out of such a
conflict (considering its regional interests, allies and own war in Iraq).
Revelations of the sinister role played by the Bush administration in
organizing and provoking a civil war among Palestinians shows the extent to
which Bush is willing to go to achieve Israel's objectives. More, it shows the
willingness of various Arab and Palestinian players to readily participate in
the bloody and costly US-Israeli ventures.
With all due respect to Levy and Atwan, I think Israel's
main aim was neither to send a message to its public nor to commit genocide --
though these are not unreasonable possibilities. Indeed, the majority of the
Israeli public, according to a Tel Aviv University poll, wished that their
government would negotiate a ceasefire with Hamas, as bombs were falling atop
the hapless Gaza residents.
The facts -- as demonstrated by the US-Israeli role in the
turmoil in Lebanon, the consistent attempt to blame Iran, and the Israeli
provocations and bombings in Syria -- all indicate that Israel's plans are
regional, with Gaza being a testing ground, and the least costly target to
isolate and brutalize. Already a massive concentration camp with a largely
starving population, Gaza has provided Israel with a perfect opportunity to
start sending stern messages to the other players in the region.
Ramzy
Baroud is a Palestinian-American author and editor of PalestineChronicle.com. His work has
been published in numerous newspapers and journals worldwide. His latest book
is TThe
Second Palestinian Intifada: A Chronicle of a People�s Struggle (Pluto
Press, London). Read more about him on his website: ramzybaroud.net.