The bombing of the Gaza Strip has predictably been justified
by Israel and the United States as self-defense by a country under attack from
a �terrorist� organization. Claims of �surgical air attacks� against �carefully
selected targets,� to minimize civilian casualties, are repeated by Israeli
politicians and government spokesmen in their daily encounters with the world
media. In Jerusalem, as in Washington, the blame for the plight of Palestinians
is placed entirely on Hamas, which rules the territory.
A little perspective is needed to understand what is really
happening in Gaza. Roughly 400 Palestinians were killed and as many as 2000
injured in the first five days of Israeli bombing, December 27-December 31,
2008. These casualties include children and young students, civilian officials
and local policemen. The Gaza Strip is a small territory, about 140 square
miles in area and a population of 1.5 million, making it one of the most
densely populated places in the world. The scale of bloodshed in Gaza over five
days is the same as if almost 2,000 Israelis had been killed and 9,000 wounded
in the same period. Imagine the consequences for Israel in such an event. It
begins to explain what the people of Gaza have already endured. And their
horror is still not over. In contrast, the actual number of Israeli deaths by
Hamas rockets fired randomly towards Israel in the same period is four.
Not only have Hamas security complexes and government
buildings been hit. Mosques, schools, university buildings and civilian homes
lie in ruins. Hospitals have been overwhelmed and shortages of medical supplies
and food are making the situation increasingly desperate. Underground tunnels
to Egypt, used to transport essential supplies as well as weapons and
explosives, have been destroyed. Despite all this, the leader of Israel�s
Kadima Party, Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni, says the country has �no
alternative� but to carry on.
The Israeli offensive was launched soon after the end of a
six-month �ceasefire� with Hamas. In reality, no such ceasefire ever existed,
because the continuing Israeli siege of Gaza amounts to an act of war.
Richard Falk, the United Nations special rapporteur, has
described the Israeli air attacks on the territory as �severe and massive
violations of international law as defined in the Geneva Conventions, both in
regard to the obligations of an occupying power and in the requirements of the
laws of war.� According to Professor Falk, Israel is guilty of inflicting
collective punishment on the entire population of Gaza, of targeting civilians
and of using disproportionate force, killing civilians and destroying the
administrative infrastructure in the territory.
Certainly the Hamas rocket attacks against civilian targets
in Israel are unlawful, he says. But that illegality does not give rise to any
Israeli right to violate international humanitarian law and commit war crimes
or crimes against humanity in response.
Deepak Tripathi is a researcher and
an author with reference to South and West Asia and US policy. His works can be
found on his website deepaktripathi.wordpress.com
and he can be reached at: DandATripathi@gmail.com.