George W Bush is not going to leave the White House quietly.
After eight days of relentless Israeli bombing of Gaza, he waved the green flag
to Israel to invade the Gaza Strip. In his weekly radio address, Bush held
Hamas responsible for the latest violence. And he proclaimed that �no peace
deal would be acceptable without tougher action to prevent Hamas and other
groups from receiving weapons.� Hours later, on January 3, Israeli tanks were
rolling into the Gaza Strip.
As the movers work in the White House, the conduct of George
W Bush in the last few days of his presidency shows that there is no change in
him after eight years. He remains a hostage of his demons. His radio address is
going to be remembered alongside television pictures of mutilated bodies of
Palestinian children, beamed all over the world. The Bush presidency ends just
as it began in 2001 -- with war.
A lot has happened in the intervening years. But the
overpowering impression he leaves behind is that of a president who put
political opportunism to most destructive use, wherever and however he could,
to satisfy his own capriciousness and prejudices. With few exceptions, those in
Congress in Washington and in other Western capitals simply caved in, because
they did not want to be on the �wrong� side. The cost of this failure has been
horrendous. As Bush prepares for quieter pastures in Texas, he leaves much of
the Middle East and South Asia burning.
Bush and his vice president, Dick Cheney, have used every
significant player who crossed their path. From Tony Blair of Britain and
General Pervez Musharraf of Pakistan through the Arab and East European
countries where abducted detainees were taken to be tortured to Mahmoud Abbas,
president of the Palestinian Authority, and Israel�s leading politicians � the
list is long. As the end came near, the Bush-Cheney administration seized the
opportunity offered by circumstances in and around Gaza.
A bitter dispute loomed in advance of January 8, 2009, when
Abbas would complete his normal four-year term as Palestinian Authority
president, having been elected in 2005. Hamas, the majority party in the Legislative
Council, insisted that Abbas submit his resignation to the speaker and the
process begin to hold a new presidential election. But Abbas was determined to
hold on to power. His Fatah group argued that a law subsequently passed allowed
him to remain in the post until the next council elections in 2010.
As February elections approached in Israel, the defense
minister and Labor Party leader, Ehud Barak, and the foreign minister and
leader of the Kadima Party, Tzipi Livni, were in competition within the
cabinet. The hard-line Likud leader, Binyamin Netanyahu, goaded them from
without. The leaders of Egypt and Jordan felt threatened by the emergence of
Hamas and growing Iranian influence in the region. All this provided the ideal
ground for Bush and Cheney to create a crisis and unleash the proxies on Gaza
to reshape the territory. After Afghanistan and Iraq, it was the turn of Gaza
to be subjected to �shock and awe.� The command center for the operation is the
White House. The proxies are in the region. The more insecure the proxies feel,
the easier it is to play on their fears.
The events in Gaza bear echoes of the Sabra and Chatila
massacres in Lebanon in September 1982. Then, Israel let loose its proxies, the
Christian Phalange militiamen, on the two refugee camps. Hundreds of
Palestinians, men women and children, were killed and thousands injured. Today,
Israeli bullets and bombs also kill women and children in Gaza. And the
responsibility lies not in Tel Aviv, but in the White House. Despite all the
talk of Hamas� intransigence and its refusal to cease rocket attacks on
Israel�s border areas, truth does emerge from time to time.
Writing in the Huffington Post (Understanding the Gaza Catastrophe, January 3, 2009), the United
Nations Special Rapporteur for Human Rights in the Palestinian Territories,
Richard Falk, gives a detailed account of how the Hamas leadership �offered to
extend the truce, even proposing a ten-year period.� He writes, �Israel ignored
these diplomatic initiatives and failed to carry out its side of the ceasefire
agreement that involved some easing of the blockade that had been restricting
the entry to Gaza of food, medicine and fuel to a trickle.�
The cynical manipulation of fears and insecurities of others
to punish peoples not liked in the White House has been the trademark of the
Bush administration. His latest act is calculated to overthrow, or greatly
weaken, Hamas in Gaza and, at the same time, to try to block the path of the
incoming administration of Barak Obama for the foreseeable future. Israel may
finish its �military job� in Gaza in the next few weeks or months. Many more
will die of bullets, lack of treatment, hunger and malnutrition. The rest will
have to endure conditions worse than before. The sense of humiliation and
betrayal will sink in deeper among Palestinians. The prospects of any
diplomatic engagement with Hamas will have been set back, possibly for years.
And America�s image abroad takes another battering.
All of which would not matter to George W Bush, for his
green light to the Israelis to invade Gaza shows he has no remorse. An
instinctive demolisher, he inspected the vast wreckage around him at the end of
his presidency and decided to go with a bang -- this time in Gaza - making
President-elect Obama�s task in the Middle East even more difficult.
Deepak Tripathi,
former BBC journalist, is a researcher and an author with particular reference
to South and West Asia and US policy. His works can be found on deepaktripathi.wordpress.com and he can be reached at: DandATripathi@gmail.com.