Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Israel's Invasion of Gaza

It has been two years, since the disastrous invasion by Israel into Lebanon. I spoke out forcefully against that folly at the time – See here and here and here and here and here as well as the comments at the end of each of my commentaries. Talk about “Déjà vu all over again” in the immortal words of Yogi Berra.

After the folly of the Lebanese invasion, which it was generally agreed was folly; an almost identical folly has now been committed. If you look at the comments you will see that very few agreed with me on Lebanon. There are few dissenting voices in the American community, and even less in the Jewish American community. But in Israel there are strong dissenting voices. See numerous opinion pieces in Haaretz entitled, “The Neighborhood Bully Strikes Again” and “Trying To 'Teach Hamas A Lesson' Is Fundamentally Wrong.”

That is a lot of reading, but with so many dying, so many wounded, so many made homeless, is it really too much to ask that a little time be spent reading other opinions.

We keep hearing, “Israel Has a Right to Defend Itself.” What we don’t hear is “Palestinians Have a Right to Defend Themselves.” We hear “Hamas has ended the truce.” Was there ever a truce on Israel’s side? It is well recognized that a blockade is an act of war. But during the six month of the so-called truce, Israel had a tight blockade applied against Gaza. No food, no medicine, no electricity was allowed into the territory, and Israel never ceased assassinating Hamas leaders.

As a Jew who knows what being a Jew means, not only in Nazi Austria, but at the hands of anti-Semitism in the US, I reject the notion so widely spread by the Israeli lobby, that to criticize Israel constitutes anti-Semitism.

They say that in the US Social Security is the third rail. In fact the third rail in the US is Israel and this is particularly true in the Jewish community. I maintain that criticism of dumb and immoral policies whether by the US, or by Israel, is the height of patriotism, or as Obama said in another context, "I am not against all wars, only dumb wars." When I spoke out against the madness of Lebanon, I was addressed as “Dear un- American Anti-Semite” in a comment here, but as Martin Luther King said, "Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter" and I will not be silent.

There are so many myths around the Israeli/Palestinian conflict. The biggest is “Jews good” “Arabs bad” ‘Muslims bad”.

I hear that Hamas refuses to recognize Israel. But Israel refuses to recognize Hamas. After all, as a result of pressure by the US, an election in the territories was held, and Hamas won the election and as a result became the duly elected representative of the people of the territories.

I hear that even in the West Bank children’s textbooks display a negative image of Israel. But Israeli textbooks refer to the territories as Judea and Samaria, clearly carrying the implication that Israel is negotiating in bad faith when it talks about a two state solution. And even a spokesperson for the Israeli foreign office talks about not the West Bank but about Judea and Samaria.

This is not calculated to instill trust.

After Hamas declared the truce at an end and fired some rockets into Israel not one Israeli was killed. The rockets were too inaccurate and the Israeli’s had good bomb shelters. That is not true the other way around.

The government of Israel says they try as hard as they can to avoid civilian casualties and that Hamas uses civilians as shields and so a thousand Palestinians have been killed and a multiple of that wounded and many, many more made homeless. There is a doctrine in the law called reckless endangerment. The concept says that if you recklessly endanger lives that is almost as bad as murder. Can anyone say that even if the IDF did not intend to kill civilians, there was not reckless endangerment?

When In our society a criminal take hostages, the police does not recklessly fire upon the criminal if it endangers the hostages. They will negotiate, they will wait, they will truly do all they can to avoid endangering the hostages. Can anyone say that is what the IDF has done?

And the use of cluster and phosphorous bombs. What can possibly justify these horrific weapons?

But even if we put all morality aside, what has all this carnage done for the security of Israel. According to an article in the New Yorker, Hamas had grown weak. Its support among Gazans was waning. It needed an Israeli strike to bolster its popularity. Israel has accommodated it.

What has it gained? Hate! Oh, there was hate there before, but there are degrees of hate.

Before 1967 Israel was in fact a besieged country. It faced the combined arms of all the surrounding Arab states and they were being armed by the Soviet Union. That is not the case any more. Peace treaties have been signed with Egypt and Jordan; there is no Soviet Union. Israel is the 80 pound gorilla in the Middle East. When a bee stings, the gorilla cannot go around destroying the whole jungle around it, because it is enraged.

Gideon Lichfield, the Jerusalem correspondent for The Economist writing in the NY Times from Tel Aviv said:

“Even if Israel now manages to impose a cease-fire on its terms, the calm will be short-lived unless it is willing to reoccupy much of the Gaza Strip indefinitely. Moreover, as long as Israel plays the role of aggressor in Palestinian eyes, Hamas’s support remains high. And each attack has weakened the relative moderates within Hamas and strengthened its most extremist leaders.

“Israel needs instead to abandon its military concept of deterrence in favor of a more pragmatic political one. What could deter Hamas is the fear that by using violence it will lose support among its people.

“How to create this? It is worth remembering that Israel launched its operation after the breakdown of a cease-fire that had held, reasonably well, for several months. Each side accused the other of breaching it, both with some justification. Instead of trying to re-establish the cease-fire, Israel’s leaders, driven by the need to bolster their ratings ahead of an election in February, decided to try to strike a decisive blow against Hamas.

“What Israel should do now is work for a cease-fire on terms that allow both sides to save some face. It should then do something it has done far too little of in the past: improve Gazans’ living conditions significantly. The aim should be to construct a long-lived state of calm in which Hamas has more to lose by breaching the cease-fire than by sticking to it.

“In the longer term Israel will have to accept that Hamas is no fringe movement that can be rooted out and destroyed, but a central part of Palestinian society. This will be the hard part, not least because of the opposition from Hamas’s secularist Palestinian rivals, Fatah.

“But even though Hamas’s stated goal is Israel’s destruction, it has said many times that it would accept a truce extending decades. Some former Israeli security chiefs argue that such an accommodation — a peace treaty in all but name — would eventually oblige Hamas to accept Israel’s existence, or else lose its own base of support. It is a gamble, certainly. But the alternative is more innocent lives lost, more extremism and ultimately more trouble for Israel.”

Even as I write this Israel has started withdrawing, having accomplished nothing except sowing destruction and hate.

What should Israel do? It should stop building illegal settlements on Arab lands. It may build walls to keep out terrorists, but on its own territory, not on occupied territory. It must not blockade Gaza. Gazans are entitled like any other people to come and go and to trade and to build a viable economy. Are there risks for Israel in this? Of course! But the alternative is worse. Israel instead of tearing down the Palestinian economy should build it. A prosperous Palestinian people tied to Israel by trade will not tolerate a Hamas in its midst, unless Hamas reforms. There will always be rejectionists, but they can be isolated, and without support they will wither.

The lessons of Vietnam and of Iraq have relevance.

12 comments:

Anonymous said...

January 20, 2009
Israel's invasion of Gaza was probably timed to coincide with the impending departure of George Bush, who had unequivocally supported Israel's war in Lebanon. Now that the new Obama administration has come into the picture, Israel is pulling out of Gaza. Hopefully there will be a more even-handed US policy toward Israel and the Palestinians.  If George Mitchell is appointed as our special envoy to the area, there is room for optimism. Hopefully a super hawk like Netanyahu will not end up as Prime Minister of Israel since he would never agree to a two state solution.

Anonymous said...

January 21, 2009
Beautifully written and very very fair minded, humanistic...non partisan from one who can afford to speak. 
Hopefully, the world will follow the US's lead in the coming years as, once again, I pray, our President will encourage peace and good will throughout the world.  We all want that....we are all one...a thread running through the universe......no matter the labeled name, God, Allah, whatever....I know it as "God" is love....and, "Ye shall know them by the fruits they bear"..........All good "religions" teach the same lesson..... Hate destroys.......
Kudos (for speaking the truth).  It is an asset to mankind and to your own people.

Anonymous said...

January 21, 2009
It has been a great relief for me to read your comments full of sense, on "Israel's Invasion of Gaza.
Being a Jew yourself, gives me some confidence that there is still some sanity left, and  we should all  unite our dissenting voices and let people know what is really happening in that region of the world.
For me this invasion has been a unilateral "massacre!" Nothing can excuse the killing of 1500 civilians, 500 children among them and so many wounded , burnt or mutilated. What a shame for the rest of us, sitting back and watching in silence... !

Anonymous said...

January 21, 2009
Your thoughts are very well thought through and expressed very clearly.  I'm glad that you wrote!

Anonymous said...

January 21, 2009
Anti-Semitism is here to stay. Jew bashing is a very popular sport. The Arabs only want the country is not negotiable! Their aims are war until they achieve what they want. What ever Israel does is wrong. I personally would send rockets back all day until they are all wetting their pants as the Israelis do!

Anonymous said...

January 21, 2009
I too feel that you fail to understand that the Israeli's live in a constant barrage of missiles and whether well aimed or not, and that they have no alternative but to retaliate. Would you simply sit still and allow your neighbors to shell you?
Possibly, when both sides are ready to sit down and negotiate a proper peace settlement this can come to a stop. But before that, both Hamas and their supporters, Iran, will need to accept the right for Israel to exist.
I, regrettably, cannot see that happening and the conflict will continue. Too bad that the Israelis gave Gaza back. Maybe another Arab state like Syria could absorb the Palestinian people that they too, do not want!"

Anonymous said...
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
Anonymous said...

January 23, 2009
I thought your Gaza commentary was pretty much on target. ….You might also add that the Israeli and American publics have yet to come to grips with the biggest myth of all concerning the founding of Israel -- namely that the Palestinians ceded their homes en masse "voluntarily" to accept refugee status because their leaders so instructed them . Though this idea seems absurd on the face of it, it is apparently what Israeli school children and others have been taught. Since the late 1980's Benny Morris and a growing number of "revisionist" Israeli historians have been recognizing the uncomfortable truth that in many, if not most cases, the Palestinians were driven from their homes by Jewish terrorist groups such as Haganah and Irgun. David Remnick gives us a more balanced and, I believe, accurate view of the truth in his: Blood and Sand article in the May 5 issue of the New Yorker.
http://www.newyorker.com/arts/critics/books/2008/05/05/080505crbo_books_remnick?currentPage=3
While we cannot turn back the clock, any attempt at a fair settlement of this chronic conflict needs to take account of the facts and not be based on the myth."

Anonymous said...

January 24, 2009
I commented earlier, but I want to respond to some of the comments previously posted: I refer to Bill Maizer's comment: "Too bad that the Israelis gave Gaza back" and I ask: Now they should be Indian Givers?"
and I refer to Frank Friedman's comment that "Jew bashing is a very popular sport." This sounds so self-deprecating...just baby sing-songy.....does not do the Jewish descendants justice.
Hate begets hate....  Respect to live in harmony from both sides is necessary.... 
Perhaps taking some wisdom from the American Indians (who were terribly wronged):  God created the "land" for man to exist....No one can or should own it........ any more than the air we breathe.  "He," alone, controls it.  For peace (on earth) that is the direction in which an answer of peace needs to be found....  Then the impossible becomes possible.  It was made quite simple for the human brain to comprehend. 
The Ten Commandments....  They are not the Ten Suggestions....
Love Thy Neighbor as Thy Self --Thou Shalt not kill-- Can't get easier than that.....

Anonymous said...

January 24, 2009
I refer back to commentary you made in 2006, entitled, "Israel Invasion of Lebanon" which can be found at:
http://commentaryonpolitics.blogspot.com/2001/07/letter-to-editor.html
and want to make it clear that I think this analysis of the situation as well as Kristoff's: http://select.nytimes.com/2006/07/18/opinion/18kristof.html?hp=&pagewanted=print is somewhat simplistic. Soccer, even the World Cup, is not war, even though some fans think it more important. You commented that Sharon's single incident at the Temple Mount, where no person was injured, provoked the wave of suicide bombings that killed and injured scores of persons. This was one incident, if it indeed was meant to provoke. Essentially you are saying that the Arabs can provoke as often as they like, but the Israeli's can not do it even once."
But let us get back to the present situation in Gaza. Rockets have been shot by Hamas for some time with tepid reaction from the Israelis. These rockets were homemade crude units with limited range and explosive power (less than a suicide bomber would carry, or I as I like to call them, homicidal bomber). We know that Hamas has been getting more sophisticated weaponry from Iran. Soon these rockets will reach Tel Aviv. Imagine London during the WW II. Soon the rockets will reach the Israeli nuclear facility (the whole world knows they have the bomb). When do the Israeli's say enough is enough? Surely you do not believe they should let themselves be destroyed as in WW II. I have spoken to Americans who have very recently returned from Israel where their children and grandchildren live. The emotion expressed by the Israelis is a little fear, not rage as you have written.
In summary I can agree that the Sharon invasion of Lebanon was botched and made the situation worse. I do not wholly agree with your capsule comments on the situation in Lebanon.
But the big question I have I have for you is with Hamas continuing to escalate their attacks, when is the line to be drawn? When is it okay for the Israelis to react with force?"
As for your recent comments on Israel's invasion of Gaza
1. I found your comments unbalanced and one-sided, although not as one sided as W's 8 years of benign neglect of the problems. Even Mummar Qaddafi (our favorite born again ex-terrorist) threw Israel a few bones in his ridiculous Isratine piece. I point to the recent piece in the NY Times by Steven Erlanger http://www.nytimes.com/2009/01/11/world/middleeast/11hamas.html?hp
for a more balanced response.
2. As you are aware the British had bomb shelters during the blitz and also choose to retaliate. However the world had much sympathy for them (maybe because they were for the most part not Jewish?)
3. As for the blockade of Gaza, I am sure you are aware that the Egyptians are also blockading Gaza. There is very little complaint about their actions, but then again the Egyptians are not Jewish. I have great sympathy for the innocent Palestinians who have been killed and injured. Just as I had sympathy for then in 1970 when King Hussein of Jordan (the good Arab) bombed the Palestinian refugee camps on the West bank killing more than the Israeli's have killed in all these decades. No one mentions this (maybe because King Hussein was not Jewish) I could go on and on mentioning the response of the world and the media to Darfur, Bosnia, Rwanda, etc. Where is the outrage when a thousand times as many innocent persons are killed? I find it appalling.

Anonymous said...

January 24, 2009
I agree with you.
In the N.Y. Times of today there is a letter by Bill Moyer which expresses a similar opinion., See: http://www.nytimes.com/2009/01/24/opinion/l24moyers.html?ref=opinion

Anonymous said...

Jamuary 27, 2009
I recommend the reading of four articles in various publications which make the case for Israel.
The first is "The Phony War Crimes Accusation" which can be found at:
http://www.aish.com/jewishissues/middleeast/The_Phony_War_Crimes_Accusation.asp
The second is entitled: Clinton says Israel has right to defend itself and can be found at: http://www.reuters.com/article/vcCandidateFeed1/idUSTRE50Q4Z520090127
The third is entitled: "Jews in South Africa and can be found at:
http://www.sajewishreport.co.za/pdf/2009/jan/23-january-2009.pdf
The final one is entitled: The Demons of Gaza and can be found at:
http://www.nypost.com/seven/01102009/postopinion/opedcolumnists/the_demons_of_gaza_149549.htm