By Ramzy Baroud
September 14, 2021 -- "Information
Clearing House - A
large Israeli army campaign is
taking social media by storm. The unstated aim
of what is known as the “#Untie_Our_Hands”
initiative is the desire to kill, with no
accountability, more Palestinian protesters at the
Gaza fence. The campaign was motivated by the
killing of an Israeli sniper, Barel Hadaria
Shmueli, who was reportedly shot from the
Palestinian side of the fence on August 21.
An immediate question comes to mind: what do
Israeli soldiers want, considering that they have
already
killed over 300 unarmed Palestinian protesters
and wounded and maimed thousands more at the Gaza
fence during what Palestinians referred to as the
‘Great March of Return’ between 2018 and 2020?
This ‘march’ is now being
renewed, though it often takes place at night,
where frustrated Palestinian youth gather in their
thousands, chanting anti-Israeli occupation slogans
and, at times, throwing rocks at Israeli snipers who
are stationed nearly a mile away.
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Months after the Israeli onslaught on Gaza - a
relatively brief but
deadly war between May 10-21 - the stifling
status quo in the besieged Strip has not changed:
the hermetic Israeli
siege, the snipers, the occasional nightly
bombardment, the devastating
unemployment, the closures, and the lack of
everything, from clean water to cement to even
cancer
medication.
Therefore, it should not be surprising that
Palestinians in Gaza, especially the youth, are in
desperate need of a platform to express their
justifiable rage at this ongoing misery; thus, the
renewed mass protests at the fence.
Israeli politicians and media intentionally
exaggerate the ‘threat’ posed by the Gaza protesters
to Israel’s security. They
speak of ‘incendiary balloons’ as if they are
500-pound bombs dropped by fighter jets. They are
terrified by the prospect of Gaza kids ‘breaching
the border’, with reference to fences that Israel
has arbitrarily established around Gaza without
respecting any ceasefire demarcations as recognized
by the United Nations.
This fear-mongering is now back with a vengeance,
as the killing of the Israeli sniper is offering an
opportunity for Israeli politicians to
present themselves as the defenders of the army
and the champions of Israeli ‘security’. A political
witch hunt quickly followed, regarding those who are
supposedly ‘cuffing the hands of our troops.’
This same assertion was
made by Naftali Bennett in 2019, before he
became the country’s prime minister. “The High Court
is cuffing the hands of IDF troops,” Bennett has
said, vowing to “free the IDF from the High Court”.
A year earlier, Bennett offered more details on
how he intends to end Palestinian protests at the
Gaza fence. Responding to a question during an
Israeli Army Radio interview on what he would do if
he were the country’s defense minister, he
replied: “I would not allow terrorists to cross
the border from Gaza every day … and if they do, we
should shoot to kill. Terrorists from Gaza should
not enter Israel … Just as in Lebanon, Syria or
anywhere else we should shoot to kill.”
The emphasis on ‘killing’ in response to any form
of Palestinian protests seemed to be the common
denominator between Israeli officials, military
brass and even ordinary soldiers. The latter, who
are purportedly behind the social media campaign,
seem to be enjoying their time at the Gaza fence.
Israeli snipers - per their own testimonies - keep
track of the number of Palestinians they shoot, try
to break each other’s’ records and cheer on video
when they document a ‘clean shot’ of a Palestinian
protester, which should demonstrate the horrific
violence meted out against those Palestinian youth.
Israeli snipers at the Gaza fence work in pairs.
A third person, known as the ‘locator’, helps the
snipers locate their next target. Eden is an Israeli
sniper, who, among others,
gave testimonies to the Israeli newspaper
Haaretz, in March 2020. Eden is particularly proud
of a grizzly milestone that he and his team have
achieved.
“On that day, our pair had the largest number of
hits, 42 in all,” he said. “My locator wasn’t
supposed to shoot, but I gave him a break, because
we were getting close to the end of our stint, and
he didn’t have knees. In the end you want to leave
with the feeling that you did something, that you
weren’t a sniper during exercises only. So, after I
had a few hits, I suggested to him that we switch.
He got around 28 knees there, I’d say.”
Such testimonies are further validated by
occasional video footage of Israeli snipers cheering
after shooting Palestinian kids at the fence. In
April 2018, a particular video of cheering soldiers,
along with the kind of dialogue that indicates that
Israelis have no regard for Palestinian lives
whatsoever, was leaked to international media. Even
CNN
reported on it.
This violent phenomenon is not confined to Gaza.
The debate on Israel’s ‘shoot-to-kill’ policy in the
rest of the occupied Palestinian territories has
been raging on for years. In 2017, Human Rights
Watch linked the increased number of Palestinian
casualties, who are killed at the hands of
trigger-happy soldiers, to the violent discourse
emanating from the Israeli government itself.
HRW “has documented numerous statements since
October 2015, by senior Israeli politicians,
including the police minister and defense minister,
calling on police and soldiers to shoot to kill
suspected attackers, irrespective of whether lethal
force is actually strictly necessary to protect
life,” the report
read.
The above issue was highlighted in the
execution of the incapacitated Palestinian,
Abdel Fattah al-Sharif, in the occupied city of
Al-Khalil, Hebron, in March 2016 and in the
killing of Ahmad Erekat, at a military
checkpoint in the West Bank in July 2020. Not only
did Erekat pose no immediate threat to the lives of
the occupation soldiers, but according to a
statement by 83 Palestinian and international
NGOs, Erekat “was then left to bleed to death for an
hour and a half, while the Israeli occupying forces
denied him access to medical care”.
Considering the disproportionate number of
Palestinian casualties which, at times, push
Palestinian morgues in Gaza to full capacity, it is
inconceivable what Israeli soldiers, army generals,
and politicians want exactly when they speak of
‘untying their hands’. Far more bewildering is the
international community’s apathy while Israelis
debate about how many more Palestinians ought to be
killed.
- Ramzy Baroud is a journalist and the Editor
of The Palestine Chronicle. He is the author of five
books. His latest is “
These Chains Will Be Broken
: Palestinian Stories of Struggle and Defiance
in Israeli Prisons” (Clarity Press). Dr. Baroud is a
Non-resident Senior Research Fellow at the Center
for Islam and Global Affairs (CIGA) and also at the
Afro-Middle East Center (AMEC). His website is
www.ramzybaroud.net
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