Why I Support the BDS Movement Against Israel
By Chris Hedges
July 27, 2015 "Information
Clearing House"
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"Truthdig"
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The Palestinians are poor. They are powerless.
They have no voice or influence in the halls of power. They are
demonized. They do not have well-heeled lobbyists doling out
campaign contributions and pushing through pro-Palestinian
legislation. No presidential candidate is appealing to donors—as
Hillary Clinton did when she sent a letter to
media mogul Haim Saban denouncing critics of Israel—by promising
to advance the interests of the Palestinian people. Palestinians,
like poor people of color in the United States, are expendable.
Justice for Palestine will never come from the
traditional governmental institutions or political parties that
administer power. These institutions have surrendered to moneyed
interests. Justice will come only from us. And the sole mechanism
left to ensure justice for Palestine is the
boycott,
divestment and sanctions (BDS) movement against Israel.
Sanctions brought down the apartheid regime of South Africa. And
they are what will bring down the apartheid regime of Israel. BDS is
nonviolent. It appeals to conscience. And it works.
All Israeli products including Jaffa citrus
fruits, Ahava cosmetics, SodaStream drink machines, Eden Springs
bottled water and Israeli wine must be boycotted. We must refuse to
do business with Israeli service companies. And we must boycott
corporations that do business with Israel, including Caterpillar, HP
and Hyundai. We must put pressure on institutions, from churches to
universities, to divest from Israeli companies and corporations that
have contracts with Israel. The struggle against apartheid in South
Africa was long and hard. This struggle will be too.
Gaza, a year after Israel carried out a
devastating bombing campaign that lasted almost two months, is in
ruins. Most of the water is unsafe to drink. There are power outages
for up to 12 hours a day. Forty percent of the 1.8 million
inhabitants are unemployed, including 67 percent of the youths—the
highest youth unemployment rate in the world. Of the 17,000 homes
destroyed by Israel in the siege, not one has been rebuilt. Sixty
thousand people remain homeless. Only a quarter of the promised $3.5
billion in aid from international donors has been delivered—much of
it diverted to the Palestinian Authority, the Israeli puppet regime
that governs the West Bank. And no one in Washington—Republican or
Democrat—will defy the Israel lobby. No one will call for justice or
stay the Israeli killing machine. U.S. senators, including Bernie
Sanders, at the height of the Israeli bombardment last summer voted
unanimously to
defend the Israeli slaughter of a people with no army, navy, air
force, mechanized units, artillery or command and control. It was a
vote worthy of the old Soviet Union. Every senator held out his or
her tin cup to the Israel lobby and chose naked self-interest over
justice.
Israel, like the United States, is poisoned by the
psychosis of permanent war. It too is governed by a corrupt
oligarchic elite for whom war has become a lucrative business. It
too has deluded itself into carrying out war crimes and then playing
the role of the victim. Israeli systems of education and the
press—again mirrored in the United States—have indoctrinated
Israelis into believing that they have a right to kill anyone whom
the state condemns as a terrorist. And Israel’s most courageous
human rights campaigners, intellectuals and journalists are
slandered and censored in their own country, just as American
critics such as
Norman Finkelstein,
Max Blumenthal and
Noam Chomsky
are in the United States.
Those who become addicted to the wielding of the
instruments of war, blinded by hubris and a lust for power,
eventually become war’s victims. This is as true for Israel as for
the United States.
Israel’s goal is to make life a living hell for
all Palestinians, ethnically cleansing as many as it can and
subduing those who remain. The peace process is a sham. It has led
to Israel’s seizure of more than half the land on the West Bank,
including the aquifers, and the herding of Palestinians into
squalid, ringed ghettos or
Bantustans while turning Palestinian land and homes over to
Jewish settlers. Israel is expanding settlements, especially in East
Jerusalem. Racial laws, once championed by the right-wing demagogue
Meir Kahane, openly discriminate against Israeli Arabs and
Palestinians.
Ilan Pappe calls the decades-long assault against the
Palestinian people “incremental genocide.”
In Gaza, Israel practices an even more extreme
form of cruelty. It employs a mathematical formula to limit outside
food deliveries to Gaza to keep the caloric levels of the 1.8
million Palestinians just above starvation. This has left 80 percent
of the Palestinians in Gaza dependent on Islamic charities and
outside aid to survive. And the periodic military assaults on Gaza,
euphemistically called
“mowing the lawn,” are carried out every few years to ensure
that the Palestinians remain broken, terrified and destitute. There
have been three Israeli attacks on Gaza since 2008. Each is more
violent and indiscriminate than the last. Israeli Foreign Minister
Avigdor Lieberman has said that a fourth attack on Gaza is
“inevitable.”
During its 51-day siege of Gaza last summer Israel
dropped $370 million in ordinance on concrete hovels and refugee
camps that hold the most densely packed population on the planet.
Two thousand one hundred four Palestinians were killed. Sixty-nine
percent—1,462—were civilians. Four hundred ninety-five were
children. Ten thousand were injured. (During the attack six Israeli
civilians and 66 soldiers were killed.) Four hundred Palestinian
businesses were wiped out. Seventy mosques were destroyed and 130
were damaged. Twenty-four medical facilities were bombed, and 16
ambulances were struck, as was Gaza’s only electrical power plant.
Israel tallied it up: 390,000 tank shells, 34,000 artillery shells,
4.8 million bullets. Most of the civilians who died were killed in
their homes, many of the victims torn to shreds by
flechette darts sprayed from tanks. Children were burned with
white phosphorous or buried with their families under rubble caused
by 2,000-pound iron fragmentation bombs. Others died from
dense inert metal explosive, or DIME, bombs—experimental weapons
that send out extremely small, carcinogenic particles that cut
through both soft tissue and bone. The Israel Defense Forces, as
Amira Hass has reported, consider any Palestinian over the age
of 12 to be a legitimate military target. Max Blumenthal’s new book,
“The 51 Day War,” is a chilling chronicle of savage atrocities
carried out by Israel in Gaza last summer. As horrible as the
apartheid state in South Africa was, that nation never used its air
force and heavy artillery to bomb and shell black townships.
A report by
Action on Armed
Violence (AOAV) found Israel
killed and injured more civilians with explosive weapons in 2014
than any other country in the world. Hamas’ indiscriminate firing of
wildly inaccurate missiles—Finkelstein correctly called them
“enhanced fireworks”—into Israel was, as a U.N. report recently
charged, a war crime, although the report failed to note that under
international law Hamas had a right to use force to defend itself
from attack.
The disparity of firepower in the 2014 conflict
was vast: Israel dropped 20,000 tons of explosives on Gaza while
Hamas used 20 to 40 tons of explosives to retaliate. Israel’s
wholesale slaughter of civilians is on a scale equaled only by
Islamic State and
Boko Haram. Yet Israel, in our world of double standards, is
exempted from condemnation in Washington and provided with weapons
and billions in U.S. foreign aid to perpetuate the killing. This is
not surprising. The United States uses indiscriminate deadly force
in Iraq, Syria, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Yemen and Somalia that
outdoes even Israel, leaving behind civilian victims, refugees and
destroyed cities and villages in huge numbers.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who
during his last election campaign received 90 percent of his money
from U.S. oligarchs such as
Sheldon Adelson, has internally mounted a campaign of state
repression against human rights advocates, journalists and
dissidents. He has stoked overt racism toward Palestinians and Arabs
and the African migrant workers who live in the slums of Tel Aviv.
“Death to Arabs” is a popular chant at Israeli soccer matches. Thugs
from right-wing youth groups such as Im Tirtzu routinely beat up
dissidents, Palestinians, Israeli Arabs and African immigrants in
the streets of Tel Aviv. It is a species of Jewish fascism.
Israel is not an anomaly. It is a window into the
dystopian, militarized world that is being prepared for all of us, a
world with vast disparities of income and draconian systems of
internal security. There will be no freedom for Palestine, or for
those locked in our own internal colonies and terrorized by
indiscriminate police violence, until we destroy corporate
capitalism and the neoliberal ideology that sustains it. There will
be no justice for
Michael Brown until there is justice for
Mohammed Abu Khdeir. The fight for the Palestinians is our
fight. If the Palestinians are not liberated none of us will be
liberated. We cannot pick and choose which of the oppressed are
convenient or inconvenient to defend. We will stand with all of the
oppressed or none of the oppressed. And when we stand with the
oppressed we will be treated like the oppressed.
Chris Hedges spent nearly two decades as a
foreign correspondent in Central America, the Middle East, Africa
and the Balkans. He has reported from more than 50 countries and has
worked for The Christian Science Monitor, National Public Radio, The
Dallas Morning News and The New York Times, for which he was a
foreign correspondent for 15 years.
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