The Only Surprise Is That Not More Israeli Jews
Are Being Attacked And Killed
By Alan HartOctober 09, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - " The incidents which
have marked the escalation of violence in Israeli occupied East
Jerusalem and the West Bank and have included the killing of Israeli
Jews should not be viewed and considered in isolation. They have a
context and it can be summarised as follows.
Israel’s strategy (not stated but actual) is to
make life hell for the occupied, oppressed and humiliated
Palestinians in the hope that they will abandon their struggle and
surrender on Zionism’s terms or, better still, pack their bags and
leave to save Israel’s leaders from having to resort at some point
in the future to a final ethnic cleansing of Palestine.
The consequence of this Israeli strategy plus the
failure of the major powers to do anything to try to cause Israel to
end its defiance of international law and denial of justice for the
Palestinians is that more and more Palestinians are being driven to
total despair.
Question: Is it then any wonder that Israeli Jews
are being attacked and killed?
My answer is an emphatic “NO!” In my view, and as
indicated by my headline, the only real surprise is how few Israeli
Jews have been attacked and killed to date.
What also needs to be said is that Israel’s
responses to Palestinian actions driven by total despair – responses
which include shooting to kill instead of arresting and house
demolitions – are counter-productive. And that begs its own
question.
Has the sickening self-righteousness of Israel’s
leaders made them dangerously stupid or do they really want an
escalation of Palestinian violence to give them the pretext to go
for a final ethnic cleansing?
As I said in a contribution to Press TV’s news in
English, only the future will give us the answer to that question.
It is worth recalling that way back in 1998, a
year before he became Israel’s prime minister, former Defence
Minister Ehud Barak said the following to Gideon Levy in an
interview. “If I was a Palestinian at the right age I would have
joined one of the terrorist organisations at a certain stage.”
And still in my own mind is what was said to me in
early 1980 by then retired Major-General Shlomo Gazit, the very best
and brightest of Israel’s directors of military intelligence. Over
coffee one morning when I was acting as the linkman in a secret and
exploratory dialogue between Yasser Arafat and Shimon Peres (then
the leader of Israel’s main opposition Labour Party) and he was
advising Peres, Gazit said, “If we had been the Palestinians we
would have had our mini state a long time ago.”
He meant that they would have resorted to a well
planned and sustained terrorist campaign to push a majority of
Israel’s Jews to say to their government something like: “Enough is
enough. We can’t take any more of this. Make peace with the
Palestinians on terms they can accept.”
Israel’s existence is, of course, the most
dramatic proof of what can be achieved with well planned and
sustained terrorism. Israel was created mainly by Zionist terrorism
which drove out first the occupying British and then three-quarters
of the Arab population of Palestine.
When the Palestine Liberation Organisation did
resort to what could be called big time terrorism in the 1970s it
was for public relations purposes – to draw the world’s attention to
the Palestinian claim for justice.
For the record: Throughout his many years as
chairman of the PLO Arafat gave his reluctant approval to only one
terrorist operation – taking Israeli athletes hostage at the Munch
Olympics in 1972. That operation was masterminded by Abu Iyad, the
head of Fatah’s intelligence service, but killing the Israeli
athletes who were taken hostage was not part of his plan. As agreed
with Egypt’s President Anwar Sadat, the captured Israeli athletes
were to be flown to Cairo and released in exchange for the release
of Palestinian prisoners. That, plus the public relations benefit of
the operation, would have been enough for Abu Iyad and his Fatah
leadership colleagues.
The Israeli athletes were killed because Israel’s
then defence minister, Moshe Dayan, insisted on a shoot-out at
Furstenfeldbruck Airport before the captured Israeli athletes could
be transferred to the plane that was supposed to take them to Cairo.
When Prime Minister Golda Meir told me that story she said Dayan had
threatened to resign if she didn’t allow him to authorise a
shoot-out in Germany. She herself was opposed to it because she
didn’t want one more Israeli life to be lost.
In my view, a well planned and sustained terror
campaign has never been an option for the Palestinians because (as
they know) it would give Israel’s leaders the pretext to go for a
final round of ethnic cleansing.
But it is likely that as more and more
Palestinians are driven to total despair, more Israeli Jews will be
attacked and killed. (In addition to an extensive network of
Palestinian informers, Israel has very sophisticated surveillance
technology, but that won’t prevent individual Palestinians taking a
decision to attack and kill on the spur of a despairing moment with
whatever weapon – a car, a knife or gun – is available.)
If and as that happens, the chants of “Death to
the Arabs” from mobs of illegal and truly deluded Jewish settlers
will grow louder and louder throughout occupied East Jerusalem and
the West Bank. And the government of Israel will bow to their
wishes.
Alan Hart has been engaged with events in the
Middle East and their global consequences and terrifying
implications – the possibility of a Clash of Civilisations,
Judeo-Christian v Islamic, and, along the way, another great turning
against the Jews – for nearly 40 years…
http://www.alanhart.net