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Onslaught in Gaza:
Why the Status Quo is a Precursor for War
By
Ramzy Baroud
February
11, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- It is not true that only three wars have taken
place since Hamas won parliamentary elections in
2006 in the Occupied Palestinian Territories. Other
wars that were deemed insignificant or ‘skirmishes’
also took place. Operation Returning Echo in March
2012, for example, killed and wounded over 100
people. But since the death toll, relative to the
other major onslaughts seemed trivial, it was not
cited as ‘war’, per se.
According
to this logic, so-called operations Cast Lead
(2008-9), Pillar of Defense (2012) and the deadliest
of them all, Protective Edge (2014) were serious
enough to be included in any relevant discussion,
especially when the prospective new Israeli war on
Gaza is considered.
It is
important to denote that most of the media,
mainstream or other, adheres to Israel’s
designations of the war, not those of Palestinians.
For example, Gazans refer to their last
confrontation with Israel as the ‘Al-Furqan Battle’,
a term we almost never hear repeated with reference
to the war.
Observing
the Israeli war discourse as the central factor in
understanding the war against the Resistance
surpasses that of language into other areas. The
suffering in Gaza has never ceased, not since the
last war, the previous one or the one before that.
But only when Israel begins to mull over war as a
real option, do many of us return to Gaza to discuss
the various violent possibilities that lie ahead.
The
problem of relegating Gaza until Israeli bombs begin
to fall is part and parcel of Israeli collective
thinking – government and society, alike. Gideon
Levy, one of the very few sympathetic Israeli
journalists in mainstream newspapers wrote about
this
in a recent article in Haaretz.
“The
addiction to fear and the eternal wallowing in
terror in Israel suddenly reminded one of the
existence of the neighboring ghetto,” he wrote in
reference to Gaza and
sounding of Israeli war drums. “Only thus are we
here reminded of Gaza. When it shoots, or at least
digs … (only then) we recall
In fact,
Israel’s exceedingly violent past in Gaza does not
hinge on Hamas’ relative control of the
terribly poor and besieged place, nor is it, as
per conventional wisdom, also related to
Palestinian factionalism. Certainly, Hamas’
strength there is hardly an incentive for Israel to
leave Gaza alone, and Palestinians’ pitiful
factionalism rarely help the situation. However,
Israel’s problem is with the very idea that there is
a single Palestinian entity that dares challenge
Israel’s dominance, and dares to resist.
Moreover,
the argument that armed resistance, in particular,
infuriates Israel the most is also incorrect.
Violent resistance may speed up Israel’s
retaliation and the intensity of its violence, but
as we are currently witnessing in the West Bank,
no form of resistance has ever been permissible,
not now, not since the Palestinian Authority was
essentially contracted to control the Palestinian
population, and certainly not since the start of the
Israeli military occupation in 1967.
Israel
wants to have
complete monopoly over violence, and that is the
bottom line.
A quick scan of Israel’s history against
Palestinian Resistance in all of its forms is
indicative that the Israel vs. Hamas narrative has
always be reductionist, due partly to it being
politically convenient for Israel, but also useful
in the Palestinians’ own infighting.
Fatah,
which was Palestine’s largest political party until
Hamas won 76 out of the legislative council’s 132
seats in the early 2006 elections, has played a
major rule in constructing that misleading
narrative, one that sees the past wars and the
current conflict as an exclusive fight between
Hamas, as political rival, and Israel.
When seven
of Hamas fighters were recently killed after a
tunnel collapsed – which was destroyed during the
2014 war by Israel and was being rebuilt –
Fatah issued a statement that appeared on
Facebook. The statement did not declare solidarity
with the various resistance movements which have
operated under horrendously painful circumstances
and unremitting siege for years, but chastised the
‘war merchants’ – in reference to Hamas – who,
according to Fatah, “know nothing but burying their
young people in ashes.”
But what
other options does the Resistance in Gaza actually
have?
The unity
government which was agreed on by both Fatah and
Hamas in the Beach Refugee Camp agreement in the
summer of 2014 yielded no practical outcomes,
leaving Gaza with no functioning government, and a
worsening siege. That reality, for now, seals the
fate of a political solution involving a unified
Palestinian leadership.
Submitting
to Israel is the worst possible option. If the
Resistance is Gaza was to lay down its arms, Israel
would attempt to recreate the post-1982 Lebanon war
scenario, when they pacified their enemies using
extreme violence and then entrusted their
collaborating allies to rearrange the subsequent
political landscape. While some Palestinians could
readily offer to fill that disreputable role, the
Gaza society is likely to shun them entirely.
A third
scenario in which Gaza is both free and the
Palestinian people’s political wishes are respected
is also unlikely to materialize soon, considering
the fact that Israel has no reason to submit to this
option, at least for now.
“To date,
Israel and Palestinian Authority security forces
have succeeded in scuttling most of Hamas’ schemes,”
he wrote, referring to his allegations that Hamas is
attempting to co-opt the ongoing uprising in the
West Bank.
In one of
several scenarios he offered, “The first is that a
successful Hamas attack in the West Bank will spur
an Israeli response against the group in Gaza, which
will lead the parties into a confrontation.”
In most of
Israeli media analyses, there is almost total
disregard for Palestinian motives, aside from some
random inclination to commit acts of ‘terror.’ Of
course, reality is rarely close to Israel’s
self-centered version of events, as
rightly pointed out by Israeli writer Gideon Levy.
After
his most recent visit to Gaza, Robert Piper, UN
envoy and humanitarian coordinator for the Occupied
Territories, left the Strip with a grim assessment:
only 859 of homes destroyed in the last war have
been rebuilt. He blamed the blockade for Gaza’s
suffering, but also the lack of communication
between the Ramallah-based government and Hamas
movement in Gaza.
“There’s no
changes to the underlying fragility of Gaza,” he
told AFP, and the situation “remains on a frankly
disastrous trajectory of de-development and
radicalization, as far as I can tell.”
Of the
blockade, he said, “It is a blockade that prevents
students from getting to universities to further
their studies in other places. It’s a blockade that
prevents sick people from getting the health care
that they need.”
Under these
circumstance, it is difficult to imagine that
another war is not looming. Israel’s
strategic, political and military tactics, as it
stands today, will not allow Gaza to live with a
minimal degree of dignity. On the other hand, the
history of Gaza’s resistance makes it impossible to
imagine a scenario in which the Strip raises a white
flag and awaits its allotted punishment.
– Dr.
Ramzy Baroud has been writing about the Middle East
for over 20 years. He is an
internationally-syndicated columnist, a media
consultant, an author of several books and the
founder of PalestineChronicle.com. His books include
‘Searching Jenin’, ‘The Second Palestinian Intifada’
and his latest ‘My Father Was a Freedom Fighter:
Gaza’s Untold Story’. His website is:
www.ramzybaroud.net.
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