Hard talk – Zionist occupiers…

April 20, 2010

Zionists occupiers… Heed my call

Like most people, I do believe in dialogue and civilized coexistence, like most people I long to live in dignity and freedom in my homeland, like most people I yearn for peace and justice for every human, like most people I like to foster loving and trusting relationships with all decent individuals; however, our problem with the Zionist occupiers is not about hate and distrust as they like to believe, it’s not about security as they constantly declare, nor is it about dialogue or lack of it thereof!

Our problem with them is not confined to the many aspects of your occupation, human right abuses, checkpoints, walls, collective punishment and assassinations.

The origin of our problem is as profound as a the roots of a fig tree, buried deep and covered up with piles of dishonesty and deceit, yet its fruits has the pungent taste of supremacy, arrogance, racism, dehumanization, theft, and war crimes, and no amount of fig tree leaves could conceal or beautify.

So, to unearth the core of the problem and spell the truth-out loud and clear, I am going to direct my words towards the Zionists of all shades and affiliations.
Furthermore, I am going to be to honest and blunt here; as the catastrophic situation that they have created does not stomach glossing over any longer

Zionist occupiers:

I must warn you; that what I am going to say is not going to be very pleasant, it will taste as bitter as the chilling years of your occupation, as cold as the barren roots of our uprooted olive trees, and as sour as the dry lips of dying babies at your military checkpoints.

My words will be parched, choking and hard to swallow; it will be as rigid and impervious as the cement of your apartheid wall

My words will smell of tear gas and burning flesh of infants while cuddled in their mothers’ arms after an air raid

My words will be burning hot like a bullet penetrating the head of a little boy as he picked a stone to throw at his oppressor

My words will be sizzling with blazing fire like the one ton bomb dropped from afar at a neighbourhood of sleeping women and children

My words will be gushing causing excruciating pain and discomfort because it stems from the depth of my wounded, distressed and agonised soul that was tormented by your people for the entirety of my existence.

So Zionist occupiers heed my words;

Our problem with you is not a “conflict” between two warring parties, who are similarly wrong and equally guilty as you shamelessly often describe… NO… NO… NO

The problem is one of aggression, oppression, colonization, theft, and occupation on your side, and one of being oppressed, exploited, and occupied on our side.

It’s one is of a crime of theft of a whole country and the ethnic cleansing of a whole nation by your people on the one hand and a displaced and dominated population on the other

It’s one of a CRIMINAL THIEF and a DISPOSSESSED VICTIM

To equate the two is nothing but an act of deception and a manifestation of moral bankruptcy.

A whole lot of your people came from ALL over the world, stole our homeland, dispossessed and expelled us, took over our homes and farms, destroyed our villages and history, occupied our country, oppressed those who stayed behind, killed and maimed who dared to demand their rights or attempted to assert their humanity, demonized and subjugated us to a racist, bigoted and ruthless set of laws that don’t apply to yourselves; then you come with chilling cold-heartedness and assert that both parties are equally guilty!!

Which planet are you living on?
By what principles do you abide?
What ethics do you follow?

Have you ever questioned the morality of your actions as multinationals who gave themselves the liberty to come to our homeland -which I am denied the right to live in- take it over by violence and bloodshed, then settle there on the ruins of the villages you’ve annihilated, dwelling in the homes of some dispossessed Palestinians, for no other justifications than the dominance of your Jewishness and the fact that we are not Jews?

Does that not smell of rotten racism, arrogance and supremacy to your clogged-up conscience?

The only crime that our people committed is that they existed on the land of their ancestors which you proclaimed as a God given-right to Jews only.

Your people have destroyed our culture, denied our existence as human beings, treated us for four generation with sheer cruelty, ruthlessness and contempt, and subjugated us to inconceivable savagery and humiliation, and denied us even the right to defend ourselves on our stolen Palestine under the pretext of “terrorism”

On top of all that your people have lied and lied, until they believed their own lies, you managed to brainwash yourselves with packs of cover-ups and masks of reality until truth became so blur and obscured, so much so that most of your people refuse even to acknowledge their own crimes of theft of a whole country and disposition of a whole nation

You stole the land of our ancestors and forefathers under the claim that some few thousands years back in history, some people who followed your religion have lived there, and apparently secured a contract with God affirming the eternal ownership of this land

How dare you give yourselves these abhorrent privileges of taking over someone’s home and homeland just because you belong to a particular faith?

What does an American Jew, a Russian Jew, an African Jew, a Japanese Jew, an Indian Jew or a German Jew has anything to do with the Land of Palestine?

If you think we are some kind of brainless retarded human beings who lack your “intelligence”, “emotions” and “morality” and who would just disregard what happened to them sixty years ago, and who would be happy to live as your inferiors in their own homeland; you better think again

We are sick and tired of witnessing your crimes for decades on end
We are sick and tired of your deception, false claims and the pretence of innocence and victim-hood
We are sick and tired of your orchestrated peace processes and leading-no-where road-maps

What is needed at this stage is not dialogue and reconciliation, what is most urgently needed is to STOP ALL your incessant ugly racism, supremacy, aggression and assault, to put a halt to your crimes, and to take a serious look in the mirror as a whole “population” and see what monsters have you become!

You need to address within your immoral and utterly sick society the obscene injustices you’ve inflected upon us
You need to deal with the hideous, corrupt, aggressive, militarized and wicked society that you have become

Before worrying about hate and distrust that engulfs you, you aught to be worrying about the crimes of your people and the injustices they have committed -and still committing- and how to facilitate for justice to run its course, and how to restore back the rights of millions that you have violated.

That requires an inner reflection of you as a whole people, it requires an honest and sincere look within yourselves, serious questioning of the “history” that you were taught, a bursting of the bubble that you are living in, it requires that you stop all your acts of aggression, theft of land, humiliation, murder, and destruction of our community, and above all, it requires that you step down from the high ground that you placed yourselves on, and be prepared to GIVE UP ALL the privileges that you have bestowed upon yourselves by the “virtue” of your Jewishness!

It also requires restoring our rights back including the right of return of all refugees, AND the compensation to ALL those who suffered from your Frankenstein creation of the racist Zionist entity.

To those blood-soaked criminals who come frothing with fake words of peace but get incensed and infuriated when they hear the word justice, I would say:

Masters of lies and dishonesty

I would like to see you talking to the Nazis who abused you without asking them to acknowledge their crimes

I would like to see how you respond to those who deny the holocaust

I would like to see you turning a blind eye to Hitler’s crimes and moving forward without asking for justice or compensation

Masters of terror and deceit

How do you want us to move on with out YOU acknowledging your crimes of theft, ethnic cleansing and genocide, yet you demand that the whole world acknowledges the crimes of Hitler against you?

Masters of arrogance and conceit

How could you deny our Catastrophe and your responsibility for it, yet insist and make sure that anyone who even doubts (let alone denies) the holocaust or the number six millions has to pay severely by imprisonment and loss of livelihood and even life?

Masters of mischief and evil doing

God had sent you many warnings; that you do not transgress or do mischief in the land, but your arrogance, self interest, greed and supremacy are blinding you from seeing the evil you are doing

Instead of acknowledging your crimes and establishing justice, you are still in a state of total denial, carried away with more crimes, more lies, and suppression of truth

Instead of repentance and accepting that you have wronged us, you try to silence our faint voices causing more deception, concealing the truth and sinking deeply in the abyss of immorality and wickedness

Your Jewishness, your self interest, your love of material gains and you drunkenness by power is what you worship now not the God of goodness, peace and justice

My warning to you now is the same warning given to your ancestors by many prophets and prophetic voices:

You are descending deeper in the hole that you dug for yourselves by your evil deeds, your denial of truth, and by your inability to ask for forgiveness

The crimes that you have committed against us are indeed painful and agonizing, but it’s only done against our physical bodies, our souls are out of your reach and forever intact; however, it’s your own souls that you are disfiguring and destroying, if only you knew

Unfortunate, pitiable and deceived souls

You have lost your humanity and killed your own souls if only you could see

Unless and until you acknowledge your crimes and correct the wrongs you have committed there will be a dark bleak and desolate future awaiting for you

And this is not a threat; it is a promise

Mischief makers

They cry peace, but what they mean is war; they scream freedom but what they mean is enslavement; they shout democracy but what they mean is democracy for their own kind.

The Quran describes such people whose words contradict their deeds:

“And when it is said unto them: Make not mischief in the earth, they say: We are peacemakers only. Are not they indeed the mischief-makers? But they perceive not. (2:11-12)”

WARNING

“And We gave (Clear) Warning to the Children of Israel in the Scripture, that twice would they do mischief on the earth and will become tyrants and behave insolently with extreme arrogance.” (17:4)

“When the first of the warnings came to pass, We sent against you Our servants of mighty prowess: They entered the very inmost parts of your homes; and it was a warning (completely) fulfilled.” (17:5)

“Afterwards, we will give you a turn over them, and will grant you an increase of wealth and children; we will give you the upper hand.” (17:6)

“If you do good, it will be for your own benefit, but if you do evil, it will be against your souls. When the prophecy of your second transgression will come to pass, sadness will cover your faces. They (your enemies) will enter the mosque as they did the first time, they will wipe out all the gains you had accomplished.” (17:7)

“It may be that your Lord will have mercy on you, but if you revert to transgression, we will counter with retribution. We have designated hell as a final abode for those who conceal the truth.” (17:8)

The ONLY thing that could save you -arrogant zionists- from a bleak and painful future is to reverse your evil ways of oppression, arrogance and greed, and join the civilized world and behave like normal human beings with justice and compassion

But mischief makers perceive not
Posted by nahida the Exiled Palestinian at 5:24:00 PM 0 comments Links to this post


TO ALL EUROPEAN CITIZENS

March 8, 2010

The EU MEPs are meeting on 10 March to debate the Goldstone Report. I have just sent them the letter below (through e-mail). Please write similar letters to your EU representatives.

Dear Robert Sturdy, Richard Howitt, David Campbell Bannerman, Stuart Agnew, Geoffrey Van Orden, Andrew Duff and Vicky Ford,

I understand that the European MEPs are meeting on the 10th of March to discuss the implementation of what is now known as the Goldstone report. As you know, the credentials of Justice Goldstone are impeccable, so much so that one of the Israeli ministers has called him ‘propaganda proof’.

I am writing to urge you to support the immediate and full implementation of the Goldstone Report, and demand accountability for all violations of international law committed by Israel in its war on Gaza. The Goldstone report clearly states that the purpose of the operation in Gaza was to “punish, humiliate and terrorise the civilian population” of Gaza and accuses Israel of war crimes and possible crimes against humanity.

The Goldstone report follows on the heels of other reports of Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International, B’tselem not to mention criticism from the International Red Cross who is normally silent in such matters, who have all condemned Israel for its action in Gaza and called it a grave breach of international law.

The immediate consequence of not accepting this report was made clear when Justice Goldstone said in his report to the UN, that every time a report is published and no action follows, this ’emboldens Israel and her conviction of being untouchable’.

The broader consequences of inaction are likely to be further war crimes against Palestinians by Israel and a green light to every other state so inclined to treat the Geneva conventions and International law with impunity. Emboldened, Israel has already begun obstructing the work of Human Rights organisations and NGOs in Israel and the Occupied Palestinian Territories.

I will also urge you to support the unconditional, immediate and sustained opening of the crossings into Gaza, including from the sea. Official visitors from EU countries, including the new High Representative Catherine Ashton, should routinely include Gaza when visiting the region, to see the devastating effects of the two and a half year old blockade of Gaza and Operation Cast Lead.

The collective punishment of 1.5 million Palestinians in Gaza, which was severely tightened after the parliamentary election in the PA, is inhumane and illegal and must end.

Yours sincerely,


An internationally orchestrated outrage against Palestine

January 3, 2010

A beautifully researched and well sourced piece from Emilio Dabed demonstrating how the West is ensuring that a viable Palestinian state does not take shape. First published in http://www.scribd.com/doc/24560513/Decrypting-the-Palestinian-Political-CrisisXX

DECRYPTING THE PALESTINIAN POLITICAL CRISIS

OLD STRATEGIES AGAINST NEW ENEMIES

CHILE 1970-1973, PALESTINE 2006-2009

By Emilio Dabed*

“You said we’d never defeat them: On the contrary, we needed to help them defeat themselves. No

one is defeated from the outside; every defeat is internal…they have fallen into the whirlpool of

defeat, and it’s up to us to keep them going in this direction.”

Elias Khoury, Bab al-Shams

The explanations given by Israel to justify the onslaught on Gaza in last December were confused. The goals advanced by military and political Israeli apparatus varied, depending either on the person speaking or on the moment in which they were stated: from overthrowing the Hamas-led government and annihilating the movement, to putting an end to the launching of Hamas rockets from the Strip, to destroying Hamas’s military capabilities, to stopping the smuggling into Gaza, and so on.

However, none of these stated objectives were met. The Hamas government remains in Gaza.  Indeed, immediately after the cease fire was declared, the TV screens showed the Gaza police putting order on the streets while the armed resistance groups were firing rockets into Israel again. The message was clear: Hamas government holds power in Gaza, its capability to fire on Israel was far from being destroyed and the underground economy of Gaza continued to grow, becoming more and more sophisticated.

But despite these facts, the Israeli establishment triumphantly declared that its war objectives were reached1 The only way to reconcile facts and the Israeli public position and to decrypt the current Palestinian crisis is to expose the main aim and the strategy behind the “war on Gaza”. How do we reconcile these statements with the reality? Should weinterpret it as a sort of “cognitive dissociation”, a tendency to hold as “reality” what is constantlybelied by the facts? Indeed this is a resilient historical trend in Israeli policy. However, there is another possible explanation: the objective may have been different, one that had more important and far-reaching consequences than simply overthrowing the Hamas government or obtaining some provisory gains – an objective that Israelis could not openly admit without contradicting its supposed stance – widely spread by Israeli propaganda- of “self-defense” and its eagerness for a “just and lasting peace”.

The objective of the assault was to consolidate the results of a campaign initiated long time ago during the Oslo agreements period itself: once and for all, to turn the Palestinian national movement into an unthreatening one and the Palestinian Authority (PA) into a mere administrator of the occupation with dictatorial trends. The strategy was based on deepening the division within the Palestinian camp and delegitimising both armed and non violent resistance as viable political options.

The long term prospect was clear: to force never-ending negotiations during which, due to its position of power, Israel could continue to create “facts on the ground” and impose its conditions to secure its expansionist idea of “Eretz Israel” (“Great Israel”), without paying any serious cost. One could argue that there is nothing new in this idea and that this has been the Israeli objective for the last five decades. Nonetheless, a closer examination of the situation sheds light on one significant difference, a difference that had forced Israel to change its strategy after the signing of the Oslo Agreements and at the same time better explains its current policy. Before the Oslo accords, Israel’s approach was almost purely a military one: to destroy those who Israel did not even recognize as Palestinians but as “Arab terrorists”.2

This response was the very terms of the Oslo process and its practical application. The political mainstream of PLO (fundamentally Fatah leadership The infamous sentence of Golda Meir epitomized this idea: “there is no such a thing as Palestinians”. But the Oslo agreements put the Palestinian national movement back in some part of historic Palestine and made inexorable a political solution for its claims. To be sure, the only meaningful concession made by Israel in Oslo was to recognize the existence of Palestinian people and their claim as a political issue, something that it had flatly denied since 1948. Ever since Oslo, the Israeli approach has been accompanied by a “new Israeli strategy”.

The military stance became insufficient. Israel could no longer simply kill Palestinians or expel them from occupied territory, but rather, it had to find a political response as well.3) had been seduced by “the trap ofstatehood”: a hollow Israeli promise of an independent Palestinian state under unacceptable conditions. It tore down the Palestinian national movement and was meant to deepen the division in the years to come. The main condition of the Oslo agreements for any Israeli concession was to “deliver security for Israel”, namely, to renounce and repress resistance. Fatah (that is to say PLO) under the leadership of Arafat abided to this rule and formally renounced armed struggle, started repressing Palestinian resistance and bet everything on political negotiations.4

By 2006 Israel was half way towards its objective. The PLO had virtually disappeared and, in practical terms, was replaced by the PA as the head of Palestinian national movement. The Fatah leadership in the PA was no longer a part of Palestinian resistance and was keen to accept an “Israeli solution to the conflict”. Only one major player, Hamas, continued to reject Israel’s unilateral solution, with a strategy of armed resistance and political negotiations. But, Hamas was no longer a political minority as a movement of resistance. It had become a political party with solid and wide popular support. In January 2006, it obtained a sweeping victory in the Palestinian legislative elections and was thus constitutionally authorized to form the next PA government.

This unexpected development created a major crisis for Israel, Fatah and the U.S. administration.  The fair and free elections had delivered an “Islamic-led government” that openly challenged Israel’s unilateralism, Fatah’s own political and economic privileges, and U.S. foreign policy. Hence to confront this new scenario, these three parties turned to history, employing old strategies against new enemies.

To avoid the embarrassment of openly disrespecting the results of the elections, Israel, the PA and U.S. -albeit with different objectives- united and devised a “new strategy” of destabilization, propaganda and political and military plot against a democratically elected government. The U.S. is an expert in this technique, having used it at will around the world during the “cold war”.  At then time, it was used against left wing social movements seeking political and social reforms. South America, for example, had to suffer a long history of civil wars, strong divisions and dictatorships as a result of these tactics. The strategy was always the same: political and economic destabilization, propaganda and military aggression.

What happened with Hamas since its electoral victory in 2006 until the aggression of Gaza in 2008-2009 can be analyzed through the South American experience. The case of Chile in the period of 1970-1973 is an appropriate parallel. While the political context differed, in both Chile and Palestine, a plan of sabotage was set up, uniting foreign powers to internal groups to destabilize a democratically elected government. While the objectives in the two contexts were not identical, there were key similarities. As in Chile the plan culminating in the 1973 coup d’état intended to destroy the social movement and turn it into a functional part of a new economic and social structure, the sabotage of the Hamas-led government ending in the Israeli aggression on Gaza should be seen as a culminating act by the Israeli establishment to increase and consolidate the state ofdivision, inactivity and self-defeat within the Palestinian movement. By so doing, Israel sought to eliminate resistance as a political option by forcing Palestinians, and specifically Hamas, to become a functional part of the structure of cooperation of the PA or to assume the consequences. The aggression’s objectives were not military but political.

This article intends, through the Chilean comparison, to show that the Fatah-Hamas conflict does not represent a novelty but, rather, the application of an old strategy against a new enemy. It should help us to decrypt the internal dynamic of division and fighting that reins today in the Palestinian political landscape and allow to discard any ‘essentialist’ explanations of the conflict.  In contrast to the way in which many may have started thinking about the issue, the internal crisis is not about a supposed “Palestinian politics” rooted in an essential “Palestinian character”, but about “politics in Palestine”: the current Palestinian deadlock has internal and external political causes and dynamics that can be identified and analyzed. We turn to the Chilean parallel to shed light on this.

When former Socialist President Salvador Allende Gossens was democratically elected in Chile in 1970, the U.S. President, Richard Nixon, gave the order to “Make the (Chilean) economyscream” and to reverse, by ‘political or military means’, the results of the elections.

THE CHILEAN CASE: or How to Convert Marxists Revolutionaries into Docile Administrators5

But, the Chilean case was a special one. Allende’s government was one of the first socialist governments to be democratically elected into office. Indeed, this feature had been perhaps the most symbolic pillar of the political platform of this government: the ‘Chilean (democratic) way to socialism’.

The world was witnessing one of the peak moments of the “cold war”. The West’s foe at the time was the left wing and progressive movements, which were ‘imperiling U.S. economic interests around the globe’. The war in Vietnam had been a complete fiasco. The young Cuban revolution had survived all the North- American onslaughts (Bahia Cochinos failed invasion, sabotages, plots, propaganda campaigns and the long-lasting economic blockage). From the lens of U.S. foreign policy, there was no room for another Cuba.

Despite this fact, the Allende government was not spared a systematic U.S.-Chilean-right- wing plot to overthrow it. The multi fold plan included restrictions on President’s constitutional powers, severe economic boycott, activities of propaganda, political destabilization and a militaryintervention.6 A backbone of this strategy was the theory of the “internal enemy”. This was a central element of U.S. foreign policy in the region. It was taught first to the South American officers receiving U.S. military instruction and, then, spread around the population through the media and political campaigns. The theory was that there existed an international communist plot, which used local political parties to bring about communist dictatorships, and which aimed to destroy the culture, tradition of freedom and other founding values. Thus, the political conflict was turned into an existential one. The Chilean conservative forces started seeing the popular movement as a deadly threat not only to their economic power but also to their very existence. Now, any means were appropriated to defend themselves.  Each step was to prepare the field for a coup d’état, which was to be presented to the world as the only solution for an ‘unsolvable and dangerous conflict’ between “communism and freedom”.

A second element of the strategy was curtailment of the President’s constitutional powers. In 1970, Allende was elected in a very tight electoral fight. He obtained 36.3% of the votes compared to 35.8% by his closest right wing opponent. Since none of the parties had reached the absolute majority to be directly elected, Congress had to choose the new president. The constitutional tradition had been one where Congress nominated the candidate who won the highest number of votes. In this case it was Allende. Nonetheless, he was subjected by Congress to special conditions. To be nominated, the congress demanded that Allende sign a document that would restrict his range of maneuver, the “Estatuto de Garantias Constitucionales” (Statute of Constitutional Guarantees).

Shortly after the new government came into office, economic boycott measures were put in place. Loans to Chile were frozen and the country could no longer provide the most basic supplies for its economy. The main international financial institutions along with Chilean and North American companies participated in the economic boycott, by cancelling financial projects and interrupting supply to the Chilean economy. Aid was maintained for only one purpose: support for social or political organizations that were strongholds for anti-Allende activity, including the military.

Meanwhile, a propaganda campaign was carried out in full force against the government. During and after the elections, U.S. and the right wing dominated Chilean newspapers spread false stories to create fear in the population and alienate Allende’s political support: ‘the socialist government was receiving orders from Cuba and the Soviet Union’; ’children will be sent to Cuba and their parents to concentration camps’; and ‘the government was preparing to turn Chile into a dictatorship of proletariat without public freedoms or rights’. This campaign fueled fear, hatred as well as internal social and political divisions. This propaganda machinery was well-financed by CIA and other institutions, and meanwhile the government was not even able to finance its basic social projects.

In addition, a parliamentary coalition (of right wing-Christian Democrats) was formed to block the President’s political initiatives. In 1972, a strong political campaign against members of government was initiated. The opposition parliamentary coalition had the majority to dismiss the ministers. In three years, Allende had to form six governments. This state of affairs was to be exacerbated by an increasing militarization of the conflict, chiefly by substantial increases in material support to the Chilean military. Thousands of high officers of the Chilean army had been trained and introduced to the theory of the “internal enemy”.  In the same way, the CIA armed, trained and supported the most radical reactionary forces within the Chilean right wing.

The strategy yielded fruits. An unprecedented social and political conflict lead to a total destabilization of the country: People queuing for bread and the most basics supplies; clashes between political factions; strikes; incendiary speeches; calls for armed actions from both sides and accusations of sedition and treason; political assassinations; and bombing of bridges, railways and other public facilities.

In this scenario, calls from the Chilean right wing for direct intervention by the army escalated. Preparations needed to be made for such an intervention. A key element of this was the unveiling of a fabricated document in August 1973, the so called “plan Z” masterminded by the CIA and Chilean right-wing. The document supposedly revealed that the left wing was planning to physically liquidate thousands of officers and their families, whose names were listed in it. It spread panic in military ranks and consolidated support for a coup d’état at all levels of the army. Now, it was only a matter of time and coordination.

Considering the overall state of affairs in the country, Allende decided to call for a referendum to allow the population to decide on the future of his government. The date to call for the referendum was set for September 12th, 1973. But the U.S.-Chilean right wing alliance was at unease. The latest legislative elections in March 1973 showed that the government’s coalition had strong popular support. The right wing alliance had no interest in an electoral exercise, which could further consolidate Allende’s power.

At dawn on September 11, 1973, military actions were undertaken in the capital, Santiago. A military “junta” claimed that it had assumed power over the government and declared the state of emergency. The presidential palace was surrounded by the army and the “Junta” demanded that the President surrender. These demands received a flat rejection from Allende who, in a final speech from the presidential palace, declared that he would rather die than give up his popular mandate. The “junta” ordered the bombing of the presidential palace by the air force. By the end of the day, the Chilean democracy was broken, the government was overthrown and Allende himself was dead. Thousands of people were arrested, tortured, killed and others disappeared. Thousands of others were exiled.

A new dictatorial military government was installed headed by General Augusto Pinochet. It constituted a strong alliance between military forces and the Chilean right wing widely supported by the U.S. administration. U.S. support for the new government was immediate. Even within days after the coup d’état, people no longer had to queue for food. Supplies to the Chilean economy resumed and international credits were again made available for the “new Chilean government”. Most of the legal, economic and political measures undertaken by Allende’s government were undone. After a few years, more comprehensive economic and legal reforms were undertaken, including total economic liberalization.  Throughout its period in power, the military “Junta” also put in place a repressive political and social regime.  Social movements were repressed, labor unions weredismantled and political parties were forbidden.

The Chicago School of Economics and its neo-liberal principles were to serve as the guide to the path of economic reforms. The military government was especially successful in ensuring profits for multinational enterprises and the upper economic class of Chilean society. Meanwhile, the poorer segments of the population were left to pay the high price for economic adjustment of the country. The political elite in Chile (both the right and left) -which is rooted in the economic elite- benefited from the flourishing of big businesses. Former revolutionaries became managers of international and local companies. Others undertook their own industrial or commercial ventures or became economic or political consultants. The left wing elite became a dynamic part of the Chilean business world and deepened its ties with the economic right wing and with the new Chilean economic system.

The country’s economy was now privatized, opened to the international trade and displayed as an economic model for South America. Its macroeconomic rates improved all throughout the 1980s, only with the exception of salaries, the distribution of the country’s wealth and poverty. In 1980, the process initiated in 1973 was to be sealed with the promulgation of a new political Constitution that was approved in a doubtful electoral process. The legal text sanctified the ideological principles carried forth by the dictatorship and its right wing supporters: a neoliberal economy and a conservative “protected democracy” that assured political over-representation of the right wing and gave to it a power of veto over all major political or economic reforms in the country.

Following the referendum of 1989, democracy was restored in Chile in 1990. But, the worldhad changed significantly, most notably with the demise of the Soviet Union. The Chilean left completely abandoned its former programme. The left political elite was by now fully incorporated into the neoliberal economic system and was enjoying significant material benefits. This trend was to be deepened after some years in office. The center-leftist coalition that has ruled the country for almost nineteen years has been a mere administrator of the former military government’s political and economic legacy. The 1980 constitution is the only law in the land and social movements seem to be contained within a neoliberal and conservative status quo.

“My fear is that treason will become an opinion.”

HAMAS, A NEW ENEMY: Chile, the Old Solution

Abu Jihad

As Allende in Chile, the electoral victory of Hamas in January 2006 was historical. For the first time in the Arab world, an Islamic movement was democratically elected to parliament and the time in the Arab world, an Islamic movement was democratically elected to parliament and the government. It was as well a political event fraught with important potential consequences. Their victory was threatening for Fatah-PA, Israel, the neighboring Arab authoritarian regimes and for the U.S’s. “New Middle East” conception.

Each of these actors had different reasons to ensure the failure of a Hamas-led government. Fatah leadership wanted the Hamas government to be overthrown to recover PA institutional power and unhindered access to PA financial funds and commercial interests. Neighboring Arab countries were disturbed with the presence of a democratically elected “Islamic government” at their doors while they were repressing their own “Islamists” at home. Moreover any outward support to Hamas were disturbed with the presence of a democratically elected “Islamic government” at their doors while they were repressing their own “Islamists” at home. Moreover any outward support to Hamas would disrupt their relations with Israel and the West, whose financial support they are dependent on. For the pro-Israeli Bush administration, getting rid of Hamas was framed within its mantra of the “war on terror” and as part of its unconditional support to Israel. For Israel itself, it was a chance to further debilitate the Palestinian movement by strengthening division to unexpected levels and toliquidate it politically, from inside.

Dealing with this new Palestinian political landscape required the re-deployment of a proven and efficient strategy. The Chilean formula was to be reapplied: An alliance between a Palestinian internal group and foreign powers was formed and a plan was set up, which included severe economic boycott, activities of propaganda, political and social destabilization and military intervention. Once again, each element of the plan was meant to prepare the field for a coup d’état, which was to be presented to the world as the only solution for an ‘unsolvable and dangerous conflict’ this time between “moderates” and “fundamentalism”.

FATAH LEADERSHIP: or How to Turn Liberation Fighters into Docile Administrators of an Occupied

Non-State

The Palestinian equivalent of the Chilean right wing – the internal group which allied itself with foreign powers in support of de-stabilization – turned out to be Fatah-PA leadership itself. Even before the new democratically elected Hamas government took office, an alliance between this internal group, Israel, U.S. and other countries started working to prevent Hamas from governing.7

The co-optation of this group started during Oslo. At the time, Fatah leadership agreed to a key Israeli condition of “delivering security” to obtain advances in the negotiations, knowing well the benefits and privileges they would in turn receive with the establishment of the PA. The PA leadership’s first step was to silence its closest political opposition. It progressively sidelined the PLO, which was left languishing and only reactivated, when necessary, to “legitimize” Fatah-PA political decision-making. PLO outsiders suffered from military and political repression. All forms of resistance, especially armed struggle to Israel, were contained. The main target was Hamas, whose members became intimately familiar with PA jails, and were subject to political harassment and torture.

Years of heading the PA in these terms led a part of the Fatah leadership to deviate from the struggle for national liberation into becoming auxiliary instruments of a lasting occupation. During its time in office, the Fatah-PA leadership developed strong political and economic incentives to maintain its subservient relationship with Israel.8 The death of Arafat unveiled this reality. In exchange for Western and Israeli support to keep political and economic power in its hands, the new Abbas leadership agreed to renounce all forms of resistance both armed and non violent9. The PA tightened the intelligence and military cooperation with Israel in order to fight and disarm its internal opponents. Fatah started with its own armed branch in 2005. A core part of the Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades was asked to disarm with promises of amnesty from Israel and employment in the PA.

Though a significant number of members gave up arms, the Fatah-PA leadership did not meet itspromises. To make sure that the new orders had been understood, the PA set up a new rule for its security forces: In the case that a Palestinian soldier was killed in a confrontation with the Israeli military, his family would not receive his salary after his death as was the case before10

The 2006 Hamas victory came as something of a shock for the Fatah leadership. Its political and economic interests were seriously threatened. Therefore, Fatah tried, at the price of Palestinian unity, to hold political power through a variety of tactics.  This included breaching the constitutional framework that some years ago a Fatah parliament had approved and participating in a political and military plot to deprive Hamas of its electoral victory. Within the Fatah leadership, Israel and the U.S. had found their allies to accommodate their own agendas.

CONSTITUTIONAL AND LEGAL MEASURES: Restricting the Power of the Hamas Government

As in the case of Chile, a range of constitutional and legal measures were adopted to restrict powers of the elected government even before it came into office. Foreseeing a potential victory for Hamas in the legislative elections, Fatah parliament members introduced a proposition for constitutional amendments during a meeting of the parliament in 200511 After the elections, the outgoing Fatah government and parliament did pass several measures to undermine the capabilities of the new Hamas-led government. They amended the law of PIF (Palestinian Investment Fund) so as to exclude the government from representation on the Board and transfer PIF oversight under the President’s office. By so doing, they limited the access of the new government to a large part of PA financial resources; the budgetary law was amended aswell to prevent the new government from resorting to the Palestinian Monetary Authority; On 13 February 2006 the law of the Palestinian Constitutional Court was passed.  This law, whose passage had been stalled for several years, was now approved with some last minute amendments that gave increased powers to the President to nominate its members. In one of its last meetings, the Fatah-led outgoing PLC created new administrative posts in the PLC and appointed Fatah people to them; main official Palestinian media were transferred to the oversight of the President’s office; the Presidency reinforced its prerogatives and security powers undoing most of the security sector reforms that had been launched after the creation of the Prime Minister post in 2003.

The proposition tried to strengthen the President’s legislative powers; to give the President the power to call for referendum and the right to call for early elections (dissolving the PLC) under several scenarios, some of which strikingly resembled situations that transpired after the election of Hamas. But the amendment was not approved, perhaps reflecting the overconfidence that Fatah still had at the time regarding the elections. A few days before the elections the motion was re-introduced but, on two occasions, the parliamentary quorum was not reached. Apparently Fatah members were too absorbed in their campaigns. 12

ECONOMIC BOYCOTT: Making the Palestinian Economy Scream

The economic boycott was also a central element of the destabilization plan in Palestine, as it had been after the victory of Allende in Chile. In fact, the Israelis made no efforts to even mask this objective. After election results in 2006, Dov Weisglass, an adviser to Ehud Olmert remarked nonchalantly: it [the planned boycott] will be “like an appointment with the dietician. Palestinians will get a lot thinner, but won’t die”.

The first movements from the U.S. and Israel took place immediately after the victory of Hamas in the elections. The Bush administration and other countries suspended financial aid until certain conditions were met: Hamas’s recognition of Israel and its “right to exist” (without demanding from Israel the acceptance of a Palestinian state), renunciation of violence (that is to say resistance) and acceptance of the terms of prior agreements between Israel and the PLO. Hamas rejected these conditions and international aid was completely frozen, with the exception, of course, of money directed to strongholds of anti-Hamas activity and the Fatah political and military apparatus. In June 2006, international donors created “TIM” (Temporary International Mechanism) and later “Pégase” to channel financial aid into Palestine by bypassing the Hamas government. No official international aid arrived to the Hamas government accounts.

Israel in its turn withheld all Palestinian clearance revenues that, under the Paris economic protocol, it collected on behalf of the PA. On the other hand, Israel maintained its draconian limitations on movement of the Palestinian population; it subjected the population of Gaza to a total siege, and arrested members of the government and more than 40 Hamas deputies, thereby completely paralyzing the Palestinian parliament.13

As in Chile, the boycott created economic crisis, political destabilization and social turmoil. The government could not meet its payroll, thousands of Palestinians did not get their salaries for months, demonstrations broke out, and armed inter-faction clashes took place. Public sector workers went on strike, the operations of most government institutions came to a halt, schools were closed, and medicines were in short supply.

The plan for the Palestinian “diet” was working well, except for the fact that Hamas government remained firmly in power. The U.S. administration tried to up the ante by opposing a Fatah-Hamas negotiation to form a national unity government. Simultaneously, it pressed the Palestinian President (Fatah) to dismiss Prime Minister Haniyeh’s (Hamas) cabinet.

Despite U.S. and Israeli pressures, Fatah and Hamas reached an agreement to form a national unity government on February 2007. Nevertheless international aid continued to be blocked and the Fatah-Hamas divide escalated.

THE INCREASING POLARIZATION: “Preparing the Palestinian Contras”

“…You are not here to confront Israel, the conflict with Israel has until now led nowhere. You must show the Israelis that you can do the job”. Former PA Interior Minister General Abdel Razak al Yahya speaking to young Palestinian recruits in a military training camp near Jericho. Confronted with a resilient Hamas that continued to hold power, the U.S. administration launched a plan for a coup d’état in 2007. Its objectives were to remove Hamas from power and replace it with a Fatah government that accepted Israeli-U.S. conditions. The plot14, codenamed “Plan B”, had several dimensions: security, economic, political and public relations. A first informal draft which lays out the foundations of the plan can be found in a document called “Talking Points”.

This document was a memo of the discussion, in October or November 2006, between the State Department envoy Jake Walles and the Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas. According to the document, “Hamas should be given a clear choice with a clear deadline…they either accept a new government that meets the Quartet principles, or they reject it…If Hamas does not agree within the prescribed time, you (Abbas) should make clear your intention to declare a state of emergency and form a emergency government explicitly committed to that platform…If you (Abbas) act along these lines, we will support you both materially and politically…”15 to deal with  the likely backlash from Hamas.

The details of the plan can be found in another document titled “An action plan for the Palestinian presidency” drafted by U.S., Jordanians and Palestinians officers16 To prepare for the move, Fatah started recruiting and training a new kind of military personnel and acquiring more sophisticated arms. Young men coming from humble social contexts were the main target of these efforts. The objective: to replace the old cadres who were considered “too politicized” and engaged in resistance against Israel with new troops trained in crowd control and counter insurgency in military camps in Jericho as well as in Jordan and Egypt. The idea was to form new security forces more loyal to orders from their superiors than to the principles of resistance against Israel.

Its security appendix reveals details of the secret talks between Palestinian Fatah strongman Muhammad Dahlan and Lieutenant General Keith Dayton. With the publication of this document the armed clashes between Fatah and Hamas re-commenced.

By this time, in early 2007, Palestinian society was confronting a major political crisis with features of a civil war. Strong Fatah-Hamas armed clashes were taking place and the PA President threatened to call for a referendum or early legislative elections. Rumors of an imminent coup d’état17 The action was ironically labeled by Fatah as a Hamas coup d’état. Abbas declared the state of emergency and dismissed Prime Minister Haniyyeh and his cabinet. In his place, the President appointed a new Prime Minister (Salam Fayyad) to form a government that completely excluded Hamas.  Hamas continued to hold power in Gaza. further poisoned the situation. In mid-May 2007, these fears took root with the arrival of 500 new Egyptian-trained recruits loyal to the Palestinian President. On June 7, the Israeli newspaper

Haaretz made public the fact that Abbas was negotiating with Israel for authorization to receive a heavier arms supply from Egypt. There were also rumors that Fatah was mobilizing troops towards Gaza.  Unlike the Chilean left, Hamas had prepared its troop for such event.  On 14 June 2007, in a pre-emptive measure, Hamas undertook military action resulting in a total takeover of all PA security and political apparatus in Gaza.

THEORY OF INTERNAL ENEMY: Fatah and Israel Fighting a Common Adversary

Following these June 2007 events, both factions launched their own media war. The theory of “the internal enemy” was aptly applied in Palestine, escalating the internal conflict to new levels. The rhetoric deployed depicted the conflict as one of deep ideological struggles and almost a cultural division, and by so doing, masked the political differences which were at the root of the conflict18.

From the Fatah side, the conflict was presented as a fight between a moderate, secular force (i.e. Fatah) against Islamic fundamentalism and terror (i.e. Hamas). Hamas was also accused of wanting to create an “Islamic regime” in the Palestinian territory.  From the Hamas side, accusations of corruption, collaboration with the enemy and treason were the main charges leveled against Fatah. The kind of hateful rivalry between the “brothers in arms” resembles in many aspects an ethnic cleavage: the enemy is described, once and for all, as an essential danger for one’s culture, identity or existence, when the conflict is in reality a more profane, political one19

The theory of “the internal enemy” proved efficient in terms of fuelling internal hatred and deepening divisions. A part of PA leadership and bureaucracy coordinates intelligence and military strategies with Israel and collaborates with occupation measures.  The PA and Israel share information to arrest Palestinian militants; new PA security forces are being trained in neighboring Arab countries and provided with weapons with the authorization of Israel; the Israeli army carries out military operations in the West Bank with the assistance and coordination of PA security forces. Its security appendix reveals details of the secret talks between Palestinian Fatah strongman Muhammad Dahlan and Lieutenant General Keith Dayton. With the publication of this document the armed clashes between Fatah and Hamas re-commenced. Furthermore, during PA-Israel meetings for intelligence and military coordination, some Fatah officers have even expressed their conviction of fighting a “common enemy”20

NEW FATAH GOVERNMENT: Authoritarianism without a State

The “Emergency Government” of Salam Fayyad created in June 2007 has been ruling the West Bank outside constitutional legality.21 Meanwhile, Abbas has been using a range of legal and extra-legal means to consolidate his power and marginalize Hamas politically. Currently, a long list of ministerial and presidential decrees governs the West Bank, excluding Hamas from the PA and repressing internal opposition and resistance to Israel.  Despite participation in several rounds of meetings with Hamas to solve the internal deadlock, PA-Fatah has concomitantly overseen a crackdown of Hamas in the West Bank. In all the major cities of the West Bank, the Abbas government has mobilized its forces; a “police quasi- state” has been set up, one which entails repression and arrest of dissidents; Hamas military forces are outlawed; Hamas-linked charitable NGO’s are closed; freedom of speech exists only in appearance; amendments to the law are made by presidential decrees, including the electoral law; and some efforts are made to renew the PLO as a way to bypass the paralyzed PLC. The final objective of all these measures is to prepare the field for legislative elections that will assure a Fatah victory.

Nevertheless, Israel, U.S. and the EU have given their total support and international financial institutions and donors have resumed aid for this government. Most recently, the Abbas government undertook the decision to withdraw its support – in the Human Rights Council of the United Nations- for the “Goldstone report”, which attempted to bring Israel to account for its crimes in Gaza.  This decision sent shockwaves in Palestinian society widening the internal division. Yet, tactics of fear and repression by the government, popular political demobilization, and lack of any serious opposition in the West Bank mean that the political consequences of even this decision will likely remain limited.

It is in this context, that Abbas’s regime has been hoisting its intention of negotiating an end to the internal Palestinian conflict. Maybe the fear of Abu Jihad is already a reality: treason has become an opinion from where one can negotiate.

GAZA AGGRESSION: Seeking a Real Victory on the Palestinian National Movement

“We have no solution, you shall continue to live like dogs, and whoever wishes may leave, and we will see where this process leads.”

Moshe Dayan

Ever since the events of June 2007, there are no longer only two main rival factions within the Palestinian national movement but two PA governments fighting against one another,  ironically for the pieces of a non-existent power.  The “trap of statehood” has seduced Hamas as well and is destroying the Palestinian national movement from the inside. Israel just “needed to help them defeat themselves”.  The motto was to deepen confrontation and division and “to keep them going in this direction”. The Israeli aggression in Gaza in 2008-2009 was undertaken to serve this purpose.

Fundamentally, the aim of the aggression was to bring the cleavages and divisions within the Palestinian political camp to a level of paroxysm. While in the case of Chile, the internal group had succeeded in the coup, in the case of Palestine they did not. After Fatah’s military failure in June 2007, Israel stepped in, albeit with different objectives. That is how the “war in Gaza” should be understood.

To be sure, annihilating Hamas movement was not a real objective of the “war”.  Hamas has become a mass movement and, in many ways, a real political party. To destroy it means to physically destroy a significant portion of the Palestinian population itself.  Otherwise, new militants would replace those who are killed, as was the case with Hamas’ leaders Ahmad Yassin, Abdelaziz Rantisi and many others. Israelis had learned this lesson on many occasions -the aggression of Lebanon in 2006 being the most recent. Hezbollah came out reinforced after 33 days of shelling, as Hamas has been reinforced now.  Today it is clearer than ever before that no possible solution to the Palestinian crisis can be found by ignoring Hamas.

The war on Gaza was also not made to stop Palestinian Hamas rockets.  Why would Israel provoke a war to obtain what it already had through political negotiations? In 2008, an Egyptian brokered unwritten cease-fire fundamentally comprised a bilateral end of fire and the lifting of the Israeli blockade of Gaza by opening the crossing points. Effectively, from June 19 to November 4, 2008, the number of rockets falling into Israel decreased significantly22. The Israeli Prime Minister’s spokesman even admitted that there were no Hamas rockets launched during the period23.  While Hamas maintained the cease fire between 19 June and 4 November24, Israel managed to kill a number of Palestinians during this period, never opened the crossing points nor extended the cease fire to the West Bank. Hamas was willing to renew the deal as long as Israel met its terms, and they let Israel know this25

This objective is to make Palestinians accept the Israeli political solution to the overall conflict: the “only Jewish Great Israel”. This plan completely disregards international legality and deprives Palestinian of their national rights. Israel rejects withdrawing to the 1967 armistice lines (UN resolution 242) and the return of refugees or their compensation (UN resolution 194). Israel refuses to give up East Jerusalem and only offers limited autonomy for several enclaves in the West Bank and Gaza without real sovereignty.

But Israel decidedly did not want a new deal.  It had many tactical reasons not to agree to a new cease fire but, chiefly, it saw a “war on Gaza” as a great opportunity to work towards its main objective. To succeed, Israel has to debilitate the Palestinian camp to the extent of forcing it to accept its unilateral and illegal solution. The aggression on Gaza was another step in this direction.

Nevertheless, Israel needed some Qassam rockets to fall into Israel in order to justify the aggression. It waited for the perfect moment to deliberately provoke Hamas fire. On November 4, Israel carried out a military operation killing 6 fighters, exactly at the moment when the world was absorbed in the U.S. elections. Israel’s actions received little media coverage. Subsequent to this provocation, rocket attacks commenced from the Gaza side. The Israeli propaganda machine could hence present its aggression as an act of “self-defense”.

The intentionally massive destruction of Gaza and the killing and wounding of thousands of Palestinians served Israeli strategy in two ways. First, it showed that Palestinian resistance has a high, potentially intolerable price. This was done by making the Palestinian civil population suffer a high human and material cost and then blaming Hamas for it. The strategy was in fact set down in Lebanon in 2006. Among Israeli circles, it was called the “Dahiya Doctrine”26: “…wield disproportionate power against every village from which shots are fired on Israel, and cause immense damage and destruction… This isn’t a suggestion. This is a plan that has already been authorized.”27

“The answer … is a disproportionate strike at the heart of the enemy’s weak spot, in which efforts to hurt launch capability are secondary…”28 The same military strategy was employed in Gaza. Every building was seen by the Israeli military as a potential target. The civil population could not feel safe anywhere. The Israeli forces bombed factories, police stations, radio and TV stations, warehouses, schools, hospitals, and other government facilities. The army instructed several members of one family to seek shelter in one building and then, less than 24 hours later, blew it up

The aggression in Lebanon in 2006 was actually disproportionate and immensely destructive. 29

There are a number of cases reported of civilians leaving their houses with white flags in their hands, to seek refuge elsewhere, when they were shot dead by the Israeli army30. Children, mothers and fathers had to witness the agony of their injured family members. People were under the rubble for days, while medical staff were prevented from reaching the wounded and were directly targeted by Israeli soldiers. The aim was multifold: to turn the situation for the civil population so intolerable that it would place enough pressure on Hamas to accept any Israeli deal; to create disincentives for a popular commitment to resistance by making sure that the population understood its consequences, i.e. a horrific death that Israel can inflict on them at any time; and finally to convert the Palestinian political struggle into a mere humanitarian crisis in international opinion31

In all certainty, this level of violence and destruction was premeditated and part of a larger strategy.32. It was about convincing the Palestinian camp that resistance will be squashed at any price and that there cannot be hope in resistance as a political option. The message went through:

Palestinian resistance can choose between submission and death. Put between the wall and the sword, Hamas seems to choose the sword. The rockets continued falling into Israel. This gesture will surely not be overlooked in Palestinian streets33

The second dimension of the strategy in Gaza was to deepen the divide within the Palestinian national movement and prevent Palestinian unity. It is for this reason that overthrowing the government in Gaza was not a priority for Israel. From the Israeli perspective, what is preferable? Having one strong Palestinian government more able to focus its efforts against occupation, or to have two Palestinian governments counteracting and delegitimizing each other? The political division in the Palestinian Territories has reached an unprecedented level, where there is no room for political trust or for patriotic loyalty. This crisis has shown that the two main Palestinian parties no longer consider themselves as mere political opponents but as enemies. In fact, Hamas recently raised the accusation that some Fatah-PA officers were helping and assisting the Israeli army during the bombing of Gaza.34

Solving this confrontation will take a very long and, meanwhile, the Palestinian national movement is stalling: with not one but several voices; without a clear programme or strategy; absorbed in the internal deadlock; loosing internal and international legitimacy; and unable to confront occupation in any meaningful way. Given the position of Fatah-PA after the legislative elections of 2006 and during the Gaza aggression, Hamas understands that it not only has to endure a strong political opposition from Fatah, but that it is their target for physical liquidation.

The situation cannot be better for Israel. We should expect it to continue pushing in the same direction. After the Gaza aggression, the Palestinian national movement came out more fragmented and debilitated than ever before. Indeed, the metaphor that best represents its current condition is to be found in the words of Umm Ibrahim who speaks of the loss of her children during the attacks:

“…My son Rakan was torn to pieces. No hands, no legs and even no face were left. My daughter Fidaa was as beautiful as the moon. Her clothes were torn like her body. She died in my hand. My elder son Ibrahim, I collected his body in a blanket and took him with me to the neighbors’ home. I went back for my daughter-in-law Eman; her face and legs were chopped and bloody and she kept asking me to call an ambulance. I have nothing in mind except what has happened to me. Everything is in my memory and I will never forget it all of my life. I am a mother who collected the fragments of her children.”

Who will now collect the fragments of the Palestinian national movement?

*The author is a lawyer, specialized in constitutional matters. He holds a Masters degree in Political Science and is currently finishing a Ph.D at IREMAM (Institut de Recherche et d’Etudes sur le Monde Arabe et Musulman, Aix-en-Provence, France) on the constitutional process in Palestine. He can be reached at emiliodabed@yahoo.fr.

“We have reached all the goals of the war, and beyond.” Ehud Olmert. Al Jazeera 1/18/2009. http://english.aljazeera.net/news/middleeast/2009/01/200911718127624660.html

For instance, in 1970 Israel took part in convincing King Hussein of Jordan to repress and expel PLO from his country. “Black September” left thousands of Palestinians dead. PLO reinstalled its HQ in Lebanon, but In 1982 Israel invaded Lebanon. Thousands more were killed and PLO fighters had to leave and re-establish its HQ in Tunis. On October 1, 1985, Israel attempted to kill Arafat with an air raid on his headquarters in Tunis. He survived, but 60 members of the PLO were killed.

In this article the expressions “The mainstream of PLO”, “Fatah leadership”, “Fatah-PA”, refer to a very select group of persons who were and, still today, are involved in PA decision-making. Indeed, Fatah is a party constituted by very diverse groups of people and it cannot be seen as a monolithic movement.

4 The Palestinian national charter was amended in 1996 to this aim.

CIA Director Richard Helms’s notes of a meeting with Nixon and other U.S. officers on the Chilean situation.  http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/NSAEBB/NSAEBB8/nsaebb8i.htm.

6 U.S. responsibility for the coup in Chile. http://www.namebase.org/chile.html. Also see http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/NSAEBB/NSAEBB8/nsaebb8i.htm

7 See Jean-François Legrain, L’IMPASSE POLITIQUE ET INSTITUTIONNELLE PALESTINIENNE, critique international N° 36, juillet-septembre 2007.

8 See for example “The Peace Business. Money and Power in the Palestine-Israel Conflict”, Markus E. Bouillon,I.B. Tauris, London, 2004; Mushtaq H.  Khan, State Formation in Palestine : Viability and Governance During A Social Transformation, Routeledge, July 2004; Peter Lagerquist, “Privatizing the Occupation: The Political Economy of an Oslo Development Process,” Journal of Palestine Studies, Vol.32, No. 2, 2003.

9 In the last political programme of the Fayyad government, the word resistance (Muqāwamah), a symbol in Palestinian political platforms, has completely disappeared.

10 Zakaria Al-Zubaidi, former commander in Martyrs al-Aqsa brigades, Haaretz, on April 13, 2008.

11 http://www.palestinianbasiclaw.org/wp-content/uploads/2008/02/2005-proposals.pdf

12 The rationale was to prevent Hamas from having control over the security apparatus. That is why Hamas government created a new security force, the Executive Force, in April 2006.

13 After that, the PLC was unable to convene since it lacked the quorum to do so. Fatah did not attend PLC meetings to prevent it from functioning and avoiding legislation contrary to their interests.

14 Vanity Fair, March 5, 2008. http://www.vanityfair.com/politics/features/2008/04/gaza_documents200804

15 “Talking Points”, http://www.vanityfair.com/images/politics/2008/04/gaza_Walles0804.pdf

16 The document was published in Jordan: « Khitta ‘Amaliyya li-l- Ri’âsa al-Filastîniyya li-‘am 2007 », al-Majd (Amman), On April 30, 2007.

17 Mark Perry, Paul Woodward, « Document details « U.S. » Plan to sink Hamas », Asia Times, 16 May 2007.

18 http://www.ynetnews.com/Ext/Comp/ArticleLayout/CdaArticlePrintPreview/1,2506,L-3446404,00.html#n

19 In interviews with the author, many Fatah supporters have communicated the instinctive hatred they bear for Hamas and tend to describe them as “politically fanatical, bloodthirsty and socially backward”.

20 http://www.ynet.co.il/english/articles/0,7340,L-3600099,00.html

21 The Palestinian Basic Law does not authorize any government to enter into office before receiving a vote of confidence from the PLC.  The Salam Fayyad government has never met this condition.

22 During the six months preceding the lull, 2,278 rockets and mortars were launched. During the cease fire and until November 4, 2008, a total of 20 rockets and 18 mortars were launched. http://www.terrorism- info.org.il/malam_multimedia/English/eng_n/html/hamas_e017.htm

23 http://www.youtube.com/watch?gl=GB&hl=en-GB&v=SILJxPTqjAM

24 “Hamas arrests Gaza rocket squad after two Qassams hit Negev.” Ha’aretz, 10/7/2008.

25 http://www.imemc.org/article/52046

26 Dahiya is a suburb of Beirut considered a Hezbollah stronghold. This place was severely destroyed during Israel’s attack on Lebanon in 2006.

27 Gadi Einsekot, commander of the Israeli military’s northern sector. Ha’aretz, October 5 2008.

28 Colonel (Res.) Gabriel Siboni, Ha’aretz, 5 October 2008.

29 Samouni family lost 29 members in a matter of seconds. Their case has been presented as one of the main legal cases against Israeli actions in Gaza.

30 Israeli soldiers expose atrocities in Gaza: http://electronicintifada.net/v2/article10411.shtml

31President Obama, in one of his few statements on the Gaza events said that he was“…deeply concerned by the loss of Palestinian and Israeli life in recent days, and by the substantial suffering and humanitarian needs in Gaza…”, without referring once to the occupation and its consequences. http://www.metimes.com/International/2009/01/23/arabs_weigh_obamas_words_to_assess_his_viewpoints/9992/

32 “Consent and Advise”, Haaretz, http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1059925.html

33 Recent opinion polls show that, as long as there is occupation, resistance will be one of the greatest sources of internal Palestinian political legitimacy.

34 http://electronicintifada.net/v2/article10266.shtml; JPOST.COM, February 9, 2009. “A Fatah friend writes: I’m supporting the Israel Air Force. http://jeffreygoldberg.theatlantic.com/archives/2008/12/


Samieh is out of house arrest

November 19, 2009

An e-mail I received from the “Friends of Samieh”

Good news! Some days ago, our friend Samieh Jabbarin was released from the house-arrest he had been held under for nearly ten months. He is back into his own life-routine, and to the ongoing struggle at court, where he is to be tried for the fabricated charges of assaulting a police officer at Um Al Fahm on the Knesset Election Day, February 2009.

His trial opens in January 2010.
Samieh’s letter follows:

Dear Friends,

For a start, I would like to thank every one of you personally for manifesting your solidarity with me while I was being held under house arrest. I often think that the impact of this solidarity on me goes way beyond mere gratitude. Especially because your letters and phone calls have, more than anything else, imparted sincerity and honesty. There is no doubt in my heart that having and feeling you around was a severe blow to the solitude I was meant to feel and experience during these long months.

Some of you I do not even know personally – a fact that has touched me all the more, knowing that personal acquaintance must not necessarily stand as a condition for human and political solidarity. Moreover this has opened a great door for new friendships and acquaintances. To say the least, considering that among the motivations standing behind imprisoning me and later putting me under house arrest was an attempt to isolate me from my friends and others, your solidarity has neutralized this repressive objective and given me a rather warm feeling of being free and among friends. Thank you for that.

Nevertheless, I was just one among thousands of Palestinians who more often than not, are prosecuted and harassed for no crime but claiming their natural right to practice protest against occupation, racism and discrimination.

Mohammad Othman, a Palestinian activist, was detained on 22 September 2009 at the Allenby Crossing as he attempted to return home to the Occupied West Bank from Jordan. To this day there are no official or specific charges against him except for the fact that he is a prominent Palestinian activist and an outspoken advocate of the nonviolent boycott, divestment and sanctions (BDS) movement in Palestine. In about a week it will be two months since he was arrested.

Thinking of the great solidarity I have been privileged to experience, I cannot think of any reason why other victims of political harassment should not get the same acknowledgement and recognition. In a way, they stand in the dark and cold for our sake. It is they who are punished, humiliated and tortured for trying to generate a change and a better reality. It is exactly that which makes them “dangerous” for the system. It is they who get thrown in cages where there are no rules but the rule of breaking the human spirit.

Mohammad Othman is one of the new numerous tragic cases of the harsh and inhumane reality that Palestinians experience day by day. There are more than 11,500 Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails. I think they all deserve our deep and consistent solidarity. Let us not stand aside and watch while human rights and human dignity get trampled.

Our solidarity will surely give Mohammad Othman and the other prisoners a real feeling of not being alone in their struggle. Let us be the ones who give them hope and strength to go on struggling for a better and a just reality.

Last but not least, I have to thank the great guys whose huge efforts made this solidarity campaign possible. It was rather a pretty small group but with amazing energies, conviction and vision. They have worked very hard to make my case widely known and recognized.

I owe them very much for that. So, Ira Avneri, Nurit Yaari, Tal Itzhaki, Tal Haran, Avraham Oz, Lena Ghanayem, Igal Azrati, Ofra Yeshua-Lyth thanks very much.

Let us raise our voices loud,

No Pasaran,

Your friend and comrade,

Samieh Jabbarin

Yafa, Palestine


Israel’s trade in Palestinian body parts

August 21, 2009

DF: Israel’s organ grinder
21/08/2009 03:00:00 PM GMT

After watching the Israeli army dumping white phosphorous on a civilian population, organ theft seems to be a ‘light crime’.

By Gilad Atzmon

A few weeks ago we learned about a ring of American rabbis who had been arrested in New Jersey on suspicion of trafficking human organ trafficking. Rabbi Levy Izhak Rosenbaum, we read, enticed “vulnerable people to give up a kidney for 10,000 U.S. dollars which he would turn around and sell for 160,000 dollars.” Not bad, I thought to myself then. We are living in hard times, financial melt down, credit crunch, Wall Street is licking its wounds, the car industry is evaporating. Seemingly, kidney trafficking is still booming.

In fact, the ring of rabbi in New Jersey didn’t take me by complete surprise. For years we have been hearing about Palestinians claiming that Israel is “deep into organ trafficking”. We also learned that the family of Alastair Sinclair, a Scottish tourist who hanged himself in an Israeli jail, “was forced to bring suit for his return with missing body parts”.

In 2002 the Tehran Times reported:

The Zionist state has tacitly admitted that doctors at the Israeli forensic institute at Abu Kabir had extracted the vital organs of three Palestinian teenage children killed by the Israeli army nearly 10 days ago. Zionist Minister of Health Nessim Dahhan said in response to a question by Arab member of the Zionist parliament, the “Knesset” Ahmed Teibi … that he couldn’t deny that organs of Palestinian youths and children killed by the Israeli forces were taken out for transplants or scientific research.

But now the news about Israeli trafficking of human organ is spreading to Western mainstream media. Ynet, the biggest Israeli online newspaper, reported: “Leading Swedish daily Aftonbladet claimed in one of its articles that IDF [Israel Defence Forces] soldiers killed Palestinians in order to trade in their organs.”

A few weeks ago we had a debate on Palestine Think Tank on whether or not Zionism is a colonial apparatus. One of the materialist arguments against the perception of Zionism as a colonial practice was that Palestine has never been too attractive economically – it lacks oil, gold and minerals. However, this may change now. People who specialize in organ theft may find Palestine to be heaven on earth. In the light of the latest rapidly spreading news about the Israeli trade in stolen human organs, it would seem that the Jewish national project is colonial after all.

Although the Israeli government denies the accusation that it is trading in stolen human organs, and I myself am far from qualified to know what the truth of the matter is, one cannot deny that we are facing here a shift of consciousness within the Western discourse.

At the end of the day, after watching the Israeli army dumping great quantities of white phosphorous on a civilian population in broad daylight, after seeing Israelis gathering gleefully en masse on the hills around Gaza just to watch their military spreading death and physical suffering on the Palestinians, after reading that 94 per cent of Israelis supported the Israeli armed forces’ campaign against the elderly, women and children, most of whom were refugees with nowhere to escape and seek further refuge, organ theft seems to be a “light crime”.

Whether or not the Swedish paper’s accusations are true is yet to be seen. However, one fact has already been established: after so many years of the West dancing to the relentless crying violin of the Jewish Israeli melancholic victim serenade, the Western media is now changing its mood and is willing to confront the Jewish State’s institutional crime.

— Gilad Atzmon (gilad.co.uk) is an Israeli-born writer and jazz musician living in London. He had previously served in the Israeli military but he is currently an anti-racism campaigner. His latest CD is In Loving Memory of America.

Published in Al-Jazeera.com


“If you are neutral in situations of injustice, you have chosen the side of the oppressor.” – Desmond Tutu.

July 31, 2009

On the right of resistance

31/07/2009 11:50:00 AM GMT

By Ramzi Kysia

“If you are neutral in situations of injustice, you have chosen the side of the oppressor.” – Desmond Tutu.

We live in an era defined by its brutality. Our challenge is whether to accept this – or to take the risks necessary to transform our world commons in beloved community.

A year ago this August, forty-four ordinary people from seventeen different countries sailed to Gaza in two, small wooden boats. We did what the world would not do – we broke through the siege of Gaza. Over the last year the Free Gaza Movement has organized seven more voyages, successfully arriving to Gaza on five separate occasions. Ours remain the only international ships to reach the Gaza Strip in over forty-two years.

In the Middle-East, the struggle for justice is an uncertain endeavour in the best of times. On all sides human rights workers are beset with difficulties and distress. The Arab states are tyrannies, their peoples subject to secret police, arbitrary arrest, torture, and oppression. Within their societies, the Arab world is equally fractured by ethnic and class tensions, poverty, and political stagnation. From the outside, from the West, the Middle-East faces both open and covert acts of intimidation, intervention, economic destabilization, and even war, invasion, and mass killings.

Standing astride all these troubles, blocking near every attempt at progress in the region are the twin colossi of big oil and Israel. Seldom have a people been cursed with burdens more bitter, more devastating, and seemingly more intransigent than have the Arabs with oil and Israel.

Nowhere is this truer today than in Gaza. In 1999, British Gas discovered huge natural gas fields, worth billions of dollars, in Palestinian territorial waters off the coast of Gaza. Israel has already built a horizontal pipeline to siphon off gas from at least one of these fields. If there is an unspoken reason for the siege of Gaza – this is it.

Israel maintains effective control of all points of entry and exit to Gaza, as well as de facto control of Gaza’s revenues and economy. As such, and despite the closure of settlements in Gaza in 2005, Israel remains an occupying power in Gaza as in the rest of Palestine. As an occupying power, Israel is responsible for the well-being of the people it occupies and cannot legally impose a blockade, particularly one the collectively punishes the entire population of Gaza. These are clear crimes and the Israeli government and military should be prosecuted for them.

For the last three and a half years the Israeli siege has become increasingly ruthless. Less than twenty percent of normal trade is allowed into Gaza today. The siege has caused the local economy to collapse, leading to steep increases in unemployment, poverty and childhood malnutrition rates.

Because of Israel’s siege there is little fuel to run Gaza’s power plant – so electricity is scarce and intermittent. Without electricity, water and sanitation systems do not function. On March 27, 2008 two elderly women in their 70s, a teenage girl, and two babies were killed by a flood of sewage in Umm Naser. Last year alone, well over 16 billion litres of raw sewage had to be dumped in the sea, turning the Mediterranean into a toilet and creating a public health disaster.

Gaza is a tiny coastal plain, barely twenty-five miles long by four to seven miles wide. It does not have the ability to independently support the one and a half million human beings who live in one of the most densely populated places on the planet. Two-thirds of Gaza’s people are refugees, driven out of historical Palestine during Israel’s founding war in 1948. Over half the population are children.

Israel has a long history of violence against Palestinian children. A few examples: In December 2004, the IDF shot and killed seven-year old Rana Siyam. Earlier that year, nine-year old Raghda Alassar was shot and killed in her school while she was taking an English test. Thirteen-year old Iman al-Hams was shot seventeen times by the IDF as she was walking home after class in Gaza. An Israeli captain went up to her corpse and shot her again in the head – “dead-checking” the schoolgirl. The IDF prosecuted him, but not for murder. He was charged with “illegal use of his weapon,” and – despite admitting that he emptied his entire magazine into a little girl – he was found “not guilty.”

Over the summer of 2006, the IDF killed three-year old Bara Habib, three-year old Rajaa Abu Shaban, six-year old Rawan Hajjah, nine-year old Aya Salmeya, and over thirty-five other children just in Gaza alone. On January 16th, 2007, the IDF killed ten-year old Abir Aramin, the daughter of a Palestinian peace activist, as she was walking home from school. These are only a handful of cases. The Israeli human rights organization B’tselem estimates that over 900 Palestinian children were killed by the Israeli military between 2000 and 2008.

Israel has already recreated the worst aspects of the Warsaw Ghetto in Gaza – transforming this small strip of land into the world’s largest open-air prison, and the humanitarian condition of the one and a half million men, women, and children illegally incarcerated in Gaza is now at its worst point in the last forty-two years of Israeli occupation.

But there are darker histories waiting to be reborn. The simple and terrifying truth is that Israel is pushing the world on a path towards genocide. We are all en route to the slow-drip destruction of the Palestinian people. This reality must be forcefully confronted and fully overcome before it’s too late.

It’s now been more than six months since the end of Israel’s latest assault on the Gaza Strip, which led to the killing of over 1,400 Palestinians, and the people of Gaza are still living in rubble. Israel’s hermetic closure has created a man-made and deliberately-sustained humanitarian catastrophe. The continuing failure of the international community to enforce its own laws and protect the people of Gaza demands that we as private citizens directly intervene to take action commensurate with the crisis. We must act because our governments refuse to do so.

Regardless of Israeli threats or intimidation, Free Gaza volunteers intend to continue sailing unarmed boats to Gaza. Now more than ever – we need the people of the world to join with us.

The siege of Gaza only serves to strengthen authoritarian structures on all sides of this conflict, entrenching centralized control, rallying people against a common enemy. The isolation of Gaza reinforces a belief that the world has forgotten Palestine, and little cares how Palestinians are forced to live or even whether they live or die.

In contrast, civil resistance and citizens’ action movements are not only aimed against the injustices that we face – they are also strategies for social change. Nonviolent resistance empowers everyone with the knowledge that any among us can reach out, organize, and act to change the entire world. Time and again, history demonstrates that even the greatest of tyrannies can crumble to the ground when confronted with an organized and determined resistance.

Join us, whether in whole or in part. Join the Free Gaza Movement, the International Solidarity Movement, and the BDS Movement. Join us and other campaigns in the struggle for justice for Palestine. We need volunteers to do research and writing, web updates, translation, graphic design, local organizing in their communities, and much more.

Become part of the resistance.

We are often told that resistance is either unwarranted or impossible. Liberal apologists for Israel, such as Thomas Friedman, are constantly demanding that Palestinians lay down their arms, all the while exhorting Israelis to pick them up in ever increasing acts of violence and degradation.

When faced with violence in our world, our elites tell us that we have two – and only two – choices: capitulate to the violence, or go to war. Of course, which of these two choices is the right and proper course of action depends on who you are. Faced with Palestinian violence, Israelis must, rightly and properly, go to war. Faced with Israeli violence, Palestinians must, rightly and properly, capitulate. In Tel Aviv and Washington D.C. this is called “moral clarity:” the supposed necessity of pursuing Israeli security through deliberately creating massive insecurity among Palestinians. This is lunacy.

But even mainstream “peace” movements in the West try to delegitimize resistance by calling on both Palestinians and Israelis to renounce overt acts of violence, equating Palestinians who commit suicide bombings with Israelis who send F-16s, D9 military bulldozers, and Apache attack helicopters to level entire neighborhoods.

The problem is that the usually random and individual acts of violence by Palestinians against Israelis are not equal to the myriad structural oppressions and cruelties imposed on Palestinians through Israeli government policies. No Palestinian fighter jets bomb Israeli cities – because Palestine has no fighter jets. No Palestinian bulldozers demolish Israeli homes – because Palestine has no military bulldozers. No Palestinian soldiers invade Israeli neighbourhoods, terrorizing the populace – because there is no Palestinian army. The conflict in Palestine is a war of Israeli state terror against a largely unarmed and defenceless civilian population.

Even immoral and self-defeating acts of violence against Israeli civilians (such as suicide bombings are) cannot be equated with the daily humiliations, terror, and death that Israel inflicts on Palestinians by deliberate policy. Contrary to its presentation in the mainstream media, this conflict is neither a righteous war against evil Arab terrorists, nor a religious or ethnic dispute between two opposing and equally self-justified groups of people. The Israeli/Palestinian conflict is the struggle of two irreconcilable and unequal causes: the struggle of an oppressed people for freedom, justice, and self-determination against their oppressors’ struggle to maintain (and even expand) their domination. Under these circumstances resistance is not only a right – it’s a moral imperative.

This is not to say that any and all acts of resistance are acceptable. Clearly they are not. But it grows tedious to continually hear well-meaning, but otherwise clueless, Westerners try to equate the two sides of this conflict. I am past tired of hearing white people passively whine, or shrilly demand, “Where is the Palestinian Gandhi?”

With respect, just because some people have chosen to remain ignorant of the long and deep history of Palestinian nonviolent resistance – from the 1936 Boycott to Bil’in today – does not mean that it does not exist. The Free Gaza Movement struggles in solidarity with an already vibrant Palestinian civil resistance.

Similarly, the other criticism of resistance – that it is futile – is equally mistaken. There is a widespread delusion among many that Israel and the Israeli lobby are simply too powerful to be challenged, let alone defeated. This is not the case.

On June 30th 2009 Israeli Occupation Forces forcibly boarded one of our boats, the SPIRIT OF HUMANITY, and kidnapped 21 human rights workers and journalists who were on their way to deliver much needed humanitarian and reconstruction supplies to besieged Gaza, including Nobel peace prize laureate Mairead Maguire and former U.S. Congresswoman Cynthia McKinney. They were held in jail for a week before being deported.

Though we were stopped on this particular voyage, it was not a “failure.” In the month after our boat was hijacked, over 100,000 news stories, essays, blog entries, action alerts, and radio and television segments were made on Israel’s violent response to our mission. It’s true that the ordeal of our 21 volunteers pales in comparison to the 11,000 Palestinian political prisoners held in Israeli prisons. The seizure of our small cargo of 3 tons of medical aid and reconstruction kits is insignificant in light of the $4 billion (USD) of aid promised to Gaza – aid that has not and will not be delivered because of the Israeli blockade.

But that too misses the point. By choosing to violently confront and kidnap unarmed human rights workers on a mission of mercy, Israel publicly demonstrated both the illegality and the absurdity of the Gaza siege. The siege is abjectly not about “security.” No one could possibly have believed that our small boat was a physical threat to Israel,

This public demonstration of the siege’s illegality resulted in record action at the governmental level as well. Both the Irish and Greek governments formally intervened to protect their citizens and property. Despite having no diplomatic relationship and refusing to recognize the legitimacy of Israel’s government – the King of Bahrain personally & successfully intervened to force Israel to immediately release the five Bahraini human rights workers kidnapped from the SPIRIT. The British parliament held a formal debate on the issue, and even the U.S. State Department was forced to hold a national conference call on for family and friends of the kidnap victims, as well as for Arab-American civil rights groups.

This was unprecedented, but it’s not enough.

The Free Gaza Movement started our small part in this struggle in 2006. We began on hope alone. Many thought it couldn’t be done, yet we did it. We broke through the Israeli blockade. We will sail again, and we are absolutely determined to reach the Gaza Strip on our next voyage. We intend to non-violently escalate our response. By sending a cargo ship, we will escalate the challenge to the blockade by bringing in significant amounts of banned reconstruction materials. By sending more boats on our next mission, we will significantly escalate the logistical difficulties Israel faces should they decide to violently attack us again.

By sending even more parliamentarians, dignitaries, journalists, and human rights workers to accompany the boats, we will significantly escalate the political difficulties Israel faces should they decide to violently attack us again.

The journey to Gaza is dangerous. The Israeli navy rammed our flagship, the Dignity, when we attempted to deliver medical supplies to Gaza during their vicious assault in December/January. In June, they hijacked our small boat and kidnapped everyone on board. Israel has even threatened to open fire on our unarmed ships, rather than allow us to deliver humanitarian and reconstruction supplies to the people of Gaza.

But the risks we take on our voyages are insignificant compared to the risks imposed every day upon the people of Gaza.

The purpose of nonviolent direct action and civil resistance is to take risks – to put ourselves “in the way” of injustice. We take these risks well aware of what the possible consequences may be. We do so because the consequences of doing nothing are so much worse. Any time we allow ourselves to be bullied, every time we pass by an evil and ignore it – we lower our standards and allow our world to be made that much harsher and unjust for us all.

Israel can threaten our boats and passengers – we will keep coming. Israel can illegally disrupt our communications and navigation systems – we will keep coming. Israel can open fire around our boats, or attempt to ram and sink them. Israel can choose to forcibly board and highjack our boats, and abduct our volunteers.

It doesn’t matter. We will keep coming. Armed only with the love of justice, and in the rite of resistance – we will go to Gaza again and again and again, until this siege is forever shattered and the people of Gaza have free access to the rest of the world.

— Ramzi Kysia is an Arab-American essayist and an organizer with the Free Gaza Movement (www.FreeGaza.org).

This article was published in Al-Jazeera Magazine


Noam Chomsky: Season of Travesties: Freedom and Democracy in mid-2009

July 17, 2009

chomsky.info, July 9, 2009

June 2009 was marked by a number of significant events, including two elections in the Middle East: in Lebanon, then Iran. The events are significant, and the reactions to them, highly instructive.
The election in Lebanon was greeted with euphoria. New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman gushed that he is “a sucker for free and fair elections,” so “it warms my heart to watch” what happened in Lebanon in an election that “was indeed free and fair Ñ not like the pretend election you are about to see in Iran, where only candidates approved by the Supreme Leader can run. No, in Lebanon it was the real deal, and the results were fascinating: President Barack Obama defeated President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad of Iran.” Crucially, “a solid majority of all Lebanese — Muslims, Christians and Druse — voted for the March 14 coalition led by Saad Hariri,” the US-backed candidate and son of the murdered ex-Prime Minister Rafik Hariri, so that “to the extent that anyone came out of this election with the moral authority to lead the next government, it was the coalition that wants Lebanon to be run by and for the Lebanese — not for Iran, not for Syria and not for fighting Israel.” We must give credit where it is due for this triumph of free elections (and of Washington): “Without George Bush standing up to the Syrians in 2005 — and forcing them to get out of Lebanon after the Hariri killing — this free election would not have happened. Mr. Bush helped create the space. Power matters. Mr. Obama helped stir the hope. Words also matter.”

Two days later Friedman’s views were echoed by Eliott Abrams, a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign relations, formerly a high official of the Reagan and Bush I administrations. Under the heading “Lebanon’s Triumph, Iran’s Travesty,” Abrams compared these “twin tests of [US] efforts to spread democracy to the Muslim world.” The lesson is clear: “What the United States should be promoting is not elections, but free elections, and the voting in Lebanon passed any realistic test. … the majority of Lebanese have rejected Hezbollah’s claim that it is not a terrorist group but a ‘national resistance’ … The Lebanese had a chance to vote against Hezbollah, and took the opportunity.”

Reactions were similar throughout the mainstream. There are, however, a few flies in the ointment.

The most prominent of them, apparently unreported in the US, is the actual vote. The Hezbollah-based March 8 coalition won handily, by approximately the same figure as Obama vs. McCain in November 2008, about 54% of the popular vote, according Ministry of Interior figures. Hence by the Friedman-Abrams argument, we should be lamenting Ahmadinejad’s defeat of President Obama, and the “moral authority” won by Hezbollah, as “the majority of Lebanese … took the opportunity” to reject the charges Abrams repeats from Washington propaganda.

Like others, Friedman and Abrams are referring to representatives in Parliament. These numbers are skewed by the confessional voting system, which sharply reduces the seats granted to the largest of the sects, the Shi’ites, who overwhelmingly back Hizbollah and its Amal ally. But as serious analysts have pointed out, the confessional ground rules undermine “free and fair elections” in even more significant ways than this. Assaf Kfoury observes that they leave no space for non-sectarian parties and erect a barrier to introducing socioeconomic policies and other real issues into the electoral system. They also open the door to “massive external interference,” low voter turnout, and “vote-rigging and vote-buying,” all features of the June election, even more so than before. Thus in Beirut, home of more than half the population, less than a fourth of eligible voters could vote without returning to their usually remote districts of origin. The effect is that migrant workers and the poorer classes are effectively disenfranchised in “a form of extreme gerrymandering, Lebanese style,” favoring the privileged and pro-Western classes.

In Iran, the electoral results issued by the Interior Ministry lacked credibility both by the manner in which they were released and by the figures themselves. An enormous popular protest followed, brutally suppressed by the armed forces of the ruling clerics. Perhaps Ahmadinejad might have won a majority if votes had been fairly counted, but it appears that the rulers were unwilling to take that chance. From the streets, correspondent Reese Erlich, who has had considerable experience with popular uprisings and bitter repression in US domains, writes that “It’s a genuine Iranian mass movement made up of students, workers, women, and middle class folks” — and possibly much of the rural population. Eric Hooglund, a respected scholar who has studied rural Iran intensively, dismisses standard speculations about rural support for Ahmadinejad, describing “overwhelming” support for Mousavi in regions he has studied, and outrage over what the large majority there regard as a stolen election.

It is highly unlikely that the protest will damage the clerical-military regime in the short term, but as Erlich observes, it “is sowing the seeds for future struggles.”

As in Lebanon, the electoral system itself violates basic rights. Candidates have to be approved by the ruling clerics, who can and do bar policies of which they disapprove. And though repression overall may not be as harsh as in the US-backed dictatorships of the region, it is ugly enough, and in June 2009, very visibly so.

One can argue that Iranian “guided democracy” has structural analogues in the US, where elections are largely bought, and candidates and programs are effectively “vetted” by concentrations of capital. A striking illustration is being played out right now. It is hardly controversial that the disastrous US health system is a high priority for the public, which, for a long time, has favored national health care, an option that has been kept off the agenda by private power. In a limited shift towards the public will, Congress is now debating whether to allow a public option to compete with insurers, a proposal with overwhelming popular support. The opposition, who regard themselves as free market advocates, charge that the proposal would be unfair to the private sector, which will be unable to compete with a more efficient public system. Though a bit odd, the argument is plausible. As economist Dean Baker points out, “We know that private insurers can’t compete because we already had this experiment with the Medicare program. When private insurers had to compete on a level playing field with the traditional government-run plan they were almost driven from the market.” Savings from a government program would be even greater if, as in other countries, the government were permitted to negotiate prices with pharmaceutical corporations, an option supported by 85% of the population but also not on the agenda. “Unless Congress creates a serious public plan,” Baker writes, Americans “can expect to be hit with the largest tax increase in the history of the world — all of it going into the pockets of the health care industry.” That is a likely outcome, once again, in the American form of “guided democracy.” And it is hardly the only example.

While our thoughts are turned to elections, we should not forget one recent authentically “free and fair” election in the Middle East region, in Palestine in January 2006, to which the US and its allies at once responded with harsh punishment for the population that voted “the wrong way.” The pretexts offered were laughable, and the response caused scarcely a ripple on the flood of commentary on Washington’s noble “efforts to spread democracy to the Muslim world,” a feat that reveals impressive subordination to authority.

No less impressive is the readiness to agree that Israel is justified in imposing a harsh and destructive siege on Gaza, and attacking it with merciless violence using US equipment and diplomatic support, as it did last winter. There of course is a pretext: “the right to self-defense.” The pretext has been almost universally accepted in the West, though Israeli actions are sometimes condemned as “disproportionate.” The reaction is remarkable, because the pretext collapses on the most cursory inspection. The issue is the right TO USE FORCE in self-defense, and a state has that right only if it has exhausted peaceful means. In this case, Israel has simply refused to use the peaceful means that have readily available. All of this has been amply discussed elsewhere, and it should be unnecessary to review the simple facts once again.

Once again relying on the impunity it receives as a US client, Israel brought the month of June 2009 to a close by enforcing the siege with a brazen act of hijacking. On June 30, the Israeli navy hijacked the Free Gaza movement boat “Spirit of Humanity” — in international waters, according to those aboard — and forced it to the Israeli port of Ashdod. The boat had left from Cyprus, where the cargo was inspected: it consisted of medicines, reconstruction supplies, and toys. The human rights workers aboard included Nobel Laureate Mairead Maguire and former congresswoman Cynthia McKinney, who was sent to Ramleh prison in Israel — apparently without a word from the Obama administration. The crime scarcely elicited a yawn — with some justice, one might argue, since Israel has been hijacking boats travelling between Cyprus and Lebanon for decades, kidnapping and sometimes killing passengers or sending them in Israeli prisons without charge where they join thousands of others, in some cases held for many years as hostages. So why even bother to report this latest outrage by a rogue state and its patron, for whom law is a theme for 4th of July speeches and a weapon against enemies?

Israel’s hijacking is a far more extreme crime than anything carried out by Somalis driven to piracy by poverty and despair, and destruction of their fishing grounds by robbery and dumping of toxic wastes — not to speak of the destruction of their economy by a Bush counter-terror operation conceded to have been fraudulent, and a US-backed Ethiopian invasion. The Israeli hijacking is also in violation of a March 1988 international Convention on safety of maritime navigation to which the US is a party, hence required by the Convention to assist in enforcing it. Israel, however, is not a party — which, of course, in no way mitigates the crime or the obligation to enforce the Convention against violators. Israel’s failure to join is particularly interesting, since the Convention was partially inspired by the hijacking of the Achille Lauro in 1985. That crime ranks high in Israel and the West among terrorist atrocities — unlike Israel’s US-backed bombing of Tunis a week earlier, killing 75 people, as usual with no credible pretext, but again tolerated under the grant of impunity for the US and its clients.

Possibly Israel chose not to join the Convention because of its regular practice of hijacking boats in international waters at that time. Also worth investigating in connection with the June 2009 hijacking is that since 2000, after the discovery of apparently substantial reserves of natural gas in Gaza’s territorial waters by British Gas, Israel has been steadily forcing Gazan fishing boats towards shore, often violently, ruining an industry vital to Gaza’s survival. At the same time, Israel has been entering into negotiations with BG to obtain gas from these sources, thus stealing the meager resources of the population it is mercilessly crushing.

The Western hemisphere also witnessed an election-related crime at the month’s end. A military coup in Honduras ousted President Manuel Zelaya and expelled him to Costa Rica. As observed by economist Mark Weisbrot, an experienced analyst of Latin American affairs, the social structure of the coup is “a recurrent story in Latin America,” pitting “a reform president who is supported by labor unions and social organizations against a mafia-like, drug-ridden, corrupt political elite who is accustomed to choosing not only the Supreme Court and the Congress, but also the president.”

Mainstream commentary described the coup as an unfortunate return to the bad days of decades ago. But that is mistaken. This is the third military coup in the past decade, all conforming to the “recurrent story.” The first, in Venezuela in 2002, was supported by the Bush administration, which, however, backed down after sharp Latin American condemnation and restoration of the elected government by a popular uprising. The second, in Haiti in 2004, was carried out by Haiti’s traditional torturers, France and the US. The elected President, Jean-Bertrand Aristide, was spirited to Central Africa and kept at a safe distance from Haiti by the master of the hemisphere.

What is novel in the Honduras coup is that the US has not lent it support. Rather, the US joined with the Organization of American States in opposing the coup, though with a more reserved condemnation than others, and with no any action, unlike the neighboring states and much of the rest of Latin America. Alone in the region, the US has not withdrawn its ambassador, as did France, Spain and Italy along with Latin American states.

It was reported that Washington had advance information about a possible coup, and tried to prevent it. It surpasses imagination that Washington did not have close knowledge of what was underway in Honduras, which is highly dependent on US aid, and whose military is armed, trained, and advised by Washington. Military relations have been particularly close since the 1980s, when Honduras was the base for Reagan’s terrorist war against Nicaragua.

Whether this will play out as another chapter of the “recurrent story” remains to be seen, and will depend in no small measure on reactions within the United States.


British government sets aside the rights of British citizens in support of Zionist Israel

July 14, 2009

Official: ‘Reckless’ to sail in international waters

14/07/2009 01:46:00 PM GMT

By Stuart Littlewood

Britain’s foreign secretary David Miliband – or rather, a henchman on his behalf – has written to me about the government’s response to Israel’s hijacking of the mercy ship Spirit of Humanity on the high seas and the outrageous treatment of six peace-loving British citizens (including the skipper), en route to Gaza not Israel, who had their gear stolen or damaged and were thrown into Israeli jails. The letter contains the usual wet and meaningless expressions like deplore and press and raise the issue, which are the familiar hallmark of Foreign Office mentality.

And I’m told it is “reckless” to travel in international waters. It should, of course, be safe – and would be if the high and mighty Western allies, always talking big against terror, were to enforce maritime law and rid the Eastern Mediterranean of marauding Israeli pirates.

Miliband’s spokesman says: “The Israeli Navy took control of the Spirit of Humanity on 30 June, diverting it to Ashdod port in Israel. All those on board, including six British nationals, were handed over to Israeli immigration officials. British consular officials had good access to the British detainees and established that they were treated well. The Israeli authorities deported the detainees on 6 July.”

Treated well? That’s not what the peaceful seafarers say. They were assaulted, put in fear of their lives and deprived of their liberty for fully a week – a long time in a stinking Israeli jail.

Miliband’s spokesman: “The Foreign Secretary said in the House of Commons on 30 June that it was ‘vital that all states respect international law, including the law of the sea. It is also important to say that we deplore the interference by the Israeli navy in the activities of Gazan fishermen’.”

Such fine words. Where is the action to back them up? Gaza’s fishermen suffer increasingly unjust restrictions and are still fired on.

Miliband’s spokesman: “When the Foreign Secretary spoke to the Israeli Foreign Minister, Avigdor Lieberman, on 1 July he raised the issue with him and asked for clarification about whether or not the Spirit of Humanity had been intercepted in international waters. We will continue to press the Israeli authorities for clarification.”

It’s well over a week and Lieberman hasn’t clarified anything. There’s a surprise! Was the Israeli ambassador in London summoned and given a dressing down? Has London demanded compensation for the Britishers’ losses and damage? Has the boat and its cargo been returned? Have arrangements been made for the aid to be delivered? Our Zionist-leaning government apparently takes pleasure in Britain’s repeated humiliation. Not long ago the British consul-general in Tel Aviv (a woman) was strip-searched by Israeli security perverts.

Miliband’s spokesman: “We regularly remind the Israeli government of its obligations under international law on a variety of issues, including with respect to humanitarian access to Gaza as well as Israel’s control of Gazan waters and the effect this has on Gaza’s fishing industry.”

Ever get the feeling they’ve switched off their collective hearing aid? What is the point of obligations if they never have to be met? Miliband and the rest should hang their heads in shame, particularly over the Gaza fishing scandal.

Miliband’s spokesman: “As I said on the phone, our Travel Advice makes clear that we advise against all travel to Gaza, including its offshore waters; that it is reckless to travel to Gaza at this time; and that medical and other essential specialist staff needing to travel to Gaza should coordinate their entry to Gaza with the major international humanitarian organisations already on the ground.”

Why does London perpetuate the blockade of Gaza by colluding in Israel’s unlawful conduct? Where are the consequences and penalties for breaching international law and all codes of human decency?

On the other point, Gaza’s Ministry of Health is surely best placed to know what’s needed.

Miliband’s spokesman: “Our Embassy in Tel Aviv and our Consulate General in Jerusalem have also similarly advised those wishing to deliver humanitarian assistance to Gaza to do so through existing humanitarian organisations which can advise, particularly with regards to medicines, [and] which items if any are currently required.”

Private suppliers should be free to deliver aid through whatever channels they wish.

Miliband’s spokesman: “The UK has been unequivocal in its calls for Israel to lessen restrictions at the Gaza crossings, allowing the legitimate flow of humanitarian aid, trade and reconstruction goods and the movement of people. This is essential not only for the people of Gaza, but also for the wider stability of the region.”

“Unequivocal”? “Essential”? More splendid but empty words. The needs of the crushed and devastated and half-starved people of Gaza have been urgent for 3 years, ever since Britain ganged up with the Zionist axis to bring Gaza to its knees.

Miliband’s spokesman: “Recent events in Gaza are a tragic reminder of the importance of progress on the peace process.”

No kidding……. They are also a tragic reminder of the West’s perverse failure in its duty to enforce compliance with international law, human rights and UN resolutions.

Miliband’s spokesman: “The UK, with the support of our international allies, will continue to pursue vigorously a comprehensive peace based on a two-state solution, involving a secure Israel alongside a viable Palestinian state.”

But never vigorously enough. The world is still waiting after sixty-one years. And let’s change those worn-out words around. How does a secure Palestine alongside a viable Israel sound?

Britain and its allies need to try a new tack… like first establishing the rule of international law and forcibly breaking the siege. It’s so blindingly obvious.

Meanwhile, doesn’t the gut-churning, cowardly shambles that is Gaza make you proud to be British? Or American? Or European?

— Stuart Littlewood is author of the book Radio Free Palestine, which tells the plight of the Palestinians under occupation


Netanyahu’s peace plan is just a front for legitimising ethnic cleansing

July 5, 2009

Ethnic cleansing as a state policy
05/07/2009 07:34:00 PM GMT

By Nicola Nasser

In his speech at Bar Ilan University on June 14, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu proposed a new Israeli “peace plan,” with preconditions that a Palestinian negotiator must first meet before he would “promptly” engage in “unconditional” bilateral talks to meet an international consensus demanding the creation of a Palestinian state alongside Israel. His preconditions added to the fourteen conditions the former Israeli government of comatose Ariel Sharon attached to Israel’s adoption in grudge of the 2003 Road Map blueprint for peace with the Palestinian side, on the basis of which the U.S. administration of President Barak Obama and his presidential envoy George Mitchell are now urging an early resumption of “immediate” Israeli – Palestinian peace talks, which Mitchell on June 26 hoped “very much to conclude this phase of the discussions and to be able to move into meaningful and productive negotiations in the near future.”

Sharon’s conditional approval of the Road Map has condemned the blueprint as a non-starter, led to the Israeli military reoccupation of the Palestinian autonomous areas, aborted former U.S. President George W. Bush’s promise to Palestinians to have their own state twice in 2005 and 2008, and doomed the twenty – year peace process since the Madrid conference in 1991 to its current impasse that Obama and Mitchell are trying to break through. It is a forgone conclusion that Netanyahu’s preconditions — Palestinian recognition of Israel as a “Jewish state,” “demilitarization” of the prospective Palestinian less-than-a-sovereign state and preserving Israel’s illegitimate “right” to expand its illegal colonial Jewish settlements in the occupied Palestinian territories — will fare worse than Sharon’s conditions.

Netanyahu demanded that the “Palestinian population,” and not the Palestinian people — who live “in Judea and Samaria,” and not in the Israeli – occupied Palestinian territory, where there is an “Israeli presence,” and not an Israeli military occupation — should first agree to a “public, binding and unequivocal” recognition that Israel is “the nation state of the Jewish people” worldwide, and not the nation state of the Israelis. His demand was an arrogant precondition ridiculed by Gideon Levy in Haaretz on June 15 as an “excessive demand that Palestinians recognize the Jewish state by one who has failed to recognize the Palestinians as a people,” sarcastically welcomed the next day by Ma’ariv’s chief political columnist, Ben Caspit, who wrote: “Welcome, Mr. Prime Minister, to the 20th century. The problem is that we’re already in the 21st.” Moreover, such a precondition “is almost humiliating and it is unlikely to be met,” by the Palestinian Authority (PA), according to Avi Issacharoff, writing in Haaretz on June 17.

Israeli analyst M.J. Rosenberg wrote on June 19: Acceptance of Israel as a “Jewish state” is a non-starter at this point. And Netanyahu knows it. If that is a precondition for negotiations, there will be no negotiations. But without any definition of borders and with Netanyahu committed to expanding settlements in the West Bank, how can anyone seriously expect Palestinians to recognize Israel as a “Jewish state?” Aaron David Miller, a former senior U.S. negotiator in the Mideast, said Netanyahu’s speech “was less about pursuing Arab-Israeli peace and much more about pursuing the U.S.-Israeli relationship.”

PA’s Prime Minister in Ramallah, Salam Fayyad, noted in a speech at Al-Quds (Jerusalem) University on June 22 that his Israeli counterpart’s speech missed all reference to the Road Map blueprint as well as to the thorny issue of expanding settlements and described the speech as “a new blow to efforts to salvage the peace process.” Head of the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO)’s department of negotiations affairs, Saeb Erakat, condemned Netanyahu’s speech as a “non-starter.” Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas urged the international community to isolate him and his government. His Egyptian counterpart, Hosni Mubarak, a close ally of Abbas and the U.S. and Israel’s 30-year unwavering peace partner, said Netanyahu’s precondition “aborts the chance for peace,” although he declined to heed Abbas’ call for the isolation of Netanyahu and received him and others of his cabinet. Al-Baath, the mouthpiece of Syria’s ruling party, commented: “Netanyahu has confirmed that he rejects the Arab initiative for peace.” In an editorial on June 16, the Saudi Arabian English daily, “Arab News,” said his speech was “a challenge to the world community.” Walid Jumblat, a leading figure of the March 14 bloc, which recently won the Lebanese elections, lambasted the speech as dragging the region into a “dangerous stage” and one that “completely crippled” any possibility to reach a peace settlement, adding that, “any talk about Israel as a Jewish state means closing the file on the (Palestinian right of) return,” on which there is a consensus among rival Lebanese factions to reject the resettlement of half a million Palestinian refugees hosted by Lebanon since 1948.

However Obama and Mitchell insensitively ignored all negative Palestinian and Arab reactions, repeatedly and on record renamed Israel as the “Jewish” State of Israel, with Obama lightly trying to defuse the explosiveness of Netanyahu’s demand by stating that it was “exactly what negotiations are supposed to be about,” because “this is what both America and Europe are asking,” according to Italian foreign minister Franco Frattini.

Angrily describing Netanyahu as a “swindler” who plays “tricks” with peace – making, Yasser Abed Rabbo, secretary general of the PLO’s executive committee, said the Israeli premier wants Palestinians to “become Zionists.” Mere heartfelt commitment to Zionism will not be enough, however, Hasan and Ali Abunimah wrote in The Electronic Intifada on June 17, for the Palestinians’ conversion to have “practical meaning,” Netanyahu explained, “there must also be a clear understanding that the Palestinian refugee problem will be resolved outside Israel’s borders.” In other words, “Palestinians must agree to help Israel complete the ethnic cleansing it began in 1947-48, by abandoning the right of return,” Abunimah brothers added.

In a statement, five PLO member factions, namely the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine, the Palestinian People’s Party, the Palestinian National Liberation Movement and the Palestinian Popular Struggle Front, said Netanyahu’s speech was “tantamount to a declaration of war on Palestinians’ national rights.” For the first time since the Palestinian – Israeli “peace process” was launched some twenty years ago, the voice of the PLO peace partners was much louder and harsher in criticizing Israel than that of their opposition among the non-PLO factions, like Hamas and the Islamic Jihad. Netanyahu seems to have succeeded where four years of Egyptian efforts have failed to make Palestinians speak in one voice.

When Netanyahu makes Palestinian recognition of Israel as a “Jewish state” as the cornerstone of his “peace” policy and has Avigdor Lieberman, who calls on record for the transfer of Israeli Arab Palestinians, as the foreign minister of his ruling coalition, he officially raises ethnic cleansing to the level of state policy, and may be this is why French President Nicolas Sarkozy reportedly urged visiting Netanyahu on June 30 to replace his top diplomat and “to get rid of that man,” whom he declined to meet when Lieberman was recently in Paris, leading Israeli member of Knesset Afu Aghbaria (Hadash) and ten others of his parliamentary colleagues to call on world leaders to declare what they condemn as the “racist” Lieberman a persona-non-grata. Another Hadash MP, Hanna Swaid, wrote to Mitchell: “The recognition of Israel as a Jewish state harms the Arab citizens (25% of the population), undermines their legal status in the country and puts them at the heart of the struggle with no representation in the negotiations.”

Recognizing Israel as a/or the “Jewish state” should be rejected not only because it politically forecloses whatever chance remains for the resumption of peace talks and sets the regional stage for the alternative, which another peace partner to Israel, Jordan’s King Abdullah II, has repeatedly warned against because it “would have adverse and catastrophic consequences on the whole region,” but more importantly because strategically such a precondition, if it gains international recognition, would inevitably be used by Israel as a casus belli to officially resume — what has been so far claimed an unofficial policy by neutral monitors and officially denied by Israeli politicians – and defend its ethnic cleansing of native Arab Palestinians as an internationally –recognized state policy inside its borders, and in the Palestinian territories it occupied in 1967 outside them, and as an international carte blanche vindicating what the Israeli historian, Ilan Pappe documented as its more than sixty-year old “The Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine.”

Politically this would rule out the Palestinian refugees’ “Right of Return” and legitimize Lieberman’s “transfer” dreams (expulsion en masse of Israel’s Arab – Palestinian citizens as well as Palestinian natives of East Jerusalem) to be made true as soon as the political timing render their realization feasible, to throw “the Arabs into the sea,” according to Aharon Barak, the former president of the supreme court of Israel from 1995 to 2006, who was speaking at the Rabin Center in Tel Aviv on June 25.

Israeli governmental and parliamentary officials of Netanyahu’s ruling coalition criticized Barak’s support for “a state for all its citizens.” It would be very instructive here to recall the first Prime Minister of Israel and forefather of ethnic cleansing David Ben-Gurion’s reaction to the news that the world renowned physicist Albert Einstein declined the offer of the Israeli presidency in 1952: “Tell me what to do if he says yes! If he accepts, we are in trouble,” he said, because Einstein “would distinguish between Jewish homeland and state, and argued for a bi-national state where Jews and Arabs shared a common land, not a strictly defined “Jewish state,” according to Fred Jerome, who in June published his new book, “Einstein on Israel and Zionism: His Provocative Ideas about the Middle East” (St. Martin’s Press).

More instructive than Einstein’s arguments and Ben-Gurion’s reaction was the U.S. President Harry S. Truman’s proclamation, just 11 minutes after the state’s unilateral declaration, that, “The United States recognizes the provisional government (proclaimed by Jews “in Palestine”) as the de facto authority of the new State of Israel,” and NOT as “the new Jewish State” as proposed by the American Jewish leaders, crossing out the proposed words and replacing them in his own handwriting with “the new state of Israel.” Obviously, Netanyahu’s precondition “was devised because Netanyahu understands that Palestinians will never accept it because it negates their standing in a land they have inhabited from time immemorial.” (Rosenberg on June 14)

Czech Republic Foreign Minister Jan Kohout, visiting Israel on June 28, said in an exclusive interview with The Jerusalem Post: “First we have to understand what is meant by this [Jewish state demand]. So far, I can say that I don’t have a clear picture on that.” “Resolution 181 (UN Resolution 181, also called the 1947 UN Partition Plan) calls for recognition of Israel as a Jewish state. But at the same time it gives equal rights to all of its citizens,” said Kohout, who seemed not interested in recent history to note that the Israel recognized by the UN Resolution 181, which at the time had a population of some (500,000) Jews and (438,000) Arab Palestinians, is very much smaller than the one we know now, which enjoys a de facto, but not yet a de jure, international recognition, thanks to Israel’s “War of Independence” using Plan D to “cleanse” Palestine, according to Pappe and to five major territorial expansionist wars, dubbed “preventive” or “pre-emptive” wars by Israeli strategists, who launched them to secure their ethnic cleansing exploits, claiming with their former premier, Golda Meir, that there was “no Palestinian people” to cleanse.

To ethnically cleanse the Palestinians was the very basis of Israel’s raison-d’être. Speaking of the Arabs of Palestine (Complete Diaries, June 12, 1895 entry), Theodore Herzl, founder of the World Zionist Organization, said: “Spirit the penniless population across the frontier by denying it employment… Both the process of expropriation and the removal of the poor must be carried out discreetly and circumspectly.” The tragic result was summarized by Israel’s minister of defense during the 1967 war, Moshe Dayan, in an address to the Technion, Haifa, (Haaretz, April 4, 1969): “Jewish villages were built in the place of Arab villages. You do not even know the names of these Arab villages, and I do not blame you because geography books no longer exist. Not only do the books not exist, the Arab villages are not there either. Nahlal arose in the place of Mahlul; Kibbutz Gvat in the place of Jibta; Kibbutz Sarid in the place of Huneifis; and Kefar Yehushua in the place of Tal al-Shuman. There is not a single place built in this country that did not have a former Arab population.”

It seems clear now that the UN General Assembly Resolution 4686 of 1991, which revoked an earlier one equating Zionism with racism (the 1975 Resolution 3379), was a premature measure.

Kohout, whose country was the former rotating president of the European Union, is not a rare species in demanding to “understand what is meant” by the “Jewish state” precondition. One could not but recall the Venetian word “ghetto,” once meant for the Jews of Europe. The Israeli leadership seems now in the grips of a “ghetto mentality” racing against the modern times of pluralism and coexistence, when nations are moving towards a globalized 21st-century identity of citizenship by allegiance, regardless of race, creed or gender, and at a time when the French translation of Israeli academic Shlomo Sand’s “The Invention of the Jewish People” is granted this year’s French prestigious Aujourd’hui Award for a book which argues that Zionism in modern times “invented” the concept of the “Jewish people” as well as their “imaginary” historical connection to Palestine.

— Nicola Nasser is a veteran Arab journalist based in Bir Zeit of the Israeli – occupied Palestinian territories.


Gideon Levy: the world only wants to know Gazans when they fire rockets

July 4, 2009

Spoil them rotten

By Gideon Levy in Haaretz

For the past several weeks it has been very hard to get coffee in Gaza. Gas is dirt cheap (NIS 2.40 per liter), and diesel is even cheaper (NIS 1.70); it’s all flowing through the tunnels from Egypt. But there is no coffee. Only after inquiring at a number of grocery stores might you find a bag of coffee, but the grocer will sell you only 250 grams for NIS 18 shekels – an exorbitant price in Gaza. Coffee, as you know, is not a “humanitarian” item; you can live without it. And indeed, Gaza has gone over to tea. Spoil them rotten – that’s Israel’s Gaza policy.

Every few weeks there’s a shortage of another item. Water is in sufficient supply for the time being, but electricity is intermittent. They are repairing the power station but there aren’t any spare parts. You try living in the Gaza heat and poverty without electricity. On Tuesday, for example, the electricity supply to Beit Lahia was cut off for hours. They have begun to clear away the rubble from Operation Cast Lead, but they haven’t started to rebuild, not even a room, except for mud houses, because there is no cement and gravel.

The $2 billion promised with much ceremony at the Sharm el-Sheikh summit about six months ago – of it $900 million from the new America under President Barack Obama – is lying in vaults at the international banks. A senior American diplomat explained a few days ago that his country is not transferring the money “because Israel is objecting,” and an American law prohibits trading with Hamas. He said this in utter seriousness, as if there were no American commitment to transfer the money, and as if the great America were dependent on Israel. However, the burden of Gaza’s suffering is also weighing on Obama’s shoulders: Without its rehabilitation, his great promise is hollow.

The Hamas government has been in existence for two years and the siege on Gaza continues at full strength and cruelty. Washington is busy with the fate of the Migron settlement, Israel is busy with the Dudu Topaz case, and the world has lost interest. When there are no terror attacks, there are no Arabs: When Gaza isn’t shooting, it is abandoned to its fate. That is the message Israel is sending its imprisoned neighbors: Launch Qassams and we’ll take an interest in you, don’t launch Qassams and we won’t take an interest. Only abducted soldier Gilad Shalit is still reminding us of Gaza’s existence: The activists for his release demonstrated again last week. But instead of demonstrating for the release of Palestinian prisoners, they demonstrated for tightening the siege and collective punishment. Only Gilad was born to be free.

The mass experiment on human beings has failed miserably; two years is enough time to determine this. Not one of the siege’s aims have been achieved and the damage is only piling up, perhaps for all eternity. Folly and malevolence, a fairly common combination, have melded into one of Israel’s most fateful mistakes. Even if we leave aside the moral aspect of the inhumane and illegal siege, it is no longer possible to ignore its stupidity as a policy. Shalit has not been released – no siege is going to free him. Hamas has not fallen – the group is only more firmly establishing its regime. And above all, a new reality is developing before our eyes that is worse for Israel than all its predecessors.

The siege has splintered the Palestinian people even more. This is not the first time Israel has split up the Palestinians: Since 1948 it has been systematically separating Palestinians from Palestinians, dividing and ruling. The diaspora abroad, the refugees in the Arab countries, the inhabitants of the territories, the Arabs of East Jerusalem and the Arabs of Israel – sometimes members of a single family – are developing into separate splinter peoples.

Now the next splintering has come along, the most stupid of all: the split between Gaza and the West Bank. While Israel is preventing Gaza from having any connection with the West Bank, it complains that there is no Palestinian partner. While we are strengthening the Hamas regime, thanks to the siege’s hardships and the wrongs of Operation Cast Lead, we are lamenting “the Hamastan in Gaza.” And what would happen if Israel were to lift the siege, enable the reconstruction and bring Gaza and the West Bank closer together? A huge disaster; a chance for moderation.

Leave aside, then, the moral aspect – it doesn’t have any takers in Israel. But what about good sense? What is Israel getting out of the siege, apart from the enjoyment of the other side’s suffering and another stage in its disintegration? Yasser Arafat was too strong, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas is too weak and now there is a new ray of hope for all the spoilers: The Palestinians are split and there’s no one to talk to.