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Ben Gurion University
Ben Gurion University – Neve Gordon
(Dept of Political Science) gets indignant over arrests of Leftist
Protesters [its good enough for the Settlers but its “intimidation”
when applied to Leftists]
Fmr.
Clinton Special Counsel Lanny Davis vs. Israeli Professor Neve
Gordon: A Debate on the Israeli Assault on Gaza
Israel has poured thousands of
reservists into Gaza as Israeli troops push deeper into Gaza City in
the seventeenth day of fighting. Nearly 900 Palestinians have now
died, including 275 children. Another 4,100 Palestinians have been
injured. The Israeli death toll is at thirteen. We host a debate on
the crisis with Lanny Davis, senior adviser to the Israel Project
and the former special counsel to President Clinton, and with Neve
Gordon, an Israeli professor at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev.
[includes rush transcript]
Guests:
Lanny Davis, Senior adviser and spokesperson for the Israel Project.
He is an attorney and the former special counsel to President
Clinton.
Neve Gordon, chair of the Department of Politics and Government,
Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Israel, and the author of
Israel’s Occupation.
AMY GOODMAN: Israeli troops are
pushing deeper towards Gaza’s towns and cities as thousands of
Israeli reservists enter the conflict for the first time. Israeli
warplanes continue to bombard targets across northern Gaza and in
the town of Rafah on the southern border with Egypt. Meanwhile,
Palestinian militants continue to fire rockets into southern Israel.
The Israeli military is continuing
to surround Gaza City, and many residents in the outlying suburbs
are moving into the city center. A Palestinian human rights group
told The Guardian newspaper up to 90,000 Gazans, more than
half of them children, had fled their homes across the territory.
Israel and Egypt have refused to open their borders to allow Gazans
to flee the fighting.
The death toll now stands at nearly
900 Palestinians, many of them civilian, including 275 children.
Another 4,100 Palestinians have been injured. Thirteen Israelis have
been killed, including three civilians hit by rocket fire and ten
soldiers. Four of those soldiers died in friendly fire incidents.
Aid agencies are warning of a
humanitarian crisis in Gaza with the territory’s one-and-a-half
million residents in urgent need of food and medical aid. The BBC
reports the main hospital in Gaza is close to collapse with patients
reportedly dying because of a lack of specialist doctors and basic
medical equipment.
On Tuesday, Israeli Prime Minister
Ehud Olmert said the offensive was nearing its goals but that the
assault will continue. Olmert also spoke out in defiance of the UN
Security Council’s call for an immediate ceasefire, saying, “Nobody
should be allowed to decide for us if we are allowed to strike.”
Both Hamas and Israel have rejected the UN resolution. Meanwhile,
talks between Hamas and Egyptian officials are continuing in Cairo.
We turn now to a debate on the
issue. Attorney Lanny Davis is with us. He’s a senior adviser and
spokesperson for the Israel Project, former special counsel to
President Clinton. He joins us from Washington, D.C. Joining us on
the line from Beersheba, Israel is Neve Gordon. He’s the chair of
the Department of Politics and Government, Ben-Gurion University of
the Negev. He is author of Israel’s Occupation.
We welcome you both to Democracy
Now! Lanny Davis, you’re in full support of the Israeli
invasion. Tell us why.
LANNY DAVIS: The right of
self-defense. When terrorism kills innocent civilians intentionally,
there isn’t a civilized nation in the world that wouldn’t attack
back to try to prevent that terrorism. I use “terrorism” with a very
specifically defined expression. When a party shoots to kill
innocent civilians intentionally for a political purpose, including
one’s own citizens to be exposed to death for political purposes,
that’s terrorism. So I support the right of self-defense against
terrorism, as any country would if this were happening, I believe.
And the United States certainly would. If Rochester were being
exposed to mortars and rockets from Montreal, I believe that the
United States would not sit idly by and allow the Canadians to do
that. So I think the first and most foremost right is the right of
self-defense against terrorism, which is intentional killing of
civilians.
AMY GOODMAN: And the issue
proportionality, the number of people we’ve seen dead, close to 900
Palestinians, over 200 of them children, overwhelmingly civilian,
versus the thirteen Israelis who have died, ten of them soldiers,
four of them in friendly fire.
LANNY DAVIS: Yes, it’s very
disturbing that there are so many more deaths and suffering by
innocent people in Gaza. I grieve and regret that as a human being,
as an American, as a Jew who has supported a Palestinian state ever
since I was a child and have been very critical through the years of
the Israeli government not supporting a Palestinian state until just
recently. So I grieve for those numbers, but I don’t understand the
word “disproportional.”
Number one, if it was one child, if
it was your child who was intentionally killed by a terrorist, and
you asked your government to respond, and in order to respond, the
people who launched the rockets placed their rockets among
schoolchildren and innocent civilians deliberately—and that is an
undisputed fact that Hamas has located its rocket launchers
deliberately among civilians in schools, beneath hospitals—then that
unfortunate and terrible tragic death of innocent civilians has to
be more attributed to Hamas’s calculated strategy of exposing its
civilians to death, but certainly does not take away from my first
statement of the horror and the grief of any innocent civilians,
whether it’s one child in Israel or a hundred children in Palestine
or in Gaza. To me, they’re equally tragic. There is no
disproportionality. They’re equally tragic.
AMY GOODMAN: Professor Neve Gordon,
you and your family have spent a good deal of time in a bomb shelter
against the Hamas rockets in Ben-Gurion University, in the area
around Ben-Gurion University where you live. You have called for the
invasion to end now. Why?
NEVE GORDON: I would call for the
invasion not to begin. We just had a rocket here about an hour ago,
and the issue—I agree with some of what Lanny says. First of all, I
agree with the idea of a basic right to self-defense. And the right
to self-defense is a right to self-defense from violence. We have to
understand that the occupation itself is violence. It’s an act of
violence. Putting people in a prison, in a prison of one million and
a half million people and keeping them there for years on end
without basic foodstuff, without allowing them to enter and exit
when they will, is an act of violence. Without electricity, without
clean water, it’s all an act of violence. And these people are
resisting. I am against the way they’re resisting, but we have to
look at their violence versus our violence.
About between ten and twenty people,
Israelis, have died from rockets in the eight years that rockets
have been launched from the Gaza Strip into Israel. During the same
amount of time, 4,000 Israelis have died from car accidents. And
yet, we don’t see an outrage against the terrorism on the streets in
Israel. But from these twenty people, we’re allowed to enter into
the Gaza Strip and bomb them from the air into their cage and kill
275 children. And Lanny says that it’s not about disproportionality,
but it is. Disproportionality is a term from international law. And
by saying that he doesn’t agree with it, he’s defying international
law.
And Israel has been defying
international law and international agreements and international
decisions from 1967, or probably from before. One of these decisions
is that Israel must return these territories. And by maintaining and
holding onto these territories through violent means, Israel is
creating a situation where basically all the doors in the Gaza Strip
are closed except one door. Sheikh Ahmed Yassin, the founder of
Hamas, said it. Israel has closed all the doors in the Gaza Strip
again, except for the mosque doors. We’ve closed the school doors.
We’ve closed the economic doors. We’ve closed the medical doors. And
so, and then we’re surprised that we have to deal with Hamas.
So I think we need to change the
hard drive, and the hard drive has to be that you don’t solve things
through violence. You solve things—you solve diplomatic issues,
political issues through negotiations and talks. And it’s about time
that Israel sat down with Hamas and started negotiating with them.
Hamas is the elected government of the Palestinian people. We don’t
need to like them. I don’t like them. But they are the elected
government, and we need to sit down and talk with them and not bomb
them.
AMY GOODMAN: Lanny Davis, your
response?
LANNY DAVIS: Well, first of all, I
appreciate—Professor Gordon and I probably have the same heart, and
we probably have the same empathy, and we probably have the same
goals of a two-state solution where people negotiate peace. And I
appreciate Professor Gordon is sitting in a situation where his
family is exposed to death, and I’m sitting safely here in
Washington. So I don’t mean to be judgmental, and I greatly respect
what the professor just said, but I focus on facts, and I’m sorry to
say that I must disagree with the professor’s misstatement of
certain facts, or omission might be also accurate.
Let’s start with the international
law issue. It is a violation of international law to deliberately
launch rockets from within civilian areas. Article 53 of the Geneva
Accords expressly says that. Yet the professor forgot to mention
that. It is not a violation of international law to defend yourself
if you’re not intentionally targeting civilians. The Hamas is
intentionally targeting civilians. The professor forgot to mention
the distinction between defending yourself and tragically killing
civilians in trying to find those who are launching missiles against
you intentionally to kill civilians.
And finally and most importantly, I
share the professor’s desire for negotiations. And as I said, since
I was a child, contrary to my father’s strong views, I favored a
Palestinian state, independent, and I still do. But Hamas’s stated
public objective is the destruction of Israel. There isn’t a
civilized country in the world that would sit across the table from
a party that is launching terrorist—and it is defined as terrorism
to intentionally kill civilians, as opposed to military. Nobody
denies that’s what Hamas is doing. And to sit across the table from
an organization that says, “We will not recognize you. We want to
destroy you, and we will use terrorism against your innocent
children,” is impossible. We did sit across the table from Fatah. We
do have the beginnings of a negotiation with Mr. Abboud [sic.].
And we certainly do have the Fatah opposed to the terrorism of Hamas.
After all, they were expelled by a military coup by Hamas.
So all of the issues that I believe
the professor and I have in common, we should at least agree on
basic facts, and the overwhelming one that I don’t think the
professor would deny is Hamas’s aim is terrorism, to kill innocent
civilians, and its objective is the destruction of Israel, not the
recognition of Israel, not two states that can live side by side in
peace.
AMY GOODMAN: Professor Neve Gordon?
NEVE GORDON: The problem is the—yes,
intentions are important, but the facts are more important. And the
fact is that Israel is the one that’s doing the harm to—much more
harm to civilians than the Hamas ever did and ever will do. Israel
has killed in the past two weeks 275 children, and not Hamas,
regardless of the intentions. You mentioned the school. Israel is
dealing with a propaganda war. Israel is the one that disseminated a
video of Hamas shooting rockets from a school, a video that’s almost
two years old, claiming that the video was taken a day or two
earlier. So Israel is in a propaganda war. Yes, the Hamas is
fighting out from a civilian population, but Israel has the choice
whether it’s going to bomb the civilian population ore not, and it
is intentionally deciding to bomb the civilian population. So in
terms of intentionality in bombing areas where there are civilians,
Israel is acting like a state terrorist. So, if your definition of
terrorism doesn’t take into account the identity of the actor—and
state actors can also be terrorists—then when you bomb a school and
when you bomb a university and when you bomb a neighborhood and
you’re killing much more civilians than militants, then you’re doing
something that is an act of terror.
And I have a problem. I think my
views are pro-Israelis. I would like to see Israel existing in the
Middle East sixty years down the line, and not only the first sixty
years. And the only way for Israel to continue to exist in the
Middle East is if it changes its approach towards the region and see
itself as a leader of peace and not a belligerent actor in the
region. And Israel has been living on the sword. Some of our
neighbors have been living on the sword. But we have to come out and
say we no longer want to live on the sword, because those who live
on the sword, as the Bible tells us, also die on the sword. We have
to come out and say we are willing to talk with our enemies, even
with people that say that they do not believe in the existence of
Israel. The PLO—you mentioned Fatah—the PLO said that they do not
believe in the existence of Israel for many years. And ultimately,
we sat down and talked with them, and they are now considered our
Palestinian partner. I believe that if there is a pragmatic side, a
strong pragmatic wing in Hamas, that if we start negotiation with
them, over the years these people will also agree to the existence
of Israel and be willing to live side by side with us. If we do not
talk with them, if we continue this cycle of violence, ultimately
Israel will be destroyed, because ultimately, the technological edge
that we have over our neighbors will not be meaningful. So we have
to change our approach. We have to be pro—by changing our approach,
we’re actually pro-Israeli. We say we want to see Israel a hundred
years from now. And the only way we’ll see Israel exist a hundred
years from now is if Israel makes peace with Syria, with Lebanon and
with the Palestinian people.
AMY GOODMAN: Professor Neve Gordon
and Lanny Davis, we’re going to break, then come back. Then, we will
be joined by Congress member Dennis Kucinich, speaking to us from
Cleveland, one of five Congress members to vote against the
resolution in support of Israel. And then we’ll be speaking with
Jewish women who are standing up to the Israeli invasion of Gaza,
one in Toronto, one here in New York. A major protest is planned
today outside the Israeli consulate at 5:00 in the afternoon. Lanny
Davis is former attorney, former special counsel to President
Clinton. He is currently an attorney, and he’s a senior adviser and
spokesperson for the Israel Project. Neve Gordon is in Beersheba in
Israel, chair of the Department of Politics and Government at
Ben-Gurion University of the Negev. Stay with us.
[break]
AMY GOODMAN: Our guests are attorney
Lanny Davis, senior adviser, spokesperson for the Israel Project in
Washington, D.C., and Professor Neve Gordon, chair of the Department
of Politics and Government, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev in
Israel, author of Israel’s Occupation. I want to talk about
why Israel invaded at this point. What is your understanding of
this? They said Hamas broke the ceasefire. Professor Gordon, is that
the reason you feel that this happened?
NEVE GORDON: Hamas did launch an
incredible amount of rockets at the end of the ceasefire. Israel
actually is a first actor that broke the ceasefire on November 1st,
when it attacked in the Gaza—November 4th, when it attacked in the
Gaza Strip.
I think the actual reasons have to
do—the two major reasons—with rebuilding the reputation of the
Israeli military after its humiliation in 2006 in Lebanon and the
upcoming Israeli elections. Both Labor and Kadima, the two out of
the three major parties, were behind in the polls against BB
Netanyahu’s Likud, who was blaming them of being soft on the
Palestinians. And I think the timing, in terms of the elections,
which are on February 10th, was perfect to show that Kadima and
Labor, that are in party, know how to be tough on the Palestinians.
And in fact, already in the polls we see that Labor has added almost
50 percent to what it had before the war began. So I think there’s
some cynical political issues and reputation issues that played a
dramatic part in initiating this war.
I think that Hamas also acted—or
miscalculated and acted totally wrong, that it launched the rockets
on Israel. I think, strategically and morally, it was a mistake. But
I’m not sure Israel had to react through such a war. I think through
diplomatic means it could have been stopped.
AMY GOODMAN: Lanny Davis, are you
concerned about the blockade not only on the Palestinians, but also
on information? The New York Times, the BBC, Reuters, CNN
have all filed a complaint with the Israeli prime minister not
allowing international press into Gaza. Why do you think Israel is
not allowing press in?
LANNY DAVIS: Well, first of all, I
don’t want to duck your latter question, because I’m in favor of
greater media going into Gaza so they can report the facts rather
than false reporting. I’d like to get back to that.
But let me start with your use of
your word “blockade.” That’s an inaccurate or at least a biased
word. I don’t say that you intended it that way, but it is. There is
a blockade of tunnels and any other means of access that the Hamas
has used to allow the import of these rockets from Iran. This is an
Iranian-subsidized operation, just like Hezbollah. And yet, 165
trucks of humanitarian, medical, food aid went into Gaza yesterday
from Israel. It is the Egyptians that have blocked access. You must
ask the Egyptian government, “Why are you blocking access?” Because
they know these tunnels have been used by Hamas not to resupply
their people with food and medical aid, but with rockets who are
placed among civilians, next to schools, under hospitals, to kill
civilians in Israel. So “blockade” is really, I think, a word that
needs to be changed. It’s a selective blocking of terrorist war
instruments that are being supplied primarily by Iran, and the
Egyptian government has the ability to open those tunnels, and they
see the same danger as does Israel.
AMY GOODMAN: Well, let me put that
question—
LANNY DAVIS: On the issue—
AMY GOODMAN: Just one sec—on the
issue of the blockade to Professor Neve Gordon, which predates the
Israeli invasion, the total blockade of Gaza that many people have
been challenging around the world. Can you explain what that
blockade is, Professor Gordon?
NEVE GORDON: Well, since Hamas was
elected into government in a democratic election, Israel decided
basically to economically boycott the Palestinian people, and
particularly Hamas and the Hamas takeover of the Gaza Strip, and is
basically controlling all the borders and deciding who can enter and
who can leave and what can enter and what can leave. And it is
actually allowing a certain amount of humanitarian aid, and it’s
allowing this humanitarian aid, according to Israel’s own claims, in
order that there won’t be a humanitarian catastrophe. So, basically,
Israel is saying, “We’ll allow 165 trucks so there won’t be a
humanitarian catastrophe, so we can continue the war against Hamas.”
So it’s a kind of new war ethics, a war ethics that you’re fighting
against not another military, but militants in an armed wing of an
organization that are within the civilian population, and so you’re
basically attacking the civilian population, and you’re saying, “We
don’t want a catastrophe to happen, so we can continue attacking
you.” There’s something very cynical about it and something horrific
about it.
And so, actually, there has been a
blockade on Gaza, and it’s been a very severe blockade on Gaza. And
even Israel claims that there’s been a blockade on Gaza and saying
that Israel allows humanitarian assistance to enter so it can
continue bombing them is very, very cynical.
LANNY DAVIS: Let’s agree on a basic
fact here. Ms. Goodman, you used the expression “absolute blockade”
a second time after I said the first use of your expression
“blockade” was inaccurate or imbalanced. So I would like to suggest
that you at least say “partial blockade,” because it is not aimed at
anything other than preventing munitions and rockets coming in from
Iran. That’s a fact. And ask the government of Egypt whether they
agree. Secondly—
NEVE GORDON: If a Palestinian wants
to import a car—
LANNY DAVIS: Professor, professor,
let me just—let me just make one other point.
NEVE GORDON: —a car, he can’t import
the car. If a Palestinian wants to import a cow, he can’t import a
cow.
LANNY DAVIS: I really—I really
wanted to interrupt you badly, but I appreciate you have a lot to
say, and I’d like you to allow me to finish.
I am very surprised that you don’t
start with the fact that we agree on: all Hamas has to do is stop
sending terrorist rockets aimed at civilians—you’ve never disagreed
with me on that; we agree on that—and make peace with Israel. That’s
all they have to do, the same way that Mr. Abboud [sic.] and
the Fatah have done in the West Bank, which is flourishing.
And secondly, most importantly, the
occupation ended. In 2005, Israel took all of its troops out. Faced
with a state or a terrorist state or a government that says, “I’m
trying to destroy you, and I’m going to send rockets to kill your
civilians,” is the reason why the economic boycott, as you call it,
would occur in any civilized country in the world. If Canada or
Mexico had a destruction objective of the United States and were
launching rockets against Houston or against Boston—if you think the
United States or any other country in the world would allow that to
happen without at least economic boycott while allowing humanitarian
aid, then I would beg to differ with you.
On the media, Ms. Goodman, I—
AMY GOODMAN: Lanny Davis, we began
with you—I just—we’re going to have to wrap up because we’re headed
to Dennis Kucinich.
LANNY DAVIS: OK. Well, just a quick
comment on the media, which I didn’t answer. I think that there
ought to be more exposure, and there should be more openness with
the media. I think Israel is moving in that direction. I certainly
think that the propaganda, for example, a false report that an
Israeli tank shot on a UN convoy, took forty-eight hours for the
United Nations spokesperson who put that statement out to say,
“Well, I’m not so sure.” That was a forty-eight hour time gap.
Everybody still believes it happened, because the withdrawal of the
statement or the modification of the statement didn’t get the
front-page headlines that the statement did.
So we have to be very careful that
when we get our media into Gaza, that we get people who are
objective reporting the facts as to where are these missiles. Are
they under schools? Are they in hospitals? And if so, is that an act
that is a violation and a war crime in and of itself? That’s why I
want the media in Gaza, to prove the war crimes being committed by
Hamas are where they’re placing their rockets.
AMY GOODMAN: Lanny Davis, we began
with you; we will end with Professor Neve Gordon in Beersheba.
NEVE GORDON: I have two comments to
make, one related to protest in media. 700 Israelis have been
arrested since this war began, because they protested this war. This
has not made it to an international media, and it’s an act of
intimidation by the state against those who protest the war.
Second, regarding what Lanny said,
that no country would allow another country to bomb its citizens,
he’s right. He forgets one essential fact, and that is the
occupation. And Gaza was not—is still under occupation, because
Israel controls all of its borders, and the West Bank is under
occupation, and East Jerusalem is under occupation. And the act—the
first, the initial, the primordial act of violence is the
occupation. The rockets are a reaction to that act of violence. And
so, we have to keep in mind that within—it’s not between a state and
another state. It’s been between an occupier and an occupied.
AMY GOODMAN: We will leave it there.
Professor Neve Gordon in Beersheba, chair of the Department of
Politics and Government, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev. He is
author of Israel’s Occupation. Lanny Davis, senior adviser
and spokesperson for the Israel Project, attorney and former special
counsel to President Clinton. Thank you both for being with us.
LANNY DAVIS: Thank you so much.
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