|
Home
About IsraCampus
Search
עברית
Русский
Ben Gurion U
Hebrew U
Tel Aviv U
U of Haifa
Other Schools
A-C
D-G
H-K
L-N
O-R
S-V
W-Z
Israeli Academic Extremism
Israeli Academic Extremists outside
Israel
Anti-Israel Petitions Signed by Israeli
Academics
ALEF Watch
IDI Watch
IsraCampus Essays
How to Complain
Contact Us |
Israelis at
Non-Israeli Universities
University of Exeter - Ilan Pappe (Dept. of Political Science)
justifies Hamas kassam missile war crimes; hangs the war crime
“albatross” on Israel’s neck
http://www.lrb.co.uk/web/14/01/2009/papp01_.html
Israel’s Message
Ilan Pappe
14 January 2009
In 2004, the Israeli army began building a dummy Arab city in the
Negev desert. It’s the size of a real city, with streets (all of
them given names), mosques, public buildings and cars. Built at a
cost of $45 million, this phantom city became a dummy Gaza in the
winter of 2006, after Hizbullah fought Israel to a draw in the
north, so that the IDF could prepare to fight a ‘better war’ against
Hamas in the south.
When the Israeli Chief of General Staff Dan Halutz visited the
site after the Lebanon war, he told the press that soldiers ‘were
preparing for the scenario that will unfold in the dense
neighbourhood of Gaza City’. A week into the bombardment of Gaza,
Ehud Barak attended a rehearsal for the ground war. Foreign
television crews filmed him as he watched ground troops conquer the
dummy city, storming the empty houses and no doubt killing the
‘terrorists’ hiding in them.
‘Gaza is the problem,’ Levy Eshkol, then prime minister of
Israel, said in June 1967. ‘I was there in 1956 and saw venomous
snakes walking in the street. We should settle some of them in the
Sinai, and hopefully the others will immigrate.’ Eshkol was
discussing the fate of the newly occupied territories: he and his
cabinet wanted the Gaza Strip, but not the people living in it.
Israelis often refer to Gaza as ‘Me’arat Nachashim’, a snake pit.
Before the first intifada, when the Strip provided Tel Aviv with
people to wash their dishes and clean their streets, Gazans were
depicted more humanely. The ‘honeymoon’ ended during their first
intifada, after a series of incidents in which a few of these
employees stabbed their employers. The religious fervour that was
said to have inspired these isolated attacks generated a wave of
Islamophobic feeling in Israel, which led to the first enclosure of
Gaza and the construction of an electric fence around it. Even after
the 1993 Oslo Accords, Gaza remained sealed off from Israel, and was
used merely as a pool of cheap labour; throughout the 1990s, ‘peace’
for Gaza meant its gradual transformation into a ghetto.
In 2000, Doron Almog, then the chief of the southern command,
began policing the boundaries of Gaza: ‘We established observation
points equipped with the best technology and our troops were allowed
to fire at anyone reaching the fence at a distance of six kilometres,’
he boasted, suggesting that a similar policy be adopted for the West
Bank. In the last two years alone, a hundred Palestinians have been
killed by soldiers merely for getting too close to the fences. From
2000 until the current war broke out, Israeli forces killed three
thousand Palestinians (634 children among them) in Gaza.
Between 1967 and 2005, Gaza’s land and water were plundered by
Jewish settlers in Gush Katif at the expense of the local
population. The price of peace and security for the Palestinians
there was to give themselves up to imprisonment and colonisation.
Since 2000, Gazans have chosen instead to resist in greater numbers
and with greater force. It was not the kind of resistance the West
approves of: it was Islamic and military. Its hallmark was the use
of primitive Qassam rockets, which at first were fired mainly at the
settlers in Katif. The presence of the settlers, however, made it
hard for the Israeli army to retaliate with the brutality it uses
against purely Palestinian targets. So the settlers were removed,
not as part of a unilateral peace process as many argued at the time
(to the point of suggesting that Ariel Sharon be awarded the Nobel
peace prize), but rather to facilitate any subsequent military
action against the Gaza Strip and to consolidate control of the West
Bank.
After the disengagement from Gaza, Hamas took over, first in
democratic elections, then in a pre-emptive coup staged to avert an
American-backed takeover by Fatah. Meanwhile, Israeli border guards
continued to kill anyone who came too close, and an economic
blockade was imposed on the Strip. Hamas retaliated by firing
missiles at Sderot, giving Israel a pretext to use its air force,
artillery and gunships. Israel claimed to be shooting at ‘the
launching areas of the missiles’, but in practice this meant
anywhere and everywhere in Gaza. The casualties were high: in 2007
alone three hundred people were killed in Gaza, dozens of them
children.
Israel justifies its conduct in Gaza as a part of the fight
against terrorism, although it has itself violated every
international law of war. Palestinians, it seems, can have no place
inside historical Palestine unless they are willing to live without
basic civil and human rights. They can be either second-class
citizens inside the state of Israel, or inmates in the mega-prisons
of the West Bank and the Gaza Strip. If they resist they are likely
to be imprisoned without trial, or killed. This is Israel’s message.
Resistance in Palestine has always been based in villages and
towns; where else could it come from? That is why Palestinian
cities, towns and villages, dummy or real, have been depicted ever
since the 1936 Arab revolt as ‘enemy bases’ in military plans and
orders. Any retaliation or punitive action is bound to target
civilians, among whom there may be a handful of people who are
involved in active resistance against Israel. Haifa was treated as
an enemy base in 1948, as was Jenin in 2002; now Beit Hanoun, Rafah
and Gaza are regarded that way. When you have the firepower, and no
moral inhibitions against massacring civilians, you get the
situation we are now witnessing in Gaza.
But it is not only in military discourse that Palestinians are
dehumanised. A similar process is at work in Jewish civil society in
Israel, and it explains the massive support there for the carnage in
Gaza. Palestinians have been so dehumanised by Israeli Jews –
whether politicians, soldiers or ordinary citizens – that killing
them comes naturally, as did expelling them in 1948, or imprisoning
them in the Occupied Territories. The current Western response
indicates that its political leaders fail to see the direct
connection between the Zionist dehumanisation of the Palestinians
and Israel’s barbarous policies in Gaza. There is a grave danger
that, at the conclusion of ‘Operation Cast Lead’, Gaza itself will
resemble the ghost town in the Negev.
Ilan Pappe is chair of the history department at the University
of Exeter and co-director of the Exeter Centre for Ethno-Political
Studies. The Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine came out in 2007.
|