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Hamas vs. Israel: The Needless War
Aref Assaf
First published in www.Arabisto.com
January 10, 2009
Deservedly, body and rocket count of the invasion of Gaza has
received much media coverage. The carnage, however, becomes more
intolerable once we delve into Israeli's miscalculations about
its relation with Hamas, its upcoming elections and the end and
the beginning of a presidential cycle in the United States.
The military plans and political decision to invade Gaza were
formulated much earlier than the end of the ceasefire between
Israel and Hamas. Cunningly, Israel has repeatedly claimed that
it had "no choice" but to wage war on Gaza on December 27
because Hamas had broken a ceasefire, was firing rockets at
Israeli civilians, and as Foreign Minister
Tzipi Livni put
it, Israel had "tried everything in order to avoid this
military operation."
But this claim, however, contradicts with the fact that Israel's
military and political leadership took many aggressive steps
during the ceasefire that escalated a crisis with Hamas, and
possibly even provoked Hamas to create a pretext for the
assault. This wasn't a war of "no choice," but rather a very
avoidable war in which Israeli actions played the major role in
instigating.
Israel's history is replete with examples of its deliberate use
of violence and other
provocative measures to trigger reactions in order to create a
pretext for military action, and to portray its opponents as the
aggressors and Israel as the victim. According to historian Zeev Maoz in his recent book,
Defending the Holy Land, Israel most notably
used this policy of "strategic escalation" in 1955-1956, when it
launched deadly raids on Egyptian army positions to provoke
Egypt's President Nasser into violent reprisals preceding its
ill-fated invasion of Egypt; in 1981-1982, when it launched
violent raids on Lebanon in order to provoke Palestinian
escalation preceding the Israeli invasion of Lebanon; and
between 2001-2004, when Prime Minister Ariel Sharon repeatedly
ordered assassinations of high-level Palestinian militants
during declared ceasefires, provoking violent attacks that
enabled Israel's virtual reoccupation of the West Bank.
According to a
detailed report by Barak Raviv in the Israeli newspaper
Haaretz, the countdown to a war began, when Israel's Defense Minister Ehud Barak
started planning the current attack on Gaza with his chiefs of
staff at least six months ago — even as Israel was negotiating
the Egyptian brokered ceasefire with Hamas that went into effect
on June 19. During the subsequent ceasefire, the report
contends, the Israeli security establishment carefully gathered
intelligence to map out Hamas' security infrastructure, engaged
in operational deception, and spread disinformation to mislead
the public about its intentions.
Indeed, there was a genuine lull in rocket and mortar fire
between June 19 and November 4, due to Hamas compliance and only
sporadically violated by a small number of launchings carried
out by rival Fatah and Islamic Jihad militants, largely in
defiance of Hamas. According to the conservative Israeli-based
Intelligence and Terrorism Information Center's
analysis of rocket and missile attacks in 2008, there were
only three rockets fired at Israel in July, September, and
October combined. Israeli civilians living near Gaza experienced
an almost unprecedented degree of security during this period,
with no Israeli casualties.
Yet despite the major lull,
Israel continually raided the West Bank, arresting and
frequently killing "wanted" Palestinians from June to October,
which had the inevitable effect of ratcheting up pressure on
Hamas to respond. Moreover, while the central expectation of
Hamas going into the ceasefire was that Israel would lift the
siege on Gaza, Israel only took the barest steps to ease the
siege, which kept the people at a bare survival level. This
policy was a clear affront to Hamas, and had the inescapable
effect of undermining both Hamas and popular Palestinian support
for the ceasefire.
But Israel's most provocative action, acknowledged by many now
as the critical turning point that undermined the ceasefire,
took place on November 4, when Israeli forces auspiciously
violated the truce by crossing into the Gaza Strip to destroy
what the army said was a tunnel dug by Hamas, killing six Hamas
militants. Sara Roy,
writing in
the
London Review of Books, contends this attack was
"no doubt designed finally to undermine the truce between Israel
and Hamas established last June."
The Israeli breach into Gaza was immediately followed by a
further provocation by Israel on November 5, when the Israeli
government hermetically sealed off all ways into and out of
Gaza. As a result,
the UN reports that the amount of imports entering Gaza has
been "severely reduced to an average of 16 truckloads per day —
down from 123 truckloads per day in October and 475 trucks per
day in May 2007 — before the Hamas takeover." These limited
shipments provide only a fraction of the supplies needed to
sustain 1.5 million starving Palestinians.
In response, Hamas predictably claimed that Israel had violated
the truce and allowed Islamic Jihad to launch a round of rocket
attacks on Israel. Only after lethal Israeli reprisals killed
over 10 Hamas militants in the following days did Hamas
finally respond with volleys of mortars and rockets of their
own. In two short weeks, Israel killed over 15 Palestinian
militants, while about 120 rockets and mortars were fired at
Israel, and although there were no Israeli casualties the calm
had been shattered.
It was at this time that Israeli officials launched what appears
to have been a coordinated media blitz to cultivate public
reception for an impending conflict, stressing the theme of the
"inevitability" of a coming war with Hamas in Gaza. On November
12, senior Army officials announced that war with Hamas
was likely in the two
months after the six-month ceasefire, baldly stating it
would occur even if Hamas wasn't interested in confrontation. A
few days later, Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert publicly
ordered his military commanders to draw up plans for a war
in Gaza, which were already well developed at the time. On
November 19, according to Raviv's report in
Haaretz, the Gaza war plan was brought before Barak
for final approval.
While the rhetoric of an "inevitable" war with Hamas may have
only been Israeli bluster to compel Hamas into line, its actions
on the ground in the critical month leading up to the official
expiration of the ceasefire on December 19 only heightened the
cycle of violence, leaving a distinct impression Israel had cast
the die for war.
Finally, Hamas then walked right into the "inevitable war" that
Israel had been preparing since the ceasefire had gone into
effect in June. With many Palestinians believing the ceasefire
to be meaningless, Hamas announced it wouldn't renew the
ceasefire after it expired on December 19. Hamas then stood back
for two days while Islamic Jihad and Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades
militants fired volleys of mortars and rockets into Israel, in
the context of mutually escalating attacks. Yet even then, with
Israeli threats of war mounting, Hamas imposed a 24-hour
ceasefire on all missile attacks on December 21, announcing it
would consider renewing the lapsed truce with Israel in the Gaza
Strip if Israel would halt its raids in both Gaza and the West
Bank, and keep Gaza border crossings open for supplies of aid
and fuel. Israel immediately rejected its offer.
But when the Israeli Army killed three Hamas militants
laying explosives near the security fence between Israel and
Gaza on the evening of December 23, the Hamas military wing
lashed out by launching a barrage of over 80 missiles into
Israel the following day, claiming it was Israel, and not Hamas,
that was responsible for the escalation.
According to Raviv, Prime Minister Olmert, and Defense Minister
Barak had already met on December 18 to approve the impending
war plan, but put the mission off waiting for a better pretext.
By launching more than 170 rockets and mortars at Israeli
civilians in the days following December 23, killing one Israeli
civilian, Hamas had provided reason enough for Israel to unleash
its long-planned attack on Gaza on December 27.
If Israel's goal were simply to end rocket attacks on its
civilians, it would have solidified and extended the ceasefire,
which was working well, until November. Even after November, it
could have addressed Hamas' longstanding ceasefire proposals for
a complete end to rocket-fire on Israel, in exchange for Israel
lifting its crippling 18-month siege on Gaza.
Instead, the actual targets of its assault on Gaza after
December 27, which included police stations, mosques,
universities, and Hamas government institutions, clearly reveal
that Israel's primary goals go far beyond providing immediate
security for its citizens. Israeli spokespersons repeatedly
claim that Israel's assault isn't about seeking to effect regime
change with Hamas, but rather about creating a "new
security reality" in Gaza. But that "new reality" requires
Israel to use massive violence to degrade the political and
military capacity of Hamas, to a point where it agrees to a
ceasefire with conditions more congenial to Israel. Short of a
complete reoccupation of Gaza, no amount of violence will erase
Hamas from the scene.
The timing and the impetus to create a 'new reality' are the
products of several factors unrelated to the urgency for Israel
to provide security to its citizens.
First, many senior Israeli political and military leaders
strongly opposed the June 19 ceasefire with Hamas, and
looked for opportunities to reestablish Israel's fabled
"deterrent capability" of instilling fear into its enemies.
These leaders felt Israel's deterrent capability was badly
damaged as a result of their withdrawal from Gaza in 2005, and
especially after the widely criticized failures in the 2006
Israeli war with Hezbollah. For this powerful group a ceasefire
was at best a tactical pause before the inevitable renewal of
conflict, when conditions were more favorable. Immediately
following Israel's aerial assault, a
New York Times article noted that Israel had been
eager "to
remind its foes that it has teeth" and to erase the ghost of
Lebanon that has haunted it over the past two years.
A second factor was pressure surrounding the impending Israeli elections
set to take place in early February. The ruling coalition, led
by Barak and Livni, have been repeatedly criticized by the Likud
leader Benjamin Netanyahu, the former prime minister, who is
leading in the polls, for not being tough enough on Hamas and
rocket-fire from Gaza. This gave the ruling coalition a strong
incentive to demonstrate to the Israeli people their security
credentials in order to bolster their chances against the more
hawkish Likud.
Third, Hamas repeatedly said it wouldn't recognize Mahmoud Abbas
as president of the Palestinian Authority after his term runs
out on January 9. The looming political standoff on the
Palestinian side threatens to boost Hamas and undermine Abbas,
who had promoted closer security coordination with Israel and
was congenial to Israeli demands for concessions on future peace
proposals. One possible outcome of this assault is that Abbas
will remain in power for a while longer, since Hamas will be
unable to mobilize its supporters in order to force him to
resign.
And finally, Israel was pressed to take action now due to its
sense of the American political timeline. The Bush
administration rarely exerted constraint on Israel and would
certainly stand by in its waning days, while Barack Obama would
not likely want to begin his presidency with a major
confrontation with Israel.
The
Washington Post
quoted a Bush administration official saying that Israel
struck in Gaza "because they want it to be over before the next
administration comes in. They can't predict how the next
administration will handle it. And this is not the way they want
to start with the new administration." Israeli
supporters have already tied up the hands of the president-elect
by securing a supportive resolutions from both chambers of the
US Congress. Rami Khoury stated in a recent
Daily Star piece that while "
Obama has stayed away from the
war, but they brought the war to him - shoving it down his
throat as his first pre-incumbency lesson in how American
presidents must behave with respect to Israel's desires, if they
wish to remain in power."
At the same time, critics of Hams will argue that Hamas continued to
callously sacrifice its fellow Palestinian citizens, as well as
Israeli civilians, on the altar of maintaining its pyrrhic
resistance credentials and its myopic preoccupation with
revenge, and fell into many self-made traps of its own. There
had been growing international pressure on Israel to ease its
siege and a major increase in creative and nonviolent strategies
drawing attention to the plight of Palestinians such as the
arrival of humanitarian relief convoys off of Gaza's coast in
the past months, but now Gaza lies in ruins.
But as the vastly more powerful actor holding nearly all the
cards in this conflict, the war in Gaza was ultimately Israel's
choice. And for all this bloodshed and violence, Israel must be
held accountable. The bloody history of the Israel/
Palestine conflict did not begin with Hamas's Qassams. It began
in 1948 with the dispossession and subsequent exodus of millions
of Palestinians. No amount of Israeli force will quell
Palestinians' determination to end their misery by ending
Israel's occupation and to this goal, the world must commit
itself.
With the American political establishment firmly and blindly behind Israel's
attack, and Obama's foreign policy team heavily weighted with
pro-Israel insiders like Dennis Ross and Hillary Clinton, any
efforts to hold Israel accountable in the United States will
depend upon American citizens mobilizing a major grassroots
effort behind a new foreign policy that will not tolerate any
violations of international law, including those by Israel, and
will immediately work towards ending Israel's siege of Gaza and
ending Israel's occupation. (See
my piece on Arab and Jewish Americans working together.)
Aref Assaf, PhD,
President,
American Arab Forum,
www.aafusa.org
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