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GAZA
CEASEFIRE:
PALESTINE HOLDS STRONG IN THE FACE OF U.S.-BACKED ISRAELI TERROR CAMPAIGN
By
Richard Becker
A
ceasefire agreement between the Hamas-led Palestinian government in Gaza and
Israel was announced today, Nov. 21, in Cairo by U.S. Secretary of State Hillary
Clinton and Egyptian Foreign Minister Mohammed Kamel Amr.
Clinton
made an emergency trip to the Middle East with the aim of brokering a truce, a
clear sign of the Obama administration's fears that the continuation of the
brutal Israeli assault on Gaza was endangering U.S. imperialist interests in the
region.
Since
Israel's latest intense bombing campaign began last week, Clinton, President
Obama, and Republican and Democratic congressional leaders have repeatedly
expressed all-out support for the Israeli side, while pointedly ignoring far
higher Palestinian casualties.
The
House of Representatives "passed" a resolution expressing its "unwavering
commitment" to Israel. House Resolution 813 was introduced at 12:04 p.m. on Nov.
16, and declared adopted at 12:05 p.m. the same day!
Since
Nov. 14, at least 146 Palestinians have been killed, more than 1,000 wounded,
and much of Gaza's infrastructure and public facilities destroyed by a
coordinated air, sea and land-based bombardment. On the Israeli side, there have
been five killed and more than 100 wounded.
To
hear U.S. officials talk, you would think it was the other way around. But
despite their obscenely pro-Israel rhetoric, it was also clear that Washington
was fearful that a new Israeli ground invasion of Gaza might provoke rebellions
in Egypt, Jordan and other neighboring Arab countries, and possibly lead to a
wider war.
Despite
the death and destruction inflicted by Israel, and despite the fact that it has
no air force, navy, armored units or anti-aircraft defenses, the Palestinian
forces have not been defeated. Virtually all news reports from inside Gaza
reflect a strong determination to resist among the population.
The
terms of the temporary agreement reportedly call for a halt to the fighting, an
end to Israeli targeted assassinations of Palestinian leaders, and undefined
steps to lift the Israeli blockade that has inflicted massive suffering on the
1.6 million Palestinians in Gaza.
Lifting
the blockade is a critical issue for the people of Gaza. Whether there will be
any real movement toward ending the blockade remains in doubt, as does the
durability of the truce as a whole.
ISRAEL’S
BLOCKADE: USING FOOD AS A WEAPON
While
Israel withdrew its settlers and bases from Gaza in 2005, it has kept the area
surrounded and blockaded ever since. As result, half of all school children are
malnourished and two-thirds of infants are anemic. Eighty percent of Gaza’s
population are refugees -- those driven out of other parts of Palestine by the
Zionist military forces in 1948 and their descendants.
After
the Hamas party won the January 2006 Palestinian parliamentary election, Israel
imposed a complete blockade on Gaza, with the support of the United States,
European Union and the client government of Hosni Mubarak in Egypt. That the aim
of the blockade was to make the people of Gaza suffer was highlighted by an
article in the Israeli newspaper Haaretz the following month. It reported on a
meeting of top Israeli government officials where the top advisor to then-Prime
Minister Ehud Olmert, Dov Weisglass, said: "It's like an appointment with a
dietician. The Palestinians will get a lot thinner but won’t die." According to
the Haaretz report, the assembled officials "rolled with laughter," at
Weislglass's grotesque "joke."
THE
MYTH OF ISRAEL AS VICTIM
In
the 1960s, the Black Panther Party had a saying about racist cops justifying
their routine killing and brutalizing of Black people by "masquerading as the
victim of an unprovoked attack." It is a description that perfectly fits Israeli
Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu and his predecessors going back to the
creation of the Israeli state in 1948.
In
the U.S. corporate media, Israel is invariably depicted as the "victim." Its
brutal and cowardly military assaults are justified as "retaliation," inferring
that Israel's actions are "self-defense." Over and over, since the early 1950s,
successive Israeli governments have staged provocations to prompt responses that
could then be used to justify massive attacks while presenting Israel as the
"victim of an unprovoked attack." The aim has generally been to gain new
territory and/or crush any state or movement perceived as a threat to Israeli
military domination.
This
familiar pattern was repeated in November 2008. The murder of five Palestinian
civilians on the day after the 2008 U.S. election broke a ceasefire and set in
motion a train of events that led to an all-out assault on Gaza by the Israeli
military. A vast array of weaponry, including white phosphorous and depleted
uranium munitions, was unleashed on a trapped population. More than 1,400
Palestinians were killed, while Israeli forces had 13 killed -– a ratio of more
than 100 to 1.
This
time, the fatal shooting of a mentally disabled young man on Nov. 5 and a
12-year-old boy on Nov. 9, both killed by the Israeli army inside Gaza, set off
the new round of fighting. Then, on Nov. 14, Israel assassinated a top Hamas
leader, Ahmed Al-Jaabari, the very same day that he had been presented with a
proposal for a long-term ceasefire by a joint Israeli-Egyptian commission.
These
provocations were no doubt approved at the highest level of the Israeli
government. The extreme right-wing Netanyahu-Lieberman government desired a new
conflict both to further devastate the Palestinian infrastructure in Gaza and to
advance their political prospects in the January 2013 Israeli election. That
hundreds of Palestinians and some Israelis as well would die in order to achieve
these objectives was incidental to the Israeli leaders.
Whether
the present ceasefire holds and for how long can't be known at this point. The only real long-term solution to
the crisis is an to end to colonial occupation and real self-determination for
the Palestinian people, including the right to return to their
homeland.
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This space is dedicated to the proposition that we need to know the history of the struggles on the left and of earlier progressive movements here and world-wide. If we can learn from the mistakes made in the past (as well as what went right) we can move forward in the future to create a more just and equitable society. We will be reviewing books, CDs, and movies we believe everyone needs to read, hear and look at as well as making commentary from time to time. Greg Green, site manager
Thursday, November 22, 2012
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