http://www.arabia.com/article/0,1690,News|30332,00.html

It takes more than man to torment a nation
  
 "It's a war zone, it's a war zone, the only difference between what's
taking
 place here and a real war is that it's a war from one side, Israel's side" 
  

 By Ramzy Baroud

 October 04, 2000, 04:03 PM 
 SEATTLE (AROL) - "Listen ..listen.. can you hear that?" My friend cried out
with a trembling
 voice as I waited on the line, trying to make sense of the rush of sounds
coming from the
 other end. "That's an Israeli helicopter firing missiles at Khan Yunis
refugee camp," he
 screamed, "there's another one... I have to go, I must wait with the people
outside." 



 Cries From a Battle Zone 

 He hurried outside to gather in the camp's
 graveyard, south of Gaza City. It seems that
 gathering in the graveyard has become a ritual for
 them, a graveyard that is now riddled with scars left
 by random shooting. They also gather there to bury
 their dead. 

 Another friend, a nurse at Makased Hospital in
 Jerusalem's Intensive Care Unit appeared more
 content as his experiences seem to have become
 a devastating routine. "I worked in the intensive
 care Friday," he began. "Six injured young men
 were brought in the morning. None survived." he
 lamented. 

 A third, "it's a war zone, it's a war zone, the only difference between
what's taking place
 here and a real war is that it's a war from one side, Israel's side" adding
"Israel is shelling
 us with missiles, can you believe it? They are shooting rockets at the
refugee camps in
 Gaza. They bombarded Gaza's community college. No space is left for the
injured, they
 had to operate on people in small clinics. They barely have aspirin in
these clinics. Our
 children are filling the streets like slaughtered sheep. Are you writing
this down? Like
 slaughtered sheep.." 

 Who's to Blame for the Violence? 



 Most of us find it comforting to hold one reason or one
 person responsible for such tragedies. Others prefer the
 "both are responsible" approach, a diplomatic way to
 escape the burden of accountability that comes with
 confronting the truth. 

 Unlike what many have concluded, the continuous
 violence is not simply an outcome of Israeli hard liner
 Ariel Sharon's "visit" to Al Haram Al Sharif (the Noble
 Sanctuary), one of Islam's holiest sites. Yes, Sharon is a
 well known war criminal, that's uncontested. It's also
 true that a trail of blood seems to be accompanying the
 champion of the Jewish settlers. But it's utterly unfair to
 give the man all the credit for the deaths of nearly 70 Palestinians and
well over two
 thousand injuries. Many others share the crime, and they too must be
recognized. 

 Would Sharon have succeeded in assembling 1,000 Israeli soldiers and police
to
 accompany him on his disgraceful visit to the Muslim sites in Jerusalem if
it wasn't for the
 Israeli government's approval? Supposing that Sharon succeeded in ordering
1,000
 heavily armed Israeli soldiers and police to join him on his controversial
trip, and then
 ordering them to kill 5 worshipers and injure hundreds more, how can one
explain the
 violent events developing in the West Bank and Gaza? 

 Sharon, a Criminal Face Among Many 

 It wasn't Sharon who ordered the killing of scores of Palestinian
protesters, many of
 whom were children. It isn't Sharon who is shelling Palestinian refugee
camps with
 Apache helicopters, nor is he the one who killed 12-year-old Mohammed al
Durah, while
 he clung to his father's knee and wept. What about the shoot-to-kill policy
carried out by
 the Israeli army throughout the West Bank, Gaza and Arab towns in Israel?
Though such a
 policy might be denied verbally, medical statistics in the Palestinian
territories prove its
 validity. 80 percent of injured Palestinians received bullets in the upper
parts of their
 bodies according to the Palestinian Minister of Health, Riyadh Zanoun, in
an interview with
 Voice of Palestine radio. 



 Israeli Lieutenant-General Shaul Mofaz, the Israeli Chief
 of Staff who oversaw the Israeli army's retreat from
 Lebanon, appeared to be determined in recent months
 to deploy heavy armories into Palestinian territories,
 anticipating a unilateral declaration of Palestinian
 statehood. Israeli settlements were flooded with
 supplies, even sand bags were brought to Gaza's
 Jewish settlements.

 Israel's muscle flexing was aimed at instituting fear in
 the hearts of Palestinians, as the option of armed
 struggle reemerged following Israel's defeat in South
 Lebanon. Israel wanted to reinforce its tainted image of
 the undefeatable army at any cost, and as quickly as
 possible. Recent Palestinian protests in May were dealt
 with swiftly by the Israeli army. Six Palestinians were killed and nearly
900 hundred were
 injured. With the suppression of protests by the PA police, the violence
would have carried
 on, and Israeli soldiers were fully equipped and ready "to teach a lesson".


 A Political Message is also Being Sent 

 But the Israeli message was also political. PA Charmin's Yasser Arafat's
position at the
 intensive negotiations at Camp David last July appeared to Israel as too
stubborn. Arafat
 was immovable when the talks narrowed down to Jerusalem, perhaps because of
his
 knowledge that Jerusalem is too complex, too emotional and far too sacred
to simply
 return to Gaza without it. 

 In order to support Israel against the PA's seemingly firm stand which
demanded the
 implementation of UN resolution 242 fully, the US began it's own scare
tactics, launching
 a verbal war against Arafat for not being "courageous enough" as Ehud Barak
was during
 the talks, according to Clinton. The US Congress also participated in the
mental war by
 passing bills vowing to cut aid to Palestinians if they dared to declare a
state unilaterally.
 The latest of these measures was September 27th, when a 385-27 House vote
decided
 withhold diplomatic recognition and aid from any such Palestinian state. 

 As Israel's "diplomatic options" were exhausted one by one, time was ripe
for the military
 option to conquer what peace has failed to uphold. With every missile fired
at Palestinian
 protesters, with every bullet, tear gas granade, tank being deployed or
tank pulling into a
 Palestinian town, Israel is sending a message: it's my way and no other
way. 

 Sharon's role in what is clearly a well orchestrated Israeli government
scheme is to
 initiate the conflict, and in the end bear whatever responsibility may be
put on Israel. So in
 the end, the responsibility of the violence is equally shared between the
Palestinian
 Authority as a whole, and Sharon, not the Israeli government. 

 No Room for Innocence 

 The crying face of Mohammed al Durah, who died in the springtime of his
youth, was a
 tragedy that was seen all over Palestine, as innocent faces were gunned
down one by
 one. Yet amongst the many faces covered with blood and sanctified with the
sand of a
 land that Palestinians will always refer to as their homeland, one could
see the real face
 of Israel, inhumane, unmerciful and relenting as ever. If you look deeper
at the images of
 al Durah as he is fades away at his father's side, you will see much more
than a face of
 one killer named Sharon, you will see a government with a hostile policy,
an occupation
 army, an apathetic international community, billions of US government
dollars and dozens
 of vetoes, and a destiny that's has no place for the innocence of a twelve
year old boy. 




 Arabia on Line � 2000 all rights reserved 

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