“Washing one’s hands of the confli ct between the powerful and the powerless 
means to side with the powerful, not to be neutral.”
 
“Existential” threat 
MIKE MARQUSEE 





The recent offensive in Gaza shows that it’s the Palestinians, not Israelis, 
who are besieged, isolated and vulnerable. 




http://www.hindu.com/mag/2009/01/11/stories/2009011150170500.htm
Marching amid the 50,000 protesters in London bearing witness against the 
Israeli offensive on Gaza, I spotted a hand-made placard inscribed with the 
words of the radical Brazilian educator Paolo Freire: “Washing one’s hands of 
the confli ct between the powerful and the powerless means to side with the 
powerful, not to be neutral.”
It was meant as a rebuke to the British government and others who have stood 
aside as Israel has assaulted a captive civilian population. Beyond that, it 
pointed to an underlying reality that Israel and its champions work over-time 
to obfuscate.Myth and fact 

>From its inception, Israel has promoted the myth of its own isolation and 
>vulnerability; it has claimed the mantle of the surrounded underdog. The 
>realities, as Israeli military power created facts on the ground, have always 
>been otherwise. Today, Jordan and Egypt are US-Israeli dependencies, with the 
>latter playing a critical role in bottling up the Gaza strip. Other Arab 
>regimes, hostile to HAMAS and radicalism in general, have offered nothing but 
>words, and feeble ones at that. The U.S., Britain, the EU (which plans to 
>strengthen preferential ties with Israel), India, China and of course the UN 
>Security Council, fettered with the inevitable US veto — all have made it 
>clear that Israel will be allowed to take this action with impunity. It’s the 
>Palestinians, not the Israelis, who are besieged, isolated and vulnerable.
Defenders of Israel speak often of the “existential threat” under which the 
country labours. Evidence for this usually consists of quotations from HAMAS 
leaders threatening Israel with extinction. Unconsidered are the numerous 
statements over many years from Israeli political leaders threatening the 
Palestinians, treating them as sub-human and their rights and lives as 
expendable. In February 2008, Israel’s Deputy Defense Minister Matan Vilnai 
threatened Gaza with a “bigger shoah” — shoah being the Hebrew word for 
holocaust. As we’ve seen in recent weeks in Gaza, this was no idle threat, and 
it is “existential” in an immediate and material sense.
Beyond the jaded circles of professional statecraft, people around the world 
have been appalled by the disproportionate nature of the Israeli punishment of 
the alleged Palestinian offence. There are many ways to present the 
calculation. In the years between the Israel’s heavily qualified withdrawal 
from Gaza in 2005 and the beginning of the current offensive, some 18 Israelis 
were killed by rocket-fire from Gaza; during the same period some 2000 
Palestinians were killed by Israeli military action. In the first week of the 
offensive, 400 rockets were fired from Gaza, taking four Israeli lives; it took 
only a few minutes for Israel to hit Gaza with four hundred bombs and missiles, 
which within a week had taken 400 lives.
Thanks mainly to the U.S., but with help from Britain, India and others, Israel 
is one of the world’s great military powers. Even before they sent tanks and 
armoured vehicles into Gaza’s densely-populated territory, the Israelis had 
struck from the air with wave after wave of F16 fighter jets, Apache attack 
helicopters and pilotless aerial drones. Against that formidable arsenal, the 
Palestinians have no aircraft, no defence against air attack, no tanks, no 
heavy artillery, and no regular army.
On this scale, disproportionality is not merely a matter of arithmetic; it 
reflects the relationship between perpetrator and victim, dispossessor and 
dispossessed.
The Israeli “all out war on HAMAS” is in practise an indiscriminate assault on 
the people of Gaza and their society. Their early targets included government 
and residential buildings, television stations, universities, mosques and 
marketplaces. An Israeli officer explained the strategy to a Washington Post 
reporter: “We are trying to hit the whole spectrum, because everything is 
connected and everything supports terrorism against Israel.”
The officer was giving expression to the inexorable logic of collective 
punishment, which underpins both the current offensive and the blockade which 
preceded it. Like it or not, HAMAS is a social force in Gaza, and as the 
Israeli officer explained, its agents and supporters cannot be targeted in 
isolation. The use of indisciminate violence against a civilian population in 
pursuit of political aims is as clear a definition of terrorism as we possess, 
and the Israeli attack on Gaza is as much an example of this as the HAMAS 
rocket fire on southern Israel. But because this act of terror is committed by 
a powerful state, it is not described as such. Once again, the “war on terror”, 
whose mantle Israeli officials have wrapped themselves in, has been used to 
license state terror.
The Israelis ask what else they could have done in response to the rocket 
attacks on its citizens. The answer is painfully obvious: end the blockade of 
Gaza (which has been HAMAS’s key condition for a ceasefire), and then begin to 
redress the litany of entirely justified Palestinian demands. Do what the rest 
of the world has urged for decades, end the occupation and accept a genuinely 
independent Palestinian state.Aim of the war 

But the offensive suggests that Israel is not prepared to countenance that 
solution. The concessions required are too great: the abandonment of settler 
expansion on the West Bank and a curtailment of Israeli regional supremacy, 
believed to be essential for the survival of the Jewish state.
Surely no member of the Israeli cabinet actually believes that this onslaught 
will reduce attacks on Israel, either in the short or long term. What then is 
aim of the war? The idea seems to be to grind down the Palestinians until, 
bereft of necessities, infrastructure, leaders, and hope, they are compelled to 
accept a solution on Israel’s terms. In a sense, then, what Israel is fighting 
for in Gaza is the West Bank, much of which it hopes to annexe if and when Gaza 
is finally subdued.
Certainly a core motive of the war is to reaffirm Israeli military supremacy, 
embarrassingly compromised by its reversals in Lebanon in 2006. Perhaps there 
is a hope that in stripping HAMAS bare, they will weaken and discredit Islamist 
radicalism across the region, just as the six day war of 1967 crippled 
Nasser-style Arab nationalism.
In a coarse reversal of historical responsibility, Israelis insist that the 
Palestinians are the sole authors of their own suffering. Written out of the 
script are: the origins of the Gaza population, 80 per cent of whom belong to 
families forced from their homes in Israel in 1948; four decades of direct 
military occupation, during which Gaza was made an economic dependency of 
Israel; the blockade, which has cut off essential supplies of food, fuel and 
medicine, and which was initiated because Gazans had voted for HAMAS in a 
democratic election.
There is a growing fissure between governments and people on this matter. Those 
50,000 in London were joined by thousands more in 25 cities across the UK; 
there were demonstrations in New York (a reported 25,000), Paris, Sydney, 
Johannesburg, Rome, Jakarta, and across the Arab world. Despite the best 
efforts of a well-oiled Israeli publicity machine, this latest crime has only 
given more people yet more reason to protest.
Mike Marqusee’s most recent book is If I Am Not for Myself: Journey of an 
Anti-Zionist Jew (Verso, 2008). 
www.mikemarqusee.com 


With Regards 

Abi
 
P Please consider the environment before printing this email. 


      
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