The most plausible theory, however, is that reported by the Haaretz, which 
states Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak has been planning this operation, 
known as Operation Cast Lead, into the Gaza strip well over six months. Those 
six months of relative peace were used by the IDF for information gathering, in 
order to understand Hamas’s security infrastructure completely and destroy it 
when ready.
 
Israel's failure to learn



 By Nir Rosen
 









When George Bush, the US president, first entered the White House as the 
commander-in-chief in 2001, Palestinians were being killed in the al-Aqsa 
intifada. Eight years later, as Bush prepares to leave office, Israel is 
carrying out one of the largest massacres in its 60-year occupation of 
Palestine. The US, then and now, strongly backs Israel's offensive, justifying 
it as being, in fact, defensive.
 
An Israeli general recently threatened to use military force to set Gaza back 
decades in much the same language used before the invasion of Lebanon in 
2006. But despite the Israeli devastation of Lebanon, Hezbollah emerged 
victorious and the Shia resistance and social movement emerged a hero to the 
Arab world.
Israel is about to make the same mistake with Hamas.
 
Its notion of a truce with Hamas was that the Palestinians would quietly accept 
the siege. Israel would deny them the basic means of survival, let alone the 
basic means to create a functioning society. If the Palestinians attempted to 
resist, they would be crushed. As in Lebanon, Israel should have learned years 
ago that military might cannot crush Palestinian resistance movements.
 
Media matters
 
While the Israeli military again bombs the starving and imprisoned population 
of 1.5 million Gazans, the world watches their plight live as Western media 
scrambles to explain and, in some cases, justify the ongoing carnage.
Even some Arab outlets have attempted to equate Palestinian resistance - and 
homemade rockets - with the might of the Israeli military machine. However, 
none of this is a surprise; the Israelis just concluded a global public 
relations campaign to gather support for their assault, even gaining the 
collaboration of some Arab states.
 
An American periodical once asked me to contribute to a discussion on whether 
terrorism or attacks against civilians could ever be justified. My answer was 
that an American journal should not be asking whether attacks on civilians can 
ever be justified. This is a question for the weak, such as the Native 
Americans 150 years ago, the Jews in Nazi Germany, and the Palestinians today, 
to answer.
 
Terrorism is a normative term which is used to describe what the 'other' does, 
not what 'we' do.
Powerful nations such as Israel, the US, Russia or China will always describe 
their victims' struggle as terrorism. However, they fail to acknowledge as acts 
of terror the destruction of Chechnya, the slow slaughter of the remaining 
Palestinians, the repression of Tibetans, and the US occupation of Iraq and 
Afghanistan. Normative rules and what is legal and permissible are determined 
by the powerful. They formulate the concept of terrorism in normative terms and 
make it appear as if a neutral court derived such definitions instead of the 
oppressors.
 
For the weak to resist becomes illegal by definition. This excessive use of 
legal jargon actually undermines the fundamentals of what is truly legal and 
diminishes the credibility of international institutions such as the UN. The 
law becomes the enemy of those who struggle. It becomes apparent that the 
powerful - those who make the rules - insist on legality merely to preserve the 
power relations that serve them or to maintain their occupation and colonialism.
 
Desperate resistance
 
Colonial powers use civilians strategically, settling them to claim land and 
dispossess the natives, be they indigenous populations in North America or 
Palestinians in what are today Israel and the Occupied Palestinian Territories. 
Attacking civilians, then, becomes the last, most desperate and basic method of 
resistance in the face of overwhelming odds and imminent eradication.
 
The Palestinians do not attack Israeli civilians with the expectation that such 
violence will destroy or defeat Israel. When the native population understands 
that there is an irreversible dynamic stripping them of their land and identity 
with the support of an overwhelming power then they are forced to resort to 
whatever methods of resistance they can muster.
 
PLO, then Hamas
In 1948, when Israel was being established as a new state, 750,000 Palestinians 
were deliberately cleansed and expelled from their homes, and hundreds of their 
villages were destroyed. Their lands were settled by colonists who even today 
deny their very existence and wage a 60-year war against the remaining natives 
and the national liberation movements the Palestinians established around the 
world.
 
Israel, its allies in the West and some regional Arab countries have managed to 
corrupt the leadership of the Palestinian Liberation Organisation (PLO) and 
entice them with the promise of power at the expense of liberty for their 
people. This eventually neutralised and transformed the PLO into a liberation 
movement which collaborates with the occupier.
 
The focus then shifted to Hamas, a movement which won legislative elections 
nearly three years ago and thus became a target for the Israelis. By enforcing 
an embargo and allowing Israel's siege of Gaza, the world has effectively told 
the Palestinians that they are unfit for democracy.
 
Isolation and radicalisation
 
By informing them that they are not free to choose the leaders they trust but 
must conform to the requirements set in place by others, the world community is 
only further isolating and radicalising the Palestinians.







This radicalisation has increased several-fold as Israel pounds Palestinian 
infrastructure, saying it is solely targeting Hamas targets. This is not true, 
however; Israeli forces have targeted Palestinian police forces, killing some 
such as Tawfiq Jaber, the chief of police - a former PLO official who stayed on 
in his post after Hamas took control of Gaza. With the vestiges of security and 
order debilitated in successive Israeli military campaigns, chaos will prevail 
in Gaza.
 
If Hamas is weakened it will not be a more moderate Palestinian group which 
will take the helm.
It will not be the weakened, corrupted and unpopular Fatah, but a more extreme 
group who have been persuaded through blockades and incessant Israeli attacks 
that compromise and negotiations with Tel Aviv are ill-fated.
 
Failed policies
 
In the past 60 years, Israeli leaders have toed the line that 'the only 
language Arabs understand is force'.
However, it is Israel that has routinely used violence to solve problems. 
During the 2002 Arab Summit in Beirut, the Arab League collectively offered 
Israel a framework to end the bloodshed and move towards a comprehensive 
regional peace deal. Israel responded by invading Jenin and killing hundreds.
Last month, Fatah launched a media campaign to revive the 2002 peace 
initiative, but this, too, has been answered with Israel's extreme brutality.
 
A Zionist Israel is no longer a viable long-term project. Israeli settlements, 
land expropriation and separation barriers have long since made a two-state 
solution impossible. There can be only one state in historic Palestine. In 
coming decades, Israelis will be confronted with a fundamental question - 
whether to ensure the peaceful transition towards an egalitarian society in 
which Palestinians are given the same rights as Jews.
The alternative in a few years will become untenable. History has shown that 
colonialism has only worked when most of the natives have been exterminated. 
But often, as in occupied Algeria, it is the settlers who flee. Eventually the 
Palestinians will not be willing to compromise and accept one state for both 
people, and the Jewish colonists will be forced to leave.
 
Restoring Palestine
Despite its lack of initiative for the Middle East peace process, the White 
House has in recent years been unable to dislodge the occupation of Palestine 
as the main motive for every anti-American militant in the Arab world and 
beyond. It is the common denominator by which Arab populist policies are 
shaped. Invading Iraq or offering economic benefits to frontline states will 
not make the Palestinian issue go away. During my travels and research, I have 
spoken with jihadists in Iraq, Lebanon, Afghanistan, Somalia and elsewhere; 
they all mentioned the Palestinian struggle as one of their motivations.
 
The US will pay a price for backing Israel. Soon the so-called moderate Arab 
dictatorships that collaborate with the US hegemony in the region will find 
themselves in untenable positions.
 
Loss of credibility
Already we see tensions increasing in the region. Damascus has pulled out of 
third-party talks with Tel Aviv and Arab anger has been mounting not just at 
Israel, and not just at America, but also at their own regimes which have 
collaborated with Washington. Some Israelis have started to realise their 
government's flawed approach. While 81 per cent of Israelis support the 
military campaign, a poll has showed only 39 per cent believe it will succeed 
in removing Hamas or reducing violence.
 
An editorial in Haaretz, an Israeli daily, even went so far as to label Israel 
"the region's bully".
Barack Obama, the US president-elect, remains silent as Israel kills 
Palestinians with impunity. In his silence he expresses his complicity.
 
Nir Rosen is a Beirut-based journalist, fellow at the New York University 
Center on Law and Security and the author of The Triumph of the Martyrs: A 
Reporter's Journey into Occupied Iraq.

The views expressed by the authors are not necessarily those of Al Jazeera.








 Source:
Al Jazeera
Also see: In Pictures: Massacre of Gazan Children
http://www.uruknet.de/?s1=1&p=50118&s2=30


With Regards

Abi


      

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