The
candidacy of Bernie Sanders for the Democrat nomination for president of the
United States has excited many pro-Palestinian activists. Even academic Amin
Saikal ("Bernie Sanders dares to challenge Israel", Times2, April 20,
p5) has jumped on the bandwagon.
This
Sanders euphoria is based on few facts and much posturing, vitriol and emotion.
For instance, Sanders told the New York Post that he thought more than
10,000 "innocent civilians" had been killed in the 2014 Gaza war.
Even Hamas and the United Nations put the number at more like 1500, and
Israel says it was about 1000. Similarly, his claims about
"disproportionality" reflect a basic ignorance of what the term
"proportionality" means in international law.
Though
it is of course true that residents of Gaza have been and continue to be the
innocent victims of the conflict, and it is a tragedy that there is still not
peace between Israelis and Palestinians, any fair analysis of the situation
demonstrates that to hold Israel solely responsible, as Saikal does and implies
Sanders also does (though this is far from clear), is untenable.
Start
with Gaza. Israel evacuated it completely in 2005, removing 8000 settlers and
all military bases. Rather than establishing a prosperous territory living in
peace next to Israel, and paving the way for proposed Israeli withdrawals in
the West Bank, terror groups started raining rockets down on Israel. This
worsened after Hamas took control of the Strip in June 2007 in a bloody coup.
Since 2005, more than 11,000 rockets have been fired indiscriminately from Gaza
at Israeli civilians, each one a war crime.
Yet
Saikal bizarrely claims that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu is doing "everything possible to undermine any chance of a
united Palestinian leadership by continuously treating Hamas as a
"terrorist organisation".
Hamas
is regarded as terrorist by most of the Western world, including Australia and
even some Arab countries. This is due not only to the rockets, but its long
history of other terror attacks, including dozens of suicide bombings.
Sadly,
since 2007, Hamas' often massive rocket bombardments have forced three major
Israeli campaigns in response.
In
each, Israel has gone to great pains to avoid civilian casualties with steps
unprecedented in war such as calling, texting and leafleting civilians to warn
of impending attacks, and even dropping unarmed missiles on roofs as warnings.
Unfortunately, Hamas' illegal tactic of hiding weapons and other military
infrastructure among civilian buildings, including even hospitals, makes
civilian casualties and damage to civilian buildings inevitable.
However,
a group of senior international military officers, including Australia's own
Major-General Jim Molan, reviewed the 2014 conflict and found that Israel's
conduct "not only met but in many cases significantly exceeded" the
standards set by the laws of war.
The
past six months have seen a wave of violence in Israel, with individual
Palestinians using mainly knives, but also guns and cars, to randomly attack
Israelis. Thirty-three people have been killed in these attacks, which are
often portrayed as a result of Palestinian frustration. In fact, they are
prompted largely by incitement emanating from the Palestinian Authority, from
President Mahmoud Abbas down. Having falsely accused Israel of intending to
change the status quo on Jerusalem's Temple Mount, and claimed the Jews
were "defiling" Muslim holy sites with their "filthy feet",
Abbas stated in September, "Every drop of blood spilled in Jerusalem is
pure, every shahid [martyr] will reach paradise." The PA has since lauded
many of the attackers.
About
200 Palestinians have been killed in this period, most while carrying out
attacks. Saikal inaccurately and unfairly labels these death as Israeli "atrocities".
If a person armed with a knife, determined on both murder and martyrdom,
charges at either soldiers or civilians, it is simply very hard for security
forces anywhere to stop them without using deadly force. Certainly that was the
case for the Australian police officer who shot dead Numan Haider as Haider
stabbed another officer in Melbourne in September.
Saikal's
claim that Netanyahu is adamantly opposed to a Palestinian state is just
untrue. Netanyahu has certainly expressed doubt that now is the time to create
a Palestinian state, with the Middle East in turmoil, terror groups filling
every power vacuum and the PA inciting violence and even refusing to negotiate.
However,
Netanyahu has repeatedly stated he supports a two-state resolution and has a
standing offer to meet with Abbas without preconditions. Further, US mediator
Martin Indyk stated that during peace talks in 2013 and 2014, he saw Netanyahu
"sweating bullets to find a way to reach an agreement" on two states
with Abbas.
The
PA, however, refused to show any interest in progressing those talks despite
Israeli confidence-building measures such as a moratorium on construction in
settlements and the release of Palestinian prisoners who have killed Israelis,
after having walked away from generous offers of statehood in 2000, 2001 and
2008. Today, the PA is refusing to meet at all.
The
settlements are an issue that must be resolved but they didn't prevent the
previous offers of statehood, or the withdrawal from Gaza, and won't stop the
creation of a Palestinian state now if a reasonable compromise appears
achievable.
The
real obstacles to peace are Palestinian intransigence, incitement and
terrorism, lack of unity and the rejectionism of Hamas.
Misrepresenting
these realities, as Saikal and Sanders do, is inimical to the cause of peace,
encouraging further intransigence from the Palestinian leadership and
deflecting attention away from the real causes of the impasse. These must be
identified and resolved if the two-state peace that all people of goodwill hope
for is to finally be achieved.
No comments:
Post a Comment