MIFTAH
Monday, 1 July. 2024
 
Your Key to Palestine
The Palestinian Initiatives for The Promotoion of Global Dialogue and Democracy
 
 
 

Ever since the release of the Goldstone Report, I have been waiting to hear the words that often deflect attention away from the reality of the Israeli occupation and its state-sponsored violence against Palestinians. I finally heard them when Israeli Finance Minister Yuval Steinitz declared that the United Nations Human Rights Council decision to endorse the Goldstone Report is anti-Semitic. On this basis it was argued that the vote represents an attempt to deny Israel the right to defend itself, a right not denied to other nations engaged in the War on Terror.

Israel tends to turn to this strategy when all else fails, perhaps because the cry of anti-Semitism hits a nerve with the West that runs very deep. Not only does the West suffer from immense guilt about the Holocaust, but it also believes in the ideal that democracies have a right to defend themselves, creating a captive audience for Israel to draw support from. While this is a strategy that Israel has fallen back on repeatedly in the past, the reality on the ground in Palestine tells a very different story.

From a rational and human perspective, I can not comprehend Israel’s justification and overall policy of targeting civilians as self-defense. Gaza lies in ruins; its civilian infrastructure was deliberately targeted and destroyed by Israel during Operation Cast Lead. With the continuation of the Israeli-imposed blockade, there is little ability to rebuild or recover. The level of trauma inflicted was severe, the results of which will have dire consequences for generations to come. Yet the default response from the West is to point the finger at the rocket fire as the source of the Gazans’ misery, and not to take a closer look at Israeli practices in the Palestinian territories.

Palestinian militant groups have fired some 8,000 homemade rockets, mortars and projectiles into southern Israel since 2001 that have killed approximately 13 Israelis. The Goldstone Report condemned the firing of these rockets and rightly so, asserting that they constitute war crimes, and possibly crimes against humanity. Yet during that same time period, Israeli forces killed thousands of Palestinian civilians in Gaza alone, including hundreds of children. Defensible or not, the violence that emerges from Palestine is an indication that something is very wrong with the way they are treated.

Yet the accusation of anti-Semitism is intended to distort the view of Palestine from the outside, including from Israel. The resulting sentiment is that virtually all Palestinians are terrorists and must be treated accordingly, and while some may feel that Israeli-imposed violence is unfortunate, it doesn’t seem that people see any other option. The rockets are certainly counterproductive, and one can’t deny they have a traumatic psychological impact on the people living in the areas where the rockets land. But Israel did have other options in dealing with the rocket fire and dealing with the de facto Hamas leadership. War was not the last resort.

During the six-month long truce preceding Operation Cast Lead, rocket fire from Gaza came to a near halt. Hamas further offered to extend the truce for 10 years, which seemed to indicate a willingness to engage with Israel constructively. Yet Israel broke the ceasefire on November 4th 2008 by killing six Hamas members and demonstrating a preference for military action and unwillingness to pursue diplomacy. If Israel is really seeking peace, why did it sideline the diplomatic option in favor of a military operation, particularly considering that the rocket fire has not been eliminated and Hamas has not been neutralized? If the ultimate aim was to stop the rocket fire and protect the citizens of southern Israel, they could have extended the truce.

Of course claims of anti-Semitism are one of Israel’s strongest deflective strategies, and labeling the UNHRC vote as such is intended to conceal Israel’s crimes in Gaza. Racism can not and should not be tolerated and there is no doubt that racism against Jews still exists in the world as it does against many other groups of people, including Palestinians. However in labeling the UNHRC vote anti-Semitic, Israel is undermining its own future and diminishing the possibility of a peaceful resolution by refusing to confront itself. There is only one conclusion I can draw from this – the Israeli government is not interested in negotiating a settlement with the Palestinians, but wants to impose peace on its terms only.

Yet their actions always speak louder than words, and a primary example of this is Israel’s refusal to stop building settlements. The settlement enterprise is a strategic initiative designed to fragment and divide the West Bank, swallow east Jerusalem and prevent a Palestinian state from emerging while incorporating the maximum amount of land possible into Israel. This is not secret information – it is available to those who seek it out and it is happening right now, slowly but surely. So while they publicly talk of peace and a two-state solution while showing a noble face, behind the scenes they are working steadily to negate it.

And so it goes with Israel’s claim that the UNHRC vote was anti-Semitic. As long as they can deflect enough attention away from their crimes in Gaza and their illegal practices in the occupied territories, they can continue to do as they please. Yet at some point they will have to realize that the security of their own people should not and can not come at the expense of another. Until Israel can come to terms with this, Israelis and Palestinians both will live in a state of insecurity. It seems justice for the Palestinians will be the last resort, only after all other options have been exhausted.

Britain Eakin is a Writer for the Media and Information Program at the Palestinian Initiative for the Promotion of Global Dialogue and Democracy (MIFTAH). She can be contacted at mip@miftah.org.

 
 
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