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Archive for January, 2009

Gaza: Suffer the Children

Tuesday, January 6th, 2009
Suffer the little children...Hilmi al-Samuli's sons and nephew killed by Israeli shelling Monday (Mahmud Hams/AFP-Getty)

Suffer the little children...Hilmi al-Samuli's sons and nephew killed by Israeli shelling Monday (Mahmud Hams/AFP-Getty)

Suffer the little children to come unto Me.

–Luke, 18:16

And suffer and come unto Him they have in Gaza today.  Leila Abu Saba reports 20 children killed today.  Here is the story of the liquidation of one entire family:

The Samouni family knew they were in danger. They had been calling the Red Cross for two days, they said, begging to be taken out of Zeitoun, a poor area in eastern Gaza City that is considered a stronghold of Hamas.

No rescuers came. Instead, Israeli soldiers entered their building late Sunday night and told them to evacuate to another building. They did. But at 6 a.m. on Monday, when a missile fired by an Israeli warplane struck the relatives’ house in which they had taken shelter, there was nowhere to run.

Eleven members of the extended Samouni family were killed and 26 wounded, according to witnesses and hospital officials, with five children age 4 and under among the dead.

Hundreds of members of the clan flooded in to Shifa Hospital, all from Zeitoun, many in shock. Masouda al-Samouni, 20, lost her mother-in-law, her husband and her 10-month-old son. She said she had been preparing food for the baby when the missile struck. “He died hungry,” she said.

Haaretz reports the elimination of the Samouni family along with two others:

Over the past 24 hours, two Palestinian families were killed. In the Shati refugee camp the parents and five children of the Abu Aisha family were killed. In the Zeitun neighborhood, the seven members of the Salmuni family were killed. In another incident, a pregnant Palestinian woman and her four children were killed.

How long, O Lord? How long must this go on? Sometimes I think if I could just get Israelis supporting this Operation to visualize the effect of an F-16 missile, or tank shell tearing into a tender body of a young Gazan child, I think perhaps they could begin to feel some of the revulsion I do. But I know it’s probably a hopeless exercise. Most Israelis and their supporters have innoculated themselves with arguments and certainties that prevent them from feeling such emotions of regret or uncertainty.

But just keep this ratio in mind: 100 to 1. One hundred Gazans for every Israeli killed. That one Israeli means everything. Those 100 Gazans mean nothing. That is the moral calculus of this nightmarish war. Phil Weiss reports a commentary written by one of his readers Jules Rabin in which the latter quotes the eulogy for Jewish serial murderer, Baruch Goldstein: “A million Arabs are not worth a Jewish fingernail.” Is that what we have come to as Jews? To, in effect, accept the racist, genocidal words of a crazy settler rabbi?

Must we kill many children to ensure that our own can live? Is that part of our religious belief? I know that religion has little to do with Israel’s motivation in this war except in the propaganda sound bytes emanating from the mouths of Israeli politicians, but I can’t help but seeing this conflict as a reflection, in some way, of my religious values. I wish the generals and ministers would be thinking more of theirs.

IDF Friendly-Fire Disaster in Gaza, 3 Dead

Monday, January 5th, 2009
Hilmi al-Samuli mourned his two sons and nephew killed during Israeli shelling Monday  (Mahmud Hams/AFP-Getty)

Hilmi al-Samuli mourned his two sons and nephew killed during Israeli shelling Monday (Mahmud Hams/AFP-Getty)

An Israeli friend alerted me this afternoon:

…The Israeli news now talk about “heavy fire exchanges” which in previous conflicts has usually been codeword for “be prepared to hear of more IDF casualties soon.”

Sure enough, by early this evening he reported to me a major self-inflicted IDF disaster:

It turns out a Gaza building with a whole Golani unit in it collapsed, apparently after being hit by “friendly” IDF tank fire. 3 dead, one fighting for his life, a few badly injured, and a whole regiment busy evacuating the unit the entire night last night.

While it’s important to note that the IDF has suffered similar self-inflicted wounds in previous conflicts, it’s also important to point out that Israeli deaths in combat especially involving friendly fire have a severe impact on public perceptions of the war.

David Grossman’s speech at the Yitzhak Rabin memorial–after he’d lost his own brave son in the last day of the war–in which flayed Ehud Olmert played a major role in turning public perception against that conflict.

Unfortunately, four Israeli dead in such an incident has much more impact than the death of 400 or even 4,000 Palestinians, because Israelis are inured to the suffering of the enemy. But their own suffering they understand. Thank God they have that much human feeling.

It is customary to talk of such losses as korbanot (“sacrifices”) for the nation. I see them as sacrifices as well. But in a different sense. These soldiers are sacrifices on the altar of Ehud Barak’s folly. If Israelis begin to reconsider the costs of implementing Barak’s folly, then their sacrifice will not have been in vain.

Haaretz reports about 100 Palestinian dead today alone with many of them civilians.  This would raise the total to somewhere close to 600 dead for the whole conflict.  The IDF wiped out three entire Gazan families totalling 19 souls in separate attacks.

Gaza: Foreign Ministry Media Manipulation

Monday, January 5th, 2009

The hasbara brigade strikes again!  You always hear about Israeli attempts at media manipulation.  Everyone knows it’s going on but usually the process happens through dedicated volunteers like those involved with Giyus.  Now, we know that the Israeli foreign ministry itself is orchestrating propaganda efforts designed to fill news websites with pro-Israel arguments and information.

A friend has received the following e mail which documents both the efforts and the agency that originated them.  The solicitation to become a propagandist also includes a list of media links which the ministry would like flooded with pro-Israel comments:

Dear friends,

We hold the military supremacy, yet fail the battle over the international media. We need to buy time for the IDF to succeed, and the least we can do is spare some (additional) minutes on the net. The ministry of foreign affairs is putting great efforts in balancing the media, but we all know it’s a battle of numbers. The more we post, blog, talkback, vote – the more likely we gain positive sentiment.

I was asked by the ministry of foreign affairs to arrange a network of volunteers, who are willing to contribute to this effort. If you’re up to it you will receive a daily messages & media package as well as targets.

If you wish to participate, please respond to this email.

My friend did so and received this official communique from the ministry with talking points about Operation Solid Lead which s/he was to use in her/his propaganda efforts. Here are the links s/he was asked to respond to:

English

http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2009/jan/04/israel-history-comment-peter-beaumont

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/columnists/guest_contributors/article5446519.ece

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2158709/posts

http://www.ireport.com/ir-topic-stories.jspa?topicId=169745 (comment on Anti-Israeli posts, post your own)

http://palestinian.ning.com/profiles/blogs/ilan-pappe-israels-righteous

http://www.nowpublic.com/world/depleted-uranium-found-gaza-victims(disinformation)

Spanish

http://video.aol.com/video-detail/ataque-brutal-y-sangriento-de-israel-contra-la-franja-de-gaza/3276528285/?icid=VIDURVENT06

Dutch

http://www.telegraaf.nl/buitenland/2925927/__Chaos_in_ziekenhuizen__.html

http://www.telegraaf.nl/buitenland/2923318/__Veel_burgerdoden_in_Gaza__.html

Material to use

http://www.bicom.org.uk/

Video – Israel history in 10 minutes -http://www.aish.com/jewishissues/middleeast/What_Really_Happened_in_the_Middle_East.asp

Amid Gaza violence, Israeli and Palestinian doctors save baby’s life -http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wjqm5tzIwIQ

– CNN’s Amanpour interviews Tzipi Livni – http://switch3.castup.net/cunet/gm.asp?ClipMediaID=3244332&ak=null

Military incursion should be seen as part of War on Terror,http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/middle_east/article5447575.ece#cid=OTC-RSS&attr=797093

Blog from Southern Israel, Morit Rozen – http://soundsofwar.wordpress.com/

If you visit any of those articles you will identify the hasbaraniks easily through the pseudo-polite style they adopt and the programed arguments they advance.

Remember when the defense department was paying public relations companies to insert articles praising the Iraq war in U.S. newspapers?  There rightly was a media uproar about the manipulation.  We’ll see whether the same happens over this.

I just hope the foreign ministry doesn’t get a pass on this one.  They view this as maximizing their efforts to “explain” Israel’s position in the world media.  I view it as a cynical attempt to flood the web and news media with favorable flackery in a vain attempt to tilt the war effort favorably toward Israel.  Not only does it do Israel a disservice, it stains every legitimate effort that the ministry might make to explain Israel to the world, since no one will believe a word it says knowing it engages in such outright propaganda efforts.

Not to mention that this is such cheap pennyante s(^t.  What do they gain by this?  How effective can it be and how many can be convinced?  By the way, I’ve even noticed the hasbaraniks here in this blog.  You can tell them a mile away because they’ve never published a comment before yet write something like: “I’ve enjoyed your blog for a long time, but anyone with a brain in their head knows that Hamas is out to destroy Israel blah, blah blah.”  Pretty formulaic stuff.  Also, you can Google a few phrases of the comment and if you find it appears elsewhere on the web you know you either have a hasbaranik or someone who has repetition compulsion.

In the meantime, over 500 Gazans are dead.  An entire family of seven killed in their home.  Claims are flying that Israel is using depleted uranium, cluster bombs and white phosphorus munitions.  But thank God, hasbara never sleeps.

Israel Invades Gaza: Going for the Hamas Kill?

Sunday, January 4th, 2009

Today, the other shoe dropped.  After a week of vicious air assaults on Gaza, the IDF sent in 10,000 troops for the long-expected ground assault.  Apparently there have been fierce firefights in which Israel claims dozens of Hamas fighters have been killed.  Hamas claims IDF forces have been killed though the IDF refuses to confirm the charge.  Haaretz reports that 30 soldiers have been wounded, two seriously.

The Gaza death count is at least 460 with 2,000 wounded.  Over 100 of the dead were women or children.  25% were civilians.  Besides the Hamas fighters killed today, Israel bombed a northern Gaza mosque during prayers and killed 13 worshippers.  This will no doubt foster positive relations with the world’s Muslim population.

In what is the finest piece Ethan Bronner has written since becoming the N.Y. Times Israel correspondent (and I have written critically of his reporting here before), he summarizes the dangers inherent in this invasion.  Most importantly, he raises the red flag question: what is Israel’s ultimate goal?

As Israel’s tanks and troops poured into Gaza on Saturday…a question hung over the operation: can the rockets really be stopped for any length of time while Hamas remains in power in Gaza? And if the answer is determined to be no, then is the real aim of the operation to remove Hamas entirely, no matter the cost?

He goes on to quote two of Israel’s most senior ministers as advocating precisely this view:

“There is no doubt that as long as Hamas controls Gaza, it is a problem for Israel, a problem for the Palestinians and a problem for the entire region.”

Vice Premier Haim Ramon went even further Friday night in an interview on Israeli television, saying Israel must not end this operation with Hamas in charge of Gaza.

“What I think we need to do is to reach a situation in which we do not allow Hamas to govern,” Mr. Ramon said on Channel One. “That is the most important thing.”

Is Israel going for regime change?  It is a chilling question for those of us who are critical of this operation. Again, Bronner poses the concerns quite acutely:

…While it may sound decisive to speak of taking Hamas out of power, almost no one familiar with Gaza and Palestinian politics considers it realistic. Hamas legislators won a democratic majority in elections four years ago, and the group has 15,000 to 20,000 men under arms. It has consolidated its rule in the past 18 months since pushing out its rivals loyal to the more Western-oriented and moderate Fatah party…

And while there are plenty of Gazans who would prefer Fatah, they seem hardly organized or strong enough to become the new rulers. [And even if they were] they would never be willing to ride into Gaza on the back of an Israeli tank. In fact, the longer Israel pounds Gaza, the weaker Fatah is likely to become because it will be seen as collaborating.

The likelier result of a destruction of the Hamas infrastructure, then, would be chaos, anathema not only to the people of Gaza but also to those hoping for peace in southern Israel.

Here Bronner presents another distressing possibility that must be seriously considered given the failures of the 2006 Lebanon war and the U.S. invasion of Iraq, whose goal was to topple Saddam Hussein–which were characterized by similarly unrealistic expectations:

…Even if Israel intends to hold back from completely overthrowing Hamas, its choice of assault tactics could head that way anyway. And the Israelis may already be facing a kind of mission creep: after all, if enough of Hamas’s infrastructure is destroyed, the prospect of governing Gaza, a densely populated, refugee-filled area whose weak economy has been devastated by the Israeli-led boycott, will be exceedingly difficult.

You’ll recall that Dan Halutz, Amir Peretz and Ehud Olmert confidently predicted the elimination of Hezbollah as a potent force in 2006.  You’ll also recall that Don Rumsfeld predicted Iraqis would welcome U.S. forces as liberators.  Neither prediction came remotely true.  So what happens if Israel gets its wish and Hamas is either eliminated from, or falls from power?

What will take its place?  Fatah?  Hardly.  Fatah was despised in Gaza BEFORE Hamas toppled it.  Even if Fatah were willing to do Israel’s dirty work and assume control, the party would be so hated it couldn’t possibly govern effectively.  If Israel does reoccupy Gaza it will become responsible as occupier for all of Gaza’s needs, unlike now when it can say it has washed its hands of the enclave.  This would also effectively nullify Ariel Sharon’s much heralded withdrawal from Gaza in 2005 thus causing Israel an even deeper black eye on the world state.  Not to mention that it would set up Israeli forces as likely target for all manner or suicide bombers and vengeance seekers of whom there would be myriads.

Recall the fact that when the U.S. invaded Iraq it faced only Iraqi army forces which it quickly subdued.  Only later did a powerful insurgency arise which made us pay the price for our foolhardy illusions about what we could accomplish there.  This is what awaits Israel in Gaza should it eliminate Hamas.

Given the grand delusion that was Israel’s strategy in 2006, any serious observer has to concede the real possibility that Israel wants to go whole hog. Regime change in Gaza would entail an even greater disaster for Israel than would a limited ground operation designed to eliminate Hamas launching capability.  The former would lead to a Lebanon-style debacle, while the latter will only lead to a failure of the operation to realize Israel’s objectives to eliminate Hamas rocket fire.

Unfortunately, it’s come to this: trying to persuade Israel to restrain itself from making an even more serious blunder than it already has made.  If the U.S., UN and world community continues to diddle and dawdle, then they will have only themselves to blame for the results…not only more bloodshed and loss of innocent life in Gaza, but a receding ever farther into the distance of a comprehensive resolution of the overall conflict.

Gaza and the Shame of American Jewish Liberals

Saturday, January 3rd, 2009

Phil Weiss alerts me to a disturbing column written by Rabbi Eric Yoffie in the Forward attacking J Street for its insufficient sympathy for Israel’s assault on Gaza.  His piece is shameful not because it expresses sympathy for the Israeli suffering from Palestinian rocket attacks.  This is certainly legitimate.  It is shameful because he demeans J Street for expressing too much sympathy for the Gazans.

I have written several times glowing posts about speeches and statements Rabbi Yoffie has made about Christian Zionists or Muslim-Jewish understanding.  And I have never criticized him before because I have never read anything that I felt was so far off the mark.  But this piece requires a strong denunciation since it lacks any sense of moral calculus or compass regarding the horror of this event.

He goes off the rails in his argument almost from the beginning:

I suspect that most American Jews feel the same discomfort that I feel. They support the military offensive too…

Not so fast.  Glenn Greenwald reports on a Rasmussen survey that confirms that while the American public is sharply divided on the conflict, that Democrats are overwhelmingly opposed:

Democratic voters overwhelmingly oppose the Israeli offensive — by a 24-point margin (31-55%).

Since 80-85% of Jews consider themselves Democrats that would mean that even IF a majority of Jews supported the Operation Solid Lead, that the split would be close to right down the middle (I’m conceding that the 20% of Jewish Republicans would strongly favor the assault).  This is Yoffie’s first questionable assumption.  Here is more questionable thinking:

…They [American Jews] expect Israel to be both politically wise and morally sensitive in how it fights. It is especially important to us that Israel do everything humanly possible to avoid the death of innocents and to prevent a humanitarian crisis in Gaza. There is much evidence that Israel has worked hard to limit the carnage, and the credibility of Israel’s leaders in providing assurances on these points is an important factor in assuring the continued support of American Jews — and, indeed, of all Americans — for the Gaza campaign.

This passage too is full of dubious assumptions.  Israel has killed 400 civilians in Gaza and undertaken an 18 month siege which has reduced the enclave to penury.  Eric Yoffie is an intelligent person and learned rabbi.  How can he possibly believe what he is writing?  It simply flies in the face of reality as the rest of the world (outside Israel’s most ardent backers) knows it.

Yoffie’s insinuation that the majority of Americans support the operation is also questionable.  Rasmussen finds that Americans support it by a slim plurality (44-41%).  The longer the operation continues surely the more opposition will mount among Americans.

Here Yoffie takes on J Street’s courageous position attacking the Gaza incursion:

…Not a few Jewish doves have demonstrated an utter lack of empathy for Israel’s predicament. J Street, a new Washington lobbying group and a major voice of the dovish pro-Israel community, has spoken out sharply against Israel’s actions in Gaza. While it claims to represent the moderate American Jewish majority, in this case it has misread the issues and misjudged the views of American Jews.

It is interesting to note that Yoffie’s presumption is that American Jews owe Israel the benefit of the doubt in issues like this military offensive.  The majority of our empathy must go to Israel’s “predicament” rather than to the Gazans who presumably deserve less because they simply are not Jews.  This is a stale notion that lost favor years ago even among American Jews.  The day when we got out the flag and waved it no matter what Israel did (and especially when it did anything morally questionable) are long gone.  Israel no longer gets a blank moral check from most American Jews.  And that’s as it should be. We state what we think is in Israel’s long-term interests, but owe no special obligation to support Israel when it strays from our view of what those interests should be (as they have done in Operation Solid Lead).  I’m simply shocked to read that the leader of the most liberal American religious denomination is still spouting such virtual inanities.

Consider the moral calculus of this statement and ask yourself what is missing:

A second J Street statement was worse by far. It could find no moral difference between the actions of Hamas and other Palestinian militants, who have launched more than 5,000 rockets and mortar shells at Israeli civilians in the past three years, and the long-delayed response of Israel, which finally lost patience and responded to the pleas of its battered citizens in the south.

Notice that Israel has suffered 5,000 rockets fired at it while the Palestinians have suffered…hmmm, I seem to have missed that portion of Yoffie’s statement.  The Palestinians haven’t suffered anything, have they?  Well then, in that case you can see how easy it is for Yoffie to get into high moral dudgeon over J Street’s purported embrace of a “pro-Palestinian” position.

Here is more ignorance masquerading as sympathy for Israel:

These words [of J Street's criticizing both Israeli and Palestinian violence] are deeply distressing because they are morally deficient, profoundly out of touch with Jewish sentiment and also appallingly naïve. A cease-fire instituted by Hamas would be welcome, and Israel would be quick to respond. A cease-fire imposed on Israel would allow Hamas to escape the consequences of its actions yet again and would lead in short order to the renewal of its campaign of terror. Hamas, it should be noted, is not a government; it is a terrorist gang.

Most people in the world feel, at best, deeply divided over this conflict; and at worst they feel Israel is almost entirely in the wrong.  Yet somehow Yoffie transforms this reality into one in which J Street is “morally deficient” for seeing precisely what most other people are seeing: an aggressive Israel attacking disproportionately a virtually defenseless (except for crude handmade rockets which cause far more fear than actual mayhem) Gaza.

Not a whiff from the good rabbi in the above passage of Israel’s draconian siege on Gaza and the effects this is having on 1.5 million civilians who have done nothing to warrant such punishment.  And regarding the Hamas line he espouses, it is once again wrong.  Hamas IS a government whenever Israel isn’t intervening (like now) against its control of Gaza by preventing it from being one.  Hamas was elected by Palestinians democratically.  It was the U.S. and Israel which refused to accept the democratic results of this election and determined to topple Hamas by force.  Not a word about that, Rabbi Yoffie.  Why not?  Or is it possible that Middle Eastern democracy is only considered legitimate when it’s flying an Israeli flag?

In order to justify Yoffie’s rejection of Hamas as a legitimate representative of the Palestinians, he trots out this definitive “wisdom:”

To be a dove of influence, you must be a realist, firm in your principles but shorn of all illusions…

Being a “realist” as far as Yoffie is concerned means accepting that Hamas are nothing but a bunch of thugs incapable of being legitimate partners of Israel or of governing Palestine.  The only problem is that many Israelis, among them respected generals and intelligence analysts, don’t agree.  So Rabbi, are they unprincipled and illusion-filled or are you perhaps getting a bit ahead of yourself in making such definitive and ill-considered statements about the nature of Hamas?

As a reality check for my views, I did what I normally do in these circumstances: I checked with my closest Israeli friends, who are all left of center, haters of war and ferocious opponents of the West Bank settlement movement. In virtually every case, they saw the action in Gaza as tragic but necessary and were astounded by the opposition of American doves.

You’ll note that Yoffie’s “closest Israeli friends” are the moral arbiters of what a correct American Jewish position should be on this issue.  Could it be that his Israeli friends represent as narrow a spectrum of opinion as his own views expressed here?  Can Yoffie deny that the pages of the Israeli press are filled with reports that question Israeli motives for this attack, which denounce it as a failure practically before it began, which portray the immense suffering of Gazan civilians?  I guess the many critical journalists I’ve been reading in Haaretz and Ynet must not be among Yoffie’s circle of “closest friends.”  I’d like to introduce him to Akiva Eldar, Amira Hass, Gideon Levy, Yossi Sarid, B. Michael, David Grossman, Uri Avnery, and many others.  They might teach him a thing or two about what those Israelis believe who aren’t among his intimate circle.

…Why, we ask, should Israel’s center-left government, after long periods of restraint and desperate efforts to renew the cease-fire, be expected to refrain from fighting terrorists that are regularly attacking from right across the border?

Because the operation won’t work.  Because the only way to end the violence is to negotiate.  Because Hamas legitimately demands something in return for the end of its attacks–that is, an end to the horrifying siege that has starved its children and brought death to its critically ill who lack medicine or care.

American Jews see Israel’s Gaza offensive as a tragic necessity, unwelcome but inevitable, carried out by a reluctant Israeli government doing what it must to end rocket attacks against its citizenry. In short, American Jews are, as usual, sensible and centrist, and supporting Israel in her hour of need.

Again, not so fast.  While Rabbi Yoffie speaks for a large religious denomination, I don’t believe his views are those of the majority of American Jews.  And even if I concede that they are the views of the majority, there is by no means the consensus he posits.  American Jews, like the rest of Americans, are deeply divided about this.  To claim otherwise, is simply like whistling in a graveyard.  You’re hoping you’re right, but haven’t a clue or a means to prove it.

Rabbi Yoffie’s piece in the Forward proves to me that while he may have liberal instincts on many issues, when it comes to Israel he is little better than the mainline Israel lobby organizations.  We cannot expect wisdom from them or him on these issues.  It grieves me to say this because he has often been eloquent and profound about some subjects as I’ve noted above.  But not this one.  Not by a long shot.

J Street–you’ve done something honorable.  Don’t even think of backing down or being intimidated by this flackery.  You are in the right.  Time and history will confirm it.  It is Rabbi Yoffie who will be eating his words in six months time when he sees that this military project has failed just as all previous ones seeking to do the same thing have failed before it.  Unfortunately, Rabbi Yoffie would do well to consider these profound words from Zechariah: Ki lo b’choach, v’lo b’hayil, ki im b’ruchi, amar Adonai tzevaot.  “Not by strength and not by might, but rather by my spirit says the Lord of Hosts.”  “Spirit” is words, negotiations leading to peace.  Those are the only things that will work here.  Remember that little bit of Jewish wisdom, Rabbi.

Gaza: Kill a Terrorist, Let 1,000 Terrorists ‘Bloom’

Friday, January 2nd, 2009

One of Nizar Rayyan's nine dead children removed from rubble of his home (Ismail Zaydah/Reuters)

One of Nizar Rayyan's nine dead children removed from rubble of his home (Ismail Zaydah/Reuters)


Israel has done the world the dubious “favor” of providing a textbook example of how a colonial power fuels an insurgency.  This is from today’s N.Y. Times:

The Israeli Air Force on Thursday afternoon bombed the house of Nizar Rayyan, a senior Hamas leader, killing him along with his four wives and nine of his children, four of them under the age of 18, Palestinian hospital officials said. An Israeli military spokeswoman, Maj. Avital Leibovich, described Mr. Rayyan as one of the “most extreme” figures of Hamas, which controls Gaza. The military said he had helped plan a deadly suicide bombing in Israel in 2004, had sent his own son on a suicide mission against Jewish settlers in Gaza in 2001 and was advocating renewed suicide missions against Israel in retaliation for the current offensive.

Mr. Rayyan was known in Gaza as a highly influential figure with strong links to the military wing of Hamas, particularly in northern Gaza, where he lived, and as a popular Hamas preacher who openly extolled and championed the idea of martyrdom.

The Israeli military said in a statement that there were many secondary explosions after the air attack, “proving that the house was used for storing weaponry.” It was also used as a communications center, the statement said, and a tunnel that had been dug under the house was used by Hamas operatives.

Most Hamas leaders in Gaza have been in hiding since the Israeli operation began, but Mr. Rayyan was said to have refused to leave his home on ideological grounds. In the past, he had been known to gather supporters to stand on the rooftops of other houses in Gaza that Israel had threatened to strike.

Rayyan home levelled by Israeli attack (Mahmud Hams/AFP-Getty)

Rayyan home levelled by Israeli attack (Mahmud Hams/AFP-Getty)

Before I begin discussing this, I want to concede, just for the sake of argument (though I do not know this for a fact and tend to be dubious of many similar claims made by the IDF), that Rayyan may have been the worst terrorist scum facing Israel–that he was a bloodthirsty, cutthroat assassin.  Maybe his murder will diminish the number of Israelis he himself would kill in the future.  Let us also concede that his death will provide some form of comfort to those Israelis who lost loved ones in previous attacks he engineered.

Given all those concessions, this murder is a morally bankrupt, heinous act nevertheless.  It reminds me of the murder of Salah Shehadeh, in which a 2000 lb. bomb levelled an entire Gaza apartment building and killed all the 18 residents of the building who were in it during the strike.  Undoubtedly, Dan Halutz, Doron Almog, the officers who planned and executed this act of terror will be confronted with charges before a Hague tribunal for this bombing.  There also can be no doubt that Ehud Barak, Gabi Alexander, Ehud Olmert and others will be sought for their role in today’s killings.

It is immoral in the process of killing one wanted man to knowingly wipe out his entire family of thirteen souls.  The murder of women and young children cannot justify what Israel has done.  This is, as I wrote above, a heinous act.  A bestial act, no matter what villainy Rayyan was responsible for.  It defies the norms of western civilization.  And it is of a piece with Israel’s entire “strategy” if you can call it that in this military offensive.  There are no red lines.  They’ve all been crossed.  Barak is happy for Hamas to see him as a Strangelovian psychopath prepared to go to the ends of the earth to exact revenge for the murder of Israelis.  But he doesn’t stop to think that instead, the thousands of Palestinians who will be honored to emulate Rayyan’s act of martyrdom will thirst for their own acts of psychopathic revenge.

For every Rayyan Israel kills, 1,000 will take his place.  And they will not only be mere soliders in the conflict.  Some of that 1,000 will outdo Rayyan in devising ever greater acts of revenge against Israel for this travesty.  So has it been in the past and so will it be till the ends of time or of this conflict, whichever comes first.

Israel is a country, not a terrorist group.  Therefore, even if its enemy violates every norm of international law and civilization, Israel must not stoop to the terrorists’ level.  When it does, it becomes no better than a terrorist.  This is not a new argument.  Unfortunately, Israel has forced us to invoke it time and again as it proves that it is little better than the terrorists it faces when it performs such targeted assassinations.  And once again I want to make clear that I only know about Rayyan what the IDF claims and that for the sake of argument I’m conceding the terms it is using to describe him.

Finally, if any right wing readers wish to crow about Rayyan’s death–go right ahead.  But when 10 or 100 of the next suicide shadeeds dedicate their successful acts of terrorist vengeance to Rayyan’s memory, it will give me absolutely no satisfaction to say this was a chronicle of deaths foretold.  You were warned and yet in the pathology of your thought processes you believed that killing one terrorist would bring respite.  In fact, it will spawn scores more who will make you pay a severe price in blood.

Once again, lest any of my right wing readers seek to say that this gives me satisfaction in any form, that is a low lie.  It gives me no satisfaction to see my own people murdered.  Just as gives me no satisfaction to see innocent Gazan women and children murdered simply because they are related to a terrorist and live in his home.

The Gaza operation, and I will cry this to the winds until it ends, is a brutal, cold-blooded, disproportionate attack by Israel on 1.5 million Palestinians who have done nothing more than acquiesce in the rule of Hamas over them. And even if they embraced Hamas wholeheartedly, it cannot justify what Israel has done to them. The attack has not succeeded, will not succeed, and indeed cannot succeed. It was a failure before the first bomb was dropped.

There is only one sane, reasonable resolution of this conflict: Israel must lift the 18 month siege of Gaza and allow the return to normal life. Hamas must end the rocket barrages against Israeli civilians. It is simple, yet at the same time impossible because neither side appears willing to concede.

Israel: French Ceasefire Proposal ‘Offensive’ or ‘Go, Stick It in Your Eye’

Thursday, January 1st, 2009

You’ve got to hand it to those Israelis: they wrote the book on chutzpah.  What the rest of the world can see with its own two eyes, simply doesn’t exist as far as Tzipi Livni is concerned.  Humanitarian crisis?  There is no fuel, little food, no medical care, and your children can be killed for the crime of venturing outside to empty the garbage. What humanitarian crisis?

“There is no humanitarian crisis” in Gaza, she said, “and therefore there is no need for a humanitarian truce.”

The Israeli official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to comment publicly on the French proposal, called it “unrealistic,” “hasty” and bordering on “offensive,” saying that Israel was already allowing relief supplies into Gaza every day.

Imagine a nation which is systematically vaporizing an entire urban population center, killing 400 in the process having the gall to say that a ceasefire proposal was “offensive.”  That takes balls.

I’ve always been struck by the solipcism of this statement common to all Israeli ministers and U.S. officials when talking about Hamas:

Ms. Livni has emphasized that Israel will not accept Hamas’s rule as legitimate unless the organization fulfills conditions set by the international community, including recognizing Israel’s right to exist, renouncing all violence and accepting previous agreements between Israel and the Palestinians — conditions that Hamas has so far rejected.

Does it strike anyone else that Livni is essentially saying that Israel will not recognize Hamas until Hamas recognizes Israel?  It’s a game of chicken in which one side proclaims the other side is evil because the other guy won’t do what you won’t do either.  Which one is going to blink first and recognize the other?

Of course this is all sophistry because Livni knows that negotiations are the place where such bilateral agreements are worked out if Israel was truly interested in having Hamas recognize Israel.  And the last thing that Israel wants is for Hamas to do so.  That would test Israel’s sincerity to the limit.  If (and Hamas is not the type of group that will give Israel this opportunity) Hamas were to recognize Israel, the latter would find some other new condition Hamas had failed to fulfill and this would be the newest failing of Hamas which prevents Israel from recognizing it.

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Gaza: Death of a Doctor

Thursday, January 1st, 2009
8 year-old Ismael Hamdan on his deathbed (Mahmud Hamas/AFP-Getty)

8 year-old Ismael Hamdan on his deathbed (Mahmud Hamas/AFP-Getty)

A snapshot of the tragedy and utter senselessness of Israel’s attack on Gaza:

A dentist stood at the bed of a doctor, his good friend Ehab Madhoun, 32, who had just died, his shrapnel-pitted body wrapped in a white shroud.

The day before, Dr. Madhoun, a general practitioner, was in an ambulance responding to an Israeli strike at the Jabalya refugee camp in northern Gaza. Another missile hit the ambulance. The driver, Muhammad Abu Hasira, died instantly. Dr. Madhoun lingered for a day, dying of his wounds on Wednesday in the intensive care unit of Shifa Hospital, where hundreds of people have been brought since Israel began its heaviest assault on Gaza in three decades.

The dentist cried.

“He was just doing his work,” said the dentist, who would not give his name. “He’s a doctor, and I can’t understand why Israel would hit an ambulance.

…Several children [were] in another intensive care unit on Tuesday. Among them was Ismael Hamdan, 8, who had severe brain damage as well as two broken legs, according to a doctor there. Earlier that day, two of his sisters, Lama, 5, and Hayya, 12, were killed.

“I prepared them breakfast that day in the garden,” said their mother, Ayda, 36. “They had the tea, bread and thyme. Lama wanted a second pita, but we all teased her saying, ‘Keep it for lunch.’ She told us, ‘Don’t worry, God will provide us with bread.’

“She made all of us laugh,” the mother said. “I cleaned after them and collected the garbage. Ismael volunteered to dump the garbage, but Hayya and Lama joined him. The garbage can is in front of the house, a five-minute walk away. All of a sudden I heard the news from a neighbor, and I ran barefoot to the hospital. A relative collected the bodies of Lama and Hayya on a donkey cart.

“The neighbors ran trying to save Ismael, who was the only one breathing,” she said. “They say my kids flew 40 meters before hitting the ground.”

Ismael died Wednesday night.

In a twisted way, it’s a good thing Ismael died.  Who would have cared for him?  What kind of life would he have led?  But then again, I am not his father and how can I put myself in his place?

Can anyone reading this not feel like raging against the sheer injustice of it all?  President-elect Obama, are you listening? It’s time to take a stand. Support the people of Israel of course and their right not to be bombarded by missiles. But tell Israel it must end the carnage and it must end the strangling siege against Gaza. The solution is simple. It is the will to do it that is missing.  Mr. Obama, you can help provide that will with a simple, straightforward statement.  You’re missing in action.  Missing when we need you most.

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