2006-06-13-Propaganda-deaths |
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jewishsightseeing.com, June 13, 2006 |
By Ira Sharkansky
JERUSALEM—It was a great day for the
Palestinians when a family of seven died in an explosion
on the beach of Gaza. A video photographer filmed a young
daughter running, finding her family dead, screaming and
throwing herself on the sand. The pictures appeared time
and again on television news programs: Arab, Israeli, CNN
and many others. The girl appeared in repeated interviews,
and received a filmed visit from the President of
Palestine, Mahmoud Abbas. The Palestinian National
Authority proclaimed three days of national mourning and
lowered its flags to half-mast.
It was just what they wanted: an Israeli
massacre caught on film. In order to be sure that
there would be no challenge to the Palestinian story,
Authority personnel removed all traces of shrapnel from
the beach. They did not respond to Israeli authorities
wanting evidence for an investigation as to who was
responsible.
The IDF and government authorities
expressed their regret, and brought some of the wounded to
Israeli hospitals. As usual, they stopped short of
apologies. The area of the disaster was one of the places
that Palestinians use to fire rockets at Israel. The IDF
had warned Palestinians to stay away from what would be an
open field of fire.
Now the IDF has concluded that it was not
responsible. There was a gap of 8 minutes between the time
of the last cannon fire and the explosion; it does not
take that long for an artillery shell to fly a few hundred
meters. There was no crater in the sand of the type an
artillery shell would create. And the Palestinians did not
get all the shrapnel in their combing of the beach. Some
remained in the people taken to Israeli hospitals.
Analysis of the metal found it was not the type used in
Israeli munitions.
It was not the first time the Palestinians
celebrated an Israeli massacre that turned out to be their
own work. The view of IDF personnel is that this one may
have come from explosives that the Palestinians had buried
in the sand, perhaps to use against an Israeli
invasion from the sea. Some time ago a group of fighters
paraded with a tender filled with their rockets; they
exploded and killed a number of bystanders. That, like the
most recent incident, produced a rain of missiles on
Sderot and other Israeli sites.
This is a tragedy that goes beyond the
death of seven family members on the beach, as well as the
fury of Israelis who are living under the threat of
primitive missiles. The greater tragedy is that it reveals
the Palestinian reliance on deaths among their own
civilians to provide them with support in international
media and—if there are enough deaths—the intervention
of international forces against Israel. This is a piece
with encouraging their young people to commit suicide for
the sake of Palestine.
With an adversary like this, it is
impossible to reach an agreement. Israel has offered
compromise. But compromise violates religious doctrines
and national pride. Better to kill and to die. The more
who die the grander the spectacle.
There is not much Israel can do to break
into this cycle. It can use its military power to
punish those who are violent. Civilians who do not vacate
areas from which the gangs fire their missiles become
collateral damage. But civilian deaths are just what the
Palestinians want! The more who die the more certain that
the world will support them.
We are left with the less heroic actions of
targeting the violent, seizing or killing them, and
wearing down the Palestinians.
This is not a war that we can fight until
the Palestinians surrender. Many of them suffer no less
than the residents of Sderot. They are tired of the
conflict which has killed and hurt many of them, and made
almost all of them poorer in resources, health, education,
and other opportunities. But Palestine is not a
disciplined society. It is a collection of extended
families, some of which provide the basis of official
security forces or armed gangs. Their loyalties to
themselves and their rivalries take priority. Some
owe greater allegiance to the religious and political
leaders of Iran or Syria than to the nominal leaders of
Palestine. Iran and Syria funnel money and munitions
over the border between Gaza and Egypt. Thus they fight
Israel directly, and the United States via Israel. The
deaths of Palestinians serve them no less than the death
of Israelis.
This is a war of attrition, whose current
chapter is likely to continue until the Palestinians are
sufficiently weakened and tired of their heroism. We have
reached a level of violence significantly below what
prevailed four years ago. It remains unpleasant, and currently
the residents of Sderot are demanding a more severe
response to protect them and their children from the fear
of missiles. The frequent shrieks of warning mechanisms
are no less fearful than the occasional explosions.
More Israelis suffer from road accidents
than from Palestinian violence. One set of our officials
struggles to reduce the level of road accidents. They have
had a measure of success via better roads and vehicles,
more policing, and driver education. Another set of
officials struggles to reduce the Palestinian violence
directed against Israel. There is no final victory on the
horizon for either the campaign against road accidents, or
the campaign against the Palestinians.
Sharkansky is an emeritus member of the political science department at Hebrew University in Jerusalem |
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