2006-07-02-Gaza operation |
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jewishsightseeing.com, July 2, 2006 |
By Ira Sharkansky
We are in the middle of something. We
do not know exactly what.
A variety of gangs associated with the
Hamas government of Palestine or in competition with
it overreached themselves when they attacked an IDF
outpost and took a soldier as prisoner. They provided
Israel unavoidable reasons to move with force. They
had invaded Israel; they had killed soldiers and taken
one hostage; and they did it as Israel was more than
fed up with continued rocket attacks against
settlements close to the border with Gaza.
At about the same time and in another
area, another gang kidnapped a young Israeli
hitchhiker. Apparently they killed him soon after
seizing him, but continued for several days to offer
his freedom in exchange for Israeli concessions.
That game ended when Israel seized some of the people
involved, and they let on where they put the body.
For about a week there have been
considerable IDF forces in the southern part of Gaza,
additional forces poised to enter the northern part,
and continued air strikes and artillery barrages
against various targets in Gaza. Much of the
population there has been without electricity; water
supplies are doubtful insofar as electricity powers
the pumps; and they are running short of medical
supplies, oil, and gasoline. Israel has promised to
open the borders for humanitarian supplies. Once the
fighting ends, it may take several months or a year to
repair the damage to electrical installations.
Among the targets have been Hamas
government offices, including that of the prime
minister. The IDF bombed it at night; meaning to send
a message rather than to eliminate the prime minister
immediately. It was less pleasant for about one-third
of Hamas government ministers and a large number of
its parliamentarians located in the West Bank. They
are now in an Israeli prison, awaiting indictment for
membership in a terrorist organization and other
charges.
Israel is sending different messages.
It demands the return of its soldier, apparently still
alive and treated for minor wounds. It also wants
those rockets to stop. Among the targets of the air
force have been the workshops where they are made and
stored; but the industry is crude. A new workshop can
emerge in a small space in a short period of time.
Israel also seems to be working to dismantle the Hamas
government. That may have been accomplished, with the
mass arrests in the West Bank and the concern of
officials in Gaza to hide from IDF hunters. Different
voices are making different demands as to the price
required for information about the Israeli prisoner,
or his release. Egyptian mediators are saying that
Hamas has to deliver a clear message today, or Egypt
will give up the task of helping to settle this.
Mahmoud Abbas, the Fatah President of
the Palestinian National Authority has accused his
political rivals in Hamas of incompetence in dealing
with the crisis, but stands with them in condemning
Israeli actions as violations of basic humanitarian
concerns, international law, etc etc. He puts on the
often used record that calls on the international
community to intervene, but the international
community seems to be tired of this performance. Arab
governments have demanded a condemnation of Israel in
UN forums, but so far have not gotten enough support
to enact what they want.
Here we had a pleasant weekend: Saturday brunch with friends, and our usual late afternoon walk around Mt Eytan. Commentators speculate about the next round of the World Cup, and what will happen in Palestine. We see pictures of Palestinian families sitting in the floor with candlelight, not seeming to enjoy the ambience. They complain of frequent sonic booms, which is just one of the devices meant to increase the pressure. We also see pictures of families fleeing with small children and a few possessions from expected Israeli attacks.
There is no shortage of retired
Israeli generals who criticize the current
generation of politicians and generals for
incompetence. Some urge massive force; some urge the
beginning of what they see as the inevitable
negotiation for a prisoner exchange. Most of them
say that whatever is happening, it will not result
in a solution of the problems with Palestinians.
Some say we have not learned to live in the Middle
East. One says that demands the use of much greater
force; another says that it requires the acceptance
of continued violence from problematic neighbors.
Perhaps the goal is something else:
the Palestinians must learn to live with Israelis in
the Middle East. No one should expect an early
change in their culture. But if they do not learn
how to live with much less violence alongside of us,
they will continue to suffer much more than we do.
At my advanced age, with friends even older and in
worse shape than I, the metaphor that comes to mind
is coping with chronic disease.
Sharkansky is an emeritus member of the political science department at Hebrew University in Jerusalem |
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