bitterlemons-international.org
Middle East Roundtable /
Edition 46-2008
A Palestinian View (I):
War crimes in Gaza
put PA in awkward place
by Ghassan Khatib
The devastating Israeli bombardment of Gaza in the past
few days did not come as a surprise to anybody. Its scale and magnitude,
however, were unexpected by almost everybody except its perpetrators.
The attack, which Israel called "Operation Cast Lead", began around 11:30
A.M last Saturday when 64 aircraft delivered over 100 tons of explosives on
50 to 100 targets in the Gaza Strip. It was described by officials as the
largest Israeli operation in Gaza since 1967. In that first attack, over 130
were killed and about 800 injured. The number of casualties on that day and
the following few days has continued to rise and those slain come from a
seemingly random sample of society: they include Hamas security forces and
civilian men, women and children, among them seven UNRWA students and their
instructor.
Israel's disproportionate and indiscriminate bombing of Gaza should invite
experts of humanitarian and international law to seriously investigate the
Palestinian claim that the attack is a war crime.
On the second day of the Israeli attack, the objectives of both Israel and
Hamas were clear. Israel wanted to teach Hamas the same lesson that it meant
to give Hizballah in the summer of 2006: that there is a heavy price all
Gazans will pay when Hamas launches any attack against Israelis. In addition,
Israel wanted to destroy the smuggling tunnels from Egypt to Gaza without
any promise of easing its siege on Gaza. In other words, Israel wanted to
renew the truce while maintaining, and consolidating, the closure.
Hamas is even clearer in what it is striving to achieve from this
confrontation. In the first official statement on the first day of the
attack it declared that the "practical response to the Israeli attack is the
opening of the Rafah crossing and the cutting of diplomatic relations
between Israel and Arab states."
It is notable that following that declaration, which was echoed by all Hamas
spokespeople, the call to open the Rafah crossing and criticism of Egypt for
failing to do so became the main rallying call in almost all solidarity
demonstrations across the Arab world. That is a strong indicator that there
are well-organized groups taking advantage of Arab sympathy with the
Palestinians of Gaza to make political gains on a regional level. The
harmony between Hamas and Islamic political parties in the region is
significant.
In spite of the heavy material and human losses, the Israeli attack on Gaza
is strengthening Hamas politically and increasing public support and
sympathy for the movement. Hamas is using this momentum to achieve an end to
the closure of Gaza, not by Israel opening the crossings it controls but by
Egypt opening Rafah. The irony here is that if Rafah is opened on Hamas'
terms, is will also secure a significant Israeli strategic objective, namely
handing over effective responsibility for Gaza to Egypt.
In the meantime, the war in Gaza is also affecting the balance of power
between the two main rival factions in Palestine, Fateh and Hamas. The
Israeli attack has increased public sympathy and support for Hamas because
it is the target of these attacks and because it is trying to fight back.
The Palestinian Authority in Ramallah, meanwhile, finds itself in an awkward
and difficult position.
For one thing, it has been marginalized and has been the target of criticism
while being compared unfavorably with the role and position of Hamas in
Gaza. This has led Fateh spokespeople and leaders to change their tone from
trying to hint at Hamas responsibility for the suffering of Gazans to a more
reasonable and rational tone, exemplified by President Mahmoud Abbas, who,
during a meeting of the PLO's Executive Committee, suggested that the time
is right for coordination between the different factions and invited all
factions, including Hamas, to address this issue.
This change in tone could result in some positive momentum in the dialogue
among the Palestinian factions that are under growing pressure from the
public to reconcile.- Published 29/12/2008 © bitterlemons.org
Ghassan Khatib is coeditor of the bitterlemons family of internet
publications. He is vice-president for community outreach at Birzeit
University and a former Palestinian Authority minister of planning. He holds
a PhD in Middle East politics from the University of Durham.
Bitterlemons-international.org is
an internet forum for an array of world perspectives on the Middle East and
its specific concerns. It aspires to engender greater understanding about
the Middle East region and open a new common space for world thinkers and
political leaders to present their viewpoints and initiatives on the region.
Editors Ghassan Khatib and Yossi Alpher can be reached at
ghassan@bitterlemons-international.org and
yossi@bitterlemons-international.org, respectively.
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