mike watkins dot ca : July 7 2006 Archives

July 07 2006

Another failed state

Middle east expert Juan Cole examines in a thought provoking article the completely disproportionate Israeli response to the kidnapping of one of its soldiers.

(Salon, July 7 2006) The actions of Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert seem intended to create a failed state in Gaza and the West Bank, thus rendering the Israeli claim that “we have no one to talk to” a self-fulfilling prophecy and allowing Israel to continue with its unilateral, annexationist policies, free of the need to even pretend to negotiate.

This shortsighted “strategy,” which both the United States and, to a slightly lesser degree, the strangely docile Europeans have signed off on, is a recipe for continued hatred, extremism, bloodshed, injustice and festering grievances. Unless Israel and its patron summon the wisdom to take the long view and hammer out an agreement that will give the Palestinians a viable state, rather than simply trying to smash them into submission, the world’s most dangerous conflict will continue to rage, with dangerous consequences for all.

It would be one thing if Olmert, head of Israel’s governing Kadima Party, ordered the Israeli Army (the IDF) to conduct simple, targeted search-and-destroy missions, the logical response to the kidnapping by Palestinian guerrillas of an Israeli soldier or the firing of small homemade rockets from Gaza into nearby Israeli towns. Instead, he has launched a wide-ranging attack on the Gaza Strip, sending tanks and troops over the border, destroying Gaza’s only electricity plant, and firing missiles at militants without regard for innocent civilians in the area. He even ordered Israeli jets to create terrifying sonic booms throughout the night, as if 1.4 million persons, many of them children, were being subjected to the sleep deprivation techniques applied by U.S. interrogators at Guantanamo and Abu Ghraib. As Patrick O’Connor has pointed out, Olmert told his cabinet last Sunday that he wanted “no one to be able to sleep tonight in Gaza.”

The destruction of the electricity plant has produced a humanitarian crisis of significant proportions. Hundreds of thousands of people have been plunged into darkness at night. It is impossible to operate hospitals and emergency rooms, refrigerate food, pump or purify water, or handle sewage in the cascading heat of midsummer. Complete article >

Given Canada’s increasing complicity in the middle eastern agenda of the United States, and the willingness of our current crop of leaders to take an unbalanced approach to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, we shouldn’t expect our government to do anything constructive on this file. Yet the linkage between what happens in Gaza and what transpires in Afghanistan and Iraq, not to mention our own shores, is very real.