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The IDF is Hungry for War

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The IDF is Hungry for War
What Are They Fighting For?

By TANYA REINHART

Whatever may be the fate of the captive soldier Gilad Shalit, the Israeli armyís war in Gaza is not about him. As senior security analyst Alex Fishman widely reported, the army was preparing for an attack months earlier and was constantly pushing for it, with the goal of destroying the Hamas infrastructure and its government. The army initiated an escalation on 8 June when it assassinated Abu Samhadana, a senior appointee of the Hamas government, and intensified its shelling of civilians in the Gaza Strip. Governmental authorization for action on a larger scale was already given by 12 June, but it was postponed in the wake of the global reverberation caused by the killing of civilians in the air force b! ombing the next day. The abduction of the soldier released the safety-catch, and the operation began on 28 June with the destruction of infrastructure in Gaza and the mass detention of the Hamas leadership in the West Bank, which was also planned weeks in advance. (1)

In Israeli discourse, Israel ended the occupation in Gaza when it evacuated its settlers from the Strip, and the Palestiniansí behavior therefore constitutes ingratitude. But there is nothing further from reality than this description. In fact, as was already stipulated in the Disengagement Plan, Gaza remained under complete Israeli military control, operating from outside. Israel prevented any possibility of economic independence for the Strip and from the very beginning, Israel did not implement a single one of the clauses of the agreement on border-crossings of November 2005. Israel simply substituted the expensive occupation of Gaza with a cheap occupation, one which in Israelís view exempts it from! the occupierís responsibility to maintain the Strip, and from concern for the welfare and the lives of its million and a half residents, as determined in the fourth Geneva convention.

Israel does not need this piece of land, one of the most densely populated in the world, and lacking any natural resources. The problem is that one cannot let Gaza free, if one wants to keep the West Bank. A third of the occupied Palestinians live in the Gaza strip. If they are given freedom, they would become the center of Palestinian struggle for liberation, with free access to the Western and Arab world. To control the West Bank, Israel needs full control Gaza. The new form of control Israel has developed is turning the whole of the Strip into a prison camp completely sealed from the world.

Besieged occupied people with nothing to hope for, and no alternative means of political struggle, will always seek ways to fight their oppressor. The imprisoned Gaza Palestinians found a way to disturb the life of the Israelis in the vicinity of the Strip, ! by launching home-made Qassam rockets across the Gaza wall against Israeli towns bordering the Strip. These primitive rockets lack the precision to focus on a target, and have rarely caused Israeli casualties; they do however cause physical and psychological damage and seriously disturb life in the targeted Israeli neighborhoods. In the eyes of many Palestinians, the Qassams are a response to the war Israel has declared on them. As a student from Gaza said to the New York Times, ìWhy should we be the only ones who live in fear? With these rockets, the Israelis feel fear, too. We will have to live in peace together, or live in fear together.î (2)

The mightiest army in the Middle East has no military answer to these home-made rockets. One answer that presents itself is what Hamas has been proposing all along, and Haniyeh repeated this week - a comprehensive cease-fire. Hamas has proven already that it can keep its word. In the 17 months since it announced its! decision to abandon armed struggle in favor of political struggle, an d declared a unilateral cease-fire (ìtahdiyaî - calm), it did not participate in the launching of Qassams, except under severe Israeli provocation, as happened in the June escalation. However, Hamas remains committed to political struggle against the occupation of Gaza and the West Bank. In Israel`s view, the Palestinians elections results is a disaster, because for the first time they have a leadership that insists on representing Palestinian interests rather than just collaborating with Israel`s demands.

Since ending the occupation is the one thing Israel is not willing to consider, the option promoted by the army is breaking the Palestinians by devastating brutal force. They should be starved, bombarded, terrorized with sonic booms for months, until they understand that rebelling is futile, and accepting prison life is their only hope for staying alive. Their elected political system, institutions and police should be destroyed. In Israel`s vision, Gaza should be r! uled by gangs collaborating with the prison wards.

The Israeli army is hungry for war. It would not let concerns for captive soldiers stand in its way. Since 2002 the army has argued that an ìoperationî along the lines of ìDefensive Shieldî in Jenin was also necessary in Gaza. Exactly a year ago, on 15 July (before the Disengagement), the army concentrated forces on the border of the Strip for an offensive of this scale on Gaza. But then the USA imposed a veto. Rice arrived for an emergency visit that was described as acrimonious and stormy, and the army was forced to back down (3). Now, the time has finally came. With the Islamophobia of the American Administration at a high point, it appears that the USA is prepared to authorize such an operation, on condition that it not provoke a global outcry with excessively-reported attacks on civilians.(4)

With the green light for the offensive given, the army`s only concern is public image. Fishman reported this Tue! sday that the army is worried that `what threatens to burry this huge military and diplomatic effort` is reports of the humanitarian crisis in Gaza. Hence, the army would take care to let some food into Gaza. (5) From this perspective, it is necessary to feed the Palestinians in Gaza so that it would be possible to continue to kill them undisturbed.

Tanya Reinhart is a Professor of Linguistics at Tel Aviv University and the author of Israel/Palestine: How to End the War of 1948 and The Roadmap to Nowhere. She can be reached through her website: http://www.tau.ac.il/~reinhart

*Parts of this article were translated from Hebrew by Mark Marshall.

(1) Alex Fishman, Who is for the elimination of Hamas, Yediot Aharonot Saturday Supplement, June 30, 2006. See also Alex Fishman, The safety-catch released, Yediot Aharonot June 21, 2006 (Hebrew), Aluf Benn, An operation with two goals, Ha`aretz, June 29 2006.

(2) Greg Myre, Rockets Create a `Balance of Fear` With Israel, Gaza Residents Say. The New York Times, July 9, 2006.

(3) Steven Erlanger, ìU.S. Presses Israel to Smooth the Path to a Palestinian Gazaî, New York Times, August 7 2005.
(4) For a detailed survey of the U.S. administration`s present stands, see Ori Nir, U.S. Seen Backing Israeli Moves To Topple Hamas, The Forward, July 7, 2006.

(5) Alex Fishman, Their food is finished, Yediot Aharonot, July 11, 2006.

http://www.counterpunch.org/reinhart07142006.html
 
Maybe we should send a few fighters to leboan again like we did in 1969:flag:

PS: Why is this thing in big letters, i did nothing, it's just coming this way
 
Thunder said:
Maybe we should send a few fighters to leboan again like we did in 1969:flag:

PS: Why is this thing in big letters, i did nothing, it's just coming this way

That was a different time in 1969. Pakistan didnt have any kind of pressure from US at that time. Being a muslim nation we should, but do you think US will let Pakistan do that. The only way this can be possible if Saudi arabia or other muslim nations back Pakistan by taking the whole responsibility and counter US for any possible action.
 
melb4aust said:
That was a different time in 1969. Pakistan didnt have any kind of pressure from US at that time. Being a muslim nation we should, but do you think US will let Pakistan do that. The only way this can be possible if Saudi arabia or other muslim nations back Pakistan by taking the whole responsibility and counter US for any possible action.

I think more than being a muslim, you shud think whther you want to support a shia conglomerate which includes Iran and Syria or be with the sunni group lead by the saudis.
 
Bull said:
I think more than being a muslim, you shud think whther you want to support a shia conglomerate which includes Iran and Syria or be with the sunni group lead by the saudis.
shia & sunni are not enemies of each others, both are muslim; but they follow different school of thought.
 
Amnesty calls for arms embargo on Israel, Hezbollah LONDON: Countries around the world should establish an arms embargo on Israel and the Hezbollah militia in Lebanon, Amnesty International here said, following reports that the United States used a British airport as a staging post for bombs destined for Israel.

"Direct targeting of civilians and civilian infrastructure and launching indiscriminate and disproportionate attacks amount to war crimes," said Irene Khan, secretary general of the London-based human rights group.

"Governments supplying Israel and Hezbollah with arms and military equipment are fuelling their capacity to commit war crimes. All governments should impose an arms embargo on both sides and refuse permission for their territories to be used for the transfer of arms and military equipment."

Recent reports have alleged that two Airbus A310 cargo planes filled with GBU28 laser-guided missiles stopped at Glasgow Prestwick Airport over the weekend for refuelling and for the crew to rest en route to Israel.

Amnesty's Khan said: "The UK government should refuse permission for its sea and air ports to be used by planes or ships carrying arms and military equipment destined for Israel or Hezbollah."

The human rights group also called on Britain to suspend the sale or transfer of all military equipment to Israel.
 
Owais said:
Recent reports have alleged that two Airbus A310 cargo planes filled with GBU28 laser-guided missiles stopped at Glasgow Prestwick Airport over the weekend for refuelling and for the crew to rest en route to Israel.

Indeed, the news appreared in several independand newpapers. GBU-28 is an offensive weapon well known for its precision.
 

Hizbullah claims sinking of Israeli gunboat
TYRE (updated on: August 11, 2006, 20:13 PST): Hizbullah said on Friday its guerrillas sank an Israeli Super Dvora fast patrol boat off the coast of southern Lebanon, a claim denied by Israel.

"At 2:05 pm (1105 GMT), while an Israeli Super Dvora warship was off the coast of Mansouri, south of the city of Tyre, and was aggressing our steadfast people and our civilian regions, the men of the Islamic Resistance attacked the ship with suitable weapons," a Hizbullah statement said.

"They scored a direct hit, destroying it, setting off a fire on it and sinking it," said the statement, read on Hizbullah's Al-Manar television.

"Other Israeli boats and zodiacs rushed to rescue its crew, made up of 12 officers and soldiers and who were killed, wounded or drowned," it said.

An Israeli military spokeswoman initially said she knew nothing about a boat being hit.

When pressed, and asked if that were a denial of Hizbullah's claim, she said "yes."



 

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