Who Is to Blame? Israel and the US Say Hamas; Iran,
Syria, and Hezbollah, plus the Media, say Israel; Abbas, Egypt, Saudi
Arabia, and Jordan Say It Doesn’t Matter, Just Keep the Muslim
Brotherhood Away
By
Susan Rosenbluth
January 2009
The Israeli War in Gaza, which is officially called Operation Cast
Lead but, unofficially, by many Israelis "The Chanukah War," seems to
have divided the entire world. American and Canada have come out clearly
for Israel; the Arab street in the Middle East, large swathes of Europe,
and most of the media are for Hamas; and the governments of Western
Europe and even the Muslim world seem uncertain whom to blame, so many
of them have castigated both sides, emphasizing Israel’s
"disproportionate use of force."
Peter Wehner, writing for Commentary magazine’s blog,
"Contentions," characterized the "dominant media narrative" like this:
"Of course, Hamas should not have been launching rocket attacks
against Israel. And, yes, Hamas is a terrorist organization. And sure
it’s regrettable that Hamas has embedded itself in civilian populations
in order to cause collateral damage in the form of Palestinian deaths.
We (grudgingly) grant all that. But the real offense is Israel’s
response, which, we are told by countless commentators, is
‘disproportionate.’ Israel has a right to self-defense—but, in this
instance, it is massively overreacting."
Just Like the US
Mr. Wehner, however, pointed out that, if Israel’s response is
disproportionate, then so, too, was the US response to the attacks of
September 11th.
"After all, the attacks by Al Qaeda, while deadly, were limited to a
multi-pronged strike on a single day. Thousands of Americans died in the
terrorist attacks—but, in response, did America have to declare war on
the Taliban regime in Afghanistan—a war that merited the support of NATO
and has now entered its eighth year?" he said.
To the vast majority of Americans as well as to other nations and
even to the UN, the US war in Afghanistan was a just use of force.
"Our response was deemed as proportional in part because of the good
being defended and the possible good that may result from the actions.
These are among the standards comprising the just-war theory. Israel is
acting along the same ethical lines, yet when Israel does it, its
actions are met with almost universal condemnation," said Mr. Wehner.
No Negotiations
Hamas, like the Taliban, he said, cannot be tamed by "typical
state-to-state negotiations; it must therefore be dealt a crippling
military blow."
"That is what Israel is now attempting to do, and in this latest
battlefield in the larger conflict between civilization and barbarism,
we need to unambiguously take the side of civilization. That is, after
all, what Israel did with the US in the aftermath of 9-11," he said.
On the issue of proportionality, New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg,
who just came back from Israel, put it this way: "If you’re in your
apartment, and some emotionally disturbed person is banging on your
door, screaming, ‘I am going to come through this door and kill you,’ do
you want us to respond with one police officer, which is proportional,
or with all the resources at our command? Just think about it in that
context. There is no such thing as a proportional response to terrorism.
This is not something we are playing by the Marquis of Queensbury rules.
People’s lives are at risk."
The Marquis of Queensbury rules are a set of strict tit-for-tat
guidelines sometimes used in the boxing ring.
Divided World
While the Arab-Muslim world is not grappling with the same
"civilization vs. barbarism" paradigm presented by Mr. Wehner or Mr.
Bloomberg’s proportionality context, the Muslims are divided. None of
the players can be called pro-Israel, but some are anti-Hamas, not
because the terrorist group murders Jews, but, rather, because they
threaten the regimes of some Arab countries.
Those who oppose Hamas include the Fatah president of the Palestinian
Authority Mahmoud Abbas and the governments of Egypt, Jordan, and Saudi
Arabia. Hamas counts among its supporters Syria, Iran, and Iran’s
surrogate in Lebanon, the terrorist group Hezbollah.
In the West, Hamas’s most important supporters, besides Arab
residents, are large segments of the media.
The US government, especially the Bush administration, and, according
to polls, the American people are decidedly pro-Israel.
In Europe, the reaction is mixed.
Israeli Support
One place where this has been little disagreement, for a change, is
in Israel itself. Domestic opposition to the military action has been
much more muted than in the past. Even among Israel’s most liberal
segments, the sentiment is that those who castigate the Jewish state
simply do not understand what Israel has been through in the past few
years.
A poll taken by the left-wing Ha’aretz showed that 71 percent
of the public supported continuing the hostilities against Hamas, while
only 21percent supported a ceasefire.
On Jan 4, a poll by Maagar Mochot for Israel radio said 81 percent of
Israelis back the incursion, even though 39 percent do not believe it
will bring peace.
Not Fighting for Peace
David Breakstone, head of the Department of Zionist Activities of the
World Zionist Organization, supports the military operation in Gaza, but
does not believe it will lead to peace.
"We really are not fighting for peace. We are fighting to protect
ourselves and for our right to some normalcy in our lives. Few, if any,
are under the illusion that this military campaign is going to result in
peace. Hamas has repeatedly affirmed its commitment to the destruction
of the State of Israel, and no amount of bombs is going to alter that.
The problem is, neither is any amount of diplomacy. The Hamas covenant
explicitly rejects negotiations as a legitimate form of struggle against
a Zionist entity," he said.
He said Israel had entered the ceasefire agreement with the hope that
"our avowed enemy would use this period of calm to invest its resources
and energies in promoting the social agenda on which it rose to power,
and, in the meantime, reconcile itself—without ever having to say so out
loud—to living alongside its hated adversary."
Fears
At the same time, he said, Israel’s fear was that Hamas would take
advantage of the opportunity to act with impunity and enhance its
firepower.
"Unfortunately, it was our fears that were realized, not our hopes,"
he said.
As a result, he said, Israel is no longer interested in discussions
of proportionality, such as firing back one missile into Gaza for every
missile fired from it.
"We are long past the point where dispensing medicine can do any
good. Instead, we are interested in radical surgery, in eliminating as
much of the cancer of radical Islamist terrorism as possible before it
metastasizes throughout the region, and eventually the entire world. If
someone, somehow can offer us a noninvasive procedure that will allow us
to do that, I am confident with every fiber of my being that we will opt
for it, even if the method is considered chancy and unproven," he said.
Two Sides of His Mouth
Mr. Abbas’s position on the Cast Lead has been much less decisive. On
one hand, he has castigated Israel for defending itself, but he has also
blamed Hamas, mostly for refusing to extend its truce with Israel, thus
prompting Israel’s military operations in Gaza.
Mr. Abbas, who lost control of Gaza to Hamas in a June 2007 coup,
said that maintaining the truce could have helped the Arab residents of
Gaza avoid the Israeli raids.
"We talked to [Hamas leaders] and we told them, ‘Please, we ask you,
do not end the truce. Let the truce continue and not stop,’ so that we
have avoided what happened," he told reporters in Cairo.
At the UN, however, the PA’s observer, Riyad Mansour, who was
appointed by Mr. Abbas, blamed "this Israeli aggression" for the "very
dangerous crossroads in the Middle East."
He accused Israel of "threatening the life and prosperity of 1.5
million Palestinians and also threatening to undermine the peace
efforts."
Jordan
Mr. Abbas’s Arab supporters, which include the governments of Egypt,
Jordan, and Saudi Arabia, have given similarly ambiguous messages.
More than a week after Operation Cast Lead began, Jordan’s Prime
Minister Nader al-Dahabi told parliament that his government, which has
a peace treaty with Israel, retained the right to reconsider its
relations with the Jewish state.
Jordan, he said, would "not remain silent" about Israel’s actions in
Gaza and the "threat which risks the security of the whole area and its
stability."
Hoping for Israeli Victory
According to Arab papers, the head of Egyptian Intelligence Omar
Suleiman has made clear that he, too, supports Israel’s campaign against
Hamas. The London-based Palestinian paper, Al Quds-Al Arabi
reported at the end of the December that Mr. Suleiman said he hoped
Israel would destroy Hamas and "end the suffering in Gaza."
Sources told the paper Mr. Suleiman was angry that Hamas had refused
to negotiate with Mr. Abbas’s faction and had "acted haughtily" towards
Egypt.
Egypt’s Foreign Minister Ahmed Aboul Gheit, however, publicly
complained to Israel’s ambassador about the IDF’s military actions in
Gaza.
"We object to this, and we demand that the Israeli army does not
carry out a new invasion," he said.
Betraying Palestinians
The chairman of the Egyptian Foreign Relations Committee and former
Ambassador to Israel Muhammad Basyouni also criticized Hamas for
betraying the Palestinians.
"Where are the Hamas leaders now, when Gazans are being killed? They
are all in hiding," he told Cairo’s State TV.
He took issue with Hamas Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh’s assertion
that "no one cares if the Palestinians are annihilated."
"This is what Hamas wanted, to isolate itself from the rest of the
Arab world, but the storm sweeping the Arab nations has proven the Strip
has not been forsaken. We have proven the Palestinians cause is in our
hearts. All free men believe the aggression must be stopped immediately
and that all the crossings must be opened to allow the Palestinian
people a free and dignified existence," he said.
No Diplomatic Change
Sources in Israel said that, despite these remarks, there are no
indications that either Jordan or Egypt plans to alter diplomatic ties
with Israel. Both countries receive millions—in Egypt’s case,
billions—of dollars from the US, based on their full diplomatic and
political relations with Israel, and neither regime seems eager to
relinquish that aid.
Nevertheless, Israeli experts recognize that the Gaza conflict
exposes its allies in the Arab world to tremendous internal pressure
that will force the governments of Egypt and Jordan to address the
issue.
Eyal Zisser, director of Tel Aviv’s Moshe Dayan Center, predicted
that Jordan, followed by Egypt, might withdraw their ambassadors to
Israel, but nothing more.
"What I see now are some demonstrations, as was expected, but nothing
more than that. The Second Lebanon War was worse," he said.
Withdrawing Ambassadors
Gamal Abdel Gawad, head of the international relations unit at the
Cairo-based Al-Ahram Center for Strategic Studies, said he, too, saw the
possibility that Jordan and Egypt might have to withdraw their diplomats
from Israel or reduce their economic ties or exports of gas or energy
supplies to Israel.
"Governments are under pressure and might do that to accommodate
their public, to release the pressure. If the pressure gets to a certain
point, they have to release it or risk escalation or deterioration
between the governments and the people," he said.
The issue is particularly sensitive in Jordan, where Palestinians,
who make up more than 60 percent of the population, constitute "a strong
mobilizing force," he said.
According to Mr. Gawad, satellite TV channels that broadcast
continually from Gaza "drive people to anger and make them more easily
manipulated by radical ideologies and propaganda."
He did not think either Egypt or Jordan risk being taken over by
radical regimes because of the Gaza conflict, but, he said, the pressure
their governments experience can present "a challenge."
Third Intifada
Jerusalem Post analyst Khaled Abu Toameh suggested the anger
against Israel as well as their own Arab leaders could lead to a "third
intifada."
"The IDF’s Cast Lead offensive may have severely harmed Hamas’s
military capabilities and weakened its tight grip on the area, but it
has also further undermined the credibility of the ‘moderate’
pro-Western Arab regimes," he said.
The media in Egypt, Jordan, and Saudi Arabia have been filled with
reports suggesting that Mr. Abbas, Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak,
Jordan’s King Abdullah II, and Saudi Arabia’s King Abdullah bin Abdel
Aziz had given Israel a "green light’ to attack Gaza.
These reports were fueled when Mr. Mubarak allowed Israeli Foreign
Minister Tzipi Livni to speak to the Egyptian media about Israel’s plans
to crush Hamas.
"What would have happened if a Palestinian leader had issued threats
to eliminate Israel from the heart of the Egyptian capital? It would
have been the end of the world," said Abdel Bari Atawan, editor of
Al-Quds al-Arabi.
US-Zionist Conspiracy
Mr. Toameh said this could prove more than merely an embarrassment
for these rulers. Already, he said, there have been "hundreds of
thousands" of protesters condemning not Israel, but, rather what they
regard as their own governments’ involvement in the "US-Zionist
conspiracy to remove Hamas from power," he said.
Some Arab political analysts, he said, see this as the beginning of a
popular "intifada’ against "corrupt, pro-Western Arab dictators, a
movement that could intensify as the IDF operation continues and the
number of Palestinian casualties rises."
According to Mr. Toameh, most of the "heat" on the Arab street is
directed against Messrs Mubarak and Abbas, because they openly blamed
Hamas.
"Traitor"
Walid Tabtabai, an Islamist member of the Kuwaiti parliament who
recently took off his shoe and waived it in the air while hurling curses
at Mr. Abbas, is now being hailed as a hero throughout the Arab world.
Other members of the Kuwaiti parliament have called on their
government to ban the "traitor" Abbas from entering the country.
In a similar move, several members of the Jordanian parliament took
the unprecedented step last month of burning the Israeli flag inside the
chamber and calling on King Abdullah to expel the Israeli ambassador.
On Friday, Jan 2, 60,000 protesters in Amman, Jordan, chanted for
Hamas to increase rocket attacks against Israel. They also chanted
slogans against the US and Arab leaders, especially Messrs Mubarak and
Abbas.
King Abdullah reportedly found the demonstrations so offensive, he
asked his intelligence chief, who had failed to stop the rallies, to
step down.
Tunnels
Mr. Mubarak is being attacked not only for allowing Ms. Livni to
speak, but also for participating in the Israel blockade on Gaza by
refusing to reopen the Rafa border crossing between Gaza and Egypt.
The Arab street is not alone in recognizing this. Writing in the
Canadian National Post last month, Lorne Gunter asked, "If Israel
is the ‘occupier’ of Gaza, how come it has no troops or military posts
in Gaza, and has not had since 2005?"
He argued with the position of many pro-Palestinians that the
smuggling tunnels between Gaza and Egypt were dug only because of
Israel’s "occupation" and "the siege." Mr. Gunter pointed out that
Egypt, not Israel, controls Gaza’s southwestern frontier.
"So how do Israel’s restrictions make Gaza-Egypt tunnels necessary?
If Egypt were not just as determined to keep Gaza sealed off, the
tunnels would be unnecessary, no matter what Israel was doing," he said.
Arm’s Length
In fact, Egypt has kept Palestinians out of their country ever since
the end of the 1967 Six-Day War. Before that war, Egypt kept the
Palestinians in decrepit refugee camps, where, under Hamas, many of them
still reside.
"Doesn’t all this make Egypt at least a co-occupier?" said Mr.
Gunter.
Several months ago, when Palestinians forced open the crossing into
Egypt, Mr. Mubarak’s government brutally resealed it and threw all
Palestinians who had entered Egypt illegally out of the country.
During Operation Cast Lead, Egypt has been no less insistent on
keeping the borders between it and Gaza shut. Egyptian authorities have
called on locals to refrain from assisting infiltrators from Gaza in any
way.
Waiting for Fatah
Mr. Mubarak’s stated policy is that the border crossing will not be
reopened until Mr. Abbas’s loyalists are permitted to return to the
terminal, which means waiting for Hamas to relinquish power to Fatah, in
Gaza, a position that has enraged Palestinians.
This anger was reflected in a fiery speech given in Lebanon by
Hezbollah secretary-general Hassan Nasrallah, who publicly called on the
Egyptian people to overthrow Mr. Mubarak and his government.
"Mubarak has become the number one enemy of the Arab masses," a
Palestinian newspaper editor told Mr. Toameh.
Abbas’s Trouble
The editor added that Mr. Abbas is also "in big trouble, because he’s
being portrayed as someone who supported the Israeli attack so that he
could return to the Gaza Strip."
These accusations prompted Mr. Abbas and his aides to initiate a
campaign to convince the Palestinians and the Arab world that they have
no plans to return to Gaza "aboard Israeli tanks." Further, they insist,
they never gave their blessings to the Operation Cast Lead.
It may not matter much. Mr. Abbas’s term is due to expire on January
9, and Hamas leaders have said that, after that date, they will not
recognize his position at all. Even many of his own Fatah members see
Mr. Abbas as a failed leader who is responsible for losing Gaza to
Hamas.
In fact, after January 9, the Palestinians’ only legitimately elected
Palestinian government will consist of Hamas.
Preaching Insurrection
According to Mr. Toameh, the incitement against Messrs Mubarak and
Abbas is likely to intensify as Al-Jazeera continues to broadcast
horrific images of dead women and children in Gaza and, simultaneously,
depicting the "moderate" Arab leaders as pawns of the Israelis and
Americans.
"The message that Al-Jazeera is sending to the Arab and Islamic
masses is: ‘You must rise against your treacherous leaders, because they
are serving the interests of Israel and the US,’" said Mr. Toameh.
This is not new. During the Second Lebanon War, many Arab media
outlets also waged a campaign against Arab leaders, accusing them of
"collusion" with Israel.
"Fortunately for those leaders, that war did not last too long.
Moreover, it was regarded as a campaign against Hezbollah alone, while
the current offensive is being seen as an attempt to punish the
Palestinians for having voted for Hamas," said Mr. Toameh.
Ending Peace
The media campaign, he said, will probably leave Hamas more popular
than ever, not just among Palestinians, but also "on the streets of
Khartoum, Amman, Cairo, and Beirut," where Arabs seem no longer afraid
to openly condemn their leaders as "traitors" and "Israeli puppets."
By seeking to ban pro-Hamas demonstrations, Messrs Mubarak and Abbas
and King Abdullah II have only drawn more fire from their constituents
and the Arab media, said Mr. Toameh.
According to Palestinian writer Rashad Abu Shawar, the Arab street is
ready for a "third intifada," which he saw at the beginning of January
"on the streets of Ramallah, Hebron, Jordan, Syria, and Lebanon, as well
as inside Israel."
In these places, said Mr. Shawar, the Arab regimes of Messrs Abbas
and Mubarak are regarded as eager to see the surrender of Gaza "so they
can eliminate the term ‘resistance’ from their lexicon."
"The third intifada won’t only finish off the PA; it will also
destroy the illusion of peace with the Israeli enemy," said Mr. Shawar.
Ending the Ceasefire
The radicals’ disillusionment with Mr. Mubarak had already begun
when, in June 2008, Egypt brokered a ceasefire between Hamas and Israel,
which Hamas never implemented. While the number of rockets aimed at
Israel’s civilian population in the western Negev decreased, they never
stopped.
On December 19, after Israel responded to a particularly nasty round
of rockets fired on its southern population by destroying some of the
smuggling tunnels, Hamas announced an official end to the ceasefire by
launching dozens of rockets per day into the Jewish state, deliberately
targeting homes, schools, and businesses. The rockets usually began at
7:30 in the morning, just the time when children were walking to school
and adults commuting to work.
"In response to these attacks on their people, the leaders of Israel
have launched military operations on Hamas positions in Gaza," said
President George Bush on his regularly scheduled radio address on
January 3. "As part of their strategy, Hamas terrorists often hide
within the civilian population, which puts innocent Palestinians at
risk."
Mr. Bush said that while a truce between the two sides was important,
"another one-way ceasefire that leads to rocket attacks on Israel is not
acceptable."
"And promises from Hamas will not suffice. There must be monitoring
mechanisms in place to help ensure that smuggling of weapons to
terrorist groups in Gaza comes to an end," he said.
Republican Support
In his analysis, Mr. Bush mirrored the sentiments of most Americans.
At the very beginning of the Israeli defensive air attacks, a Rasmussen
poll found that only 13 percent of Americans thought Israel was
responsible for the situation in Gaza; 55 percent blamed the
Palestinians; and 32 percent were unsure.
The breakdown along party lines was surprising, and does not
necessarily bode well for Israel when President-elect Barack Obama takes
office on January 20. The poll found that while 62 percent of
Republicans support Israel’s decision to take military action against
the Palestinians, only 31 percent of Democrats agree.
A majority of Democrats, 55 percent, said Israel should have tried to
find a diplomatic solution first, a view shared by only 27 percent of
Republicans.
Further, while 75 percent of Republicans said Israel is an ally of
the US, only 55 percent of Democrats see the Jewish state that way.
On average, 63 percent of Americans see Israel of an ally of the US,
and only 3 percent see the Jewish state as an "enemy." Some 27 percent
place Israel "somewhere in between," and seven percent are undecided.
Just over half of those surveyed, 51 percent, fear Israel’s actions
in Gaza might cause more terrorism against the US.
Like Mr. Bush and most Americans, the Canadian government has
fingered Hamas as the cause of the current conflict.
"Canada maintains that the rocket attacks are the cause of this
crisis," said Canadian Foreign Minister Lawrence Cannon.
Telling the Truth
Messrs Bush and Cannon are not the only Western leaders who consider
Israel’s cause to be just. At the beginning of Operation Cast Lead,
Czechoslovakian Foreign Minister Karel Schwarzenberg, who assumed the
presidency of the European Union in January, announced that Hamas had
"excluded itself from serious political debate" due to its rocket
attacks on Israel.
"Why am I one of the few that has expressed understanding for Israel?
I enjoy the luxury of telling the truth," he said.
He said Hamas was responsible for its own growing death toll because
it had placed its military bases and gun warehouses in densely populated
areas and "steeply increased the number of rockets fired at Israel."
"That is not acceptable anymore," he said, calling Israel’s action in
Gaza "defensive, not offensive."
Mr. Schwarzenberg, who will serve as the EU’s president for the next
six months, said he intended to work for closer relations between the EU
and Israel.
French Blame
He has his work cut out for him. Almost immediately after he made his
statements to reporters, the EU called for a bilateral end to the
violence. French President Nicolas Sarkozy, the outgoing president of
the EU, condemned both Israel and Hamas, but, he said, Israel had
displayed "a disproportionate use of force."
Jerusalem Post analyst Gerald Steinberg said the French statement
"makes no distinction between Hamas and the IDF, or between aggressor
and defender."
"The French government is promoting a vague, ‘humanitarian ceasefire’
which, Israel fears, will allow Hamas to rebuild and even extend its
rocket forces for the next round," said Mr. Steinberg.
Like Mr. Sarkozy, Sweden, which is scheduled to take over the
presidency on July 1, generally opposes military action, especially by
Israel, and tends to see Palestinians as victims.
Reacting to Czech Statement
Once again displaying the PA’s ambiguity, Mr. Abbas’s aid, Saeb
Erekat, called for the world to condemn Mr. Schwarzenberg’s position.
In response, the French Foreign Ministry said that Israel’s
"dangerous military escalation" had "complicated" efforts to end the
fighting and bring aid to the area.
Further underlining the impression that the EU is now divided, a
British government source told Reuters, "[The Czech position] is not the
position of the British government."
Change
By January 5, positions changed. Mr. Schwarzenberg’s office retracted
its support for Israel, while France switched its criticism from Israel
to Hamas.
The Czech Republic’s spokesman, Jiri Potuznik, said Mr.
Schwazenberg’s support for Israel was "a youthful mistake."
"Even the undisputable right of the state to defend itself does not
allow actions which largely affect civilians," said Mr. Potuznik.
Mr. Sarkozy, however, told Lebanese newspapers that Hamas had to
accept the lion’s share of the blame for the hostilities.
"Hamas, which decided to break the truce and resume rocket fire
against Israel, bears a heavy responsibility for the suffering of the
Palestinians," he said.
Despite their contradictory statements, Hamas remains on the EU’s
list of terrorist organizations.
First Duty
In London, British Foreign Minister David Miliband urged both Israel
and Hamas to stop hostilities.
But former British Foreign Secretary Malcolm Rifkind said Israel’s
actions were "not unreasonable."
"Imagine if, for several years, the IRA had been allowed to fire
missiles into the villages of Northern Ireland from the Irish Republic
with the consent and approval of the Irish government," he said, noting
that the comparison itself is "controversial,"
But the point, he said, is the same: "Every government has a first
duty to protect its citizens."
He pointed out that if Hamas, after Israel "disengaged" from Gaza,
had concentrated its energies on economic development rather than on
cross-border attacks, "the Israeli government and public would have been
much more willing to make a similar withdrawal from the West Bank, where
the majority of Palestinians live."
He noted that Israel would never permit a Palestinian state unless
the leaders "provide an absolute guarantee of an end to hostilities by
all Palestinian parties."
BBC Bias
In Britain, the BBC’s pro-Hamas tilt to its coverage of the Gaza
conflict "horrified and angered" Tory MP Michael Fabricant, prompting
him to file a formal complaint with the chairman of the BBC Trust.
According to British journalist Melanie Phillips, typical BBC
coverage ignored the 10,000 rockets fired at Israeli civilians from Gaza
over the last seven years, to highlight "human interest" stories
"reminiscent of salacious photos in the cheaper red-top newspapers."
One of them, she said, was a "heart-rending report" from a
Palestinian in Cyprus who "imagined" that "Gaza’s streets would be
running with the blood of dead Arab children."
Hamas Aid Worker
BBC also featured an "unbiased report" from a British citizen, Hatim
Shurrab, who works in Gaza with Islamic Relief Worldwide, a group
affiliated with Hamas
Ms. Phillips pointed out that Mr. Shurrab "didn’t just pop up on the
BBC." Rather, for the entire first week of January, the BBC website
published an "aid worker’s diary," written by Mr. Shurrab. It is, she
said, "chock-full of manipulative rubbish about conditions in Gaza."
Mr. Shurrab, for example, expressed approval of the death penalty,
presumably without due process, for "collaborators" with Israel or
Fatah.
Ms. Phillips commended Mr. Fabricant, but, she said, she would prefer
if the BBC’s "collusion with Hamas, along with coverage whose incendiary
distortions cannot but have incited hatred of Israel among its viewers
and listeners" had prompted an emergency debate in Parliament.
Quiet Support
When Ms. Phillips wrote her impressions about the BBC coverage for
the London Daily Mail, she said, she was expecting little
reaction. Instead, she said, she was "absolutely overwhelmed."
"There is a large groundswell of support for Israel and detestation
of Hamas," she said, noting that most of the people who wrote to her
were neither Jewish nor Evangelical Christian, who are usually
pro-Israel.
"The people I heard from have had no particular view about the Middle
East one way or another. This in my view, is a significant shift of
opinion towards Israel amongst ordinary people," she said.
Typical of the letters she received was one which called her piece "a
breath of fresh air."
"After so many days of BBC-led propaganda, I am sick of seeing
pictures of shell-shocked, wide-eyed Palestinians, and not a word hardly
about the poor sods in Israel who have had to undergo a relentless
bombardment for years," said the letter.
Germany
In Germany, there is also a debate. Chancellor Angela Merkel has
given her unconditional support to Israel’s strikes, prompting numerous
attacks from her coalition partner, the Social Democratic Party (SPD),
as well as from the Free Democratic Party (FDP) and the Left Party.
Ms. Merkel said Hamas’s rocket attacks were to blame for Israel’s
military operation. She stressed that Israel has the right to defend its
territory and citizens.
"The terror of Hamas cannot be accepted," she said, demanding that
the terrorists "immediately and permanently" stop rocket attacks on
Israel.
Hezbollah’s Candidate
SPD MP Rolf Mutzenich, who is considered friendly with Iran, accused
Ms Merkel of "siding with the permanent Israeli bombing" of Gaza.
He argued that the Second Lebanon War in 2006 showed that "Hamas and
Hezbollah cannot be defeated militarily."
The foreign policy spokesman of the FDP, MP Werner Hoyer, said that
Ms. Merkel’s "raising the question of guilt" was the "wrong approach to
the peace process."
Left Party foreign policy spokesman, MK Wolfgang Gehrcke, demanded
that Ms. Merkel and German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier
publicly criticize Israel.
During the Second Lebanon War, Mr. Gehrcki marched in a pro-Hezbollah
demonstration in Berlin, where the most popular slogans were "Zionists
are fascists;" "No place for Israel;" and "We are all Hezbollah."
Antisemitism in Germany
In Germany, at the beginning of January, there were a series of
anti-Israel demonstrations throughout the country that verged on
outright antisemitism. About 8,000 protesters marched in Berlin and
10,000 in Frankfurt, including Left Party members who waved banners
equating Operation Cast Lead with a second Holocaust. Some carried signs
saying "Israel, go to hell," while others held signs with the Star of
David crossed out and the words "Israel, child murderer."
In Frankfurt, an Israeli flag was burned.
Levi Solomon, the representative of the 12,000-member Berlin Jewish
community, filed a criminal complaint saying the demonstration amounted
to incitement against the Jews.
"We cannot accept antisemitic taunts such as ‘Jews Out,’" he said.
Sacha Stawski, editor-in-chief of Honestly Concerned, a media
watchdog publication in Frankfurt, said he heard chants of "Gas the
Jews" and "Merkel Out."
Anti-Israel Interview
Whom the German media chooses to interview is also an issue. In
December, Deutschlandradio radio host Birgit Kolkmann interviewed Moshe
Zuckermann, who claims to be an historian and sociologist as well as a
regular writer for the aggressively anti-Israel left-wing paper junge
Welt, which has been called "the central German newspaper of Hamas."
During the interview, Mr. Zuckermann said Israel had killed "400,000
Palestinians" during the current conflict.
At the time, the reported number of deaths was about 400.
Vienna-based veteran journalist and media critic Karl Pfeifer cited
Ms. Kolkmann for failing to question the accuracy of the impossibly
large number.
While Deutschlandradio corrected its on-line transcript about eight
hours after the broadcast, it did not modify the live tape of the show
on-line, leaving the false statistic intact.
Thomas Wische, an editor with Deutschlandradio, called the error "a
bad mistake" and, he said, after the broadcast, Mr. Zuckerman was
"embarrassed" by it.
Mr. Wische defended Ms. Kolkmann, saying she "did not notice" the
error, but had had "no bad intention or ideology."
Mr. Wische said Mr. Zuckermanm was a guest on the program in an
attempt to "document a piece of the opinion spectrum."
Dutch
Another European leader who has refused to blame Israel is Dutch
Prime Minister Jan Peter Balkenende.
"Condemning Israel is pointless because both parties have to be
addressed," he said in an interview on Dutch TV. "As long as the rocket
attacks continue, Israel will always say, ‘We cannot accept this,’ and I
understand that."
He said he hoped that a ceasefire would be put in place as soon as
possible so that humanitarian aid could reach Gaza and work towards the
peace process could resume, "however difficult that might be."
"It is always regrettable when there are civilian casualties, but, at
the same time, I see Hamas continuously firing rockets on Israel. It is
essential that both parties renounce violence, but then it is essential
that Hamas stops firing rockets because it isn’t acceptable that Israel
finds itself in a sphere of threat," he said.
Demonstrations
Despite most European government’s moderate positions,
pro-Palestinian marchers have taken to the streets of Britain, the
Netherlands, Germany, Spain, Austria, Sweden, Poland, Greece, and
Cyprus, with reports of skirmishes outside Israeli embassies.
While some of the demonstrators are home-grown, many are immigrants
or children of immigrants from Muslim countries.
In Paris, 20,000 people marched in support of the Palestinians on
Sat., January 3; 12,000 showed their solidarity with Israel the next
day.
More sinister are the news stories indicating that Jews are being
attacked by Muslims throughout Europe. According to the AP, government
officials and Jewish leaders are concerned that the conflict in Gaza is
spilling over into violence in Europe. There have been attacks against
Jews and synagogues in Denmark, France, Sweden, and Britain.
France, Denmark, Belgium
On Monday, January 5, Muslim assailants rammed a burning car into the
gates of a synagogue in Toulouse in southwest France and unlighted
gasoline bombs were found in a car nearby and in the synagogue’s yard.
At the same time, a Jewish congregation in Helsingborg, in southern
Sweden, was attacked.
A day earlier, slogans, including "murderers…You broke the
ceasefire," were scrawled on Israel’s Embassy in Stockholm.
In Denmark, a 27-year-old Dane, born in Lebanon to Palestinian
parents, shot two young Israelis in a shopping mall. The Israelis were
selling Dead Sea cosmetic products in a kiosk.
Belgian police in Antwerp and Brussels were ordered on high alert
after recent pro-Palestinian demonstrations ended in violence and
arrests.
Not Acceptable
In France, from where thousands of Jews have already emigrated to the
US, Canada, and Israel, because they felt unsafe, Mr. Sarkozy issued a
warning that the country would not tolerate violence linked to the Gaza
crisis.
Nevertheless, Jews in the small Strasbourg suburb of Lingolsheim, in
eastern France, awoke on Tues, January 6, to find "assassins"
spray-painted outside the synagogue. According to the mayor’s office,
the Jewish community filed a complaint for "degradation of a place of
worship."
French-Muslim leader Mohammed Moussaoui condemned the attack, but
Robert Spencer, director of Jihad Watch, a Muslim-extremist monitoring
website, and the author of eight books on Islam and jihad, criticized
the AP journalist for not asking the Muslim leader "what measures the
Muslim community in France would take to make sure that such attacks
would not happen in the future and that antisemitism did not spread
among Muslims in France."
Even in the US, some who are defending Israel have faced threats, and
there has been an increase in vandalism and attacks on Jewish
institutions, although the number is still small.
"When things heat up in the region, our attentiveness to security
matters also increases. We’re keeping a close eye and closely
coordinating with federal and local law enforcement," said William
Daroff, director of the UJC’s Washington office.
"Alarmed" UN
None of the anti-Israel, antisemitic attacks deterred the UN from a
comparably anti-Israel line. Arguing that he had "repeatedly condemned
the rocket attacks by Hamas," UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon
nevertheless waited until Israel began to defend itself before speaking
more forcefully. Israel’s efforts left him "deeply alarmed by the
current escalation of violence in and around Gaza," he said.
"This is unacceptable," he said, demanding that regional and world
leaders take "more action to end the violence."
"While recognizing Israel’s right to defend itself, I have also
condemned the excessive use of force by Israel in Gaza," he said.
"Israel must keep opening all border crossings necessary for the
continued provision of humanitarian supplies."
"The Siege"
In 2005, Israel withdrew its troops and expelled 10,000 Jews from
their homes, schools, and businesses in Gaza’s Jewish settlement bloc
called Gush Katif. One year later, Hamas won the PA’s parliamentary
elections, and, in 2007, expelled forces loyal to Mr. Abbas, who was
willing to negotiate with Israel.
Hamas and its leaders publicly insist that, ceasefires—which they
call "lulls"—notwithstanding, their goal is to destroy the Jewish state.
Israel and the Western world involved in peace efforts, including the
US, the EU, the UN, and the Former Soviet Union, have insisted that, to
receive aid and a seat at the table, Hamas will have to adopt Mr.
Abbas’s concessions: renunciation of violence, recognition of Israel’s
right to exist, and acceptance of all agreements signed by the PA.
In an effort to convince the Palestinians in Gaza either to overthrow
Hamas in favor of Mr. Abbas’s Fatah or to pressure the terror group to
give up terrorism, Israel has implemented an economic blockade of Gaza.
As it does at checkpoints throughout Judea and Samaria, Israel also
closely monitors the border crossings into Gaza because they have been
used by terrorists to infiltrate into Israel as well as to bring arms,
designed to murder Jews.
Hamas calls the closures and crackdowns at the border crossings "the
siege."
One-Sided Resolution
To counteract "the siege," ever since Hamas usurped full control of
Gaza, the terrorist group has imported thousands of guns, rockets, and
mortars, many by way of underground smuggling tunnels that also serve as
a conduit for less lethal commerce.
This ambiguous relationship between Egypt and the Palestinians is
nothing new. Cairo has long been determined to support the Palestinians,
but, if possible, from a distance.
But the PA’s UN observer, Mr. Mansour, did not have Egypt in mind
when he said the Arab sector would work "day and night" to push for a
resolution that would "condemn the crimes committed by Israel and stop
the military aggression, and provide protection for the Palestinians and
lift the siege."
When the UN Security Council tried to pass a resolution calling for
an immediate halt to the violence in Gaza, protection for Arab
civilians, and opening the Gaza crossings, it failed.
Libya’s Contribution
Circulated by Libya on behalf of the 22-member Arab League, the draft
resolution made no mention of the incessant missile-and-mortar attacks
on Israeli civilians by Gaza terrorists. Rather, it condemned "the
excessive, disproportionate, and indiscriminate use of force by Israel."
The US immediately rejected the resolution. US Ambassador Zalmay
Khalilzad noted that Washington had seen no evidence that Hamas intended
to cease its own fire.
Most analysts believe that, just as happened during the Second
Lebanon War, efforts by the West to stop the hostility will eventually
result in some sort of ceasefire. The hope is that, if Israel does its
job properly, this ceasefire will be more effective than the one with
Hezbollah. The appearance of diplomatic foot-dragging is seen as an
effort to allow Israel to do what it feels is necessary.
Allowing People Out
Despite claims by Hamas supporters that Israel was preventing
humanitarian efforts, the Jewish state allowed close to 400 people with
foreign passports—mostly foreign-born wives and children of Palestinian
men—to leave Gaza last month. Only about 200 actually left, mostly for
the US, Russia, and other Eastern European countries.
"They were very happy just to get out of Gaza. Each lady came with
three, four, or five children. Nobody can guarantee their security when
they stay in Gaza," said Anastasia Fedorova, press secretary at the
Russia Embassy in Israel.
Imad Abulkhair, 39, a pediatrician in Gaza City, is married to a
Romanian woman who was allowed to leave with their three children.
However, he said, they would not leave without him.
"Either we all leave Gaza or we all stay. The important thing is for
us to be together," said Dr. Abulkhair. The Romanian Embassy in Tel Aviv
will provide him with a visa which, he said, he hopes the Israelis will
recognize.
Humanitarian Aid
During Operation Cast Lead, the Jewish state has continuously allowed
hundreds of trucks carrying thousands of tons of supplies, including
food and medicine provided by the UN and other agencies to enter Gaza.
In addition, the most badly wounded Palestinians have been
transported to Israeli hospitals for treatment. Most of those who have
been taken to Israeli hospitals are children, such as 9-year-old Sari
Alsamana from Beit Hanoun, who was playing with his cousin outside his
house in the northern Gaza town when a Qassam rocket fired by Gaza
terrorists landed nearby. Minutes later, there was an additional rocket
attack in the same spot.
Both boys were taken to Shifa Hospital in Gaza, but, after the
Israeli military operation was launched and the Israeli Air Force began
bombing, the hospital was overrun with casualties. Sari was discharged
to his home, where his condition worsened.
A neighborhood clinic arranged for the child to be taken to Tel
Hashomer Hospital in Tel Aviv for medical care.
"Now I know he is in good hands. They will take care of him with
devotion, said Sari’s father, Mana Alsamana, who was staying with his
son until he recovers from his injuries.
"The atmosphere is different; it’s America here. In Gaza, there is
nothing but fear, cold, hunger, and war," said Mr. Alsamana.
Israeli Bomb
Other Palestinian children from Gaza have also received care in
Israel. On Dec 31, a seven-year-old child with Down’s Syndrome who had
suffered a head injury when an Israeli bomb dropped next to his house,
was taken to the Schneider Children’s Hospital in Petach Tikvah.
The child, whose father was killed by the bomb and whose mother was
wounded, arrived in critical condition with serious injuries to his
spinal cord and neck.
"Iran eagerly supplies Hamas with plenty of weapons to fire on
Israel, but it provides precious little food or medical aid for ordinary
Palestinians. Nor do Saudi Arabia or any of the oil-rich Gulf states
come close to Israel’s aid levels," said Canada’s Mr. Gunter.
No Crisis
Ms. Livni denied that there was a humanitarian crisis in Gaza.
"Israel has been supplying comprehensive humanitarian aid to the strip,"
she said.
Mr. Bush recognized that living conditions have worsened in Gaza, but
he blamed Hamas for the deterioration.
"By spending its resources on rocket launchers instead of roads and
schools, Hamas has demonstrated that it has no intention of serving the
Palestinian people," said Mr. Bush.
Muslim Brotherhood
That detail has not deterred pro-Hamas demonstrations across the Arab
world, even in Egypt and Jordan.
Those that have been stopped by Egyptian police were generally
organized by the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood, a group with historical
and ideological links to Hamas. The Muslim Brotherhood, which opposes
the government of Mr. Mubarak and could be responsible for an intifada
against him, has accused Egypt’s leadership of "collusion" with Israel,
a crime punishable by death in parts of the Arab world.
Such accusations have outraged Mr. Mubarak’s supporters, such as
Egyptian actor Adel Imam, perhaps the Arab world’s most prominent movie
star. Mr. Imam, 68, shocked many of his fans last month by expressing
understanding for Israel’s military operation.
A longtime outspoken critic of Islamist fundamentalism, he pointed
out that Hamas ignored the warnings of Egypt’s leadership, choosing
instead to wage "an asymmetrical war."
"They should have known that Israel wasn’t going to receive the
attacks with roses," he said.
Secretly Rooting
Jordan, too, has a huge Muslim Brotherhood presence, which
jeopardizes the regime of King Abdullah II.
Some observers maintain that Jordan and Egypt would object
strenuously if Israel were to legitimize Hamas by holding direct
negotiations with the terrorist group. There would be direct
implications for Egypt and Jordan, putting stress on their regimes’
dealings with the Muslim Brotherhood.
"Many countries in the Arab world who are publicly objecting to
Israel’s self-defense operations are privately—when the doors are
closed—rooting for Israel and hoping Israel puts a real damper on
Hamas’s capabilities because they themselves have problems with the
radical Islamist groups in their own countries," said Dore Gold, former
Israeli Ambassador to the UN.
"Collaborators"
Large pro-Hamas demonstrations have been held in Turkey, Iran, Syria,
India, Lebanon.
Mostly small demonstrations have taken place in areas controlled by
Mr. Abbas’s PA. In Ramallah, Hamas loyalists have openly fought with Mr.
Abbas’s supporters, calling them "collaborators," which is the
accusation that they work with Israel. Even in Mr. Abbas’s area, the
punishment for the crime of "collaboration" is death.
In the eastern Arab neighborhoods of Jerusalem, Israel, fearing
violent mobs, deployed riot police who allowed only men older than 55
with Israeli-issued identity cards to enter the Al-Aqsa mosque on the
Temple Mount in Jerusalem, an action which sparked anger.
Christian Support
Christian support for Israel is also divided. Among Israel’s most
ardent supporters are the millions of fundamentalist and Evangelical
Christians. The International Fellowship of Christians and Jews,
directed by Orthodox Rabbi Yechiel Eckstein, announced it will be
providing more than $280,000 to Israeli communities currently under fire
from terrorists in Gaza.
But in Bethlehem, Mayor Victor Batarseh, a Christian, said he had
shut off the decorative lights in the city, including those on the
Christmas tree, "to protest against the massacres committed in Gaza."
When the PA took over Bethlehem in 1995, 90 percent of the city’s
population was Christian. Today, Christians represent only 20 percent.
Mr. Batarseh has joked that more Christian Arabs originally from
Bethlehem now live in South America and Detroit, Michigan.
Officially, Mr. Batarseh blamed the Christian emigration on "the
Israeli occupation," but most analysts point to the unofficial and
official persecution of Christians by Palestinian Muslims.
In Bethlehem, a few hundred demonstrators have marched in the city,
calling for unity between Hamas and Fatah against Israel.
"We call upon the international community to stop the aggression and
stop the siege over Gaza and for the Arab countries to take conclusive
decisions on Gaza," said Khaled al-Azza, one of the organizers.
Christian Persecution
In Gaza, which has a Christian population of about 3,000, the
takeover by Hamas was accompanied by a series of attacks on Christians
and their institutions, including murders, vandalism, bombings of
schools and churches, and kidnappings.
Just before Israel launched Operation Cast Lead, terrorists in Gaza
fired a mortar at the Erez Crossing into Israel just as a group of
Christians were on line, waiting to travel to Bethlehem for Christmas.
Nevertheless, after Israel began to fight back, Pope Benedict XVI
lamented that "the holy land" has "seen itself struck by an outbreak of
unprecedented violence."
He said he was "profoundly saddened by the deaths, the wounded, the
material damage, the suffering, and the tears of the peoples victim to
this tragic recurrence of attacks and reprisals."
Left-Wing Churches
The left-wing World Council of Churches, which works with the
Catholic Church and includes 349 Protestant, Orthodox, Anglican, and
other denominations, representing more than 560 million Christians in
more than 110 countries, was more explicit. The WCC condemned only
Israel’s "violence against Gaza."
WCC General Secretary Methodist Rev Dr. Samuel Kobia, of Kenya,
called on "governments in the region and abroad" to protect "those who
are at risk on both sides of the border." Nevertheless, he singled out
only those killed, wounded, and "traumatized" in Gaza as a result of the
"bombardment of one of the most densely populated places on Earth."
The Episcopal Church’s presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori
"challenged the Israeli government to call a halt to this wholly
disproportionate escalation of violence and the Palestinian forces to
end their rocket attacks on Israelis." However, she said, her primary
concern was getting "vital humanitarian assistance to the suffocating
people of Gaza."
Jewish Radical Left
The vast majority of American-Jewish groups have been very supportive
of Israel’s counter-terrorist campaign. The exceptions are from the
radical left-wing, including Americans for Peace Now, the Israel Policy
Forum, and J Street, which sees itself as the left-wing answer to AIPAC.
Jeremy Ben-Ami, the founder and president of J Street, took credit
last fall for keeping Republican Vice-Presidential candidate Sarah Palin
and Sen Hillary Clinton (D-NY), now the incoming Secretary of State,
from addressing a rally against Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad,
Mr. Ben-Ami conceded that Israel "has a right to protect itself,"
however, he said, he did not think "this is a smart thing to do."
"This question we are raising is this: Is Israel’s military response
ultimately counterproductive?" He said he and his group think it is.
Debra DeLee, CEO of Americans for Peace Now, agreed, warning that
Israel could get "bogged down in an open-ended mission in Gaza."
American Jewish Congress
Richard Gordon, president of the American Jewish Congress, said his
organization had been "wary" from the start concerning Hamas’s
intentions to abide by the truce, fearing the terrorists would "use this
opportunity not to reach out a hand in friendship but in fact to
regroup, restock, rearm, and prepare for further aggression."
"We now know that Hamas did precisely that," said Mr. Gordon.
Other pro-Israel groups, including the Conference of Presidents of
Major American Jewish Organizations, held daily conference calls with
reporters and activists to make the case for the Jewish state.
The Israel Project (TIP) was available to speak to reporters
throughout the world.
TIP founder and president Jennifer Laszlo Mizrahi said her focus was
on the Europeans and the UN. "Our focus is on building support to allow
Israel to win this war, so people don’t have to face rockets on an
almost daily basis," she said.\.
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