I must agree with Riyad Mansour, the Palestinian ambassador to the UN, when he said "Israel’s blockade of Gaza and repeated assaults in the territory didn’t achieve its aims of destroying Hamas’s military capabilities and ensuring security. Instead, it inflicted terrible suffering on Gaza’s civilian population".
It seems that Israel is contemplating its typical barbaric biblical vengeance in yet another monumental blunder of believing that violence will solve its existential problem: The existence of a Palestinian nation, a Palestinian identity, a Palestinian people on the same land Israel stole from them. That Palestinian identity was robbed of its land by the invading hordes of European settlers between the 1920s and the 1940s, who then spent the next several decades ethnically cleansing Palestine and trying to deny to themselves and to the world that there is a people who lived on this land, a people who is the real owner of the land.
“It
is time for an immediate end to the violence and the bloodshed, and it
is time to end this blockade and to open a political horizon,” Riyah Mansour further said.
“This is not a time to let Israel double-down on its terrible choices.
This is a time to tell Israel it needs to change course — that there is a
path to peace, where neither Israelis nor Palestinians are killed. And
it is the one diametrically opposed to the one Israel is embarked on.”
Israel did in fact promote Hamas to drive a wedge in the Palestinian resistance represented a few decades ago by Yasser Arafat's PLO. Israel and the United States are stupid in their arrogance. They take tactical measures to score a short-term victory, only to see it turn against them. But they never learn from the experience. Back in the 1970s, secular Arafat was the "radical terrorist communist" and the PLO was a terrorist organization. Many of the PLO's leadership (Ghassan Kanafani, Kamal Nasser, Yousef al-Najjar, Kamal Adwan and others) were assassinated by the Mossad, in the idiotic belief that eliminating the leadership would dismantle the organization. Some twenty years later, Arafat is in the White House signing peace treaties with Israel, and the PLO has embassies all over the world. How do the US and Israel justify their sudden metamorphic view of the PLO?
Now, it is the Islamist Hamas that is the terrorist, and Israel has abused the label "Islamist" to deny the Palestinian resistance movement any credibility. The fact is that there is a Palestinian nation, a Palestinian identity, that ought to be recognized and granted the self-determination that every nation deserves. Adding labels (terrorist, Islamist, communist...) to the Palestinian resistance movement might have worked briefly to undermine the movement and cast it as evil in public opinion, but it will surge back in some other form. The Lions Den organization in Palestine is exactly what the future could hold for the Palestinian movement: Not Fatah, not the PLO, not Hamas .... no labels. Just a Palestinian national resistance movement.
The dumb Americans used that same short-term idiotic strategy when they funded and armed the fundamentalist Islamists of Afghanistan to fight the communist Russians who had invaded the country. What did the Americans reap? Osama Bin Laden and the Taliban. Think, America, think.
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I post the following report from 2014 in the Washington Post when Israel was proclaiming how it is going to defeat Hamas in one of its barbaric wars against the concentration camp it itself created in Gaza for the Palestinian people.
"How Israel helped create Hamas"
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/worldviews/wp/2014/07/30/how-israel-helped-create-hamas/
All signs indicate that the government of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is prepared to wage a protracted battle in the battered Gaza Strip as it seeks to crush the capabilities of the Islamist militant group Hamas. The ongoing conflict has already exacted a bloody toll, with the Palestinian death count approaching the total of Israel's 2008-2009 bombing campaign and ground offensive in Gaza, which led to the deaths of at least 1,383 Palestinians over three weeks.
Netanyahu wants to wholly demilitarize the Palestinian enclave, beginning with the network of tunnels that allow Hamas's fighters to infiltrate into Israeli territory. But Hamas, a dogged outfit that thrives in wartime, is digging in its heels. On Tuesday, a Hamas spokesman said Netanyahu's "threats did not frighten Hamas or the Palestinian people."
The current fighting — a clash between Israel's vastly superior armed forces and Hamas's insurgents — obscures the greater challenges facing Israelis and Palestinians, including the thorny question of how to accord equal rights to millions of Palestinians living under occupation in the event that a separate Palestinian state turns out not to be viable.
It also obscures Hamas's curious history. To a certain degree, the Islamist organization whose militant wing has rained rockets on Israel the past few weeks has the Jewish state to thank for its existence. Hamas [was] launched in 1988 in Gaza at the time of the first intifada, or uprising, with a charter now infamous for its anti-Semitism and its refusal to accept the existence of the Israeli state. But for more than a decade prior, Israeli authorities actively enabled its rise.
At the time, Israel's main enemy was the late Yasser Arafat's Fatah party, which formed the heart of the Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO). Fatah was secular and cast in the mold of other revolutionary, leftist guerrilla movements waging insurgencies elsewhere in the world during the Cold War. The PLO carried out assassinations and kidnappings and, although recognized by neighboring Arab states, was considered a terrorist organization by Israel; PLO operatives in the occupied territories faced brutal repression at the hands of the Israeli security state.
Meanwhile, the activities of Islamists affiliated with Egypt's banned Muslim Brotherhood were allowed in the open in Gaza — a radical departure from when the Strip was administered by the secular-nationalist Egyptian government of Gamal Abdel Nasser. Egypt lost control of Gaza to Israel after the 1967 Arab-Israeli war, which saw Israel also seize the West Bank. In 1966, Nasser had executed Sayyid Qutb, one of the Brotherhood's leading intellectuals. The Israelis saw Qutb's adherents in the Palestinian territories, including the wheelchair-bound Sheik Ahmed Yassin, as a useful counterweight to Arafat's PLO.
"When I look back at the chain of events I think we made a mistake," one Israeli official who had worked in Gaza in the 1980s said in a 2009 interview with the Wall Street Journal's Andrew Higgins. "But at the time nobody thought about the possible results."
Higgins's article is worth reading in full. [How Israel Helped to Spawn Hamas; https://www.wsj.com/articles/SB123275572295011847 ]. He goes on to outline the type of assistance the Israelis initially gave Yassin, whom the PLO at one time deemed a "collaborator," and Gaza's other Islamists:
Israel's military-led administration in Gaza looked favorably on the paraplegic cleric, who set up a wide network of schools, clinics, a library and kindergartens. Sheikh Yassin formed the Islamist group Mujama al-Islamiya, which was officially recognized by Israel as a charity and then, in 1979, as an association. Israel also endorsed the establishment of the Islamic University of Gaza, which it now regards as a hotbed of militancy. The university was one of the first targets hit by Israeli warplanes in the [2008-9 Operation Cast Lead].
Yassin's Mujama would become Hamas, which, it can be argued, was Israel's Taliban: an Islamist group whose antecedents had been laid down by the West in a battle against a leftist enemy. Israel jailed Yassin in 1984 on a 12-year sentence after the discovery of hidden arms caches, but he was released a year later. The Israelis must have been more worried about other enemies.
Eventually, the tables turned. After the 1993 Oslo accords, Israel's formal recognition of the PLO and the start of what we now know as the peace process, Hamas was the Israelis' bete noire. Hamas refused to accept Israel or renounce violence and became perhaps the leading institution of Palestinian resistance to Israeli occupation, which, far beyond religious ideology, is the main reason for its continued popularity among Palestinians.
Yassin was killed in an Israeli airstrike in 2004. In 2007, after a legitimate Hamas election victory that rankled both the West and Fatah, the Islamist group took over Gaza — a move that led to strict Israeli blockades and the grinding cycle of conflict that is once more repeating itself.
But, as Aaron David Miller, a Middle East expert at the Woodrow Wilson Center, observes, a strange, self-sustaining relationship remains. Israel's hawkish government — comprising many politicians who have little interest in seeing the creation of a separate Palestinian state — dwells on the security threat that Hamas's crude rockets pose. Hamas depends, Miller writes, on "an ideology and strategy steeped in confrontation and resistance."
And so, he concludes, they are "two parties who can't seem to live with one another — or apparently without one another either."
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