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Writers Articles And Opinions |
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31 May 2010 By Stephen Lendman
Professor Jeremy Salt teaches
political science at Ankara, Turkey's Bilkent
University. He's also the author of "The Unmaking of
the Middle East: A History of Western Disorder in Arab
Lands." On January 9, 2009, during Israel's war on
Gaza, he wrote "A Message to the brave Israeli
Airmen," asking:
-- "What's it like, firing
missiles at people you can't see?
-- Does that help, that you
cannot see who you are killing?
-- does it ease your conscience
that you are not deliberately targeting civilians,"
when, in fact, you are under Israel's Dahiya Doctrine
to use enough "disproportionate force (to inflict)
damage and met(e) out punishment" against civilian
infrastructure, "economic interests and the centers of
civilian power," willfully slaughtering noncombatant
men, women and children;
-- "How does this sit on your
conscience?
-- Do you sleep well at night or
do you have nightmares of the women and children you
killed in their homes, in their beds, in their
kitchens and living rooms, in their schools and
mosques?"
Do you really believe they
threaten your security - farmers in their fields,
mothers with their children, teachers in classrooms,
imams in mosques, children at play, the elderly, frail
or disabled?
Do you ever question what you've
done and why? Have you no shame, no sense of decency,
no idea of the difference between right and wrong?
Will you follow orders blindly and do it again and
again, mindless about crimes of war and against
humanity you, your superiors, and government officials
are accountable for under fundamental international
law?
"Brave" Israeli airmen, soldiers,
sailors, and other security force personnel have acted
lawlessly for decades, including committing appalling
human rights crimes - a snapshot of some victims
follows.
Persecuting
Mazin Qumsiyeh
Qumsiyeh teaches and does
research at Bethlehem and Birzeit Universities in the
West Bank. Earlier he taught at Yale, Duke, and the
University of Tennessee. Interested mainly in media
activism and public education, he's been a board,
steering, and executive committee member of numerous
activist organizations, and is President of the
Palestinian Center for Rapprochement Between People
and coordinator of the Popular Committee against the
Apartheid Wall and Settlements in Beit Sahour. His
most recent book is titled, "Popular Resistance in
Palestine: A History of Hope and Empowerment."
On the morning of May 6, Qumsiyeh
and three others were arrested, handcuffed, and taken
to an unknown destination. He explained what
happened.
In Al-Wallaja, his "ten hour
ordeal" began at 8:30AM. The village is near the Green
line. Israel's Separation Wall route will encircle it.
It's already lost much of its land. Residents fear
losing the rest, so to prevent it they resist.
Israeli bulldozers have
demolished numerous homes. Heroic villagers inspired
others, "including Internationals and Israelis to join
them in their popular resistance....Today's started as
we came through the woods and sat in front of the
bulldozer."
"As the soldiers gathered their
forces around us, you could feel (them) preparing
themselves for attack. We remained calm and peaceful.
They dragged us one by one forcefully from the
bulldozed lands. They picked the four of us for arrest
for no obvious reason" - Qumsiyeh, two Palestinian
brothers, and a Canadian activist.
They beat, clubbed, rifle-butted,
and pepper-sprayed the two brothers. All four were
then taken to a military checkpoint, told to sit and
wait, then ordered "to sign a paper claiming....we
were not beaten or mistreated."
They refused, then taken to "the
investigation offices near Qubbit Raheel (Rachel's
tomb), (and) locked up in a metal container." Hours
later, they were interrogated individually, asked, but
refused, to sign other papers. Painfully handcuffed,
they were returned to the container.
Next on to Talpiot police station
to be fingerprinted and photographed. "It was now
nearly 5:30 and we were starving....Finally they
br(ought) us some bread, each a slice of cheese and a
small packet of jam." Together they were "dragged in
front of a new investigator who asked us to sign a
release form that says we are told to stay away from
the wall....for 15 days and if we don't we will (each)
have to pay" about $1,200. They signed, were released,
but not given their ID cards. Later they got them.
"Life goes on in the land of Apartheid. Stay tuned."
As coordinator of the Popular
Committee against the Apartheid Wall and Settlements
in Beit Sahour, Qumsiyeh leads Palestinian grassroots
resistance against "Israeli occupation and
colonization" as well as "stopping and dismantling"
what the International Court of Justice (ICJ) called
illegal, ordering the Wall's demolition and for Israel
"to make reparation for all damage caused by the
construction....including in and around East
Jerusalem."
As the "main national grassroots
body mobilizing and organizing resistance against" the
Wall, the Campaign "coordinates the work of 54 popular
committees in communities" targeted for (or now being)
destroyed by its construction.
Strategies against it include
raising awareness internationally; national and
community resistance; mobilizing solidarity among
affected communities, the Arab world, civil society,
and unions; calling for global boycott, divestment and
sanctions; and enlisting international popular support
for justice.
Attacking
Disabled Palestinians in Gaza
Besides the occupation, siege,
regular incursions, and overall reign of terror
against 1.5 million people, Israel targets the
disabled, explained by the Palestinian Centre for
Human Rights (PCHR) in a December 2009 report titled,
"Israeli Attacks on Palestinian Disabled Persons in
the Gaza Strip," from September 1, 2003 - November 30
2009.
It covers willful assaults
against disabled civilians, and others incapacitated
by attacks. Of most concern was Operation Cast Lead's
23-day assault from December 27, 2008 - January 18,
2009, inflicting massive numbers of deaths and
injuries, as well as widespread destruction, mostly
against civilians, their homes, mosques, businesses,
factories, farms, schools, and hospitals - clear
non-military targets. The siege's effect on health,
education, and other vital services was also
addressed.
During the reporting period, 31
disabled Palestinians were killed, including four
women, and six children. Another 600 sustained
permanent disabilities, mostly physical. In addition,
because of inadequate or unavailable food, medicines,
medical equipment, fuel, clean water, sanitation, and
the ability to leave or enter freely, the negative
impact has been enormous.
"At the same time, foreign
medical and technical personnel have not been able to
enter (Gaza) to help the disabled and provide them
with necessary medical and rehabilitation services."
As for the overall effect of the siege, the longer it
continues the more harm it inflicts on those least
able to cope. Precisely Israel's strategic aim - to
strangle and smother all Gazans, the elderly, infirm
and disabled the most vulnerable.
Amnesty
International (AI) on Israeli War Crimes
In its 2010 annual report, AI
accused Western nations of shielding Israel from
accountability during the Gaza war and for nearly
three years of siege, depriving the population of
vital essentials to survive and endure. At the same
time, it praised the Goldstone Commission for
heroically telling the truth.
In documenting Israeli crimes of
war and against humanity, AI said:
"Among other things, (Israel)
carried out indiscriminate and disproportionate
attacks against civilians, targeted and killed medical
staff, used Palestinian civilians as 'human shields,'
and indiscriminately (used) white phosphorous (and
other illegal weapons) over densely populated
residential areas." As a result, the toll was
devastating.
In response, the US State
Department downplayed the accusations, saying it
"supports the need for accountability for any
violations that may have occurred in relation to the
Gaza conflict by any party," ignoring Israel's
premeditated aggression, willfully attacking civilians
and committing horrendous war crimes.
AI also condemned America's human
rights abuses, saying:
"In the counter-terrorism
context, accountability for past human rights
violations by the USA remains largely absent,
particularly in relation to the CIA programme (sic) of
secret detention. In litigation, the US administration
continues to block remedy for victims of such human
rights violations. 181 detainees remain in Guantanamo
despite President Obama's commitment to close the
detention facility by January 2010. A new Manual for
Military Commissions released by the Pentagon in April
confirmed that even if a detainee is (uncharged or)
acquitted by a military commission, the US
administration reserves the right to continue to hold
them in indefinite detention."
Obama
Administration's Brazen Lawlessness
The latest example comes from a
just revealed September 2009 secret directive about
expanded covert military activity in the Middle East,
Central Asia, the Horn of Africa or anywhere in the
world to counter alleged threats. In other words, the
Obama administration reserves the right to send US
forces anywhere clandestinely, with or without host
nation approval, to "penetrate, disrupt, defeat or
destroy" designated targets by state terrorism, war,
or any other means on the pretext of defending
national security - a justification only scoundrels
would invoke.
Italian New
Weapons Research Committee (NWRC) Accuses Israel of
Contaminating Gaza Soil
In its May 11 press release, NWRC
(a group of independent scientists and doctors) said
Israel's 2006 and 2009 bombings left a high
concentration of toxic/carcinogenic metals residue in
soil and human tissue, likely to cause tumors,
fertility problems, and serious harm to newborns,
including deformities and genetic mutations.
Of particular concern were
"wounds provoked by weapons that did not leave
fragments in the bodies of the victims, a peculiarity
that was pointed out repeatedly by doctors in Gaza.
This shows that experimental weapons, whose effects
are still to be assessed, were used."
Some elements found are
carcinogenic, including mercury, arsenic, cadmium,
chromium, nickel and uranium (from weapons with
depleted uranium). Others are potentially
carcinogenic, including cobalt and vanadium, and still
more are fetotoxic (harmful to fetuses), including
aluminum, copper, barium, lead, and manganese. All of
them in high enough amounts produce genetic mutations
as well as pathogenic effects on human respiratory
organs, kidneys, skin, neurological development, and
other bodily functions.
The combination of environmental
contamination, direct wounds or inhilations,
aggravated by dire living conditions, presents a
serious risk to large numbers of people, worsened by
repeated armed incursions. According to Paola Manduca,
NWRC's spokesperson:
"Our study indicates an anomalous
presence of toxic elements in the soil (and human
tissue). It is essential to intervene at once to limit
the effects of the contamination on people, animals
and cultivations."
Thus far, Israeli-Western
collaborators still prevent 1.5 million Gazans from
getting the critical help they need, while Moshe
Kantor, president the European Jewish Congress,
equated NWRC's research to "ancient blood libels
against the Jewish people, when rumors were spread
about Jews poisoning wells. Today we are seeing a
recurrence of all the worst excesses of anti-Semitism
and diatribes that we perhaps naively thought had
remained in the Dark Ages."
The pro-Israeli NGO Monitor's
Gerald Steinberg called the accusations "designed to
stigmatize Israel and erase the context of mass
terror, (similar to other) false or unverifiable
claims." These are typical responses from rogues and
their defenders caught red-handed.
But clear evidence they deny
can't be hidden. Nor can the growing disenchantment of
young American Jews, a phenomenon Steven Rosenthal
discussed in his 2001 book "Irreconcilable
Differences: The Waning of the American Jewish Love
Affair with Israel," citing policies that transformed
the relationship from uncritical "Israelotry" to
disapproval and distress. The 1982 Lebanon invasion,
repressive occupation, Intifada, regular incursions,
and greater concern about home-grown issues shattered
American Jewish unanimity, diluting Israel's next
generation support.
On May 10, 2009, The Forward and
Brandeis University Professor Jonathan D. Sarna asked
why, noting "a critical difference between support for
Israel in the past and today. For much of the 20th
century, the Israel of American Jews - the Zion that
they imagined in their minds, wrote about and worked
to realize - was a mythical Zion, a utopian extension
of the American dream."
They imagined a "social
commonwealth," an "outpost of democracy, spreading
America's ideals eastward in a Jewish refuge where
freedom, liberty and social justice would someday
reign supreme." Utopias, of course, are illusions, now
dispelled to reveal "unlovliest warts." Today, bloom
is off the rose, unsurprising given convincing reasons
to remove it.
A Final
Comment
On May 26, Nobel Peace Laureate
Mairead Maguire paid "Tribute to the People of Gaza,"
saying:
"I never cease to be amazed at
the power of the human spirit to survive....In a
triumph of hope over adversity and tremendous
suffering, love still abides....Gaza's people have
suffered an Israeli occupation for over 40 years,"
enduring wars and current medieval-type siege.
Lives have been shattered, crops
destroyed, soil poisoned, and sustainability
comprised, so "Where is the hope? Where is the love in
the midst of such suffering and injustice?" In the
will to survive; in growing worldwide solidarity; in
the "Freedom Flotilla" defying the blockade to deliver
aid, Maguire on it, "inspired by the people of Gaza
whose courage, love and joy in welcoming us, even in
the midst of such suffering gives us all hope. They
represent the best of humanity," no amount of Israeli
repression can extinguish, nor their redoubtable
"nonviolent struggle for human dignity, and freedom."
Stephen Lendman lives in
Chicago and can be reached at lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net.
Also visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com and
listen to cutting-edge discussions with distinguished
guests on the Progressive Radio News Hour on the
Progressive Radio Network Thursdays at 10AM US Central
time and Saturdays and Sundays at noon. All programs
are archived for easy listening.
http://www.progressiveradionetwork.com/the-progressive-news-hour/.
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