When it comes to Israel’s
blockade of Gaza, the silence is deafening, at least
outside of Palestine. One wonders
how many international conventions the Israelis need to break before there
is an actual global outcry and action against their repeated human rights
abuses against Palestine. The
blockade of Gaza is only the
latest in a long list of such abuses, but the scale of the abuse is beyond
dramatic.
Israel
justifies its blockade of Gaza,
and their repeated refusals to consistently allow in humanitarian aid,
due to rocket attacks against Israeli positions. Yet the reality of the
situation is a bit more complicated. From the moment that Hamas, the Palestinian
Islamist party, won free elections in 2006, there was a concerted
effort by Israel and the USA to destabilize the situation and ultimately
to destroy Hamas. In point of fact, both the USA
and Israel were more
than content to permit Palestinian elections as long as the candidates
that Israel and the USA favored, won. When this did not happen, both
countries went into action in order to destroy the Palestinian government.
If one has any questions as to whether this suggestion
is paranoid, one need only read the April 2008 Vanity Fair article “The
Gaza Bombshell” for a remarkable exposure of the US-led plot to carry
out a coup against the Hamas government. Once Hamas got a hint of the
plot, a semi-civil war unfolded which resulted in Hamas military units
taking over Gaza, and the further splintering of Palestine.
Since the Palestinian semi-civil war, the Israelis
have been doing all that they can to further isolate and destroy Hamas
in particular and Gaza in general. Thus, their blockade of Gaza
is nothing short of “collective punishment”, a war crime according
to the 1949 Geneva Conventions. In other words, the civilian population
of Gaza is being punished by the Israelis as a means
of forcing Hamas to submit. One can ask the legitimate question, how is
such a course of action different from terrorism?
Although Israeli naval authorities permitted a symbolic
violation of the blockade by a small ship carrying relief supplies, on
December 1st the Israelis turned back a Libyan ship bringing a
more substantial amount of assistance. While this drama has been unfolding,
Gaza is running out of money, fuel and food. Humanitarian organizations
have been repeatedly sounding the alarm, but this has been all but ignored
outside of the Arab World.
Human rights abuses inflicted against the Palestinians
are regularly excused away by mainstream opinion in the USA. The excusing away is largely framed in terms
of defending Israel’s
right to exist, and permitting Israel
to do what it needs to do in order to survive. But this defense ignores
the daily horrors inflicted on the Palestinian people, Gaza
being only one, but the illegal so-called apartheid Wall built by Israel in and around
the Palestinian territories being another notorious example. All of this
is unfolding, of course, in the context of a denial of the Palestinian
people’s right to exist.
The attempt to block discussion of Palestine
in the USA
has suffered some set backs. Former President Jimmy Carter’s best-selling
book Palestine:
Peace Not Apartheid
helped to begin a reframing of the conflict. Nevertheless, Carter’s treatment
at the 2008 Democratic National Convention (where he was not permitted
to speak) seems to indicate an on-going fear that anyone who challenges
the establishment “wisdom” when it comes to Palestine
is a contagious pariah. In fact, the attorney Alan Dershowitz has claimed
that he was personally responsible for undermining Carter’s speaking at
the Democratic Convention because of Carter’s views on Palestine.
So, Gaza represents another
test, less for the world and more for the leaders and people of the USA. President-elect
Obama has been relatively silent on the question of Palestine, at least as of recent, but his appointments do not make
one particularly optimistic that a different approach to the Israeli/Palestinian
conflict is in store. While one should not jump to conclusions, it is
worth suggesting that no change in the US relationship to the conflict, and particularly
toward Palestinian national self-determination, is in store until and
unless a significant, organized, and vocal constituency emerges in the
USA, upholding of Palestinian
rights as well as fighting for a just peace. This is what makes the work
of groups such as the “US
Campaign to End the Israeli Occupation” so critical. That said, the
scale of this work must be increased geometrically.
Silence is not an acceptable alternative, because
continued silence toward human rights abuses against the Palestinian people
means the removal or elimination of a people, a stated objective, by the
way, of a segment of the Israeli ruling elite.
BlackCommentator.com Executive
Editor, Bill Fletcher, Jr., is a Senior Scholar with the Institute for Policy Studies,
the immediate past president of TransAfrica
Forum and co-author of, Solidarity Divided: The Crisis in Organized Labor and a New Path
toward Social Justice
(University of California Press), which examines the crisis of organized
labor in the USA. Click here
to contact Mr. Fletcher. |