Virginia Tilley
Counterpunch, 30 June 2006
On the excuse of rescuing one
kidnapped soldier, Israeli is now bombing the Gaza Strip and is poised to
re-invade. It has also arrested a third of the Palestinian parliament, wrecking
even its fragile illusion of capacity and reducing the already-empty vessel of
the Palestinian Authority into broken shards.
In the shambles, Palestinians
may be observing one bitter pill of compensation: vicious angling by Fatah to
reclaim control of Palestinian national politics and its rivalry with
Hamas are now rendered obsolete. Even the dogged international community
cannot maintain its dogged pretense that the PA is actually capable of any
governance at all. The demise of the disastrous Oslo
model, Israel's
device to ensure its final dismemberment of Palestinian land and its fatal
cooptation of the Palestinian national movement, may finally be at hand.
Perhaps Palestinian unity again has a chance.
But no one knows what will
replace the PA. It is therefore not surprising that this transformed diplomatic
landscape is absorbing the principal attention of an anxious international
community.
Nevertheless, politics should
not be the greatest international concern. For over in Gaza,
one appalling act must now eclipse all thoughts of “road maps” or “mutual
gestures”: on Wednesday, Israeli war planes repeatedly bombed and utterly
demolished Gaza’s
only power plant. About 700,000 of Gaza’s
1.3 million people now have no electricity, and word is that power cannot be
restored for six months.
It is not the immediate human
conditions created by this strike that are monumental. Those conditions are, of
course, bad enough. No lights, no refrigerators, no fans through the
suffocating Gaza
summer heat. No going outside for air, due to ongoing bombing and Israel’s
impending military assault. In the hot darkness, massive explosions shake the
cities, close and far, while repeated sonic booms are doubtless wreaking the
havoc they have wrought before: smashing windows, sending children screaming
into the arms of terrified adults, old people collapsing with heart failure,
pregnant women collapsing with spontaneous abortions. Mass terror, despair,
desperate hoarding of food and water. And no radios, television, cell phones,
or laptops (for the few who have them), and so no way to get news of how long
this nightmare might go on.
But this time, the situation is
worse than that. As food in the refrigerators spoils, the only remaining food
is grains. Most people cook with gas, but with the borders sealed, soon there
will be no gas. When family-kitchen propane tanks run out, there will be no
cooking. No cooked lentils or beans, no humus, no bread – the staples
Palestinian foods, the only food for the poor. (And there is no firewood or
coal in dry, overcrowded Gaza.)
And yet, even all this misery is
overshadowed by a grimmer fact: no water. Gaza’s
public water supply is pumped by electricity. The taps, too, are dry. No sewage
system. And again, word is that the electricity is out for at least six months.
The Gaza aquifer is already contaminated with sea
water and sewage, due to over-pumping (partly by those now-abandoned Israeli
settlements) and the grossly inadequate sewage system. To be drinkable, well
water is purified through machinery run by electricity. Otherwise, the brackish
water must at least be boiled before it can be consumed, but this requires
electricity or gas. And people will soon have neither.
Drinking unpurified water means
sickness, even cholera. If cholera breaks out, it will spread like wildfire in
a population so densely packed and lacking fuel or water for sanitation. And
the hospitals and clinics aren’t functioning, either, because there is no
electricity.
Finally, people can’t leave.
None of the neighboring countries have resources to absorb a million desperate
and impoverished refugees: logistically and politically, the flood would
entirely destabilize Egypt,
for example. But Palestinians in Gaza can’t seek
sanctuary with their relatives in the West Bank, either, because they can’t get
out of Gaza to
get there. They can’t even go over the border into Egypt
and around through Jordan,
because Israel will no
longer allow people with Gaza identification
cards to enter the West Bank. In any case, a
cordon of Palestinian police are blocking people from trying to scramble over
the Egyptian border — and war refugees have tried, through a hole blown open by
militants, clutching packages and children.
In short, over a million
civilians are now trapped, hunkered in their homes listening to Israeli shells,
while facing the awful prospect, within days or weeks, of having to give toxic
water to their children that may consign them to quick but agonizing deaths.
One woman near the Rafah border,
taking care of her nephews, spoke to BBC: “If I am frightened in front of them
I think they will die of fear.” If the international community does nothing,
her children may soon die anyway.
The astonishing
scale of this humanitarian situation is indeed matched only by the deafening
drizzle of international reaction. “Of course it is
understandable that [the Israelis] would want to go after those who kidnapped
their soldier,” says Kofi Anan (while the Palestinian population cowers in the
dark listening to thundering explosions demolish their society), “but it has to
be done in such a way that civilian populations are not made to suffer.” Even
as Israel bombs smash Gaza’s roadways, the G-8 stands up on its hind-legs to
intone, “We call on Israel
to exercise utmost restraint in the current crisis.” How about the Russians,
now angling for position in the new “Great Game” of the Middle
East? “The right and duty of the government of Israel to defend
the lives and security of its citizens are beyond doubt,” says Russia’s foreign
ministry, as though poor Corporal Shalit warrants any of this mayhem, “But this
should not be done at the cost of many lives and the lives of many Palestinian
civilians, by massive military strikes with heavy consequences for the civilian
population.”
And
what says noble Europe, proud font of human
rights conventions, architects of the misiĆ³n
civilizatrice? “The EU remains deeply concerned,” mumbles the mighty
defenders of humanitarian law, “about the worsening security and humanitarian
developments.” Seemingly soggy phrases like “deeply concerned” are diplomatic
code for “We are seriously unhappy.” But under these circumstances, “remains
deeply concerned” suggests that this staggering crime is just one more sobering
moment in the failed “road map.”
Diplomatic
bubbles of unreality in the Middle East are
the norm rather than the exception, but at some point the international
community must face the very unwelcome fact that it needs to change gear. A
country that claims kinship among the western democracies of Europe
is behaving like a murderous rogue regime, using any excuse to reduce over a
million people to utter human misery and even mass death. Plastering Corporal
Shalit’s face over this policy is no more convincing that South African
newspapers emblazoning the picture of one poor murdered white doctor over their
coverage of the 1976 Soweto uprising.
Israel has done
many things argued to be war crimes: mass house demolitions, closing whole
cities for weeks, indefinite “preventative” detentions, massive land
confiscation, the razing of thousands of square miles of Palestinian olive
groves and agriculture, systematic physical and mental torture of prisoners,
extrajudicial killings, aerial bombardment of civilian areas, collective
punishment of every description in defiance of the Geneva Conventions — not to
mention the general humiliation and ruin of the indigenous people under its
military control. But destroying the only power source for a trapped and
defenseless civilian population is an unprecedented step toward barbarity. It
reeks, ironically, of the Warsaw Ghetto. As we
flutter our hands about tectonic political change, we must take pause: in the
eyes of history, what is happening in Gaza
may come to eclipse them all.
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