by Ran HaCohen
It is high time to reiterate the favourite media question –
"Is Arafat Unable, or Rather Unwilling to Stop Terrorism" – but with
a different protagonist. Prime Minister Sharon has now been in office for about
15 months. He has been enjoying total and unprecedented freedom, both
nationally and internationally, to fight Palestinian terrorism however he
likes, using all measures at hand and blatantly ignoring all moral and legal
considerations. In spite of that, Palestinian terrorism is alive and killing.
So is Sharon unable – or rather unwilling to stop
terrorism? Last week's events in Gaza irrefutably prove that the Israeli leader
is not only unwilling to see Palestinian terrorism stopped; Sharon would also
do anything to ensure and encourage terrorism against his own people.
All experts unanimously agree: terrorism cannot be stopped
by military means alone. Politics and diplomacy are essential, both bilaterally
and on the Palestinian side. Even devoted supporters of the Israeli occupation
admit that a "political horizon" is necessary. The term is revealing:
"horizon" is the place you never get to, and that's the most generous
offer made to the Palestinians: a "horizon" never to be reached, a
"vision" never to be realised. In short, the very goods that Shimon
Peres has been selling so efficiently to the Palestinians and to the world over
the past decade. Israel's Foreign Minister indeed met with Palestinian
officials in the last weeks, in what was described as the most serious talks
between the sides for many months.
Much more importantly, reliable reports say that, on the
22nd of July, “the heads of Tanzim, convened at Jenin, approved the text of a
communique calling unilaterally for an end to fighting by Tanzim, Hamas and
Islamic Jihad. A few hours before, Muhammad Dahlan [influential former head of
Palestinian Security in the Gaza Strip] met with [Hamas Leader] Sheikh Ahmed
Yassin, in which meeting Yassin accepted the principles of the cease-fire
communique" (Yedioth Achronot, July 24, 2002). For weeks,
Israel has been following deliberations inside the Tanzim on the idea of
declaring a unilateral cease-fire; Israel was also officially briefed by the
European Union, which, together with Egypt and Saudi Arabia, supported the
initiative.
So after 21 months of violence, a ray of hope could be
observed. A chance for cease-fire, for a cessation of violence. Unilaterally
even, without any demands from occupying side. Israel's reaction was immediate
and swift. "One and a half hours after the Tanzim leadership approved the
document at its Jenin gathering, Israel carried out the assassination of Salah
Shehadeh, in the course of which dozens of civilians were killed and wounded as
well. In this way, Israel apparently destroyed the chance to test the viability
of a cease-fire" (ibid.).
Though this be madness, yet there is Method in it. Time and
again, Israeli assassinations (as well as other offensive measures) abruptly
ended prolonged periods of hope. In November 2001, the assassination of the
Hamas activist Mahmoud Abu Hanoud was carried out just when the Hamas was
respecting for two months its agreement with Arafat not to attack inside Israel.
In January 2002, the assassination of Raed Karmi ended a few weeks of relative
quiet in the territories. The same pattern repeated itself this time too. The
operation was no mistake; the decision to use a bomb instead of missiles, the
more usual means used by Israel for its extra-judiciary killings, was
undoubtedly deliberate. And whoever gave the order to drop, in the middle of
the night, a 1,000 kg bomb on a residential house in one of the most densely
populated strips on earth, knew very well what he was doing. It was a
premeditated act of state terrorism, a cold-blooded massacre. 14 innocent
civilians, 9 of them children, were killed to ensure the continuation of
Palestinian terrorism, in which many more innocent civilians will be killed.
It has been established beyond any reasonable doubt that
Sharon does not want to stop terrorism, but rather to perpetuate it. The very
moment political negotiations seemed to be serious, the very moment
Palestinians intended to stop terrorism, Israel dropped a bomb. Whether Sharon
should be sent to the Hague or rather to Guantanamo is one question; a more
important one is: why has he done it?
What is Israel's interest in terrorism? Remember its vision
for the occupied territories. Israel has never made a secret of it. Whether it
was Ehud Barak, who claimed that UN resolution 242 did not apply to the West
Bank and Gaza, or Ariel Sharon, who said he would never discuss evacuating a
Jewish settlement, Israel's intentions have always been quite clear: keeping a
maximal share of the occupied territories, with a minimal number of
Palestinians.
The almost-total dispossession of Palestinian land and
water, achieved during the Oslo years, has not satisfied Israel's colonial
appetite. It wants more: the Palestinians should not be there at all. They
should either be killed, or deported, or annihilated as an independent
political and social entity. These three, partly overlapping options can be
termed genocide, ethnic cleansing, and politicide respectively. Politicide – a
term suggested by Israel's leading sociologist Baruch Kimmerling
– has been implemented extensively since last
April ("Operation Defensive Shield"). The Palestinian national,
public, cultural and academic infrastructure has been destroyed: Israeli
soldiers systematically demolished everything, from the Sakakini Cultural Centre in Ramallah, through the database of the Palestinian
Bureau of Statistic, down to the last hard-disk of a doctor's clinic broken
into. Israel's present policy continues along these lines.
The other two options – genocide and ethnic cleansing – are
waiting for the right opportunity, which has not arrived yet. But the recent
movement of the idea of "transfer" (i.e. mass deportation) into
mainstream Israeli discourse, together with the warnings of so-called
"mega-attacks" (a new term introduced in the last weeks), are
preparing the hearts for such measures.
The Benefits of Terrorism
Here is where terrorism comes in. Israel cannot carry out
these atrocious plans without effective propaganda. Terrorism has always been
an excellent excuse, even more so since September 11th. The plans were there
long before, as documented painstakingly by Israeli analyst Tanya Reinhart. They have nothing to do with terrorism: they are aimed at
entrenching the Israeli occupation, making it irreversible and reducing the
Palestinians to ashes. But every terror attack enables Israel to implement the
next steps in its premeditated plans, and to sell it to the world as
"self-defence", "retaliation", "prevention" etc.
No wonder, then, that none of these plans actually stops terrorism: they are
not meant to. And since terrorism gives the best legitimation for carrying them
out, stopping terrorism would be, from Israel's point of view,
counter-productive.
Palestinian terrorism thus serves Israel's interests on
both an international and a national level. Internationally, Israel's
propaganda machine efficiently exploits every terror attack to strengthen
Israel's image as a victim, and to obscure and justify the proceeding
oppression of the Palestinians. Moreover, the Israeli use of terrorism has now
been adopted by the American administration, that keeps sending Israel money –
$200 million last week – for "fighting terrorism" (note that Israel
may spend it as it wishes!); and, as the Washington Post put it (July 28, 2002), "the United States should not
pressure Sharon's government while Palestinian violence continues."
Nationally, as Spinoza observed back in the 17th century, people in adversity
"know not where to turn, but beg and pray for counsel from every passer-by.
No plan is then too futile, too absurd, or too fatuous for their adoption; the
most frivolous causes will raise them to hope, or plunge them into
despair." Keeping the Israeli people constantly exposed to fatal violence
(and to "terror alerts", true or false) is the best way to ensure
national coherence. Understandably terrified, most Israelis indeed back the
most futile, absurd and fatuous – not to say immoral – operations of their
government, misled to believe that its goal is securing their lives rather than
perpetuating a murderous occupation that most Israelis do not want.
So Sharon has a vested interest to keep Palestinian
terrorism at a high level. As long as he is in power, and as long as the Bush
administration actually rewards Israel for Palestinian violence, terrorism will
persist. This does not relieve Palestinians of their moral responsibility; but,
on the list of states supporting terrorism, Israel, as well as the United
States, deserve a good place.
Ran
HaCohen teaches in the Tel-Aviv University's Department
of Comparative Literature, and is currently working on his PhD thesis. He also
works as a literary translator (from German, English and Dutch), and as a
literary critic for the Israeli daily Yedioth Achronoth. HaCohen’s
semi-regular “Letter from Israel” column can be found at AntiWar.com, where this
article first appeared.
Posted
with author’s permission.