12th June 2003
War on Terrorism
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by Ash Pulcifer -- Source: www.YellowTimes.org
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Fighting Terror with Terror
On June 6, four days after the Mideast peace summit in
Jordan, Hamas, Islamic Jihad and Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigades launched an attack
on the Israeli military in Gaza. The groups managed to kill four Israeli
soldiers and wound four others. Their actions were in response to the June 5
assassinations of two Hamas militants by the Israeli military, along with
the IDF's continued house demolitions of families of Palestinian militants.
Despite the fact that in the June 6 attack the Palestinian militant groups
focused their attacks on the Israeli military, rather than attacking
civilians as they have in the past, Israel responded by launching what can
only be defined as a "terrorist" attack. On June 10, Israel fired missiles
into a crowded street in Gaza, missing their main target but killing and
wounding innocent bystanders. The following day, a Palestinian suicide
bomber responded with a "terrorist" attack against Israel, exploding on a
bus in Jerusalem, killing 16 people and injuring more than a hundred more.
Shortly after, the Israeli government was directing helicopter attacks in
Gaza.
While it claims otherwise, Israel has been fighting "terror" with "terror."
It is impossible to suggest that Israel is worried about Palestinian
civilians when it launches raids like the one on June 10. Authorizing
helicopter gunships to launch missiles into crowded Palestinian streets?
Only a ruthless government would authorize such attacks. Furthermore, as
many others have stated, the target of Israel's June 10 attack was not a
suicide bomber packed with explosives on his way to blow up a bus or a café.
No, that target was Abdel Aziz Rantisi, the well-known Hamas political
leader who was merely driving down the street at the time; Rantisi barely
survived the attack. It is a highly dubious assertion for Israel to claim
that this extreme level of force was needed.
Such heavy-handed and careless attacks by Israel are making it harder and
harder for the Jewish state to claim the moral high ground. In order to
defend its occupation of what the U.N. has labeled Palestinian lands, the
Israeli government is using similar tactics that its enemies use: not
distinguishing between militants and civilians. The only difference between
the opponents is that Palestinian militant groups admit they are
uninterested in peace; the Israeli government, on the other hand, claims
that it is interested in peace, while at the same time ordering massive
military attacks meant to bring terror and death to the Palestinian
populace.
It seems that the Israeli government, and the Israeli populace, still
believe that they can break the will of the Palestinians. This explains why
they continue their harsh repression of the Palestinian population, along
with their massive retaliatory attacks anytime Palestinians defend
themselves either justly or unjustly. But the past 55 years have shown that
such actions merely further radicalize the Palestinian population, resulting
in more terror and death for the Israeli people.
Palestinians from 1948 would be shocked at the current methods of
Palestinian resistance. What used to be a civil disobedience movement has
now been radicalized into one that largely approves of the use of suicide
attacks on civilian populations. So, too, would Jews from the 1940s be
shocked at what is now considered "self-defense": occupying a land whose
population does not wish to be occupied, continuing to build illegal
settlements on that land, following a policy of assassinations, and firing
rockets and missiles into crowded streets or apartment buildings.
And now with these latest attacks, it looks as if the conflict will
radicalize even further. According to Joel Greenberg of the Chicago Tribune,
in the June 10 attack, Israeli Apache helicopter gunships fired seven
missiles at Rantisi, who was driving on a busy street in downtown Gaza.
Greenberg writes, "The explosions sprayed metal fragments across sidewalks
and buildings, shattering windows. A woman who stepped out of a taxi was
killed, and an 8-year old girl was critically wounded in the head." Does the
Israeli population still believe that such careless attacks are actually
helping the peace process? The frequency of these attacks force any honest
analyst to wonder if the current Israeli government wants peace at all.
The coming months will decide whether these latest incitements by the
Israeli government and Palestinian militant groups will further radicalize
the conflict. Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon has already said that such
strikes by Israel will continue. And Hamas spokesmen have made even harsher
statements. "The Israelis will never enjoy security or stability as long as
they occupy our territories," Abdel Aziz Rantisi, the target of the June 10
attack, said from his bed in Shifa Hospital. "We are going to retaliate by
all means," another Hamas spokesman stated, as quoted from Greenberg's
article in the Tribune. "Every person in Israel should condemn the policy of
their government because they are going to pay the price."
So, once again, we seem to be back at square one with the Mideast peace
process. This time the Israeli government is as much to blame for derailing
the peace process as Palestinian militant groups are. If the Israeli
government and its people truly want to live in peace, then they will have
to stop fighting terror with terror; their current harsh policies towards
the Palestinians have to come to an end, otherwise they are no better than
the "terrorist" groups they are fighting.
[Ash Pulcifer is a U.S. based analyst of international conflicts and is also
a human rights activist. While he does not justify or accept the killing of
civilians in warfare, he attempts to understand why groups or governments
resort to such means in order to achieve their strategic objectives.]