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Chris Hedges: The Lessons of Violence

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laststeamtrain Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-21-08 06:06 PM
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Chris Hedges: The Lessons of Violence
The Lessons of Violence
http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/20080121_the_lessons_of_violence/
Posted on Jan 21, 2008

By Chris Hedges

The Gaza Strip is rapidly becoming one of the worst humanitarian disasters in the world. Israel has cordoned off the entire area, home to some 1.4 million Palestinians, blocking commercial goods, food, fuel and even humanitarian aid. At least 36 people have been killed in Israeli strikes since Tuesday and many more wounded. Hamas, which took control of Gaza in June, has launched about 200 rockets into southern Israel in the same period in retaliation, injuring more than 10 people. Israel announced the draconian closure and collective punishment Thursday in order to halt the rocket attacks, begun on Tuesday, when 18 Palestinians, including the son of a Hamas leader, were killed by Israeli forces.

This is not another typical spat between Israelis and Palestinians. This is the final, collective strangulation of the Palestinians in Gaza. The decision to block shipments of food by the United Nations Relief and Works Agency means that two-thirds of the Palestinians who rely on relief aid will no longer be able to eat when U.N. stockpiles in Gaza run out. Reports from inside Gaza speak of gasoline stations out of fuel, hospitals that lack basic medicine and a shortage of clean water. Whole neighborhoods were plunged into darkness when Israel cut off its supply of fuel to Gaza’s only power plant. The level of malnutrition in Gaza is now equal to that in the poorest sub-Saharan nations.

Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert uses words like war to describe the fight to subdue and control Gaza. But it is not war. The Palestinians have little more than old pipes fashioned into primitive rocket launchers, AK-47s and human bombs with which to counter the assault by one of the best-equipped militaries in the world. Palestinian resistance is largely symbolic. The rocket attacks are paltry, especially when pitted against Israeli jet fighters, attack helicopters, unmanned drones and the mechanized units that make regular incursions into Gaza. A total of 12 Israelis have been killed over the past six years in rocket attacks. Suicide bombings, which once rocked Jerusalem and Tel Aviv, have diminished, and the last one inside Israel that was claimed by Hamas took place in 2005. Since the current uprising began in September 2000, 1,033 Israelis and 4,437 Palestinians have died in the violence, according to the Israeli human rights organization B’Tselem. B’Tselem noted in a December 2007 report that the dead included 119 Israeli children and 971 Palestinian children.

The failure on the part of Israel to grasp that this kind of brutal force is deeply counterproductive is perhaps understandable given the demonization of Arabs, and especially Palestinians, in Israeli society. The failure of Washington to intervene—especially after President Bush’s hollow words about peace days before the new fighting began—is baffling. Collective abuse is the most potent recruiting tool in the hands of radicals, as we saw after the indiscriminate Israeli bombing of Lebanon and the American occupation of Iraq. The death of innocents and collective humiliation are used to justify callous acts of indiscriminate violence and revenge. It is how our own radicals, in the wake of 9/11, lured us into the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq.

Israel has been attempting to isolate and punish Gaza since June when Hamas took control after days of street fighting against its political rival Fatah. Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, a Fatah leader, dissolved the unity government. His party, ousted from Gaza, has been displaced to the Israeli-controlled West Bank. The isolation of Hamas has been accompanied by a delicate dance between Israel and Fatah. Israel hopes to turn Fatah into a Vichy-style government to administer the Palestinian territories on its behalf, a move that has sapped support for Fatah among Palestinians and across the Arab world. Hamas’ stature rises with each act of resistance.

<more>

http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/20080121_the_lessons_of_violence/
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ProgressiveMuslim Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-21-08 06:37 PM
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1. I will be curious to see how the Pro-I's respond to this respected journalist's POV. nt
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MasonJar Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-21-08 06:42 PM
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2. WOW! W and Condi really had an impact/not.
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Vegasaurus Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-21-08 06:56 PM
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3. I'll take a go at this
There are no suicide bombings, not because the terrorists have reduced their desire to take over "all of greater Palestine" and kill as many Jews as possible, but because of the wall and checkpoints. No other reason. People hate the wall, but it has reduced all those suicide bombings.

Palestine resistance is "largely symbolic"? Tell that to the terrorized citizens of Sderot, who are traumatized by rockets falling on their schools and homes.

"Old fashioned pipes"? Try a rocket filled with explosives and shrapnel, designed to inflict the most possible damage. If the Palestinians had bigger rockets, they would use them, and in fact, they ARE using the ones that are being smuggled in from Iran. They are likely stockpiled somewhere, ready for use, the big Katushas, and who knows what else.

This is an asymmetric conflict, without question, but this article is complete bullshit, because again, those poor Palestinians are innocent victims who have done absolutely nothing! They need to drop the victim mentality, because they have created a large part of the misery in which they now find themselves.
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