The War on Iraq A Cover for Israels Atrocities
By Michael S. Ladah
While the
world has been busy with the specter of a major war in the Middle East, the American
public has been getting very little news coverage about the Palestinians and the
continuation of the oppressive Israeli measures. As
the world comes closer to the war on Iraq which now appears imminent, many of us are more
concerned not only about the major loss in civilian lives in Iraq but also about the
potential tragedy that is expected to unfold in the West Bank and Gaza.
Credible
analysis about the true motives behind the war and the real objectives of the Bush
Administration has confirmed that Israel has a vested interest in the looming war on Iraq and that Israel is expected to reap
major gains from the war. In his article
The US Gameplan for Iraq (Counterpunch, February
8, 2003) former CIA political analyst for 29 years,
Bill Christison, gave a complete analysis of the apparent and hidden objectives from the
almost certain war on Iraq. He classified and
analyzed all the reasons being discussed by the media and the public, and explained that
the true reasons were the oil and the present administrations desire for world
domination, including domination of the Middle East by Israel, the US surrogate power [1].
One of the obvious
reasons that has not been mentioned by most analysts, however, is the diversion from (or
cover up for) what Israel is doing in the West Bank and Gaza, and from what it plans
to do. In an article titled As the world
focuses on Iraq, the bodies pile up in Gaza (the Independent, February 23, 2003)
reporter Justin Huggler asks pointedly from Gaza Is the Israeli military taking
advantage of a time when the world is not paying attention to what is going on here, when
media coverage is focusing on Iraq, to step up its campaign in the occupied
territories? The answer is obviously
yes and Huggler explains that the restraints imposed on Israeli repression
against the Palestinians have in the past come from world public opinion only [2]. That public opinion is now busy elsewhere.
A more important reason for concern is what Israel might be planning
for the Palestinian residents of the West Bank and Gaza. Academic observers
and analysts of the question on Palestine, both in Israel and in the United States, have
warned about a potential major disaster if Israel makes good on threats being vocalized by
Israeli extremists regarding further ethnic cleansing; many extremists in the government,
and most settlers, have threatened to expel Palestinians from population centers in the
West Bank and Gaza across international borders into Jordan and Egypt. These academics and observers have warned that as
the world gets more pre-occupied with the war on Iraq, the Israeli military will manufacture excuses to conduct
another in a series of ethnic cleansing steps which started in 1948. In her article titled Threats of Forced Mass
Expulsion (Le Monde Diplomatique, February 19, 2003), Amira Hass, the only Israeli
reporter who lives in a West Bank city (Ramallah), confirms that the idea of
transfer of Palestinians forcibly or through enticement is gaining momentum
across the political spectrum of Israeli society. Amira
Hass asserts Some 73% of those who live in the Jewish settlements, euphemistically
known as development towns, believe that Israel should encourage its Arab population to leave. This rises to 76%
among Jews from the former Soviet Union and to 87% among religious Jews. In the same article, Amira Hass further confirms
that mini transfers have indeed already started:
The presence of military pacifists in the occupied territories
has not prevented "mini-transfers". Faced with non-stop harassment from their
500 Jewish neighbours and a round-the-clock military curfew designed to protect settlers,
many Palestinians have moved out of the ancient city of Hebron. In the northern West Bank 180 Palestinian villagers
in Yanun were forced to abandon their homes and relocate after increased harassment from
the neighbouring Jewish settlement of Itamar. Other expulsions have taken place because of
the construction of Israel's infamous wall. Though such "mini-transfers" have
come to the attention of the Israeli public and resulted in demonstrations, the loss of
land and homes over the past two years has left the Palestinians feeling dispossessed [3].
Considering this growing
acceptance of the transfer idea within Israeli society, and the fact that the
world will soon be even more pre-occupied with the war on Iraq and the problems that
the war will create, Israel could be expected to
uphold its reputation of committing further atrocities and manufacturing excuses to
justify them. It should be expected that such
atrocities will include the transfer, at least through increased harassment by
the settlers and at most by the Israeli authorities with the backing of the occupation
forces.
President Bush continues
with his efforts to try to appease the Arabs and Moslems by promising democracy for the
Iraqis when he liberates Iraq and a state for the
Palestinians where Israel must stop building
settlements. Apparently this is the best he
can do, to stop Israel from building
settlements. It is unknown how he plans to do
that or whether he plans to ask, or beg, Sharon the man of peace to stop, just
like he asked him in April 2002 to withdraw the Israeli forces from the West Bank without
delay. President Bush is making promises
to people who do not believe or trust him. If
he wanted to build some trust with the Arabs and Moslems, President Bush knows how to
regain his credibility; he would ask Sharon to pull his troops out
from the West
Bank
immediately and end the Israeli occupation regime.
As the
world gets closer by the day to a devastating war on Iraq, the world community, including President Bush, must be mindful
of the actions of the Israeli settlers and the Israeli military in the West Bank and Gaza. The world, especially the Middle East, does not need
and can not withstand another human tragedy in the form of a few million refugees. The
Palestinians have been victimized through frequent transfers and ethnic cleansing since
1948. The world has the responsibility to
insure that Palestinians of the West Bank and Gaza will not suffer the agony of yet another major transfer from
their ancestral homeland.
© 2003 by
Michael S.
Ladah.The writer is an Arab American who lived and worked in various parts of
the Middle East. He is the author of
Quicksand, Oil and Dreams: The Story of One of Five Million Dispossessed
Palestinians.
[1] Christison, Bill (2003, February
8). The US Gameplan for Iraq. CounterPunch [Online]. Available: http://www.counterpunch.org/christison02082003.html
[2]
Huggler, Justin (2003, February 22). As the world
focuses on Iraq,
the bodies pile up in Gaza. The Independent [Online]. Available: http://news.independent.co.uk/world/middle_east/story.jsp?story=380492
[3] Hass, Amira (2003, February 19). Threats of Enforced Mass
Expulsion. Le Monde Diplomatique [Online].
Available: http://www.zmag.org/content/print_article.cfm?itemID=3077§ionID=22
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