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Noam Chomsky: Guillotining Gaza
Information Clearing House
13 August, 2007
THE death of a nation is a rare and somber event. But the
vision of a unified, independent Palestine threatens to be
another casualty of a Hamas-Fatah civil war, stoked by Israel
and its enabling ally the United States.
Last month’s chaos may mark the beginning of the end of the
Palestinian Authority. That might not be an altogether
unfortunate development for Palestinians, given US-Israeli
programmes of rendering it nothing more than a quisling regime
to oversee these allies’ utter rejection of an independent
state.
The events in Gaza took place in a developing context. In
January 2006, Palestinians voted in a carefully monitored
election, pronounced to be free and fair by international
observers, despite US-Israeli efforts to swing the election
towards their favourite, Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud
Abbas and his Fatah party. But Hamas won a surprising victory.
The punishment of Palestinians for the crime of voting the
wrong way was severe. With US backing, Israel stepped up its
violence in Gaza, withheld funds it was legally obligated to
transmit to the Palestinian Authority, tightened its siege and
even cut off the flow of water to the arid Gaza Strip.
The United States and Israel made sure that Hamas would not
have a chance to govern. They rejected Hamas’s call for a
long-term cease-fire to allow for negotiations on a two-state
settlement, along the lines of an international consensus that
Israel and United States have opposed, in virtual isolation, for
more than 30 years, with rare and temporary departures.
Meanwhile, Israel stepped up its programmes of annexation,
dismemberment and imprisonment of the shrinking Palestinian
cantons in the West Bank, always with US backing despite
occasional minor complaints, accompanied by the wink of an eye
and munificent funding.
Powers-that-be have a standard operating procedure for
overthrowing an unwanted government: Arm the military to prepare
for a coup. Israel and its US ally helped arm and train Fatah to
win by force what it lost at the ballot box. The United States
also encouraged Abbas to amass power in his own hands,
appropriate behaviour in the eyes of Bush administration
advocates of presidential dictatorship.
The strategy backfired. Despite the military aid, Fatah
forces in Gaza were defeated last month in a vicious conflict,
which many close observers describe as a pre-emptive strike
targeting primarily the security forces of the brutal Fatah
strongman Mohammed Dahlan. Israel and the United States quickly
moved to turn the outcome to their benefit. They now have a
pretext for tightening the stranglehold on the people of Gaza.
‘To persist with such an approach under present
circumstances is indeed genocidal, and risks destroying an
entire Palestinian community that is an integral part of an
ethnic whole,’ writes international law scholar Richard Falk.
This worst-case scenario may unfold unless Hamas meets the
three conditions imposed by the ‘international community’ — a
technical term referring to the US government and whoever goes
along with it. For Palestinians to be permitted to peek out of
the walls of their Gaza dungeon, Hamas must recognise Israel,
renounce violence and accept past agreements, in particular, the
Road Map of the Quartet (the United States, Russia, the European
Union and the United Nations).
The hypocrisy is stunning. Obviously, the United States and
Israel do not recognise Palestine or renounce violence. Nor do
they accept past agreements. While Israel formally accepted the
Road Map, it attached 14 reservations that eviscerate it. To
take just the first, Israel demanded that for the process to
commence and continue, the Palestinians must ensure full quiet,
education for peace, cessation of incitement, dismantling of
Hamas and other organisations, and other conditions; and even if
they were to satisfy this virtually impossible demand, the
Israeli cabinet proclaimed that ‘the Roadmap will not state that
Israel must cease violence and incitement against the
Palestinians.’
Israel’s
rejection of the Road Map, with US support, is unacceptable to
the Western self-image, so it has been suppressed. The facts
finally broke into the mainstream with Jimmy Carter’s book,
‘Palestine: Peace not Apartheid,’ which elicited a torrent of
abuse and desperate efforts to discredit it.
While now in a position to crush Gaza, Israel can also
proceed, with US backing, to implement its plans in the West
Bank, expecting to have the tacit cooperation of Fatah leaders
who will be rewarded for their capitulation. Among other steps,
Israel began to release the funds — estimated at $600 million —
that it had illegally frozen in reaction to the January 2006
election.
Ex-prime minister Tony Blair is now to ride to the rescue.
To Lebanese political analyst Rami Khouri, ‘appointing Tony
Blair as special envoy for Arab-Israeli peace is something like
appointing the Emperor Nero to be the chief fireman of Rome.’
Blair is the Quartet’s envoy only in name. The Bush
administration made it clear at once that he is Washington’s
envoy, with a very limited mandate. Secretary of State Rice (and
President Bush) retain unilateral control over the important
issues, while Blair would be permitted to deal only with
problems of institution-building.
As for the short-term future, the best case would be a
two-state settlement, per the international consensus. That is
still by no means impossible. It is supported by virtually the
entire world, including the majority of the US population. It
has come rather close, once, during the last month of Bill
Clinton’s presidency — the sole meaningful US departure from
extreme rejectionism during the past 30 years. In January 2001,
the United States lent its support to the negotiations in Taba,
Egypt, that nearly achieved such a settlement before they were
called off by Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak.
In their final Press conference, the Taba negotiators
expressed hope that if they had been permitted to continue their
joint work, a settlement could have been reached. The years
since have seen many horrors, but the possibility remains. As
for the likeliest scenario, it looks unpleasantly close to the
worst case, but human affairs are not predictable: Too much
depends on will and choice.
Noam Chomsky is a professor of linguistics at the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the author, most
recently, of Hegemony or Survival Americas Quest for Global
Dominance.
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