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Culture
and Politics
(Middle East Report 219, Summer 2001)
EDITORIAL
This May's
escalations in the long-since militarized confrontation in the Occupied
Territories prompted the obligatory calls upon the US to intensify
its diplomatic efforts. Secretary of State Colin Powell responded
with the lackluster Mitchell Commission report and another attempt
to broker a ceasefire. But as usual, the much-ballyhooed US initiative
did not depart from basic support for Israel's positions. "The
complete cessation of violence," which Israel can interpret
to mean stone-throwing as well as suicide bombings, must precede
all "confidence-building measures" on Israel's part. The
Mitchell report endorsed Israel's characterization of the second
intifada as a security crisis, rather than a political one.
Pundits have
often contrasted the inaction of George W. Bush's administration
with the engagement of Bill Clinton, but Bush's inaction has actively
made things worse. When Israeli tanks first moved into Beit Hanoun
in mid-April, Powell abruptly castigated Ariel Sharon for attempting
to reoccupy land long since transferred to the Palestinian Authority
(PA). Sharon ordered the tanks to leave, to the consternation of
the Israeli right. But the US did not seem to mind if or how often
Israeli tanks returned. Even the Washington Post noted the deafening
US silence about Israel's regular incursions into PA-controlled
territory. Meanwhile, the US veto on March 28 of the UN Security
Council resolution calling for international monitors in the Palestinian
territories showed that the Bush administration will act decisively
in Israel's favor when needed. Millions of US taxpayer dollars,
of course, continued to bankroll the occupation, throughout Sharon's
upward ratcheting of Israel's already excessive force.
On May 18,
Israel sent US-made F-16 fighters into the Occupied Territories
for the first time since 1967, rocketing PA security force installations
in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip and killing 13. This attack
and subsequent helicopter attacks were at once a military escalation
and confirmation of an existing pattern. When Islamic militants
whom the PA does not control kill Israelis -- as they did in the
May 18 suicide bombing that killed five -- Israel targets the PA.
Since October,
Israel's military spokesmen have vociferously claimed that PA security
men are behind the "violence." It has been a clever public
relations strategy, playing on the complicated reality on the ground.
The memberships of the Popular Resistance Committees in Gaza and
the tanzim of Fatah do indeed overlap with Force 17 and other security
forces. Some militant members of Force 17 -- the anonymous "Palestinian
gunmen" of news reports -- have indeed participated in shootings
of soldiers and settlers. But the memberships of Hamas and Islamic
Jihad and the PA's security services do not overlap. Though Israeli
intelligence has been known to make egregious mistakes, they obviously
know that the PA does not order Hamas operations. Israel Defense
Forces (IDF) attacks like the May rocketing serve a two-fold political
purpose, not a purely military one
As Rema Hammami
and Jamil Hilal argue in this issue, one purpose is to squeeze the
PA into "ending" the intifada, and renouncing the uprising's
aim of ending the occupation. Israeli attacks on the PA remind Arafat
just how weak he is, and how it was only the skewed Oslo process
that made him a "head of state." The other purpose of
attacks on the PA is to project an image to the world of two countries
at war. Constant use of the word "war" by pro-Israeli
commentators -- however appropriate it may otherwise be -- is another
way to hide the reality of colonial occupation. The war image implies
parity between the two parties, and that Arafat is some kind of
commander-in-chief. It also allows the media to describe Sharon's
pledge to stop preemptive strikes on the PA as a "unilateral
ceasefire."
Leaks in the
Israeli press after the F-16 attack confirm that many Israeli ministers
believe that the PA has outlived its usefulness. Sharon, with US
prodding, may be reconsidering the wisdom of attacking the most
pliant negotiating partner he is likely to find. But while the US
murmurs its objections to the use of F-16s, the IDF continues to
demolish homes and uproot olive groves. These ostensibly military
operations also have a political objective. There will be many new
Israeli "facts on the ground" in the West Bank and Gaza
if and when negotiations begin again.
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