Setting the Record Straight
Disclaimer:
This analysis is from the website of the Israel Committee Against
House Demolition http://www.icahd.org. While ICAHD supports a two-state
solution, and believes in Israel's "right to exist" as a Jewish
state, and is therefore a supporter of Zionism, the reframing
offered is useful when deconstructing the current
situation.
Israel’s core
messages, listed below, argue for the justice of its cause in Gaza,
cast Israel as the victim and ensure that its war is seen not in
terms of occupation but of the broader Western struggle against
terror. The critical reframing we offer, that of Israelis committed
to human rights, international law and a just peace as the only way
out of this interminable and bloody conflict, argues that security
cannot be achieved unilaterally while one side oppresses the other
and that Israel’s attack on Gaza is merely another attempt to
render its Occupation permanent by destroying any source of
effective resistance. It argues that Israel could have avoided all
attacks upon it over the last twenty years, and the rise of Hamas,
if it had genuinely negotiated a two-state solution with the
Palestinian leadership. Israel, the strong party and the Occupying
Power, is not the victim. Indeed, its attack on Gaza is a form of
State Terrorism.
Israeli
PR: Like all countries, Israel has a right and duty to defend its
citizens. Israel, acting as any life-loving nation would, has a
right to be a normal country living in peace and
security.
Critical Reframing: To pursue offensive policies of prolonged
occupation as well as sanctions, boycotts and closures that
impoverish a civilian population, and to then refuse to engage with
that population’s elected leaders, is not defending ones’ citizens.
To expect your citizens to live in security while a million and a
half subjugated people just a few kilometers away live in misery is
both unrealistic and presumptive. Israel will only be able to
defend its citizens – which is indeed its duty – if it addresses
the causes of their insecurity, a 41 year-old occupation.
Israeli
PR: Israel had no choice but to attack in response to the barrage
of 8,500 Hamas rockets fired from Gaza into Israel over the past
eight years that have killed 20 Israeli civilians.
Critical Reframing: In the past three years alone Israel – together
with the US, Europe and Japan – imposed an inhumane siege of Gaza
while conducting a campaign of targeted assassinations and attacks
throughout the cease-fire that left 1,700 Palestinians dead. Hamas’
barrage did not exist in a vacuum. This war is no “response:” it is
merely a more deadly round of the tit-for-tat arising out of a
political vacuum. The rocket firings could have been avoided had
there been a genuine political horizon. To present the “barrage” as
an independent event disassociated from wider Israeli policies that
led to them is disingenuous.
Israeli
PR: There is no occupation – in general, but specifically in Gaza.
Israel ended its occupation of Gaza in 2005 with the
“disengagement.” Gaza could have flourished as the basis of a
Palestinian state, but its inhabitants chose conflict.
Critical Reframing: Economic development, not to mention a
political process which might have prevented the violence on both
sides, was actively prevented by both Israel and its international
supporters, which share responsibility for the present tragedy in
Gaza. At no time since the “disengagement” did Israel ever
relinquish or even loosen its control. The closure remained in
force, including by sea; Gazans were never allowed to reopen their
sea or air ports; nor were any conditions conducive to economic
development allowed. Israel’s claim that there has never been an
occupation of the West Bank, East Jerusalem and Gaza is rejected by
every member of the international community. Neither does it accept
Israel’s claim that occupation ended in 2005, since the definition
of occupation in international law has to do with exercising
effective control of a foreign territory, which Israel obviously
does over Gaza.
Israeli
PR: Only Hamas violated the cease-fire, and thus it carries full
responsibility.
Critical Reframing: Israel and Hamas agreed to a truce (through
Egypt) by which Israel would allow the opening of the Gazan border
crossings (at least partially) in return for an end to rocket fire
on Israel. Hamas largely, though not entirely, kept its part of the
bargain; Israel almost never did. Killings of Palestinians from the
air continued, and on the American election day in early November
it attacked the tunnels (which functioned as alternative means of
supplying Gaza in the absence of open borders, which would have
allowed control over the movement of arms), killing a number of
Hamas people. In response Hamas launched rockets and….the truce
began breaking down.
Israeli
PR: Israel is only attacking the “infrastructure of terror” in Gaza
and only targets Hamas fighters.
Critical Reframing: Being the elected government, all the
infrastructure, from traffic cops to schools to military
installations, “belong” to Hamas. It is clear that Israeli attacks
go beyond “the infrastructure of terror.” Who’s a “Hamas fighter?”
The graduating class of traffic cops that was slaughtered in the
first aerial attack on Gaza? Professors and students who attend the
“Hamas” Islamic University? Family members of Hamas military
figures? People who voted for Hamas? All, but for those actively
participating in hostilities, would be defined as civilians under
international law.
Israeli
PR: Civilians may die, but it’s because Hamas hides its fighters
and weapons factories among ordinary people.
Critical Reframing: Israel’s military headquarters are located in
the center of Tel Aviv, the military headquarters over the West
Bank are in the densely populated civilian settlement Neveh Ya’akov
in East Jerusalem, the Pentagon is located in downtown Washington
D.C. and the British Ministry of Defence is located in central
London. Hamas, of course, as both a government and a military
organization, carries responsibility for protecting the civilian
population and keeping the fighting away from them but the question
that should be asked, and never is, is why western nations who do
the same are not faced with such criticism?
Israeli
PR: Hamas is a terrorist organization that refuses to recognize
Israel or enter into a political process.
Critical Reframing: Which Israel should Hamas recognize? 1947 U.N.
partition borders? 1967 borders? With annexed East Jerusalem? With
the settlement blocs? So long as Israel refuses to define its
borders then there is only an abstract concept available for
recognition. Hamas has openly declared that it will de facto
recognize Israel on the 1967 borders. Israel has made no such
offers to any Palestinian faction, government or
representatives.
Israeli
PR: Hamas is a global problem, part of Islamist fundamentalism
together with Iran and Hezbollah and therefore Israel is only doing
its part in the West’s agreed-upon War on Terror.
Critical Reframing: Hamas started as a social welfare organization
that was allowed by Israel to develop as a political force in
Occupied Palestine to weaken the standing of the secular PLO. There
also, was no Hezbollah prior to the 1982 Israeli invasion. The
theocrats in Iran were an organized but quite small political force
until the U.S. overthrew Iran’s democracy. The local population
will always resist when foreign countries try to oppose their will
and the resistance will not always be pretty. Painting Hamas as
part of a global conspiracy when it’s a product of the Occupation
itself is disingenuous and a gross distortion of
history.