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           |  | Another Superfluous 
	Israeli War on Gaza  By Uri Avnery Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, November 19, 2012   
 HOW DID it start? Stupid question.
 
 Conflagrations along the Gaza Strip don’t start. They are just a continuous 
	chain of events, each claimed to be a [or “in”] “retaliation” for the 
	previous one. Action is followed by reaction, which is followed by 
	retaliation, which is followed by …
 
 This particular event “started” 
	with the firing from Gaza of an anti-tank weapon at a partially armored jeep 
	on the Israeli side of the border fence. It was described as retaliation for 
	the killing of a boy in an air attack some days earlier. But probably the 
	timing of the action was accidental – the opportunity just presented itself.
 
 The success gave rise to demonstrations of joy and pride in Gaza. Again 
	Palestinians had shown their ability to strike at the hated enemy.
 
 
 HOWEVER, THE Palestinians had in fact walked into a trap prepared with great 
	care. Whether the order was given by Hamas or one of the smaller more 
	extreme organizations - it was not a clever thing to do.
 
 Shooting 
	across the fence at an army vehicle was crossing a red line. (The Middle 
	East is full of red lines.) A major Israeli reaction was sure to ensue.
 
 It was rather routine. Israeli tanks fired cannon shells into the 
	Gaza Strip. Hamas launched rockets at Israeli towns and villages. Hundreds 
	of thousands of Israelis rushed to their shelters. Schools closed.
 
 As usual, Egyptian and other mediators went into action. Behind the scenes, 
	a new truce was arranged. It seemed to be over. Just another round.
 
 The Israeli side did everything to get back to normal. Or so it seemed. The 
	Prime Minister and the Defense Minister went out of their way (to the Syrian 
	border) to show that Gaza was off their minds.
 
 In Gaza, everybody 
	relaxed. They left their shelters. Their supreme military commander, Ahmad 
	Ja’abari, climbed into his car and drove along the main street.
 
 And 
	then the trap closed. The car bearing the commander was blown up by a 
	missile from the air.
 
 
 SUCH AN assassination is not carried out 
	on the spur of the moment. It is the culmination of many months of 
	preparation, gathering of information, waiting for the right moment, when it 
	could be executed without killing many bystanders and causing an 
	international scandal.
 
 Actually, it was due to take place a day 
	earlier, but postponed because of the bad weather.
 
 Ja’abari was the 
	man behind all the military activities of the Hamas government in Gaza, 
	including the capture of Gilad Shalit and the successful five-year long 
	hiding of his whereabouts. He was photographed at the release of Shalit to 
	the Egyptians.
 
 So this time it was the Israelis who were jubilant. 
	Much like the Americans after the Osama bin-Laden assassination.
 
 
 THE KILLING of Ja’abari was the sign for starting the planned operation.
 
 The Gaza Strip is full of missiles. Some of them are able to reach Tel 
	Aviv, some 40 km away. The Israeli military has long planned a major 
	operation to destroy as many of them as possible from the air. Intelligence 
	has patiently gathered information about their location. This is the purpose 
	of the “Pillar of Cloud” operation. (“And the Lord went before them by day 
	in a pillar of cloud, to lead them the way – Exodus 13:21).
 
 While I 
	am writing this, I don’t know yet how the whole thing will end. But some 
	conclusions can already be drawn.
 
 
 FIRST OF All, this is not 
	Cast Lead II. Far from it.
 
 The Israeli army is rather good at 
	discreetly drawing lessons from its failures. Cast Lead was celebrated as a 
	great success, but in reality it was a disaster.
 
 Sending troops into 
	a densely populated area is bound to cause heavy civilian casualties. War 
	crimes are almost inevitable. World reaction was catastrophic. The political 
	damage immense. The Chief of Staff at the time, Gabi Ashkenazi, was widely 
	acclaimed, but in reality he was a rather primitive military type. His 
	present successor is of a different caliber.
 
 Also, grandiose 
	statements about destroying Hamas and turning the Strip over to the Ramallah 
	leadership have been avoided this time.
 
 The Israeli aim, it was 
	stated, is to cause maximum damage to Hamas with minimum civilian victims. 
	It was hoped that this could be achieved almost entirely by the use of air 
	power. In the first phase of the operation, this seems to have succeeded. 
	The question is whether this can be kept up as the war goes on.
 
 
 HOW WILL it end? It would be foolhardy to guess. Wars have their own logic. 
	Stuff happens, as the man said.
 
 Binyamin Netanyahu and Ehud Barak, 
	the two men in overall command, hope the war will wind down once the main 
	aims are achieved. So there will be no reason to employ the army on the 
	ground, enter the Gaza Strip, kill people, lose soldiers.
 
 Deterrence will be restored. Another truce will come into force. The Israeli 
	population surrounding the Strip will be able to sleep soundly at night for 
	several months. Hamas will be cut down to size.
 
 But will this whole 
	exercise change the basic situation? Not likely.
 
 Ja’abari will be 
	replaced. Israel has assassinated dozens of Arab political and military 
	leaders. Indeed, it is the world champion of such assassinations, politely 
	referred to as “targeted preventions” or “eliminations”. If this were an 
	Olympic sport, the Ministry of Defense, the Mossad and the Shin Bet would be 
	festooned with gold medals.
 
 Sometimes one gets the impression that 
	the assassinations are an aim by [in] themselves, and the other operations 
	just incidental. An artist is proud of his art.
 
 What have the 
	results been ? Overall – nothing positive. Israel killed Hizbollah leader 
	Abbas al-Moussawi, and got the vastly more intelligent Hassan Nasrallah 
	instead. They killed Hamas founder Sheik Ahmad Yassin, and he was replaced 
	by abler men. Ja’abari's successor may be less or more able. It will make no 
	great difference.
 
 Will it stop the steady advance of Hamas? I doubt 
	it. Perhaps the opposite will happen. Hamas has already achieved a 
	significant breakthrough, when the Emir of Qatar (owner of Aljazeera) paid 
	Gaza a state visit. He was the first head of state to do so. Others are 
	bound to follow. Just now, in the middle of the operation, the Egyptian 
	prime minister arrived in Gaza.
 
 Operation “Pillar of Cloud” compels 
	all Arab countries to rally around Hamas, or at least pretend to. It 
	discredits the claim of the more extreme organizations in Gaza that Hamas 
	has gone soft and lazy, enjoying the fruits of government. In the battle for 
	Palestinian opinion, Hamas has gained another victory over Mahmoud Abbas, 
	whose security cooperation with Israel will look even more despicable.
 
 All in all, nothing basic will change. Just another superfluous war.
 
 
 IT IS, of course, a highly political event.
 
 Like Cast Lead, it 
	takes place on the eve of Israeli elections. (So, by the way, did the Yom 
	Kippur war, but that was decided by the other side.)
 
 One of the more 
	miserable sights of the last few days has been the TV appearances of Shelly 
	Yachimovich and Ya’ir Lapid. The two shining new stars in Israel’s political 
	firmament looked like petty politicians, parroting Netanyahu’s propaganda, 
	approving everything done.
 
 Both had hitched their wagons to the 
	social protest, expecting that social issues would displace subjects like 
	war, occupation and settlements from the agenda. When the public is occupied 
	with the price of cottage cheese, who cares about national policy?
 
 I 
	said at the time that one whiff of military action would blow away all 
	economic and social issues as frivolous and irrelevant. This has happened 
	now.
 
 Netanyahu and Barak appear many times a day on the screen. 
	They look responsible, sober, determined, experienced. Real he-men, 
	commanding troops, shaping events, saving the nation, routing the enemies of 
	Israel and the entire Jewish people. As Lapid volunteered on live 
	television: “Hamas is an anti-Semitic terrorist organization and must be 
	crushed.”
 
 Netanyahu is doing it. Adieu, Lapid. Adieu Shelly. Adieu 
	Olmert. Adieu Tzipi. Was nice seeing you.
 
 
 WAS THERE an 
	alternative? Obviously, the situation along the Gaza Strip had become 
	intolerable. One cannot send an entire population to the shelters every two 
	or three weeks. Except hitting Hamas on the head, what can you do?
 
 A 
	lot.
 
 First of all, you can abstain from “reacting”. Just cut the 
	chain.
 
 Then, you can talk with Hamas as the de facto government of 
	Gaza. You did, actually, when negotiating the release of Shalit. So why not 
	look for a permanent modus vivendi, with the involvement of Egypt?
 
 A hudna can be achieved. In Arab culture, a hudna is a binding truce, 
	sanctified by Allah, which can go on for many years. A hudna cannot be 
	violated. Even the Crusaders concluded hudnas with their Muslim enemies.
 
 The day after the assassination, Israeli peace activist Gershon 
	Baskin, who had been involved in mediating Shalit’s release, disclosed that 
	he had been in contact with Ja’abari up to the last moment. Ja’abari had 
	been interested in a long-term cease-fire. The Israeli authorities had been 
	informed.
 
 But the real remedy is peace. Peace with the Palestinian 
	people. Hamas has already solemnly declared that it would respect a peace 
	agreement concluded by the PLO – i.e. Mahmoud Abbas – that would establish a 
	Palestinian state along the 1967 borders, provided this agreement were 
	confirmed in a Palestinian referendum.
 
 Without it, the bloodletting 
	will just go on, round after round. Forever.
 
 Peace is the 
	answer. But when visibility is obscured by pillars of cloud, who can see 
	that?
 
 
 
 
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