Saturday, September 4, 2010

Fwd: [bangla-vision] Hebron, 2 Posts by Jared Malsin



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From: Romi Elnagar <bluesapphire48@yahoo.com>
Date: Sat, Sep 4, 2010 at 8:42 AM
Subject: [bangla-vision] Hebron, 2 Posts by Jared Malsin
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Hebron


Some thoughts on last night's deadly shooing attack in Hebron: The four Israeli settlers who were killed were civilians, noncombatants, and therefore their murder is to be condemned.

But I want to talk analytically about the attack:

  • Hamas' armed wing, the Al-Qassam Brigades claimed responsibility. The Israeli military also blamed Hamas. I see no reason to doubt  at this point that members of Hamas were behind the attack.
  • But as Ali Abunimah pointed out on Democracy Now this morning, the attack was likely indicative of divisions within Hamas.
  • Some are asking why, if their aim was to disrupt the negotiations in Washington, did Hamas carry out a dramatic and divisive attack such as this? That question is misleading because of the massive structural and procedural problems with the current talks. The talks will either collapse, or result in an impasse, on their own. As Hamas official Osama Hamdan put it yesterday, speaking on Al-Jazeera: "There is no need to do something like this to sabotage these negotiations, because Netanyahu [already] has."
  • The geography is important here. The attack took place in an area under full Israeli military control, not the control of the Palestinian Authority. I think this is notable because the Israeli-controlled areas around Hebron are some of the only places in the West Bank where Hamas as an organization has not already been obliterated or driven underground by the PA.
  • Inevitably, however, the PA has come under pressure to clamp down on Hamas, and has launched a massive campaign of arrests against the group. This often happens following armed attacks against Israelis in the West Bank. It did following the December 2009 shooting death of a settler near Nablus.
  • As Ehud Barak already vowed, Israel will retaliate, probably in Hebron or Nablus or Gaza. And when that happens, and Palestinians inevitably die, what will become of the peace negotiations? What happens if settlers take matters into their own hands, as indeed they have already begun to do?

Hamas' aim here is to demonstrate that they are still the relevant combatant party in the Israel-Palestine conflict at this stage. The Palestinian Authority is not at war with Israel. Hamas is. And that is why they must be included in the negotiations process. I'll quote again from my recent interview with Ambassador Charles Freeman:

The question is 'do you want peace?' If you want peace you have to talk with the people who can make peace. If you want peace you have to talk with the people who can make peace. Hamas at one point enjoyed and may still enjoy a majority among Palestinians, and is in effective control of Gaza. It therefore has the legitimacy to sign an agreement. It has the discipline to enforce an agreement as it has repeatedly demonstrated with truces with Israel over the years.

It may be disagreeable from many points of view, but there's another factor that has to be taken into account. No agreement that does not have Hamas' imprimatur can survive. Hamas has the capacity to wreck any agreement that excludes it. And therefore it must be in the agreement. If you're interested in peace you must talk to Hamas.

There's hardly anything unusual about that. If there is a problem, whether on the private level or between nations or between peoples the only way to solve it and reach an accommodation is by talking to people who disagree with you. So the entire premise that Hamas should come up with it's hands up and sign on to various Israeli demands for recognition of right of existence, whatever that is, and so forth, is a ploy intended to prevent any serious negotiations.

The effort to split the Palestinians and destroy the possibility of any unified Palestinian national government or national movement has a similar purpose. It's part of a long-term effort to avoid a serious negotiation, so that instead of trading land for peace, land can be obtained without dealing with the difficult issues that have to be dealt with to produce peace. So Hamas must be spoken to just as the PLO had to be spoken to produce Oslo and whatever progress that represented.

Further reading: Richard Silverstein has more angry analysis. Paul Woodward also has an interesting take.

Possibly related posts: (automatically generated)

Written by jaredmalsin

1 September 2010 at 2:20 pm


http://jaredmalsin.wordpress.com/2010/09/01/hebron/

Settlements


There is one piece of analysis that I should have added to my previous post about the Hebron shooting attack, which is this:

It's impossible to think coherently about this incident without also taking into account the fact that the West Bank settlements are themselves represent an act of thievery, and an ongoing violation of international humanitarian law. They are universally rejected (except in Israel, where they are controversial). The settlements are also the cause of huge hardships among Palestinians, and geographically they are the reason the two state solution seems increasingly implausible. Ideological settler activists also harass and attack Palestinian civilians on a nearly daily basis. The settlers in and around Hebron are among the most extreme.

So, while I utterly reject and deplore the killing of noncombatants, I think if we are to have an intelligent and realistic conversation about the Middle East and the prospects for peace, we cannot leave out these central facts.

Written by jaredmalsin

1 September 2010 at 11:57 pm


http://jaredmalsin.wordpress.com/

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Palash Biswas
Pl Read:
http://nandigramunited-banga.blogspot.com/

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