Help - Search - Members - Calendar
Full Version: Israel massacred and murders 145 on Christmas in the Gaza strip
Common Ground Common Sense > Issues that Affect Our Lives > Foreign Policy and National Defense > Israel, Palestine the Middle East
Pages: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6
graham4anything
Israel launches air strikes on Gaza, 145 dead
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20081227/ap_on_...el_palestinians
GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip – Israeli warplanes retaliating for rocket fire from the Gaza Strip pounded dozens of security compounds across the Hamas-ruled territory in unprecedented waves of airstrikes Saturday, killing at least 155 and wounding more than 310 in the single bloodiest day of fighting in recent memory.

Hamas said all of its security installations were hit and responded with several medium-range Grad rockets at Israel, reaching deeper than in the past. One Israeli was killed and at least four people were wounded.

Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak said "the operation will last as long as necessary," but it was not clear if it would be coupled with a ground offensive. Asked if Hamas political leaders might be targeted next, military spokeswoman Maj. Avital Leibovich said, "Any Hamas target is a target."

The strikes caused widespread panic and confusion in Gaza, as black clouds of smoke rose above the territory, ruled by Hamas for the past 18 months. Some of the Israeli missiles struck in densely populated areas as children were leaving school, and women rushed into the streets frantically looking for their children.
graham4anything
155 innocent people have now been reported murdered by Israeli bombs for no reason whatsoever

fascist swine.

and over 200 others injured, including possibly many school kids
graham4anything
http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/LR160170.htm
SNAP ANALYSIS-Israel-Hamas conflict could escalate 27 Dec 2008 13:34:39 GMT
Source: Reuters
JERUSALEM, Dec 27 (Reuters) - Israel's air attack on the Gaza Strip on Saturday could signal a return to a much higher level of violence in the conflict with Palestinian Islamist group Hamas after nine months of lower-level confrontations.

The peace process with Israel, already in a coma in the last days of George W. Bush's presidency in the United States, could be killed off by renewed violence.

Several factors point to the likelihood of violence worsening following a series of Palestinian rocket attacks since Hamas ended a ceasefire just over a week ago.

* Israel's Defence Ministry signalled it was ready to pursue and widen actions against Hamas in Gaza, including targeting the militant group's leaders, and made clear it was preparing for a potentially long campaign.

"We face a period that will be neither easy nor short, and will require determination and perseverance until the necessary change is achieved in the situation in the south," Defence Minister Ehud Barak said.

* Hamas quickly vowed revenge, ordering "all fighters to respond to the Israeli slaughter". It did not say what form this action would take but one fighter maddened by the sight of the mangled bodies of his comrades said suicide bombers would blow themselves up in Israeli restaurants, cafes and streets.

Hamas leaders left the door open to a strong response, saying their movement was popular and deeply rooted. "All options are open to the Palestinian resistance to strike the Zionist enemy," a statement said. "One leader will be replaced by a hundred leaders."

* Islamist fighters fired a salvo of rockets into Israel, killing one Israeli. The mostly homemade, inaccurate rockets have caused few Israeli casualties in the past two months but militants could fire longer-range rockets which can reach the Israeli coastal city of Ashkelon.

* Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni, who hopes to defeat right-wing hawks to become prime minister in an election in February, has said the rule of Hamas in Gaza must be ended because the Islamists will never make peace with Israel.

* The Israeli air attacks caused widespread anger in the Palestinian territories. Palestinian protesters in East Jerusalem, Ramallah and Hebron staged demonstrations and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas condemned the attack and called for "this aggression to stop immediately".

* The Gaza Strip is the bloodiest arena in a militarily lopsided conflict. Some military analysts see it as a proxy war between moderate Arab regimes such as Egypt and hardline states such as Iran and Syria, which back Hamas.

Saturday's end to six months of relative calm during an Egyptian-brokered truce propels the Islamists into the frontline of the Palestinian struggle.

A longer battle could marginalise Abbas's Fatah movement and its Western and Arab peace backers.

(For main story, click on [nLR139307])
GOPGuy
QUOTE(graham4anything @ Dec 27 2008, 09:14 AM) *
155 innocent people have now been reported murdered by Israeli bombs for no reason whatsoever

fascist swine.

and over 200 others injured, including possibly many school kids


Even by your posting it seems that the Palestinians started it by launching rockets into Israel and they targeted Hamas spots, so I doubt its 155 innocent people.
graham4anything
QUOTE(GOPGuy @ Dec 27 2008, 11:08 AM) *
QUOTE(graham4anything @ Dec 27 2008, 09:14 AM) *
155 innocent people have now been reported murdered by Israeli bombs for no reason whatsoever

fascist swine.

and over 200 others injured, including possibly many school kids


Even by your posting it seems that the Palestinians started it by launching rockets into Israel and they targeted Hamas spots, so I doubt its 155 innocent people.



now death toll is over 300

david slingshots pebbles

goliath nukes the davids

f-k Israel and the rightwing militia

and I am Jewish
graham4anything

The rightwing here and there want to get this in before Bush leaves office, bloody fascist slime that they are
terrorists=Isreal=Bushrepublicans(and anyone who didn't want them impeached)...
maybe its time to treat them as terrorists they are and have the next president lob some nukes at all of them


here's how Huffington has it headline wise (this hasn't been updated in a while, weekends they are slow to)
AP: "SINGLE BLOODIEST DAY OF FIGHTING IN YEARS"... NEARLY 200 DEAD, 275 INJURED... CIVILIANS AMONG THE DEAD... ISRAEL DEFENSE MINISTER: "NOW IS THE TIME FOR FIGHTING"... AIRSTRIKES IN RESPONSE TO RECENT ROCKET FIRE... HAMAS THREATENS REVENGE
TheRestofUs
It seems sometimes it's pretty hard to figure out what "God" or "Allah" wants. Or is it?
Frenchy
QUOTE(graham4anything @ Dec 27 2008, 11:29 AM) *
QUOTE(GOPGuy @ Dec 27 2008, 11:08 AM) *
QUOTE(graham4anything @ Dec 27 2008, 09:14 AM) *
155 innocent people have now been reported murdered by Israeli bombs for no reason whatsoever

fascist swine.

and over 200 others injured, including possibly many school kids


Even by your posting it seems that the Palestinians started it by launching rockets into Israel and they targeted Hamas spots, so I doubt its 155 innocent people.



now death toll is over 300

david slingshots pebbles

Katyusha rockets are not pebbles

goliath nukes the davids

Nukes were not used

f-k Israel and the rightwing militia

and I am Jewish

who the hell cares.
.
graham4anything
QUOTE(Frenchy @ Dec 27 2008, 12:49 PM) *
QUOTE(graham4anything @ Dec 27 2008, 11:29 AM) *
QUOTE(GOPGuy @ Dec 27 2008, 11:08 AM) *
QUOTE(graham4anything @ Dec 27 2008, 09:14 AM) *
155 innocent people have now been reported murdered by Israeli bombs for no reason whatsoever

fascist swine.

and over 200 others injured, including possibly many school kids


Even by your posting it seems that the Palestinians started it by launching rockets into Israel and they targeted Hamas spots, so I doubt its 155 innocent people.



now death toll is over 300

david slingshots pebbles

Katyusha rockets are not pebbles

goliath nukes the davids

Nukes were not used

f-k Israel and the rightwing militia

and I am Jewish

who the hell cares.
.



why do you hate Israel Frenchy?
Frenchy
QUOTE(graham4anything @ Dec 27 2008, 11:50 AM) *
QUOTE(Frenchy @ Dec 27 2008, 12:49 PM) *
QUOTE(graham4anything @ Dec 27 2008, 11:29 AM) *
QUOTE(GOPGuy @ Dec 27 2008, 11:08 AM) *
QUOTE(graham4anything @ Dec 27 2008, 09:14 AM) *
155 innocent people have now been reported murdered by Israeli bombs for no reason whatsoever

fascist swine.

and over 200 others injured, including possibly many school kids


Even by your posting it seems that the Palestinians started it by launching rockets into Israel and they targeted Hamas spots, so I doubt its 155 innocent people.



now death toll is over 300

david slingshots pebbles

Katyusha rockets are not pebbles

goliath nukes the davids

Nukes were not used

f-k Israel and the rightwing militia

and I am Jewish

who the hell cares.
.



why do you hate Israel Frenchy?


Stuff it Squirrelbate...
graham4anything
90% of Jews worldwide do NOT agree with the militant rightwing fascists that occupy power in Israel

Time to oust all of them

and let peace rule

Amazing too that the Palestinian people VOTED DEMOCRATICALLY for their leaders, while Israel has a corrupt system that installs their leaders
OVER THE DEAD BODIES OF THE PEOPLE ISRAELIS THEMSELVES WANT (aka the Rabin types, who the militant rightwing assasssinates.
Confederacy Of Dunces
when the fine people of GAZA take back their 'hood and keep bombs from falling on Israel...bombs launched from GAZA, then the fine people of GAZA will NOT have to worry about payback from Israel. but they will not have peace because peace is against the Palestinian agenda. They will brook no dissent.

Where is the Palestinian peace faction that criticizes Palestinian actions in the Homeland? Ate they all in graves? hmmm
graham4anything
QUOTE(Frenchy @ Dec 27 2008, 12:52 PM) *
QUOTE(graham4anything @ Dec 27 2008, 11:50 AM) *
QUOTE(Frenchy @ Dec 27 2008, 12:49 PM) *
QUOTE(graham4anything @ Dec 27 2008, 11:29 AM) *
QUOTE(GOPGuy @ Dec 27 2008, 11:08 AM) *
QUOTE(graham4anything @ Dec 27 2008, 09:14 AM) *
155 innocent people have now been reported murdered by Israeli bombs for no reason whatsoever

fascist swine.

and over 200 others injured, including possibly many school kids


Even by your posting it seems that the Palestinians started it by launching rockets into Israel and they targeted Hamas spots, so I doubt its 155 innocent people.



now death toll is over 300

david slingshots pebbles

Katyusha rockets are not pebbles

goliath nukes the davids

Nukes were not used

f-k Israel and the rightwing militia

and I am Jewish

who the hell cares.
.



why do you hate Israel Frenchy?


Stuff it Squirrelbate...



you must hate them because Israelis themselves despise the rightwing militia and what they are doing

Israeli's love their neighbors, just the Bushwar machine doesn't

Not one Israeli was hurt this week, yet maybe 1000 on the other side will be dead or injured before the day is through
graham4anything
QUOTE(Confederacy Of Dunces @ Dec 27 2008, 12:52 PM) *
when the fine people of GAZA take back their 'hood and keep bombs from falling on Israel...bombs launched from GAZA, then the fine people of GAZA will NOT have to worry about payback from Israel. but they will not have peace because peace is against the Palestinian agenda. They will brook no dissent.

Where is the Palestinian peace faction that criticizes Palestinian actions in the Homeland? Ate they all in graves? hmmm



killed by Israel's radical rightwing

just like Rabin was.
TheRestofUs
Maybe we all need another visit from Klaatuu and Gord.
graham4anything
QUOTE(TheRestofUs @ Dec 27 2008, 01:01 PM) *
Maybe we all need another visit from Klaatuu and Gord.



Israel spews off about we cannot forget the Holocaust then makes their neighbors live in squalor and fear and kills them just the same
Seems moronic to me.

seems hypocritical to me.
TheRestofUs
QUOTE(graham4anything @ Dec 27 2008, 10:19 AM) *
QUOTE(TheRestofUs @ Dec 27 2008, 01:01 PM) *
Maybe we all need another visit from Klaatuu and Gord.



Israel spews off about we cannot forget the Holocaust then makes their neighbors live in squalor and fear and kills them just the same
Seems moronic to me.

seems hypocritical to me.

It has seemed so to me for a long time and I like quite a few Israelis I have known.
amy
QUOTE(graham4anything @ Dec 27 2008, 01:19 PM) *
QUOTE(TheRestofUs @ Dec 27 2008, 01:01 PM) *
Maybe we all need another visit from Klaatuu and Gord.



Israel spews off about we cannot forget the Holocaust then makes their neighbors live in squalor and fear and kills them just the same
Seems moronic to me.

seems hypocritical to me.

I wonder....would the Palestinians be living in squalor if they chose to live in peace along side the Israelis? Don't think so. Would Israel be bombing areas in the Gaza Strip if the Palestinians were willing to live in peace along side the Israelis? Don't think so.
Beamer
Absolutely disgusting! They have no shame.
Frenchy
QUOTE(Beamer @ Dec 27 2008, 01:26 PM) *
Absolutely disgusting! They have no shame.



Who is "they" Beamer?
Confederacy Of Dunces
QUOTE(amy @ Dec 27 2008, 11:21 AM) *
QUOTE(graham4anything @ Dec 27 2008, 01:19 PM) *
QUOTE(TheRestofUs @ Dec 27 2008, 01:01 PM) *
Maybe we all need another visit from Klaatuu and Gord.



Israel spews off about we cannot forget the Holocaust then makes their neighbors live in squalor and fear and kills them just the same
Seems moronic to me.

seems hypocritical to me.

I wonder....would the Palestinians be living in squalor if they chose to live in peace along side the Israelis? Don't think so. Would Israel be bombing areas in the Gaza Strip if the Palestinians were willing to live in peace along side the Israelis? Don't think so.



agree
Confederacy Of Dunces
QUOTE(Frenchy @ Dec 27 2008, 11:32 AM) *
QUOTE(Beamer @ Dec 27 2008, 01:26 PM) *
Absolutely disgusting! They have no shame.



Who is "they" Beamer?

methinks she means they-Palestinians.
Beamer
QUOTE(Frenchy @ Dec 27 2008, 11:32 AM) *
QUOTE(Beamer @ Dec 27 2008, 01:26 PM) *
Absolutely disgusting! They have no shame.



Who is "they" Beamer?



The Israelis.
graham4anything
QUOTE(Confederacy Of Dunces @ Dec 27 2008, 02:43 PM) *
QUOTE(Frenchy @ Dec 27 2008, 11:32 AM) *
QUOTE(Beamer @ Dec 27 2008, 01:26 PM) *
Absolutely disgusting! They have no shame.



Who is "they" Beamer?

methinks she means they-Palestinians.



methinks she means the disgusting ones are the Jews, who are bombing innocents and civilians. People are dying from Jewish bombs in the 100s and 1000s.

Whereas all they do is toss pebbles and try to hurt property not people.

Then they wonder why they later will exact revenge.

After all, the Jewish bible says an eye for an eye. Except the Jews started first.

this is all a ruse as Israel will bomb Iran before Bush leaves office if they can get away with it.
Confederacy Of Dunces
QUOTE(Beamer @ Dec 27 2008, 12:05 PM) *
QUOTE(Frenchy @ Dec 27 2008, 11:32 AM) *
QUOTE(Beamer @ Dec 27 2008, 01:26 PM) *
Absolutely disgusting! They have no shame.



Who is "they" Beamer?



The Israelis.
QUOTE




The man who assassinated RFK. The face of hate. The face of Arab/Palestinian nationalism based on the destruction of Israel. Anti-semitism/anti-Americanism.


B, what an odd statement you made.
graham4anything
cut the propaganda. Sirhan did NOT kill RFK

so I guess all Christians hated Ronald Reagan in your world, because Hink-a-dink-ly attempted to kill him
(yeah right, son of the Bushfamily major friend The Hinkley's how convienient...

we're on the road to Manchurian, Manchurian is where we will go
heart
G-- Stop using the cover that you are Jewish. As you have said before, your being Jewish doesn't mean you have a care in the world for Israel, so when you end any criticism with "I'm Jewish", you're using it as a cover, when no cover is needed in your own philosophy.

I'm not happy with what Israel AND EGYPT have been doing with Gaza!

But, this action is not without reason either.

Let's just hope that both sides can learn to act peacefully as soon as possible.

The Gaza Air Strikes: Why Israel Attacked

By AARON J. KLEIN / JERUSALEM Aaron J. Klein / Jerusalem – 2 hrs 56 mins ago


Israel's strike on Gaza had been expected for days, but it was still a surprise when it finally came. Taking advantage of good weather, which is forecast to last at least three days, Israeli planes bombed some 40 Palestinian police stations, posts and other targets early Saturday morning, killing more than 150 people including a number of senior Hamas military leaders. The first strikes came in a coordinated three-minute blitz.

Israeli officials say the strikes were necessary to force an end to the rocket attacks from Gaza, which is ruled by the radical Islamist group Hamas after it split from the Palestinian Authority run by President Mahmoud Abbas out of the West Bank. Palestinian militants in Gaza have long launched Kassam and other rockets at Israeli towns across the border, and in the past six weeks the number of attacks has increased dramatically. After the attack, Israeli officials said the number of Palestinian rocket attacks could now spike to 200 a day. Hamas announced that it had sent a rocket toward Askelon; one man in the Israeli town of Netivot, east of the Gaza strip, was killed. Israel also expects Hamas to launch suicide attacks against Israel. A Hamas leader promised as much Saturday.

But Israel is prepared to ratchet up the pressure still further in the hope that it will force a workable ceasefire. Saturday's attack was authorized two days previously, and though no Israeli ground troops have crossed into Gaza so far, that remains an option according to Israeli officials. Dozens of Israeli air force planes remain in the skies above Gaza. "If they retaliate they will feel it stronger and the number [of casualties] on the Gaza side will rise", a senior Israeli military source told TIME.

But Israel will need to move carefully. Air strikes that kill large numbers of Palestinian civilians are only likely to fuel support for Hamas, and ramp up international pressure to end the operation quickly. (See photos of Gaza border tension.)

Israel and Hamas agreed to a ceasefire in June. Israel wants the release of captured Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit and is extremely wary of becoming embroiled in a military operation in Gaza with no clear exit strategy. Hamas needed the truce to relieve the catastrophic economic strain imposed by the Israeli siege and to consolidate its control over Gaza. And so, for very different reasons, the two sides found themselves negotiating - not directly, because neither side recognizes the other - but through an Egyptian mediator. But in the past few weeks the ceasefire has all but broken down.

Indeed, even as the Israelis said the operation was continuing, Egypt was among the diplomatic casualties. Cairo had played host to Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni on Dec. 25. She took the opportunity to criticize Hamas for its rocket attacks. The silence of her Egyptian hosts is now being seen by Palestinians as indirect collusion with Israel, damaging Cairo's ability to play mediator. Furthermore, in the contest for primacy between Hamas and Abbas's Palestinian Authority (PA), Hamas, as the "victim" of this episode, emerges as the victor in the eyes of Arabs and Palestinians. Already, elements of Abbas' own Fatah Party, the bulwark of the PA, are campaigning against the security cooperation with Israel and talking about boycotting meetings with the Jewish state.

Both Israel and Hamas have their reasons for a return to open hostilities. Livni and her allies face a looming election against the more hawkish former Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Hamas may be pushing for tactical gains, like doing away with a 600-meter no-man's land established by the Israeli military on the Palestinian side of the boundary fence. The recent rocket attacks were also well timed because of the political vacuum in the U.S. In Washington, officials have been urging Israel to refrain from an invasion or other operations in Gaza during the White House transition. The air attack on Gaza has shattered that hope.

Time



veritas
QUOTE
http://www.democracynow.org/2008/12/17/day...eli_blockade_of

December 17, 2008
Days After Calling Israeli Blockade of Gaza “A Crime Against Humanity,”
UN Human Rights Investigator Richard Falk Detained, Expelled from Israel


AUDIO/VIDEO LINK

Guest: Richard Falk, UN special rapporteur on human rights in the Palestinian Territories. He is professor emeritus of international law at Princeton University and the author of more than fifty books on war, human rights and international law, including Achieving Human Rights; Crimes of War: Iraq, with Irene Gendzier; and Israel-Palestine on Record: How the New York Times Misreports Conflict in the Middle East, with Howard Friel.


QUOTE
http://www.antiwar.com/orig/kring.php?articleid=13955

December 27, 2008
Gaza Voices, American Silence
by Kenneth Ring


Author's note: Just after this article was written, it became evident that Israel is likely to launch at least a limited attack on Gaza, which only heightens the sense of urgency for action that is advocated here.

The baby is crying again. You wake up. Cold. There is no electricity in the house; it went off during the night. For the last week – weeks, months – it has been on only sporadically. You throw on a coat and go to check on the baby. It seems listless. There is no milk in the house, and very little food. The UN shipments have stopped again, and you are not sure when they will resume.

In the other room, you hear your husband coughing. He has been sick for weeks and lately he has been spitting up blood. He has tried to get permission to get to a hospital in Israel, but every time he has been denied permission to leave.

You go outside to see if a neighbor can give you any milk. The first thing that hits you is the stench. The garbage has not been collected for weeks, and the sewage problem, because of the recent rains, has become even worse. No wonder so many people are sick. You are living in a cesspool. And you, and everyone else, is trapped inside this prison because the borders are sealed. This has been going on now for a year and half, and there is no telling when it will be over. And with the end of the truce, such as it was, there is a renewed threat of violence from the Israelis. Even now, you see an Israeli drone overhead and know that a missile could be launched from it at any time.

This is ordinary life these days in Gaza, the thin strip of land along the southern Mediterranean coast, 25 miles long and 6 miles wide at its maximum into which about one and half million inhabitants, most of them originally refugees, are packed. Gaza has one of the highest population densities in the world, and most of its population, about 56%, is 16 or younger. Many are malnourished – some estimates put the figure as high as 75%. According to a recent study cited by the noted author, Chris Hedges, 46% of Gazan children are afflicted with acute anemia, and 30% suffer from stunted growth as a result of chronic malnutrition. About a tenth of these children have permanent brain damage. Eighty-two percent are afflicted with post-traumatic stress disorder; the great majority of them have witnessed death first-hand. Eighty percent of the population as a whole is dependent on food aid. Unemployment is rampant – upwards of 60%. Most Gazans subsist on less than $2 a day.

According to a recent report by Andrea Becker in an article entitled "The Slow Death of Gaza," the effects of the siege, which has been imposed on Gaza by Israel, ever since Hamas took control of this territory in June, 2007, have been devastating, and the situation is, if anything, only growing worse. Many on-the-spot observers and prominent international spokesmen have not hesitated to call Israel's actions genocidal both in intent and effect. The U.N. special rapporteur for human rights in the Occupied Territories, Richard Falk, for example, has condemned the Israeli siege of Gaza as "a crime against humanity" and "a prelude to genocide." It's easy to understand why when you read such reports as Becker's where she recounts the various forms of misery and deprivation from which Gazans suffer daily:

"In practice, Israel's blockade means the denial of a broad range of items – food, industrial, educational, medical – deemed 'non-essential' for a population largely unable to be self-sufficient at the end of decades of occupation. It means that industrial, cooking and diesel fuel, normally scarce, are virtually absent now. There are no queues at petrol stations; they are simply shut. The lack of fuel in turn means that sewage and treatment stations cannot function properly, resulting in decreased potable water and tens of millions of litres of untreated or partly treated sewage being dumped into the sea every day. Electricity cuts – previously around eight hours a day, now up to 16 hours a day in many areas – affect all homes and hospitals. Those lucky enough to have generators struggle to find the fuel to make them work, or spare parts to repair them when they break from overuse. Even candles are running out."

Articles such as Becker's are easily found on the Internet and even occasionally in the American press; there is no dearth of damning statistics that can be cited to illustrate the immensity of the problems Gazans face in coping with the challenges of this siege, seemingly without end. But my purpose here is not merely to provide another such recitation of numbers, percentages and other quantitative indices of this situation. Instead, I would merely like to present to you some voices from Gaza that speak directly of what their own lives are like and how they have come to feel as this siege continues.

The people whose stories I will cite are friends of mine – though I have never met them. Although I spent most of November in Palestine myself, I was never able to get into Gaza since the walls of a prison often exclude visitors as well as those they incarcerate. But they have become friends of mine through correspondence, and all of them will be contributing to a book I'm writing about life under the occupation. Here, however, I will just let them speak for themselves, quoting from the letters they have sent or otherwise made available to me.

One man, a professor, in writing about the siege, sent me this summary several months ago, although conditions have not really changed significantly from the time of his letter:

"Sorry to disappoint you and tell you that Israel, in fact, is still preventing us from having fuel. They only allowed the only electricity station we have here to have some industrial diesel. But that was not enough at all. I spent the whole night in total darkness.

"The severe shortages in fuel have affected our teaching program. Our students and lecturers cannot attend their classes. Yesterday, I had only three students out of 80! Those who can walk long distances try their luck. But yesterday we had a heat wave and many of those who tried to walk to school had dehydration. Mind you that most of our students already suffer from malnutrition. To add insult to injury, UNRWA has halted all its activities yesterday, for the first time in 60 years. 80 percent of Gazans depend on food handouts provided by UNRWA. So you can imagine the situation now.

"Israel's continued tightened siege on the Gaza Strip has a catastrophic effect on all of us here. In addition to the chronic shortages of fuel, we also have shortages in medicine and some basic food stuffs. The situation is simply disastrous. I've just heard that patient number 138 has passed away. He is one of thousands of terminally ill patients who need urgent treatment outside Gaza, in Israeli, Jordanian, Egyptian, or even West Bank hospitals, but Israel is refusing to give them the necessary permits. Two days ago I visited Al-Shifa hospital and was told that almost all major surgical operations have been suspended due to regular power cuts and the absence of fuel to run their generator!

"In addition to the dangerous shortage of electricity that threatens the lives of critically ill patients in all of Gaza's hospitals, and the chronic shortages of petrol and diesel and gas for domestic use, we are also suffering widespread shortages of bread, due to lack of electricity to run the ovens at bakeries across Gaza."

Another friend, this one a college student, who wrote me only two weeks ago, after alluding to similar conditions that were affecting her personally, summed up her feelings this way:

"My dear, I don't want to break your heart with the awful news of the late Gaza, peace be upon that place of earth. I am sure you follow the news wherever available, yet media can not and will never be able to honestly describe the truth of our reality. People here have reached a point in which they feel as if they are isolated from the rest of the world (which the are). I have personally heard some saying: 'This is not a life, we are dead, we have been for a long time but lying to ourselves saying that we are alive, we're just some moving dead people.'

"Believe me, it is worse than that, but there are still many people who truly believe that salvation is very close. I am not sure which one of them I am…."

And. finally, a letter that was written a year ago showing that even then, only five months into the siege, the situation was just as grim as today and the feelings of hopelessness and abandonment fully as pronounced. As you'll see, this woman's remarks foreshadow and articulate even more powerfully the same sentiments my college student friend expressed in her recent letter.

"I'm sorry for not being in touch and for not writing sooner, but words are failing me, and I cannot articulate what Gaza feels like right now. A hopeless prison with a dark gloomy cloud over it. It's been raining for three days now and its starting to get cold. Unfortunately with rainstorms come power outages, so that means there is no water or electric heaters. Gas heaters are not operational either because of the high gas price, that's when gas is even available. But also because most people are saving their gas for cooking food, rather than using it for heaters, especially with a possible invasion coming in two weeks and the possible cutoff of gas. I feel for people without access to heat. I also feel for people like my aunt whose house was demolished and is living in a half-built house with no windows that UNRWA stopped building because they ran out of cement and other building materials. It's the beginning of the winter. It's only going to get colder.

"I also can't help but think of Gaza's sick and dying...in their frailty, lying there helpless…wishing…hoping…praying that by God's mercy they would be allowed a permit to leave Gaza, or by some sort of miracle someone will save them. But most are denied access…and most die a slow agonizing death, and only then are their bodies free.

"And the world reads about it, but it's just another story, another one of Gaza's tragedies. But I wish the world would realize how real this is and how real these sick people are. Some of these sick patients are my uncle who has heart disease, or my little cousin with a tumor, and now unfortunately my aunt's husband who one day was walking, and the next day woke up crippled from a brain tumor. And when you see people you care about so sick and unable to leave Gaza, you first get angry for having such shi*ty luck, and for the injustice of the world...the type of anger that turns into fury and consumes you, until it becomes exhausting. You then resign yourself to the reality of Gaza's fate…which finally sinks in. But with that reality comes hopelessness and the crippling feeling of helplessness. And so my uncle, my cousin and my aunt's husband lie in a hospital, waiting for their permits, and none of us can do a thing other than pray or chase around people who may know someone who knows someone who can help us with a permit. But we know full well how real death is, and that most just die while waiting. And then a human rights organization issues a statement, yet again, another Palestinian dies because they were denied access to medical care. And their only crime was being born Palestinian in Gaza and falling ill. Nowhere else will you see this but in Gaza. And no place else will the world remain silent at the obscenity of Israel's inhumane acts, except in Gaza.

"It's hard to not feel like we're in a large concentration camp as I see Gaza's empty streets, and the hopeless feeling in the air…and just the gloominess that has covered Gaza. I think most people feel abandoned as we are literally locked up in this small, concentrated space and we don't know what the world plans for us, or what to expect next. It's hard to imagine what being in Gaza does to someone's will until you've come here. You no longer feel alive, in fact, you're not living; you're just killing time until some sort of change happens. Sadly, Gaza has become desensitized to the rest of the world, as it feels like the international community has turned a blind eye to the reality that is Gaza, and as long as Israel is allowing some food in and hasn't completely cut off electricity or gas…and as long as we are kept alive, no one will ask about us.

"But just because we are breathing, that doesn't mean we're alive."

Again, like the statistics I cited at the beginning of this article, these despairing Gazan voices could be multiplied ad infinitum, but redundancy would not strengthen my case that the people of Gaza have been suffering, and continue to suffer, grievously from this terrible siege that has been imposed on them collectively because of the actions of a few. Of this, you are probably already convinced, whatever you may think of the justifications – or lack of it – for Israel's actions. The point is that more than a million people are experiencing a calamitous humanitarian crisis, which has been made even worse by so many American voices remaining silent in the face of this ongoing and, in the view of many, obscene strangulation of Gaza.

Of course, you could say, "well, there are many people who are suffering throughout the world – look at Darfur, the Congo, Kenya, India, etc., etc." True enough, but Americans must remember this: It is our unremitting financial support of Israel, amounting to about 3 billion dollars every year*, making it the recipient of more of our foreign aid that any other country, that makes this siege possible. We are paying for all those planes and missiles, for all those bulldozers that demolish the houses of Gazans (and other Palestinians), and for the salaries for all those guards who are keeping the Gazan people locked up in their fetid open-air prison. Yes, these are your tax dollars at work. Do you really want to continue to see them spent in this way?

If not, then please, as the Obama administration is about to take office, write to the incoming president, to your senators and congressmen, and even to the government officials in Israel, which is holding its own election soon, to protest as vigorously as possible against the continuation of the siege and to call for its cessation. Americans have a special responsibility here, and by adding our voices to those around the world who have already condemned in the strongest way the siege of Gaza, perhaps we can help to create a wave of irresistible pressure against the walls of Gaza that will finally bring them down. The people of Gaza, resilient as many of them doubtless are, are counting on us not to forget them. Listening to their voices, we must use ours not to fail them.

*Some analyses suggest that the actual amount may be closer to 5 billion dollars per annum, but whichever figure is used, the thesis is not affected.
david sobien
Any country is allowed to defend itself. If rockets were comming from Mexico into the US, the US would use force to prevent it. The same applies here.
graham4anything
little pebbles tossed one way with no one hurt no one dead

other side kills 200-300 and wounds another 300, all who had nothing to do with the little pebbles slingshot in

seems a mite bit unfair if you ask me.

Who died and allowed Israel to have nukes?
Seems hypocritical to me that Bush goes to 2 or 3 wars

and seems really rude that Israel on Christmas would do this. MF'ers that is what they are.

Take away Israel's nukes. Nukes kill. So does Israel. Women and children mostly are killed. Cowards is Israel if you ask me. Killing women and children
is being cowards.
graham4anything
QUOTE(heart @ Dec 27 2008, 05:10 PM) *
G-- Stop using the cover that you are Jewish. As you have said before, your being Jewish doesn't mean you have a care in the world for Israel, so when you end any criticism with "I'm Jewish", you're using it as a cover, when no cover is needed in your own philosophy.

I'm not happy with what Israel AND EGYPT have been doing with Gaza!

But, this action is not without reason either.

Let's just hope that both sides can learn to act peacefully as soon as possible.

The Gaza Air Strikes: Why Israel Attacked

By AARON J. KLEIN / JERUSALEM Aaron J. Klein / Jerusalem – 2 hrs 56 mins ago


Israel's strike on Gaza had been expected for days, but it was still a surprise when it finally came. Taking advantage of good weather, which is forecast to last at least three days, Israeli planes bombed some 40 Palestinian police stations, posts and other targets early Saturday morning, killing more than 150 people including a number of senior Hamas military leaders. The first strikes came in a coordinated three-minute blitz.

Israeli officials say the strikes were necessary to force an end to the rocket attacks from Gaza, which is ruled by the radical Islamist group Hamas after it split from the Palestinian Authority run by President Mahmoud Abbas out of the West Bank. Palestinian militants in Gaza have long launched Kassam and other rockets at Israeli towns across the border, and in the past six weeks the number of attacks has increased dramatically. After the attack, Israeli officials said the number of Palestinian rocket attacks could now spike to 200 a day. Hamas announced that it had sent a rocket toward Askelon; one man in the Israeli town of Netivot, east of the Gaza strip, was killed. Israel also expects Hamas to launch suicide attacks against Israel. A Hamas leader promised as much Saturday.

But Israel is prepared to ratchet up the pressure still further in the hope that it will force a workable ceasefire. Saturday's attack was authorized two days previously, and though no Israeli ground troops have crossed into Gaza so far, that remains an option according to Israeli officials. Dozens of Israeli air force planes remain in the skies above Gaza. "If they retaliate they will feel it stronger and the number [of casualties] on the Gaza side will rise", a senior Israeli military source told TIME.

But Israel will need to move carefully. Air strikes that kill large numbers of Palestinian civilians are only likely to fuel support for Hamas, and ramp up international pressure to end the operation quickly. (See photos of Gaza border tension.)

Israel and Hamas agreed to a ceasefire in June. Israel wants the release of captured Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit and is extremely wary of becoming embroiled in a military operation in Gaza with no clear exit strategy. Hamas needed the truce to relieve the catastrophic economic strain imposed by the Israeli siege and to consolidate its control over Gaza. And so, for very different reasons, the two sides found themselves negotiating - not directly, because neither side recognizes the other - but through an Egyptian mediator. But in the past few weeks the ceasefire has all but broken down.

Indeed, even as the Israelis said the operation was continuing, Egypt was among the diplomatic casualties. Cairo had played host to Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni on Dec. 25. She took the opportunity to criticize Hamas for its rocket attacks. The silence of her Egyptian hosts is now being seen by Palestinians as indirect collusion with Israel, damaging Cairo's ability to play mediator. Furthermore, in the contest for primacy between Hamas and Abbas's Palestinian Authority (PA), Hamas, as the "victim" of this episode, emerges as the victor in the eyes of Arabs and Palestinians. Already, elements of Abbas' own Fatah Party, the bulwark of the PA, are campaigning against the security cooperation with Israel and talking about boycotting meetings with the Jewish state.

Both Israel and Hamas have their reasons for a return to open hostilities. Livni and her allies face a looming election against the more hawkish former Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Hamas may be pushing for tactical gains, like doing away with a 600-meter no-man's land established by the Israeli military on the Palestinian side of the boundary fence. The recent rocket attacks were also well timed because of the political vacuum in the U.S. In Washington, officials have been urging Israel to refrain from an invasion or other operations in Gaza during the White House transition. The air attack on Gaza has shattered that hope.

Time



first off, stop telling me to shut up.
Doesn't make you a better Jew than me to blindly back a massacre of innocents.

This is all political.

And Livni should have kept her fat mouth CLOSED while in Egypt. She inflamed the situation and made it 100times worse.

Netan Yahhhhhhhhhhhhhhooooooooooooooo is wanting war, Bush wants Israel to bomb Iran, and its inevitable it will happen the next 3 weeks before
the new President comes in, the way things are going.

Hope you are happy heart.

Blindly backing the wrong side just because you/they are Jewish is wrong.

How many people will die?
How many of those people wanted to die?
GOPGuy
QUOTE(graham4anything @ Dec 28 2008, 07:03 AM) *
QUOTE(heart @ Dec 27 2008, 05:10 PM) *
G-- Stop using the cover that you are Jewish. As you have said before, your being Jewish doesn't mean you have a care in the world for Israel, so when you end any criticism with "I'm Jewish", you're using it as a cover, when no cover is needed in your own philosophy.

I'm not happy with what Israel AND EGYPT have been doing with Gaza!

But, this action is not without reason either.

Let's just hope that both sides can learn to act peacefully as soon as possible.

The Gaza Air Strikes: Why Israel Attacked

By AARON J. KLEIN / JERUSALEM Aaron J. Klein / Jerusalem – 2 hrs 56 mins ago


Israel's strike on Gaza had been expected for days, but it was still a surprise when it finally came. Taking advantage of good weather, which is forecast to last at least three days, Israeli planes bombed some 40 Palestinian police stations, posts and other targets early Saturday morning, killing more than 150 people including a number of senior Hamas military leaders. The first strikes came in a coordinated three-minute blitz.

Israeli officials say the strikes were necessary to force an end to the rocket attacks from Gaza, which is ruled by the radical Islamist group Hamas after it split from the Palestinian Authority run by President Mahmoud Abbas out of the West Bank. Palestinian militants in Gaza have long launched Kassam and other rockets at Israeli towns across the border, and in the past six weeks the number of attacks has increased dramatically. After the attack, Israeli officials said the number of Palestinian rocket attacks could now spike to 200 a day. Hamas announced that it had sent a rocket toward Askelon; one man in the Israeli town of Netivot, east of the Gaza strip, was killed. Israel also expects Hamas to launch suicide attacks against Israel. A Hamas leader promised as much Saturday.

But Israel is prepared to ratchet up the pressure still further in the hope that it will force a workable ceasefire. Saturday's attack was authorized two days previously, and though no Israeli ground troops have crossed into Gaza so far, that remains an option according to Israeli officials. Dozens of Israeli air force planes remain in the skies above Gaza. "If they retaliate they will feel it stronger and the number [of casualties] on the Gaza side will rise", a senior Israeli military source told TIME.

But Israel will need to move carefully. Air strikes that kill large numbers of Palestinian civilians are only likely to fuel support for Hamas, and ramp up international pressure to end the operation quickly. (See photos of Gaza border tension.)

Israel and Hamas agreed to a ceasefire in June. Israel wants the release of captured Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit and is extremely wary of becoming embroiled in a military operation in Gaza with no clear exit strategy. Hamas needed the truce to relieve the catastrophic economic strain imposed by the Israeli siege and to consolidate its control over Gaza. And so, for very different reasons, the two sides found themselves negotiating - not directly, because neither side recognizes the other - but through an Egyptian mediator. But in the past few weeks the ceasefire has all but broken down.

Indeed, even as the Israelis said the operation was continuing, Egypt was among the diplomatic casualties. Cairo had played host to Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni on Dec. 25. She took the opportunity to criticize Hamas for its rocket attacks. The silence of her Egyptian hosts is now being seen by Palestinians as indirect collusion with Israel, damaging Cairo's ability to play mediator. Furthermore, in the contest for primacy between Hamas and Abbas's Palestinian Authority (PA), Hamas, as the "victim" of this episode, emerges as the victor in the eyes of Arabs and Palestinians. Already, elements of Abbas' own Fatah Party, the bulwark of the PA, are campaigning against the security cooperation with Israel and talking about boycotting meetings with the Jewish state.

Both Israel and Hamas have their reasons for a return to open hostilities. Livni and her allies face a looming election against the more hawkish former Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Hamas may be pushing for tactical gains, like doing away with a 600-meter no-man's land established by the Israeli military on the Palestinian side of the boundary fence. The recent rocket attacks were also well timed because of the political vacuum in the U.S. In Washington, officials have been urging Israel to refrain from an invasion or other operations in Gaza during the White House transition. The air attack on Gaza has shattered that hope.

Time



first off, stop telling me to shut up.
Doesn't make you a better Jew than me to blindly back a massacre of innocents.

This is all political.

And Livni should have kept her fat mouth CLOSED while in Egypt. She inflamed the situation and made it 100times worse.

Netan Yahhhhhhhhhhhhhhooooooooooooooo is wanting war, Bush wants Israel to bomb Iran, and its inevitable it will happen the next 3 weeks before
the new President comes in, the way things are going.

Hope you are happy heart.

Blindly backing the wrong side just because you/they are Jewish is wrong.

How many people will die?
How many of those people wanted to die?


Your wrong G4A, the Palestinians started it, they provoked the Israelis. Again I ask why you are an advocate for criminals?
graham4anything
babies don't toss bombs

though Bush and Rove would

you and Reagan were repudiated forever politically.

Bedtime for Bonzo indeed.
Beamer
QUOTE(david sobien @ Dec 27 2008, 09:21 PM) *
Any country is allowed to defend itself. If rockets were comming from Mexico into the US, the US would use force to prevent it. The same applies here.



Yes, two mismatches. One side is so firepower dominant in both situations.
Indianhead
Is there anything worth fighting and dying for?

If not your people...then what?
If not your family then what?
If not your country...you have none.

Self-loathing stops when family is attacked,
unless one assumes the contemplation of a coward.

Read it as you will.

Frenchy
QUOTE(Beamer @ Dec 28 2008, 11:26 AM) *
QUOTE(david sobien @ Dec 27 2008, 09:21 PM) *
Any country is allowed to defend itself. If rockets were comming from Mexico into the US, the US would use force to prevent it. The same applies here.



Yes, two mismatches. One side is so firepower dominant in both situations.


So, because the Pal's are under-gunned, the Israelis should sit back and let them have at it?
.
graham4anything
QUOTE(Indianhead @ Dec 28 2008, 01:09 PM) *
Is there anything worth fighting and dying for?

If not your people...then what?
If not your family then what?
If not your country...you have none.

Self-loathing stops when family is attacked,
unless one assumes the contemplation of a coward.

Read it as you will.



these are not my people

what a stupid phrase "my people"

the world is my people

the Palestine people are my people

We are all one

Why do you always have to break things down into prejudicial barriers?

When are you going to start considering black/white/any religion/gay straight as one

we all are members of the republic of earth

When will you learn that?

I for one would not want to die for Israel. I would peace for Israel but not die.
Israel is just a country. It is not a person.

Guns and religion kill.

real_democrat
QUOTE(amy @ Dec 27 2008, 02:21 PM) *
QUOTE(graham4anything @ Dec 27 2008, 01:19 PM) *
QUOTE(TheRestofUs @ Dec 27 2008, 01:01 PM) *
Maybe we all need another visit from Klaatuu and Gord.



Israel spews off about we cannot forget the Holocaust then makes their neighbors live in squalor and fear and kills them just the same
Seems moronic to me.

seems hypocritical to me.

I wonder....would the Palestinians be living in squalor if they chose to live in peace along side the Israelis? Don't think so. Would Israel be bombing areas in the Gaza Strip if the Palestinians were willing to live in peace along side the Israelis? Don't think so.

The notion that the Palestinians can "choose" to live in peace is absurd on the face of it. The Israelis have been bulldozing their land one household at a time for 60 years plus. The settlements are illegal, and to protect them, Palestinians must pass through hundreds of checkpoints within the occupied territories. They live in virtual prison camps with automatic machine guns mounted on walls and their every move is monitored and controlled. They have been subjected to the collective punishment of war on a nearly constant basis, having their power stations destroyed and their medical and food supplies denied.

In short the Palestinians have been treated like animals, and yet they have no recourse. Everyone says that Israeli's have a right to retaliate when attacked, but where is the recognition that the Palestinians have a right to respond when being attacked by Israel has been the single constant in their lives?

real_democrat
QUOTE(david sobien @ Dec 28 2008, 12:21 AM) *
Any country is allowed to defend itself. If rockets were comming from Mexico into the US, the US would use force to prevent it. The same applies here.

Except when it can not. Gaza is not a country, but it has been under constant assault by Israel, a country whose borders swell every day with complete disdain for the people they stole their country from.
real_democrat
QUOTE(veritas @ Dec 27 2008, 11:22 PM) *
QUOTE
http://www.democracynow.org/2008/12/17/day...eli_blockade_of

December 17, 2008
Days After Calling Israeli Blockade of Gaza “A Crime Against Humanity,”
UN Human Rights Investigator Richard Falk Detained, Expelled from Israel


AUDIO/VIDEO LINK

Guest: Richard Falk, UN special rapporteur on human rights in the Palestinian Territories. He is professor emeritus of international law at Princeton University and the author of more than fifty books on war, human rights and international law, including Achieving Human Rights; Crimes of War: Iraq, with Irene Gendzier; and Israel-Palestine on Record: How the New York Times Misreports Conflict in the Middle East, with Howard Friel.


QUOTE
http://www.antiwar.com/orig/kring.php?articleid=13955

December 27, 2008
Gaza Voices, American Silence
by Kenneth Ring


Author's note: Just after this article was written, it became evident that Israel is likely to launch at least a limited attack on Gaza, which only heightens the sense of urgency for action that is advocated here.

The baby is crying again. You wake up. Cold. There is no electricity in the house; it went off during the night. For the last week – weeks, months – it has been on only sporadically. You throw on a coat and go to check on the baby. It seems listless. There is no milk in the house, and very little food. The UN shipments have stopped again, and you are not sure when they will resume.

In the other room, you hear your husband coughing. He has been sick for weeks and lately he has been spitting up blood. He has tried to get permission to get to a hospital in Israel, but every time he has been denied permission to leave.

You go outside to see if a neighbor can give you any milk. The first thing that hits you is the stench. The garbage has not been collected for weeks, and the sewage problem, because of the recent rains, has become even worse. No wonder so many people are sick. You are living in a cesspool. And you, and everyone else, is trapped inside this prison because the borders are sealed. This has been going on now for a year and half, and there is no telling when it will be over. And with the end of the truce, such as it was, there is a renewed threat of violence from the Israelis. Even now, you see an Israeli drone overhead and know that a missile could be launched from it at any time.

This is ordinary life these days in Gaza, the thin strip of land along the southern Mediterranean coast, 25 miles long and 6 miles wide at its maximum into which about one and half million inhabitants, most of them originally refugees, are packed. Gaza has one of the highest population densities in the world, and most of its population, about 56%, is 16 or younger. Many are malnourished – some estimates put the figure as high as 75%. According to a recent study cited by the noted author, Chris Hedges, 46% of Gazan children are afflicted with acute anemia, and 30% suffer from stunted growth as a result of chronic malnutrition. About a tenth of these children have permanent brain damage. Eighty-two percent are afflicted with post-traumatic stress disorder; the great majority of them have witnessed death first-hand. Eighty percent of the population as a whole is dependent on food aid. Unemployment is rampant – upwards of 60%. Most Gazans subsist on less than $2 a day.

According to a recent report by Andrea Becker in an article entitled "The Slow Death of Gaza," the effects of the siege, which has been imposed on Gaza by Israel, ever since Hamas took control of this territory in June, 2007, have been devastating, and the situation is, if anything, only growing worse. Many on-the-spot observers and prominent international spokesmen have not hesitated to call Israel's actions genocidal both in intent and effect. The U.N. special rapporteur for human rights in the Occupied Territories, Richard Falk, for example, has condemned the Israeli siege of Gaza as "a crime against humanity" and "a prelude to genocide." It's easy to understand why when you read such reports as Becker's where she recounts the various forms of misery and deprivation from which Gazans suffer daily:

"In practice, Israel's blockade means the denial of a broad range of items – food, industrial, educational, medical – deemed 'non-essential' for a population largely unable to be self-sufficient at the end of decades of occupation. It means that industrial, cooking and diesel fuel, normally scarce, are virtually absent now. There are no queues at petrol stations; they are simply shut. The lack of fuel in turn means that sewage and treatment stations cannot function properly, resulting in decreased potable water and tens of millions of litres of untreated or partly treated sewage being dumped into the sea every day. Electricity cuts – previously around eight hours a day, now up to 16 hours a day in many areas – affect all homes and hospitals. Those lucky enough to have generators struggle to find the fuel to make them work, or spare parts to repair them when they break from overuse. Even candles are running out."

Articles such as Becker's are easily found on the Internet and even occasionally in the American press; there is no dearth of damning statistics that can be cited to illustrate the immensity of the problems Gazans face in coping with the challenges of this siege, seemingly without end. But my purpose here is not merely to provide another such recitation of numbers, percentages and other quantitative indices of this situation. Instead, I would merely like to present to you some voices from Gaza that speak directly of what their own lives are like and how they have come to feel as this siege continues.

The people whose stories I will cite are friends of mine – though I have never met them. Although I spent most of November in Palestine myself, I was never able to get into Gaza since the walls of a prison often exclude visitors as well as those they incarcerate. But they have become friends of mine through correspondence, and all of them will be contributing to a book I'm writing about life under the occupation. Here, however, I will just let them speak for themselves, quoting from the letters they have sent or otherwise made available to me.

One man, a professor, in writing about the siege, sent me this summary several months ago, although conditions have not really changed significantly from the time of his letter:

"Sorry to disappoint you and tell you that Israel, in fact, is still preventing us from having fuel. They only allowed the only electricity station we have here to have some industrial diesel. But that was not enough at all. I spent the whole night in total darkness.

"The severe shortages in fuel have affected our teaching program. Our students and lecturers cannot attend their classes. Yesterday, I had only three students out of 80! Those who can walk long distances try their luck. But yesterday we had a heat wave and many of those who tried to walk to school had dehydration. Mind you that most of our students already suffer from malnutrition. To add insult to injury, UNRWA has halted all its activities yesterday, for the first time in 60 years. 80 percent of Gazans depend on food handouts provided by UNRWA. So you can imagine the situation now.

"Israel's continued tightened siege on the Gaza Strip has a catastrophic effect on all of us here. In addition to the chronic shortages of fuel, we also have shortages in medicine and some basic food stuffs. The situation is simply disastrous. I've just heard that patient number 138 has passed away. He is one of thousands of terminally ill patients who need urgent treatment outside Gaza, in Israeli, Jordanian, Egyptian, or even West Bank hospitals, but Israel is refusing to give them the necessary permits. Two days ago I visited Al-Shifa hospital and was told that almost all major surgical operations have been suspended due to regular power cuts and the absence of fuel to run their generator!

"In addition to the dangerous shortage of electricity that threatens the lives of critically ill patients in all of Gaza's hospitals, and the chronic shortages of petrol and diesel and gas for domestic use, we are also suffering widespread shortages of bread, due to lack of electricity to run the ovens at bakeries across Gaza."

Another friend, this one a college student, who wrote me only two weeks ago, after alluding to similar conditions that were affecting her personally, summed up her feelings this way:

"My dear, I don't want to break your heart with the awful news of the late Gaza, peace be upon that place of earth. I am sure you follow the news wherever available, yet media can not and will never be able to honestly describe the truth of our reality. People here have reached a point in which they feel as if they are isolated from the rest of the world (which the are). I have personally heard some saying: 'This is not a life, we are dead, we have been for a long time but lying to ourselves saying that we are alive, we're just some moving dead people.'

"Believe me, it is worse than that, but there are still many people who truly believe that salvation is very close. I am not sure which one of them I am…."

And. finally, a letter that was written a year ago showing that even then, only five months into the siege, the situation was just as grim as today and the feelings of hopelessness and abandonment fully as pronounced. As you'll see, this woman's remarks foreshadow and articulate even more powerfully the same sentiments my college student friend expressed in her recent letter.

"I'm sorry for not being in touch and for not writing sooner, but words are failing me, and I cannot articulate what Gaza feels like right now. A hopeless prison with a dark gloomy cloud over it. It's been raining for three days now and its starting to get cold. Unfortunately with rainstorms come power outages, so that means there is no water or electric heaters. Gas heaters are not operational either because of the high gas price, that's when gas is even available. But also because most people are saving their gas for cooking food, rather than using it for heaters, especially with a possible invasion coming in two weeks and the possible cutoff of gas. I feel for people without access to heat. I also feel for people like my aunt whose house was demolished and is living in a half-built house with no windows that UNRWA stopped building because they ran out of cement and other building materials. It's the beginning of the winter. It's only going to get colder.

"I also can't help but think of Gaza's sick and dying...in their frailty, lying there helpless…wishing…hoping…praying that by God's mercy they would be allowed a permit to leave Gaza, or by some sort of miracle someone will save them. But most are denied access…and most die a slow agonizing death, and only then are their bodies free.

"And the world reads about it, but it's just another story, another one of Gaza's tragedies. But I wish the world would realize how real this is and how real these sick people are. Some of these sick patients are my uncle who has heart disease, or my little cousin with a tumor, and now unfortunately my aunt's husband who one day was walking, and the next day woke up crippled from a brain tumor. And when you see people you care about so sick and unable to leave Gaza, you first get angry for having such shi*ty luck, and for the injustice of the world...the type of anger that turns into fury and consumes you, until it becomes exhausting. You then resign yourself to the reality of Gaza's fate…which finally sinks in. But with that reality comes hopelessness and the crippling feeling of helplessness. And so my uncle, my cousin and my aunt's husband lie in a hospital, waiting for their permits, and none of us can do a thing other than pray or chase around people who may know someone who knows someone who can help us with a permit. But we know full well how real death is, and that most just die while waiting. And then a human rights organization issues a statement, yet again, another Palestinian dies because they were denied access to medical care. And their only crime was being born Palestinian in Gaza and falling ill. Nowhere else will you see this but in Gaza. And no place else will the world remain silent at the obscenity of Israel's inhumane acts, except in Gaza.

"It's hard to not feel like we're in a large concentration camp as I see Gaza's empty streets, and the hopeless feeling in the air…and just the gloominess that has covered Gaza. I think most people feel abandoned as we are literally locked up in this small, concentrated space and we don't know what the world plans for us, or what to expect next. It's hard to imagine what being in Gaza does to someone's will until you've come here. You no longer feel alive, in fact, you're not living; you're just killing time until some sort of change happens. Sadly, Gaza has become desensitized to the rest of the world, as it feels like the international community has turned a blind eye to the reality that is Gaza, and as long as Israel is allowing some food in and hasn't completely cut off electricity or gas…and as long as we are kept alive, no one will ask about us.

"But just because we are breathing, that doesn't mean we're alive."

Again, like the statistics I cited at the beginning of this article, these despairing Gazan voices could be multiplied ad infinitum, but redundancy would not strengthen my case that the people of Gaza have been suffering, and continue to suffer, grievously from this terrible siege that has been imposed on them collectively because of the actions of a few. Of this, you are probably already convinced, whatever you may think of the justifications – or lack of it – for Israel's actions. The point is that more than a million people are experiencing a calamitous humanitarian crisis, which has been made even worse by so many American voices remaining silent in the face of this ongoing and, in the view of many, obscene strangulation of Gaza.

Of course, you could say, "well, there are many people who are suffering throughout the world – look at Darfur, the Congo, Kenya, India, etc., etc." True enough, but Americans must remember this: It is our unremitting financial support of Israel, amounting to about 3 billion dollars every year*, making it the recipient of more of our foreign aid that any other country, that makes this siege possible. We are paying for all those planes and missiles, for all those bulldozers that demolish the houses of Gazans (and other Palestinians), and for the salaries for all those guards who are keeping the Gazan people locked up in their fetid open-air prison. Yes, these are your tax dollars at work. Do you really want to continue to see them spent in this way?

If not, then please, as the Obama administration is about to take office, write to the incoming president, to your senators and congressmen, and even to the government officials in Israel, which is holding its own election soon, to protest as vigorously as possible against the continuation of the siege and to call for its cessation. Americans have a special responsibility here, and by adding our voices to those around the world who have already condemned in the strongest way the siege of Gaza, perhaps we can help to create a wave of irresistible pressure against the walls of Gaza that will finally bring them down. The people of Gaza, resilient as many of them doubtless are, are counting on us not to forget them. Listening to their voices, we must use ours not to fail them.

*Some analyses suggest that the actual amount may be closer to 5 billion dollars per annum, but whichever figure is used, the thesis is not affected.


Of course a voice of reason like Richard Falk is all but ignored by the US media.

Indianhead
QUOTE(graham4anything @ Dec 28 2008, 03:19 PM) *
these are not my people

what a stupid phrase "my people"

the world is my people

the Palestine people are my people

We are all one

Why do you always have to break things down into prejudicial barriers?

When are you going to start considering black/white/any religion/gay straight as one

we all are members of the republic of earth

When will you learn that?

I for one would not want to die for Israel. I would peace for Israel but not die.
Israel is just a country. It is not a person.

Guns and religion kill.


And the Oscar for naivette goes to...

"The republic of earth" Rofl2.gif laugh.gif roflmbo.gif roflmao.gif Rofl2.gif laugh.gif roflmbo.gif roflmao.gif
graham4anything
QUOTE(Indianhead @ Dec 28 2008, 08:32 PM) *
QUOTE(graham4anything @ Dec 28 2008, 03:19 PM) *
these are not my people

what a stupid phrase "my people"

the world is my people

the Palestine people are my people

We are all one

Why do you always have to break things down into prejudicial barriers?

When are you going to start considering black/white/any religion/gay straight as one

we all are members of the republic of earth

When will you learn that?

I for one would not want to die for Israel. I would peace for Israel but not die.
Israel is just a country. It is not a person.

Guns and religion kill.


And the Oscar for naivette goes to...

"The republic of earth" Rofl2.gif laugh.gif roflmbo.gif roflmao.gif Rofl2.gif laugh.gif roflmbo.gif roflmao.gif



Then you indeed have NO understanding of Jesus at all my friend.
Do you think Jesus wanted to kill everyone who was not Jesus?

Seems you mis-read a word or three somewhere along the line.
graham4anything
notice how Iran keeps creeping into the conversation
That is what this is about
Bombing Iran before Bush leaves office in 3 weeks...oops they did it again.




http://www.reuters.com/article/newsOne/idU...0081228?sp=true
Israel pounds Gaza for second day
Sun Dec 28, 2008 6:28pm EST


GAZA (Reuters) - Israel pounded Hamas targets in the Gaza Strip from the air on Sunday and prepared for a possible invasion after killing at least 298 Palestinians in two days of attacks.

Israel said the campaign that began on Saturday was a response to almost daily rocket and mortar fire that intensified after Hamas, the Islamist group in charge of the enclave that Israel quit in 2005, ended a six-month ceasefire a week ago.

Israel stepped up air strikes after dark on Sunday, destroying a laboratory building at the Islamic University in Gaza, a significant cultural symbol, Hamas said. Israel has accused Hamas of using the facilities to develop explosives.

During the first two days of the assault, militants fired about 150 rockets and mortars at Israel, the army said, less than had been expected. Two rockets struck near the port of Ashdod, 30 km (18 miles) from Gaza, causing no casualties.

The attacks enraged Arabs across the Middle East, where protesters burned Israeli and U.S. flags to press for a stronger response from their leaders to Israel's attack on Gaza.

Israeli tanks deployed on the edge of the Gaza Strip, poised to enter the densely populated enclave of 1.5 million Palestinians. Prime Minister Ehud Olmert's cabinet approved a call-up of 6,500 reservists, a government official said.

Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak told top commanders at a briefing on Sunday that the Israeli offensive was open-ended. Military spokesman Avi Benayahu said it could "take many days."

Mark Regev, a spokesman for Olmert, said the campaign would continue until the population in southern Israel "will no longer live in terror and in fear of constant rocket barrages."

Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni, who hopes to become prime minister after a February 10 election, appeared to rule out a large-scale invasion to recapture the territory.

"Our goal is not to reoccupy Gaza Strip," she said on NBC's "Meet the Press" program. Asked on Fox News if Israel was out to topple Gaza's Hamas rulers, Livni replied: "Not now."

The U.N. Security Council called on all sides to cease fire. But an Israeli official said Israel was feeling little international pressure to halt its operations.

Hamas spokesman Fawzi Barhoum urged Palestinian groups to use "all available means, including martyrdom operations" -- a reference to suicide bombings in Israel.

Keeping pressure on Hamas after bombing runs that turned Saturday into one of the bloodiest days for Palestinians in 60 years of conflict, Israeli aircraft flattened the group's main security compound in Gaza, killing at least four security men.

Israel expanded its air campaign to the southern Gaza Strip, bombing some 40 smuggling tunnels running under the border with Egypt, a network that is a lifeline to the outside world.

Dozens of Gazans crossed into Egypt through holes opened in the border wall by bulldozers and explosives. An Egyptian border guard and a Palestinian youth died in a clash as Egyptian police tried to stop the influx, medics and Egyptian security said.

Egypt later warned Gaza residents to steer clear of the border area as Israel planned to bomb more tunnels there, a Palestinian security source said. Israel says militants use border tunnels to smuggle weapons into Gaza.

"SHOCK AND AWE"

Palestinian health officials said the deaths raised to 298 the number of Palestinians killed since Saturday, when Israel launched what one Israeli newspaper columnist described as "shock and awe" air strikes against Hamas facilities.

Hamas said 180 of its members were killed and the rest included civilians, among them 16 women and some children.

The international Red Cross said that hospitals in the Gaza Strip were overwhelmed and unable to cope with the casualties.

One Israeli was killed on Saturday by a rocket fired from Gaza. Gazan rockets have caused few Israeli casualties but have damaged property and sparked panic in many border towns.

Benayahu, the army spokesman, said Hamas had not yet responded as strongly as expected, possibly because it was "trying to recover from the blows," but that "it is too soon to eulogize" it.

Livni said Israel was trying to "target only terrorists and Hamas headquarters." "But, unfortunately, in a war ... sometimes also civilians pay the price."

Violence spread to the occupied West Bank, where Israeli soldiers opened fire at stone-throwing Palestinian protesters. Palestinian medical officials said two Palestinians were killed.

Palestinian forces loyal to President Mahmoud Abbas of Fatah shot and wounded three people in a protest in support of Hamas. Arab citizens of Israel also held protests.

In Damascus, a senior official said Syria has suspended indirect peace talks with Israel in response to the attacks.

Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah, leader of Lebanese Hezbollah guerrillas who fought a 2006 war with Israel, said he asked fighters to be on standby for a possible Israeli attack.

Parents in Gaza kept their children home from school as the roar of Israeli aircraft and thunder of explosions echoed. Schools in Israel's south, due to reopen on Tuesday after the Jewish holiday of Hanukkah, were ordered to stay shut.

Abbas, speaking in Cairo, accused Hamas, which seized the Gaza Strip from Fatah in 2007, of triggering Israel's raids by not extending the ceasefire that Egypt brokered in June.

U.S. President George W. Bush's administration, in its final weeks in office, put the onus on Hamas to prevent more violence.

(Additional reporting by Ari Rabinovitch, Dan Williams, Allyn Fisher-Ilan, Douglas Hamilton and Adam Entous in Jerusalem, Wafa Amr and Ali Sawafta in Ramallah, Writing by Jeffrey Heller; Editing by )

graham4anything
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2008/dec/2...rcussions/print
Six months of secret planning - then Israel moves against Hamas'Patience ran out' over repeated missile attacks in south of country but strategy risks creating fresh motives for revenge and hatredIan Black, middle east editor
The Guardian, Monday 29 December 2008

Even as Israel's F16s were aiming their first deadly salvoes at Hamas positions in the Gaza Strip on Saturday, questions were being asked at home and abroad, about what this "shock and awe" campaign was intended to achieve - and what Israel's exit strategy would be.

Preparations

Unlike the confused and improvised Israeli response as the war against Hizbullah in Lebanon unfolded in 2006, Operation Cast Lead appears to have been carefully prepared over a long period.

Israeli media reports, by usually well-informed correspondents and analysts, alluded yesterday to six months of intelligence-gathering to pinpoint Hamas targets including bases, weapon silos, training camps and the homes of senior officials. The cabinet spent five hours discussing the plan in detail on December 19 and left the timing up to Ehud Olmert, the caretaker prime minister, and his defence minister Ehud Barak. Preparations involved disinformation and deception which kept Israel's media in the dark. According to Ha'aretz, that also lulled Hamas into a sense of false security and allowed the initial aerial onslaught to achieve tactical surprise - and kill many of the 290 victims counted so far.

Friday's decision to allow food, fuel and humanitarian supplies into besieged Gaza - ostensibly a gesture in the face of international pressure to relieve the ongoing blockade - was part of this. So was Thursday's visit to Cairo by Tzipi Livni, Israel's foreign minister, to brief Egyptian officials. The final decision was reportedly made on Friday morning.

Why now?

Barak said yesterday the timing of the operation was dictated by Israel's patience simply "having running out" in the face of renewed rocket and mortar attacks from Gaza into Israel when the shaky six-month ceasefire expired 10 days ago. "Any other sovereign nation would do the same," is the official Israeli refrain. Amid the storm of international criticism of Israel's hugely disproportionate response, it is easy to overlook the domestic pressure faced by the Israeli government over its handling of "Hamastan".

Homemade Qassam rockets and mortars rarely kill but they do terrify and have undermined Israel's deterrent power as well as keeping 250,000 residents of the south of the country in permanent danger.

But the context now is February's Israeli elections. The contest that matters is between Livni's centrist Kadima party and the rightwing Likud under Binyamin Netanyahu, who talks only of "economic peace" with the Palestinians and does not want an independent Palestinian state, as Livni does. Opinion polls show that it pays to talk tough: Livni's standing has improved in recent days. The US political timetable may be as significant. The three weeks before Barack Obama's inauguration were Israel's last chance to assume automatic diplomatic support from Washington, as it got from George Bush over both West Bank settlements and the Lebanon war.

It is hard to imagine an Israeli government testing Obama, whom it views with foreboding because of a sense he has more sympathy for the Palestinians, with a crisis of these dimensions during his first days or weeks in office.

Game plan

Livni and other Israeli officials have spoken openly of wishing to topple Hamas since the Islamist movement took over from the western-backed, Fatah-dominated Palestinian Authority (PA) in June 2007. But this may be something less ambitious. "The realistic objective of any military operation is not the ousting of Hamas, but rather ... undermining its military effectiveness and weakening its rule," is the view of Yediot Aharonot analyst Alex Fishman. Ron Ben-Yishai, another military expert, called it an attempt to "change the rules of the game." This appears to be a case of "asymmetric warfare" in which the weaker party commands disproportionate force - by repeatedly firing crude rockets or using suicide bombers - and the more powerful one responds with a massive, disproportionate blow. "The objective of an Israeli military operation in Gaza must be to undermine Hamas' desire to keep fighting, and at that point agree on a ceasefire," said Fishman.

Israel is well-informed about what happens in Gaza. Its premise is that Hamas is unpopular and that by targeting its personnel it can encourage that trend. But not all the victims are from Hamas. Some are civilians and there are security officers who belong to Fatah. And nor, crucially, has the PA been able to deliver a peace agreement with Israel, or even end its settlement activity. Most significantly, the scale of the bloodshed - ranking in Palestinian history alongside the 1948 Deir Yassin killings or the Sabra and Shatila massacres (by Israel's Christian Lebanese allies) in 1982 means renewed motives for hatred and revenge.

What next?

Israel said yesterday that it is calling up thousands of reservists. There can be little doubt that it could reoccupy and hold the coastal strip - as it did from 1967 to 2005 - but tanks and infantry would be vulnerable in guerrilla warfare against lightly-armed but highly-motivated Hamas or Islamic Jihad fighters. Civilian casualties would grow with international pressure. The only reason to deploy ground forces would be to achieve something air power could not - searching for rocket production and storage facilities that have not yet been identified.

Israeli commentators suggest the army has no appetite for a ground war, making comparisons with Lebanon in 2006, and pointing to the impending elections. Another key question for the military must be the fate of Gilad Shalit, the Israeli corporal held in Gaza since he was captured in 2006. It is hard to see negotiations on his release, and of Palestinian prisoners held by Israel, continuing in these circumstances.

Repercussions

The Gaza offensive has already fuelled anti-Israeli and anti-American feeling across the Arab world. Mahmoud Abbas, the Palestinian president, faces demands for an end to any talks with Israel. Hamas, calling for a "third intifada," accused Egypt and Jordan of colluding with the Gaza plan. If there is a silver lining in this dark cloud it is to have shown that working to achieve a lasting peace in the Middle East is still a desperately urgent task.
GOPGuy
QUOTE(real_democrat @ Dec 28 2008, 06:31 PM) *
QUOTE(amy @ Dec 27 2008, 02:21 PM) *
QUOTE(graham4anything @ Dec 27 2008, 01:19 PM) *
QUOTE(TheRestofUs @ Dec 27 2008, 01:01 PM) *
Maybe we all need another visit from Klaatuu and Gord.



Israel spews off about we cannot forget the Holocaust then makes their neighbors live in squalor and fear and kills them just the same
Seems moronic to me.

seems hypocritical to me.

I wonder....would the Palestinians be living in squalor if they chose to live in peace along side the Israelis? Don't think so. Would Israel be bombing areas in the Gaza Strip if the Palestinians were willing to live in peace along side the Israelis? Don't think so.

The notion that the Palestinians can "choose" to live in peace is absurd on the face of it. The Israelis have been bulldozing their land one household at a time for 60 years plus. The settlements are illegal, and to protect them, Palestinians must pass through hundreds of checkpoints within the occupied territories. They live in virtual prison camps with automatic machine guns mounted on walls and their every move is monitored and controlled. They have been subjected to the collective punishment of war on a nearly constant basis, having their power stations destroyed and their medical and food supplies denied.

In short the Palestinians have been treated like animals, and yet they have no recourse. Everyone says that Israeli's have a right to retaliate when attacked, but where is the recognition that the Palestinians have a right to respond when being attacked by Israel has been the single constant in their lives?


Right, like the Isaelis dont live under constant threat from virtually every neighbor. Maybe the Israelis wouldnt have to treat the Palestinians in such a manner IF THEY acted properly. They will never get sympathy from the world community by launching rockets at Israel, that can be assured.
heart
QUOTE(TheRestofUs @ Dec 27 2008, 01:01 PM) *
Maybe we all need another visit from Klaatuu and Gord.


We got one! We still don't listen!

G....I never told you to shut up. If we can't even get along in here, how can we tell anyone else in the world that they have to get along? Peace out!
graham4anything
it would seem to me, if Israel is targeting their leaders, then indeed, using GOP Guy's logic above- if they target Israeli leaders, that is just fighting back,
so he is okay with that, based on what he said, right? Where consistency just once would be lovely.



December 28, 2008 | 12:10 AM (EST) BIO Become a Fan Get Email Alerts Bloggers' Index
What's Next on Gaza/Israel and Why Americans Should Care

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/daniel-levy/...a_b_153743.html
For many people, what happened today between Gaza and Israel may have all too familiar a ring to it - Israel warns and then retaliates to an alleged or real Palestinian escalation of violence, there is Arab condemnation and international exasperation, eventually things de-escalate but according to Israel's timetable as the U.S. prevents effective early international mediation, and we're back to where we started -- with the addition of more blood and death (many innocent, some less so), more wounded and more shattered families.

Most of those involved, often including Israel, tend to regret things not coming to a halt sooner. The Israel Defense Forces with their modern weaponry try to pinpoint targets but invariably, predictably, and painfully there are plenty of "misses"; the Palestinians - well their weaponry is by definition more crude, they use what is available and the results are correspondingly messy and indiscriminate. Bottom line - Arabs and Jews are killing each other - so what's new? And why on earth would America want to be involved?

Here's the bad news folks - America is involved, up to its eyeballs actually. Today, after Israeli air-strikes that killed over 200 Palestinians in Gaza, the Middle East is again seething with rage. Recruiters to the most radical of causes are again cashing in. If Osama Bin Laden is indeed a cave-dweller these days then U.S. intel should be listening out for a booming echo of laughter. Demonstrations across the Arab world and contributors to the ever-proliferating Arabic language news media and blogosphere hold the U.S., and not just Israel, responsible for what happened today (and that is a position taken, for good reasons, by sensible folk, not hard-liners). America's allies in the region are again running for cover. America's standing, its interests and security are all deeply affected. The U.S.-Israel relationship per se is not to blame (that is something I support), the unresolved Israeli-Palestinian conflict is - and thankfully we can do something about that.

Why did today's events occur? The list of causes is a long one and of course depends who you are asking. Here are five of the most salient factors as I see them:

(1) Never forget the basics - the core issue is still an unresolved conflict about ending an occupation and establishing an independent Palestinian state - everything has to start from here to be serious (this is true also for Hamas who continue to heavily hint that they will accept the 1967 borders).

(2) The immediate backdrop begins with the Israeli disengagement from Gaza of summer 2005, ostensibly a good move, except one that left more issues open than it resolved. It was a unilateral initiative, so there was no coordinating the 'what happens next' with the Palestinians. Gaza was closed off to the world, the West Bank remained under occupation and what had the potential to be a constructive move towards peace became a source of new tensions - something many of us pointed out at the time (supporting withdrawal from Gaza, opposing how it was done).

(3) U.S., Israeli and international policy towards Hamas has greatly exacerbated the situation. Hamas participated in and won democratic elections to the Palestinian Legislative Council in January 2006. Rather than test the Hamas capacity to govern responsibly and nurture Hamas further into the political arena and away from armed struggle, the U.S.-led international response was to hermetically seal-off Hamas, besiege Gaza, work to undemocratically overthrow the Hamas government and thereby allow Hamas to credibly claim that a hypocritical standard was being applied to the American democracy agenda.

American, Israeli and Quartet policy towards Hamas has been a litany of largely unforced errors and missed opportunities. Hamas poses a serious policy challenge and direct early U.S. or Israeli engagement let alone financial support was certainly not the way forward, but in testing Hamas, a division of labor within the Quartet would have made sense (European and U.N. engagement, for instance, should have been encouraged, not the opposite). Every wrong turn was taken - Hamas were seen through the GWOT prism not as a liberation struggle, when the Saudi's delivered a Palestinian National Unity Government in March 2007 the U.S. worked to unravel it, Palestinian reconciliation is still vetoed which encourages the least credible trends within Fatah, and unbelievably Egypt is given an exclusive mediation role with Hamas (Egypt naturally sees the Hamas issue first through its own domestic prism of concern at the growth of the Muslim Brothers, progress is often held hostage to ongoing Hamas-Egypt squabbles).

(4) Failure to build on the ceasefire. Israel is of course duty bound to defend and protect its citizens, so as the intensity of rocket fire in 2007-8 increased, Israel stepped up its actions against Gaza. But there was never much Israeli military or government enthusiasm for a full-scale conflict or ground invasion and eventually a practical working solution was found when both sides agreed to a six-month ceasefire on June 19th 2008. Neither side loved it. Both drew just enough benefit to keep going. That equation though was always delicately balanced. For the communities of southern Israel which bore the brunt of the rocket attacks, notably Sderot, the ceasefire led to a dramatic improvement in daily life, and there were no Israeli fatalities during the entire period (only today, following the IDF strikes did a rocket hit the town of Netivot and kill one Israeli). Israel was though concerned about a Hamas arms build up and the entrenching of Hamas rule (which its policies have actually encouraged). For Gaza the calm meant less of an ongoing military threat but supplies of basic necessities into Gaza were kept to a minimum - just above starvation and humanitarian crisis levels - an ongoing provocation to Hamas and collective punishment for Gazans. The ceasefire needed to be solidified, nurtured, taken to the next level. None of this was done - the Quartet was busy with the deeply flawed Annapolis effort.

(5) A disaster was waiting to happen, and no-one was doing much about it. There was of course a date for the end of the ceasefire - December 19th. As that date approached both sides sought to improve their relative positions, to test some new rules of the game. Israel conducted a military operation on November 4th (yes, you had other things on your mind that day), apparently to destroy a tunnel from which an attack on Israel could be launched, Hamas responded with rocket-fire on southern Israeli towns. That initiated a period of intense Israeli-Hamas dialogue, albeit an untraditional one, largely conducted via mutual military jabs, occasional public messaging and back-channels. Again though the main reliance was on Egypt - by now in an intense struggle of its own with Hamas. When Hamas pushed the envelop with over 60 rockets on a single day (December 24th), albeit causing no serious injuries and mostly landing in open fields (probably by design), Israel decided that it was time for an escalation. That happened today - on a massive scale - with an unprecedented death toll.

Israel clearly felt it was time to make a point, there was pressure (often self-generated) to act, and don't forget that Israel is in an election campaign (the vote is on Feb 10th). Hamas too had scores to settle - not only with Israel, but it was also time to pressure Egypt, Fatah, and Arab actors who had done little to address the blockade of Gaza.

So here we are, in a dangerous escalatory cycle that is already sweeping the region, with scores of Palestinian dead, horrific images, a highly-charged blame-game and no obvious exit-strategy. Both Israel and Hamas are looking to emerge with a better deal than what previously prevailed - both are preparing their publics to take harsh hits over the coming days, weeks or even longer, and over 200 families in Gaza and one family in Israel already know what that means, first-hand.

So, what needs to happen next?

Sadly it is too late for preventive action but there is an urgent need for a de-escalation that can lead to a new ceasefire - and that will not be easy.

Useful lessons can be drawn from some very recent, and ugly, Middle East history - though it seems that to its dying day the Bush Administration is refusing to learn (today the White House called on Israel only to avoid civilian casualties as it attacks Hamas - not to cease the strikes, Secretary Rice was more measured).

In the summer of 2006 an escalation between Israel and Hezbollah led to a Lebanon war whose echoes still reverberate around the region. There were well over one thousand civilian casualties (1,035 Lebanese according to AP, 43 Israelis), thousands more injured, and other fatalities including the Israeli government which never recovered its poise, what little American credibility remained in the region (Secretary Rice was literally forced to return to Foggy Bottom as allied Arab capitals were too embarrassed to receive her) and much Lebanese infrastructure. That time it took 33 days for diplomacy to move and for a U.N. Security Council Resolution (1701) to deliver an end to fighting. The U.S. actively blocked diplomacy, Rice famously called this conflict "the birth pangs of a new Middle East" - it was no such thing, and the Middle East itself did not know whether to laugh or cry (the latter prevailed).

Just as in 2006, Israel needs the international community to be its exit strategy - and there is no time to waste. Even what appears as a short-term Israeli success is likely to prove self-defeating over a longer time horizon and that effect will intensify as the fighting continues. Over time, immense pressure will also grow on the PA in Ramallah, on Jordan, Egypt and others to act and their governments will be increasingly uneasy. Demonstrations across the West Bank are calling for a halt to all Israeli-Palestinian talks and for Palestinian unity.

If the U.S. is indifferent or still under the neocon ideological spell then Europe, the rest of the Quartet, Arab States and other internationals must act - with a variety of players using leverage with Israel and Hamas to de-escalate. Escalation poses dangers at a humanitarian and regional-political level. International leaders should head to the region before the new year, even if the warring parties discourage it, and for some of them Gaza must be on the itinerary, the boycott (anyway unwise) is a secondary matter now. High-level visits in themselves can create a de-escalatory dynamic.

Both sides will want to land the final big punch and both will need a dignified narrative for home consumption - any ceasefire deal will have to take this into account (and this during an Israeli election campaign, with violence usually helping the right, and the centrist government desperate for an image make-over after that Lebanon 2006 debacle).

The obvious ingredients will have to be creatively re-configured for this to be possible, including ending rocket fire at Israel and removing the blockade on Gaza. New ingredients may also be necessary and while extending the ceasefire to the West Bank is (unfortunately) probably out of the question, it might be possible this time to establish a monitoring mechanism for the ceasefire. Such a mechanism could serve both sides' interests (Israel gets a more solid guarantee, Hamas gets more recognition). There is a precedent for this - after the April 1996 Israel-Hezbollah conflict a formal Ceasefire Understanding was reached that included the establishment of a Monitoring Group consisting of the U.S., France, Syria, Lebanon, and Israel (with Syria basically acting as guarantor for Hezbollah). That mechanism proved useful and met with constructive IDF cooperation - something similar might be needed now.

In addition efforts need to be revived for achieving Palestinian national reconciliation (which itself could ease the management of the Gaza situation) and for allowing Gaza greater access to the outside world through Egypt via the Rafah border crossing.

But there is a bigger picture - and it is staring at the incoming Obama administration. Today's events should be 'exhibit A' in why the next U.S. Government cannot leave the Israeli-Palestinian conflict to fester or try to 'manage' it - as long as it remains unresolved, it has a nasty habit of forcing itself onto the agenda. That can happen on terms dictated to the U.S. by the region (bad) or the U.S. can seek to set its own terms (far preferable). The new administration needs to embark upon a course of forceful regional diplomacy that breaks fundamentally from past efforts. A consensus of sorts is emerging in the U.S. foreign policy establishment that this conflict needs to be resolved - evidenced in the findings of a recent Brookings/Council of Foreign Relations Report or the powerful statements coming from elder statesmen like Zbigniew Brzezinski and Brent Scowcroft, themselves building on the findings of the Baker-Hamilton Iraq Study Group. It will require tenacity and bold ideas - in framing the solution, bringing in previously excluded actors, creating mechanisms to implement a deal (such as international forces) and utilizing the Saudi-led Arab Peace Initiative - but the alternative is far worse, its what we see today and it guarantees ongoing instability in a region of paramount importance to the United States.
graham4anything
by the way(six for this morning)-

why is the defense minister parading herself on American tv while she started a war?
Shouldn't she be administering the war itself?
WHy is she doing a promo tour?

As Dan Rather asked Richard Nixon, Is she running for something? Does she think she is Paris Hilton though not 1/zillionth as cute.
Why is she on TV?

Though like Richard Nixon when he said he wasn't a crook, she is lying 100 times over. And did she wink?
Arneoker
QUOTE(graham4anything @ Dec 27 2008, 12:52 PM) *
90% of Jews worldwide do NOT agree with the militant rightwing fascists that occupy power in Israel

Time to oust all of them

and let peace rule

Amazing too that the Palestinian people VOTED DEMOCRATICALLY for their leaders, while Israel has a corrupt system that installs their leaders
OVER THE DEAD BODIES OF THE PEOPLE ISRAELIS THEMSELVES WANT (aka the Rabin types, who the militant rightwing assasssinates.

Graham, you make some valid points (if your over the top hyperbolic style and factual distortions distracts from them), but while Israel has several serious faults lack of democracy is not one of them.
Arneoker
QUOTE(david sobien @ Dec 28 2008, 12:21 AM) *
Any country is allowed to defend itself. If rockets were comming from Mexico into the US, the US would use force to prevent it. The same applies here.

But I would hope that our response wouldn't be dropping bombs over Mexico City killing thousands of civilians.
This is a "lo-fi" version of our main content. To view the full version with more information, formatting and images, please click here.
Invision Power Board © 2001-2009 Invision Power Services, Inc.