Home
Archive
Columnists
Video
Blogs
Discuss
About
Search
Donate
Advertise
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Register to Vote: Rock the Vote, powered by Working Assets Wireless
Advertisement
  • AlterNetYour turn

Support AlterNet
Do you value the information you're getting from AlterNet? Please show your support with a tax-deductible donation.


Feedback
Tell us how we're doing.

Palestine No More? Here Comes Hamastan and Fatahland

By Jonathan Cook, CounterPunch. Posted June 29, 2007.


Bush and Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert sound more smug than usual after Fatah's overthrow in Gaza. It appears that a drastic and deadly new strategy to isolate Palestinians and use other Arab countries as enforcers has been unveiled.
Advertisement

Nazareth -- The boycott by Israel and the international community of the Palestinian Authority finally blew up in their faces with Hamas' recent bloody takeover of Gaza. Or so argues Gideon Levy, one of the saner voices still to be found in Israel. "Starving, drying up and blocking aid do not sear the consciousness and do not weaken political movements. On the contrary Reality has refuted the chorus of experts and commentators who preached [on] behalf of the boycott policy. This daft notion that it is possible to topple an elected government by applying pressure on a helpless population suffered a complete failure."

But has Levy got it wrong? The faces of Israeli and American politicians, including Ehud Olmert and George Bush, appear soot-free. On the contrary. Over the past fortnight they have been looking and sounding even more smug than usual.

The problem with Levy's analysis is that it assumes that Israel and the US wanted sanctions to bring about the fall of Hamas, either by giving Fatah the upper hand so that it could deal a knockout blow to the Palestinian government, or by inciting ordinary Palestinians to rise up and demand that their earlier electoral decision be reversed and Fatah reinstalled. In short, Levy, like most observers, assumes that the policy was designed to enforce regime change.

But what if that was not the point of the sanctions? And if so, what goals were Israel and the US pursuing?

The parallels between Iraq and Gaza may be instructive. After all, Iraq is the West's only other recent experiment in imposing sanctions to starve a nation. And we all know where it led: to an even deeper entrenchment of Saddam Hussein's rule.

True, the circumstances in Iraq and Gaza are different: most Iraqis wanted Saddam out but had no way to effect change, while most Gazans wanted Hamas in and made it happen by voting for them in last year's elections. Nevertheless, it may be that the US and Israel drew a different lesson from the sanctions experience in Iraq.

Whether intended or not, sanctions proved a very effective tool for destroying the internal bonds that held Iraqi society together. Destitution and hunger are powerful incentives to turn on one's neighbour as well as one's enemy. A society where resources -- food, medicines, water and electricity -- are in short supply is also a society where everyone looks out for himself. It is a society that, with a little prompting, can easily be made to tear itself apart.

And that is precisely what the Americans began to engineer after their "shock and awe' invasion of 2003. Contrary to previous US interventions abroad, Saddam was not toppled and replaced with another strongman -- one more to the West's liking. Instead of regime change, we were given regime overthrow. Or as Daniel Pipes, one of the neoconservative ideologues of the attack on Iraq, expressed it, the goal was "limited to destroying tyranny, not sponsoring its replacement Fixing Iraq is neither the coalition's responsibility nor its burden."

In place of Saddam, the Americans created a safe haven known as the Green Zone from which its occupation regime could loosely police the country and oversee the theft of Iraq's oil, while also sitting back and watching a sectarian civil war between the Sunni and Shia populations spiral out of control and decimate the Iraqi population.

What did Washington hope to achieve? Pipes offers a clue: "When Sunni terrorists target Shiites and vice-versa, non-Muslims [that is, US occupation forces and their allies] are less likely to be hurt. Civil war in Iraq, in short, would be a humanitarian tragedy but not a strategic one." In other words, enabling a civil war in Iraq was far preferable to allowing Iraqis to unite and mount an effective resistance to the US occupation. After all, Iraqi deaths -- at least 650,000 of them, according to the last realistic count -- are as good as worthless, while US soldiers' lives cost votes back home.

For the neocon cabal behind the Iraq invasion, civil war was seen to have two beneficial outcomes.

First, it eroded the solidarity of ordinary Iraqis, depleting their energies and making them less likely to join or support the resistance to the occupation. The insurgency has remained a terrible irritation to US forces but not the fatal blow it might have been were the Sunni and Shia to fight side by side. As a result, the theft of Iraq's resources has been made easier.


Digg!

See more stories tagged with: fatah, hamas, gaza, palestine, israel

Jonathan Cook is a writer and journalist based in Nazareth, Israel. He is the author of the forthcoming Blood and Religion: The Unmasking of the Jewish and Democratic State published by Pluto Press, and available in the United States from the University of Michigan Press.

Liked this story? Get top stories in your inbox each week from AlterNet! Sign up now »


Advertisement

 

Comments Turn comments off sitewide Give us feedback »
Comments closed.
The comments for this story have been closed. Thank you to everyone who participated.
View:
the next "moderate regime"
Posted by: Jack Schitt on Jun 29, 2007 3:13 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What will be the next "moderate regime" on Israeli borders to fall to Islamists? I think if Israeli strategy in this issue is predicated on the stability of their moderate neighbours, their continued antagonism to militant Islam and indifference to Palestine, they may be in for a rude awakening.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Divide and rule is the essence of Class society and Imperial rule
Posted by: Perfectclue on Jun 29, 2007 4:31 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
All the issues addressed here are used not only against the Palestinian people, Arab world, but are wholesale strategies, and ideological outcomes that are also used by class elites and thugs, throughout the world as Empire. Economic strangulation and subordination are normal and inherent in today's corporate fascsim. Today you do not need gunboat diplomacy to choke of social growth and impose exploitation. however, gunboat diplomacy and imperial criminal policies are still followed up illegal invasions and occupations for those who resist this oppression.

The misuse of economic sanctions against the victims of this imperial class power, by Amerikanism or Zionism, while the boycott of Israel and Amerikan interests are condemned, reflects the double standards, class standards, hypocrisy of class rule and imperial poliices of divide and conquering strategies. Of course this always works through phony leaders, quislings, dictators, oligarchies, plutocracies, class mercenaries who do the bidding of the Empire and its thugs, because after all, that is how class societies reproduces itself through this division between popular rule and democracy, and criminal elite policies.

Half of the middle layers are corrupted, and bought off as quislings for corporate oligarchy and fascism, while the other half is subordinated by this division, class mechanism, which imposes itself on the rest of society through class hierarchies, and class institutions. The Fatah quisling, Abbas, like Saddam, and many other dictators, willing sell outs, just like most of the middle layers, works precisely because that is how class divisions impose their national divisions and economic domination.

Until the world realizes this inherent class strategy, and criminal imperial policies, by Israel and Amerika, as well as the Arabs own class divisions, and now the Palestinian divisions, this imperial rot, class nationalist rot, ethnic rot, will continue to lead us to the same carnage, historical failure, that all imperial strategies, Empires end with, a point of endless conflicts, and cummulative resistance that will bring down both Zionism, Amerikanism, and hopefully the stupid class factionalism between Shiites, Sunnis, and Christians, that hide the real division between the divide and class polcies of class rule in place for several thousands ofyears.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Elliot Abrams and the Palestinian Contras
Posted by: thoughtcriminal on Jun 29, 2007 9:24 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
From Hamas acted on a very real fear of a US-sponsored coup, Guardian UK

Summary: the US and Israel attempted to replace Hamas with Fatah using covert military means. They also cut off the aid to the Palestinian population.

This was a replay of what the Iran-Contra group, in which both Elliot Abrams and Robert Gates played roles, did in Nicaragua in order to bring down the Sandinista government. For more, see The Contras, Cocaine,
and Covert Operations
.

In the modern world, it seems that Congress has provided all the funding Bush&Cheney want, so there's no need to engage in drug sales to raise money. It does make one wonder about all the Afghani heroin flooding into Europe and the US, though.

This administration has a taste for sneaky, very secretive and complicated covert plans that they developed in the 70s and 80s, apparently. From the article:

Reports have been circulating for months of a more sinister side to the boycott. According to them, the US decided last year on a plan to arm and train Mahmoud Abbas's presidential guard in a deliberate effort to confront and defeat Hamas militarily...

Arming insurgents against elected governments has a long US pedigree and it is no accident that Elliott Abrams, the deputy national security adviser and apparent architect of the anti-Hamas subversion, was a key player in Ronald Reagan's supply of weapons to the Contras...

The document is dated March 2, less than a month after Saudi Arabia brokered the Mecca agreement under which Abbas finally agreed with Hamas on a unity government. The deal upset the Israelis and Washington because it left Hamas's prime minister Ismail Haniyeh in charge. The document suggests the US wanted to sabotage it...

While Hamas has successfully blocked the US-Fatah plans for Gaza, Abbas is trying to implement them in the West Bank by forming an emergency government. The policy is doomed since the constitution says such a government can only last 30 days. Parliament has to renew it by a two-thirds majority, and parliament is controlled by Hamas.

It seems that the wise thing for Palestinians to do would be to dissolve their farcical 'governments'. It's like inmates in a prison who get to elect their 'leaders and representatives' while all their activities are dictated by the guards. It really is apartheid.

As far as reforming apartheid in the state of Israel, it should be noted that religions don't need private states (well, perhaps very small ones, like the Vatican). This is a problem for the entire Middle East, however - the whole area is full of indentured servants and second-class citizens who live under apartheid conditions, such as the bidoon of Kuwait.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Palestine no more? It never was.
Posted by: Philip Newton on Jun 30, 2007 9:06 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Sorry. Your racist attempt at equating the Palestinians with Native Americans rings as false as this article.

There was never a sovereign Palestinian Arab state. There never was, and there likely never will be because of the fratricide, elitism, racism and corruption just outlined. If the Jewish population of Palestine had the drive and the organization -- and the motivation -- to establish their state, the Palestinians needed as much. They don't have it. I doubt they ever will. They certainly won't if people (like you and this author) keep handing them excuses to fail.

Thanks for nothing, amigo.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

One problem...
Posted by: Philip Newton on Jun 30, 2007 8:57 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The arabs -- and Palestinians in particular -- need no assistance in dividing thmeselves into family, clan and tribe. Faced with internal and external pressures, that is what they do.

The author writes:

"Iraq is being broken up into small ethnic and religious fiefdoms that will be easier to manage and manipulate."

It has always been thus, under the veneer of a modern nation state. The US stumbled in and exacerbated existing tribal, familial and religious divides. It was bound to happen. It does so every time.

The author writes:

"Is this the model for Gaza now and the West Bank later?"

Duh. It always has been. How does the author think the Palestinians got where they are? Arabs are their own worst oppressors and their own best killers.

Blame others all you want. Until my Arab brethren learn to build a nation free of murder, corruption and inter-clan self-destruction, there will be no need for anyone to oppress them. They do such a good job of it themselves.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» RE: One problem... Posted by: ALANHESTER
» RE: One problem... Posted by: Philip Newton