Leading Israeli Scholar Avi Shlaim:
Israel
Committing "State
Terror" in Gaza
Attack, Preventing Peace
The assault on Gaza
is entering its nineteenth day, with no end in sight. Israel continues its
intense bombardment of the
territory as Israeli troops
edge closer to the heart
of Gaza
City.
Nearly 1,000 Palestinians have
been killed, more than 4,400 injured, many of them women and children.
Thirteen
Israelis have died over the same period, ten of them soldiers. We speak
with Oxford
professor Avi Shlaim. He served in the
Israeli army in the mid-1960s and is widely regarded as one of the
world’s
leading authorities on the Israeli-Arab conflict.
Guest:
Avi
Shlaim, a
professor of international relations at Oxford University
who served in the Israeli army in the mid-1960s. He is the author of
numerous
books, most notably The Iron Wall: Israel and the Arab World.
His latest
book is Lion of Jordan: King Hussein’s Life in War
and Peace. Avi
Shlaim is widely
regarded as
one of the world’s leading authorities on the Arab-Israeli
conflict. - DemocracyNow 1/14/09
AMY GOODMAN: The Israeli assault on Gaza
is
entering its nineteenth day, with no end in sight. Israeli warplanes
are
continuing their bombardment, launching over sixty air strikes
overnight.
Meanwhile, Israeli troops have edged closer to the heart of the densely
populated Gaza
City
and are engaged in street fighting
with militants.
Since Israel's
offensive began on December 27th, nearly 1,000 Palestinians have been
killed.
More than 4,400 have been injured, and an estimated 90,000 have fled
their
homes. Thirteen Israelis have died over the same period, ten of them
soldiers,
including four by so-called “friendly” fire.
As the war continues, humanitarian concerns are mounting. The
chief UN aid
official for Gaza,
John Ging,
has appealed to the international community to protect Gaza's
civilians, calling it a “test of our
humanity”.
Meanwhile, a UN watch group has accused Israel
of showing a “manifest disrespect” for the
protection of children in Gaza. According
to the UN
Committee on the Rights of the Child, more than 40 percent of those
killed in Gaza
are women and
children.
On Tuesday, the head of the International Committee of the Red
Cross visited
Gaza and said what he saw was shocking. ICRC president Jakob
Kellenberger said,
“It is unacceptable to see so many
wounded people. Their lives must be spared and the security of those
who care
for them guaranteed.”
Despite a UN Security Council ceasefire resolution last week,
Israeli
Defense Minister Ehud Barak said the military operation will continue.
Our next guest is widely regarded as one of the world's
leading authorities
on the Arab-Israel conflict. Avi
Shlaim
served in the Israeli army in the mid-1960s. He is now a professor of
international relations at Oxford University.
In an article
in The Guardian newspaper of London,
he says
he has never questioned the legitimacy of the state of Israel
within
its pre-1967 borders. But he says its merciless assault on Gaza
has led him to devastating conclusions.
Professor Avi Shlaim is the
author of a number of books, most notably The Iron Wall:
Israel and the Arab
World. His latest book is Lion of Jordan: King
Hussein's Life in War and
Peace. Avi Shlaim joins
us today from Oxford
University
in Britain.
We welcome you to Democracy Now!
AVI SHLAIM: Thank you. I'm happy to be on
your program in these very
sad times.
AMY GOODMAN: As you look at what's
happening in Gaza from your
vantage point, well, many miles away in Britain, can you talk about the
kind of
trajectory your evaluation has taken, where you started in your
thoughts about
Israel and where you are now?
AVI SHLAIM: As you mentioned, I did
national service in the Israeli
army in the mid-1960s. And in those days, Israel
was a small state surrounded
by enemies, and the nation was united in face of the surrounding Arab
states.
We all felt total commitment to the state of Israel
and to the defense of the state of Israel.
The Israeli army is called
the Israel Defense Forces, and it was true to its name.
But 1967, the war of June 1967, was a major turning point in
the history of Israel
and the
history of the region. In the course of the war, Israel
captured the Golan Heights from Syria,
the West Bank from Jordan
and Sinai from Egypt.
After the war, Israel
started building civilian territories in the occupied territories in
violation
of international law. So Israel
became a colonial power and an imperial power.
And I, for my part, have never questioned the legitimacy of
the Zionist
movement. I saw it as the national liberation movement of the Jewish
people.
Nor did I ever question the legitimacy of the state of Israel
within
its pre-1967 borders. What I reject,
what I reject
totally, absolutely and uncompromisingly, is the Zionist colonial
project
beyond the 1967 borders. So we have to distinguish very clearly between
Israel
proper,
within its pre-1967 borders, and Greater Israel, which began to emerge
in the
aftermath of the June ‘67 war and has completely derailed the
Zionist project.
AMY GOODMAN: And then, specifically talk
about Gaza,
how it has developed and where it is
today, right now under assault by the Israeli military.
AVI SHLAIM: In a long-term historical
perspective, I would begin with
the creation of the state of Israel
in 1948. I wrote a book, which you mentioned in your introduction,
called The
Iron Wall: Israel and the Arab World. It is a history of the
Arab-Israeli
conflict since 1948. It's a very long book, but I can summarize it for
you in
one sentence, that throughout its sixty years, Israel has been
remarkably
reluctant to engage in meaningful negotiations with its Arab opponents
to
resolve the dispute between them and only too ready to resort to
military force
in order to impose its will upon them. And the current vicious Israeli
onslaught on the people of Gaza
is the climax of this longstanding Israeli policy of shunning diplomacy
and
relying on brute military force.
AMY GOODMAN: We're going to break and then
come back to Professor Avi
Shlaim. He is professor
of
international relations at Oxford University,
served in the
Israeli military. His latest book is called Lion of Jordan.
He is one of
the world's leading scholars on the Arab-Israel conflict. Stay with us.
[break]
AMY GOODMAN: Our guest right now, 1/14/09, is Oxford
University Professor Avi
Shlaim. He teaches
international relations at Oxford University.
He's speaking
to us from Oxford
right now, leading authority in the world on the Arab-Israeli conflict.
We've had a number of debates here on Democracy Now!,
Professor Shlaim, over
the past weeks about what's happening in Gaza
and those who support the Israeli military continually say that in
2005, three
years ago, Israel pulled out of Gaza entirely. You have a different
picture of
what happened under Ariel Sharon in August of 2005. Explain how you see
the
withdrawal of Israeli military at that time.
AVI SHLAIM: President Bush described Ariel
Sharon as a man of peace.
I've done a great deal of archival research on the Arab-Israeli
conflict, and I
can honestly tell you that I have never come across a single scintilla
of
evidence to support the view of Ariel Sharon as a man of peace. He was
a man of
war, a champion of violent solutions, a man who rejected totally any
Palestinian right to self-determination. He was a proponent of Greater
Israel,
and it is in this context that I see his decision to withdraw
unilaterally from
Gaza
in August
of 2005.
The withdrawal was officially called the unilateral Israeli
disengagement
from Gaza.
I
would like to underline the word “unilateral.”
Ariel Sharon was the
unilateralist par excellence. The reason he decided
to withdraw from Gaza
was not out of any concern for the welfare of the
people of Gaza or
any sympathy for the
Palestinians or their national aspirations, but because of the pressure
exerted
by Hamas, by the Islamic resistance, to the Israeli occupation of Gaza.
In the end, Israel
couldn't sustain the political,
diplomatic and psychological costs of maintaining its occupation in Gaza.
And let me add in parentheses that Gaza
was a classic example of exploitation, of colonial exploitation in the
postcolonial era. Gaza
is a tiny strip of land with about one-and-a-half million Arabs, most
of
them--half of them refugees. It's the most crowded piece of land on
God's earth.
There were 8,000 Israeli settlers in Gaza,
yet the 8,000 settlers controlled 25 percent of the territory, 40
percent of
the arable land, and the largest share of the desperately scarce water
resources.
Ariel Sharon decided to withdraw from Gaza
unilaterally, not as a contribution, as he claimed, to a two-state
solution.
The withdrawal from Gaza
took place in the context of unilateral Israeli action in what was seen
as
Israeli national interest. There were no negotiations with the
Palestinian
Authority on an overall settlement. The withdrawal from Gaza
was not a prelude to further withdrawals from the other occupied
territories,
but a prelude to further expansion, further consolidation of Israel's control over
the West Bank. In
the year after the withdrawal from Gaza,
12,000 new settlers went to live on the West
Bank.
So I see the withdrawal from Gaza
in the summer of 2005 as part of a unilateral Israeli attempt to redraw
the
borders of Greater Israel and to shun any negotiations and compromise
with the
Palestinian Authority.
AMY GOODMAN: Professor Avi Shlaim,
Israel
says the reason it has attacked Gaza
is because
of the rocket fire, the rockets that Hamas is firing into southern Israel.
AVI SHLAIM: This is Israeli propaganda,
and it is a pack of lies. The
important thing to remember is that there was a ceasefire brokered by Egypt
in July
of last year, and that ceasefire succeeded. So, if Israel wanted to
protect its
citizens--and it had every right to protect its citizens--the way to go
about it
was not by launching this vicious military offensive, but by observing
the
ceasefire.
Now, let me give you some figures, which I think are the most
crucial
figures in understanding this conflict. Before the ceasefire came into
effect
in July of 2008, the monthly number of rockets fired--Kassam
rockets, homemade Kassam
rockets, fired from the Gaza
Strip on Israeli settlements and towns in southern Israel
was 179. In the first four
months of the ceasefire, the number dropped dramatically to three
rockets a
month, almost zero. I would like to repeat these figures for the
benefit of
your listeners. Pre-ceasefire, 179 rockets were fired on Israel;
post-ceasefire, three rockets a month. This is point number one, and
it's
crucial.
And my figures are beyond dispute, because they come from the
website of the
Israeli Foreign Ministry. But after initiating this war, this
particular table,
neat table, which showed the success of the ceasefire, was withdrawn
and
replaced with another table of statistics, which is much more obscure
and
confusing. Israel--the
Foreign Ministry withdrew these figures, because it didn't suit the new
story.
The new story said that Hamas broke the ceasefire. This is a
lie. Hamas
observed the ceasefire as best as it could and enforced it very
effectively.
The ceasefire was a stunning success for the first four months. It was
broken
not by Hamas, but by the IDF. It was broken by the IDF on the 4th of
November,
when it launched a raid into Gaza
and killed six Hamas men.
And there is one other point that I would like to make about
the ceasefire.
Ever since the election of Hamas in January--I'm sorry, ever since
Hamas
captured power in Gaza
in the summer of 2007, Israel
had
imposed a blockade of the Strip. Israel
stopped food, fuel and
medical supplies from reaching the Gaza Strip. One of the terms of the
ceasefire was that Israel
would lift the blockade of Gaza,
yet Israel
failed
to lift the blockade, and that is one issue that is also overlooked or
ignored
by official Israeli spokesmen. So Israel
was doubly guilty of sabotaging the ceasefire, A, by launching a
military
attack, and B, by maintaining its very cruel siege of the people of Gaza.
AMY GOODMAN: Israel
calls Hamas "terrorist." What is your definition of "terror"?
AVI SHLAIM: My definition of "terror" is
the use of violence against
civilians for political purposes. And by this definition, Hamas is a
terrorist
organization. But by the same token, Israel
is practicing state terror,
because it is using violence on a massive scale against Palestinian
civilians
for political purposes. I don't hold a brief for Hamas. Hamas is not a
paragon
of virtue. Its leaders are not angels. They harm civilians
indiscriminately.
Killing civilians is wrong, period. That applies to Hamas, and it
applies
equally to the state of Israel.
But there are two points I would like to make about Hamas, and
that is--the
first point is that it was elected in a fair and free election in
January 2006.
It was an impeccable election, monitored by a number of international
observers, including President Jimmy Carter. So it is not just a
terrorist
organization. It is a democratically elected government of the
Palestinian
people and the representative of the Palestinian people in Gaza,
as well as the West Bank.
And the second point that I would like to make is that since
coming to
power, Gaza
has
moderated its political program. Its charter is extreme. Its charter
denies the
legitimacy of a Jewish state. The charter calls for an Islamic state
over the
whole of historic Palestine.
The charter has not been revived, but since coming to power, the
leadership of
Hamas has been much more pragmatic and stated that it is willing to
negotiate a
long-term ceasefire with the state of Israel
for twenty, thirty, forty,
maybe even fifty years.
Thirdly, Hamas joined with Fatah, the rival group, the
mainstream group, on
the West Bank in a
national unity government
in the summer of 2007. That national unity government lasted only three
months.
Israel,
with American support, helped to sabotage and to bring down that
national unity
government. Israel
refused to deal with a Palestinian government which included Hamas
within it.
And shamefully, both the United
States
and the European Union joined in Israel
in this refusal to recognize a Hamas-dominated government, and Israel
withdrew
tax revenues, and European Union withdrew foreign aid, in a shameful
attempt to
bring down a democratically elected government.
So, I do not defend Hamas, but I think that it hasn't received
a fair
hearing from the international community, and Israel
has done everything to sabotage
it all along.
AMY GOODMAN: Professor Shlaim, you say it's
done everything to sabotage it, except at the beginning, when you say
it
supported Hamas to weaken Fatah, which it now supports.
AVI SHLAIM: Indeed. Israel
has always played the game of divide and rule. This is a very good
tactic in
times of war, to divide your enemies and pick them off one by one. No
one can
complain about that. But divide and rule isn't a good tactic in times
of peace.
If your aim is to achieve peace with the Arabs, then you should want
unity
among the Palestinians and unity in the Arab world. But Israel
continued to play this game of divide and rule.
Hamas emerged in the course of the First Intifada in the late
1980s. It is
the Islamic resistance movement. The mainstream movement, Fatah, was
led by
Yasser Arafat. And Israel
gave tacit encouragement and support to the Islamic resistance in the
hope of
weakening the secular nationalists led by Yasser Arafat. It was a
dangerous
game to play, because the end result of this game was that Hamas
emerged as the
strongest Palestinian political party.
And Israel
helped Hamas
inadvertently in another way, because Fatah signed the Oslo Accord with
Israel
in 1993.
It expected the Oslo Accord to lead to a two-state solution. And yet, Israel,
after
the election of Benjamin Netanyahu in 1996, reneged on the Israeli side
of the
deal. So, the Oslo Accord, the Oslo
peace process wasn't doomed to failure from the start. It failed
because Israel,
under
the leadership of the Likud, reneged on its side of the deal. So that
left the
Palestinians with nothing but misery and poverty and frustration and
ever-growing Israeli settlements on the land. And it was this context
that led
to the success of Hamas at the last elections. So Israel
has a lot to explain in the
rise to power of the Hamas movement.
AMY GOODMAN: Professor Avi Shlaim,
we only have a minute, but I want to ask you where
you see the solution at this point. Barack Obama will be president on
Tuesday
in just a few days. Hillary Clinton will be Secretary of State.
AVI SHLAIM: The solution--this is a
political conflict, and there is
no military conflict to--there is no military solution to this
conflict. The
only solution lies in negotiations between Israel
and Hamas about all the
issues involved. President-elect Obama is a very impressive man and a
very
intelligent man and a very fair-minded man. He hasn't demonstrated any
courage
in the course of this crisis. He hasn't taken any position. He hasn't
called
for an immediate ceasefire. So the first step is an immediate
ceasefire, and
the next step would be negotiations between all the sides about
restoring the
ceasefire and then moving on to stage two, which is a political
settlement to
this tragic hundred-year-old conflict.
AMY GOODMAN: And Hillary Clinton as
Secretary of State, who said in
her confirmation hearing yesterday she wouldn't negotiate with Hamas?
AVI SHLAIM: Yes, but there are other signs
from the Obama campaign
that they would be willing to consider low-level, indirect contacts
with Hamas.
And one has to be grateful for small mercies, so small, minor,
low-level
contacts with Hamas could lead to a proper dialog in due course. So I
remain
optimistic that sanity and rationality would take over in American
foreign
policy after the dreadful last eight years.
AMY GOODMAN: Professor Avi Shlaim,
thank you very much for being with us. Professor Avi Shlaim,
professor of
international relations at Oxford University, served in the Israeli
military--among his books, Lion of Jordan: King Hussein's
Life in War and
Peace--known as one of the leading authorities in the world
on the
Israel-Palestine conflict and Arab-Israel conflict. Among his other
books, The
Iron Wall.