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D**Y
A Precision-Guided Missile
During the massive demonstrations in London against Operation Protective Edge in the summer of 2014, the question was often asked by Israelâs apologists: why was Israel singled out? Why didnât people come out in such numbers to protest against the actions of the Syrian government or Islamic State that have killed far more people? For Israelâs apologists, the answer was simple: anti-Semitism.But the real answer must surely lie in the reaction by Western governments to Operation Protective Edge. Israel was indeed singled out, as the one state in the world that could massacre defenceless civilians â as Norman Finkelstein conclusively proves in this book-- and yet be described by Western governments as acting in âself-defenceâ. During the onslaught, then-President Obama (as Finkelstein writes) âreaffirmed Israelâs âright to defend itselfâ day in, day outâ. In July 2014, the European Union called on Hamas to ârenounce violenceâ and recognised âIsraelâs legitimate right to defend itself against any attacksâ. It was left to civil society to express its outrage.Similarly, as Finkelstein points out, Western governments only evinced some concern about Israelâs strangulating and illegal blockade over Gaza after the murder of activists on the Mavi Marmara (the civilian aid ship to Gaza)â a concern that led to some easing of the siege (even though in practice this relaxation amounted to very little).Gazaâs only potentially effective answer to high-tech Israeli military attacks (in contrast to Hamasâs ineffective token resistance of improvised, home-made rockets) is the resilience of its people, the activism of international civil society and the reports put out by human rights organisations. These reports, Finkelstein writes in his preface, âeven if mostly underutilisedâŠare the most potent weapon in the arsenal of those who hope against hope to mobilize public opinion so as to salvage a modicum of justiceâ.Finkelstein concentrates on the two most devastating recent onslaughts on Gaza: Operation Cast Lead in 2008-9 and Operation Protective Edge in 2014, together with the attack on the Mavi Marmara that occurred between these two massacres. He demonstrates that Israelâs alleged aims â to stop Hamas rockets and (in Protective Edge) to destroy Hamas tunnels â were only pretexts; Israelâs real goals were a) to restore its âdeterrence capacityâ, after its humiliation in Lebanon in 2006 and (before Operation Protective Edge) the 2010 Mavi Mamara debacle and what was widely perceived as the failed 2012 Operation Pillar of Defence; and b) to destroy the âpeace offensivesâ of Hamas that threatened to force Israel to the negotiating table to give up land for peace. Israelâs twisted rationale was exposed by Finkelstein in his previous book Method and Madness.Parts of that book (and of Finkelsteinâs previous book about Gaza, âThis Time We Went Too Farâ) â updated, expanded and (in the case of the chapter about Operation Protective Edge) almost completely rewritten --are included in Gaza as a necessary historical and political background. But, as Finkelstein writes in the preface, âthe primary subject-matterâ of Gaza is the myriad but largely unread human rights reports. His objective, he writes, is to refute the âBig Lieâ -ie the âofficial consensusâ that Israel acts in âself-defenceâ -- by âexposing each of the little liesâ.âIn the aftermath of Operation Cast Leadâ Finkelstein writes, âas many as three hundred human rights reports were issuedâ. These overwhelmingly gave the lie to Israeli hasbara (propaganda). For instance, in a chapter examining the often unthinkingly-accepted Israeli claim that Hamas used civilians as âhuman shieldsâ, Finkelstein quotes Amnesty Internationalâs categorical exoneration of Hamas and other Palestinian fighters on this charge:âIn the cases investigated by Amnesty International of civilians killed in Israeli attacks, the deaths could not be explained as resulting from the presence of fighters shielding among civilians, as the Israeli Army generally contends. In all of the cases investigated by Amnesty International of families killed when their homes were bombed from the air by Israeli forces, for example, none of the houses struck was being used by armed groups for military activities.âAmnesty did, however, find ample evidence of the use of human shields by Israeli troops.But the highest point reached by the international human rights community in relation to Operation Cast Lead was the Goldstone Report, the findings of the Fact-Finding Mission appointed by the UN Human Rights Council. This Report presented the stark, unvarnished truth in its conclusion that Operation Cast Lead was âdesigned to punish, humiliate and terrorize a civilian populationâ.As Finkelstein stresses, Judge Richard Goldstone is a Zionist Jew who was forced to choose between tribal loyalty to Israel on the one hand and his universalist liberal conscience and international law on the other; his choice (which was not really a choice, because to have supported Israeli lies would have been to destroy his reputation) represented a sea-change among liberal Diaspora Jews. The Goldstone Report also, Finkelstein points out, put the findings of human rights organisations, including Israeli organisations such as BâTselem, centre-stage; their reports became âchargedâŠ. with political consequencesâ.Then came the bombshell of Goldstoneâs recantation, which Finkelstein dissects in a devastating chapter that forms the turning-point of this book. Precisely because Goldstone is a Zionist Jew, the Israeli hasbara machine attacked him with particularly venomous force â though Finkelstein speculates that Goldstoneâs capitulation could have been the result of blackmail. Finkelstein cites his own prophetic words written in an earlier version of this chapter, published in 2011: the recantation âmost unforgivably.âŠincreased the risk of another merciless IDF assaultâ. Finkelstein also, however, points out where he got it wrong in 2011; in his book ââThis Time We Went Too Farââ, he considered Lebanon the most likely next target. However âin the end, defenceless Gaza remained Israelâs preferred punching-bagâ.Even before Goldstoneâs recantation on April 1 2011, there had been backpedalling among the human rights community (including Goldstone himself) in relation to Cast Lead and the Goldstone Report. The first casualties of this reversal were the murdered activists on the Mavi Marmara in May 2010. Israel set up its own inquiry, the Turkel Commission, which completely exonerated the Israeli commandos. Finkelstein tears its Report to pieces, concluding by pointing toâan odd paradox lodged in its conclusions: the shaheeds plotted and armed themselves to kill Israelis but didnât even manage to kill those in their custody, whereas the Israelis took every precaution and exercised every restraint not to kill anyone, but ended up killing nine peopleâ.The then Secretary-General of the UN, Ban Ki-Moon, taking his cue from the US, set up a UN Panel Report, which Finkelstein eviscerates with even greater force, demonstrating, in a complex logical unravelling of its hidden premises, that the UN Panel's dilemma between placating both the Israeli government and international opinion causes the Reportâs authors to tie themselves up in knots, whereas the Israeli Turkel Report is more honest, because its writers don't have any concerns in relation to international opinion. But, despite Goldstoneâs recantation and the UN Panel Report, a UN Human Rights Council Fact-Finding Mission produced an unbiased report, upon which Finkelstein bases many of his arguments in this chapter.Yet, as Finkelstein points out, the pressure of Israeli hasbara and its Diaspora supporters â a pressure particularly virulent precisely because the Israeli government knows it has lost the battle for international public opinion â has continued to take its toll on the human rights community.Operation Protective Edge was the most terrible result of Goldstoneâs recantation and the backpedalling of the human rights community. In Cast Lead, up to 1,200 Gazan civilians were killed, including 350 children, and 6,000 homes were destroyed. In Protective Edge, 1,600 Gazan civilians were killed, including 550 children; 18,000 homes were destroyed. Yet there was a stark difference between the response of the international human rights groups to Cast Lead and their reaction to Protective Edge. Finkelstein points out that after Protective Edge there was âa muted response from human rights organizationsâ. Human Rights Watch, which had supported Amnesty after Cast Lead, was almost silent.An exception was Amnesty, which produced five reports. Finkelstein devotes the first of his three final chapters to a complex, detailed, case-by -case analysis of Amnestyâs reports that brings out the full horror of the human suffering behind the statistics. Finkelstein demonstrates that Amnestyâs findings are at odds with its legal analysis, which whitewashes Israelâs actions in order to avoid making the charge that Israel had a deliberate policy of targeting civilians and civilian infrastructure.To take just one example: the case of four Gazan children killed while playing hide-and-seek on a beach. Finkelstein writes: âAmnesty noted that an Israeli investigation absolving the military of responsibility for the killings âdid not explain why the army had not identifiedâ the children âas suchââ. As Finkelstein points out, this begs the question: had the army indeed failed to identify the children âas suchâ? Amnesty, he writes, âcouldnât even conceive, or wouldnât let itself conceive, that the IDF HAD identified the four children âas suchâ â and then proceeded to murder themâ. (Emphasis in original)Finkelstein does not accuse Israel of a policy of systematic murder of Gazan civilians âie genocide. His charge is the same as that set out in the Goldstone Report. The âstrategic goalâ of Protective Edge, as Finkelstein writes in the penultimate chapter, was the same as that of Cast Lead but on a larger scale: âto punish, humiliate and terrorize Gazaâs civilian population, part and parcel of which was the infliction of massive civilian casualtiesâ.The book reaches its climax in the penultimate chapter, which analyses the report on Protective Edge that was put out by the UN Human Rights Council, which had produced the Goldstone Report and a report on the Mavi Marmara that was based on the facts. In the bookâs most searing indictment, Finkelstein makes it clear in case-by-case detail that after Operation Protective Edge the UN Human Rights Council "succumbed to the Israeli Juggernaut". As in the Amnesty report, the UNHRCâs legal analysis contradicts its findings, in order to avoid accusing Israel of the deliberate targeting of civilians. In the case of the four children murdered on the beach, the UNHRC Report âfound strong indications that the IDF failed in its obligations to take all feasible measures to avoid or at least minimise incidental harm to civiliansâ. Finkelstein sums up the UNHRC's betrayal of Gaza:âThe Report itself copiously documented that Israel fired tens of thousands of high-explosive artillery shells into, and dropped hundreds of one-ton bombs over, densely populated civilian neighborhoods, targeted hospitals, ambulances, rescue teams, civilian vehicles and âgroups of citizensâ and pursued a shoot-to-kill anything that moves policy in pacified areas that still contained civilians. But nonetheless it was the finding of this cynical, craven document that of the 1,600 Gazan civilians killed by Israel during the 51-day terror onslaught, only two were killed deliberately.âThe bookâs Conclusion is realistically pessimistic about Gazaâs chances: on the brink of collapse, betrayed by the human rights organisations, its devastation dwarfed by other human rights catastrophes, particularly in Syria, with the international public becoming inured to the brutality of the Israeli army. Yet the Conclusion also puts forward the possibility of action to effect change. As well as a legal indictment, Gaza is a monument to the massacred people of Gaza that ensures that their agony will never be forgotten. But it is also an urgent wake-up call for the prevention of a still greater onslaught upon Gaza â a prevention that can only be achieved by ending Israelâs Occupation. Israel, Finkelstein writes in his penultimate chapter, has reached a state of moral collapse and âwill not reform itself because it cannot reform itselfâ. So the Occupation can only be ended from without.An Appendix that answers, in a complex, difficult but clear legal discussion, the question âIs the Occupation Legal?â also puts forward â in tandem with the Conclusion -- a concrete and achievable plan. The US will always exercise its Security Council veto with regard to Israel. But a UN General Assembly resolution and ICJ advisory opinion that would unequivocally declare the Occupation over could mobilise Palestinians into mass non-violent action that would be supported by international public opinion, galvanised and led by pro-Palestinian activists.To conclude: this is not an easy book to read. Finkelstein writes in his Preface: âThe readerâs forbearance must in advance be begged, as perusing this book will require infinite patienceâ. The reader who embarks on this demanding, often harrowing voyage is required to work his or her passage. Nonetheless, this is definitely a book for the general reader, who will bring back great rewards. No other scholar could make these reams of human rights reports so accessible to the general public or render complex logical and legal arguments so clear. Indeed, the bookâs exposĂ© of contradictions and absurdities would be entertaining if the subject-matter were not so appalling.The sub-title of Gaza points to its two most striking qualities. As the word âinquestâ indicates, the book is a meticulously detailed, logically-argued legal inquiry into the facts in order to come as close as possible to the truth. But the highly emotive word âmartyrdomâ points to Gazaâs other aspect: an impassioned anger at injustice and lies â a searing indignation reminiscent of the Hebrew Prophets. The unusual synthesis of these two qualities has always characterised Finkelsteinâs work; but in Gaza each aspect reaches a higher level than ever before, because Palestinian martyrdom has never before reached such a peak of desperation nor has Israel ever before sunk into such an abyss of barbarism. Never before has Finkelstein deployed logical analysis and international law to such devastating effect; never before has his writing reached such heights of impassioned outrage. The combination means that the book is itself a precision-guided missileâ brilliant, white-hot and accurately annihilating its intended targets.
S**M
Unique, Important, Timely, Brilliant.
This is the only authoritative and scholarly history of Gaza. The Israel lobby have elected to play the man, not the ball in their dealings with the author Norman Finkelstein; who has simply been demonised. The vindictiveness of the treatment of Finkelstein is very easy to understand: he tells the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth in this brilliant book. It is a truth that a huge, coordinated public relations apparatus works relentlessly to discredit. The mainstream media worldwide are complicit in a massive cover-up. It sounds so unlikely, so unhinged, yet perfectly logical: the vested interests of the world's richest people are invested in Israel. The truth doesn't stand a chance and there is a sense of despair in the book. There is no realistic hope that anything approaching justice will ever be done in Gaza. Be among the tiny minority of people who know what is going on, before the Israel lobby rewrite history.
J**N
Outstanding scholarship - a damning indictment of Israel
This book is a highly engaging and insightful read into the atrocious treatment Gaza and the Palestinians endure daily by the racist Israeli occupation. Grounded in factual source material, it is a damming indictment of how Israel, created as a state with the help of Holocaust survivors, attempts to do unto others that which was done unto them.The book shreds the absolutely rampant and completely pathetic Israeli justifications for imposing genocidal practices on Gaza, exposing Israeli occupation as nothing more than brutal colonialism, disgusting racism, and racial superiority.What has been done to Gaza is a disgraceful stain upon the worldâs consciousness, and defines the state that Israel has become, which Finkelstein superbly illustrates throughout.It also shatters Israeli attempts at victimhood. Imagine imposing a crushing blockade on Gaza since 2006, denying the population food, water and medical supplies, destroying their airport, closing borders, conducting targeted assassinations, killing tens of thousands of women and children, and then having the gall to cry about being victims of âArab aggressionâ!Anyone who wishes to understand the Palestinian plight must read this book, including those who are committed to concepts of international law and human rights who may not have a sympathy to either side.
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