Every Friday with out fail Palestinians youths march on the border
between the West Bank and Israel in order to throw stones at the Israeli
police in protest against the occupation. Every Friday the police
respond by firing tear gas and stun grenades at the Palestinian youths.
However over the last month or so tensions have increased meaning that
this rioting has become an almost daily occurrence and the level of
violence has increased with the Palestinian youths now throwing
fireworks and petrol bombs and the Israeli police responding with rubber
bullets and sometimes live ammunition. A particular flashpoint has been
the border crossing between Palestinian East Jerusalem and Israeli West
Jerusalem and the entrance to the Al-Asqa Mosque/Temple Mount.
This has created a situation that is very, very similar to the start of
the second or Al-Asqa Intifada which began in 2000 when hard-line
Israeli politician Ariel Sharon visited Al-Asqa/Temple Mount and
declared it his right as a Jew to pray there. This triggered a mass
uprising (literally Intifada) by the Palestinians that lasted for nearly
five years and saw almost constant rioting across the West Bank during
which both sides not only traded petrol bombs and rubber bullets but
also routinely exchanged sniper fire. It also saw an intense suicide
bombing campaign by Hamas and other Palestinian groups that saw 141
attacks which killed some 600 Israelis. It was this bombing campaign
more then anything else that led to the building of the security wall
between Israel and the West Bank.
The main driving factor behind this current escalation in tension has
been this summer's war between Israel and Hamas. Although the majority
of that war was fought in Gaza it began in the West Bank when Hamas
kidnapped and then killed three Israeli teenagers. Israel's response to
this crime was to send 40 battalions (40,000 troops) of the Israeli Army
into the West Bank to conduct house to house searches and arrest more
then 500 suspects in an operation that was known as "My Brother's
Keeper." A significant part of the reason why I find the largely
unwarranted and often hysterical criticism of Israel's operation in Gaza
(Protective Edge) so frustrating is that it seems to have more or less
erased the West Bank operation from the public memory.
While I appreciate the urge to kick down every door and beat every bush
in response to what was a particularly heinous and provocative crime
during My Brother's Keeper some 23,000 Palestinians were prevented from
travelling to work in Israel, 8 people died, 120 were wounded and more
then 700 homes were destroyed. Added to the fact that it failed to
either arrest any of the main suspects in the crime or recover the
bodies of the victims in a timely manner My Brother's Keeper seemed less
like the police trying to solve a crime and more like an exercise in
collective punishment.
During times of war collective punishment is considered a war crime
under Article 33 of the 4th Geneva Convention. It also goes against a
long standing legal principle in civilised societies that people should
not be punished for crimes that they themselves have not committed.
Although I'll need to check I'm pretty sure that the origin of this
principle is the Jewish Torah specifically the Deuteronomic Code. While
I now think that Hamas had been planning to fire rockets into Israel
all along if they hadn't the aggressive and repressive nature of My
Brother's Keeper would have made it near impossible for even the most
moderate Palestinian leader to avoid being seen to strike a blow against
Israel in retaliation.
Aside from the obvious provocation of the military operation in Gaza and
the hyperbolic and often irrational international response to it the
war in Gaza also added to the specific tensions in East Jerusalem which
was already smarting from My Brother's Keeper. As often happens during
times of increased tensions such as war during Operation Protective Edge
Israel restricted Palestinian access to the Al-Asqa Mosque to women and
men over the age of 50 along with a ban of more then 150 people of any
religion gathering in public anywhere in Israel while rocket attacks are
taking place.
Located on what is believed to be Mount Zion where all life on earth
began, the first Jewish Temple was built and the Ark of the Covenant was
stored the Temple Mount is considered the holiest site in the Jewish
religion. As Christianity and Islam are simply extensions of Judaism the
site is also hugely important to them both and in 705AD Al-Asqa Mosque
was built there by Caliph Umar, a companion of the Prophet Mohamed to mark the Prophet's ascension into Heaven. As
such Al-Asqa Mosque is considered the third holiest site in Islam and
the only Islamic holy site that most Palestinian Muslims will ever get
to visit.
Although I think the restrictions on those going to pray at Al-Asqa were
lifted for a day or so the timing of the Gaza war meant that there was
very little break between the war ending and the start of the Jewish New
Year. During this time Israel is locked down entirely meaning that
people in Palestine cannot travel into Israel for any reason due to a
well proven risk of terrorist attack. This overlap meant that
effectively Palestinian men were barred from Al-Asqa from the start of
July 2014 right up until the end of September 2014 - a period of three
months.
During this time the Gaza war also substantially weakened Israel's Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and with it the peace process. Throughout
his current term Netanyahu has focused on "maintaining the quiet" which
essentially meant avoiding any major confrontation with the Palestinians
in the hope that most Israelis would sort of forget about the security
situation and concentrate on getting on with their lives. With Israelis
going on to have fulfilling lives they have seemed less interested in
religious extremism including the Zionist desire to continue expanding
Israel into Palestine making a two state solution seem more possible
then at any point before.
The Gaza war brought all that crashing down because along with the
situation in neighbouring Syria it became impossible for Israelis to
ignore security issues and the Palestinian question. Also the fact that
Israel's objective in Gaza was to degrade Hamas' ability to launch
attacks rather then to completely destroy the organisation, re-occupy
Gaza or wipe out the Palestinians Netanyahu was denied a big flag waving
victory that he could show to voters.
Having been weakened by a war that exposed his lefty peacenik tendencies
along with harsh and unfounded criticism from US President Obama in
particular Netanyahu has been forced to consolidate his position with
the very extreme right-wing members of his coalition in order to fend
off a potential challenge for Labor and Tzipi Livni who were key
architects of 2008/9's Operation Cast Lead.
A key demand of the Israeli far right has always been Jewish settlements
on Palestinian territory. Shortly after the end of the war Netanyahu
clearly signalled this extra pressure on him by authorising the 1000
acre Gvaot settlement which is one of the largest such moves in Israeli
history. Although I think there are quite stages to go before that
settlement is built there has been a clear renewal of the settler
movement with a 500 unit settlement at Ramat Shlomo in East Jerusalem
being announced just on Monday (3/11/14).
Another key demand of Israel's extreme religious right is the right to
be allowed to pray on the Temple Mount in defiance of Jordan's Waqf
Ministry which has administered the site since the Crusades in the 11th
Century. At face value this actually sounds quite reasonable and I for
one find it hard to argue that Jews shouldn't be allowed to pray at the
most holy site of their religion. However many Ultra-Orthodox Jews want
to go much further then that and not only pray on the Temple Mount but
also prevent all Muslims from praying and even go so far as to destroy
Al-Asqa Mosque. The destruction of Al-Asqa Mosque is something that both
Jewish and Muslim extremists consider as a key sign of impending
Judgement Day.
With the Ultra-Orthodox seemingly in the ascendancy in Israeli politics
and the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) claiming to be
fighting the battle that is one of the other signs of the impending
apocalypse just across the border in Syria the fact that Palestinian men
have been prevented from praying at Al-Asqa for so long has led many to
believe - rightly or wrongly - that Israel is going to seize Temple
Mount and destroy the Mosque.
What I cannot explain is the decision this morning by Palestinian youths
who had been granted access to Al-Asqa to start attacking Israeli
police with fireworks. That of course forced Israel to close Al-Asqa
again because people were simply being put in danger. As for the
run-over terror attack at a bus stop which killed a Muslim (Druze)
Israeli police officer later in the day I can only see that
strengthening calls for more apartheid between Jews and Muslims on
Israeli public transport.
So in summary this is one of those situations where I can talk to you
for hours about what the problem is and what has caused it. However I
can't for the life of me offer any solutions to it. Hopefully though
Obama will have learnt his lesson and in the future will think very long
and hard before referring to any Israeli or Palestinian leader as a
"Chickensh*t."
(Originally Posted) 20:30 on 5/11/14 (UK date).
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