The ‘Genocide Moment’
Gaza’s utter devastation and masses of civilians
facing death from bombardment and deliberate starvation already presents the
world with a spectacle of mass murder of unspeakable proportions
by Gareth
Porter Posted on October 31, 2023
Reprinted from Consortium News with the author’s permission.
https://original.antiwar.com/porter/2023/10/30/the-genocide-moment/
Israel’s systematic and wanton destruction of Gaza has raised long-standing issues of its political and legal culpability over the treatment of Palestinians to a new level of seriousness.
It obviously poses familiar issues of Israeli war
crimes, and Amnesty International had already clearly designated it as such after just the first week. The human rights
organization also asked the prosecutor of the International Criminal Court to
“urgently expedite” its investigation of the aims of all parties.
But this Israeli campaign now poses the even graver
issue of genocide of Palestinians as a nation. The utter devastation of Gaza
and the vast numbers of civilians facing death from bombardment and from
deliberately engineered starvation and sickness already presents the world with
a spectacle of mass murder of unspeakable proportions.
The Israelis should face accountability for its
crimes.
A panel of nine distinguished independent experts on
human rights who investigated the Gaza emergency for the United Nations’ Human
Rights Council has just warned that the Israeli campaign of destruction of Gaza
poses “a risk of genocide against the Palestinian people.”
And there is a long history of genocidal thinking and
action behind this “genocidal moment”. It should be recalled that
during the previous Gaza crisis in 2014, an equally extremist Israeli
government openly threatened genocide against the Palestinians.
Israeli Justice Minister
Ayelet Shaked declared on Facebook that “the entire Palestinian people
is the enemy” and said:
“All of them are enemy fighters and all of them are
bleeding from the head. Now it also includes the mothers of the martyrs, who
send them to hell with flowers and kisses. They should follow in the footsteps
of their sons, there is nothing fair about that. They have to go, and so does
the physical house where they raised the snake. Otherwise, more small snakes
will grow there.”
That same year, the Likud deputy speaker of the
Israeli Knesset, Moshe Feiglin said:
“Gaza is part of our Land and we will remain there
forever. Subsequent to the elimination of terror from Gaza, it will become part
of sovereign Israel and will be populated by Jews. This will also serve to ease
the housing crisis in Israel.”
The present Israeli government — whose extremist
right-wing politics resemble those of the 2014 government — has made no effort
to hide its political, genocidal contempt for the 2.3 million Palestinians
living in Gaza.
Nor has it hidden the proximate objective of the
present campaign, which is to eliminate Palestinians entirely from Gaza.
Al Aqsa Flood
The official reason for the murderous new Israeli
campaign against Gaza Palestinians was Hamas’s “Al Aqsa Flood” operation of
Oct. 7, in which Palestinian commandos invaded kibbutzim near
Gaza for the first time, taking the Israeli security system completely by
surprise and inflicting a humiliating defeat on the government in the eyes of
its own citizens.
Hamas said it was retaliating for hundreds of Israeli
settlers who three days earlier had stormed the al-Aqsa mosque
in Jerusalem/al-Quds, the third holiest site in Islam.
Ultranationalist Jews want to rebuild the Roman-era Jewish temple, destroyed around 70
AD, on the mosque’s site.
The Hamas operation clearly resulted in the deliberate
killing of innocent civilians by Hamas. But surviving residents say it was
the police — not the Hamas raiders — who destroyed many houses to
ensure that everyone inside, both Hamas gunmen and hostages, would be killed,
according to a standard Israeli procedure.
So the Israeli claim that Hamas killed more
than 1,400 civilians in
the operation must now be regarded with skepticism as part of the preparation
for the massive murder to be inflicted on innocent Palestinian civilians in the
weeks that followed.
The Israeli initial strategy for accomplishing its
objective in Gaza appeared to be to carry out such heavy bombing on civilian
targets throughout Gaza that the Palestinian population would be forced to
leave Gaza for Egypt through the Rafah exit.
But that plan quickly ran into a serious obstacle that
the Israelis apparently had not anticipated: the Egyptians have adamantly
refused to open the exit for a Palestinian exodus.
The primary reason for this Egyptian resistance to the
Israeli plan is that appearing to collaborate with an Israeli policy of pushing
the entire Palestinian population out of Gaza would be extremely unpopular with
the Egyptian public, which passionately supports the Palestinian cause.
Egyptian leader Abdel Fattah el-Sisi was
extremely harsh in his denunciation of the Israeli Gaza strategy in his joint
press appearance with U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken on Oct. 15, declaring that the Israeli air war “went beyond the right
to self-defence, turning into collective punishment for 2.3 million people in
Gaza.”
Meanwhile, el-Sisi was insisting that the Israelis allow the trucks containing
international assistance for displaced Palestinian families to enter the war
zone, while Israel continued to delayed approval for any humanitarian
assistance day after day and to allow only a trickle to enter Gaza.
At the same time, the Israeli government took the
position that Palestinian civilians have no legal right to protection
whatsoever, on the ground that Hamas is a terrorist organization. That
was the import of remarks by former Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett in
an interview
with Britain’s Sky News Oct.
12.
When asked by a journalist what Israel planned to do
about the Palestinian civilians in Gaza hospitals after it had cut off all fuel
supplies on which the hospitals depended for power, Bennet shouted angrily,
“Are you seriously asking me about Palestinian civilians? What is
wrong with you? Have you not seen what’s happened? We’re
fighting Nazis.”
No Legal Limits
By reducing the issue to Israel vs. “Nazis”, the
Israeli government has sought to reject its legal and moral responsibility for
humane treatment of civilians, or to abide by international law regarding its
conduct of a war.
Seizing on the Hamas raid on the kibbutzim,
the Israelis hoped to convince their key foreign allies — the United
States and the major European states — that the Palestinian civilian population
has forfeited all right to protection from Israeli bombing.
Thus it has made no commitment whatever to any such
legal or ethical limits on its war in Gaza, which should have been recognized
immediately as a threat to the entire civilian population there.
The Israeli government has not uttered the phrase
“collective punishment” in this phase of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Nevertheless
Israel has carried out systematic punitive home
demolitions as a
means of punishing entire communities because of individuals who were involved
in resistance activities.
That has long been the central Israeli method for
dealing with Palestinian resistance activities, as Human Rights Watch concluded last February.
Israeli leaders have presented their current war of
destruction as a further application of the same principle, aimed at punishing
the Palestinian population in Gaza for the military operation by Hamas on Oct.
7.
Blaming that operation on the entire Palestinian
population on Oct. 12, the president of Israel, Isaac Herzog, declared,
“It is an entire nation out there that is responsible.
It is not true this rhetoric about civilians not being aware, not involved. …
They could have fought against that evil regime which took over Gaza in a coup
d’etat.”
When a reporter asked Herzog if he was arguing that
the failure of the civilian population to overthrow the Hamas government made
them “legitimate targets”, he answered, “No, I didn’t say that.” But then he
clearly contradicted the denial by arguing, “When you have a missile in your
goddam kitchen and you want to shoot it at me, am I allowed to defend myself?”
There has never been any evidence, of course, that
Hamas missiles have been hidden in civilian dwellings, nor would it make any
military sense for Hamas to do so under the present circumstances.
The constant Israeli invocation of “the right to
defend ourselves” is obviously paired silently with the unspoken belief in the
right to inflict suffering and even genocide on the Palestinians. Israel has
also been dropping leaflets in the northern Gaza Strip warning the population.
“Whoever chooses not to leave north Gaza to the south
of Wadi Gaza might be identified as an accomplice in a terrorist organization” clearly
implies that they are indeed being treated as legitimate targets for bombing as
punishment for the actions of Hamas.
No less than the former attorney general of Israel
has declared unequivocally that in order to destroy Hamas,
“you have to destroy Gaza, because almost every building there, is a stronghold
of Hamas.”
Targeting hospitals in Gaza poses additional political
risks of provoking media and even potentially U.S. government censure, so
Israel has turned to an obvious disinformation operation to smooth the way.
When a missile struck the parking lot of the al-Ahli
Arab Baptist Hospital, causing casualties among some of the more than 3,000
people who had sought refuge in that area, the IDF quickly blamed the explosion
on a Hamas rocket that it claimed had misfired.
The IDF cited a video supposedly showing the misfired
rocket exploding at the Baptist hospital, as well as what it called an
intercepted conversation between a “former Hamas operative” and a Gaza resident
that acknowledging that a misfired Hamas rocket had landed on the hospital
grounds.
Counting on the US
The U.S. National Security Council announced its official position that Israel was innocent of the
rocket attack, and the intelligence community obliged by expressing “high confidence” that it was an errant Palestinian rocket that
had caused the blast.
But then the Israeli case began to fall apart.
BBC reported they could find no cemetery anywhere near the
location from which the IDF claimed the errant rocket had been fired.
And The New York Times reported
that its own more thorough study of the relevant videos did not support the U.S.-Israeli
case. Instead
it showed that the Palestinian rocket that misfired was “most likely not what
caused the explosion at the hospital,” because it had “actually detonated in
the sky roughly two miles away.”
Nevertheless, Israel could count on the backing of the
Biden administration, which has provided political-diplomatic cover for Israel
to carry out its scorched earth policy in Gaza since before the visit of
President Joe Biden in mid-October.
Biden and Blinken were reduced to the role of virtual
appendages to the Israel government mouthing the Israeli propaganda slogan that
Israel has “the right to defend itself”, while adding a reference to the “laws
of war” to which the visitors from Washington should have known perfectly well
the Israelis were not paying the least attention.
That Biden administration’s craven support for the
Israeli destruction of Gaza makes the U.S. complicit not only in Israeli crimes
in Gaza but in the crime of genocide.
Although the genocide issue has not surfaced yet in
the international politics of the Palestine issue, there is now good reason to
expect that it will be raised both by Arab governments and by human rights
organizations in the coming months.
This is certainly the historical moment to press the
case against Israel genocide as called for by the Genocide Convention itself.
The legal requirement for such an accusation is not proof of the mass murder of
millions as was carried out by Hitler.
It is sufficient to prove that a state has the “intent to destroy, in
whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group…” and that it
is
“[d]eliberately inflicting on the group conditions of
life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part.”
The war imposed on the Gaza population by Israel
obviously qualifies under those two crucial provisions of the convention.
The Genocide Convention also provides for finding that
a state is guilty of the crime of “complicity” in genocide, which
accurately describes the behavior of the U.S. government under the Biden
administration.
Again it is not necessary to show that the complicity
was motivated by the desire for the genocide in question but only that genocide
could be a foreseeable result of the actions in question.
The legal question of genocide will ultimately be
decided by the International Criminal Court or a national court with universal
jurisdiction, such as Spanish courts have assumed in the past. The ICC would no
doubt also investigate Hamas’ actions on Oct. 7. The Observer State of
Palestine is a member of the ICC and the prosecutor of that court has an open
file on Israel and Palestine.
Both the United States and Israel are parties to the
Genocide Convention, which makes a campaign to hold them accountable for their
respective roles in the present genocide even more of an urgent moral
obligation for people and organizations of good will.
Gareth Porter is an independent investigative
journalist and historian writing on U.S. national security policy. His latest
book, Manufactured
Crisis: The Untold Story of the Iran Nuclear Scare, was published in
February of 2014. Follow him on Twitter: @GarethPorter.
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