Israel’s Biblical Wars of ‘Self Defense’: The Myth of the ‘Seven War Fronts’
by Ramzy
Baroud
Posted on October 25, 2024
Israeli officials keep repeating that Israel is
fighting on multiple fronts. The truth is that Israel chooses to fight on
multiple fronts. The two claims are fundamentally different.
Recently, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
went as far as saying that his country is fighting on seven different war fronts, all driven by the objective of “defending ourselves
against… barbarism.”
These supposedly defensive wars are also carried out
in the name of protecting “civilization against those who seek to impose a dark
age of fanaticism on all of us,” Netanyahu said in a speech in early October.
There will be no need to counter Netanyahu’s
diatribes. It should be obvious that neither genocide is classified as
self-defense, nor does preserving human civilization include burning people
alive, as was the case with Sha’ban Al-Dalou, who was horrifically killed alongside his family in the recent Israeli
shelling of the al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital in Deir al-Balah.
But is Israel being forced to fight on seven fronts?
According to Netanyahu, but also other top political
and military officials, the fronts are Iran, Gaza, Lebanon, Yemen and groups in
Syria, Iraq and the West Bank.
Though the major fighting is only taking place in Gaza
and Lebanon, the official Israeli line is keen on exaggerating the number of
war fronts to continue capitalizing on the generous US and western military and
political support. More wars for Israel also translate into more money.
Of course, Israel is fighting actual wars too; a war
of extermination and genocide against the Palestinian people in Gaza, which has
killed and wounded more than 150,000 people in the course of one year.
There is also a war in the West Bank, carried out with the precise
aim of subduing all forms of resistance, so that Israel may accelerate its
settler-colonial project in the occupied territories.
The above is not an inference, but a statement of
fact, based on Netanyahu’s own declared policies. “Israel must have security
control over all the territory west of the Jordan,” he said during a news conference last January. To be
more precise, “between the Sea and the Jordan there will only be Israeli
sovereignty,” he said. ‘Security control” is an Israeli euphemism for
territorial expansion.
In an interview with the European public service
channel, Arte, Israeli Minister of Finance Bezalel Smotrich said Israel would expand “little by little” to
eventually encompass the whole of the Palestinian territories, in addition to
Jordan, Lebanon, Egypt and other Arab countries.
“It is written that the future of Jerusalem is to
expand to Damascus,” he said.
Religious prophecies are particularly dangerous when
they are embraced by unhinged extremist politicians who wield the political
clout and military power to put them into action.
Netanyahu is a leading member of the same group. He
has already justified his genocide in Gaza and wars everywhere according to
religious texts, where he sees his army as the Israelites fighting the
Amalekites.
These religious sentiments are common in Israel’s
political discourses throughout history. However, they have taken center stage
in recent years under a succession of far-right governments, mostly formed by
Netanyahu. They see in the Gaza war an opportunity to bring about what
Smotrich, then the vice-chairman of the Knesset called in 2017 as “Israel’s decisive plan”.
Ironically named ‘One Hope’, Smotrich’s plan is
primarily centered on the annexation of the whole of the West Bank, which he,
like Netanyahu and others, refers to as ‘Judea and Samaria’. The plan entails
“imposing sovereignty on all of Judea and Samaria”, with the “concurrent acts
of settlements”, as in “the establishing of cities and towns”, with the aim of
“creating a clear and irreversible reality on the ground”.
Smotrich’s plan, which is being implemented, now that
he is one of the two kingmakers in Netanyahu’s government – the other is Itamar
Ben-Gvir – was prepared years before the ongoing war on Gaza, and is being
implemented, per his own admission, “little by little” ever since.
Israel may claim that it is fighting a war on seven or
seventy fronts. It may also assign itself the role of the savior of
civilizations. But the truth cannot be hidden, especially when the Israelis
themselves are the ones who are disclosing their sinister intentions.
Even the ongoing war on Lebanon, which Israeli
leaders, along with their US backers, have dubbed a defensive war, is now being
promoted by some Israeli politicians and their rightwing supporters as another
expansionist war, or more accurately a quest for “Greater Israel”
There is a difference between a country fighting a
defensive war on multiple fronts and another fighting for colonial expansion,
for regional hegemony and for military dominance driven by religious
prophecies. Those who have chosen the latter path, as Israel has, cannot claim
to be in a state of self-defense.
“Self-defense in international law refers to the
inherent right of a State to use of force in response to an armed attack,” the
International Red Cross states on its website. This definition does not
apply to a state that is itself a military occupier, thus is in an active state
of hostility and unlawful use of violence.
Netanyahu and Smotrich, however, are hardly concerned
about international or humanitarian laws. They are driven by ominous,
expansionist agendas. If they succeed, more deadly wars are sure to follow. The
international community must do everything in its power to ensure their
failure.
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