Netanyahu's
miscalculation: Bullish or foolish
|
||||||
Benjamin Netanyahu has
failed to achieve his main objectives.
Last
updated: 28 Aug 2014 15:35
|
||||||
|
||||||
|
||||||
A group of Palestinian boys, one carrying the national flag, walk past
destroyed houses in the Shejaiya neighborhood of Gaza City [AFP]
|
||||||
Israeli and Palestinian claims of victory after 50 days of fighting in
Gaza are part politics, part populist. Putting a brave face on an ugly war is
necessary to cover up the terrible losses both sides have incurred. But these
losses are not the same for both sides. In fact, it's the contrast between
their losses that in essence defines the war and its results.
On the one hand, Israel has seen its most precious strategic
achievement since independence - its military deterrence - diminish during
this war. And clearly, it was shocked by Hamas' tenacity and the creativity
of its rather limited means.
Simply put, Israel cannot scare the Palestinians into submission
through the threat of devastating use of force
or massive retaliation, nor can it stop them from retaliating deep
inside Israel. This is the closest thing to a "balance of terror"
that's achievable under military occupation.
Despite its superior firepower and its sophisticated missile defence
system, rockets lobbed from Gaza paralysed Israel's southern communities, and
its central and coastal plains were targeted for the first time from the
strip. Likewise, when Israel attempted a limited invasion of Gaza, the
better-prepared Hamas fighters outmanoeuvred its highly trained army and
killed scores of them.
On the other side, Palestinians suffered great human, civic and
economic losses; more than 2,000 casualties, mostly civilian, tens of
thousands of houses and businesses were destroyed, and over 100,000 rendered
homeless yet again. One wonders how many times a Palestinian refugee will be
displaced.
Behind the images of defiance coming out of Gaza, plenty of tears and
blood have been shed and will most probably continue to be shed. As the
Palestinians begin to take stock of the death and destruction, they are
likely to be as angry as they are hurting.
All of which begs the question: Why does the Israeli Right reckon
bombing the Palestinians would turn them into better neighbours? And, how
does killing their children render them more peaceful?
Civic vs strategic
The contrast here is paramount, because at the end of the day, for
Israel, the loss is primarily strategic, while for the Palestinians it's
mostly civic and humane.
The terror of Israel's so-called "war on terror" has
surpassed anything we've seen in previous wars. It flies in the face of
any and all Israeli claims of a "clean fight".
Of course, Israel was careful to blame Hamas for the human suffering
in Gaza, accusing the Palestinian movement of using civilians as human
shields. But not only has this been proven largely false and
unsubstantiated, the intensification of bombardment over the last few days of
fighting revealed the true aim of Israel's strategy: causing great
damage and suffering to the people in order to exact concessions from their
leaders. These are war crimes by any standard.
While this does not excuse or justify Hamas' random or not so random
lobbing of rockets on Israeli towns, Israel couldn't expect any less
considering its offensive firepower. Unconventional fighting between occupier
and occupied cannot be judged by conventional standards of war. Nor should
its results.
Asymmetry
It's meaningless for Israel to boast of winning another war against
Gaza - a third in six years; or of triumphing, yet again, against Hamas, when
the latter seems to grow stronger and more popular with every war.
How many victories has Israel achieved since 1948 on the long path of
more conquest; how many more will it fight until it realises it can't win if
Palestine refuses to lose or to go away!
Clearly, Israel has not learnt the primary lesson of asymmetrical
wars. Namely, the strong is bound to become weak when fighting the weak for
long.
States make wars to achieve favourable peace. But Israel, which
has already been recognised over 78 percent of historic Palestine, continues
to fight wars as a way of crisis management; a way to gain time when time is
anything but on its side.
Take the newly introduced rockets for example. If Palestinians can
produce them at a mechanics garage in Gaza, what will stop them from
producing more in the West Bank? Won't that expose the whole of Israel
to new threats and render its separation wall, or "security
fence" as they like to call it, superfluous?
Now what?
Benjamin Netanyahu, who's known to be more cautious in waging war and
negotiating peace than his predecessors, has tried to take advantage of the
strategic chaos in the region, and more favourable conditions in Egypt, in
order to defeat Hamas, corner Abbas, and get Obama's attention. Alas, he has
achieved none of his main objectives.
Hamas has grown more popular, Abbas' national unity government with
Hamas ever more indispensable to maintain any ceasefire, and Obama no less
indifferent. Worse, Israel's impunity is down a notch or more as its
image is tarnished with more Palestinian blood.
And if the Palestinians go the International Criminal Court, a
potential indictment of Israel for war crimes would be a major diplomatic and
perhaps economic blow. Meanwhile, the diplomatic wrangling has begun around
the talks of an open-ended ceasefire. Expect the two sides to negotiate with
no less vigour than they fought on the battlefield.
Whether the Egyptian regime will act fairly to ensure the lifting the
siege on Gaza, or will act in complicity with the Israeli occupation to
tighten the siege in order to weaken Hamas, remains to be seen. What's clear,
for the time, being is that after so much death and destruction, we're back
to square one - just as we were after the last war, and will be following the
next.
It's rather foolish to go at it again and again hoping for a different
result. As they say in Jerusalem: If you beat water again and again, it'll
remain just that, water.
Marwan Bishara is the senior political analyst at Al Jazeera.
The views expressed in
this article are the author's own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera's
editorial policy.
|
||||||
copy http://www.aljazeera.com/ |
Opinion Netanyahu's miscalculation: Bullish or foolish Benjamin Netanyahu has failed to achieve his main objectives
Assinar:
Postar comentários (Atom)
Postagem em destaque
Ao Planalto, deputados criticam proposta de Guedes e veem drible no teto com mudança no Fundeb Governo quer que parte do aumento na participação da União no Fundeb seja destinada à transferência direta de renda para famílias pobres
Para ajudar a educação, Políticos e quem recebe salários altos irão doar 30% do soldo que recebem mensalmente, até o Governo Federal ter f...
-
更新时 秘鲁主要金矿开采区数千名矿工举行示威,抗议当局实施严厉措施,打击非法采矿。 根据政府实施的新规定,非法采矿...
-
Aqui no Não Curto você pode ver todos os programas da Rede Globo ao vivo e online. De segunda a segunda a programação completa da emissor...
-
Delação de Léo Pinheiro, da OAS, envolve Aécio e Geddel A delação premiada de um dos principais investigados na Lava Jato, o execu...
Nenhum comentário:
Postar um comentário