20 November 2012
CURRENT HOSTILITIES IN GAZA – MYTHS AND FACTS
Myth No 1: The Palestinians have had no choice but to resort to force against Israel in order to end Israel’s “occupation” and “siege” of Gaza.
Facts:
- Israel completely withdrew its military and civilian presence from the Gaza Strip in 2005 and ceased to exercise “effective control” over the territory, an essential element of occupation for the purposes of international law: http://www.auilr.org/pdf/25/25 – 5‑4.pdf.
- Even Hamas leader Mahmoud Zahhar believes that Gaza is NOT under “occupation” or “siege”: According to the Ma’an News Agency he said in September 2012: “Gaza has been freed from occupation”. He confirmed also that Gaza is not under “siege”, stating that “contiguity with the outside world is easier as visitors from all over the world visited the coastal enclave. We are self-dependent in several aspects except petroleum and electricity”. http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=520228.
- More than 30,000 tons of supplies go into Gaza from Israel every week with the full co-operation of the Israeli government, even during the current hostilities.
- Israel does not control Gaza’s border with Egypt. Movements through that border (and under it via numerous smuggling tunnels) are beyond Israel’s control.
Myth No 2: Israel’s naval blockade of Gaza is unnecessary and illegal.
Facts:
- The blockade was imposed by Israel in mid-2007 because Hamas staged a coup and illegally seized executive power in Gaza. It declared that it would not be bound by previous agreements made by the PLO not to import weapons and munitions into Gaza.
- In 2010 an international Panel of Inquiry was established by the Secretary-General of the UN under the chairmanship of Sir Geoffrey Palmer of New Zealand, an expert in international maritime law. The other legal experts on the panel were Alvaro Uribe (Colombia), Joseph Ciechanover Itzhar (Israel) and Süleyman Özdem Sanberk (Turkey). Its findings can be found in a 105 page report searchable at: http://graphics8.nytimes.com/packages/pdf/world/Palmer-Committee-Final-report.pdf. In summary, the Palmer Report concluded that the Gaza blockade is legal. It described Israel’s naval blockade of Gaza as a “legitimate security measure” in response to the “real threat” posed by armed groups in Gaza.
Myth No 3: Most of the rockets fired into Israel from Gaza are home-made and relatively harmless.
Facts:
- Hamas has possession of sophisticated Iranian-manufactured Grad and Fajr‑5 rockets which have been fired at Israel’s largest city, Tel Aviv, and its capital, Jerusalem. These are capable of causing extensive loss of life and destruction.
- At least half of Israel’s 7 million citizens, Jews and Arabs, are now within range of these rockets.
- The Qassem rockets that are manufactured in Gaza are less sophisticated but have also claimed Israeli lives and caused much destruction in southern Israel. Nurseries, kindergartens, schools, universities and many businesses in Israel have been forced to close. Normal social and commercial life has been forced to a halt.
- No country faced with continual rocket fire from across its borders would fail to respond forcefully to end the aggression, as Israel has done.
Myth No 4: Israel started the current round of hostilities with Hamas.
Facts:
- Note that Myth No 1 contradicts Myth No 4.
- Some Palestinian commentators claim that the current flare-up in hostilities began on November 8 when a boy in Gaza was killed during a shootout between Palestinian gunmen and Israeli forces who were disabling an explosive device. (AP reported that “It was not clear who shot the boy”). What Palestinian commentators don’t say is that two days earlier Palestinians detonated an explosive device near IDF soldiers patrolling on the Israeli side of the border with Gaza, seriously injuring two of them. Nor do they mention that between 1 January 2012 and 5 November 2012, 674 rockets were fired from Gaza into Israel, with the rate of rocket fire accelerating dramatically in October.
- The accelerated rate of rocket fire was not in response to any action by Israel. It was a cynical move aimed at strengthening the political and strategic position of Hamas with the backing of its Muslim Brotherhood allies who dominate the new government of Egypt.
- To further their own power, the leaders of Hamas think nothing of sacrificing the lives of their own people and risking embroiling 80 million Egyptians in renewed war with Israel after 35 years of peace: See http://www.weeklystandard.com/blogs/hamas-s-miscalculation_663620.html
Myth No 5: Hamas is a legitimate national movement seeking to win the right of self-determination for the Palestinian people.
Facts:
Whilst international law permits armed force to be used by peoples struggling for independence, the force used must comply with the rules of international law. Non-State actors are legally bound by the same basic rules about the use of force as State actors. These rules are part of what is known as customary international law. Hamas and the other six armed groups which operate independently inside Gaza have systematically violated these rules over many years.
For example:
- These groups make no secret of the fact that their rockets deliberately target Israeli civilians. This in itself is a war crime, a violation of the principle of distinction – requiring combatants to do their best to distinguish between civilians and combatants and civilian objects and military objectives. The principle is a rule of customary international law and it is given expression in Articles 48 and 51(2) of Additional Protocol 1 to the Fourth Geneva Convention.
- In violation of many of the customary law rules contained in Articles 51, 52 and 53 of Additional Protocol 1 to the Fourth Geneva Convention, Hamas uses civilian sites in Gaza as cover for military operations, staging rocket attacks from or near residential areas, using civilian homes homes, mosques, business premises, universities, government buildings, communications facilities and even hospitals as weapons storage, blending in with civilians, and making use of human shields. Hamas also abuses the special protection given by international law to sites such as hospitals and religious buildings, by using them for weapons storage and bases for staging attacks.
- Using civilians and civilian sites as “human shields” is nothing new for Hamas. Hamas does this in the cynical knowledge that Israel’s defensive actions will inevitably cause civilian casualties, despite the extensive measures taken by Israel to avoid them. For Hamas, Palestinian civilians are mere fodder in the propaganda war against Israel, as confirmed in a notorious statement by Hamas legislator, Fathi Hamad, on Al-Aksa TV on 29 February 2008:
“[The enemies of Allah] do not know that the Palestinian people has developed its [methods] of death and death-seeking. For the Palestinian people, death has become an industry, at which women excel, and so do all the people living on this land. The elderly excel at this, and so do the mujahideen and the children. This is why they have formed human shields of the women, the children, the elderly, and the mujahideen, in order to challenge the Zionist bombing machine. It is as if they were saying to the Zionist enemy: “We desire death like you desire life.” (Emphases added). See http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CWIDZ7Jpdqg- Hamas and other Islamist groups are openly dedicated to the pursuit of criminal objectives, including the elimination by force of a member State of the UN (Israel) and removing (ie killing or expelling) most of the 5.8 million Jews who currently live there. Extracted from the second paragraph of the opening of the Hamas Charter is the following:
“Israel will exist and will continue to exist until Islam will obliterate it, just as it obliterated others before it”.
And again in Article 7:
“The Day of Judgement will not come about until Moslems fight the Jews (killing the Jews), when the Jew will hide behind stones and trees. The stones and trees will say O Moslems, O Abdulla, there is a Jew behind me, come and kill him. Only the Gharkad tree, (evidently a certain kind of tree) would not do that because it is one of the trees of the Jews.”- Israel’s conflict with Hamas is not about the failure of the Palestinians to date to achieve statehood in the West Bank and Gaza. Hamas leaders have openly and repeatedly rejected a settlement of the Israel-Palestinian conflict on the basis of the internationally-endorsed principle of two States for two peoples. Hamas’ relentless attacks against Israeli civilians are part of a broader strategy which is driven by an absolutist ideology set out in its Charter – to destroy Israel, kill or drive out its Jewish population and establish an Islamist caliphate. Hamas fully deserves its status as a listed terrorist organisation in Australia and numerous other countries. Far from being a legitimate national movement, Hamas is a criminal organisation with criminal objectives. The goal of Hamas is genocide, not human rights.
Myth No 6: Israel has the right to defend itself, but the force it has used has been disproportionate. Far more Palestinians have died than Israelis.
Facts:
- In international law the proportionality calculus is not “tit for tat”. Proportionality is not measured by comparing the number of casualties on each side or the nature or extent of the force used by each side. The customary law rules contained in Articles 51(5)(b) and 57(2)(b) of Additional Protocol 1 to the Fourth Geneva Convention prohibit incidental civilian casualties that would be “excessive in relation to the concrete and direct military advantage anticipated”, not numbers of casualties that are disproportionately on one side or the other. Israel is entitled to use such force as is necessary to repel the source of the aggression against its people and territory and to prevent the aggression from recurring.
- Those who uncritically repeat the mantra that Israel is using disproportionate force in Gaza should also compare the IDF’s record with that of the armed forces of other democratic countries in recent conflicts. In the 1991 Gulf war, a lawful war authorized by the UN, the ratio was 2.125 civilian deaths for each enemy combatant killed. In the 2003 Iraq war it was 4.5 civilians per enemy combatant. In attacks by drone aircraft in Afghanistan, 10 civilians have died for each enemy combatant killed. Israel has been far more successful in minimizing civilian casualties. In Gaza, two combatants have been killed for each civilian.
- The use of civilians and civilian sites by Hamas as cover for its armed activities in violation of international law does not immunize them from attacks which inevitably have collateral consequences of harm. Under Article 51(7) of Additional Protocol 1 to the Fourth Geneva Convention, civilians “shall not be used to render certain points or areas immune from military operations, in particular in attempts to shield military objectives from attacks or to shield, favour or impede military operations.” Further, under Article 28 of the Fourth Geneva Convention, “the presence of a protected person may not be used to render certain points or areas immune from military operations.” Therefore, Israel is not prohibited from attacking a military target simply because there are civilians or civilian structures present.
- Civilian casualties as such are always appalling and tragic, and to be avoided if at all possible. They are not illegal per se on the law as it currently stands. The documentary and video proof of Hamas’s exploitation of schools, mosques, hospitals and cultural centres to carry out its attacks is overwhelming, and responsibility for any civilian deaths and damage that follow belongs to Hamas.
Myth No 7: Israel is not interested in peace.
Facts:
- Israel completely withdrew its military and civilian presence from the Gaza Strip in 2005. The opportunity that this presented to Gazans to develop their economy and society has been squandered by Hamas, which has chosen instead to frog-march the people of Gaza down the path of war and bloodshed.
- Israel is committed to living in peace alongside a viable State of Palestine and has made repeated offers – in 2000, 2001 and 2008 – to resolve the conflict on the basis of the principle of two States for two peoples so that Israelis and Palestinians can each live in their own State in dignity and peace. This principle was originally endorsed by the UN General Assembly in November 1947, but was rejected then, and has been rejected ever since, by Palestinian leaders. This has been, and remains, the root cause of the conflict.
Contact:
Peter Wertheim AM | Executive Director
phone: 02 8353 8500 | m: 0408 160 904 | fax 02 9361 5888
e: [email protected] | www.ecaj.org.au