Here is an interesting article by Thane Rosenbaum,he reveals things i have not seen reported anywhere else,so i thought we should all read it,so as to have an unbiased view of the Isreali-Gaza conflict:
Let's state the obvious: No one likes to see dead children. Well, that's not completely true: Hamas does. They would prefer those children to be Jewish, but there is greater value to them if they are Palestinian. Outmatched by Israel's military, handicapped by rocket launchers with the steady hands of Barney Fife, Hamas is playing the long game of moral revulsion.
Rockets fired from the Gaza strip into Israel.
AFP/Getty images
With
this conflict about to enter its third week, winning the PR war is the
best Hamas can hope to achieve. Their weapon of choice, however, seems
to be the cannon fodder of their own people, performing double duty in
also sounding the drumbeat of Israeli condemnation. If you can't beat
Iron Dome, then deploy sacrificial children as human shields.
Civilian
casualties will continue to mount. The evolving story will focus on the
collateral damage of Palestinian lives. Israel's moral dilemma will
receive little attention. Each time the ledgers of relative loss are
reported, world public opinion will turn against the Jewish state and
box Israel into an even tighter corner of the Middle East.
All
the ordinary rules of warfare are upended in Gaza. Everything about
this conflict is asymmetrical—Hamas wears no uniforms and they don't
meet Israeli soldiers on battlefields. With the exception of kaffiyeh
scarves, it isn't possible to distinguish a Hamas militant from a
noncombatant pharmacist. In Vietnam, the U.S. military learned guerrilla
warfare in jungles. In Gaza, the Jewish state has had to adapt to the
altogether surreal terrain of apartment complexes and schoolhouses.
There
are now reports that Hamas and Islamic Jihad are transporting
themselves throughout Gaza in ambulances packed with children. Believe
it or not, a donkey laden with explosives detonated just the other day
The
people of Gaza overwhelmingly elected Hamas, a terrorist outfit
dedicated to the destruction of Israel, as their designated
representatives. Almost instantly Hamas began stockpiling weapons and
using them against a more powerful foe with a solid track record of
retaliation.
What did Gazans think was
going to happen? Surely they must have understood on election night that
their lives would now be suspended in a state of utter chaos. Life
expectancy would be miserably low; children would be without a future.
Staying alive would be a challenge, if staying alive even mattered
anymore.
To make matters worse, Gazans
sheltered terrorists and their weapons in their homes, right beside
ottoman sofas and dirty diapers. When Israel warned them of impending
attacks, the inhabitants defiantly refused to leave.
On
some basic level, you forfeit your right to be called civilians when
you freely elect members of a terrorist organization as statesmen,
invite them to dinner with blood on their hands and allow them to set up
shop in your living room as their base of operations. At that point you
begin to look a lot more like conscripted soldiers than innocent
civilians. And you have wittingly made yourself targets.
It
also calls your parenting skills into serious question. In the U.S. if a
parent is found to have locked his or her child in a parked car on a
summer day with the windows closed, a social worker takes the children
away from the demonstrably unfit parent. In Gaza, parents who place
their children in the direct line of fire are rewarded with an interview
on MSNBC where they can call Israel a genocidal murderer.
The
absurdity of Israel's Gaza campaigns requires an entirely new
terminology for the conduct of wars. "Enemy combatants," "theater of
war," "innocent civilians," "casualties of war" all have ambiguous
meaning in Gaza. There is nothing casual about why so many Gazans die;
these deaths are tragically predictable and predetermined. Hamas builds
tunnels for terrorists and their rockets; bomb shelters for the people
of Gaza never entered the Hamas leaders' minds.
So
much innocence is lost in this citizen army, which serves as the armor
for demented leaders and their dwindling arsenal of rockets and martyrs.
In Gaza the death toll of civilians is an endgame disguised as a
tragedy. It is a sideshow—without death, Hamas has nothing to show for
its efforts.
Surely there are civilians
who have been killed in this conflict who have taken every step to
distance themselves from this fast-moving war zone, and children whose
parents are not card-carrying Hamas loyalists. These are the true
innocents of Gaza. It is they for whom our sympathy should be reserved.
The impossibility of identifying them, and saving them, is Israel's
deepest moral dilemma. Mr. Rosenbaum, a novelist, essayist and professor at the New York University School of Law, is the author, most recently, of "Payback: The Case for Revenge."
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