
Rockets on board the Klos-C freighter, intercepted by Israel’s navy on its way from Iran to Gaza last March
While it wails piteously, Hamas also crows victoriously. This evident logical incongruity may bewilder us but Gaza honcho Ismail Haniyeh connects the dots thus: “The military victory by the resistance and the legendary strength of our people will lead us to a lifting of the blockade on the Gaza Strip.”
Gaza, he avers, “has turned itself into a graveyard for Israel” and had sown death and destruction in Tel Aviv. On the flipside, precisely Gaza’s own devastation “will make it impossible for the world to ignore the Strip.”
“Gaza’s sacrifices” mandate acquiescence to its demands, foremost the elimination of what Haniyeh calls “the siege” on Gaza.
To hear him, the blockade on Gaza was born of arbitrary malice toward hapless civilians and not as Israel’s unavoidable response to ceaseless rocketing, tunnel construction and gunrunning at the expense of the very civilians whom Haniyeh purports to champion.
To be sure, for years Hamas managed quite well with the blockade. Iran and Syria supplied money and rockets via a variety of smuggling conduits but the Syrian civil war and the Iranian involvement in it reduced the generosity of the Teheran/Damascus axis.
As long as the Muslim Brotherhood ruled Cairo’s roost, Hamas virtually reduced the blockade to irrelevance, but that came to an end a year ago. Now Hamas demands the opening of the Rafah Crossing, a seaport, an airport and extended fishing rights – all of which would fling open the floodgates to all sorts of military reinforcements.
Additionally, Hamas aims to raise six billion dollars in foreign contributions to which end the piteous wailing becomes indispensable. Here the danger is that foreign philanthropy would be mobilized on a grand scale for ostensibly charitable ends only.
This becomes a treacherously sticky point. What’s seen as a purely do-gooder venture can easily be turned into the same travesty that for years allowed largesse from abroad to be invested in attack tunnels, while the population’s subsistence and imperative needs were ignored. The cement that was to go to housing construction, hospitals and schools, ended up buttressing tunnels under Israel’s border.
It’s more than probable that whatever is donated to Gaza now, will foremost be used to reconstruct the Hamas upper echelons’ mansions and the lower ranks’ comfortable quarters. Unconnected individuals are unlikely to see a penny.
They were exploited during the fighting when they were used as human shields for Hamas leaders and rocket-launchers. They are again manipulated after the din of battle has died down, when their plight is used to tug at heartstrings the world over and raise funds – much as beggars expose physical deformities to arouse compassion.
Israel is hard put to contend with such cynicism.
It will almost certainly be soothed with assurances of due diligence by international overseers. Unfortunately, however, promises by overseas governments and NGOs to strictly supervise the financial outlays and shipments into Gaza must be taken with a great grain of salt.
Where the entire corrupt infrastructure is reliant upon coercion and cheating, outsiders cannot efficiently scrutinize. Hence the fact that UN facilities in Gaza doubled as rocket depots and that maritime smuggling of rockets and military materiel to Gaza was rife.
The monstrous burgeoning of Hezbollah missile hoards in South Lebanon despite the clear provisions of UN Security Council Resolution 1701 testifies all the more to the utter lack of trustworthiness of international undertakings and supervision.
It’s easy to promise vigilance, inspection and even demilitarization. It’s a whole other matter to actually keep these promises. Foreign peacekeepers and observers, as we had well experienced on the Lebanese front, won’t risk life and limb to confront adamant terrorists.
Quite the contrary. They are likely to stand back and vent their ire at Israel which shows up their ineffectiveness.
The replication of such scenarios is more than likely in Gaza.
The only way in which Hamas can conceivably wrest an achievement from its outright battlefield rout is by hoodwinking the global aggregate of gullible governments and the far-from-impartial hodgepodge of self-professed humanitarians eager to further current agendas while preparing the ground for future calamities.
Brilliant and incisive. We’re all listening, but how do we get Hamas’ useful fools to do so too?
Perfectly well said, as always Sarah !
Gaza must not become a second south-Lebanon.
Israel and Egypt should find a solution to that problem.
The ‘lessons’ that Israel has learned during the ‘latest Gaza war’ should be obvious to any thinking human being who has a normal brain and who has followed the events of this last monthS engagement in the Gaza strip.. For Israeli leadership to have deliberately ignored the ‘Hamas in your face’ building of a huge sophisticated massive network of tunnels for the sole purpose of ‘killing and/or kidnapping Jews (civilians and military), to further acquire and stoick massive amounts of missiles, rocket launchers and ‘other means of weaponry’, and to ‘plan the potential intrusion, destruction and mayhem toward Israels border communities’, ISRAELI LEADERSHIP NEEDS NOW TO ‘SHED ITS OTHER CHEEK’ ABOUT SUCH HAMAS TRICKERY AND SECRECY to FINALLY AND EFFICIENTLY DESTROY AND COMPLETELY HUMILIATE HAMAS TO THE POINT THAT THEIR PALESTINIAN FOLLOWERS WILL REALIZE THE FUTILITY AND STUPIDITY OF THEIR DREAMS TO ‘TARGET AND ELIMINATE THE STATE OF ISRAEL AND ITS JEWISH NEIGHBORS!
AND, WILL ISRAEL FINALLY CREATE THE ‘PROPAGANDA AND PR’ NECESSARY TO CONVIINCE THE SOCALLED ‘INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITIES’ ABOUT THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN ‘GOOD AND EVIL? .I HOPE SO, BUT UNFORTUNATELY THINK NOT.