Lesverdig ytring i NY Times om IDFs siste operasjon i flyktningeleiren i Jenin.
Her får man god innsikt i Israel/Palestina-konflikten av en kjenner av historien.
HELE artikkelen nederst under Kilde
Skudeneshavn 11. juli 2023
Jan Marton Jensen
Kilde:
HELE artikkelen i NY Times 10. juli 2023:
Guest Essay
The Tale of Two Invasions: What the Last Attack on Jenin Tells Us About Israel Now
The Jenin refugee camp near the city of Jenin in the northern West Bank, last week.Credit...Nasser Ishtayeh/SOPA Images -- LightRocket, via Getty Images
The two invasions unfolded in vastly different contexts. Between 2002
and 2023, the illusion of partitioning the land into two states
disintegrated. It exists now only in diplomatic talking points, hollowed
out of all meaning, and replaced by a consensus among international and
Israeli human rights organizations, including B’Tselem, Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International, that Israel is practicing the crime of apartheid against Palestinians, vindicating what Palestinians have long believed.
For most Jewish Israelis, this shift is barely perceptible, as they
continue to be effectively sheltered from the cost of their government’s
policies toward Palestinians. The Palestinians, meanwhile, are
experiencing growing despair and fatigue, ground down by the daily
structural violence. With the absence of any hope for statehood, and
with no viable political leadership to lead the struggle, some take
matters into their own hands through armed and unarmed forms of
resistance, others are apathetic or preoccupied with the crippling
effort to support their families, and many live in fear.
In 2002, though round after round of American-mediated negotiations had faltered, there was still the hope — and the expectation — that a peace process would resume. The two-state solution was touted as the only option for peace. The framework of territorial partition — that Israel would withdraw from the territories it had occupied in 1967 in exchange for peace with the Palestinians and its Arab neighbors — was the dominant policymaking approach.
But as the Second Intifada came to an end, Israel intensified practical measures to expand its occupation and undermine the two-state solution while maintaining the diplomatic pretense of engaging with peace efforts. With the financing of Western and Arab donors, Israel pacified the West Bank with neoliberal incentives even as it hollowed out the core of its economy and carved up the Palestinian territory with expanding settlements. It implemented security coordination measures with the Palestinian Authority, turning the Palestinian government into a key partner for managing local resistance. The Palestinian Authority, for its part, initiated an expansive state-building agenda as it sought to project an image of an authority with control, one that was setting the foundations of a future Palestinian state.Under Mr. Sharon, Israel also unilaterally reconfigured its occupation of the Gaza Strip, dismantling its settlements and initiating a territorial disengagement that proponents of the two-state solution celebrated — perhaps genuinely, but naïvely — as a step toward peace, one that demonstrated the possibility of Israeli territorial withdrawal paving the way for eventual Palestinian rule.
Like Jenin, the Gaza Strip also has a history of resistance against Israeli occupation. With Hamas’s rise to power in 2006, Israel, in coordination with Egypt, tightened a hermetic blockade on the strip, effectively severing it from the rest of Palestine, and experimented with military techniques to force the population into submission.Alongside food restriction policies and an economic chokehold, this took the form of devastating military assaults. The military referred to this doctrine as “mowing the lawn,” the approach of using disproportionate military force to periodically weaken Palestinian resistance and manage a restive population chafing against Israeli control.Last week, Israel turned this military approach, perfected in the Gaza Strip, onto the West Bank, as it cordoned off the refugee camp in Jenin, pummeled it from the air and ground and destroyed crucial infrastructure for water and electricity as a form of collective punishment.
In the time between the two invasions of Jenin, Palestinians throughout
the West Bank have been systematically funneled — through land
expropriation, home demolitions and expansion of settlements — into
isolated urban centers surrounded by land occupied by Israel. Just like
Gaza, most urban centers in the West Bank can now be, overnight,
entirely severed from the ecosystem around them, as was witnessed in
Jenin.
Today, there is no need for Israeli officials to sugarcoat their
policies for fear of diplomatic reprisal, or to mitigate against the
presumption of eventual partition. The transformation of Israeli
political culture that accelerated after the violence of the Second
Intifada and the impunity Israel enjoys internationally have culminated
in the most right-wing government in Israeli history.
In the two decades between these invasions, Israeli officials have rendered explicit their desire to consolidate what Israeli human rights group B’Tselem has called
“a regime of Jewish supremacy” in all the areas under their control.
Less than two weeks before the most recent invasion, Israel’s national
security minister, Itamar Ben Gvir, prodded
the government to launch a military offensive while urging an expansion
of settlements in the West Bank. “There needs to be a full settlement
here,” he said. “We have to settle the land of Israel and at the same
time need to launch a military campaign, blow up buildings, assassinate
terrorists. Not one, or two, but dozens, hundreds, or if needed,
thousands.”
Meanwhile, the Palestinian Authority, teetering on the wreck of its
plans for a state, has been irreversibly integrated into the structure
of Israeli apartheid, maintaining a Bantustan-like authority that helps
pacify its population for Israeli gains.
Beneath this evolving context is a singular constant: Israel’s ability to sustain its settlement of Palestinian territory without accountability, while equating Palestinian resistance to terrorism. That this framing has long been accepted among the major Western powers is particularly galling for Palestinians in the aftermath of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, where resistance to illegal occupation is hailed as heroic and supported by Western weapons and military training.
The international community has left Palestinians in a permanent condition of statelessness,
denied the right to self-determination and self-defense. While Israeli
officials use openly racist statements, like saying Israel should “wipe out”
an entire Palestinian town, the Biden administration is pushing for
Israel’s integration into the region through bilateral peace deals,
building on the Trump administration’s Abraham Accords, with barely a
nod to Palestinian rights.
Residents of the Jenin camp, some of whom had fled from their homes in what is now Israel in 1948, are refugees once again. And some of the toddlers who were in the camp in 2002 are now the young men of the Palestinian resistance. As the history of other struggles against apartheid and colonial violence have taught us, today’s children will no doubt take up arms to resist such domination in the future, until these structures of control are dismantled.
Tareq Baconi is a former senior analyst for Israel/Palestine at the International Crisis Group and the author of “Hamas Contained.” He serves as president of the board of al-Shabaka, the Palestinian Policy Network.
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