Monday, January 05, 2009

What Would You Do?

Here's a hypothetical for you...

Let's say you're the President (or Prime Minister) of a successful democracy. And let's say that things weren't so good in the country next door.

Let's then say that extremists won an "election" there, and since they took control, had fired more than 8000 rockets at your towns and cities along the border.

And every day, their leaders made speaches about how evil you were, and how they vow to destroy you.

What would you do?

You have a few options. You could cut off their electricity, which you supply. That way, the rocket makers would be working in the dark.

You could cut off their water, all of which comes from your water treatment plants.

You could stop delivering fuel. After all, if they can't drive the rockets to the launch sites, they can't fire them.

Or you could stop deliveries of food. You see, unlike your people, who, by hard work, made your nation what it is, your neighbours don't seem especially interested in intensive farming.

Come on... we all know the answer... don't pretend otherwise... you wouldn't do any of these things... you'd send in warplanes and bomb the crap out of them, and if that didn't work, you'd send in the tanks.

And it wouldn't have taken you years to make that decision either.

Yet today, it is Israel copping the scorn of mainstream media. It is Israel being described as the aggressor.

Ask yourself... what would you have done?

Ask yourself what the United States would have done if hundreds of missiles a day were raining down on San Diego from the other side of the Mexican border. At least the USA isn't being hypocritical in this. For all his faults, George W understands, and knows exactly what he would have done.

So more to the point, ask yourself what Great Britain would do if those missiles were raining on Dover from the other side of the Channel, or what Russia would have done if rockets were raining down from Georgia.

Israel, in fact, has been far more patient that any other country on earth would have been. It has tolerated daily rocket attacks, and the more it tolerated them, the more rockets Hamas chose to launch. Sooner or later, enough was going to be enough.

It's not even about "occupation". Israel pulled all of its troops out of Gaza years ago, handing the Palestinian leadership a golden opportunity to build a nation with the billions of dollars of aid that poured in. Instead, they squandered the chance.

However, the Palestinians leadership, and especially the leadership of Hamas, has learned one lesson very well over the last ten years or so. They've learned how to fight the war of public opinion and in this conflict, the truth is in danger of being lost.

Here are some facts you might like to consider, facts you won't see or hear in mainstream media. because some have used the opportunity to spread misinformation about Israel’s actions, intentions and the overall situation in Gaza.

Following are examples of fabrications – refuted by factual accounts provided by international aid organizations, Arab leaders, and Palestinian journalists.

Fiction #1: There’s no food in Gaza and people are starving.
News reports, including one produced by TV station France 2 on Dec. 29, showed a Gaza resident in a food store saying:“Apparently, there is nothing, as you can see. There are no natural products for the kids. There is no milk. There is nothing here.”
Fact: Warehouses in Gaza are filled to capacity, according to international aid groups. In the same France 2 TV clip referenced above, upon closer inspection, shelves filled with food can be seen in the reflection of a refrigerated door in the store.

The World Food Program informed Israel that it would cease shipment of food to Gaza because the warehouses there are at full capacity, with enough food to last two weeks.

During a one-day period alone – Dec. 31– Israel facilitated the transport of 29 truckloads of food, including 15 truckloads of flour, into Gaza. As Hamas was firing rockets and mortars during Israel both during and after the ceasefire, Israel facilitated the delivery of 2,500 tons (delivered on 93 trucks) of humanitarian aid, medical supplies and medication through the Kerem Shalom cargo terminal.

Since the beginning of the current conflict, about 6,500 tons of aid have been transferred into Gaza at the request of the international organizations, the Palestinian Authority and various governments.

Fiction #2: Gaza has no medical and other aid supplies to help the injured.
Fact: During the first 5 days alone of Operation Cast Lead, Israel has facilitated the delivery of 6,500 tons of aid – 179 truckoads -- into Gaza at the request of international organizations, the Palestinian Authority and various governments. The deliveries include basic food commodities, medication, medical supplies and blood units. Another 106 truckloads of humanitarian aid are expected to arrive in Gaza on Jan. 31. The crossings to Gaza are open for the transfer of humanitarian aid from all international organizations, in full cooperation with the Israeli authorities and without restriction. In a one-day period – Dec. 31 – Israel enabled the transport of 9 truckloads of medicine and medical supplies, along with 10 ambulances, into Gaza.

Fiction #3: Israel is refusing to allow injured Gazans into Israeli and Egyptian hospitals for treatment.
Fact: Israel has allowed a number of Palestinians into Israel for medical treatment they couldn’t receive in Gaza. On Dec. 31, for example, 12 Palestinians accessed Israel for medical treatment in Israeli hospitals. Two of those evacuated were injured children; the remaining were chronically sick people, and their escorts, who were allowed into Israel for treatment not available in Gaza.

Further, Hamas – in an effort to exploit the suffering of innocent civilians - has refused to allow injured Palestinians to leave Gaza to go to Egypt for treatment. Egyptian Foreign Minister Ahmed Abu al-Gheit said earlier this week that Hamas was not allowing wounded Palestinians to cross the border into Egypt for treatment: “We are waiting for the wounded Palestinians to cross. They are not being allowed to cross.” Asked who was to blame, he referred to Gaza by saying, “Ask the party in control on the ground in Gaza.”

Fiction #4: Israel is purposely targeting civilians.
Fact: While Israel goes out of its way to minimize civilian casualties, Hamas actually places civilians in harm’s way and uses them as shields. Because Hamas is known to use civilian residences to hide their weapons, on Dec. 27, the Israeli military – before launching an attack on such storehouses - called thousands of civilians in Gaza on their cell phones and left Arabic-language messages urging them to leave homes being used for weapons storage.

On Dec. 30, a reformist Iranian newspaper published a statement by a student organization that criticized Hamas for risking civilian lives, including children, by hiding its forces in nurseries and hospitals. The Iranian Culture Ministry shut down the newspaper after it printed the statements.

Israel has publicly stated time and again that it regrets the loss of any civilian life and considers each one a tragedy. However, both Iran-backed Hamas and Iran-backed Hezbollah have a history of faking deaths and funerals. For example, in Spring 2002, Palestinians were filmed as they attempted to stage a fake funeral as part of a gross exaggeration of the number of people killed in Jenin. The film shows Palestinians wrapping, then carrying a ‘corpse’ on a funeral pier; the ‘corpse’ falls off several times and gets back on – including in front of a large and surprised crowd.

Although some reports say a quarter of the deaths during “Operation Cast Lead” have been civilians, Palestinian terrorists’ history of deceptions and false claims require reporters to work to verify such information.

During Israel’s defensive war against Hezbollah two years ago, the phenomenon was so common that it became known as “Hezbollywood.” One of the best-known instances was when a man purporting to be a rescue worker at the site of a bombed village appeared in various photos in the international media, repeatedly displaying the same child’s dead body at different times – and in different poses – throughout the day. The man, identified as Salam Daher, wore a green helmet in all of the photos, earning himself the nickname “green helmet guy.” Daher was also found to have directed a camera shooting the scene.

Fiction #5: Israel has cut off electricity to Gaza.
Fact: In the past, Hamas officials have committed deceptions such as pulling dark curtains in mid-day while holding a meeting to make it look as though they were being forced to work by candlelight – a sham exposed by journalists who showed that it was actually daylight outside at the time. The ruse was carried out with the complicity of some Arab satellite TV stations. More recent such deceptions have come to light as recently as November 2008, when Palestinian Authority officials said Hamas staged new blackouts to try to get sympathy from the international community and provoke civilian violence against the Palestinian Authority and Israel. Further, terrorists in Gaza have fired rockets at – and hit - the power station in the Israeli city of Ashkelon that provides Gaza the majority of its electricity. The terrorists also have fired on Israeli workers at a depot that provides fuel to Gaza and a suicide bomber destroyed lines providing electricity from Israel into Gaza.

"There's no shortage of fuel in the Gaza Strip and the Electricity Company is continuing to function normally," a PA official said in November. "Our people in the Gaza Strip have told us that the blackouts are all staged as part of the Hamas propaganda…There's enough fuel in the Gaza Strip,” he said. "Even when Israel reduces the fuel supplies, Hamas continues to smuggle tens of thousands of liters through the underground tunnels."

Fiction #6: Palestinian journalists are unbiased and show what’s ‘really’ happening in Gaza.
Fact: Some Palestinian journalists are manipulating and exploiting unintended victims of the Israeli strikes. Said one Palestinian journalist, members of the Palestinian media are ‘directing’ civilians to cry and telling them what to say in interviews: "A mother of one of the martyrs stood by the door of the intensive care unit while crying... relatives and those around her were telling her what she should say to the television cameras: 'Say your son [before he died] prayed and went out.' Another tells her: 'Curse the Arab leaders'... The journalists [in the hospitals] are going overboard in their insensitivity and taking advantage of the [difficult] moments, with the explanation that they are showing this to the world. One cameraman told a mourning mother: 'Hit your face, cry, do some action.'"

Again ask yourself, what would you do if you were the leader of a country facing daily rocket attacks from your neighbour. You'd cut off their electricity. You'd stop sending food and medical supplies to your enemy, and then you'd launch military strikes. You certainly wouldn't call the people in the way of the bombs on their cell phones and tell them to get out of the way, or send them ambulances.

So next time you, or your freinds, work colleagues or family, start making moral judgements about what Israel has done over the last few days, ask yourself the question... what would you have done?

1 comment:

e said...

I am totally with you on this. Nothing I've heard in the news, nothing, has for one second made me sympathetic to the Palestinian side of this conflict. The news over here seems to be somewhat balanced, at least the news sources I listen to have been reporting both sides of the issue, and Hamas is simply not credible. Thanks for this.