Third
intifada?- The Gaza Conflict
BY
JOHN CHERIAN
Israel’s
latest provocation is part of a stealthy plan to establish Jewish control over
the Al Aqsa
mosque area
in Jerusalem, the third most revered place of worship for Muslims. By JOHN
CHERIAN
Since the
third week of October, Jerusalem and the occupied West Bank have been
witnessing a growing confrontation between the Israeli
security forces and the Palestinians. Trouble has been brewing in the city
since the lynching of a 17-year-old Palestinian boy by Jewish
extremists in Jerusalem in July. The unrest has spread to Israel proper, where
the minority Palestinian citizens have been protesting
against the government’s wilful policies of changing facts on the ground. The
violence escalated after the attempted assassination
of Yehuda Glick, a prominent Jewish zealot in the forefront of the Zionist move
to take control of one of the holiest Islamic sites, Al
Aqsa mosque. Glick, who holds dual American-Israeli nationality, is well-funded
and had been making frequent provocative visits to Al
Aqsa mosque with his band of supporters.
The
right-wing Israeli government led by Benjamin Netanyahu had tried to cross what
Palestinians and the entire Muslim world considered as
a red line. It tried to implement a stealthy plan to establish Jewish control
of Al Aqsa mosque in Jerusalem, the third most revered
place of worship for Muslims. The mosque is situated in a 35-acre plot known as
Al Haram al Sharif in Jerusalem Old City quarters.
This is a place where Muslims, Christians and Jews lived in harmony for
centuries until the state of Israel was created. The worst
massacres of Palestinians in the run-up to the creation of Israel occurred in
areas around Jerusalem. Zionist
historians claim that a long lost city built by King David in ancient times
lies buried in and around the compound in which the mosque is
located. These historians talk about a mythical golden age of the Jews. Since
the state of Israel was established, archaeologists
have not been able to find anything of significance that attests to a
prosperous age during the reigns of Old Testament Jewish kings
like King David. During the 1967 war, the chief Rabbi of the Israeli army,
Shlomo Goren, urged the Israeli forces to blow up Al Aqsa
mosque so that Jewish temples that had existed during the time of Jesus Christ
could be rebuilt. Jewish temples that existed on
the plot housing Al Aqsa mosque were destroyed by the Roman conquerors of
present-day Palestine.
The violence
which escalated in late October has claimed the lives of many Palestinians and
Jews. Jewish settlers have set fire to mosques in
the occupied West Bank. Enraged Palestinians have mowed down Israeli Jews in
Jerusalem and surrounding areas with their cars in
three widely reported incidents.
The Israeli
media were quick to dub them as “suicide drivers”. The Israeli security forces
had promptly shot and killed them. The man who tried to
kill Glick was also eliminated in cold blood by the Israeli security forces
during a raid on his family’s house in Jerusalem. The house was
promptly demolished and the family evicted from the area.
The Israeli
government has introduced a draft legislation that prescribes a 20-year prison
term for Palestinian stone-throwers. After the recent
spurt in violence, the Israeli Prime Minister threatened that Palestinians who
are citizens of Israel would be stripped ofcitizenship
if they participated in demonstrations. Palestinian anger has been further
stoked by the brazen annexation of Palestinian land and the
demolition of houses in Jerusalem and the West Bank. The mindless bloodletting
in Gaza by the Israeli forces in the middle of the year
will of course be etched in Palestinian consciousness for a long time.
President Mahmoud Abbas of the Palestinian Authority (P.A.)
described Israeli actions in Gaza as “genocidal”. A significant percentage of
those killed in Gaza were women and children.
According to
the P.A., 73 mosques were destroyed and many more damaged by the Israeli forces
in the 73-day Gaza war. The Temple
Mount, which is sacred to the Jews, was once situated in the area where Al Aqsa
mosque has stood for centuries. After it captured
Jerusalem in the 1967 war, Israel allowed Jews to pray at the Western Wall,
situated at the ground level of the mosque. Indian Home
Minister Rajnath Singh, during his visit to Israel in the first week of
November, was pictured wearing a Jewish skullcap and praying
in front of the “Wailing Wall”, as the site is called by Jews. This was at a
time when strict curbs on entering the mosque were imposed
on Muslims. For the first time since the 1967 war, the mosque was temporarily
sealed off by the Israeli security forces on the orders
of the Israeli Prime Minister. After that, for a short period, only Palestinian
men above 50 and women over 40 were allowed to
enter the mosque under strict Israeli security supervision. The restrictions
have been lifted now.
Mahmoud Abbas
had denounced Israel’s moves as “a declaration of war on the Palestinian people
and its sacred places and on the Arab and Islamic
nations”. Muslims have had the exclusive right to pray in the mosque. They
believe that Prophet Muhammad ascended to heaven from
the site. Hamas has announced the formation of a “popular” army to defend Al
Aqsa mosque. Sovereignty
of Al Aqsa
It was the
threat by Jordan’s King Abdullah to scrap the 1994 peace treaty with Israel and
a little arm-twisting from the Barack Obama
administration that made Netanyahu modify his position slightly over the issue
of sovereignty of the mosque. The mosque is being
administered by a waqf board supervised by the Jordanian government under the
treaty. King Abdullah warned that any attempt by
Israel to change the centuries-old religious tradition that have been in vogue
at Al Aqsa mosque would lead to severe diplomatic
consequences for Israel. In the first week of November, Jordan withdrew its
ambassador to Israel. John Kerry,
the United States Secretary of State, had to meet with the Israeli Prime
Minister and the Jordanian King in the attempts at lowering
tensions. Kerry said that Israel was committed to maintaining the status quo on
Al Aqsa mosque. After an earlier visit to the region to
cobble up a military alliance in the fight against the Islamic State (I.S.),
Kerry had said that all the leaders he had met had underlined
the importance of a durable peace settlement between Israel and the
Palestinians because “it was a cause for recruitment and of street
anger and agitation”.
An unnamed
senior U.S. official, according to a report in The Atlantic magazine,
had described Netanyahu as a “chicken-shit” and a “coward” who
was only interested in protecting himself from political defeat. American
officials have been openly faulting him for failing to make peace
with the Palestinians and the Arab world, especially at a time when the U.S.
was engaged in a military campaign against radical
Islamists in the region. Former U.S. Secretary of State James Baker revealed
that Netanyahu was denied access to the State Department
during the administration of George H.W. Bush for activities deemed as being
against U.S. national interests. Netanyahu was working
as a lobbyist for Israel in Washington at the time. In December, the Israeli
Knesset is scheduled to vote on a motion calling for the
partitioning of Al Aqsa mosque. Powerful right-wing parties that dominate the
government want Israel to exercise forcefully its sovereignty
over the mosque.
The status
quo on the right to offer prayers was maintained by Israel until the middle of
the last decade. It was only after the extreme right wing in
Israel entered the political mainstream that the demands were made for equal
access to Jews. Ariel Sharon, a Zionist hawk, who as
the leader of the opposition, made a controversial visit to the compound around
Al Aqsa mosque in 2000. His visit triggered the
Al Aqsa intifada which lasted for five years. Thousands of Palestinians and
hundreds of Israelis were killed in that uprising,
known as the “second intifada”.
Since then
many prominent right-wing Jewish leaders, including Ministers, have visited the
compound housing Al Aqsa mosque. Jewish right-wingers
have been demanding the rebuilding of the Jewish Temple on the site. Many of
them have bought houses in the vicinity of the
mosque. Pressure tactics and money power has been used to make Palestinian
residents vacate their dwellings in the Old City. The prominent
Israeli commentator Gideon Levy is of the view that Jerusalem “has become the
Israeli capital of apartheid”. He notes that from 1967
to 2013, Israel had revoked the residency of 14,309 Palestinians in Jerusalem
without giving valid reasons. Even as the current phase
of violence was raging, Netanyahu announced his plan to construct more
settlements in Jerusalem and the West Bank and separation
barriers to further isolate the original Palestinian residents of the city.
Netanyahu has gone ahead with the plan, despite
Israel’s main
patron, the U.S., voicing its strong criticism. The U.S. State Department
spokesman said in the first week of November that
Washington considered Israeli settlement activity as “illegitimate” and that
the Obama administration opposed “unilateral steps that prejudge
the future of Jerusalem”.
All the same,
it is business as usual in the patron-client relationship between the U.S. and
Israel though in recent years it is the client country that
has been dictating terms. In the first week of November, the two governments
announced that they would jointly manufacture
advanced fighter planes. Israeli Defence Minister Moshe Yaalon told the media
that this was another illustration that the ties between
the two countries “were bulletproof”, despite the statements coming out of
Washington criticising Israel’s settlement policies and
its reluctance to implement the two-state solution. Gideon Levy in his column
said that the real “chicken-shit” was the Obama
administration which continued to provide lethal arms, including F-35 fighters,
to the apartheid state of Israel.
The religious
Right in Israel now has a strong presence in the Cabinet. The extremist Jewish
Home Party has three important posts in the Netanyahu
Cabinet. Until a few years ago, only a few hundred Jews used to visit Al Aqsa
compound every year. Last year, more than 8,500
Israeli Jews visited Al Aqsa compound escorted by the state security forces.
Top Israeli leaders swear every other day that Jerusalem is
Israel’s “eternal and indivisible” capital. The international community has
never recognised Israel’s annexation of Jerusalem,
the historic capital of Palestine.
According to
reports in the Israeli media, the European Union has circulated draft proposals
among member-countries recommending sanctions
against Israel, if it put up more roadblocks against a two-state solution. In
recent months, key E.U. members such as the United
Kingdom and Sweden have recognised the state of Palestine. The P.A. has
submitted a resolution to the United Nations Security Council
calling for Israeli withdrawal from the occupied territories and Palestinian
statehood by 2017. It will be difficult for the U.S. to veto the
resolution outright when it will be put to vote soon, given Israel’s complete
isolation in the international arena on the issue.
(Published in
Frontline.in)
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