from Haaretz
Not an internal Palestinian matter
By Amira Hass
The experiment was a success: The Palestinians are killing each other. They are
behaving as expected at the end of the extended experiment called "what happens
when you imprison 1.3 million human beings in an enclosed space like battery
hens."
These are the steps in the experiment: Imprison (since 1991); remove the
prisoners' usual means of livelihood; seal off all outlets to the outside world,
nearly hermetically; destroy existing means of livelihood by preventing the
entry of raw materials and the marketing of goods and produce; prevent the
regular entry of medicines and hospital supplies; do not bring in fresh food for
weeks on end; prevent, for years, the entry of relatives, professionals, friends
and others, and allow thousands of people - the sick, heads of families,
professionals, children - to be stuck for weeks at the locked gates of the Gaza
Strip's only entry/exit.
Steal hundreds of millions of dollars (customs and tax revenues collected by
Israel that belong to the Palestinian treasury), so as to force the nonpayment
of the already low salaries of most government employees for months; present the
firing of homemade Qassam rockets as a strategic threat that can only be stopped
by harming women, children and the old; fire on crowded residential
neighborhoods from the air and the ground; destroy orchards, groves and fields.
Dispatch planes to frighten the population with sonic booms; destroy the new
power plant and force the residents of the closed-off Strip to live without
electricity for most of the day for a period of four months, which will most
likely turn into a full year - in other words, a year without refrigeration,
electric fans, television, lights to study and read by; force them to get by
without a regular supply of water, which is dependent on the electricity supply.
It is the good old Israeli experiment called "put them into a pressure cooker
and see what happens," and this is one of the reasons why this is not an
internal Palestinian matter.
The success of the experiment can be seen in the miasma of desperation that
hangs over the Gaza Strip, and in the clan feuding that erupts almost daily
there, even more than in the battles between Fatah and Hamas militants. One can
only wonder that the feuding is not more frequent, and that some bonds of
internal solidarity have been maintained, which saves people from hunger.
In contrast to the feuding between clans, Sunday's battles in Gaza and campaigns
of destruction and intimidation, mainly in West Bank cities, were not the result
of a momentary loss of control. They are generally viewed as battles between two
militias, each of which represents one half of the population, but they were
initiated by groups within Fatah to put a few more nails into the coffin of the
elected leadership.
The security forces of the Palestinian Authority - in other words, of Fatah, or
in still other words, the ones that Mahmoud Abbas is in charge of - are hiding
behind the genuine distress and protests of public employees who have not been
receiving regular salaries. And they are doing so despite the fact that everyone
knows that the failure to pay salaries is not a managerial failure, but is above
all due to Israeli policy. These forces were dispatched in order to sow
organized anarchy, as taught in the school of Yasser Arafat.
And why is this, too, an Israeli matter? Because those who dispatched these
militants have a shared interest with Israel in regressing to a situation in
which the Palestinian leadership collaborates with the appearance of holding
peace talks, while Israel continues its occupation and the international
community sends hush money in the form of salaries for the Palestinian public
sector.
And there is another reason why this is also an internal Israeli issue: Whatever
the outcome, the Palestinian feuding and the risk of civil war directly affect
about 20 percent of Israeli citizens, the Arabs. They affect the Arabs, and also
those segments of the Israeli public that have not forgotten that Israel will
remain the occupying and ruling force over the Palestinians as long as the goal
of establishing a Palestinian state in all of the territories occupied in 1967
is not realized.