From Israel with Love
Jul. 17th, 2014 02:19 pm![[identity profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/openid.png)
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"From Israel, with love"
Racism isn't something you're born with, it's taught. #FreePalestine #GazaUnderAttack pic.twitter.com/ZO7ZZChiHF
— Sara Khadra (@sskhadra) July 14, 2014
"From Israel, with love"
Racism isn't something you're born with, it's taught. #FreePalestine #GazaUnderAttack pic.twitter.com/ZO7ZZChiHF
— Sara Khadra (@sskhadra) July 14, 2014
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Date: 2014-07-18 04:52 pm (UTC)[...]
Israel immediately sought to undermine the reconciliation agreement by preventing Hamas leaders and Gaza residents from obtaining the two most essential benefits of the deal: the payment of salaries to 43,000 civil servants who worked for the Hamas government and continue to administer Gaza under the new one, and the easing of the suffocating border closures imposed by Israel and Egypt that bar most Gazans’ passage to the outside world.
[...]
Hamas is now seeking through violence what it couldn’t obtain through a peaceful handover of responsibilities. Israel is pursuing a return to the status quo ante, when Gaza had electricity for barely eight hours a day, water was undrinkable, sewage was dumped in the sea, fuel shortages caused sanitation plants to shut down and waste sometimes floated in the streets. Patients needing medical care couldn’t reach Egyptian hospitals, and Gazans paid $3,000 bribes for a chance to exit when Egypt chose to open the border crossing.
For many Gazans, and not just Hamas supporters, it’s worth risking more bombardment and now the ground incursion, for a chance to change that unacceptable status quo. A cease-fire that fails to resolve the salary crisis and open Gaza’s border with Egypt will not last. It is unsustainable for Gaza to remain cut off from the world and administered by employees working without pay. A more generous cease-fire, though politically difficult for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, would be more durable.
The current escalation in Gaza is a direct result of the choice by Israel and the West to obstruct the implementation of the April 2014 Palestinian reconciliation agreement. The road out of the crisis is a reversal of that policy.
-- Nathan Thrall, "How the West Chose War in Gaza" at The New York Times (http://www.nytimes.com/2014/07/18/opinion/gaza-and-israel-the-road-to-war-paved-by-the-west.html?hp&action=click&pgtype=Homepage&module=c-column-top-span-region®ion=c-column-top-span-region&WT.nav=c-column-top-span-region&_r=0)