Hi. On Monday I mentioned the problem of a huge number of as-yet
uncounted ballots. Today's LA Times California Section (B-4) eases
that concern and confirms faith in the democratic diligence of our
Secretary of State, Debra Bowen.   -Ed

And today's Democracy Now also discusses the Gaza Blockade.

http://www.counterpunch.org/cook11172008.html

"They Are All Hamas"

The Real Goal of Israel's Blockade of Gaza

By Jonathan Cook
CounterPunch: November 17, 2008


The latest tightening of Israel’s chokehold on Gaza – ending all supplies
into the Strip for more than a week – has produced immediate and shocking
consequences for Gaza’s 1.5 million inhabitants.

The refusal to allow in fuel has forced the shutting down of Gaza’s only
power station, creating a blackout that pushed Palestinians bearing candles
on to the streets in protest last week. A water and sanitation crisis are
expected to follow.

And on Thursday, the United Nations announced it had run out of the food
essentials it supplies to 750,000 desperately needy Gazans. “This has become
a blockade against the United Nations itself,” a spokesman said.

In a further blow, Israel’s large Bank Hapoalim said it would refuse all
transactions with Gaza by the end of the month, effectively imposing a
financial blockade on an economy dependent on the Israeli shekel. Other
banks are planning to follow suit, forced into a corner by Israel’s
declaration in Sept 2007 of Gaza as an “enemy entity”.

There are likely to be few witnesses to Gaza’s descent into a dark and
hungry winter. In the past week, all journalists were refused access to
Gaza, as were a group of senior European diplomats. Days earlier, dozens of
academics and doctors due to attend a conference to assess the damage done
to Gazans’ mental health were also turned back.

Israel has blamed the latest restrictions of aid and fuel to Gaza on Hamas’s
violation of a five-month ceasefire by launching rockets out of the Strip.
But Israel had a hand in shattering the agreement: as the world was
distracted by the US presidential elections, the army invaded Gaza, killing
six Palestinians and provoking the rocket fire.

The humanitarian catastrophe gripping Gaza is largely unrelated to the
latest tit-for-tat strikes between Hamas and Israel. Nearly a year ago,
Karen Koning AbuZayd, commissioner-general of the UN’s refugee agency,
warned: “Gaza is on the threshold of becoming the first territory to be
intentionally reduced to a state of abject destitution”.

She blamed Gaza’s strangulation directly on Israel, but also cited the
international community as accomplice. Together they began blocking aid in
early 2006, following the election of Hamas to head the Palestinian
Authority (PA).

The US and Europe agreed to the measure on the principle that it would force
the people of Gaza to rethink their support for Hamas. The logic was
supposedly similar to the one that drove the sanctions applied to Iraq under
Saddam Hussein through the 1990s: if Gaza’s civilians suffered enough, they
would rise up against Hamas and install new leaders acceptable to Israel and
the West.

As Ms AbuZayd said, that moment marked the beginning of the international
community’s complicity in a policy of collective punishment of Gaza, despite
the fact that the Fourth Geneva Convention classifies such treatment of
civilians as a war crime.

The blockade has been pursued relentlessly since, even if the desired
outcome has been no more achieved in Gaza than it was in Iraq. Instead,
Hamas entrenched its control and cemented the Strip’s physical separation
from the Fatah-dominated West Bank.

Far from reconsidering its policy, Israel’s leadership has responded by
turning the screw ever tighter – to the point where Gazan society is now on
the verge of collapse.

In truth, however, the growing catastrophe being unleashed on Gaza is only
indirectly related to Hamas’s rise to power and the rocket attacks.

Of more concern to Israel is what each of these developments represents: a
refusal on the part of Gazans to abandon their resistance to Israel’s
continuing occupation. Both provide Israel with a pretext for casting aside
the protections offered to Gaza’s civilians under international law to make
them submit.

With embarrassing timing, the Israeli media revealed at the weekend that one
of the first acts of Ismail Haniyeh, the Hamas prime minister elected in
2006, was to send a message to the Bush White House offering a long-term
truce in return for an end to Israeli occupation. His offer was not even
acknowledged.

Instead, according to the daily Jerusalem Post, Israeli policymakers have
sought to reinforce the impression that “it would be pointless for Israel to
topple Hamas because the population [of Gaza] is Hamas”. On this thinking,
collective punishment is warranted because there are no true civilians in
Gaza. Israel is at war with every single man, woman and child.

In an indication of how widely this view is shared, the cabinet discussed
last week a new strategy to obliterate Gazan villages in an attempt to stop
the rocket launches, in an echo of discredited Israeli tactics used in south
Lebanon in its war of 2006. The inhabitants would be given warning before
indiscriminate shelling began.

In fact, Israel’s desire to seal off Gaza and terrorise its civilian
population predates even Hamas’s election victory. It can be dated to Ariel
Sharon’s disengagement of summer 2005, when Fatah’s rule of the PA was
unchallenged.

An indication of the kind of isolation Mr Sharon preferred for Gaza was
revealed shortly after the pull-out, in Dec 2005, when his officials first
proposed cutting off electricity to the Strip.

The policy was not implemented, the local media pointed out at the time,
both because officials suspected the violation of international law would be
rejected by other nations and because it was feared that such a move would
damage Fatah’s chances of winning the elections the following month.

With the vote over, however, Israel had the excuse it needed to begin
severing its responsibility for the civilian population. It recast its
relationship with Gaza from one of occupation to one of hostile parties at
war. A policy of collective punishment that was considered transparently
illegal in late 2005 has today become Israel’s standard operating procedure.

Increasingly strident talk from officials, culminating in February in the
deputy defence minister Matan Vilnai’s infamous remark about creating a
“shoah”, or Holocaust, in Gaza, has been matched by Israeli measures. The
military bombed Gaza’s electricity plant in June 2006, and has been
incrementally cutting fuel supplies ever since. In January, Mr Vilnai argued
that Israel should cut off “all responsibility” for Gaza and two months
later Israel signed a deal with Egypt for it to build a power station for
Gaza in Sinai.

All of these moves are designed with the same purpose in mind: persuading
the world that Israel’s occupation of Gaza is over and that Israel can
therefore ignore the laws of occupation and use unremitting force against
Gaza.

Cabinet ministers have been queuing up to express such sentiments. Ehud
Olmert, for example, has declared that Gazans should not be allowed to “live
normal lives”; Avi Dichter believes punishment should be inflicted
“irrespective of the cost to the Palestinians”; Meir Sheetrit has urged that
Israel should “decide on a neighbourhood in Gaza and level it” – the policy
discussed by ministers last week.

In concert, Israel has turned a relative blind eye to the growing smuggling
trade through Gaza’s tunnels to Egypt. Gazans’ material welfare is falling
more heavily on Egyptian shoulders by the day.

The question remains: what does Israel expect the response of Gazans to be
to their immiseration and ever greater insecurity in the face of Israeli
military reprisals?

Eyal Sarraj, the head of Gaza’s Community Mental Health Programme, said this
year that Israel’s long-term goal was to force Egypt to end the controls
along its short border with the Strip. Once the border was open, he warned,
“Wait for the exodus.”

Jonathan Cook is a writer and journalist based in Nazareth, Israel. His
latest books are “Israel and the Clash of Civilisations: Iraq, Iran and the
Plan to Remake the Middle East” (Pluto Press) and “Disappearing Palestine:
Israel's Experiments in Human Despair” (Zed Books). His website is
www.jkcook.net.

***

WHAT: Protest Gaza Siege
WHEN: Monday, Nov. 24, 3:30-6 PMat Israeli Consulate.
WHERE: At the Israel Consulate at 6380 Wilshire Blvd., Los Angeles
                (between Fairfax and La Cienega).

     The humanitarian situation in Gaza is intolerable as reported in major
newspapers (e.g., NY Times Nov. 18).  The situation drove the UN Secretary
General to issue a plea for Israel to end its siege of Gaza.

     The 5 month truce between Israel and Hamas broke down on Nov. 4.
Israel sealed the border with Gaza cutting off fuel supplies (which through
the Gaza Strip into a blackout), and stopping food deliveries.  The UN which
feeds half the Gaza population of 1.5 million ran out of food and stopped
deliveries.  In the past few days Israel allowed just enough food to prevent
mass starvation and small amounts of fuel.

     LA Jews for Peace urges everyone to speak out against the blockade, and
call for a resumption of shipments of food and medical supplies to the
people of Gaza, and admittance of journalists to Gaza to report on the
desperate conditions.

     The blockade is not only cruel and inhumane, but also
counter-productive in that it fuels violence against Israel and works to
undermine efforts to achieve peace through negotiations.

Join LA Jews for Peace in a protest
Monday, Nov. 24, 3:30-6:00 PM
At the Israel Consulate at 6380 Wilshire Blvd., Los Angeles (between Fairfax
and La Cienega).

LA Jews will have signs and banners, bring your own.



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