Brian Holmes via nettime-l on Mon, 16 Oct 2023 23:44:16 +0200 (CEST) |
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Re: <nettime> silence on Palestine? |
Rahul, first of all, I too am thankful that we can actually discuss these issues on nettime, because in the world at large, the space for discussion is narrow, while the space for bitter animosity seems almost infinite. As stated in an earlier post, I think we are before a tragic situation which ensnares all participants in a trap not of their own making. This is why I don't justify one population over the other in this conflict. To me, what would be important is not that one side wins. What's important is to get out of the trap. Anyway, there is a point which needs to be clarified. I think we all understand that under the norms of international law, Hamas is a terrorist organization, whereas the IDF upholds, or at least claims to uphold, the humanitarian rules of military engagement. However, the analysis of the people who disagree with you - including myself on this point - is that since 1987 at least, the disproportionality of Palestinian deaths compared to Israeli deaths indicates a failure of humanitarian law as applied by the IDF. In the previous conflicts involving Gaza, the Palestinian death toll is on the order of twenty times higher, at least. This is due to the vast inequality in terms of weaponry, institutional structure, international support and logistical resources - exactly the inequality that has made it possible for Israel to hold two million people in an open-air prison, and to pursue the takeover of Palestinian land on the West Bank. It is impossible to see the humanitarian character of military operations that result in such large numbers of civilian deaths. The disproportion is well known and can be seen in the chart on this page: https://today.lorientlejour.com/article/1352614/how-many-people-has-the-hamas-israel-war-killed-so-far.html A humanitarian law that allows a country to slaughter civilians at that level of disproportionality appears first of all to contradict its own tenets, and more importantly, it looks like a transparently false justification for violent domination. Already in the current conflict, we are seeing twice as many Palestinian deaths. If the number rises to ten or twenty times as many, the trap will be complete. Not only the Arab world will look on Israel and the US as mortal enemies, but the entire Global South will come to see the Western alliance system as a hypocritical force of bloodthirsty domination. And so we will fight wars until the flames of climate change consume us. Despite the grief and rage, Israel should exercise restraint now, before the situation becomes terminally polarized. As the more powerful party, the country should analyze its own role in producing the conflict - just as the US should have done after 9/11. Not to do so is a failure on every level, including that of military strategy. Netanyahu's government is directly to blame for this strategic failure, and it looks very likely that he will be blamed for it by a majority of Israelis. Supporting them does not imply anti-Semitism, nor even less, justification of Hamas. It's just being against the war party. Anyway, in terms of the discussion here, I wanted to clarify what looks to me like a fundamental point of disagreement. best, Brian -- # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: https://www.nettime.org # contact: nettime-l-owner@lists.nettime.org