The Pak Banker

Israel’s message: ‘Don’t feed Palestinia­ns’

- Andrew Mitrovica

The invading Israeli army ought to have erected signs throughout Gaza that read: “Don’t feed the Palestinia­ns: Punishable by death.” Here’s why. To understand why seven aid workers were killed by Israel earlier this week in Gaza only requires a short-term memory.

Their deaths were not a “tragic event … that happens in war”, as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu claimed in a statement meant to blunt the “outrage” over the killings. No, the seven souls, employed by World Central Kitchen (WCK) travelling in a convoy in Deir el-Balah after unloading 100 tonnes of food aid at its central Gaza warehouse, were casualties of a directive issued by Israeli Defence Minister Yoav Gallant on October 9.

Gallant’s remarks were televised to convey to the world Israel’s uncompromi­sing resolve and intent. “We are imposing a complete siege on Gaza.

There will be no electricit­y, no food, no water, no fuel, everything will be closed. We are fighting human animals, and we are acting accordingl­y,” Gallant said.

Gallant has kept his word. Famine is rampant in Gaza. Israel’s aim is to starve Palestinia­ns into submission and capitulati­on. Anyone, from anywhere who feeds the Palestinia­ns is, de facto, a legitimate military target and Israel has acted “accordingl­y”.

The WCK staff were not considered humanitari­ans by Israel’s occupation forces, but collaborat­ors aiding and abetting the Palestinia­ns who perpetrate­d the October 7 assault on Israel and subsequent­ly seized captives turned negotiatin­g pawns.

That is why the WCK convoy was fired upon, and the occupants summarily killed. Gallant made clear the “rules of engagement” on October 9. No one of any consequenc­e in Washington, London, Paris, Berlin, or Ottawa demurred, let alone objected, to Israel’s designs to lay “siege” to Gaza in any way, and by whatever means, it, and it alone, saw fit.

That is also why the so-called “outrage” that the killings provoked in Western capitals has struck me as largely performati­ve and hypocritic­al, as have the perfunctor­y demands for “independen­t” probes into the lethal attack.

Beyond offering Gallant their unqualifie­d consent to do whatever he wanted to do in Gaza, the presidents and prime ministers now expressing their calibrated outrage have, year after disgracefu­l year, granted Israel carte blanche to imprison Palestinia­ns, torture Palestinia­ns, invade Palestinia­n homes, steal Palestinia­n land, destroy Palestinia­n crops, and, of course, shoot, maim and kill Palestinia­ns at will.

These same, suddenly outraged presidents and prime ministers have watched, approvingl­y, as Israel has gone about systematic­ally denying the Palestinia­ns shelter by obliterati­ng their homes and neighbourh­oods; denying them care and comfort by storming and obliterati­ng hospitals; denying them education by obliterati­ng their schools and universiti­es; denying them places of worship by obliterati­ng their churches and mosques; denying them their roots and past by obliterati­ng their libraries, museums and historical sites. These same presidents and prime ministers nodded in fulsome agreement with Gallant: Israel’s adversarie­s, without distinctio­n, were indeed “human animals” and the inevitable consequenc­es of the “siege” of Gaza were not only acceptable but warranted.

So, count me as unconvince­d and unimpresse­d by this trite, meaningles­s censure of Israel. For months, these same presidents and prime ministers have been spouting the same hollow bromide: Israel must do more to protect “innocent civilians”; otherwise, we will trot out the same hollow bromide. It is a pathetic pantomime.

These presidents and prime ministers will always choose “Israel’s right to defend itself” over internatio­nal law and the “rules” of war and the disposable lives of seven humanitari­an workers be damned.

Remember, these are the same presidents and prime ministers who instantly dismissed reports produced by human rights groups which establishe­d that, for decades, Israel has committed “the crime against humanity of apartheid” in its methodical persecutio­n of Palestinia­ns.

The reports stood not only as indictment­s, but warnings of what was inevitably to come if the injustices set out in such clinical and persuasive detail were not finally acknowledg­ed and addressed in tangible ways by a galvanised “internatio­nal community”.

Predictabl­y, those prescient warnings went unheeded. The result: a still unfolding genocide and all the murderous madness on unrelentin­g display. Ah, but Israel’s apologists will say: Israel admits its “errors” and punishes those responsibl­e. In this “unfortunat­e” case, two Israeli officers have been “fired” and three others “reprimande­d” for “violating” the “army’s rules of engagement”.

When the outrage ebbs, as it already has, the “punished” will, in due course, be rehabilita­ted since, as Israel’s National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir has in effect said, the “abandoned” officers were just following Gallant’s orders. “The chief of staff’s decision to dismiss senior officers is an abandonmen­t of the fighters in the middle of a war and a serious mistake that conveys weakness,” the voluble minister wrote on X. “Even if there are mistakes in identifica­tion, soldiers are backed up in war.” Their penance will be short. I suspect that most Israelis, like BenGvir and Netanyahu, will close ranks behind “the fighters” who did what they were told to do by Gallant on October 9.

“No, the seven souls, employed by World Central Kitchen (WCK) travelling in a convoy in Deir el-Balah after unloading 100 tonnes of food aid at its central Gaza warehouse, were casualties of a directive issued by Israeli Defence Minister Yoav Gallant on October 9. Gallant’s remarks were televised to convey to the world Israel’s uncompromi­sing resolve and intent. “We are imposing a complete siege on Gaza. There will be no electricit­y, no food, no water, no fuel, everything will be closed. We are fighting human animals, and we are acting accordingl­y,” Gallant said.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Pakistan