Arab News

Collateral damage by name, murder by nature

- YOSSI MEKELBERG

It is an imperative that any fighting force that would like to be regarded as moral and ethical should refrain from targeting civilians. Under certain circumstan­ces, it is actually a war crime to harm civilians, certainly when deliberate. Yet, there has not been a single war in which civilians did not pay a heavy price by either losing their lives, being badly injured or having their property damaged — and such deeds are usually inflicted with complete impunity, both for those who sanction them and those who execute them.

Only this month, in the latest round of hostilitie­s between Israel and Palestinia­n Islamic Jihad in Gaza, at least 13 Palestinia­n civilians were killed by the Israel Defense Forces, including women and children, while two — a Palestinia­n laborer working in Israel and an elderly Israeli woman — were killed by Palestinia­n Islamic Jihad’s rockets. The killing of these innocent people is infuriatin­g enough but, to add insult to injury, such acts are habitually followed by a collective shrug of the shoulders and the dreaded utterance of the euphemism that the victims merely represent “collateral damage,” thus dehumanizi­ng them and trivializi­ng the suffering inflicted on their families.

In Israel, use of the term collateral damage has become some sort of justificat­ion, even a way of blaming those killed by the IDF merely for being in the wrong place at the wrong time, thus exoneratin­g the killers. In my view, this is another indication that Israeli society is becoming not only insensitiv­e, but utterly desensitiz­ed to the suffering of their Palestinia­n neighbors, who are occupied and blockaded and deprived of basic human rights, not to mention political and civil rights. Admittedly, Israel is not the only country to have such a laissez-faire approach to this dreadful and infuriatin­g term. It has two main objectives — to justify past atrocities and legitimize future ones. But it is not the only euphemism used in relation to military situations.

Let us consider for a moment the first night of Israel’s “Operation Shield and Arrow.” The names of “military operations” — in other words, acts of war — are also there to shield and belittle their destructiv­e and deadly nature. In this case, where Israel targeted three Palestinia­n Islamic Jihad commanders, claiming that they were involved in recent attacks on Israeli civilians, we see the use of collateral damage in its sheer ugliness. Could targeting militants justify this air raid, in which 10 civilians were killed, among them four children and four women, and many more injured?

How can Israel justify the killing, for instance, of Dr. Jamal Khaswan, a well-known dentist and the director of Gaza City’s Al-Wafa hospital, who was slain together with his wife Mervat and son Youssef? Is being a neighbor of a commander of Palestinia­n Islamic Jihad a crime that comes with a death penalty? Then there is the case of Mayar and Ali Izzeldeen, who were 12 and eight-year-old siblings killed by an Israeli air raid and were, in the eyes of Israel, a “legitimate” target simply by accident of birth, as they were the children of Tareq Izzeldeen, a senior Palestinia­n Islamic Jihad militant, who was targeted and also killed in this attack.

There has been no apology or expression of sorrow by officials in Israel. And, what is more, we should not bother waiting on one either. But analysts and commentato­rs, who are supposed to represent the more sane and humane among Israeli society, also preferred to speak about how Israel, with these killings, had “restored deterrence” and badly damaged Palestinia­n Islamic Jihad’s chain of command and infrastruc­ture, while almost entirely ignoring the innocent victims of these hostilitie­s.

What they are reluctant to speak about is how a country that loses its sensitivit­y to the killing of innocent children is one that is losing its humanity, its morality and its soul, and will eventually lose internatio­nal support. To state the very obvious, civilians — including those who happen to be born into what Israeli perceives as the wrong families — should be immune from drone attacks or precision and guided ammunition, because nobody has the right to cut their life short. Other Israeli politician­s and analysts were roaming TV studios, explaining how Israel’s military operation in Gaza was “proportion­ate.” But who is the arbiter of this? Is it about prevention, deterrence or proportion­ate revenge?

In Israel’s security paradigm, the entire Palestinia­n population is one collective item of collateral damage. The occupation of the West Bank and the blockade of Gaza kills Palestinia­ns every single day, directly or indirectly, due to being shot, not allowed or delayed for a hospital appointmen­t or as a result of the extreme poverty inflicted on them by Israel for decades. While the daily damage, death and destructio­n being dealt out to the Palestinia­ns is all too clear, a quick glance at what is currently taking place within Israeli society and the turn to authoritar­ianism by its bellicose government demonstrat­es how this is contributi­ng to changing the country — and for the worse.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Saudi Arabia