Miami Herald (Sunday)

Some Latin American countries endorse Hamas’ violence against Israel: It’s shameful

- BY ANDRES OPPENHEIME­R aoppenheim­er@miamiheral­d.com

Hamas is shooting rockets into Israeli cities, including Jerusalem and Tel Aviv, aiming at the civilian population. Israel, on the other hand, is retaliatin­g by attacking Hamas’ military targets. That’s a big difference.

Also, Hamas openly calls for the annihilati­on of Israel and its Jewish population. As recently as May 7, Fathi Hamad, a senior Hamas official, called on Palestinia­ns to “cut off the heads of the Jews with knives” in a speech broadcast on Al-Aqsa TV in Gaza, according to a translatio­n by the Washington­based Middle East Media Research Institute.

In other words, the ongoing Gaza-Israel violence is not really about the Palestinia­n people’s right to a homeland, — many of us support a “two states for two peoples” solution. Hamas is a right-wing Islamic fundamenta­list group that doesn’t want a two-state solution. It wants to eliminate Israel and install an Iran-backed Muslim fundamenta­list regime.

But none of that has kept the Cuban and Venezuelan dictatorsh­ips from blaming Israel for the ongoing violence, without a word of condemnati­on for Hamas.

Cuba’s foreign minister tweeted that his country “strongly condemns the indiscrimi­nate bombardmen­ts against the Palestinia­n population in Gaza.” Venezuela’s foreign minister tweeted that,

“The world must demand the end of this new phase of Zionist violence against the Palestinia­n people.”

Most surprising was the reaction from Argentina, whose chaotic populist government until recently showed some moderation in foreign affairs. Argentina condemned the “disproport­ionate use of force” by Israel, without an equally strong condemnati­on of Hamas’ rocket attacks.

Mexico and Chile issued pretty balanced statements calling on both sides to de-escalate violence. Brazil, Colombia and Uruguay, like the Biden administra­tion, stressed Israel’s right to defend itself.

Argentina’s condemnati­on of Israel’s allegedly “disproport­ionate” use of force is intriguing. One could argue that a “proportion­ate” use of violence would be for Israel to launch the same number of rockets as Hamas, something that would have greatly multiplied the death toll in Gaza.

At the center of the current Gaza-Israel violence is the fight for Palestinia­n leadership. Hamas’ rocket attacks are part of that group’s increasing­ly successful offensive to become the sole leader of the Palestinia­n cause, making its rival Palestinia­n Authority (PA) government irrelevant.

Hamas has exploited PA President Mahmoud Abbas’ recent decision to postpone Palestinia­n elections. It has also benefited from what it has painted as the 85-year-old Abbas’ failure to respond to the Palestinia­n-Israeli clashes over the property rights of four houses in East Jerusalem, and the tear-gassing by Israeli police of protesters around Al-Aqsa

Mosque in Jerusalem.

None of this is to say that Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government is free of blame.

Netanyahu, whose coalition depends on the support of far-right and ultraOrtho­dox parties, has allowed Israeli-Palestinia­n tensions to escalate by, among other things, delaying until the last minute a decision to suspend a Jerusalem Day march by right-wing Israelis in the Muslim quarter of Jerusalem.

Netanyahu is facing corruption charges and should have been voted out of office long ago. He has done more harm than good to Israel, taking measures in recent years that have made a twostate solution increasing­ly difficult to reach.

Still, at the time of this writing, while the rockets are falling on Israeli cities, it’s Hamas — not Israel — that should be denounced.

Hamas’ terrorists are firing rockets at Israeli civilians, while hiding behind schools and hospitals, using Gaza residents as human shields. Israel is firing at Hamas’ military positions to defend its population, like any other country would do if it were hit by more than 2,000 rockets from next door.

Don’t miss the “Oppenheime­r Presenta” TV show on Sundays at 8 p.m. on CNN en Español. Twitter: @oppenheime­ra

 ?? FATIMA SHBAIR Getty Images ?? A woman in Gaza walks past a structure destroyed by an Israeli airstrike.
FATIMA SHBAIR Getty Images A woman in Gaza walks past a structure destroyed by an Israeli airstrike.

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