The rockets, however, are inaccurate, and so far, no damage has been done in Israel. As against the casualties in Gaza, the number of people treated in Israeli hospitals is said to be 123, of whom, over a 100 were suffering only from shock and anxiety. This mirrors the sort of figures one has, unfortunately, become used to seeing in past conflicts. In 2012, 167 Palestinians were killed, of whom less than half were combatants, while on the Israeli side only six people were killed — all from the Israeli Defence Forces. In 2008-09 again, 1,166 Palestinians died while 13 Israelis were killed.
It is no wonder that in his TV address on July 11, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas plaintively asked without mentioning Hamas by name: “What are you trying to achieve by sending rockets?” and maintained that he preferred to “fight with wisdom and politics”. His plea, however, has fallen on deaf ears, as has his other request for “the Security Council to quickly issue a clear condemnation of this Israeli aggression and impose a commitment of a mutual ceasefire immediately”. President Barack Obama told Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that “the United States remains prepared to facilitate a cessation of hostilities, including a return to the November 2012 ceasefire agreement” but there is little hope of any such ceasefire being agreed upon since Netanyahu has made it clear that a ceasefire with Hamas is “not even on the agenda” until the firing of rockets on Israel stops. He has warned Israelis to expect “further stages later on”.
Clearly, the painstakingly constructed agreement between Abbas and Hamas has become meaningless, but the political difficulties within Palestine are compounded by the disarray in the Arab world.
The situation in Iraq continues to go from bad to worse, with there being little prospect of an early agreement being reached on a new Shia prime minister to replace Nur al Maliki and relations between Baghdad and the Kurds deteriorating further as Kurdish ministers boycott cabinet meetings after being accused of providing sanctuary to rebel forces in Kurdish territory.
In Syria, Bashar al Assad’s forces seem to be advancing on Aleppo even while ISIS creates new fissures by capturing Kurdish-held territory along the border with Turkey.
In Yemen, a Shia tribe, the Houthi, has seized control of Amran, a province only 45 miles north of the capital from the hitherto dominant Sunni Hashid tribe. The Houthis have claimed that they were just trying to free the province from the clutches of al Qaeda and other extremist groups. For the Saudis, however, this will raise fears of Yemen falling under Shia control. Their full attention will be focused on helping Yemeni President Abdu Rabbu Mansour Hadi.
Egypt may have helped, while ruled by the Muslim Brotherhood, to broker the 2012 ceasefire, but its present government is suspicious of and hostile to Hamas. Hamas may have hoped that the abducting and subsequent killing of three Israelis, which prompted the present crisis, would secure the release of Hamas prisoners held by Israel or hopefully would, as a consequence of the expected Israeli response, trigger a third intifada. After incidents in Jerusalem, they had hailed what they called the start of the ‘Shuafat Intifada’.
There is little chance of that happening. Only further misery lies ahead for the Palestinians. It is a high cost to pay for Hamas to get some headlines and maybe a futile and temporary surge in popularity among some of the more desperate Gaza inhabitants.
Published in The Express Tribune, July 14th, 2014.
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COMMENTS (7)
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@Sexton Blake: It is the Muslims and Muslims Countries who are biggest receptor of aid from US and EU. US give aid to Palestinian also. Palestinian state is not recognized by all countries. Aren't Jordanian are Palestinian themselves? Even if we assume you are rights then why so many muslim countries are member of UN?
@p r sharma: Dear pr sharma, I was giving the true version of history, which unlike historical propaganda is based upon reality. Historical propaganda, which you and most ET readers seem to prefer, has an emotional base and emotionality has no reality.
@p r sharma: That made no sense.
@Sexton Blake:
"It has become absolutely clear that Israel is completing a long term plan to destroy the Palestinian entity. The plan really started seriously in the late 19th century with the introduction of Zionism" ---
Your imagination has no bound when Israelis claimed to be planning 30 years before it birth , to destroy the Palestinians. Surely it must have contribution of the genes too.
Your perception of UN and the west ( including USA) as the puppets of Israel (while Israel is said to receive trillions in aid from USA) speaks the contradiction. carry on, sir.
It has become absolutely clear that Israel is completing a long term plan to destroy the Palestinian entity. The plan really started seriously in the late 19th century with the introduction of Zionism, was seriously helped by the British Balfour Declaration of 1917, the ground roots really started when Britain took over the Ottoman Empire after 1918, it really took off in 1948 when the British virtually handed the reins of Government over to the Jews, and has been fully supported ever since by the Americans who have given Israel many trillions of dollars in financial and military aid, In the meantime the Israeli Government has carried out its brutal tactics with the full compliance of its Western puppets and the UN, which have become disgraceful organizations under full control of non-elected people.
It needs to be stated repeatedly that once you start a fire the destruction caused by the fire can be devastating however catching and punishing the arsonist is of utmost importance. It is a difficult decision for many Palestinians to stand against Hamas but if they do not do it during their time then their next generation will also pay the same price the current generation is paying.
Hamas is a state within a Palestinian state and as long as President Abbas does not stand firmly against Hamas, he will continue to feel helpless and will not be able to stop the carnage.
Great, good to know there are people who can speak honestly about sensitive issues in paksitan.