Why Israel’s violent Gaza strategy to divide Palestinian resistance will fail

Date:

Share post:

ANALYSIS: By Mohsen Abu Ramadan

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s latest assault on Gaza is a well-worn strategy among Israeli politicians to manufacture unity during times of internal strife.

In the early morning hours on Tuesday, May 9, Israeli occupation forces launched a brutal military attack on the Gaza Strip, killing 15 people including three leaders of the Palestinian Islamic Jihad movement (PIJ), four children, and four women.

Israeli forces reported that a total of 40 warplanes participated in the targeted assassination campaign that lasted about two hours.

Israeli media outlets also indicated that the military operation may continue for a few days, with Prime Minister Netanyahu promising on Wednesday a “broader campaign” and “severe blows against Gaza”.

It is clear that Israel’s latest attack, which Ha’aretz reports was “meticulously planned in advance”, targets everyone in Gaza. The kill list, including “the distinct possibility of civilians being killed alongside them”, was “vetted and approved by legal advisers”.

Despair and anger in Gaza
Feelings of despair and anger persist in Gaza, as the population continues to live under the constant threat of bombs. According to Palestinian health officials, the death toll in Gaza has risen to at least 24 — including five women and five children, with 64 more injured, due to Israel’s recent aggression.

Netanyahu believes he can end the judicial crisis by rallying Zionist unity against an external threat.

The attacks on Gaza came despite an Egypt-brokered ceasefire agreement last August between Israel and Islamic Jihad, with support from UN Special Coordinator for the Middle East peace process Tor Wennesland.

Since Tuesday, there have been some popular demands for response and revenge, while others fear yet another horrific war on the besieged Strip, where civilians remain in the eye of the storm.

Israel’s assault on Gaza indicates that Israel does not respect agreements and flouts international law. It appears that Israeli leaders are moving forward with their right-wing and racist agenda which seeks to “resolve” the conflict by force.

By reviving Israel’s brutal targeted assassinations policy, Netanyahu seeks to restore the image of deterrence that was cracked due to the resurgence of popular resistance movements in Gaza and the West Bank.

Netanyahu aims to preserve the ruling right-wing coalition, especially after far-right National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir continued to threaten his party’s boycott of weekly Israeli cabinet meetings “until he is given ‘significant influence’ over national security policy”.

Protests inside Israel
Knowing this could lead to the government’s fracture, including a failure to approve the annual budget and therefore push early elections that could lead to his toppling, Netanyahu, whose popularity has declined significantly in favour of Benny Gantz and his National Unity party, has chosen to shift the focus to Gaza.

Netanyahu’s latest assault on Gaza is a well-worn strategy among Israeli politicians to manufacture unity during times of internal strife. After months of mass protests against the ruling coalition’s plans to overthrow the judiciary, Netanyahu believes he can end the judicial crisis — now in its 18th week — or at least halt the protests by rallying Zionist unity against an external threat.

The joint operations room for the resistance movements in Gaza announced that the groups are united and ready to respond to Israel’s attacks. This indicates a failure to undermine Palestinian resistance, which Israel attempted to fracture by targeting only Islamic Jihad commanders.

Israeli forces threatened to carry out targeted assassinations against Hamas leaders if they were to participate in any military response to Israeli aggression.

The occupation state is anxious about Palestinian unity and has built its policy on mechanisms of fragmentation and division. It has managed to do so geographically by separating the Gaza Strip from the West Bank and dividing the latter into enclaves and “Bantustans”.

It is now trying to separate the resistance forces from each other.

The resistance groups understand that the conflict with Israel and its settler-colonial project is historical and existential and that all Palestinian political factions are within Israel’s target circle.

Israel under an illusion
Therefore, I believe that the policy of division and fragmentation will fail.

It should be noted here that the escalation by the government of the neo fascists — Netanyahu, Ben-Gvir, and Minister of Finance Bezalel Smotrich — is not limited to the Gaza Strip but extends to the West Bank, Jerusalem, 1948 Palestinians, and our political prisoners.

The occupation government is under the illusion that its policy will break the will and steadfastness of our people and their determination to resist and struggle.

If the fascist right-wing government poses a threat to our people, it is important to turn this threat into an opportunity by working towards achieving a unified struggle in the field.

Examples include pursuing action against Israeli war criminals in international courts, promoting popular resistance and diplomacy, exposing the fascist and racist nature of the occupying state, and revealing the deep connection between Zionism, fascism, and racism.

Palestinians across the occupied territories continue to emphasise national unity on the basis of resistance and struggle

Palestinians are waiting to see what will happen in the coming hours, though the situation seems to be moving towards escalation.

Despite the fear of another war on Gaza, Palestinians across the occupied territories continue to emphasise national unity on the basis of resistance and struggle, including the importance of practising all forms of legitimate struggle to defend the freedom and dignity of our people.

That Israel would engage in yet another brutal campaign against Gaza on the 75th anniversary of the Nakba only confirms the nature of the Zionist colonial project as an aggressive and racist system built on violence and ethnic cleansing.

Mohsen Abu Ramadan is the former director of the Palestinian Non-governmental Organisation Network (PNGO). This article is republished from Middle East Eye.

Al Jazeera's Youmna El Sayed reporting live from Gaza
Al Jazeera’s Youmna El Sayed reporting live from Gaza. Image: AL screenshot CP

New Zealand Nakba rallies
Saturday, May 13, is the international day of action marking the 75th anniversary of the Nakba (“catastrophe” in Arabic) which marks the ethnic cleansing of more than 700,000 Palestinians from their land and homes by Israeli militias in 1948.

The Nakba continues today with ethnic cleansing, house demolitions and land theft across Palestine.

Marches and demonstrations will be held across the world and in Aotearoa New Zealand, because the country is close to the international dateline, we will be the first nation to be taking action.

Nakba Day is actually on the Monday but to give more people the chance to take part it is being remembered around the world on Saturday, May 13)

Cafe Pacific Publisher
Cafe Pacific Publisher
Café Pacific's duty editor.
- advertisement -

Related articles

Behind settler colonial NZ’s paranoia about dissident ‘persons of interest’

COMMENTARY: By Robert Reid The Enemy Within, by Maire Leadbeater is many things. It is: • A family history • A...

Kamala Harris’s support for Israel’s genocide in Gaza ‘betrayal of true feminism’

Democracy Now! AMY GOODMAN: This is Democracy Now!, “War, Peace and the Presidency.” I’m Amy Goodman, with Nermeen Shaikh. NERMEEN...

Chris Hedges: The politics of cultural despair – and the American nightmare

ANALYSIS: By Chris Hedges In the end, the US election was about despair. Despair over futures that evaporated with...

New survey finds an alarming tolerance for attacks on the press in the US – particularly among white, Republican men

ANALYSIS: By Julie Posetti and Waqas Ejaz Press freedom is a pillar of American democracy. But political attacks on...