Hamas, Not Israel, Playing Fast & Loose With Lives in
Gaza
For three weeks, we've read about and seen the Gaza
fighting. Innumerable reports describe particular cases of death and injury as
arising from Israeli action and encompassing large numbers or proportions of
civilian casualties. Much of this reportage carries the not-so-subtle
implication that Israel is on the rampage. Don't
believe it.
It is by no means the case that the casualties we see on our
screens stem from Israeli action, nor is it always clear whether casualties are
those of armed Hamas terrorists, voluntary human shields, or of genuinely
innocent civilians.
As Bret Stephens put it this week in the Wall Street
Journal, "When minutely exact statistics are provided in chaotic
circumstances, it suggests the statistics are garbage. When a news organization
relies-without clarification-on data provided by a bureaucratic organ of a
terrorist organization, there's something wrong there, too."
Indeed there is. Here are three examples among many that could be chosen which show precisely
what is wrong in presuming Israeli guilt.
1. On July 8, 7 Gazans were killed, and two dozen wounded in
Khan Younis by Israeli strikes -- but not because Israel struck recklessly and
without taking precautionary steps.
Israel had forewarned residents that it would attack a house occupied by
terrorists, but civilians nonetheless flooded the house in question. Why?
Because, as the Wall Street Journal reported, "family members who survived
said they thought if they stayed as human shields, they could stop the
attack."
2. On 16 July, according to UN officials, "the Israeli
military delivered text messages to virtually all the residents of Ash
Shuja'iyya and Az Zaitoun neighborhoods in eastern Gaza city, approximately
100,000 people, warning them to leave their homes ... ahead of attacks to be
launched in the area ... the Palestinian Ministry of Interior in Gaza reportedly instructed the residents
... not [to] flee the area ... the vast majority decided to stay." In
these circumstances, however much care Israel exercised, civilian casualties
were ensured by Hamas.
3. On July 28, 10 people, including 8 children, were killed
at the Al-Shati refugee camp in Gaza. Fingers were immediately pointed at
Israel for committing a reckless slaughter. NBC reported it as a strike by an
Israeli drone. Israel maintained it was a Hamas misfire and that "at the
time of the incident there was no Israeli military activity in the area
surrounding the hospital whatsoever." Only when an Italian reporter,
Gabriele Barbati, was out of Gaza, beyond reach of Hamas retaliation, was he able confirm that it was indeed a Hamas
rocket that had killed Gazans, not Israel. Yet, no correction can be found
on the NBC report on its website.
Which leads to a larger point.
Journalists in Gaza
are not about to antagonize Hamas. That means exercising self-censorship.
For example, Hamas maintains a major military headquarters in a basement
beneath the Shifa hospital in Gaza City. Yet, we have seen no footage of Hamas
occupying the hospital.
We have also seen hardly any footage of Hamas terrorists firing
rockets or operating in residential areas of Gaza, though this is occurring all
the time. Not one of 37 images from three slideshows published by the New York
Times has shown even a single Hamas gunman.
In recent weeks, Hamas has rounded up and summarily murdered
some 30 Gazans for collaboration with Israel. No trials, no burden of proof --
and no mercy. Gaza is not Israel.
Journalists know well not to challenge Hamas. They cannot report without fear
or favor.
When journalists operate in a terror haven under the close
scrutiny of pitiless murderers, we cannot simply rely on Hamas-compliant
reports of Israeli strikes killing Palestinian civilians.
An army that was truly reckless and on the rampage,
disposing of massive firepower, could have killed tens of thousands by now. For
example, in the First Chechen War, Russia spent five weeks carpet-bombing and
hammering Grozny, killing what the Russian Parliament's own Commissioner for
Human Rights estimated as 27,000 civilians.
According to the Meir Amit Intelligence Center, staffed by
seasoned former military and intelligence officers, as of 29 July, 335
terrorist operatives, 347 civilians, and 440 as yet unidentified Palestinians
have been killed in Gaza.
Yet, even if one accepts the Hamas-compliant figures of 852
dead Palestinian civilians, it is clear that the thousands of air sorties,
artillery strikes and tank shells fired by Israel in the past three weeks have
produced only about 3% of the civilian fatalities produced in five weeks by
Russia in Grozny.
More than doubling the figures of Gazan civilian fatalities,
however, as the Hamas-compliant estimates have done, has a clear political
purpose: it enables Hamas to claim that something like 70% of Gazan casualties
are civilians, thus helping to paint Israel as a reckless bully, rather than
the most careful army in the world.
Absent Hamas' rocket
barrage and terror tunnels, there would be no war. Those who launch assaults,
plan mass terror attacks, embed themselves among their own civilians while
targeting those of the other side deserve exposure. It is Hamas that is playing
fast and loose with lives in Gaza, not Israel.
Dr. Michael Goldblatt is National Chairman of the Board of
the Zionist Organization of America (ZOA). Dr. Daniel Mandel is Director of the
ZOA' s Center for Middle East Policy and author of H.V. Evatt & the
Creation of Israel (Routledge, London, 2004).
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