A balancing act
With 'Operation Pillar of Cloud'
underway, can 'Operation Pillar of Fire' be far behind?
By day the Lord
went ahead of them in a pillar of cloud to guide them on their way
and by night in a pillar of fire to give them light, so that they
could travel by day or night. Neither the pillar of cloud by day nor
the pillar of fire by night left its place in front of the people.
Exodus
13:21-22.
The blogosphere is already full of
incisive accounts and analysis of the bourgeois media's fabled
balanced reportage, including Lenin,
MediaLens, Asa Winstanley,
Ali Abunimah,
Maureen Clare Murphy,
as well as of the cynical domestic political machinations that seem
to have dictated the timing of the onslaught.
So I intend to take another slant on
the question of balance.
In an article on the ABC's Drum
yesterday, Alison Pert, who 'lectures in international law and
the use of force at the University of Sydney' undertook
to unravel 'this murky area of international law' regarding the
assassination of Hamas military chief Ahmad al-Jabari. On the one
hand,
the International
Court of Justice, when considering the legality of the security
barrier that Israel was (and is) building around the occupied
territories,...clearly stated, albeit controversially, that the right
of self-defence in international law is only open to a state
defending itself against an attack from another state. It pointed
out that the occupied territories, of which Gaza is a part, are
exactly that - territory occupied by Israel and not another state.
Consequently
Israel cannot use self-defence against attacks from the Gaza strip as
a legal argument to justify its actions.
But on the other,
Israel argues that
it has the right in international law to defend itself against
terrorism: since 2001 some 13,000 rockets have landed in Israel,
killing over a thousand Israelis and wounding thousands more, and a
million more citizens live under the constant threat of rocket
attack.
Parenthetically, it seems that numeracy
is not a skill required of international law lecturers, because in
reality, between 2001 and 15 November 2012, 7882 rockets fired from
Gaza landed in Israel. But who wants to split hairs? If you add in
the 4890 mortar shells, it comes to nearly 13 000. That said, it's
hard to see how the 61 Israelis killed over the period suddenly
became 'over a thousand' or the 1719 injured became 'thousands more'.
Not that it is of any conceivable interest, according to the UN
Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs – occupied
Palestinian territories (OCHAOPT) casualties database,
between 1 January 2001 and 21 July 2012, 2998 in Gaza were killed and
4399 injured by Israeli fire, primarily by missiles, artillery and
tank shells. I still haven't found a source that might reveal how
many projectiles Israel actually lobbed into one of the most densely
populated areas on the planet, but then, why would anybody want to
know that?
The figures for Israeli casualties
don't disaggregate civilian from combatant casualties, but the OCHA
figures are explicitly related to 'Protection of civilians'. But that
hardly matters because it transpires that the reason the
International Court of Justice opinion Pert refers to
is considered
controversial is, for one thing, that the International Committee of
the Red Cross has issued Interpretive guidanceon the notion of direct participation in hostilities underinternational humanitarian law
by Dr
Nils Melzer (also author of Targeted Killing
in International Law
(Oxford University Press, 2008)), which recommends
Civilians lose
protection against direct attack for the duration of each specific
act amounting to
direct participation in hostilities .
In
order to qualify as direct participation in hostilities, a specific
act must meet the following cumulative criteria:
1.
The act must be likely to adversely affect the military operations or
military capacity of a party to an armed conflict or, alternatively,
to inflict death, injury, or destruction on persons or objects
protected against direct attack (threshold of harm), and
2.
there must be a direct causal link between the act and the harm
likely to result either from that act, or from a coordinated military
operation of which that act constitutes an integral part (direct
causation), and
3.
the act must be specifically designed to directly cause the required
threshold of harm in support of a party to the conflict and to the
detriment of another (belligerent nexus).
...individuals
whose continuous function involves the preparation, execution, or
command of acts or operations amounting to direct participation
in hostilities are assuming a continuous combat function. [my
emphasis]
Now you might think that on the basis
of these recommendations, Palestinians would be justified in
targeting, say, Benny Gantz, Israel's Chief of General Staff,
ensconced in HaKirya,
in the heart of Tel Aviv, or indeed, 'Defence' Minister, Ehud Barak.
But no. According to the ICRC, 'Continuous
combat function requires lasting integration into an organized armed
group acting as the armed forces of a
non-State party
to an armed conflict.' [my emphasis] Gotcha!
Furthermore,
The Israeli
Supreme Court agrees with the "unlawful combatant" view of
terrorists, and the US appears to take the same approach in relation
to the killing of Osama bin Laden and other senior Al Qaeda figures.
Pert concludes that because Israel and
the ICRC's expert on justifying 'targeted assassination' disagree
with the ICJ opinion, 'With the law so unclear in this area, perhaps
it tilts in Israel's favour on this occasion.'
She is of course in good company. AsaKasher, respected professor of philosophy and linguistics at Tel Aviv
University, believes that even 'a terrorist's neighbour' is not
entitled to the protection traditionally accorded to noncombatants
where there is any prospect of danger to 'a citizen in uniform'.
On Wednesday, Mark C. Toner, Deputy
Spokesperson of the US Department of State, issued a press statement.
We strongly
condemn the barrage of rocket fire from Gaza into southern Israel,
and we regret the death and injury of innocent Israeli and
Palestinian civilians caused by the ensuing violence. There is no
justification for the violence that Hamas and other terrorist
organizations are employing against the people of Israel. We call on
those responsible to stop these cowardly acts immediately. We support
Israel’s right to defend itself, and we encourage Israel to
continue to take every effort to avoid civilian casualties.
And just yesterday, Australian Prime
Minister, Julia Gillard said,
The Government
condemns the repeated rocket and mortar attacks on Israel from the
Gaza Strip and calls on Hamas to cease these immediately.
Australia supports
Israel’s right to defend itself against these indiscriminate
attacks. Such attacks on Israel’s civilian population are utterly
unacceptable.
Were it not so frightening, it would be
hilarious that venal politicians, philosophers, experts in
International Law™ and the
responsible, objective media
parade around taking so dispassionate a stance as to defend 'Israel’s
right to defend itself' and condemn 'Hamas's avowed purpose to
destroy Israel' while keeping shtum on Palestinians' right to defend
themselves and Israel's absolutely explicit commitment to eradicate Hamas. But what's really terrifying is that anybody
takes them seriously.
So the powerful write ‘laws’ favouring the preservation of their privileges and hire a small army of well-paid minion accomplices to help spread their gospel? Perish the thought!
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