The mega prison of Palestine
by Ilan Pappe
05 March 2008
The Electronic
Intifada
http://electronicintifada.net/v2/article9370.shtml

Mourners
stand beside the body of Salsabeel Abu Jalhoumm, a 21-month-old girl who was
killed early on Sunday when an Israeli air strike hit near her home in the
northern Gaza
Strip, 2 March 2008. (Wissam Nassar/MaanImages)
In several articles published by The Electronic Intifada, I claimed
that Israel is pursuing a genocidal
policy against the Palestinians in the Gaza Strip, while
continuing the ethnic cleansing of the West Bank. I
asserted that the genocidal policies are a result of a lack of strategy. The
argument was that since the Israeli political and military elites do not know
how to deal with the Gaza Strip, they opted for a knee-jerk reaction in the
form of massive killing of citizens whenever the Palestinians in the Strip
dared to protest by force their strangulation and imprisonment. The end result
so far is the escalation of the indiscriminate killing of Palestinians -- more
than one hundred in the first days of March 2008, unfortunately validating the
adjective "genocidal" I and others attached to these policies. But it
was not yet a strategy.
However, in recent weeks a clearer Israeli strategy towards the Gaza Strip's
future has emerged and it is part of the overall new thinking about the fate of
the occupied territories in general. It is in essence, a refinement of the
unilateralism adopted by Israel
ever since the collapse of the Camp David
"peace talks" in the summer of 2000. Former Israeli Prime Minister
Ariel Sharon, his party Kadima, and his successor Prime Minister Ehud Olmert,
delineated very clearly what unilateralism entailed: Israel would annex about
50 percent of the West Bank, not as a homogeneous chunk of it, but as the total
space of the settlement blocs, the apartheid roads, the military bases and the
"national park reserves" (which are no-go areas for Palestinians).
This was more or less implemented in the last eight years. These purely Jewish
entities cut the West Bank into 11 small
cantons and sub-cantons. They are all separated from each other by this complex
colonial Jewish presence. The most important part of this encroachment is the
greater Jerusalem wedge that divides the West
Bank into two discrete regions with no land connection for the
Palestinians.
The wall thus is stretched and reincarnated in various forms all over the West
Bank, encircling at times individual villages, neighborhoods or
towns. The cartographic picture of this new edifice gives a clue to the new
strategy both towards the West Bank and the
Gaza Strip. The 21st century Jewish state is about to complete the construction
of two mega prisons, the largest of their kind in human history.
They are different in shape: the West Bank is made of small ghettos and the one
in Gaza is a huge
mega ghetto of its own. There is another difference: the Gaza Strip is now, in
the twisted perception of the Israelis, the ward where the "most dangerous
inmates" are kept. The West Bank, on the
other hand, is still run as a huge complex of open air prisons in the form of
normal human habitations such as a village or a town interconnected and
supervised by a prison authority of immense military and violent power.
As far as the Israelis are concerned, the mega prison of the West
Bank can be called a state. Advisor to Palestinian Authority (PA)
President Mahmoud Abbas, Yasser Abed Rabbo, in the last days of February 2008,
threatened the Israelis with a unilateral declaration of independence, inspired
by recent events in Kosovo. However, it seemed that nobody on the Israeli side
objected to the idea very much. This is more or less the message a bewildered
Ahmed Qurei, the Abbas-appointed Palestinian negotiator, received from Tzipi
Livni, Israel's
foreign minister, when he phoned to assure her that Abed Rabbo was not speaking
in the name of the PA. He got the impression that her main worry was is in fact
quite the opposite: that the PA would not agree to call the mega prisons a
state in the near future.
This unwillingness, together with Hamas' insistence of resisting the mega
prison system by a war of liberation, forced the Israelis to rethink their
strategy towards the Gaza Strip. It transpires that not even the most
cooperative members of the PA are willing to accept the mega prison reality as
"peace" or even as a "two state settlement." And Hamas and
Islamic Jihad even translate this unwillingness into Qassam attacks on Israel.
So the model of the most dangerous ward developed: the leading strategists in
the army and the government embrace themselves for a very long-term
"management" of the system they have built, while pledging commitment
to a vacuous "peace process," with very little global interest in it,
and a continued struggle from within, against it.
The Gaza Strip is now seen as the most dangerous ward in this complex and thus
the one against which the most brutal punitive means have to be employed.
Killing the "inmates" by aerial or artillery bombing, or by economic
strangulation, are not just inevitable results of the punitive action chosen,
but also desirable ones. The bombing of Sderot is also the inevitable and in a
way desirable consequence of this strategy. Inevitable, as the punitive action
cannot destroy the resistance and quite often generates a retaliation. The
retaliation in its turn provides the logic and basis for the next punitive
action, should someone in domestic public opinion doubt the wisdom of the new
strategy.
In the near future, any similar resistance from parts of the West
Bank mega prison would be dealt with in a similar way. And these
actions are very likely to take place in the very near future. Indeed, the
third intifada is on its way and the Israeli response would be a further
elaboration of the mega prison system. Downsizing the number of
"inmates" in both mega prisons would be still a very high priority in
this strategy by means of ethnic cleansing, systematic killings and economic
strangulation.
But there are wedges that prevent the destructive machine from rolling. It
seems that a growing number of Jews in Israel
(a majority according to a recent CNN poll) wish their government to begin
negotiations with Hamas. A mega prison is fine, but if the wardens' residential
areas are likely to come under fire in the future then the system fails. Alas,
I doubt whether the CNN poll represents accurately the present Israeli mood;
but it does indicate a hopeful trend that vindicates the Hamas insistence that Israel
only understands the language of force. But it may not be enough and the
perfection of the mega prison system in the meantime continues unabated and the
punitive measures of its authority are claiming the lives of many more
children, women and men in the Gaza Strip.
As always it is important to be reminded that the west can put an end to this
unprecedented inhumanity and criminality, tomorrow. But so far this is not happening.
Although the efforts to make Israel
a pariah state continue with full force, they are still limited to civil
society. Hopefully, this energy will one day be translated into governmental
policies on the ground. We can only pray it will not be too late for the
victims of this horrific Zionist invention: the mega prison of Palestine.
Ilan Pappe is chair in the Department of
History at the University
of Exeter.