Comment: Britain must act against Israel

Martin Linton on devastation in GazaMartin Linton on devastation in Gaza

Monday, 30, Mar 2009 12:00

By Martin Linton

Gaza had already been suffering from years of economic blockade and a terrible humanitarian crisis long before the fighting started. But the situation has been ten times worse since the Israeli assault which devastated large areas of the Gaza strip and left 1,400 dead. And, although few have died since the ceasefire, the suffering is still continuing.

I went to see for myself with an all-party group of MPs in February, four weeks after the end of hostilities. I stood on the mounds of rubble that had once been the village of Isbet Abd Rabo and heard how Israeli soldiers had come with loudspeakers, giving people 15 minutes to leave their homes, and then come with explosive charges, systematically demolishing each house. The 5,000 villagers were now all living in tents provided by the United Nations, apart from the 200 who died.

I saw the industrial estate that had been destroyed in the last few hours of the fighting not by aircraft and tanks but by dynamite placed in the buildings to make sure they could not be rebuilt and by bulldozers to finish off any machinery or generators. I spoke to a Palestinian businessman who had seen his ice-cream factory completely gutted even though it had no military value and had never been used by militants.

All the impressions that we formed during that visit – that the Israelis didn't care how many civilians they killed, had a contemptuous attitude to Palestinians and wanted to destroy Gaza's infrastructure – have all been strengthened by evidence that has come out from other sources, such as the United Nations, the Red Cross and Israeli soldiers themselves.

The UN has already completed a report on the Israeli attack on the UN compound in Gaza. The Red Cross is investigating attacks on hospitals and ambulances. The targeting of medics or medical facilities is illegal under international law. And a transcript from a debriefing session at a military college makes it clear that many civilians were killed because Israeli soldiers were so keen to avoid risk and so careless of Palestinian lives that they cleared houses by shooting without warning.

A squadron leader who argued with his commander against these terms of engagement said he was saddened by "how much the IDF has fallen in the realm of ethics". But these terms of engagement clearly had the enthusiastic support of the troops as well as the commanders. As a platoon commander said: "From what I understood from most of my men… the lives of Palestinians… is something very, very less important than the lives of our soldiers."

It is simply not enough to hope, as the UK government currently does, that the full truth will emerge from the inquiry promised by the Israeli Defence Force. What we need is an investigation mandated by the UN security council which would be able to enforce cooperation or at least impose sanctions for non-cooperation.

None of this is to deny the right of Israel of retaliation against aggression. I have been to Sderot and to Ashqelon and I know the inhabitants of these two towns live in fear of being hit by home-made rockets. But in exercising their right to retaliation Israelis must accept two inevitable concomitants. Firstly, they must allow others to judge their conduct of war. Is it proportionate? Is it legal? And, secondly, if they attack non-combatants, they must expect them to claim the same right of retaliation.

It's quite clear that the Israeli use of force was disproportionate. It is almost certain that the Israelis used white phosphorous and other weapons in an illegal way. We must wait for a legal verdict on the various allegations of war crimes. But already the question needs to be answered: what do we do if the Israeli attack on Gaza is found to be in breach of international law?

This is a question we already face in the West Bank. It is against the Geneva Convention for an occupying power to settle its own citizens in occupied territory. It is even more unquestionably illegal and provocative to expand those settlements. Israeli has 149 settlements in the West Bank and is still expanding them. It is also illegal to annex occupied territory as the Israelis are doing in East Jerusalem or to evict people on ethnic grounds, as the Israelis are currently doing in the Sheikh Jarra and Silwan districts of Jerusalem.

But how do we stop them? I would like to believe that we can persuade the Israeli government that what they are doing is (a) immoral and inhumane, or (b) against their own self-interest because it will create so much hatred that they will never be able to live in peace with their neighbours. But British diplomats have been protesting along these lines for a quarter of a century and the Israelis have ignored them. The diplomatic channel is dead. The only way to influence Israeli behaviour is by some kind of sanction that will impact economically.

John Ging, the highly-respected head of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency in Gaza, has a simple solution to this problem: it's called symmetry of approach. The UK must treat all countries in accordance with the rule of law. The Geneva Convention does not only oblige warring parties. It obliges contracting parties to enforce it. UK is a "high contracting party" - a guarantor - of the Geneva Convention, but there hasn’t been a meeting of the high contracting parties since in 2002.

He says we have not just an altruistic, but a legal responsibility to act. If Israel does not abide by the Convention, it is our duty to impose sanctions. He doesn't say how this should be done - by downgrading or suspending the EU-Israeli Trade Agreement, by banning the import of settlement produce, by an arms embargo or by other measures.

The important point is that there must be a consequence for Israelis. Of course pressure can be counter-productive, as the Israelis have often found in dealing with the Palestinians. Rightly or wrongly, Israel believes itself to be under existential threat and is far more concerned about an Iranian bomb than a third intifada. If pressure is applied in the wrong way, there is always a risk they will dig themselves in deeper.

But all of these issues are interconnected and international law points us in the right direction on all of them. In the long run the interests of Israelis and Palestinians lie in the same direction – an independent, secure and viable state of Palestine alongside Israel – and the job for diplomats is to use the pressure of the international community and of international law to bring the new Israeli government to the negotiating table.

Martin Linton is Labour MP for Battersea and chair of Labour Friends of Palestine and the Middle East

The views expressed in politics.co.uk's comment pages are not necessarily those of the website or its owners.


Comments...

  • "You didn't even use the word Hamas. And nice way to generate sympathy for Sderot by calling the rockets 'home-made'. Forget Israel, you need to look at the source: Iran. ANd you can't deny that if Hamas didn't fire rockets, Israel wouldn't retaliate, but if Israel didn't defend itself..."

    lw (london) Posted: 30/03/2009 13:35:41

  • "Wow, and they let you be a member of Parliament? You are clearly extremely anti-Semitic and clearly one sided. Russia made the arms used by Hamas and Iran paid for them. As Tony Blair has correctly pointed out, if Hamas just stopped firing on Israel then the whole conflict would end. There was no blockade before Hamas started firing on Israel. Hamas has the stated aim of spilling every last drop of Jewish blood. I have repeatedly asked my extended family to leave Britain because of the anti-Semitism there. In the side of good versus evil you have chosen evil. I can only assume that you are politically astute enough to know that the lies you spread may have devastating consequences to Jews in their spiritual homeland and around the world. You shame Britain. What a sell out!"

    NS (Perth ) Posted: 31/03/2009 01:53:19

  • "NS, can you name any other religious group that has felt the need to claim someone else's homeland for their own? Of course the Palestinians are going to fight against the years of ethnic cleansing they have suffered. The raw statistics alone(1400 Palestinians dead compared with 13 Israelis) should be enough to prompt you to question your loyalty. It is an unfair fight, plain and simple."

    Lucy (Sanity) Posted: 31/03/2009 13:02:55

  • "About time this Government showed some backbone and condemned Israel for their abuses. Will Mr. Linton take this up his boss? Perhaps he'll have a better chance talking to Mr. Clegg and get cross party support. I'm fed up with loud-mouthed Israeli sympathisers bleeting on about Hamas. Wake up and realise that the Palestinians have as much right to self-defence as any other human society. Israel must stop the blockade and treat their neighbours as they themselves want to be treated. The Nazis also used arguments like Israelis are to justify their abuses. Hypocrites!"

    Martin (Swindon) Posted: 30/04/2009 10:15:09

  • "I think Lucy and Martin need to look at islam it self, the koran tells muslims jews and christians are apes and pigs and calls for their slaughter, Sura(9:29) Muslims took all lands they now reside in by force 1400 years of crusading, muhammed himself led armys a killed hundreds in the name of islam, wake up islammeans submission not peace it was founded by a warlord just pick up a history book its not hidden information, just like the islamic slave trade that's been going on since 600ad and still go's on today. Do not defend Islam untill you know facts. "

    ted (this planet) Posted: 06/06/2009 22:14:02


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