Gaza war drowns out sane voices.
By James M.
Dorsey
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Gershon
Baskin may be one of the few sane voices left on both sides of the
Israeli-Palestinian divide.
Mr. Baskin
speaks with authority when he denounces the Israeli assault on Gaza as a war
crime and Hamas for its brutal October 7 attack on Israel that killed 1,400,
primarily civilian, Israelis.
A hostage
negotiator, former advisor to Israeli prime ministers, critic of the Israeli
occupation of Palestinian lands, and an investor in East Jerusalem housing for
Palestinians, Mr. Baskin negotiated Hamas’ 2011 release of Israeli soldier
Gilad Shalit in exchange for 1,027 Palestinians, including the group’s Gaza
leader, Yahya Sinwar, from Israeli prisons.
Mr. Baskin
recalls his Hamas counterpart Ghazi Hamad, a member of the group’s political
bureau and erstwhile proponent of a two-state resolution of the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict, involving the creation of an independent
Palestinian state alongside Israel, as saying on the day of Mr. Shalit’s
release: "Next time we will negotiate peace!"
Those were
the days. In hindsight, they are days of missed opportunities wasted by leaders
on both sides of the Israeli-Palestinian divide that either wanted to thwart
any chance of an equitable solution of the conflict and/or cared more about
their personal interests than the fate of their people.
Last month,
the man who asserted he wanted to negotiate peace celebrated Hamas’ October 7 wanton slaughter of innocent
civilians and called for more.
"We
must teach Israel a lesson. We will do this again and again. The Al Aqsa Flood
was just the first time and there will be a second, a third, a fourth… Will we
have to pay the price? Yes, and we are ready to pay it… We are the victims of
the occupation. Period. Therefore, nobody should blame us for the things we do.
On October 7, October 10, October one-millionth, everything we do is
justified,” Mr. Hamad told the Lebanese Broadcasting Corporation.
Calling for
the “annihilation of Israel,” Mr. Hamad was referring to the October 7 attack
by Hamas’ codename for the assault.
Mr. Baskin
should not have been surprised by Mr. Hamad’s turn around.
“Whenever in
the past I talked with Baskin, I always came away both frustrated and
impressed. Frustrated that he always accepted his private face-to face
discussions of Palestinian leaders, while they would right afterwards turn
around and incite publicly for violence. Impressed at his commitment to work
for peace, no matter how frustrating his Palestinian interlocutors were.,” said
Paul Shindman, a former journalist and friend of Mr. Baskin in an email to the
author.
Moreover,
Mr. Hamad and other Hamas leaders seem locked into a competition with Israeli
leaders on who can make the most blood-curdling statements.
Israeli
leaders have echoed Hamas’ justifications for the October 7 slaughter,
justifying Israel’s indiscriminate bombings by asserting there are no innocent civilians in
Gaza and that Israel
is fighting “human animals.”
The
competition suggests that raw emotions, deep-seated mutual resentment, and the
desire for vengeance on both sides of the Israeli-Palestinian divide will take
years to overcome.
Some hope,
in the belief that Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu’s political days are
numbered because he will have to take the blame for Israel’s October 7
intelligence and military failure, that a Hamas defeat and change in Israel
will open the door to talks to definitively resolve the conflict.
Ram Ben
Barak, a former senior intelligence official and contender for leadership of Yesh Atid, Israel’s main opposition party,
this week illustrated just how deep and widespread Israeli anti-Palestinian
sentiment is.
In an
interview with Israel’s Channel 12, Mr. Ben Barak called for the expulsion of
Palestinians from Gaza.
“If they are
refugees, it’s better to be a refugee in Canada than in Gaza. So, let us
distribute Gazans all over the world. They are 2.5 million people. Each country
takes 25,000. 100 countries. That’s humane and needs to be done. If the world
wants to solve the Palestinian problem, it has the ability to do so.”
To be fair,
Mr. Ben Barak has also called for an end to settler violence against
Palestinians in the West Bank.
Even so, Mr.
Baskin, the hostage negotiator, tore this week into Mr. Hamad in an open letter to the Hamas official whom he has known for 18 years,
spoken to more than 1,000 times, met four times, and unsuccessfully tried to
meet again in 2021.
“I think you
have lost your mind and you have lost your moral code. You have crossed the line between humanity
and inhumanity. I have never justified the killing of innocent people. I never
imagined that you would justify the killing of innocent civilians… These are not the actions of human beings,”
Mr. Baskin wrote.
“I always
thought you were a man with principle of humanity. How can you justify the things that your
people did? How can you call for 1
million October 7? I have called
Israel's bombing of innocent civilians in Gaza a war crime,” Mr. Baskin added.
Mr. Hamad’s Israeli
interlocutor described how he shrugged off Gazan assertions that Hamas only
cared about itself and not about Palestinians. He advised Gazans to talk to the
Hamas official.
“You built
tunnels and bunkers for your own people — not 1 single shelter for the people
of Gaza. You ran away from Gaza and
deserted your people. I am sure you took
your privileged family with you when you ran away,” Mr. Baskin thundered.
Hamas
political bureau member Moussa Abu Marzouk confirmed Hamas’ attitude in an October 30 interview with
Russia Today’s Arabic channel.
“We have
built the tunnels because we have no other way of protecting ourselves from
being targeted and killed. These tunnels are meant to protect us from the
airplanes. We are fighting from inside the tunnels. Seventy-five percent of the
population of Gaza are refugees, and it is the UN’s responsibility to protect
them,” Mr. Abu Marzouk said.
Mr. Baskin’s
letter is more than an expression of anger, revulsion, and disappointment in a
man he had come to trust and with whom he believed Israel could do business.
It testifies
to the deep, difficult to bridge rift, which will be a destructive legacy of a
war that has shattered the lives of a majority of Gazans and the lives of
Israeli victims of the Hamas attack and their families as well as Israel’s
confidence and own proclaimed moral code.
Dr. James M. Dorsey is an Honorary
Fellow at Singapore’s Middle East Institute-NUS, an Adjunct Senior Fellow at
Nanyang Technological University’s S. Rajaratnam School of International
Studies, and the author of the syndicated column and podcast, The Turbulent World with James M.
Dorsey.
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