Things are going poorly in Gaza. Who among us can contain our shock?
A densely populated, profoundly poor and intensely angry territory, the Gaza
Strip is run by Hamas, a band of thugs proudly committed to the destruction
of their neighbor, Israel. Hamas, according to The New York Times, is
mimicking Hezbollah, the Lebanese terrorist organization funded by Iran and
Syria. Hezbollah masterminded the practice of launching rockets into Israel
from civilian areas and then screaming "war crime" whenever Israel responded
to the attacks.
"What we learned from Hezbollah," said Hamas spokesman Fawzi Barhoum, "is
that resistance is a choice that can work."
Translation: If you thought we were committed to permanent war with Israel
before, you ain't seen nothing yet. Indeed, Hamas seems to have gotten more
than mere inspiration from Hezbollah. Hamas is now firing more sophisticated
rockets, allegedly imported from Hezbollah's patron in Tehran.
The irony is that the "Jewish entity," as Hamas sometimes calls it, is
obligated, according to human-rights groups, to provide food, water and
electricity to Hamas' subjects, even as those subjects openly support Hamas'
ongoing war on Israel. It's a bit like being required to provide a hot meal
and a warm bed to an intruder even though he intends to kill you in your
sleep.
"Israel has the right and obligation to protect its citizens, but as the
occupying power in Gaza it also has a legal duty to ensure that Gazans have
access to food, clean water, electricity and medical care," Kate Allen,
Amnesty International's UK director, told The Telegraph. "Punishing the
entire Gazan population by denying them these basic human rights is utterly
indefensible."
There are a few problems here. First, food, clean water, electricity and
medical care may be all kinds of things, but they aren't human rights. They
may indeed be the minimum obligations a modern state must meet in terms of
its citizens' needs, but there is no inalienable right to material stuff.
More important, we are constantly told that the Palestinians aren't Israel's
people. Whatever obligations Israel might have to provide food, water,
electricity and health care to its own citizens, it's not clear why it has
those obligations to the Gazans, particularly when those Gazans are
committed to the destruction of Israel.
Human-rights groups say Israel must provide these things because Israel is
the "occupying power." But Israel no longer occupies Gaza, which Amnesty
knows. That's why they say Israel's "blockade" of Gaza is indistinguishable
from occupation.
But whether or not "blockade" is the right word for Israel's actions, it's
not the same thing as an occupation. America had a blockade of sorts against
Iraq for a decade. Then we occupied it. If there's no difference between the
blockade and the occupation, what has everyone been arguing about?
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