The real aim of "Operation Defensive Shield" was not to
"destroy the infrastructure of terrorism".
This was merely a good slogan for uniting the people of
Israel, who are angry and afraid after the suicide bombings. It is also a
good political device, allowing Sharon to ride on the bandwagon of
President Busch’s "war against international terrorism". Under the
umbrella of "destroying the infrastructure of terrorism" one can do
practically anything.
If Sharon had really intended to "destroy the
infrastructure of terrorism", he would have acted very differently. He
would have given the Palestinian masses hope of achieving their national
freedom in the near future. He would have fortified the position of Yasser
Arafat, the only effective partner for peace. He would have strengthened
the Palestinian security forces and radically improved economic conditions
in the Palestinian territories.
But destroying the infrastructure of terrorism is not
Ariel Sharon’s aim. His program is far more radical: to break the backbone
of the Palestinian people, crush their governmental institutions, turn the
people into human wreckage that can be dealt with as he wishes. This may
entail shutting them up in several enclaves or even driving them out of
the country altogether.
As Sharon sees it, this would be finishing off the job
started in 1948: to establish the real Israel, from the Mediterranean to
the Jordan river; a state inhabited solely by Jews. It was no accident
that he openly supported Slobodan Milosevic, the inventor of "ethnic
cleansing".
When I wrote this a year ago, it sounded like malicious
slander. Sharon was still pictured as a man determined to fight terrorism,
not as a person using the fight against terrorism as a means to achieve
quite different aims.
No more.
Four days ago I was in Ramallah. I sneaked into the town
(Israelis are forbidden by the military commander from entering the
Palestinian territories) in order to see it for myself. I visited the
Palestinian ministries. A shocking sight, indeed.
Take, for example, the Palestinian Ministry of Education.
It is housed in an imposing building, probably going back to British
times, a mixture of neo-Classic European and oriental styles. In front of
it there was a rose garden – "was", because a tank has crisscrossed it,
for no apparent reason, leaving only one purple rosebush in all its glory.
Just so. To teach them a lesson.
On the upper floor, where the archives and computers were
housed, the destruction was total. The computers were taken apart and
thrown on the floor, the safe blown open, the papers strewn around, the
drawers empty, the telephones crushed . Some of it was just plain
vandalism. The money in the safe was stolen, the furniture upturned, the
papers dispersed. But when one looked closer, the real aim of the
operation became clear. All the hard disks were taken from the computers,
all the important files taken away. Only empty shells remained. All the
important contents of the ministry were taken: the lists of pupils,
examination results, lists of teachers, the whole logistics of the
Palestinian school system.
The Ministry if Health suffered the same fate. The hard
disks that contained all the information, state of diseases, medical
tests, lists of doctors and nurses, the logistics of the hospitals had
been taken.
Even the people most critical of the Palestinian Authority
admitted that these two ministries – Education and Health – had been
functioning well. They have been utterly destroyed.
This happened to virtually all the Palestinian government
offices. Gone is the information pertaining to land registration and
housing, taxes and government expenditure, car tests and drivers’
licenses, everything necessary for administrating a modern society.
The lists of terrorists were not hidden in the land
registration books, the inventory of bombs was not tucked away among the
list of kindergarten teachers. The real aim is obvious: to destroy not
only the Palestinian Authority, but Palestinian society itself: to push it
back with one stroke from the stage of a modern state-in-the-making to the
primitive society of Turkish times.
This is true for the civil society, and even more so for
the security system. The headquarters of the security services were
destroyed, files burned, computers crushed, the information concerning
armed underground organizations and all other details pertaining to the
war against terrorism were obliterated. There is no better evidence of the
aims of this operation: not war on terrorism, but destruction of organized
Palestinian society.
By the way, on that day I passed, with a group of Israeli
peace activists, through the center of Ramallah – from the mass-grave in
the hospital parking lot to the besieged headquarters of Yasser Arafat. We
carried Hebrew posters and encountered much sympathy and not a single sign
of hostility. Even at this time, the Palestinians know the difference
between the Israeli peace camp and those who responsible for this brutal
attack. Here, perhaps, lies the only glimmer of hope.
[The author has closely followed the career of Sharon for four decades.
Over the years, he has written three extensive biographical essays about
him, two (1973, 1981) with his cooperation.]