Friday, January 2, 2009

GAZA EMERGENCY ACTION ALERT! Mainstream US Media Outlets Promoting Israeli Government Talking Points. Immediate Action Needed!

WRITE! For Justice, Human Rights and International Law in Palestine

GAZA EMERGENCY ACTION ALERT! Mainstream US Media Outlets Promoting Israeli Government Talking Points. Immediate Action Needed!

Israel has unleashed horrific violence against 1.5 million people of occupied Gaza -- killing over 315 and injuring more than 1,000 Palestinians. Editorials, op-eds and television reports have flooded the newspapers and TV screens supporting the official Israeli government line, managing to incorporate some of the most hawkish positions -- while little is heard from the international human rights community or Palestinians.

WRITE! generally sends action alerts regarding newspaper editorials or op-eds. However, in this emergency situation, we request that everyone take the initiative to contact as many media outlets as possible to address a broad spectrum of general and specific concerns relating to media coverage of the Gaza crisis.

We must let them know that we cannot accept biased and unbalanced coverage of these illegal attacks! Please include some or all of the following points when talking or writing to media outlets:

1. Numerous reports including by Amnesty International have cited Israel ’s November 4th raid into Gaza as effectively breaking the ceasefire.

2. The Israeli ‘disengagement’ of 2005 DID NOT end the occupation of Gaza – and an occupying power is responsible for the welfare of people under its occupation. An occupation is determined by whether there is effective control – not simply the presence of illegal settlers and soldiers.

3. A Human Rights Watch report in 2007 “Indiscriminate Fire” documented that from September 2005 through May 2007….the IDF fired 14,617 artillery shells into Gaza compared to 2,700 fired into Israel by Palestinian armed groups. HRW further stated, “When investigating incidents, HRW found that IDF shelling with 155mm howitzers often called unnecessary loss of civilian life and property in violation of IHL.”

4. Please provide more balance in your coverage by publishing op-eds by Palestinians or from the international human rights community.

5. Please report on the deaths, causalities and humanitarian crisis caused by Israel ’s bombing and blockade of Gaza using the international consensus framework of international law.

Please take a few minutes to write/call one or all of the following media outlets:

1) Washington Post: 7-1-1 hawkish op-eds/editorials
Tel – 202 334 7400 (to comment on articles and coverage); 202 336-7470 (to comment on op-eds)
Email – foreign@washpost.com; also letters@washpost.com
“Why Israel is Bombing Gaza” by Ephraim Sneh, January 1, 2009

2) Washington Times: 5-0 hawkish op-eds/editorials
Tel – 202 636-3306 (for commentary and editorial)
Email – letters@washtimes.com
“ Gaza Nazis” by Cal Thomas; The Washington Times, January 2, 2009

3) Wall Street Journal: 4-0 hawkish op-eds/editorials
Tel – 212 416-2000
Email – newseditors@wsj.com; wsj.ltrs@wsj.com (for editorial comments)
“ Israel 's Policy Is Perfectly 'Proportionate'” by Alan Dershowitz, January 2, 2009

4) CNN
Tel – 404 827 1700 (tell them you want to comment on coverage of Gaza )
Email – www.cnn.com

5) Fox News
Tel – 202 895-3000
Email –foxnews@wjla.com

Please help to stop the propaganda campaign against Palestinians in occupied Gaza . The American media should not allow itself to be used as a public relations service for the Israeli military. When writing letters, be sure to include your name, address, and keep your letter under 150 words. When calling, ask for or dial the editorial department.

Thank you,

WRITE! Team
Contact: writealert@yahoo.com
Website: www.writetruth.org

Thursday, January 1, 2009

Letter to the Philadelphia Inquirer

DeaThe January 1 edition of the Inquirer gave us a preview of what the new year will bring. The lead story was about how the Israeli government feels that the bombing of Palestinian civilian areas is not sufficient in advancing their goals, so now they are preparing a ground offensive. This was after Israel violated a six month cease fire agreement which was an act of war against the Palestinian people. The Israeli government would like the Palestinians to accept the idea that they should accept living in abject poverty while Israelis control all the resources they use. This approach has failed for over sixty years and will continue to fail as long as Palestinians are denied basic human rights in their homeland.

[...]

Sincerely,

Steven Halpern
Philadelphia, PA

Letter published in Atlanta Journal Constitution

Israel to blame for breaking cease-fire, not Hamas

http://www.ajc.com/print/content/printedition/2009/01/01/lettsed.html

During the past several years, the Israelis have forced 1.5 million people in Gaza to go without food, medical care, heating fuel, electricity, clean water and facilities and infrastructure necessary to life or even a half-way decent standard of living. In response to these human rights violations, Hamas fires primitive rockets into southern Israel that always land in open fields. Up to Israel’s latest attack, these rockets have never killed one Israeli.

The U.S. blames Hamas for breaking the latest cease-fire in Gaza when, in fact, it was the Israelis who conducted an air strike last month killing six Palestinians. It was Israel who was the first to break the cease-fire, not Hamas. Why don’t we hear about this from the State Department or from the media? The Israelis are masters when it comes to provoking its enemies to justify the use of its superior weapons to inflict disproportionate retaliation. They are also propaganda experts.

In the world according to U.S. media, and from top U.S. officials, the high moral ground in the Middle East belongs to Israel’s government, even when it slaughters 300 Palestinians.

JAMES J. DAVID

James J. David of Marietta is a retired brigadier general who served on active duty in the Middle East.

Action Call from WRITE! The Washington Post

PMWATCH -- January 1, 2009 -- Below is an action call from"WRITE! For Justice, Human Rights and International Law inPalestine," a group focused on mobilizing for letter writing onPalestine and Israel.

Please respond to this important action call.

For tips on writing letters, go to:

You can read more about the group at: http://www.writetruth.org/

Palestine Media Watch
(866) DIAL-PMW
http://www.pmwatch.org/

NOTE: WRITE! is not affiliated with Palestine Media Watch.

==========================================================

WRITE! For Justice, Human Rights and International Law in Palestine

Unfortunately, the new year has not brought any change to theWashington Post editorial page in terms of fairness or accuracy. Onthe1st day of the 2009, the Washington Post publishes two op-eds,decidedly in favor of the most hawkish Israeli positions in the midstof the Israeli bombing campaign of occupied Gaza which has claimedthe lives of over 315 Palestinians and injured 939 (Al Mezan).

The first op-ed written by Ephraim Sneh 'Why Israel is Bombing Gaza'and the second is from Robert J. Lieber 'Hard Truths About theConflict' (1/1/09). Both accounts draw heavily from the officialIsraeli talking points -- Israel 'withdrew' from Gaza in 2005. Theyclaim Palestinians violated the ceasefire. Israel did everything itcould diplomatically including the delivery of humanitarian aid. Theauthors conclude that the only option remaining is to bomb Gaza andpossibly a ground assault while minimizing civilian casualties inorder to remove Hamas from power and put the Palestinian Authority incharge.

Please help to stop the propaganda campaign and write the WashingtonPost at:

Let them know that while the authors are entitled to their ownopinions, they are not entitled to their own facts --- and the Posteditorial page should not allow itself to be used as a publicrelations service for the Israeli military. Be sure to include yourname, address, and keep your letter under 150 words.

For further information:

Samer Badawi: Gaza Bombings Only Compound Historic Wronghttp://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/dn/opinion/viewpoints/stories/DN-badawi_31edi.State.Edition1.2810ca7.html

Amnesty International: End Unlawful Attacks and Meet Gaza's EmergencyNeedsHuman Rights Watch: Civilians Must Not Be Target The Civilian Targetof Israel's

Bombing: http://electronicintifada.net/v2/article10086.shtml

WRITE! Team
http://www.writetruth.org/

******************************************************
Why Israel Is Bombing Gaza

By Ephraim Sneh

Thursday, January 1, 2009;
A13
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wpdyn/content/article/2008/12/31/AR2008123102772_pf.html

When demands are made of Israel to halt its military activities inGaza, a brief historical reminder is in order.

In September 2005, Israel vacated Gaza, dismantled all thesettlements in the Gaza Strip and did not leave a shred of a presencethere.

In January 2006, rule over Gaza passed to the Hamas government underIsmail Haniyeh. Instead of bringing investors to Gaza, the Hamasgovernment brought the guerrilla-warfare trainers of the IranianRevolutionary Guard. Instead of launching economic projects, thisgovernment launched rockets every day at Israeli towns and villagesacross the border. They smuggled in vast amounts of explosives,weapons and rockets; they prepared themselves for battle.

In June 2007, in a brutal and bloody military coup, Hamas tookcontrol of Gaza and soon killed or chased out the leaders ofPresident Mahmoud Abbas's Fatah movement. Gaza became nothing lessthan a military base for Iran.

Up until the Hamas takeover, 750 trucks would cross the border eachday with imports and exports. As Israel's deputy defense minister atthe time, I was in charge of this activity and promoted this tradewith Gaza, since the border crossings were being controlled byAbbas's Presidential Guard, not by terrorists. The Hamas takeover iswhat in effect locked the gates of Gaza and forced its residents tosuffer.The rain of rockets on the citizens of Israel intensified. The cease-fire that lasted from June until Dec. 19 was used by Hamas toincrease its military strength -- mainly to smuggle in Grad-typerockets from Iran, which have a range of 20 miles. In recent days,these missiles have struck cities such as Ashdod, Israel's main port,and Beersheva, the capital of Israel's south. No sovereign statewould have resigned itself to having its cities -- cities such asHouston or Atlanta -- bombarded. No sovereign state would allowitself to be hit by even a single missile. That is the reason for themilitary campaign that Israel launched this week in a series ofaerial strikes.

But the campaign's objective is not to end the rocket fire. The trueobjective should be the end of Hamas rule in Gaza. Israel cannotresign itself to having a missile and terror base five miles from oneof its principal cities, Ashkelon.

Gaza's Palestinians, too, in telephone and e-mail conversations, areexpressing their urgent wish to end the nightmare that Hamas hasimposed on them. An end to the Hamas regime in Gaza is essential forthem, as well. It is not possible to govern Gaza in the absence ofclose cooperation with Israel on issues of trade, energy,environment, water and health. Those who reject the legitimacy ofIsrael can't provide a normal life for Gaza's 1.5 million residents,who on average are living on $2 a day.

Israel could bring about a collapse of the Hamas regime in Gaza bymeans of a lengthy, large-scale ground campaign. With a clear exitstrategy lacking, this is not an appealing option for us. At themoment, unfortunately, this is the only option available.Yet there is another way. Those demanding a cease-fire must produce acomprehensive solution, a "package" containing the following elements:

• Full dismantling of the military power of Hamas in Gaza, includingdestruction of all stockpiles of rockets and missiles.

• Transfer of control over border-crossings between Gaza and Egyptand between Gaza and Israel to the Palestinian Authority governmentof Salam Fayyad.

• Until the elections to the Palestinian parliament and thepresidency in January 2010, Gaza is to be run by a civilianadministration appointed by the government in Ramallah.

• Augmented Egyptian supervision of the border between Gaza and Egypt.

• The return of kidnapped Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit.
Such an agreement will require international and regional support.Countries such as Turkey, Egypt and Saudi Arabia can play animportant role. Syria, if it uses its influence over the Hamasleadership that is comfortably hosted by Damascus, can win pointstoward any future discussions with the United States and Israel.

In the absence of such a package, the fighting in Gaza will not end.Israel has no reason to end it.
Ephraim Sneh, a former member of the Israeli cabinet and deputydefense minister from 1999 to 2001 and from 2006 to 2007, is chairmanof the Strong Israel party.

************
Hard Truths About the Conflict
By Robert J. Lieber
Thursday, January 1, 2009; A13
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wpdyn/content/article/2008/12/31/AR2008123102773.html
After Israel's dramatic airstrikes, the world's media are filled withimages of suffering Palestinian women and children, innocent victimsin what is being referred to as a renewed cycle of violence.Predictably, both sides are being urged to call a halt, though inmuch of the Middle East and parts of Europe these demands, and theblame, fall especially heavily upon the Israelis. In America, thereis relatively greater understanding and sympathy for Israel, buthere, too, concern is growing about the violence.While the details of the conflict often appear complex, thefundamentals -- hard truths about Gaza, its Hamas rulers and thewider Israeli-Palestinian conflict -- are straightforward. First,despite the tragic deaths of civilians, Israeli's airstrikes havebeen precisely aimed at Hamas fighters, installations and rocketlaunchers. Inevitably, the use of force causes injury and death toinnocents, but from initial figures announced by U.N. personnel, itappears that more than 80 percent of those killed were Hamas securitypersonnel or other militants -- a ratio that might compare favorablywith the use of force by U.S. and NATO troops in Afghanistan. In viewof Hamas's practice of deliberately placing missile launchers andother weapons in the midst of densely populated areas, the precisionis remarkable. It also reflects the fact that the Israel DefenseForces (IDF) seek to minimize civilian deaths, while Hamasdeliberately targets civilians.

Second, what we are witnessing is not a "cycle" of violence. The IDFairstrikes are a reaction to the unrelenting rocket and mortarattacks against the Jewish state. Israel withdrew from Gaza in 2005in the hope that the Palestinians would use the opportunity toprepare for an eventual agreement and a two-state solution in whichthey would live side by side in peace with Israel. Since then, therehave been more than 3,500 such attacks aimed at areas of southernIsrael, including over 200 launches since Dec. 19, after Hamas chosenot to extend a six-month truce. The expanding range of thesemissiles now covers an area populated by as many as 700,000 Israelis.

Third, Israel and Hamas have profoundly different aims. Israel hasaccepted the principle of a two-state solution as the basis forending the conflict. Hamas, by contrast, rejects this. Its languageof "resistance" or "ending occupation" (even though no Israelis,civilian or military, other than the kidnapped soldier Gilad Shalit,have "occupied" Gaza for the past three years) is but a veiledexpression of Hamas's actual objective: destroying Israel andcreating an Islamist Palestinian state in its place. Credulousobservers may see more peaceful purposes, but Hamas leadersperiodically reassert these objectives, whether in the Hamas covenantor, in the words of a prominent Hamas cleric, Muhsen Abu 'Ita,speaking on Al-Aqsa TV and calling for "the annihilation of the Jewshere in Palestine."Fourth, any realistic hope of progress toward a peaceful resolutionof the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and a successful two-statesolution requires that Hamas suffer a severe setback in the presentfighting in ways that seriously damage its capabilities and weakenits political credibility among Palestinians. Leading officials ofEgypt, Saudi Arabia and the Palestinian Authority know this and,notwithstanding their formulaic criticisms of Israel, have explicitlyblamed Hamas for the current violence. PLO and Fatah officials faultHamas for the deaths in Gaza, and an adviser to Palestinian PresidentMahmoud Abbas, Nimr Hammad, told the Lebanese newspaper Al-Akhbar: "The one responsible for the massacres is Hamas, and not theZionist entity, which in its own view reacted to the firing ofPalestinian missiles." Indeed, Hamas's position as a radical,terrorist, adventurist, Islamist organization is underscored by theabsence of support for it by Muslim governments other than Iran andits surrogates.

Successful negotiations between Palestinians and Israelis remainhighly desirable, but their achievement would require that a singlecredible Palestinian authority ("one authority, one gun, one law," asAbbas puts it) be able to speak on behalf of its people, representthem in difficult but meaningful negotiations, and possess thecapacity as well as the will to enforce its side of a bindingagreement. But Hamas represents an alternative source of authorityand a direct challenge to the existing Palestinian leadership in theWest Bank, while also -- through its non-recognition of Israel, itssupport for terrorism and its refusal to accept prior negotiatedagreements -- rejecting even the most basic prerequisites fornegotiations.
Egypt and Jordan have made peace with Israel, not because theyembraced the ideas of Theodor Herzl, the founder of modern Zionism,but because they concluded that the effort to destroy the Jewishstate had failed and that refusing to come to terms with it washarmful to their national interests. Ultimately, peace will bepossible only if most Palestinians and their leaders become convincedthat terrorism and violence are a dead end and that they cannot underany circumstances prevail over Israel through the use of force. Iftoday's conflict leaves a seriously weakened and politically damagedHamas, that result is more likely to enhance the prospects for peacethan to weaken them.

Robert J. Lieber, a professor of government and international affairsat Georgetown University, is most recently the author of "TheAmerican Era: Power and Strategy for the 21st Century."