The Emperor is naked
By Adam Keller
15 August, 2014
At 10.30 pm the website of the Palestinian news agency Ma’an bore an ominous headline: “Ceasefire falls apart in final
hours, with no renewal in sight; Palestinian negotiators charge Israel has refused to accede to Palestinian requests”.
So, the opposing negotiating teams – which had not met face to face, but sat in adjoining rooms with Egyptians passing
messages to and fro - left Cairo. Even before the end of the of 72-hour ceasefire three rockets were shot from Gaza at
the southern Israeli city of Ashkelon and intercepted in the air by Iron Dome. Israeli ground forces were moved closer
to the Gaza border, and commanders made dire threats of “a new ground invasion of Gaza – far deeper than the previous
one”.
A friend from Luxembourg wrote “I just communicated with my friend in Gaza, they are already in such a desperate
situation. Do you think there is still a chance to prevent a new round of bombing?” I wrote back “It does not look good
but we still have an hour until the ceasefire expiry, on Midnight Middle East time. That would be 11pm in Luxembourg”.
She wrote: “I cross my fingers”.
And then, forty minutes before Midnight came the reprieve. After all, the cease-fire had been extended for 72 hours,
which was immediately amended to 120 hours, a full five days. There was still a brief raid by the Israeli Air Force on
nine targets in the Gaza Strip to retaliate for these three rockets at 10pm, but the targets were “chosen with surgical
precision in order to avoid casualties” (if only they had done that earlier). And then things calmed down, and the
ceasefire went into effect. At least for the next five days, the arena would be occupied by the wrangling of diplomats
and politicians – Israelis with Palestinians and Egyptians and Americans and Europeans, and also Israelis with Israelis
and Palestinians with Palestinians.
Precisely what did happen behind the scenes in these tense last hours? Commentator Yossi Melman today compared it to the
Chicken Game made famous by a James Dean film, where two drivers drive towards each other on a collision course and one
must swerve to avoid a mutually destructive collision.
So who did swerve?
Already a week ago Melman used Hollywood imagery in order to explain the Cairo talks: “The Head of Egyptian Intelligence
is making to the Hamas leaders a Godfather-style offer”, he wrote, “an ‘offer which can’t be refused’: first you have to
accept immediately and unconditionally a 72-hour ceasefire and come to Cairo, then we talk about everything else”.
What did happen in the action-packed week between the Godfather commentary and the Chicken Game? A short recapitulation:
Hamas representatives came to Cairo, to hold indirect negotiations with the Israelis; they were informed by the
Egyptians at the very outset that the issue of a seaport and airport in Gaza was off the agenda and would not be
discussed; they made an angry retort, accusing the Egyptians of being “Netanyahu’s stooges”; they refused to renew the
first 72-hour ceasefire, let it break off and engaged in several days of renewed exchange of rockets and bombings; after
three days of this they consented to a new 72-hours ceasefire; they went back to Cairo – whereupon the Egyptians came up
with a new offer, namely that the issue of a Gaza seaport and airport will be on the agenda within a month.
A month is a long time in Middle Eastern politics, and Israeli governments have wriggled out of obligations far more
specific and explicit than this. Still, there is some difference between “Out of the question!” and “Let’s talk about it
next month”. Enough, it seems, to make even perennially suspicious Hamas decide to give this diplomatic track another
try and spare the people of Gaza the horror of a new round of bombings. At least for five days.
And more had happened in the past two weeks – especially in the international arena. The images of death and destruction
from Gaza were seen on TV around the world and made a profound impression, and even the horrors emanating from north
Iraq failed to overshadow them (as Netanyhau may have hoped). On November 9 there was the world-wide series of
demonstrations in solidarity with the Gazans. In particular, the one in London drew a crowd of 150,000 – one of the
largest demonstrations on any issue which the British capital saw in recent years. Israeli exporters were alarmed to
hear that European supermarkets no longer wanted to have Israeli fruit on their shelves, since the sight of it angered
many customers. Moreover, the European Union informed Israeli dairy producers that as of September 1, dairy products
originated at settlements in the Occupied Territories would be altogether denied entry to the European market. The
Spanish government declared an arms embargo on Israel, which the British threatening a similar step should the fighting
in Gaza resume. Then came the disclosure in the Wall Street Journal that the Obama Administration had stopped a shipment
of appropriately named Hellfire missiles to Israel, apparently out of anger at the Israeli military using American arms
in the killing of Gazan civilians.
Then, there was the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva deciding to set up an investigation of Israel’s deeds in Gaza,
similar to the Goldstone Commission which investigated the Cast Lead Operation of 2009 and which caused Israel great
damage on the international arena. Being engaged on a full-fledged campaign to de-legitimize in advance the UN
investigation, can Netanyahu afford to restart a full-fledged military assault in Gaza, inevitably entailing further
mass destruction and killings? By all sober calculation, he does not really have such an option, whatever dire threats
are made by generals and hawkish ministers.
But Netanyahu also has no real option of just letting the war in Gaza taper off inconclusively, with desultory shooting
going on in the border region. Such an outcome would be intolerable to the inhabitants of southern Israel, who had
suffered considerable hardships in the past month – much less than the inhabitants of Gaza, to be sure, but much more
then the inhabitants of central Israel. At the moment idolized by the country’s mass media, inhabitants of the South are
in a position to exact a prohibitive political prize from Netanyahu.
On the day after the ceasefire was extended by five days, inhabitants of the South streamed into Tel Aviv to hold a mass
rally in the Rabin Square. It was far from a peace-oriented event. Speakers – mayors and local politicians from various
towns in the South - demanded that Netanyahu “Solve the problem once and for all, put an end to the shooting and restore
calm to the border area, either by military means or by diplomacy”. Had the government sent the army into an all-out
campaign to conquer Gaza, these might have become the most vocal of cheer-leaders. But should the military option be
taken definitely off the table and a comprehensive political solution for Gaza substituted, some of the same people
might lend it their support.
On August 10, Yediot Aharonot published very prominently a letter written by Tomer Bar Gil, a child from Kibbutz Nirim
on the Gaza border:
My name is Tomer and I am ten and a half years old.
I live in Kibbutz Nirim, less than two kilometers from the Gaza border. For a month, during the war, I was staying with
my uncle and aunt in the North. Three days ago we were told that we could go back to Nirim because the shooting from
Gaza had stopped. I was very happy to go home, to my own room, to my games and books. But on the next morning the
72-hour ceasefire ended and there was a Code Red alarm, and then another alarm, and also mortar shells fell without the
alarm sounding. Then I felt we have been told in vain that we can come back to live here, but in fact we have been
brought back into an unsafe place. I try to convince my young brother to come out and play football, but he is afraid a
missile would fall. Even the steps of my father at home are frightening because they sound like explosions, and I get
frightened when a dog is barking, because they sense the Code Red alarms and start barking already before people hear
the alarm.
I think we can’t go on like this. On the one hand our life is in danger, on the other hand you can’t just leave your
home and run away all the time.
I don’t want this condition to continue. I know that it can be solved and I want the solution to happen already. I am
angry with the government for not making a peace agreement with the Palestinians and only attacking them. This is bad
for all of us. I want the world to help us make peace with the Palestinians, because then we and they will have a better
life.
“(…) The procession went on, when suddenly a little child said "But the Emperor is naked, he hasn't got anything on".
And the child’s father said: “Did you ever hear such innocent prattle?". And one person whispered to another what the
child had said, "He hasn't got anything on. A child says he is naked." Finally, the whole town was crying “He hasn't got
anything on, the Emperor is naked, the Emperor is naked!". The Emperor shivered, for he suspected they were right. But
he thought, "This procession has got to go on." So he walked on, more proudly than ever.” (Hans Christian Andersen,
April 7, 1837).