Wednesday, January 28, 2009

The Meaning of the month of Shevat and the Mystery of Tu B'Shvat


The Meaning behind the Name

Shvat is the eleventh of the twelve months of the Jewish calendar. We often refer to Tishrei as Rosh HaShanah, the head of the year, the New Year. However, it is not the first month on our calendar, as it is in other calendars. The first month in the Hebrew calendar is the spring month of Nisan, when Pesah appears.

The fifteenth day of Shvat, Tu B'Shvat is called the "New Year of Trees." The "New Year of Trees" is the day from which the new year was reckoned (and still is in Israel) for the fruit of the trees with regard to the mitzvah of 'ma'aser' the tithe or tax that was given to the Temple, the government and the poor.

Traditionally, we celebrate Tu B'Shvat (the 15th of Shevat) eating fruit, especially of the seven species which grow in the land of Israel is blessed.

The 15th day of the 11th month alludes to G's ineffable Name: Yod and Hey and Vahv and another Hey. The first two letters, Yod and Hey are often referred to as the upper level (also called the hidden level), the Heavenly Realm, and equal 15. The last two letters, Vahv and Hey refer to the lower level or revealed level, the Earthly Realm, and equal 11.

Tu B'Shvat is the 15th day of the 11th month. The unification of the two is one of the secrets of Kabbalah and Tu B'Shvat represents the mystical time to renew our commitment to "living heavenly days on earth."

The mystical view of the Tree of Life is that of uniting heaven and earth. The four letter name of G, also called the Tetragrammaton, is associated with the mystical view of the "Tree of Life," and so is associated with the month of Shvat. Shvat therefore is the month of unification of the upper and lower realm. Put differently, this month represents, in Kabbalah, the opportunity of bringing heaven and earth together.

The Letter for this month is Tzadi.

The letter Tzadi represents the word Tzadik which means righteous one. Tradition teaches us that there are 36 anonymous, perfectly righteous people in the world and through them the balance of the world is maintained.

The shape of the final Tzadi (ץ) can be seen as a tree.

In the Torah, the human is called Etz HaSadeh ("the tree of the field"). The gematria of Etz HaSadeh is 474 which is also the numerical value of Da'at, which means knowledge and is part of the 10 Sefirot (or the hidden 11th sefira, depending on one's view). It refers to a knowledge that can be shared with others. After the spiritual 'hit' of Hochmah, that 'aha' moment of awareness and the Binah, the mindful understanding of that moment, comes Da'at, the ability to share the knowledge. This is the power of human "sacred inter-connection," which, in Hebrew is 'Mitzvah.'

The month of Shevat is the month of sacred inter-connection.

The Mazal (zodiac sign) for the month is Aquarius, the water bearer.

In Israel, around this time, the first buds begin to see light. The rain has brought life to the earth and the water nourishes the roots of the tree. The buds just begin to appear. What greater sign of hope could be found in nature?

The Ba'al Shem Tov said that when one meets a water-carrier carrying pitchers full of water, it is a sign of blessing. Symbolically, a Tzadik is a water carrier. S/he is the one who waters our parched souls.

In Amos (5:24) we read, "let judgment run down as waters, and righteousness as a mighty stream." According to the Rabbis of old, water refers to Torah. There is a famous Drash (expounding) in Talmud (Baba Kamma 17a) that states "Aine mayim elah Torah" which basically calls us to interpret the term "water" as Torah.

Therefore the month of Shvat calls us to return to the study of Torah so that we may bud anew. The eating of the fruits of Shvat is symbolic of munching the sweet fruits of Torah.

The Tribe assigned to this month is Asher.

The name "Asher" means 'pleasure' and 'joy.' Asher represents the joy of learning the joy of diving into the waters of Torah.

Asher personifies the olive tree. Olives were more than food in ancient Israel. They were also the source of light and sacred light. Oil was used in lamps and most especially in the sacred Menorah of the Temple. The story of the miracle of the oil at Hanukah refers to olive oil which was, according to tradition, Asher's portion in the land of Israel. In addition, anyone anointed for leadership as king, priest, prophet or warrior was anointed with olive oil. The word for anointed is 'Mashiah'. Of the seven species of the land of Israel, the olive is the sixth.

The sixth Sefirah in Kabbalah is Yesod, the foundation for all action. Tzedaka or right action is the foundation of the world. The Tzadik righteousness is the Yesod, the foundation for right action. Olive oil represents the Tzadik who waters us with Torah as we bud in the betterment of this world.

The Sense attributed to this month is eating, taste ('achilah,' 'ta'am').

The sense of eating can be viewed on a higher level as Tzedaka, right action. When the very act of sustaining the body is elevated in a soulful manner, the action is a form of Tzedaka. In Talmud the Rabbis wrote: "The Tzadik eats to satisfy his soul."

Wednesday, January 7, 2009

Hamas using civilian human shields as it attacks civilian human targets.


Hamas and Islamic Jihad have fired thousands of rockets into southern Israel targeting civilian areas.

The rockets are designed exclusively to maximize civilian deaths, and some have barely missed schoolyards, kindergartens, hospitals, and school buses. But others hit their targets, killing more than a dozen civilians since 2001, including in February 2008 a father of four who had been studying at the local university. These anti-civilian rockets have also injured and traumatized countless children.

These rockets are not only aimed at civilians, they are fired from civilian centers, densely populated civilian areas. Palestinians have reported that when they cry out to Hamas not to fire from near their homes Hamas terrorists have threatened them. It is a cynical and unscrupulous tactic in the war between terrorists who live to die for the cause of hate and war and Israel that is dying to live in peace. The terrorists have learned how to exploit the sensibilities of the world by putting civilians in harms way, using them as shields and then accusing Israel of targeting civilians, a tactic that they they themselves use, not Israel.

Hamas brings women and children up to the roofs of buildings housing terrorist activity in an attempt to prevent air strikes; it sends civilians to the line of fire; it works out of schools and mosques; it fires rockets out of crowded population centers; and it sends Palestinian mothers to murder Israeli children in suicide attacks.

In addition, many of Hamas' arms smuggling tunnels are hidden beneath the homes of Palestinian civilians.

The attacks on Israeli citizens have little to do with what Israel does or does not do. They have everything to do with an ideology that despises – and openly seeks to destroy – the Jewish state. After Israel disengaged from Gaza in 2005, rocket attacks increased substantially and they accelerated further after Hamas seized control last year.

Just before the hostilities began, Israel reopened a checkpoint to allow humanitarian aid to reenter Gaza. It had closed the point of entry after it had been targeted by Gazan rockets. Israel's Prime Minister, Ehud Olmert, also issued a stern, final warning to Hamas that unless it stopped the rockets, there would be a full-scale military response. The Hamas rockets continued and Israel kept its word, implementing a carefully prepared targeted air attack against Hamas targets.

Militants hit the Israeli city of Ashkelon a little over a week ago with a medium-range rocket, causing no casualties. Rocket fire has fallen off as Israeli troops tighten their hold on Gaza, taking over open areas used to launch rockets, but Gaza residents say militants are still launching from heavily populated areas.






HonestReporting.com
New York Times
Al Jazeera
Xtrian Science monitor
Israel Opinion
BBC
Washington Post

Humanitarian Aid from Israel to Gaza

There is a lot of misguided criticism that is raining down on Israel like Kassam rockets, regarding Humanitarian Aid. Here are a few facts to dispel some of the propaganda being spewed.

Israel has allowed goods into Gaza regularly throughout the “siege and even sent food, medicine and heating oil into Gaza. I know of no time in history when a country has sent humanitarian aid to civilians in a neighboring country that is shooting rockets at its civilians. While they bomb Israeli civilians, Israel is sending aid to Gazans.

The day before operation “Cast Lead” got underway, Israel allowed dozens of trucks carrying aid to enter the Strip. Last Tuesday, another 100 trucks – double the normal number –entered Gaza after Defense Minister Barak approved the move.

In short, Israel is allowing aid into the Strip while Egypt has closed tight its border with Gaza.

More than 500 aid trucks have been shipped into Gaza since operations began. But even when aid crosses into Gaza Hamas has prevented officials from distributing it, leading to food shortages in some areas.

A World Bank statement last Wednesday said there are growing signs of a severe public health crisis in Gaza because of a shortage of drinking water and an escalating failure of the sewage system. The importance of this is that Israel has not targeted any sewage facility or water works. The shortage is due to the mis-handling of the Hamas leadership. Had they been more concerned with serving the people of Gaza and less with smuggling in rockets to attack its neighbor, there would be no crisis.

The Unit for Coordination of Government Activities in the Territories reports daily on the general humanitarian situation in the Gaza Strip.

Humanitarian aid includes food, medicines and medical equipment, tools and materials for essential humanitarian infrastructures, and a certain amount of diesel fuel. Cement, sand, gravel and steel are not considered to be humanitarian aid.

Different crossings are designated for different types of humanitarian aid:

Karni Crossing: grains such as wheat, barley, soy beans, corn, sesame seeds, animal feed and aggregate

Kerem Shalom and/or Sufa Crossing: food, hygiene products, tools and raw materials for essential infrastructures, medicines and medical equipment; and a myriad of other items - ranging from school books to wheel chairs - needed by the civilian population.

Nahal Oz: diesel fuel for transportation and for the local Gaza power station, petrol, and gas for cooking and heating, according to an assessment of civilian needs mandated by the Israeli court. This is Israel sending oil to Gaza, for those who like irony.

Erez Crossing: two-way traffic of international organizations' staff between Israel and Gaza ; Gaza residents seeking medical treatment in Israel or the Palestinian Authority,

Here are some details of humanitarian aid transferred to the Gaza Strip via Israeli crossings. Some of this aid comes from outside humanitarian sources and some comes from Israel herself:

January 1, 2009
60 trucks, with approximately 1360 tons of humanitarian aid, medical supplies and medication were conveyed through Kerem Shalom cargo terminal.
• Israeli humanitarian aid to the Gaza Strip 1-Jan-2009

December 31, 2008
93 truckloads carrying some 2500 tons of humanitarian aid, medical supplies and medications were transferred through the Kerem Shalom crossing. The World Food Programme notified the Israeli authorities that their food warehouses in the Gaza Strip are full, with a two-week supply, and they do not require further shipments.
The Nahal Oz fuel crossing remains closed due to continuing fire in the area.
Twelve Palestinians, including two children, were transferred to Israeli hospitals.
• Israeli humanitarian aid to the Gaza Strip 31-Dec-2008

December 30, 2008
93 truckloads carrying 2366 tons of humanitarian supplies as well as five ambulances donated by Turkey were transferred to the Gaza Strip. A Red Cross plane arrived with medical supplies for the hospital operating room.
The aid included food and medicine provided by the World Food Programme, UNRWA, UNICEF, the ICRC, the World Health Organization, Doctors without Borders, and Care International, as well as donations from Egypt, Jordan, Qatar and Turkey.
• Israel increases humanitarian effort to the Gaza Strip - 30-Dec-2008

December 29, 2008
63 trucks with 1545 tons of humanitarian goods (food, medicines and medical supplies) were delivered via the Kerem Shalom crossing. Most of the aid was provided by the International Red Cross, UNRWA, Doctors without Borders, and Care International. Five ambulances from the Palestinian Red Crescent Society (PRCS) in Ramallah passed through, at the request of the International Red Cross (ICRC). 1000 units of blood donated by the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan were also delivered.
Although scheduled to open, the Nahal Oz fuel depot remained closed due to Hamas rocket attacks.

Erez crossing: Four people (patients and their escorts), and ten international staff, including a pregnant FAO employee and her Palestinian husband, left the Gaza Strip and crossed into Israel.

December 28, 2008
At the request of international organizations (the International Red Cross which refuses to aid or even recognize Israel’s Red Mogen David while recognizing the Arab Red Crescent, UNRWA, WFP) and of the Palestinian National Authority in Ramallah, 23 truckloads of humanitarian goods such as flour, medicines and medical supplies, were transferred via Kerem Shalom crossing.

63 trucks carrying food and medical supplies as well as 10 ambulances transferred to Gaza on Monday, 29 December
Photos: IDF Spokesperson

December 26, 2008
Kerem Shalom: 63 trucks delivered1496 tons of goods - flour, oil, sugar, rice, salt, milk powder, hatching eggs and medicines.

December 21-25, 2008
Erez crossing: 145 people (patients and their escorts) crossed into Israel for medical treatment by Israeli doctors and nurses. And this, even though Hamas was targeting Israeli hospitals.


Israeli hospitals have kept their doors open to Gazans during the conflict. In Ashkelon's Barzilai Hospital, "dozens of Gaza Arabs are being treated... at the same time terrorists are bombarding the city." ("Israeli Hospital Cares for Sick and Injured Gaza Arabs," by Tzvi Ben Gedalyahu, Israel National News, December 29, 2008)

By contrast, in the Gaza hospitals, "armed Hamas militants in civilian clothes roamed the halls" where they shot and killed other Palestinians. ("No Early End Seen to 'All-Out War' on Hamas in Gaza," by Ethan Bronner and Taghreed El-Khodary, New York Times, December 29, 2008)

Shockingly, Hamas is not even allowing wounded Palestinians access to medical treatment. "We are waiting for the wounded Palestinians to cross. They are not being allowed to cross," Egyptian Foreign Minister Ahmed Aboul Gheit told reporters. Asked who was to blame, he said: "Ask the party in control on the ground in Gaza." ("Egypt: Hamas denying Gaza wounded treatment in Egypt," by Alaa Shahine, Reuters, December 28, 2008)



HonestReporting.com
New York Times
Al Jazeera
Xtrian Science monitor
Israel Opinion
BBC
Washington Post

He started it by hitting me back: A look at the Israeli Hamas conflict

A short factual background to the present conflict between Israel and Hamas.

In 2005 Israel took unilateral action to withdraw completely from the Gaza Strip. We all saw the painful pictures of Israeli soldiers uprooting thousands of its own citizens from Gaza, a defacto recognition of the borders of Gaza. The Palestinians have no further territorial claims against Israel in Gaza. Hamas could, at that point have made use of the buildings left to them, including green houses for producing crops, to feed and house and school their people. Instead of working to improve the quality of life for its citizens, Hamas has focused on smuggling in and improving the range and accuracy of its Kassam missiles and mortars as well as longer range Katyushas and increasing its store of these and other weapons. The Palestinian rockets, therefore, can only be seen as aggression against Israel with no moral basis.

Hamas came to power in Gaza, not only through general and recognized elections but also through a violent coup against the Palestinian Authority government. Members of the Fatah party were murdered in the streets, thrown from buildings that once housed their government. Many sought refuge in the State of Israel feeling safer with old enemies than with new friends. The international community continues to recognize the PA, under the leadership of Mahmoud Abbas, as the legitimate Palestinian government in all of the Palestinian territories.

At the same time Israel is fighting terror, the government is deliberately and openly maintaining a political process with the Palestinian government headed by Abbas. Hamas on the other hand opposes these negotiations and any settlement with Israel or even Israel’s right to exist.

Hamas is at its core a terrorist organization that refuses to renounce violence or recognize Israel's very right to exist. Its clearly stated goals include the destruction of Israel. Hamas is listed as a terrorist organization by the United States and the European Union.

Israel asks only two conditions for a meaningful peace. They require only a cessation of violence against Israeli civilians and the simple recognition that Israel has the right to survive and live in peace. Since its election and subsequent coup, Israel and the West have tried to force Hamas's to forego its terrorist tendencies through economic pressure. That strategy seems to have had some small effect, producing an imperfect peace during the late lamented truce. But the rockets red glare were seen in the air and felt on the ground without cease, even during the ceasefire, since Hamas took over Gaza. Arms smuggling increased during the truce even while the bombs were bursting on a battered Sderot and other towns in southern Isreal. And then the truce lapsed.

Hamas violated the truce from day one and Israel did not respond. When the truce ended, Hamas refused to extend the truce and increased its attacks on the very day that the official truce ended firing against and targetting Israeli civilians. It speaks of humanitarian needs yet is investing all its resources in arming itself and gathering power and using its destructive power against civilians of Israel.

The truce brokered by Egypt was exploited by Hamas not only to employ terror against Israel's citizens, but also to gain strength and massively arm itself with the intention of increasing their capacity for terror and expanding the range of the threat against Israeli citizens. Hamas men were being smuggled out and were being trained in Iran and Syria.

Terror groups continued to fire rockets throughout the lull with no outcry or even response from the world community other than to ask Israel to be patient. Nonetheless, top officials of Israel made it abundantly clear time and again that Israel was interested in extending the truce. Yet Hamas leaders clearly declared that the truce ended on December 19th, and proceeded to bombard southern Israeli communities with even more rockets, dozens of rockets daily. In short, it is no wonder that even the Egyptians are blaming Hamas this time.

The Palestinians have long cultivated an image of victimhood to win world sympathy and demand Israeli restraint in the face of Palestinian aggression. In reality, the Palestinians' Kassam rockets have killed and wounded hundreds of Israeli civilians. The number of casualties would be even higher without Israeli security measures such as early-warning alarms in areas under rocket threat that allow Israelis to escape into bomb shelters. Hamas has also fired medium-range Grad-type Katyusha rockets, placing more than 250,000 Israeli civilians under direct threat of rocket fire.

Palestinians have fired more than 6,000 rockets and mortars into Israel since the Israeli withdrawal -- all without provocation. Rocket fire continued unabated even during the six-month truce in the Gaza area that ended on December 19. Since then, Hamas stepped up rocket fire substantially, launching 170 rockets at Israel in an eight day period, an average of more than 20 rockets a day.

No country in the world would allow this type of onslaught against its citizens. As President-elect Barack Obama said during his visit to the rocket-battered town of Sderot five months ago, "If someone was sending rockets into my house where my two daughters sleep at night, I would do everything to stop that, and would expect Israel to do the same thing."



Sources include:
HonestReporting.com
New York Times
Al Jazeera
Xtrian Science monitor
Israel Opinion
BBC
Washington Post

Sunday, January 4, 2009

Legal Argument for Israel's actions in Gaza

This is a very well thought out and expressed legal view of the present activities in the Gaza Strip. I hope it is informative and of use when discussing the situation there.


From the Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs

by Abraham Bell
Published January 2008

Vol. 7, No. 29 28 January 2008



International Law and Gaza: The Assault on Israel's Right to Self-Defense

Abraham Bell

* International law authorizes Israel to initiate military countermeasures in Gaza. If Gaza is seen as having independent sovereignty, Israel's use of force is permissible on the grounds of self-defense. If Gaza is seen as lacking any independent sovereignty, Israel's use of military force is permissible as in other non-international conflicts.
* The rule of "distinction" includes elements of intent and expected result: so long as one aims at legitimate targets, the rule of distinction permits the attack, even if there will be collateral damage to civilians. The rule of "proportionality" also relies upon intent. If Israel plans a strike without expecting excessive collateral damage, the rule of proportionality permits it. Israeli attacks to date have abided by the rules of distinction and proportionality.
* Israel's imposition of economic sanctions on the Gaza Strip is a perfectly legal means of responding to Palestinian attacks. Since Israel is under no legal obligation to engage in trade of fuel or anything else with Gaza, or to maintain open borders, it may withhold commercial items and seal its borders at its discretion.
* The bar on collective punishment forbids the imposition of criminal-type penalties to individuals or groups on the basis of another's guilt. None of Israel's actions involve the imposition of criminal-type penalties.
* There is no legal basis for maintaining that Gaza is occupied territory. The Fourth Geneva Convention refers to territory as occupied where the territory is of a state party to the convention and the occupier "exercises the functions of government" in the territory. Gaza is not territory of another state party to the convention and Israel does not exercise the functions of government in the territory.
* The fighting in Gaza has been characterized by the extensive commission of war crimes, acts of terrorism and acts of genocide by Palestinians, while Israeli countermeasures have conformed with the requirements of international law. International law requires states to take measures to bring Palestinian war criminals and terrorists to justice, to prevent and punish Palestinian genocidal efforts, and to block the funding of Palestinian terrorist groups and those complicit with them.


Since Israel's withdrawal from the Gaza Strip in August 2005, Palestinian groups including Hamas, Fatah, Palestinian Islamic Jihad, the Popular Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine, and the Popular Resistance Committees have launched thousands of rocket attacks at Israel. All the attacks have been on civilian targets, with no more than a handful of possible exceptions. The brunt of the Palestinian assault has been borne by the town of Sderot. The attacks have killed several residents and injured dozens, struck houses and public buildings like kindergartens, and so traumatized residents that three-quarters of all Sderot children between the ages of 7 and 12 suffer from post-traumatic anxiety.



Faulty Arguments Made by Opponents of Israel

Unsurprisingly, in the wake of Israeli countermeasures, persistent critics of Israel have strongly objected to Israel's defensive actions to date, while remaining mostly mute on the crime under international law committed daily by the Gazan militias' attacks on Israeli civilians. As will be explained below, it is evident that the criticisms are without legal basis. Israeli responses to the Palestinian terror attacks emanating from Gaza correspond to the requirements of international law, and the claims that Israel has violated international law are without merit.

One widely reported criticism came from John Dugard, a professor of international law who has accepted a permanent appointment as special rapporteur on human rights in the "occupied Palestinian territories" from the discredited UN Commission on Human Rights and its successor UN Human Rights Council. Dugard has publicly and repeatedly interpreted his mandate as requiring him to criticize only Israel and, true to form, Dugard criticized Israeli defense measures for alleged illegality in the high-profile Sunday New York Times (Jan. 20, 2008).

First, Dugard claimed that Israel's attack on Hamas headquarters in a Palestinian Interior Ministry building in Gaza was illegal because the target was "near a wedding venue with what must have been foreseen loss of life and injury to many civilians." However, contrary to Dugard's insinuation, the building was certainly a legitimate target under the international humanitarian legal rule of distinction as it makes a definite contribution to Hamas' hostilities. That one Palestinian civilian lost her life in the Israeli strike is unfortunate, but not a violation of the rule of proportionality, which authorizes collateral damage to civilians where justified by military necessity.

Second, Dugard asserted that Israel's closure of its borders with the Gaza Strip constitutes illegal "collective punishment." Yet there is nothing in international law that requires Israel to maintain open borders with such a hostile territory, whatever its sovereign status. Exercising legal counter-measures against a hostile entity does not constitute "collective punishment" under international law. Dugard's refusal to level the same charge against Egypt, which also kept closed its border with the Gaza Strip, underlines the bias that accompanies the legally inaccurate statement.

Dugard was not alone. UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Louise Arbour denounced Israel's "disproportionate use of force." UN Undersecretary-General for Political Affairs Lynn Pascoe told the UN Security Council that collective penalties were prohibited under international law (Financial Times, Jan. 22, 2008). UNRWA Commissioner General Karen Koning Abu Zayd joined the chorus by criticizing Israel's "sporadic" electricity supply to Gaza and its border closures and called on the international community to act (Guardian, Jan. 23, 2008). Unfortunately, these skewed assertions and misstatements of international law by UN officials framed how international public opinion views the illegal Palestinian actions in Gaza and the merits of Israeli defensive actions, and especially Israel's legal right to defend itself.

Some parties had the courage to reject the one-sided and faulty arguments. In the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva, Canada, a state that prides itself in making the defense of human rights and international law a significant factor in its foreign policy, voted against a resolution condemning Israel for the Gaza fighting. While the European state members abstained in the Human Rights Council vote, some European officials, such as Franco Frattini, European Commissioner for Justice, Freedom and Security, correctly defended the legality of the Israeli actions, and others, such as Dutch Foreign Minister Maxime Verhagen, criticized UN bias against Israel. Finally, U.S. Ambassador to the UN Zalmay Khalilzad told the UN Security Council on January 22, 2008, that Hamas was "ultimately responsible" for the current situation in Gaza.

This essay nevertheless attempts to construct a rational legal basis for evaluating Israeli behavior and potential criticisms. This is no easy task as many of the criticisms of Israel's conduct are made in conclusory fashion, without reference to legal doctrines or legal materials in support of the charges, or, alternatively, based on a misunderstanding of the requirements of the law and the factual context.

This essay examines, in turn, the six distinct bodies of law that could potentially affect the legality of Israeli counterstrikes:

1. the laws of initiating hostilities (jus ad bellum);
2. international humanitarian law, which governs the conduct of military actions;
3. the laws of occupied territory, which some have argued applies to Israeli actions against Gaza-based terrorists;
4. human rights laws;
5. laws on genocide; and
6. anti-terror laws.

A careful examination of the relevant law demonstrates that Israeli counterstrikes to date, and its potential future counterstrikes (both economic and military), conform to the requirements of international law. Moreover, Palestinian commission of war crimes and acts considered under international conventions to be terrorist acts and acts of genocide require Israel and other countries to take steps to punish Palestinian criminals for their acts in the Gaza fighting.

A final preliminary note is in order. The legal status of the Gaza Strip is an extremely complex puzzle in international law and is beyond the scope of this essay. Fortunately, it turns out that many of the legal conclusions regarding the Gaza fighting are not affected by the precise nature of Gaza's status. The essay notes those instances where Gaza's status does affect the ultimate legal determination.



1. The Legality of Israeli Military Actions under Jus ad Bellum

The law of jus ad bellum, as codified by the UN Charter, prevents using military force against another state. However, Article 51 of the Charter excludes self-defense from this ban on the use of force. Furthermore, jus ad bellum does not restrict the use of force in non-international conflicts.

Israel's right to use force in defending itself against Palestinian attacks from Gaza is clear, notwithstanding the uncertain legal status of the Gaza Strip, which makes it difficult to determine the grounds on which Israel's actions should be analyzed. If Gaza should be seen as having independent sovereignty, Israel's use of force is permissible on the grounds of self-defense. On the other hand, if Gaza is properly seen as lacking any independent sovereignty, Israel's use of military force is permissible as in other non-international conflicts.



2. The Legality of Israeli Military Actions under International Humanitarian Law

International humanitarian law regulates the use of force once military action is underway, irrespective of its legality under jus ad bellum. The two most basic principles of international humanitarian law are the rules of distinction and proportionality. Israel's counterstrikes have abided by both these rules.

Distinction:

The rule of distinction requires aiming attacks only at legitimate (e.g., military and support) targets. The rule of distinction includes elements of intent and expected result: so long as one aims at legitimate targets, the rule of distinction permits the attack, even if there will be collateral damage to civilians and even if, in retrospect, the attack was a mistake based on faulty intelligence. Israel has aimed its strikes at the locations from which rockets have been fired, Palestinian combatants bearing weapons and transporting arms, Palestinian terrorist commanders, and support and command and control centers. Locations such as Interior Ministry buildings from which Hamas directs some military activities are objects that make a contribution to Hamas' military actions and are therefore legitimate targets, even though they also have civilian functions.

By contrast, the Palestinian attacks are aimed at Israeli civilians and therefore violate the rule of distinction. Moreover, one of the corollaries of the rule of distinction is a ban on the use of weapons that are incapable, under the circumstances, of being properly aimed at legitimate targets. The rockets and projectile weapons being used by the Palestinian attackers are primitive weapons that cannot be aimed at specific targets, and must be launched at the center of urban areas. This means that the very use of the weapons under current circumstances violates international humanitarian law.

Proportionality:

The rule of proportionality places limits on collateral damage. While collateral damage to civilian and other protected targets is permitted, collateral damage is forbidden if it is expected to be excessive in relation to the military need. Prosecutions for war crimes on the basis of disproportionate collateral damage are rare, and it is difficult to see how a credible claim can be made that any of Israel's counterstrikes have created disproportionate collateral damage. Moreover, like distinction, the rule of proportionality relies upon intent. If Israel plans a strike without expecting excessive collateral damage, the rule of proportionality permits it, even if, in retrospect, Israel turns out to have erred in its damage estimates.

All reported Israeli strikes in the latest round of fighting have been aimed at legitimate targets and none has caused excessive collateral damage. Legal advisors attached to Israeli military units review proposed military actions and apply an extremely restrictive standard of both distinction and proportionality, in accordance with expansive Israeli Supreme Court rulings. It is thus likely that future Israeli measures will continue to abide by the rules of distinction and proportionality.

Retorsion:

Israel's imposition of economic sanctions on the Gaza Strip, such as withholding fuel supplies and electricity, does not involve the use of military force and is therefore a perfectly legal means of responding to Palestinian attacks, despite the effects on Palestinian citizens. The use of economic and other non-military sanctions as a means of "punishing" other international actors for their misbehavior is a practice known as "retorsion." It is generally acknowledged that every country may engage in retorsion so long as the underlying acts are themselves legal. Indeed, it is acknowledged that states may even go beyond retorsion to carry out non-belligerent reprisals-non-military acts that would otherwise be illegal (such as suspending flight agreements) as countermeasures. Since Israel is under no legal obligation to engage in trade of fuel or anything else with the Gaza Strip, or to maintain open borders with the Gaza Strip, it may withhold commercial items and seal its borders at its discretion, even if intended as "punishment" for Palestinian terrorism.

Collective Punishment:

While international law bars "collective punishment," none of Israel's combat actions and retorsions may be considered collective punishment. The bar on collective punishment forbids the imposition of criminal-type penalties to individuals or groups on the basis of another's guilt. None of Israel's actions involve the imposition of criminal-type penalties.

Examples of retorsions are legion in international affairs. The United States, for example, froze trade with Iran after the 1979 Revolution and with Uganda in 1978 after accusations of genocide. In 2000, fourteen European states suspended various diplomatic relations with Austria in protest of the participation of Jorg Haider in the government. Numerous states suspended trade and diplomatic relations with South Africa as punishment for apartheid practices. Obviously, in none of these cases was a charge raised of "collective punishment."



3. The Legality of Israeli Military Actions under the Laws of Occupation

Some groups have claimed that the Gaza Strip should be considered "occupied" by Israel according to the Fourth Geneva Convention, in which case Israel would be required to "ensure the food and medical supplies of the population," as well as "agree to relief schemes on behalf of the...population" and maintain "public health and hygiene."

Due to internal political considerations as well as rulings by the Israeli Supreme Court, Israel continues to maintain the flow of basic humanitarian supplies such as food, medicine and water to the Palestinian population of Gaza. In a recent case (Albassiouni v. Prime Minister, HCJ 9132/07), the Israeli Supreme Court implied that it interpreted domestic Israeli administrative law to require the Israeli government to maintain a minimum flow of Israeli-supplied necessary humanitarian goods when engaging in retorsional acts such as cutting off the Israeli supply of electricity to Gaza. Thus, even if there were a legal basis for considering Gaza Israeli-occupied territory, Israel would be fulfilling its duties under the Fourth Geneva Convention.

However, there is no legal basis for maintaining that Gaza is occupied territory. The Fourth Geneva Convention refers to territory as occupied where the territory is of another "High Contracting Party" (i.e., a state party to the convention) and the occupier "exercises the functions of government" in the occupied territory. The Gaza Strip is not territory of another state party to the convention and Israel does not exercise the functions of government-or, indeed, any significant functions-in the territory. It is clear to all that the elected Hamas government is the de facto sovereign of the Gaza Strip and does not take direction from Israel, or from any other state.

Some have argued that states can be considered occupiers even of areas where they do not declare themselves in control so long as the putative occupiers have effective control. For instance, in 2005, the International Court of Justice opined that Uganda could be considered the occupier of Congolese territory over which it had "substituted [its] own authority for that of the Congolese Government" even in the absence of a formal military administration. Some have argued that this shows that occupation may occur even in the absence of a full-scale military presence and claimed that this renders Israel an occupier under the Fourth Geneva Convention. However, these claims are clearly without merit. First, Israel does not otherwise fulfill the conditions of being an occupier; in particular, Israel does not exercise the functions of government in Gaza, and it has not substituted its authority for the de facto Hamas government. Second, Israel cannot project effective control in Gaza. Indeed, Israelis and Palestinians well know that projecting such control would require an extensive military operation amounting to the armed conquest of Gaza. Military superiority over a neighbor, and the ability to conquer a neighbor in an extensive military operation, does not itself constitute occupation. If it did, the United States would have to be considered the occupier of Mexico, Egypt the occupier of Libya and Gaza, and China the occupier of North Korea.

Moreover, it is difficult to avoid the conclusion that foes of Israel claiming that Israel has legal duties as the "occupier" of Gaza are insincere in their legal analysis. If Israel were indeed properly considered an occupier, under Article 43 of the regulations attached to the Fourth Hague Convention of 1907, it would be required to take "all the measures in [its] power to restore, and ensure, as far as possible, public order and safety." Thus, those who contend that Israel is in legal occupation of Gaza must also support and even demand Israeli military operations in order to disarm Palestinian terror groups and militias. Additionally, claims of occupation necessarily rely upon a belief that the occupying power is not the true sovereign of the occupied territory. For that reason, those who claim that Israel occupies Gaza must believe that the border between Israel and Gaza is an international border between separate sovereignties. Yet, many of those claiming that Gaza is occupied, like John Dugard, also simultaneously and inconsistently claim that Israel is legally obliged to open the borders between Israel and Gaza. No state is required to leave its international borders open.



4. The Legality of Israeli Military Actions under International Human Rights Law

Under the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, Israel is required to ensure the protection of certain rights "within its territory" including the right to life. The application of the covenant to Israeli activities in the Gaza Strip is questionable as it is unlikely that the Gaza Strip should be considered Israel's territory. Nonetheless, Israel has abided by the requirements of the convention, if it applies to Gaza. In combat situations the meaning of the rights in the convention is established by the rules of international humanitarian law. Thus, Israel is protecting the human rights of Palestinian residents of the Gaza Strip by abiding by international humanitarian law.



5. Duties of Israel under the Genocide Convention

Article Two of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of Genocide defines any killing with intent "to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group, as such" as an act of genocide. Given expressions of intent by some of the Palestinian terrorist groups to kill Jews as a group due to their ethnic identity (such as the Hamas charter's call for an armed struggle against all Jews until judgment day), all the members of such groups who carry out killings are guilty of the crime of genocide under the convention. Under Article One of the convention, Israel and other signatories are required to "prevent and punish" not only persons who carry out such genocidal acts, but those who conspire with them, incite them to kill, and are complicit with their actions. The convention thus requires Israel to prevent and punish the terrorists themselves, as well as public figures who have publicly supported the Palestinian attacks.



6. Duties of Israel under Anti-Terrorism Conventions

The International Convention for the Suppression of the Financing of Terrorism requires Israel (like other state parties to the convention) to prevent the collection of funds intended to support terrorist attacks. The Palestinian attacks fall under the definition of terrorist attacks under Article 2(1)(b) of the convention because they are aimed at Israeli civilians in violation of the rule of distinction, and they are intended to kill or seriously injure civilians in order to intimidate a population. If Gaza is considered "territory of [the] state" of Israel, Israel is legally required to establish jurisdiction over Palestinian terrorist crimes under the convention; if Gaza is not Israeli territory, Israel is permitted to establish jurisdiction over the terrorist crimes.

Additionally, the convention establishes that Israel is not only permitted to impose certain economic sanctions on the de facto rulers of the Gaza Strip, it is required to do so.

Under a related convention, the International Convention for the Suppression of Terrorist Bombings, it is a crime to bomb public places (such as city streets) with the intent to kill civilians, by persons who are non-nationals of the state of which the victims are nationals. Under this convention too, the Palestinian attackers must be considered international terrorists and Israel is either required or permitted (depending on whether Gaza is Israeli "territory") to assume criminal jurisdiction over the Palestinian terrorists committing these acts. Additionally, other states signed on the convention-such as the United States, Russia, Turkey and France-must cooperate in helping to combat such Palestinian terrorist acts.

Finally, Security Council Resolution 1373 requires states to "deny safe haven to those who finance, plan, support, or commit terrorist acts, or provide safe havens" and "prevent the movement of terrorists or terrorist groups." The resolution was adopted under Chapter VII and is therefore apparently binding on all states, although some have argued that the resolution is not binding because the Security Council is not authorized to enact quasi-legislation. While the resolution does not define terrorism, it references the International Convention for the Suppression of the Financing of Terrorism, making it clear that the Palestinian attackers from Gaza fall within the scope of the international terrorists covered by the resolution. Consequently, if binding, this resolution requires Israel to take steps to deny safe haven to Palestinian attackers from Gaza and to prevent their free movement.



Conclusion

The Palestinian-Israeli fighting in Gaza has been characterized by the extensive commission of war crimes, acts of terrorism and acts of genocide by Palestinian fighters, while Israeli countermeasures have conformed with the requirements of international law.

International law requires states to take measures to bring Palestinian war criminals and terrorists to justice, to prevent and punish Palestinian genocidal efforts, and to block the funding of Palestinian terrorist groups and those complicit with them.

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Dr. Avi Bell is a member of the Faculty of Law at Bar-Ilan University, Visiting Professor at Fordham University Law School, and Director of the International Law Forum at the Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs.