The
International Court of Justice (ICJ) may take years to adjudicate the South
African case, but the accused, Israel, shall forever have the charge hanging
like a badge of shame around its neck. Because the ICJ has, in essence, deemed
the sum of what it is committing in Gaza as heinous and premeditated enough to
be probed as genocide.
اضافة اعلان
For
the Palestinian cause and for the people of the Strip who are experiencing mass
slaughter, it is not only a validation; it is a turning point. Once, well
before October 7, a journalist asked a Gazan boy what he would like to be when
he grew up. “Here, we do not get to grow up,” he matter-of-factly answered. Now
the Israeli horrors he and his entire kin have been enduring fall under a very
specific name, and it is the worst in the book of crimes against humanity.
For
Israel, the court’s findings are a flag in the deepest color, red. As The Forward’s Sam Eshman wrote in his “’A Taint of Evil: Why the ICJ
Genocide Ruling Was Branding Genius”: “That bell can’t be unrung. That thought
can’t be unthunk.”
“The International Court of Justice (ICJ) may take years to adjudicate the South African case, but the accused, Israel, shall forever have the charge hanging like a badge of shame around its neck.”
Israel
is at once defiant and shell-shocked. So, what does it do barely hours after
the ruling? It plays to type, pulling one of its usual stunts by accusing 12
UNRWA staff members of allegedly participating in the October 7 attacks. Had it
stopped there, we would have dismissed it as a feeble attempt to deflect from
the resounding legal defeat it had just been dealt. But it goes much further
and calls upon all donors to defund the refugee agency, whose role, especially
today, is critical to life in Gaza.
The
occupying state wants vengeance—and more. It is deliberately, and for all to
see, violating one of the ICJ’s provisional measures ordering it to facilitate
all humanitarian aid to the enclave. Quite apart from the 12 UNRWA employees’
guilt, which has yet to be independently verified, the utter cruelty of the
collective punishment of a 30,000-strong organization runs like a mini version
of the mass retribution Israel is exacting on all Gazans for what Hamas has
done.
Of
course, the usual troop of Western aiders and abettors immediately proceeded to
pause funding for UNRWA, blithely joining in this revenge ritual, much like
they joined in the larger one.
But
here is what is really interesting about this Israeli antic: it failed. Indeed,
a feature of the October 7 crisis has been an ever-expanding showcase of
Israeli failures on all fronts. Yet again, the occupying state deploys its hasbara playbook, mobilizes its army of
supporters, and attacks, expecting a swift win, but is very quickly exposed and
rebuffed. And whereas in the past, Western endorsement of Israel’s accusations
gave them the ring and appearance of fact, now it gives the West itself the
ring and appearance of complicity in the crime and its cover-up.
For
me, the past three months have been a fascinating study of how lost this once formidable country seems to be in this
new age as if a traveler from an ancient time. It has been an extraordinary
moment of stark contrasts, in fact. Hamas’s ingenuity and Israel’s
predictability on the battlefield have been finding their echoes in every arena
where the Palestinian and Israeli narratives clash.
“The occupying state wants vengeance—and more. It is deliberately, and for all to see, violating one of the ICJ’s provisional measures ordering it to facilitate all humanitarian aid to the enclave.”
At
the ICJ hearings, the eloquence and passion of the South African John Dugard
and the pomposity and dullness of the British Malcolm Shaw—equally the rich mix of the former’s team and the
sameness of the latter's—resonated far beyond the matter of Israel’s acts of
genocide. They faced off as totems of the audacity of the once-colonized and
the obtuse self-regard of the colonizer, the advent of the new fellowship, and
the retreat of the old one.
Just
like the punch and counterpunch in the media. A mainstream ecosystem is largely
in lockstep with rehashed Israeli storylines; a nimble alternative is robustly
debunking them. The vigorous refutation of early allegations of beheaded
Israeli babies and rapes has made what used to be such easy yarn-spinning for
Israel nearly impossible. When you are caught lying years after the misdeed, it
is debatable history; when you are caught in real-time, your lies, even in those instances when you are not
fabricating them, end up doing the job for your adversaries.
But
no battleground has been more perilous than the campuses of American
universities. There, anti-Semitism has been weaponized, lobbed at every critic
of Israel, including Jews, and dangerously emptied of all imports. As Scott
Ury, associate professor of Jewish history at Tel Aviv University, put it in
defense of professor Derek Penslar, a scholar on antisemitism and head of the
Jewish Studies Center at Harvard, “If it means everything, it means nothing.” In the past,
heated discourse suggested a communal feud; today, it has the feel of a civil
war as conservatives and liberals, billionaires and intellectuals, older
generations and younger ones, fight over the very meaning of Israel for their
Jewishness.
The
Israeli state has invested enormous resources—financial, political, and
cultural—into building an iron wall in
the West as impregnable as the military one it constructed on its home turf. The serious ruptures it has
simultaneously sustained in both do more than damage its brand; they threaten
its prospects.
“But the inescapable truth is that Israel, from its inception, has had to wield such tremendous force precisely because it was in defense of a cause unjust to many beside it.”
In
their desperation to lay the blame somewhere outside the heart and being of the
Zionist goliath, its supporters have been rushing to dump the myriad fiascos in
the lap of Netanyahu and his governing coalition. Unfair! And more
significantly, unwise. Because it asks too much of the poor fellow and asks
nothing of the state itself. And to ask nothing of it is to condemn it to a
bleak future its defenders are desperate for it to escape.
In
his conclusion to yet another Netanyahu-fixated piece, Haaretz’s Aluf Benn argued: “The first
Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion said Israel's fate depends on two things: its
power and the justice of its cause. On October 7, it turned out that its power
was far weaker than what we had believed. On Friday [the day of the ICJ
judgment], it is just cause sustained a terrible blow.”
Israel's historical
use of force and its refusal to consider political solutions are no longer
viable in the face of evolving international norms and challenges. It calls for
a reevaluation of Israel's approach to Israeli-Palestinian relations for the benefit
of both parties involved.
Amal Ghandour is a Lebanese-Jordanian
author and commentator based in Beirut. She holds an MS in International Policy
from Stanford University and a BSFS from Georgetown University.
This first appeared on her Substack page.
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