How does terrorism originate? For the last 15 years or so, I have been giving lectures on terrorism to students of journalism at a reputed training institute in Mumbai. The most difficult part of the subject is to explain the paradoxes in its history, which often defy logic. For example, President Ronald Reagan told Americans in a radio address in May 1986 that effective anti-terrorist action was “thwarted by the claim that -- as the quip goes –- ‘One man’s terrorist is another man’s freedom fighter’.’’ He added that freedom fighters did not need to terrorise a population into submission. What he said was true of India which won freedom under Mahatma Gandhi’s leadership without violence.
If Reagan was correct, why did the United States consider Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin as an acceptable and strategic partner despite an American Library of Congress paper recording that during the pre-independence days, Begin was responsible for several terrorist attacks: on two British police stations; the blowing up of the British military headquarters in King David Hotel; the execution of two British sergeants to retaliate for the hanging of three Jewish resistance fighters, and the massacre in the Arab village of Deir Yassir that left more than 250 civilians dead?
And yet, a year before Reagan’s address, New York Times columnist William Safire had criticised the Reagan administration in October 1985 for not standing by Israel, a US ally, when the latter attacked a Palestine Liberation Organisation boat within the territorial waters of Cyprus on intelligence that it was meant for terrorist activities against Israel. Safire had criticised Reagan for “allowing” the UN Security Council “to condemn its ally and call for reparations”.
In February 2001, UPI correspondent Richard Sale, quoting “several current and former US intelligence officials” claimed that Tel Aviv “gave direct and indirect financial aid to Hamas over a period of years” beginning in the late 1970s. He quoted Anthony Cordesman, Middle East analyst for the Centre for Strategic & International Studies, that Israel “aided Hamas directly -- the Israelis wanted to use it as a counterbalance to the PLO”.
This was confirmed in January 2009 by Daniel Barenboim, the famous Israeli pianist and conductor, who wrote an article ‘The Illusion of Victory’ in The Guardian: “We must not forget that before Hamas was elected by the Palestinians, it was encouraged by Israel, as a tactic to weaken Yasser Arafat. Israel’s recent history leads me to believe that if Hamas is bombed out of existence, another group will most certainly take its place that would be more radical, more violent, and more full of hatred towards Israel”.
This Monday, The Times of Israel reported that “Hamas conducted a years-long campaign to fool Israel into thinking the group did not desire armed conflict and could be placated with economic incentives to maintain relative calm”.
However, this did not start recently. I had written in 2009, quoting the late Ami Isseroff, known as the “Socialist Zionist”, that successive Israeli governments had promoted these fundamentalists, who later became ‘Hamas’. There was evidence that the Menachem Begin government had approved Sheik Ahmad Yasin’s application in 1973 to recognise his organisation ‘al-Mujama’, even when it was known that it was an offshoot of the Muslim Brotherhood. Yasin was heading its Gaza chapter.
In fact, Begin and his successor Yitzhak Shamir created “village leagues” who were thought to be helpful to check the secular and leftist PLO of Yasser Arafat. They allowed Yasin to publish a newspaper, collect funds not only from Israelis but also from orthodox Islamic regimes, and helped convert the Islamic University of Gaza (IUG) into their base. The IUG flourished as the only higher education facility on the Gaza strip — with official Israeli help, and due to Anwar Sadat’s ban on Palestinian students seeking admission in Egyptian colleges.
By the 1980s, the IUG had become the largest university in occupied territories, with 4,500 students. Isseroff had even said that Mujama cadres were allowed to keep their cache of weapons to intimidate secular students. The Telegraph (UK) said in March 2004 that deliberate Israeli neglect of Yasin’s bold political activities “nurtured a movement that came to epitomise all that Israel meant by the word ‘terrorism’”.
In 1983, Yasin had formed two secret para-military units: One for the surveillance and punishment of drug dealers, prostitutes, and collaborators with Israel; and the other consisted of commando groups that carried out attacks on Israeli targets. This was revealed only after Yasin was killed by a direct Israeli strike in March 2004. After the recent hostilities started, the Israeli air force went to the other extreme by destroying the Ahmed Yasin Mosque in Gaza on Monday. Middle East Eye reported that at least 10 mosques were demolished in the recent bombing. This, in turn, is bound to inflame religious feelings all over.
Former Shin Beth (Israel’s internal intelligence agency) chief Ami Ayalon, while speaking to the French newspaper Le Figaro recently, blamed Israeli politicians for not listening to the security chiefs to realise “the great division of the country around the crisis caused by the justice reform”. Significantly, he also added: “The Israeli government has gone out of its way to ensure that Fatah and the Palestinian Authority are no longer partners, giving power to Hamas”. By boycotting the legitimate Palestinian government in the West Bank, “We have tolerated the unacceptable, allowing Hamas to arm themselves on our doorstep since 2006”.
He advocated ground operations to wipe out the ‘Ezzedine al-Qassam Brigades’ (the armed wing of Hamas) after assuring Palestinians that “our war is not against them”. However, he had no proposal on how to avoid killing innocent Palestinian civilian in that process.
There is no better way to end this column than by quoting the concluding part of Barenboim’s 2009 article: “I wish for a return of King Solomon’s wisdom to Israel’s decision-makers that they might use it to understand that Palestinians and Israelis have equal human rights.”
(The writer is a former Special Secretary, Cabinet Secretariat. His latest book Intelligence Over Centuries’ examines the history and workings of the systems in countries like India, Israel and America)
(Syndicate: The Billion Press)