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CounterPunch
March 22,
2003
On
the Road in the West Bank
Nothing Justifies
Destruction Like This
By KATHLEEN and BILL
CHRISTISON
We've been very busy in East Jerusalem and the
West Bank since we arrived six days ago, racing against the clock
trying to fit in as much as we can in case the Israelis impose
a total curfew on the West Bank because of the war or impose
a closure that cuts off travel between Jerusalem and the West
Bank.
So far we've traveled to Nablus and Jenin
and have had a series of fascinating meetings in Ramallah, the
principal West Bank city. Thanks to some great contacts and wonderful
help from the friends of friends who know these people, we've
been lucky enough to have meetings with Hanan Ashrawi, who's
widely known throughout the U.S. from the days in the late '80s
and early '90s when she was the spokesperson for the Palestinian
negotiating delegation and appeared frequently on television;
with a physician who directs the principal medical relief organization
in the occupied territories; and--this is amazing to us--with
Yasir Arafat himself.
Hanan Ashrawi is a very warm, gracious
woman, and we had a long talk about prospects for the future,
the need (but the lack of much hope) for changes in U.S. and
Israeli policies that lead directly to so much hardship and despair
in Palestinian society, and what the war in Iraq is likely to
mean. The physician, Mustafa
Barghouti, emphasized the dire medical situation for most Palestinians,
who already have extreme difficulty getting medical help and
are likely to be without help altogether if there's a curfew.
Arafat and three of his advisers gave us almost an hour, again
talking about U.S. and Israeli policies and the grim outlook
for the future. We'll give you more details on all this as soon
as we can catch our breath and collect our thoughts.
The trips to Nablus and Jenin were dramatic
and depressing. Although we've read quite a bit about the Israeli
attacks on these and other towns in the West Bank and Gaza, actually
seeing the extent of the destruction--and in particular seeing
the huge open area in the middle of Jenin, probably the size
of a large city block in a major American city, where once thousands
of people had lived in a tightly packed warren of multistory
buildings and where now there's absolutely nothing but pulverized
rubble flattened and bulldozed over--literally takes your breath
away. It strangles you to drive into this "plaza" and
suddenly see nothing and know what happened here, and it's impossible
to understand how one people could do this to another for the
sake of keeping land. Suicide bombings, horrific and indefensible
though they are, cannot justify destruction on a scale like this.
Getting around is not easy, and we're
discovering the full extent of the travel restrictions Palestinians
endure. We've tied up with an excellent taxi driver who lives
in East Jerusalem and so has yellow Israeli license plates, which
are a sort of ticket to free travel, and who's highly experienced
at getting journalists, medical people, UN people, etc. around,
but even he, being a Palestinian, has occasional trouble at checkpoints.
We've now gone to Ramallah, about a 20-minute drive north of
Jerusalem, three times, as well as to Nablus and Jenin, and every
time has been a bit of an adventure. The first time we ourselves
got into a minor argument with a smart-aleck Israeli soldier
who wanted us to tell him what we thought of the Israeli army,
the IDF, and didn't particularly appreciate it when we told him
we wished the IDF wouldn't be so hard on the Palestinians. Once,
coming back out of Ramallah at night without our favorite taxi
driver, we had to be dropped off on the Ramallah side of the
checkpoint since no car with West Bank plates can enter Jerusalem,
walk through the checkpoint (in the rain, as it happened), show
our passports to some Israeli soldiers who bad-mouthed Ramallah
and suggested we couldn't possibly have enjoyed ourselves there
(Palestinians are all terrorists, you know), and try to find
a Jerusalem taxi at the other end to take us back to the hotel.
Yesterday, trying to enter Jenin, the Israeli soldiers wouldn't
let our driver's taxi in, so the driver and we had to walk the
approximately two miles between this first checkpoint and the
next one before finding a ride inside the checkpoint to take
us into Jenin. Coming back, we did the same walk--after passing
the first checkpoint while the Israeli soldiers fired several
rounds from their weapons, just to worry us probably.
This has all been a very graphic demonstration
of how much Palestinians, wherever they go, live at the mercy
of one or two or three 19- or 20-year-old Israeli soldiers who
may be bored, or scared, or intoxicated with his own power, or
just plain an SOB.
Bill Christison
joined the CIA in 1950, and served on the analysis side of the
Agency for 28 years. From the early 1970s he served as National
Intelligence Officer (principal adviser to the Director of Central
Intelligence on certain areas) for, at various times, Southeast
Asia, South Asia and Africa. Before he retired in 1979 he was
Director of the CIA's Office of Regional and Political Analysis,
a 250-person unit.
Kathleen Christison also worked in the CIA, retiring in 1979. Since
then she has been mainly preoccupied by the issue of Palestine.
She is the author of Perceptions
of Palestine and The
Wound of Dispossession.
The Christison's can be reached at: christison@counterpunch.org
Yesterday's
Features
Ben Tripp
Blood
for Oil: the Exchange Rate
Cathy Breens
Report from Baghdad: Mothers, Kids and Crash Kits
Scott Handleman
Fourth
Generation Protesting: Shutting Down San Francisco
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Them Red
Brian J. Foley
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Protest for Professors
Zoltan Grossman
After Saddam, a War on Iraqi Rebels?
Philip S. Golub
Inventing Demons
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On the Current Experience of Terror
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The Nightmare at the Back Door: Nuclear Plant's as Terror Targets
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See Rome (poem)
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