Method and Madness: The Hidden Story of Israel's Assaults on Gaza (2015)
By Norman Finkelstein – 40 Q&As – Unbekoming Book Summary
In Method and Madness: The Hidden Story of Israel's Assaults on Gaza, Norman Finkelstein meticulously unravels the strategic and political machinations behind Israel’s military operations in Gaza from 2008 to 2014. Through a detailed examination of three major assaults—Operation Cast Lead, Operation Pillar of Defense, and Operation Protective Edge—Finkelstein exposes the calculated brutality and the often-overlooked civilian toll of these conflicts. His work challenges the prevailing narratives, revealing a pattern of disproportionate force and systematic destruction that goes beyond self-defense, raising profound questions about the true objectives of Israel’s military policies. This book serves as a critical lens into the methodical approach Israel has taken to suppress Gaza, a region already battered by decades of occupation and blockade.
To fully appreciate the depth of Finkelstein’s analysis, one must consider the broader historical context provided by Ilan Pappe’s scholarship. In Ten Myths About Israel, Pappe dismantles the foundational myths—such as the notion of Israel as a benign democracy or a land without a people—that have long justified its actions, offering a critical perspective that aligns with Finkelstein’s critique of contemporary military strategies. Similarly, The Biggest Prison on Earth: A History of Gaza and the Occupied Territories traces the transformation of Gaza into an open-air prison, highlighting the systemic oppression and engineered deprivation that amplify the devastation Finkelstein documents. Furthermore, The Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine provides a detailed account of the Nakba, the 1948 expulsion of Palestinians, rooting the Gaza conflicts in a history of displacement and dispossession that continues to shape the region’s plight.
The relevance of Finkelstein’s work resonates in today’s geopolitical landscape, where the issues he raises remain unresolved and fiercely contested. Philip Giraldi’s article, Where Does Israel-Gaza Go from Here?, explores the ongoing violence and political stalemates, questioning the future of Israel-Gaza relations amidst what he describes as Israel’s reliance on overwhelming military force and U.S. support—a dynamic Finkelstein critiques historically. Meanwhile, contemporary efforts to silence criticism of Israel underscore the urgency of this narrative. Australia’s recent federal and New South Wales “hate speech” laws—swiftly enacted under the pretext of a now-admitted false flag “antisemitic terror plot”—exemplify global moves to suppress dissent, casting Israel as an untouchable entity akin to Voldemort. These developments highlight how Finkelstein’s call for reevaluating Israel’s actions and the international community’s complicity remains as critical as ever.
With thanks to Norman Finkelstein.
Method and Madness: The Hidden Story of Israel’s Assaults on Gaza: Finkelstein, Norman
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Analogy
Imagine a large maximum security prison where the guards not only control the inmates inside the walls, but also maintain complete authority over the flow of food, water, electricity, and basic supplies to the prison from the outside world. The guards claim they must maintain this total control for security reasons, but they go far beyond basic security measures - they deliberately limit food to keep prisoners weak but alive, destroy the prison's kitchen and plumbing during periodic raids, and severely punish the entire prison population whenever any individual prisoner protests their treatment.
When prisoners try to resist these conditions, whether through hunger strikes or fighting back against guards, they are labeled as dangerous criminals who must be suppressed with overwhelming force. The guards justify their harsh tactics by pointing to crude weapons some prisoners manage to make, while ignoring that these weapons cause minimal harm compared to the guards' automatic rifles and tanks. Meanwhile, the prison wardens give press conferences explaining how humanely they treat prisoners, even as they systematically destroy the prison's infrastructure and keep inmates in an engineered state of deprivation.
The outside world occasionally expresses concern about conditions in the prison, especially when footage leaks of guards killing unarmed prisoners. But the prison administration has powerful political allies who ensure no meaningful action is taken to change the situation. Over time, the guards become increasingly sophisticated at justifying their actions while the prisoners face a difficult choice between accepting their perpetual imprisonment or engaging in resistance that brings devastating retaliation.
This analogy captures the power dynamics, the cycle of resistance and retaliation, the role of international law and public opinion, and the fundamental injustice of a system that uses overwhelming force and control of basic necessities to maintain dominance over a captive population, all while claiming to act only in self-defense.
12-point summary
Strategic Evolution of Israeli Military Operations - Israel conducted three major operations in Gaza (Cast Lead 2008-9, Pillar of Defense 2012, Protective Edge 2014), showing an evolution from unrestricted force to more constrained operations due to increasing international scrutiny. The devastating impact remained consistent, with over 2,200 Palestinian deaths in the final operation alone.
Humanitarian Crisis and Infrastructure Destruction - The systematic destruction of Gaza's civilian infrastructure was staggering: 11,000 homes, 360 factories, 160 mosques, 100 schools, and 10 hospitals were damaged or destroyed during Protective Edge alone. The blockade left 95% of water unfit for human consumption and created widespread economic collapse.
Legal Framework and War Crimes - The Goldstone Report documented extensive violations of international law, including deliberate targeting of civilian infrastructure and collective punishment. Despite Israeli claims of self-defense, international law recognizes Palestinians' right to resist occupation while prohibiting occupying powers from using force to suppress self-determination.
Media and Public Opinion Transformation - Coverage evolved from Israeli-controlled narratives during Cast Lead to more independent reporting during Protective Edge, thanks to social media and international journalists in Gaza. This shift generated increasing public criticism of Israeli actions, though rarely translating into policy changes.
Asymmetric Military Reality - Despite Israeli claims about Hamas's military threat, evidence showed their capabilities were limited and declining. Claims about rocket threats and Iron Dome's effectiveness were exaggerated, while the tunnel network represented Hamas's only significant military achievement.
Regional Political Shifts - The Arab Spring fundamentally altered regional dynamics. Egypt transformed from mediator to adversary of Hamas after Sisi's coup, while traditional Arab state support for Palestinians declined as they prioritized opposition to Islamist movements over Palestinian rights.
International Law Enforcement Failure - Despite extensive documentation of war crimes, international legal mechanisms proved ineffective at holding Israel accountable. The threat of ICC prosecution influenced some tactical decisions but failed to prevent recurring violations of international law.
Blockade as Collective Punishment - Israel's blockade deliberately kept Gaza's economy "on the brink of collapse" while carefully calculating minimum humanitarian aid to avoid outright starvation. This policy of collective punishment aimed to pressure Gaza's population to turn against Hamas.
United States Role - The US provided consistent diplomatic cover for Israel while occasionally expressing mild criticism of specific tactical decisions. This support remained steady across administrations, blocking international accountability efforts despite growing public criticism.
Palestinian Political Evolution - Hamas showed increasing pragmatism, accepting the possibility of a two-state solution and joining a unity government. However, Israeli military responses repeatedly undermined political moderation, creating a cycle of violence that prevented diplomatic progress.
Resistance Strategy Debate - The effectiveness of armed versus nonviolent resistance emerged as a crucial strategic question. While armed resistance proved capable of surviving Israeli attacks, it failed to achieve substantial political gains or improve conditions in Gaza.
Civilian Impact and International Response - The mounting civilian death toll, particularly among children, gradually eroded international support for Israeli operations. However, the gap between public opinion and government policy remained stark, especially in Western countries that continued supporting Israel despite growing public opposition.
40 Questions & Answers
Question 1: What were the three major Israeli military operations in Gaza between 2008-2014?
Israel conducted three major military operations in Gaza during this period: Operation Cast Lead (December 2008-January 2009), Operation Pillar of Defense (November 2012), and Operation Protective Edge (July-August 2014). Cast Lead was the most extensive, beginning with a week of air attacks followed by a ground invasion that resulted in approximately 1,400 Palestinian deaths. The operation lasted 22 days and caused massive destruction to Gaza's infrastructure.
Pillar of Defense in 2012 was a shorter operation lasting eight days, characterized by aerial bombardment but no ground invasion. The final operation, Protective Edge in 2014, began as an air campaign but eventually included a ground component focused on destroying Hamas's tunnel network. It resulted in over 2,200 Palestinian deaths and widespread destruction of civilian infrastructure.
Question 2: How did Israel's military strategy evolve across these three operations?
The evolution of Israel's military strategy showed a progression from overwhelming force to more constrained operations due to increasing international scrutiny. Cast Lead demonstrated maximum force with minimal concern for civilian casualties, implementing what became known as the Dahiya strategy of disproportionate force. The operation deliberately targeted civilian infrastructure to punish the population and deter future resistance.
By Protective Edge in 2014, Israel faced new constraints including social media coverage, international pressure, and the presence of foreign journalists in Gaza. This forced a shift toward more selective targeting, though civilian casualties remained high. The strategy also evolved to focus more on specific military objectives like tunnel destruction, rather than broad punishment of the civilian population.
Question 3: What was the "Dahiya strategy" and how was it implemented?
The Dahiya strategy, named after a southern suburb of Beirut that Israel destroyed in 2006, called for using disproportionate force against any area from which attacks were launched against Israel. Israeli military officials openly discussed this strategy, with Northern Command Chief Gadi Eisenkot stating they would "cause immense damage and destruction" to any village that fired on Israel. The strategy explicitly aimed to inflict such severe civilian suffering that it would deter future resistance.
During Cast Lead, this strategy manifested in the systematic destruction of civilian infrastructure including homes, factories, schools, and government buildings. Israeli officials like Interior Minister Meir Sheetrit advocated "leveling" neighborhoods in Gaza, while other leaders spoke of demonstrating "real hooliganism" and going "wild" to restore deterrence. The strategy represented a deliberate policy of collective punishment designed to terrorize the civilian population.
Question 4: What role did tunnels play in Gaza's defense strategy?
The tunnel network represented Hamas's most sophisticated military achievement, allowing fighters to emerge from underground to attack Israeli forces while largely protected from aerial bombardment. During Protective Edge, these tunnels proved especially effective, enabling Hamas to inflict unprecedented Israeli military casualties. The network was extensive enough that Israeli forces never penetrated more than 2-3 kilometers into Gaza for fear of fighters emerging from tunnels behind their lines.
The tunnels demonstrated Hamas's adaptation of Hezbollah's 2006 strategy of using underground infrastructure to counter Israel's air superiority. While Israel claimed the tunnels threatened civilians, their primary military value was in protecting Hamas fighters and enabling them to engage Israeli forces on more equal terms. This forced Israel to either risk infantry casualties in urban combat or resort to massive bombardment of civilian areas to destroy tunnel infrastructure.
Question 5: How effective was the Iron Dome system in reality?
Despite Israeli claims of Iron Dome's remarkable success, evidence suggests its actual performance was far more limited. MIT missile defense expert Theodore Postol estimated that fewer than 10% of Iron Dome's intercepts were successful. The limited civilian casualties in Israel were more likely due to its sophisticated civil defense system and the small size of Hamas rocket warheads than Iron Dome's effectiveness.
The emphasis on Iron Dome's success served multiple purposes: it provided psychological comfort to Israeli civilians, compensated for Israel's inability to achieve decisive military victory, and created marketing opportunities for arms exports. The reality was that Hamas's rockets caused minimal damage not because of Iron Dome but because they were primarily enhanced fireworks with limited explosive capacity.
Question 6: What were the casualty figures for each operation?
Cast Lead resulted in approximately 1,400 Palestinian deaths, with human rights organizations estimating 800-1,200 were civilians, including over 300 children. Israeli casualties included 10 soldiers (four by friendly fire) and three civilians. During Pillar of Defense, around 70 Palestinians were killed, mostly civilians, while Israel suffered no significant military casualties and minimal civilian deaths.
Protective Edge proved the deadliest operation, with 2,200 Palestinian deaths, of which 70-75% were civilians, including 500 children. Additionally, 11,000 Palestinians were injured, with 3,300 of them children. Israeli losses included 66 soldiers and five civilians. The casualty ratios consistently showed dramatically disproportionate Palestinian civilian deaths compared to Israeli casualties.
Question 7: What patterns emerged in Israel's targeting choices?
Israel consistently targeted civilian infrastructure including schools, hospitals, factories, power stations, and residential buildings. During Cast Lead, investigations found that Israel deliberately targeted "decidedly 'non-terrorist,' non-Hamas" sites. The pattern suggested a strategy of destroying Gaza's economic capacity and civilian infrastructure rather than purely military targets.
This targeting pattern continued through subsequent operations, though with increasing attempts to provide military justifications for civilian targets. By Protective Edge, Israel was still destroying apartment buildings and infrastructure but worked harder to claim military necessity. The pattern of civilian targeting remained consistent even as Israel faced greater international scrutiny and criticism.
Question 8: How did Israel's "deterrence capacity" doctrine influence its military actions?
The concept of "deterrence capacity" - keeping neighboring populations so intimidated they wouldn't challenge Israel - drove much of Israel's military strategy. This doctrine called for responding to any challenge with overwhelming force to demonstrate Israel's willingness to inflict massive punishment. Israeli officials frequently cited the need to restore deterrence as justification for military operations, even when faced with minimal actual threats.
The doctrine led to deliberately disproportionate responses intended to terrorize civilian populations. When Hamas proved resilient despite heavy civilian casualties, Israel faced a strategic dilemma: it couldn't achieve deterrence without massive civilian casualties, but increasing international scrutiny made such casualties diplomatically costly. This tension became particularly apparent during Protective Edge.
Question 9: What triggered each of the three major operations?
While Israel cited rocket fire as justification for each operation, evidence suggests Israel deliberately provoked confrontations. Before Cast Lead, Israel broke a functioning cease-fire by killing Hamas militants in November 2008. Prior to Protective Edge, Israel exploited the kidnapping of three Israeli teenagers to launch extensive operations in the West Bank, despite knowing early on that Hamas leadership wasn't responsible for the kidnapping.
In each case, Israel's provocations appeared designed to elicit a response that could then justify larger military operations. This pattern aligned with historical Israeli strategy, such as in Lebanon in 1982, where Israel would break cease-fires or escalate tensions to create pretexts for planned military actions. The timing often corresponded with Israeli political needs or efforts to block diplomatic initiatives.
Question 10: How did Hamas's military capabilities change over this period?
Despite Israeli claims about Hamas's growing military threat, evidence suggests their capabilities remained limited and even declined over time. After Cast Lead, the blockade of Gaza became increasingly effective at preventing weapons imports. The severing of ties with Iran and Egypt's closure of smuggling tunnels further reduced Hamas's ability to obtain sophisticated weapons.
By Protective Edge, Hamas's rockets were described by Israeli officials as basically "pipes" lacking explosives. Their most significant military development was the tunnel network, which proved effective against Israeli ground forces but couldn't prevent massive civilian casualties from Israeli bombardment. Claims about Hamas's military capabilities often appeared exaggerated to justify Israeli operations.
Question 11: What were the main findings of the Goldstone Report?
The Goldstone Report concluded that Israel's actions during Operation Cast Lead constituted "a deliberately disproportionate attack designed to punish, humiliate and terrorize a civilian population." The Report found that Israel's military doctrine viewed disproportionate destruction and maximum disruption of civilian life as legitimate means to achieve military and political goals. Through extensive investigation, it documented numerous violations of international law, including willful killing, extensive destruction of property not justified by military necessity, and the use of civilians as human shields.
Beyond examining specific military actions, the Report presented a comprehensive indictment of Israel's treatment of Palestinians during the long years of occupation. It condemned Israel's fragmentation of the Palestinian people, restrictions on movement, institutionalized discrimination, violent repression of demonstrators, wholesale detention of civilians, and the de facto annexation of Palestinian territory. The Report explicitly rejected creating a false equivalence between occupier and occupied, noting the vast disparity in power between Israel and Palestinians.
Question 12: How did Israel respond to accusations of war crimes?
Israel launched an aggressive campaign to discredit both the Goldstone Report and Goldstone himself, with reactions ranging from official government statements to personal attacks. Israeli leaders, including President Shimon Peres and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, denounced the Report as a "mockery of history" and a "kangaroo court." The response focused on attacking the messenger rather than substantively addressing the Report's documented evidence of war crimes.
While Israel conducted some internal investigations, these resulted in minimal accountability. Out of numerous incidents investigated, only one Israeli soldier was convicted on a criminal charge - for stealing a credit card. Israel's investigations were criticized for lack of independence and transparency, while focusing primarily on lower-ranking soldiers rather than examining the decisions of senior military and political leadership who designed and approved the operational policies.
Question 13: What legal justifications did Israel provide for the blockade?
Israel claimed its naval blockade of Gaza was a legitimate security measure to prevent weapons from reaching Hamas, attempting to separate the naval blockade legally from the broader land blockade. Through the Turkel Commission and other channels, Israel argued that the blockade complied with international law requirements of notification and impartial application. However, these arguments contradicted Israel's own internal documents, which showed the blockade was explicitly designed to create economic pressure and isolate Hamas politically.
The legal justification proved problematic because Israel could not demonstrate that a naval blockade was necessary when standard maritime interdiction rights would have been sufficient to prevent weapons smuggling. Additionally, Israel's own strategic documents revealed the blockade was part of a comprehensive strategy of collective punishment, making it illegal under international law regardless of its military utility. The attempt to separate naval and land aspects of the blockade was artificial, as both served the same illegal purpose.
Question 14: How did international law view Palestinian resistance rights?
International law recognizes the right of people struggling for self-determination to use force in pursuit of that right, while prohibiting occupying powers from using force to suppress such struggles. The International Court of Justice explicitly confirmed Palestinians' right to self-determination in its 2004 advisory opinion. This created an important legal asymmetry - while Palestinian armed resistance could be legitimate under international law, Israel's use of force to maintain an illegal occupation was not.
The legal framework also addressed the issue of proportionality differently for occupier and occupied. While Israel's massive civilian casualties were judged against strict proportionality requirements, Palestinian armed groups' actions were viewed in the context of limited military capabilities and the existential nature of their struggle. International law didn't prohibit belligerent reprisals, even when targeting civilians, if such actions were the only means available to an occupied people to resist their oppression.
Question 15: What were the key legal debates surrounding civilian casualties?
A central legal debate concerned whether Israel deliberately targeted civilians or whether civilian deaths resulted from legitimate military operations. Israel claimed it took unprecedented precautions to avoid civilian casualties, but evidence showed patterns of attacking civilian infrastructure and using disproportionate force in civilian areas. The legal principle that "the doer of an act must be taken to have intended its natural and foreseeable consequences" meant Israel's claims of unintended civilian deaths were legally questionable when such deaths were predictable outcomes of its tactics.
The question of human shields also featured prominently in legal discussions. While Israel consistently accused Hamas of using civilians as human shields to justify civilian casualties, international investigations found no evidence to support these claims. Conversely, there was documented evidence of Israeli forces using Palestinian civilians as human shields. The legal debate highlighted how Israel attempted to shift responsibility for civilian deaths to Hamas while avoiding accountability for its own targeting decisions.
Question 16: Why did Richard Goldstone later modify his position?
In April 2011, Goldstone wrote an op-ed in the Washington Post that appeared to distance himself from some conclusions of his Report, particularly regarding Israel's intentional targeting of civilians. However, his reversal was not based on new evidence - the vast majority of new information that emerged after the Report actually confirmed its original findings. His co-authors on the UN mission publicly rejected his reversal, standing by the Report's conclusions.
The reasons for Goldstone's shift remain disputed. He faced intense personal pressure and attacks from pro-Israel groups, including comparisons to Nazi war criminals. His recantation focused narrowly on the question of intentional targeting of civilians while not addressing the Report's broader findings about disproportionate force and collective punishment. The timing and content of his reversal suggested it may have resulted from political pressure rather than new evidence.
Question 17: How did the UN investigate alleged war crimes?
The UN employed multiple mechanisms to investigate alleged war crimes, starting with the Fact-Finding Mission led by Goldstone. This mission conducted detailed investigations, interviewing witnesses, examining physical evidence, and analyzing military records. The UN Human Rights Council appointed additional follow-up committees to monitor implementation of the Goldstone Report's recommendations and assess Israel's internal investigations.
However, these investigations faced significant obstacles. Israel refused to cooperate with the Goldstone Mission, denying investigators access to Israeli territory and military personnel. When the UN appointed other investigators, Israel and its supporters often launched campaigns to discredit them personally and professionally. The investigations also struggled with enforcement, as the US typically blocked Security Council action on their findings, while Israel rejected their authority.
Question 18: What role did the International Criminal Court play?
The International Criminal Court's potential involvement loomed over the conflicts but never materialized into actual prosecutions. After each major operation, there were calls for ICC intervention, particularly given the evidence of war crimes documented by UN investigations. However, political obstacles, including US opposition and questions about ICC jurisdiction over Palestine, prevented cases from moving forward.
The threat of ICC prosecution did influence Israeli behavior, particularly during Operation Protective Edge, where fear of "a mega-Goldstone" led to somewhat more restrained targeting practices. However, the ICC's historical focus on prosecuting only African leaders, combined with Western political protection of Israel, made actual prosecution of Israeli leaders unlikely. The Palestinian Authority used the threat of ICC action primarily as a bargaining chip in negotiations rather than seriously pursuing cases.
Question 19: What legal justification did Israel provide for the maritime blockade?
Israel argued that its naval blockade was legally distinct from the land blockade and served purely military purposes of preventing weapons from reaching Gaza. The Palmer Report, commissioned by the UN Secretary-General, accepted this argument despite contradicting evidence. Israel claimed the naval blockade was necessary because standard maritime interdiction rights proved insufficient, though it provided little evidence of actual weapons smuggling attempts by sea.
These legal arguments were undermined by Israel's own internal documents showing the blockade was part of a unified strategy to pressure Gaza's civilian population. The attempt to separate naval and land aspects of the blockade appeared artificial, designed to create legal cover for what was effectively a single policy of collective punishment. Israel's justification also failed to explain why less restrictive measures, such as cargo inspections, couldn't achieve legitimate security objectives.
Question 20: What constituted collective punishment under international law?
International law prohibits collective punishment, defined as penalties imposed on populations for acts they did not personally commit. The blockade of Gaza, which deliberately restricted civilian goods to create economic pressure, clearly met this definition. Israeli officials openly acknowledged the blockade was designed to pressure Gaza's population to turn against Hamas, making it an explicit example of collective punishment.
The scope of destruction during military operations also constituted collective punishment. The systematic targeting of civilian infrastructure, including factories, schools, and utilities, went far beyond military necessity and aimed to inflict suffering on the entire population. This pattern of destruction, combined with statements by Israeli officials about teaching Gaza's population a lesson, demonstrated that collective punishment was a deliberate strategy rather than an unintended consequence.
Question 21: How did regional alliances shift during this period?
The Arab Spring and subsequent regional developments dramatically altered traditional alignments in the Middle East. Egypt, historically one of Hamas's key supporters, became its sworn enemy after the 2013 military coup that brought Abdel Fattah el-Sisi to power. This shift proved particularly significant during Operation Protective Edge, when Egypt supported Israel's military objectives and proposed a cease-fire agreement designed to pressure Hamas into accepting unfavorable terms.
Turkey's relationship with Israel also underwent significant changes. Under Prime Minister Erdoğan, Turkey became increasingly critical of Israeli actions, particularly after the Mavi Marmara incident in 2010. However, Turkey's influence was limited by its broader regional concerns, particularly in Syria, and its desire to maintain good relations with Washington. Meanwhile, Iran's support for Hamas diminished after Hamas sided against Iran's ally Bashar al-Assad in Syria, leaving Gaza increasingly isolated during the 2014 conflict.
Question 22: What role did Egypt play in cease-fire negotiations?
Egypt's role in cease-fire negotiations evolved significantly from a relatively neutral mediator to an actor actively aligned with Israeli interests. During Operation Pillar of Defense in 2012, Egypt under Mohamed Morsi's Muslim Brotherhood government played a crucial role in achieving terms that addressed some of Hamas's concerns. This changed dramatically after Sisi's coup, with Egypt working closely with Israel to pressure Hamas into accepting unfavorable conditions.
In 2014, Egypt's proposed cease-fire terms effectively demanded Hamas's surrender, requiring an immediate end to rocket fire while deferring any discussion of lifting the blockade until after "security conditions stabilized" - a condition absent from previous agreements. Egypt's shift from mediator to partisan actor reflected both its domestic crackdown on the Muslim Brotherhood and its strategic alignment with Israel against regional Islamist movements.
Question 23: How did the US position evolve across these conflicts?
The United States maintained consistent diplomatic cover for Israel while occasionally expressing mild criticism of specific tactical decisions. During Operation Cast Lead, the Bush administration provided unconditional support. Under Obama, there was slightly more public friction with Israel, particularly regarding settlement construction, but the administration still backed Israel's military actions and blocked international efforts to hold Israel accountable.
By Operation Protective Edge in 2014, the pattern remained largely unchanged - the US repeatedly affirmed Israel's "right to defend itself" even as evidence of war crimes mounted. However, the administration did show some frustration with Netanyahu's actions, particularly when civilian casualties became politically problematic. Still, this never translated into meaningful pressure on Israel to change its behavior, as demonstrated by continuing US military aid and diplomatic protection at the UN.
Question 24: What impact did the Palestinian unity government have?
The formation of a Palestinian unity government in 2014 represented a significant challenge to Israel's political strategy. Hamas made unprecedented concessions, allowing President Abbas to affirm the unity government's recognition of Israel and commitment to nonviolence. This threatened Israel's ability to isolate Hamas and maintain divisions between Palestinian factions. The US and EU's willingness to work with the unity government particularly alarmed Israeli leadership.
Netanyahu responded by exploiting the kidnapping of three Israeli teenagers to launch Operation Brother's Keeper in the West Bank, deliberately provoking Hamas into armed conflict. This pattern of undermining Palestinian unity efforts echoed Israel's earlier strategies, such as the 1982 Lebanon war aimed at preventing PLO moderation. The unity government's formation thus became one of several factors contributing to the outbreak of Operation Protective Edge.
Question 25: How did Turkey's relationship with Israel change?
Turkey's relationship with Israel deteriorated significantly during this period, marked most dramatically by the 2010 Mavi Marmara incident where Israeli forces killed nine Turkish citizens. Prime Minister Erdoğan became increasingly vocal in his criticism of Israeli actions, even labeling Israel a "terrorist state" during Operation Protective Edge. This represented a major shift from Turkey's previously close military and diplomatic ties with Israel.
However, Turkey's influence remained constrained by practical considerations. Its desire to maintain good relations with Washington and its focus on other regional issues, particularly Syria, limited its ability to pressure Israel effectively. While Turkey provided diplomatic support to Hamas and demanded an end to the Gaza blockade, it ultimately proved unable to significantly affect Israeli policy or prevent military operations against Gaza.
Question 26: What were the outcomes of various cease-fire agreements?
Cease-fire agreements consistently failed to address the fundamental issues driving the conflicts. The 2008 agreement broke down when Israel violated it in November, leading to Operation Cast Lead. The 2012 agreement after Pillar of Defense promised an easing of the blockade that never materialized. Each agreement essentially restored the status quo while leaving Gaza's underlying humanitarian crisis unaddressed.
The 2014 agreement following Protective Edge followed this pattern, with promises to ease the blockade that remained largely unfulfilled. While Hamas could claim political victory by surviving Israeli attacks, and Israel could claim to have restored deterrence, neither side achieved their broader objectives. The agreements demonstrated the limits of military solutions while highlighting the need for addressing Gaza's fundamental political and humanitarian situation.
Question 27: How did Israeli domestic politics influence military decisions?
While some observers suggested Israeli military operations were driven by electoral considerations, the evidence suggests broader strategic calculations typically drove major military decisions. However, domestic political dynamics did influence how operations were conducted and presented to the public. Israeli society's increasing militarization and rightward shift created pressure for aggressive responses to any Palestinian resistance.
The Israeli public's demands for security and vengeance, particularly after rocket attacks or kidnappings, created political pressure for military action. However, mounting Israeli military casualties during ground operations could also create domestic pressure to end conflicts, as seen during Protective Edge. This domestic dynamic often led Israeli leaders to prefer aerial bombardment over riskier ground operations that might result in Israeli military casualties.
Question 28: How did international public opinion play?
International public opinion became increasingly critical of Israeli actions over this period, particularly regarding civilian casualties. This shift was aided by social media and the presence of international journalists in Gaza, which made it harder for Israel to control the narrative. By Operation Protective Edge, Israel faced unprecedented global criticism, though this rarely translated into meaningful political pressure from Western governments.
The gap between public opinion and government policy was particularly notable in Western countries. While populations increasingly sympathized with Palestinians, official policy remained strongly pro-Israel, particularly in the United States. However, growing public criticism did influence Israeli tactical decisions, leading to somewhat more restricted targeting practices in later operations, though the overall strategy of massive force remained unchanged.
Question 29: How did Arab states respond to these conflicts?
Arab state responses reflected the broader regional realignment following the Arab Spring. Traditional support for the Palestinian cause was increasingly subordinated to other strategic interests, particularly opposition to Islamist movements. During Operation Protective Edge, Saudi Arabia and other Gulf states were more concerned about limiting Hamas's influence than protecting Palestinian civilians.
The Arab League's response to the 2014 conflict was particularly telling - its only meeting on Gaza supported Egypt's cease-fire proposal, which effectively demanded Hamas's surrender. This reflected both the Saudi-led bloc's alignment with Israel against Iran and political opposition to Islamist movements like Hamas. The muted Arab response helped enable Israel's military operations by reducing diplomatic pressure.
Question 30: What diplomatic initiatives were attempted?
Various diplomatic initiatives were attempted but consistently failed to address the fundamental issues driving the conflicts. The pattern typically involved cease-fire proposals that demanded immediate Palestinian concessions while deferring discussion of lifting the blockade or other Palestinian concerns. These initiatives often seemed designed to provide diplomatic cover for military operations rather than achieve lasting solutions.
The most significant diplomatic development was the 2014 Palestinian unity government, which offered potential for a new political approach. However, Israel's military response effectively ended this initiative before it could develop. Other diplomatic efforts, including various UN interventions and US-led peace initiatives, proved ineffective at preventing recurring cycles of violence or addressing Gaza's underlying humanitarian crisis.
Question 31: What was the extent of infrastructure damage in Gaza?
The scale of infrastructure destruction in Gaza was systematic and comprehensive across all three major operations. During Cast Lead, Israel damaged or destroyed 280 schools and kindergartens, 1,500 factories and workshops, electrical and water systems, 190 greenhouse complexes, and 80 percent of agricultural crops. The destruction was so extensive that 600,000 tons of rubble remained after Israeli forces withdrew. This targeting of civilian infrastructure appeared deliberate and consistent with Israel's strategy of collective punishment.
By Operation Protective Edge, the pattern of destruction intensified. The operation damaged or destroyed 11,000 homes, 360 factories and workshops, 160 mosques, 100 schools, and 10 hospitals. Essential services like water treatment, electricity, and medical facilities were severely impacted. This systematic destruction of civilian infrastructure had long-lasting effects on Gaza's economy and society, making reconstruction extremely difficult under the ongoing blockade. The World Food Program director noted that Israel precisely targeted the economic infrastructure Gaza needed to reduce aid dependency.
Question 32: How did the blockade affect civilian life?
The blockade created a humanitarian crisis that affected every aspect of civilian life in Gaza. Israel restricted basic necessities including food, medicine, fuel, construction materials, and even items like paper and glue. By 2008, the blockade had brought Gaza's infrastructure "to the brink of collapse" according to human rights organizations. Perhaps most critically, 95 percent of Gaza's water became unfit for human consumption due to infrastructure damage and inability to repair water treatment systems.
The economic impact was devastating, with unemployment reaching 70-80 percent and most of the population becoming aid-dependent. The blockade prevented reconstruction after military operations, leaving thousands homeless and unable to rebuild. Israel carefully calculated the minimum calories needed to prevent outright starvation, while deliberately keeping Gaza's economy "on the brink of collapse." This created what human rights officials described as the destruction of "a whole civilization" and "the breakdown of an entire society."
Question 33: What role did UN facilities play during conflicts?
UN facilities, particularly schools, became crucial civilian shelters during Israeli military operations. However, these facilities were repeatedly targeted despite their protected status under international law. During Operation Protective Edge, Israel struck multiple UN schools being used as civilian shelters, killing scores of displaced Palestinians who had sought refuge there. These attacks continued even after UN officials repeatedly informed Israeli forces of the facilities' coordinates and civilian status.
The targeting of UN facilities eventually provoked international outrage, with even UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, typically reluctant to criticize Israel, denouncing one attack as a "moral outrage and criminal act." The attacks on UN schools demonstrated Israel's willingness to strike civilian targets regardless of protected status, while also highlighting the impossible situation facing Gaza's civilians who had nowhere safe to shelter from bombardment. Human Rights Watch later determined these attacks constituted war crimes.
Question 34: How did Israel manage humanitarian aid access?
Israel's control of humanitarian aid access became a key mechanism for maintaining pressure on Gaza's civilian population. While claiming to allow humanitarian minimums to enter, Israel created a complex bureaucratic system that severely restricted aid flow. The criteria for allowed items appeared arbitrary - items like coriander and chocolate were banned while rice and sugar were permitted. This system created artificial scarcity while allowing Israel to claim it was meeting humanitarian obligations.
During military operations, Israel would sometimes announce brief humanitarian "pauses" in bombing, but these proved inadequate for delivering aid or evacuating casualties. The targeting of infrastructure made aid distribution increasingly difficult, while damage to UN facilities and aid warehouses further compromised humanitarian operations. The system demonstrated how Israel used control of humanitarian access as another form of collective punishment, while trying to maintain plausible deniability about causing a humanitarian crisis.
Question 35: What was the economic impact on Gaza?
The combination of blockade and repeated military operations created catastrophic economic conditions in Gaza. The destruction of productive infrastructure - factories, workshops, agricultural lands - combined with severe import and export restrictions to effectively de-develop Gaza's economy. The World Bank and UN repeatedly warned that Gaza was becoming economically unviable, with youth unemployment reaching unprecedented levels and poverty becoming nearly universal.
The targeting of economic infrastructure appeared deliberate, with Israel destroying facilities needed for economic recovery. This included Gaza's only operative flour mill, cement factories, and other basic industrial capacity. The restrictions on construction materials prevented rebuilding, while limits on exports made economic recovery impossible even in undamaged sectors. The economic devastation served Israel's political goal of pressuring Gaza's population while ensuring long-term dependency on humanitarian aid.
Question 36: How did Hamas's strategy evolve over time?
Hamas's strategy showed significant evolution, particularly in military tactics and political positioning. Militarily, Hamas adapted Hezbollah's strategy from Lebanon, developing an extensive tunnel network to counter Israel's air superiority. This proved effective during Operation Protective Edge, allowing Hamas fighters to inflict unprecedented Israeli military casualties while largely protected from aerial bombardment. However, Hamas's ability to obtain sophisticated weapons declined due to the blockade and regional shifts.
Politically, Hamas showed increasing pragmatism, accepting the possibility of a two-state solution and joining a unity government that implicitly recognized Israel. Before Operation Cast Lead, Hamas largely honored a cease-fire agreement despite Israel's failure to ease the blockade as promised. These shifts suggested Hamas was moving toward a more moderate position, though Israel's military responses repeatedly undermined this evolution. The tension between military resistance and political accommodation remained a constant challenge for Hamas's leadership.
Question 37: What were the debates between armed and nonviolent resistance?
The question of armed versus nonviolent resistance emerged as a crucial strategic debate. While Palestinians had the legal right to armed resistance against occupation, the practical effectiveness of armed struggle remained questionable. Despite the symbolic victory of surviving Israeli attacks, armed resistance had not produced concrete improvements in Gaza's conditions. This led some to argue that the human cost of armed resistance outweighed its limited strategic gains.
The potential of nonviolent mass resistance offered an alternative strategy. Historical examples like the U.S. Civil Rights Movement suggested nonviolent resistance could be more effective at mobilizing international support and pressing for concrete changes. However, this approach faced significant challenges, including Israel's willingness to use lethal force against nonviolent protesters and the international community's failure to respond effectively to Palestinian civilian casualties. The debate reflected broader questions about how an occupied population could effectively resist a militarily superior occupying power.
Question 38: How effective were different forms of Palestinian resistance?
Armed resistance proved capable of surviving Israeli attacks and inflicting some military casualties, but failed to achieve substantial political gains or improve conditions in Gaza. Hamas's increasingly sophisticated military tactics, particularly tunnel warfare, demonstrated adaptation to Israel's military superiority. However, these tactical successes didn't translate into strategic victories that could end the blockade or occupation.
Nonviolent initiatives, like the Gaza Freedom Flotilla, showed potential for mobilizing international opinion and forcing policy changes. The 2010 flotilla, despite ending in tragedy, successfully pushed Israel to slightly ease the blockade and generated unprecedented international criticism of Israeli policies. However, both armed and nonviolent resistance struggled to overcome the fundamental power imbalance between occupier and occupied, particularly given consistent US diplomatic support for Israel.
Question 39: What role did media coverage play in these conflicts?
Media coverage evolved significantly across the three operations. During Cast Lead, Israel successfully controlled the narrative by preventing journalists from entering Gaza and coordinating its public relations through a centralized body. By Operation Protective Edge, social media and the presence of international journalists in Gaza made it much harder for Israel to manage public perception. Real-time reporting of civilian casualties and infrastructure destruction generated increasing international criticism.
Israel responded with sophisticated public relations efforts, particularly promoting the success of Iron Dome and the threat of "terror tunnels" to justify its operations. However, the gap between Israeli claims and documented reality became increasingly apparent to international audiences. The presence of foreign journalists in Gaza during military operations fundamentally changed the information environment, though this shift in public opinion rarely translated into meaningful political pressure on Israel.
Question 40: How did civilian casualties influence international support?
The high number of Palestinian civilian casualties, particularly children, gradually eroded international support for Israeli military operations. While Israel consistently claimed to take unprecedented precautions to avoid civilian casualties, the evidence of deliberate targeting of civilian infrastructure and disproportionate force became increasingly difficult to ignore. The killing of four boys playing on a Gaza beach during Operation Protective Edge became particularly symbolic of Israeli disregard for civilian life.
However, the impact of civilian casualties on policy remained limited. While public opinion, particularly in Europe, shifted increasingly against Israeli actions, Western governments continued providing diplomatic and military support to Israel. The disparity between mounting civilian casualties and limited international response highlighted the gap between public opinion and government policy, particularly in the United States where Israel maintained strong political support despite growing public criticism of its military operations.
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Another take on the present events: The ridiculous paragliders, the easy penetration of Israel's defenses, the easy taking of ideal hostages (festival frolickers)...all of this reeked of collaboration between Israeli operatives and Hamas operatives. (Both sides of the Israeli political press have more-than-hinted in the past at Bibi-Hamas connections.)
I think we may be looking at a demolition and evacuation rather than a war. A murderous affair, but not a war. I'm aware of how implausible that sounds but the degree of collaboration between US/Israel military intelligence and the constantly shifting and rebadged "terror" organisations is hardly secret.
Of course, it doesn't make much sense to me, an outsider. I'm guessing that a war reacting to terror rather than a forced evacuation of Gaza is easier to sell to the wider world, even to the wider Sunni world. It's a very hard sell, but the other is harder still.
And maybe it's not going to work. The blatant alignment with the Kurds in the Syrian expansion added to the perception of an open war on helpless Sunnis may be more than the Turks will tolerate. And if Turkey swings against Israel and its NATO partners...
Look, I'm not sure of any of this, and I'm a long-term admirer of Norman Finkelstein. I just can't buy the paragliders and the festival frolicker hostages. Seen too much fakery, smelt too much fakery in recent years. This looks and smells like fakery.
WORST-CASE SCENARIO FOR ISRAEL UNDER THE FINKELSTEIN PLAN
1. 🏠 Demographic Overhaul via Right of Return
• Millions of Palestinian refugees (or descendants) claim their right to return, mostly to areas now inside Israel proper (Haifa, Jaffa, Galilee).
• The Jewish majority vanishes—or becomes tenuous.
• Israel as a Jewish state ceases to exist. It becomes a binational state, potentially named “Israel-Palestine” or “Greater Palestine.”
🚨 Impact: Jewish Israelis may perceive this as national suicide. Internal civil unrest, brain drain, and emigration of secular Jews accelerate. Right-wing factions go underground or launch insurgencies.
________________________________________
2. 🗺️ Collapse of the Zionist Project
• If Finkelstein’s conditions are met—including full withdrawal to 1967 borders, East Jerusalem handed over, dismantling of settlements—then Zionism in its original form (a safe Jewish homeland) is effectively dismantled.
💥 Symbolic Fallout: Seen by many Israelis as a betrayal of the legacy of the Holocaust and a failure to provide a haven for global Jewry.
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3. 🚪 Power Vacuum & Armed Factionalism
• Israel's withdrawal from the West Bank and blockade-lift in Gaza opens the floodgates:
o Armed groups (not just Hamas, but Islamic Jihad, PFLP, and Iranian-backed cells) gain influence.
o A power struggle emerges between Fatah, Hamas, and more extreme Islamist elements.
o Gaza's Iranian-aligned factions may bring missiles closer to Tel Aviv.
🎯 Result: Security deteriorates within months. Tel Aviv and other cities could face a new wave of attacks—only now with Israel holding no legal or military ground in those territories.
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4. ⚖️ Prosecution of Israeli Leaders and Soldiers
• International courts finally get their chance:
o Israeli generals, politicians, and even soldiers face arrest warrants for war crimes.
o Travel becomes legally risky for former IDF brass and cabinet members.
o Israeli institutions lose credibility globally.
⚖️ Bonus nightmare: An Israeli prime minister is detained abroad. Domestic chaos ensues.
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5. 💢 Settler Rebellion & Civil War
• 700,000 settlers live beyond the 1967 borders.
• Forced evacuations provoke:
o Armed settler militias.
o Riots in Jerusalem and the West Bank.
o Possibly a military split—some IDF units refuse to evict settlers.
🧨 Think Gaza withdrawal × 1,000.
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6. 🔄 Arab World Turns the Tables
• The Arab League (and Iran) push for:
o Further dismantling of Israeli nuclear capabilities.
o Reparations for decades of Palestinian suffering.
o International mandates on internal Israeli laws deemed "discriminatory" (e.g., Law of Return).
🌍 Result: Israel goes from a regional superpower to a regulated pariah, depending on foreign peacekeeping forces to survive.
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7. 🧠 National Identity Crisis
• Jewish Israelis grapple with the question: What are we now?
o A "state of all its citizens"?
o A minority with trauma-laden history?
o A secular democracy with no unique Jewish character?
😵 Outcome: Polarization deepens. Theocratic hardliners vs. cosmopolitan secularists. Chaos on Twitter. Op-eds galore.
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🧾 Summary: Israel’s Nightmare Checklist
Category Consequence
Demographics Loss of Jewish majority, binational state, possible Jewish emigration
Security Renewed attacks, rise of radical groups, destabilization
Law & Diplomacy ICC indictments, loss of travel access for officials, UN scrutiny
Internal Stability Civil war with settlers, military insubordination, collapse of Zionist consensus
National Identity Existential confusion over being a "Jewish state"
Regional Power Status Loss of deterrence, emboldened adversaries, possible demands for disarmament
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🧠 Bottom Line:
If Finkelstein's plan becomes reality without ironclad security guarantees and political consensus, Israel could unravel from within—facing existential, not just territorial, threats.
That said… is this inevitable? Not necessarily. A modified, realistic peace plan that addresses both Palestinian rights and Israeli security could thread the needle. But Finkelstein’s vision? It’s radical justice, not pragmatic diplomacy.
Under a true worst-case scenario, extrapolating far beyond Finkelstein’s intended vision—but acknowledging deep-seated fears among many Israelis and Jews globally—you arrive at the nightmare of nightmares: the potential for genocidal violence should hostile, radical elements like Hamas or more extreme factions take full control of a post-Israeli state.
8.🔥 The Ultimate Nightmare Scenario:
If Hamas, Palestinian Islamic Jihad, or other jihadist groups gained complete military and political control over Israel/Palestine, without checks from the international community or internal Palestinian moderates, and acted according to their most extreme rhetoric and charter positions, then:
________________________________________
☠️ Possibility: Mass Atrocities or Genocidal Acts
• Execution of Israeli civilians, especially settlers and former military personnel.
• Targeted massacres of Jews remaining in the territory, framed as revenge for decades of occupation.
• Systematic purging of Jewish neighborhoods in Jerusalem, Tel Aviv, and Haifa.
• Looting, rape, and humiliation of civilians as part of a "purification" campaign.
• International media blackout or indifference, allowing atrocities to proceed unchecked.
⚠️ This would not be traditional war, but rather an ideological and religiously framed vendetta, in which Jews could be treated as interlopers or "occupying crusaders" to be wiped out.
________________________________________
🛑 Historical Parallels (the dark echoes):
• Einsatzgruppen-style mass executions: Mobile death squads operating in towns and villages, systematically executing groups of Jews.
• Extermination camps? Less likely given the resource intensity—but mass executions and field slaughter could be functionally similar.
• Ethnic cleansing of Bosnia/Kosovo scale: Forced expulsions, concentration zones, starvation sieges, and selective killing.
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🔥 Would Hamas actually do this?
While some Hamas leaders have moderated language in political contexts, the original 1988 Hamas Charter openly calls for:
• The destruction of Israel.
• A religious war until the land is “redeemed” through jihad.
• Rejection of any permanent peace.
The updated 2017 Hamas document is more politically nuanced, but does not recognize Israel, and still affirms “armed resistance” as the path to liberation. Some leaders have made antisemitic statements in both political and religious contexts.
So while this scenario is not inevitable—and would depend on a total breakdown of order, international law, and restraint—it can’t be dismissed as pure fantasy. The hatred exists. And in a vacuum of power, atrocity becomes possible.
________________________________________
🧠 Final Thought:
Finkelstein may be advocating for human rights, not revenge—but in the real world, radical power vacuums get filled by the most organized and ideologically extreme actors. Without enforceable safeguards, the collapse of Israel could end not in peace—but in pogroms.