Taking stock of October 7: The view from the Arab world

In Opinion Articles by CIHRS

Bahey Eldin Hassan
Director of the Cairo Institute for Human Rights Studies.

Over the past twelve months, the Palestinian people have sustained horrifying human, humanitarian, and political casualties, the worst since the Arab defeat of 5 June 1967 and the subsequent occupation of the West Bank and Gaza Strip. At least 40,000 people have been killed, among them more women and children than have been killed in a single year in any armed conflict of the past two decades, according to a recent Oxfam report.

Last month, the United Nations reported that 60 percent of buildings in the Gaza Strip had been destroyed, including about a quarter of a million homes, in addition to 68 percent of the roads and half of the hospitals.

The remaining hospitals are operating only at partial capacity. It is estimated that the reconstruction of the Gaza Strip will take fifteen years and cost tens of billions of dollars.

Hamas’ recent announcement that it would renew suicide attacks likely indicates its recognition that its military capabilities will not be restored any time soon. The future of governance in Gaza looks bleak and may involve the return of Israeli rule, whether direct or camouflaged.

What is certain is that Hamas will not rule Gaza, at least not in the foreseeable future. That is a point of international, Arab, Palestinian, and Israeli consensus.

In addition, Yahya Sinwar, the political leader of Hamas, is wanted by the International Criminal Court’s prosecutor on charges of committing war crimes and crimes against humanity during Operation Al-Aqsa Flood, along with Benjamin Netanyahu, the prime minister of Israel, who has led the genocidal war in Gaza.

The far right in Israel has grown increasingly popular over the past year, and the re-colonisation of the West Bank has received political and on-the-ground support not seen for years. Calls for the forced displacement and deportation of Palestinians to Jordan are growing louder.

Of course, armed resistance to occupation is a legitimate right under international law. Yet, the exercise of this right at a specific time requires a rational justification beyond simply the right itself—for example, a military operation or a battle.

If war is an extension of politics by other means, then Hamas owes it to the Palestinian people to lay out the political goals of Operation Al-Aqsa Flood it had envisioned, regardless of the alleged crimes against humanity perpetrated against Israeli civilians during the operation.

What kind of political response did Hamas expect from Israel, the Arab world, and the international community?

Spectres of the International Community

The tragedy in Gaza has revealed the extent of global sympathy with the Palestinian people and their just cause, especially in Western countries, some of whose governments have supported the Israeli war of extermination to varying degrees.

Several countries in AfricaLatin America, and Western Europe have staked out a firm position of solidarity, reflected in resolutions adopted by the UN General Assembly and Security Council and the International Court of Justice.

But the response from Arab peoples and Muslim and Arab governments, including the Palestinian Authority, has fallen short of expectations. Stances taken by China and Russia have been purely symbolic—a matter of simply stating a position—but at no point have they seriously sought to take a leading international role on the issue.

One need only compare the behaviour of these two superpowers with that of a developing country like South Africa, which does not have the right of veto or even a seat on the Security Council. Meanwhile, the US administration has offered military backing for the ongoing genocide in Gaza and given the war political cover in international forums.

It has played the same criminal role in the failed negotiations to reach a ceasefire in Gaza in parallel with Israel’s efforts to eliminate Hamas once and for all. The flagrant bias of the current US administration in favour of Israeli aggression should not come as a surprise to observers.

For decades, the current US president has publicly expressed pride in being a Zionist. The inability of the international community to force an end to the war of annihilation is not a complete surprise.

It also failed to stop the genocidal war in Syria some ten years ago, although Israel was not a party to the war. That genocidal war was and still is supported by Russia, Iran, and Hezbollah, the last being, along with the regime of Bashar al-Assad, the most important leaders of the “axis of resistance” against Israel.

One morning about a decade ago as well, Russia annexed an entire region of Ukraine. Despite the vocal condemnations this occasioned, the international community surrendered to its armed extortion, whetting Russia’s appetite for imperial expansion and encouraging it to devour what remained of Ukraine eight years later.

Paralysed by the Russian veto, the UN Security Council was unable to stop it. Eighteen years ago, the UN Security Council adopted Resolution 1701 on Lebanon.

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