Much alarm has been raised over the so-called "Generals' Plan," an ethnic cleansing proposal for northern Gaza that has reportedly garnered attention in the highest reaches of the Israeli government.
But Israeli scholar Idan Landau argued in a column published in English by +972 Magazine
on Friday that what the Israeli military is actually doing in northern
Gaza "is even more appalling" than the plan outlined by a group of
retired generals. Landau argued that focus on the details of the
Generals' Plan has served to obscure the "true brutality" of Israel's
deadly operations in northern Gaza, which has been rendered a hellscape of death and destruction by the military assault and siege.
Landau, a professor of linguistics at Tel Aviv University, opened his column—first published in Hebrew
on his blog—by pointing to two photos: one showing a celebratory event
at a camp built by an Israeli settler organization just outside of the
Gaza Strip, and the other showing displaced Palestinians lined up at
gunpoint amid the ruins of northern Gaza.
"These photos tell a story that is unfolding so rapidly that its
harrowing details are already on the brink of being forgotten," wrote
Landau. "Yet this story could start from any point during the past 76
years: the Nakba of 1948, the 'Siyag Plan' that followed it, the Naksa
of 1967. On one side, displaced Palestinians with all the belongings
they can carry, hungry, wounded, and exhausted; on the other, joyful
Jewish settlers, sanctifying the new land that the army has cleared for
them."
The Israeli military's dehumanization of the people of Gaza,
Landau wrote, "cannot help but trigger our associations with scenes
depicting the Nazis loading Jews into cattle cars."
On
the left, Israeli settlers gather at an event celebrating Sukkot near
the Gaza Strip. On the right, displaced Palestinians line up at gunpoint
in the ruins of Jabalia refugee camp. (Photos via +972 Magazine)
Landau wrote that what the Israeli army has been implementing in
northern Gaza in recent weeks is "not quite" the Generals' Plan, which
entails giving Palestinians still in the region a week to leave before
declaring the area a closed military zone—and designating everyone who
remains a militant who can be denied humanitarian assistance and killed.
The actual strategy Israeli soldiers have been deploying in northern
Gaza is "an even more sinister and brutal version" of the Generals' Plan
"within a more concentrated area."
"The first, most immediate distinction is the abandoning of provisions
for reducing harm to civilians, i.e. giving residents of northern Gaza a
week to evacuate southward," Landau wrote. "The second departure
concerns the real purpose of emptying the area: while portraying the
military operation as a security necessity, it was, in fact, an
embodiment of the spirit of ethnic cleansing and resettlement from day
one."
"As opposed to the picture painted by the army, implying that residents
in the northern areas were free to move south and get out of the danger
zone, local testimonies presented a frightening reality: Anyone who so
much as stepped out of their home risked being shot by Israeli snipers or drones, including young children and those holding white flags," Landau noted. "Rescue crews trying to help the wounded also came under attack, as well as journalists trying to document the events."
The scholar cites one "particularly harrowing video" in which
a Palestinian child is seen "on the ground pleading for help after
being wounded by an airstrike; when a crowd gathers to help him, they
are suddenly hit by another airstrike, killing one and wounding more
than 20 others."
"This is the reality amid which the people of northern Gaza were
supposed to walk, starved and exhausted, into the 'humanitarian zone,"
Landau wrote. "Since the Israeli army began its operation in northern
Gaza, it has killed over 1,000 Palestinians. The Israeli Air Force usually bombs at night while the victims are sleeping, slaughtering entire families in their homes and making it more difficult to evacuate the wounded. And on October 24, rescue services announced that the intensity of the bombardment left them with no choice but to cease all operations in the besieged areas."
The deadly military assault, Landau stressed, has been accompanied by a
"starvation policy" that has severely hindered the flow of humanitarian
assistance to northern Gaza.
The heads of prominent United Nations agencies and human rights organizations warned
Friday that conditions on the ground in the region are "apocalyptic"
and that "the entire Palestinian population in North Gaza is at imminent
risk of dying from disease, famine, and violence."
Landau noted that on October 16, following pressure from the Biden
administration, the Israeli government reportedly allowed 100 aid trucks
to enter northern Gaza.
"But journalists in the north were quick to correct the record: Nothing at all had entered the besieged areas," Landau wrote. "On October 20, Israel denied
a further request by U.N. agencies to bring in food, fuel, blood, [and]
medicines. Three days later, in response to a request for an interim
order by the Israeli human rights group Gisha, the state admitted
to the High Court that no humanitarian aid had been allowed into
northern Gaza up to that point. By this time, we are already talking
about a three-week-long food siege."
Addressing the question of "what is left for us to do" in the face of
such a catastrophe, Landau wrote that "the consensus concerning the war
of extermination poisons Israeli society and blackens its future so
profoundly that even small pockets of resistance can proliferate stamina
and hope to those who have not yet been carried away by the currents of
madness."
"We can also look for partners in this fight abroad, where the critical
lever of pressure is the pipeline of American weapons," he added. "The
struggle to end this intensifying war of extermination and transfer in
Gaza, particularly in the north, is first and foremost a human fight. It
is a fight for life, both in Gaza and Israel: for the very chance that
life can continue to exist in this blood-soaked land. Nothing could be
more patriotic."
+972 Magazine published Landau's column a day after Francesca Albanese, the U.N. special rapporteur on the occupied Palestinian territories, warned in a statement
that "time is running out" to stop the far-right Israeli government's
attempt to "erase the Palestinians from their own land and allow Israel
to fully annex Palestinian territory."
"Genocide and a man-made humanitarian catastrophe are unfolding in
front of us and in Gaza," said Albanese. "I regret to see so many member
states are avoiding acknowledging the suffering of the Palestinian
people and instead look away."