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June 22, 2015       Share:    

Source: http://jcpa.org/the-gaza-war-2014/

The Gaza War 2014: The War Israel Did Not Want and the Disaster It Averted

(Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs) Hirsh Goodman and Dore Gold, eds. - Though the images of the moment may have reflected massive damage in Gaza during the 2014 war, the Chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Martin Dempsey, announced on Nov. 6, 2014, that Israel had gone to "extraordinary lengths to limit collateral damage and prevent civilian casualties in the Gaza conflict." An analysis of UN satellite photos taken during the war shows that 72% of all damaged areas in Gaza were "within two miles of the Israeli border." While this was a war Israel did not want, it was a war that inadvertently preempted a terrorist massacre inside Israel's heartland, principally through a network of sophisticated tunnels built deep under the border, and intended to stream hundreds, if not thousands, of dedicated terrorists, many on suicide missions, in the quiet of night, to destinations where they could kill as many innocent people as possible and leave Israel mauled as never before. This was potentially Hamas' terrorist version of the 1973 Yom Kippur War, when Egypt and Syria launched a joint surprise attack on Israeli forces in Sinai and the Golan Heights. Israel suffered 74 dead in the war. Had the Iron Dome system not intercepted 735 rockets fired from Gaza, the Israeli casualty count would have been incalculably higher. Had Hamas accepted the Egyptian ceasefire proposal of July 15, as did Israel, Palestinian wartime fatalities would have numbered less than 200, as opposed to more than 2,100 who died by the time Hamas agreed to a final ceasefire on Aug. 27. Thus, Hamas was fully responsible for more than 1,800 Palestinian deaths. While UN and Palestinian sources claimed that 72-84% of Palestinians in Gaza killed during the war were civilians, there are strong reasons to argue that the percentage of civilian casualties was less than 50%, a low one-to-one combatant-to-civilian ratio that is unprecedented in modern-day warfare. In addition, we don't know how many Palestinians in Gaza died as human shields or of natural causes during the 50 days of war, or how many were casualties of the 875 Palestinian rockets known to have landed inside Gaza. A discerning look at the facts would lead to the conclusion that it is Hamas, not Israel, which should be in the dock for war crimes and crimes against humanity.

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