The rest is of course history , the Jewish state of Israel was officially recognised by the UN in 1949 as hundreds of thousands of Jews occupied what is sometimes called The Fertile Crescent. An immediate by-product was the interning of the evicted Palestinians in refugee camps in The West Bank and...Gaza – the area Israel now finds itself controversially blockading today.
It is certainly true that the blockade of Gaza is unjust – as unjust as the British Blockade before it during and after WW2. Easily the site of one of the worst collective human rights abuse in the world today, Gaza is in a woeful state – still trying to rebuild after the vicious bombing campaign of last year, and desperately needs the aid activists are and will continue to bring. However, it must be said that the Strip is ruled by Hamas - a terrorist organisation that would like to see Israel destroyed both as a land as well as a people. Furthermore, that same organisation is bank rolled by a nation whose president himself has expressed his desire to see Israel “wiped off the face of the map” . This organisation rains rockets on Israel as often as it physically can. Currently it is not able to as regularly as it would like. It is understandable how the Israelis might imagine that should the blockade be lifted, that regularity would increase – significantly and fatally.
Obviously the recent attempt to board an aid ship approaching Gaza was a catastrophic disaster and quite clearly another Israeli crime against humanity. So Israel’s ability to execute this blockade must now be brought into question, let alone its right to do so. But given the above reality, perhaps aid convoys to Gaza should be searched as Hamas’ hunger and desire for military muscle is inherent. So perhaps an international peace-keeping force should conduct the blockade from a humanitarian point of view. The irony would be complete if the Navy chosen to do so was The Royal Navy.