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Smoking Guns and Bulls-Eyes:
Israel rewrote the rules of War for Gaza
By Eileen Fleming
ccun.org, February 8, 2010
On February 3, 2010, The Independent reported that a high-ranking
officer who served as a commander during Operation Cast Lead, admitted
that Israel’s army went beyond its previous rules of engagement on the
protection of civilian lives and “that he did not regard the longstanding
principle of military conduct known as ‘means and intentions’– whereby a
targeted suspect must have a weapon and show signs of intending to use it
before being fired upon – as being applicable before calling in fire from
drones and helicopters in Gaza last winter.” [1] A junior officer
described the new policy as one of "literally zero risk to the soldiers.”
[Ibid] Israeli human rights lawyers, Michael Sfard, commented that
the senior commander's acknowledgment was "a smoking gun.” That
gun has been smoking since July 2009, when 54 testimonies from Israeli
soldiers regarding their experiences during Operation Cast Lead were
published by the Israeli human rights group, Breaking the Silence, exposed
the gaps between the reports given by the army in January 2009 and
“accepted practices; the destruction of hundreds of houses and mosques for
no military purpose, the firing of phosphorous gas in the direction of
populated areas, the killing of innocent victims with small arms, the
destruction of private property, and most of all, a permissive atmosphere
in the command structure that enabled soldiers to act without moral
restrictions.” [2] Their testimonies illuminated that the soldiers
were not given directives regarding the goal of the operation and, one
soldier testified, "there was not much said about the issue of innocent
civilians."
Many soldiers said that they fought without seeing
"the enemy before their eyes." Another said, "You feel like an
infantile little kid with a magnifying glass looking at ants, burning
them, a 20-year-old kid should not have to do these kinds of things to
other people."
Mikhael Manekin, was discharged from the IDF in
2002 and is now the Foreign Relations Manager for Breaking The
Silence/BTS. In July 2009, Maniken fired and hit the bull’s-eye
when he stated, "The testimonies prove that the immoral way the war was
carried out was due to the systems in place and not the individual
soldier...through the IDF the exception becomes the norm, and this
requires a deep and reflective discussion. This is an urgent call to
Israel's society and leadership to take a sober look at the foolishness of
our policies." On August 8, 2009, Rob Lipton reported that
Netanyahu asked Spain, Britain and The Netherlands to stop funding
Breaking The Silence, which is made up of former Israeli soldiers who
served in the occupied territories over the last ten years. “The
accounts by the soldiers are harrowing and document war crimes. The
Israeli government claims that governmental support of ‘politicized’ NGOs
undermines democracy in the Jewish state [and] that foreign governmental
funding of non-governmental institutions that are ostensibly working
‘against’ the interests of the duly elected government are undemocratic.”
[3] Don Futterman, program director of the Moriah Fund, a
private American foundation working in Israel to support civil society and
democracy, immigrant absorption and education, hit another bull’s-eye:
“If our defense minister (Avigor Lieberman) wants us to live up to
the claim that the IDF is ‘the most moral army on earth,’ he should
welcome soldiers who speak out about illegal acts that they have witnessed
or were asked to perform. In our post-war rush to elections, we
unfortunately - and perhaps, conveniently - skipped over any discussion
concerning the morality of what the army has done. But even our fears of
one-sided international condemnation of our actions in Gaza cannot justify
official attempts to silence the messenger, especially when that messenger
is us.”
Don Futterman also argued that, “BTS is not an advocacy
organization, it is made up of IDF reservists who have served in the
territories during their regular military service over the last nine
years. In addition to recognizing the harm we are doing to our Palestinian
neighbors, the organization urges us to look closely at the damage we are
doing to our own soldiers when they are asked to engage in acts of
questionable morality or legality. BTS gathers and then publicizes
testimony in both words and pictures from soldiers who are willing to come
forward. The organization makes every effort to check the veracity of
these testimonies, and will not publish any soldier’s comments unless it
has corroborating testimony from at least one other reliable source.
“[What] the government and the IDF find intolerable [is] opposition to
their attempts to control the discourse concerning Israel’s behavior in
the territories. “Our government (Israel) should welcome other
expressions of foreign support for our civil society, not attempt to
control it. If the United Kingdom or Spain or any other state wants to be
a true friend to Israeli democracy, it will renew its commitment to BTS.”
Bans on foreign government support of NGOs is a characteristic of
dictatorships, and Israel was never a democracy, but has always been an
Ethnocracy:
"An ethnocracy is the opposite of a democracy, although
it might incorporate some elements of democracy such as universal
citizenship and elections. It arises when one particular group-the Jews in
Israel, the Russians in Russia, the Protestants in pre-1972 Northern
Ireland, the whites in apartheid South Africa, the Shi’ite Muslims in
Iran, the Malay in Malaysia and, if they had their way, the white
Christian fundamentalists in the US-seize control of the government and
armed forces in order to enforce a regime of exclusive privilege over
other groups in what is in fact a multi-ethnic or multi-religious society.
Ethnocracy, or ethno-nationalism, privileges ethnos over demos, whereby
one’s ethnic affiliation, be it defined by race, descent, religion,
language or national origin, takes precedence over citizenship in
determining to whom a county actually 'belongs.-Jeff Halper, An Israeli in
Palestine: Resisting Dispossession, Redeeming Israel, Page 74.
"The
terms ‘democracy’ or ‘democratic’ are totally absent from the Declaration
of Independence. This is not an accident. The intention of Zionism was not
to bring democracy, needless to say. It was solely motivated by the
creation in Eretz-Isrel of a Jewish state belonging to all the Jewish
people and to the Jewish people alone. This is why any Jew of the Diaspora
has the right to immigrate to Israel and to become a citizen of Israel."-
Ariel Sharon, May 28, 1993 edition of Yedioth Ahronoth.
On July
27, 2007, during the last day of my fifth out of seven trips to Israel
Palestine, Mikhael Manekin, informed this reporter: "I am a
practicing Jew and in two weeks we go into the month of repentance; which
requires acknowledging our sins. We cannot change things until we
acknowledge our culpability. "The problem is government policy that is
implemented by young soldiers and whenever religion is involved, we will
have fundamentalism. The Israeli peace and justice activists are less than
1% of Israeli society and anybody who is an activist is an optimist. You
cannot do anything if you do not believe you can do something to change
the situation. We have to remind ourselves that we are the minority; [it
appears that] we are loosing, but we remind ourselves we are right!
"Everybody in Israel knows somebody who has served in the occupied
territories. The situation in 2007 is worse than 2006 and it looks worse
for 2008, but more and more activists-like Anarchists Against the Wall and
Tayoush are actively working with Palestinians against the occupation,
they are not afraid to travel in the occupied territories and are learning
Arabic. Two, three years ago you wouldn't have heard anything; but now
every week Israelis are getting arrested for fighting the occupation.
"A few years ago, the soldiers you have encountered at the checkpoints
would have been me. Soldiers like myself who served during the second
intifada, got our education on the job. You all have visited more places
[the past nine days] than most Israelis ever have. Israeli's have no idea
what is happening in the occupied territories. But, so far in 2007 we have
given more Israeli's a tour through Hebron than we did in 2005 and 2006
combined. Hebron is a ghost town, the settlers are unbearable and every
soldier who is stationed there understands the 600 settlers there are
psychotic; insane. "I became very opinionated while in the
army, but I kept it all to myself. Nobody talks about it in the army and I
was the commander and did not know until after I got out that one of the
other soldiers in my unit was feeling the same way, until he gave his
testimony. Israeli society wants you to believe you are a bad apple for
speaking out because unless you trust the system, it will fall apart. Most
Israelis who get out of the army leave the country and are probably all
drugged out. They suffer post traumatic syndrome but we are the
victimizers. My age group is getting the hell out of here or walling
themselves off from society and are not involved in anything.
"Over 450 former soldiers have now given their testimonies and we don't
publish any stories without the corroboration coming from another former
soldier and the testimonies are kept anonymous. "You have to
understand you must preach to your own people; we want to shake up the
comfortable people who may agree with us in Tel Aviv and Jerusalem, but
are not activists yet."
Notes: 1. http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/israeli-commander-we-rewrote-the-rules-of-war-for-gaza-1887627.html
2. http://www.wearewideawake.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=1344&Itemid=222
3. http://www.muzzlewatch.com/2009/08/08/netanyahus-attempts-to-silence-breaking-the-silence/
4. http://www.wearewideawake.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=595&Itemid=169
Only in Solidarity do "we have it in our power to begin the world
again."-Tom Paine
Eileen Fleming, Founder of
WeAreWideAwake.org A Feature
Correspondent for Arabisto.com Author of "Keep Hope Alive" and "Memoirs
of a Nice Irish American 'Girl's' Life in Occupied Territory" Producer
"30 Minutes with Vanunu" and "13 Minutes with Vanunu"
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