Israel Palestine
Middle East Conflict
Uri Avnery
24.10.09
“Where Have All the Friendships Gone…”
ACCORDING TO a Chinese saying, if
someone in the street tells you that you are drunk, you can laugh. If a second
person tells you that you are drunk, start to think about it. If a third one
tells you the same, go home and sleep it off.
Our political and military
leadership has already encountered the third, fourth and fifth person. All of
them say that they must investigate what happened in the “Molten Lead”
operation.
They have three options:
-
to conduct a real investigation.
-
to ignore the demand and proceed as if nothing
has happened.
-
to conduct a sham inquiry.
IT IS easy to dismiss the first
option: it has not the slightest chance of being adopted. Except for the usual
suspects (including myself) who demanded an investigation long before anyone in
Israel had heard of a judge called Goldstone, nobody supports it.
Among all the members of our
political, military and media establishments who are now suggesting an
“inquiry”, there is no one – literally not one – who means by that a real
investigation. The aim is to deceive the Goyim and get them to shut up.
Actually, Israeli law lays down
clear guidelines for such investigations. The government decides to set up a commission
of investigation. The president of the Supreme Court then appoints the members
of the commission. The commission can compel witnesses to testify. Anybody who
may be damaged by its conclusions must be warned and given the opportunity to
defend themself. Its conclusions are binding.
This law has an interesting
history. Sometime in the 50s, David Ben-Gurion demanded the appointment of a
“judicial committee of inquiry” to decide who gave the orders for the 1954
“security mishap”, also known as the Lavon Affair. (A false flag operation
where an espionage network composed of local Jews was activated to bomb
American and British offices in Egypt, in order to cause friction between Egypt
and the Western powers. The perpetrators were caught.)
Ben-Gurion’s request was denied, under
the pretext that there was no law for such a procedure. Furious, Ben-Gurion
resigned from the government and left his party. In one of the stormy party sessions,
the Minister of Justice, Yaakov Shimshon Shapira, called Ben-Gurion a “fascist”. But Shapira, an old Russian Jew,
regretted his outburst later. He drafted a special law for the appointment of Commissions
of Investigation in the future. After lengthy deliberations in the Knesset (in
which I took an active part) the law was adopted and has since been applied,
notably in the case of the Sabra and Shatila massacre.
Now I wholeheartedly support the
setting up of a Commission of Investigation according to this law.
THE SECOND option is the one
proposed by the army Chief of Staff and the Minister of Defense. In America it
is called “stonewalling”. Meaning: To hell with it.
The army commanders object to any
investigation and any inquiry whatsoever. They probably know why. After all,
they know the facts. They know that a dark shadow lies over the very decision
to go to war, over the planning of the operation, over the instructions given
to the troops, and over many dozens of large and small acts committed during
the operation.
In their opinion, even if their
refusal has severe international repercussions, the consequences of any
investigation, even a phony one, would be far worse.
As long as the Chief of Staff
sticks to this position, there will be no investigation outside the army, whatever
the attitude of the ministers. The army chief, who attends every cabinet
meeting, is the largest figure in the room. When he announces that such and
such is the “position of the army”, no mere politician present would dare to
object.
In the “Only Democracy in the
Middle East”, the law (proposed at the time by Menachem
Begin) stipulates that the Government as such is the Commander in Chief of the
Israel Defense Forces. That is the theory. In practice, no decision at variance
with the “position of the army” has ever been or will ever be adopted.
The army claims to be investigating
itself. Ehud Barak represents – willingly or unwillingly – this position. The
cabinet has postponed dealing with the matter, and that’s where things stand
today.
ON THIS occasion, the spotlight
should be turned on the least visible person in Israel: the Chief of the
General Staff, Lieutenant General Gabi Ashkenazi, the
ultimate Teflon-man. Nothing sticks to him. In this debate, as in all others,
he just is not there.
Everybody knows that Ashkenazi is
a shy and modest man. He hardly ever speaks, writes or speechifies. On
television, he merges into the background.
This is how he looks to the
public: an honest soldier, without tricks or ploys, who does his duty quietly,
receives his orders from the government and fulfills them loyally. In this he
differs from almost all his predecessors, who were boastful, publicity-crazy
and loquacious. While most them came from famous elite
units or the arrogant Air Force, he is a grey infantry man. The Duke of
Wellington, seeing the huge amount of paperwork in his army, once exclaimed:
“Soldiers should fight, not write!” He would have liked Ashkenazi
But reality is not always what it
seems. Ashkenazi plays a central role in the decision-making process. He was
appointed after his predecessor, Dan Halutz, resigned
after the failures of Lebanon War II. Under Ashkenazi’s leadership, new doctrines
were formulated and put into action in the “Molten Lead” operation. I defined them
(on my own responsibility) as “Zero Losses” and
“Better to kill a hundred enemy civilians than to lose one of our own
soldiers”. Since the Gaza war did not lead to a single soldier being put on
trial, Ashkenazi must bear the responsibility for everything that happened
there.
If an indictment were issued by
the International Court in The Hague, Ashkenazi would probably be accorded the
place of honor as “Defendant No.
THE POLITICIANS who oppose (ever
so quietly) the Chief of Staff’s position believe that it is impossible to
withstand international pressure completely, and that some kind of an inquiry will
have to be conducted. Since not one of them intends to hold a real
investigation, they propose to follow a tried and trusted Israeli method, which
has worked wonderfully hundreds of times in the past: the method of sham.
A sham inquiry. Sham conclusions. Sham adherence to international law. Sham civilian
control over the military.
Nothing simpler than that. An “inquiry committee” (but not a Commission of
Investigation according to the law) will be set up, chaired by a suitably
patriotic judge and composed of carefully chosen honorable citizens who are all
“one of us”. Testimonies will be heard behind closed doors (for considerations
of security, of course). Army lawyers will prove that everything was perfectly
legal, the National Whitewasher, Professor Asa Kasher, will laud the ethics of the Most Moral Army in the
World. Generals will speak about our inalienable right to self-defense. In the
end, two or three junior officers or privates may be found guilty of “irregularities”.
Israel’s friends all over the
world will break into an ecstatic chorus: What a lawful state! What a
democracy! What morality! Western governments will declare that justice has
been done and the case closed. The US veto will see to the rest.
So why don’t the army chiefs
accept this proposal? Because they are afraid things might not proceed quite so
smoothly. The international community will demand that at least part of the
hearings be conducted in open court. There will be a demand for the presence of
international observers. And, most importantly: there will be no justifiable
way to exclude the testimonies of the Gazans
themselves. Things will get complicated. The world will not accept fabricated
conclusions. In the end we will be in exactly the same situation. Better to stay
put and brave it out, whatever the price.
IN THE meantime, international
pressure on Israel is increasing. Even now it has reached unprecedented
proportions.
Russia and China have voted in
favor of the endorsement of the Goldstone report by the UN. The UK and France
“did not take part in the vote”, but demanded that Israel conduct a real
investigation. We have quarreled with Turkey, until now an important military
ally. We have altercations with Sweden, Norway and a number of other friendly
countries. The French Foreign Minister has been prevented from crossing into
the Gaza Strip and is furious. The already cold peace with Egypt and Jordan has
become several degrees colder. Israel is boycotted in many forums. Senior army
officers are afraid to travel abroad for fear of arrest.
This raises the question once
more: can outside pressure have an impact on Israel?
Certainly it can. The question
is: what kind of pressure, what kind of impact?
The pressure has indeed convinced
several ministers that an inquiry committee for the Goldstone report has to be
set up. But no one in the Israeli establishment – no one at all! – has raised
the real question: Perhaps Goldstone is right? Except for the usual suspects,
no one in the media, the Knesset or the government has asked: Perhaps war
crimes have indeed been committed? The outside pressure has not forced such
questions to be raised. They must come from the inside, from the public itself.
The kind of pressure must also be
considered. The Goldstone report has an impact on the world because it is precise
and targeted: a specific operation, for which specific persons are responsible.
It raises a specific demand: an investigation. It attacks a clear and
well-defined target: war crimes.
If we apply this to the debate
about boycotting Israel: the Goldstone report may be compared to a targeted
boycott on the settlements and their helpers, not an unlimited boycott of the
State of Israel. A targeted boycott can have a positive impact. A
comprehensive, unlimited boycott would – in my opinion – achieve the opposite.
It would push the Israeli public further into the arms of the extreme Right.
The struggle over the Goldstone
report is now at its height. In Jerusalem, the rising energy of the waves can
be clearly felt. Does this portend a tsunami?