Israel Palestine Infos
Uri Avnery
August 14, 2010
Harakiri?
IF GOD wills, even a
broomstick can shoot – so I wrote after the appointment of the Turkel
commission. I was quoting the Jewish saying in the hope that in spite of
everything, something would come out of it.
The commission was born
in sin. Those who appointed it were not interested in discovering the truth but
in preventing the setting up of an international inquiry commission or an
In short: a commission
without wings, a broomstick without the brush.
I hoped that the members
of the commission would not agree to dance to the government’s tune. Today it is
still too early to judge whether they have passed this test, but it can already
be said: they have broken their chains.
AFTER THE testimony of
the three central witnesses this week – Binyamin Netanyahu, Ehud Barak and Gabi
Ashkenazi – one can already draw the first conclusion: the commission is
ignoring the terms of reference that were imposed on it. The terms have
disappeared. The commission hardly mentioned the subject it was charged with
exploring - international law – and instead took up all the rest.
That was not difficult,
because all three witnesses disregarded the terms of reference they themselves
had framed. Each of them was so eager to show how right and wise he was, that
the official subject of the investigation was well-nigh forgotten.
Thus a fait accompli
was established: the commission is not fettered anymore by its terms of
reference, but is dealing with all the aspects of the failed operation. (The
terms of reference may however pop up again when the time comes to draw up their
findings.)
IT WAS interesting to
observe how the three testimonies were received by the media.
Almost all the media fell
upon the first two witnesses and glorified the third.
Netanyahu was careless to
the point of frivolity, put all the responsibility on Barak and did not even
master the facts. After all, he was abroad at the time, so what do they want
from him, it was Barak who managed the affair single-handedly.
After the media assaulted
him ferociously, Netanyahu quickly convened an improvised press conference and
grandly announced that he was taking all the responsibility upon himself.
Barak was more studious.
He spoke endlessly, drowned the commission in a deluge of details and also took
the responsibility upon himself, but immediately kicked it downstairs, to the
military. The government, he stated, decides upon the mission, it is the
military that is responsible for the implementation. He, too, was sharply taken
to task by the media.
The Chief of Staff
pointed to the errors in the execution of the operation which were committed by
the lower military ranks, the navy and army intelligence, but with impressive
magnanimity took upon himself the responsibility for these, too.
His testimony was a
masterpiece. Rather surprisingly, it appeared that he was far more astute than
the two experienced politicians. While they looked like slippery eels, out only
to defend themselves, he appeared like a lovable, bumbling, unsophisticated
bear, a simple, honest, artless soldier, radiating integrity, who tells the
truth because he doesn’t know otherwise.
Ashkenazi is much smarter
than he looks. True, his testimony may have been prepared by his advisers, but
the smartness of a leader also finds expression in the ability to choose smart
advisers.
Again it was proven that
the media – and, indeed, the entire state – is controlled by the army. The same
remarks that were greeted with jeers when uttered by Netanyahu and Barak were
received with reverent attention when they came from the Chief of Staff. A
chorus of admirers praised him on TV, on the radio and in the newspapers. What
an honest person! What an upright soldier! What a responsible, level-headed
commander! If there was any difference between the uniformed army spokesmen and
the military correspondents in civilian cloths, it could hardly be discerned.
THE GENERAL picture that
emerged from the three main testimonies is quite clear: there were no serious
preparations for dealing with the flotilla, though the plans for it were known
many months in advance. Everything was done in an amateurish way, in the famous
tradition of Israeli improvisation, “rely on me” and “it’ll be OK”.
Previous aid ships
carried only non-violent peace activists, and everybody assumed that this would
continue to be so. Nobody paid attention to the fact that the Turkish activists
were imbued with quite a different ideology. Who cares, anyhow, what Turks are
thinking. The glorious Mossad did not even take the trouble to plant an agent
among the hundreds of activists on board the ship.
The planning of the
operation was slapdash, without enough intelligence, without sufficient
consideration of the alternatives, without taking into account potential
dangerous scenarios. After all, one did not have to be a prophet to foresee that
the Turkish activists, instilled with religious fervor, would forcefully oppose
the boarding of a Turkish ship on the high seas by Israeli soldiers. What a
surprise!
What is the conclusion?
The Chief of Staff disclosed it without hesitation: next time, the army will use
snipers to pick off everybody on deck (or, in the language of the military
commentators, “the attackers”) while the soldiers abseil from the helicopters.
Since Netanyahu and Barak
pushed all the responsibility onto the military, and Ashkenazi pointed to the
faults in planning and execution, there again arises a practical question: how
can the members of the Turkel commission do a serious job when they are not
allowed to summon military personnel?
To forestall the problem,
the Chief of Staff threw them two bones: the Army Advocate General and Giora
Eyland will be allowed to give evidence. (Eyland is the retired general who
conducted the army’s internal investigation.) But that is far from sufficient.
To fulfill its mission, the commission must hear evidence from the chief of the
navy and his staff. In response to the Gush Shalom petition, the Supreme Court
has already hinted that if Turkel demands their appearance, the court will
compel compliance.
NONE OF the three
witnesses touched upon the main question: the existence of the
In the fateful meeting of
“The Seven” (the senior ministers), it was clear that all of them believe in the
necessity of the blockade, as well as in the necessity of the forceful
suppression of any attempt to break it.
The legal side of the
matter is liable to arouse much debate. It seems that international law is
unclear here, both as far as the imposition and the implementation of a blockade
is concerned. The law is not set down in writing in a consistent format. It
allows for many different interpretations. There will not be a single, agreed
and clear answer.
The real question is in
any case not legal, but moral and political: for what purpose was the blockade
imposed?
All the witnesses who
have appeared so far have repeated the same agreed argument: we are at war with
the
But that is a complete
lie.
It is very simple to
control the movement of cargo by sea. In such cases, it is customary to stop
ships on the high seas, inspect the cargo, impound war materials (if any) and
allow them to continue on their way.
The cargo can also be inspected at the port of departure.
These methods were not
employed, because the whole matter of war materials is nothing but a pretext.
The aim of the blockade is just the opposite: to prevent the transfer of
non-military goods, the same goods which were also not allowed through the land
crossings: many sorts of foodstuffs and medicines, raw materials for industry,
building materials, spare parts and many other goods, from children’s copybooks
to water purification equipment.
The little that made life
bearable came through the tunnels, and the prices were sky-high, far beyond the
means of most inhabitants.
From the beginning, the
purpose was to disrupt normal life in the
Netanyahu argued in his
testimony that “there was no humanitarian crisis in the
True, people did not die
of hunger or disease in the streets. It was not a
The closure of
THE KEY word in all the
testimonies was “responsibility”. Every witness took responsibility and kicked
it as far away as possible – like soccer players who receive the ball and pass
it to somebody else.
What does responsibility
mean? Once upon a time, when a Japanese leader took responsibility for failure,
he stuck a knife into his belly – it was called Hara-kiri (“belly cutting”). No
such barbaric habit exists in the West, but there, too, a leader responsible for
failure resigns.
Not here. At least, not
now. Here, a person who “takes responsibility” evokes praise. What courage! What
nobility! He takes responsibility!
And that’s the end of
that.