Israel
Palestine Middle East Conflict Infos
Uri Avnery
18.7.09
The Johnny Procedure
LIKE THE ghost of
Hamlet’s father, the evil spirit of the Gaza War refuses to leave us in peace.
This week it came back to disturb the tranquility of the chiefs of the state
and the army.
“Breaking the Silence”, a
group of courageous former combat soldiers, published a report comprising the
testimonies of 30 Gaza War fighters. A hard-hitting report
about actions that may be considered war crimes.
The generals went
automatically into denial mode. Why don’t the soldiers
disclose their identity, they asked innocently. Why do they obscure their faces
in the video testimonies? Why do they hide their names and units?
How can we be sure that
they are not actors reading a text prepared for them by the enemies of Israel?
How do we know that this organization is not manipulated by foreigners, who
finance their actions? And anyhow, how do we know that they are not lying out
of spite?
One can answer with a
Hebrew adage: “It has the feel of Truth”. Anyone who has ever been a combat
soldier in war, whatever war, recognizes at once the truth in these reports. Each
of them has met a soldier who is not ready to return home without an X on his
gun showing that he killed at least one enemy. (One such person appears in my
book “The Other Side of the Coin”, which was written 60 years ago and published
in English last year as the second part of “1948: A soldier’s Tale”.) We have
been there.
The testimonies about the
use of phosphorus, about massive bombardment of buildings, about “the neighbor procedure”
(using civilians as human shields), about killing “everything that moves”,
about the use of all methods to avoid casualties on our side – all these corroborate
earlier testimonies about the Gaza War, there can be
no reasonable doubt about their authenticity. I learned from the report that
the “neighbor procedure” is now called “Johnny procedure”, God knows why Johnny
and not Ahmad.
The height of hypocrisy
is reached by the generals with their demand that the soldiers come forward and
lodge their complaints with their commanders, so that the army can investigate
them through the proper channels.
First of all, we have
already seen the farce of the army investigating itself.
Second,
and this is the main point: only a person intent on becoming a martyr would do so.
A solder in a combat unit is a part of a tightly knit group whose highest
principle is loyalty to comrades and whose commandment is “Thou shalt not squeal!” If he discloses questionable acts he has
witnessed, he will be considered a traitor and ostracized. His life will become
hell. He knows that all his superiors, from squad leader right up to division
commander, will persecute him.
This call to go through
“official channels” is a vile method of the generals – members of the General
Staff, Army Spokesmen, Army Lawyers – to divert the
discussion from the accusations themselves to the identity of the witnesses. No
less despicable are the tin soldiers called “military correspondents”, who
collaborate with them.
BUT BEFORE accusing the
soldiers who committed the acts described in the testimonies, one has to ask
whether the decision to start the war did not itself lead inevitably to the
crimes.
Professor Assa Kasher, the father of the
army “Code of Ethics” and one of the most ardent supporters of the Gaza War,
asserted in an essay on this subject that a state has the right to go to war
only in self defense, and only if the war constitutes “a last resort”. “All
alternative courses” to attain the rightful aim “must have been exhausted”.
The official cause of the
war was the launching from the Gaza Strip of rockets against Southern Israeli
towns and villages. It goes without saying that it is the duty of the state to
defend its citizens against missiles. But had all the means to achieve this aim
without war really been exhausted? Kasher answers
with a resounding “yes”. His key argument is that “there is no justification
for demanding that Israel negotiate directly with a terrorist organization that
does not recognize it and denies its very right to exist.”
This does not pass the
test of logic. The aim of the negotiations was not supposed to be the
recognition by Hamas of the State of Israel and its right to exist (who needs this
anyway?) but getting them to stop launching missiles at Israeli citizens. In
such negotiations, the other side would understandably have demanded the
lifting of the blockade against the population of the Gaza Strip and the
opening of the supply passages. It is reasonable to assume that it was possible
to reach – with Egyptian help - an agreement that would also have included the
exchange of prisoners.
No only was this course
not exhausted – it was not even tried. The Israeli government has consistently
refused to negotiate with a “terrorist organization” and even with the
Palestinian Unity Government that was in existence for some time and in which
Hamas was represented.
Therefore, the decision
to start the War on Gaza, with a civilian population of a million and a half,
was unjustified even according to the criteria of Kasher
himself. “All the alternative courses” had not been exhausted, or even
attempted.
But we all know that,
apart from the official reason, there was also an unofficial one: to topple the
Hamas government in the Gaza Strip. In the course of the war, official
spokesmen stated that there was a need to attach a “price tag” – in other
words, to cause death and destruction not in order to hurt the “terrorists”
themselves (which would have been almost impossible) but to turn the life of
the civilian population into hell, so they would rise up and overthrow Hamas.
The immorality of this
strategy is matched by its inefficacy: our own experience has taught us that
such methods only serve to harden the resolve of the population and unite them
around their courageous leadership.
WAS IT at all possible to
conduct this war without committing war crimes? When a government decides to
hurl its regular armed forces at a guerrilla organization, which by its very
nature fights from within the civilian population, it is perfectly clear that terrible
suffering will be caused to that population. The argument that the harm caused
to the population, and the killing of over a thousand men, women and children
was inevitable should, by itself, have led to the conclusion that the decision
to start this was a terrible act right from the beginning.
The Defense Establishment
takes the easy way out. The ministers and generals simply assert that they do
not believe the Palestinian and international reports about the death and
destruction, stating that they are, again in Kasher’s
words, “mistaken and false”. Just to be sure, they decided to boycott the UN
commission that is currently investigating the war, headed by a respected South
African judge who is both a Jew and a Zionist.
Assa Kasher is adopting a similar attitude when he says:
“Somebody who does not know all the details of an action cannot assess it in a
serious, professional and responsible way, and therefore should not do so, in
spite of all emotional or political temptations.” He demands that we wait until
the Israeli army completes its investigations, before we even discuss the
matter.
Really?
Every organization that investigates itself lacks credibility, not to mention a
hierarchical body like the army. Moreover, the army does not – and cannot –
obtain testimony from the main eye-witnesses: the inhabitants of Gaza. An
investigation based only on the testimony of the perpetrators, but not of the
victims, is ridiculous. Now even the testimonies of the soldiers of Breaking the Silence are discounted, because they cannot
disclose their identity.
IN A war between a mighty
army, equipped with the most sophisticated weaponry in the world, and a guerrilla
organization, some basic ethical questions arise. How should the soldiers
behave when faced with a structure in which there are not only enemy fighters,
which they are “allowed” to hit, but also unarmed civilians, which they are
“forbidden” to hit?
Kasher
cites several such situations. For example: a building in which there are both
“terrorists” and non-fighters. Should it be hit by aircraft or artillery fire
that will kill everybody, or should soldiers be sent in who will risk their
lives and kill only the fighters? His answer: there is no justification for the
risking of the lives of our soldiers in order to save the lives of enemy
civilians. An aerial or artillery attack must be preferred.
That does not answer the
question about the use of the Air Force to destroy hundreds of houses far enough
from our soldiers that there was no danger emanating from them, nor about the
killing of scores of recruits of the Palestinian civilian police on parade, nor
about the killing of UN personnel in food supply convoys. Nor about the illegal
use of white phosphorus against civilians, as described in the soldiers’
testimonies gathered by Breaking the Silence, and the use of depleted uranium
and other carcinogenic substances.
The entire country experienced
on live TV how a shell hit the apartment of a doctor and wiped out almost all
of his family. According to the testimony of Palestinian civilians and
international observers, many such incidents took place.
The Israeli army took
great pride in its method of warning the inhabitants by means of leaflets,
phone calls and such, so as to induce them to flee. But everyone – and first of
all the warners themselves - knew that the civilians
had nowhere secure to escape to and that there were no clear and safe escape
routes. Indeed, many civilians were shot while trying to flee.
WE SHALL not evade the
hardest moral question of all: is it permissible to risk the lives of our soldiers
in order to save the old people, women and children of the “enemy”? The answer
of Assa Kasher, the
ideologue of the “Most Moral Army in the World”, is unequivocal: it is
absolutely forbidden to risk the lives of the soldiers. The most telling
sentence in his entire essay is: “Therefore…the state must give preference to
the lives of its soldiers above the lives of the (unarmed) neighbors of a
terrorist.”
These words should be
read twice and three times, in order to grasp their full implications. What is
actually being said here is: if necessary to avoid casualties among our
soldiers, it is better to kill enemy civilians without any limit.
In retrospect, one can
only be glad that the British soldiers, who fought against the Irgun and the Stern Group, did not have an ethical guide
like Kasher.
This is the principle
that guided the Israeli army in the Gaza War, and, as far as I know, this is a
new doctrine: in order to avoid the loss of one single soldier of ours, it is
permissible to kill 10, 100 and even 1000 enemy civilians. War
without casualties on our side. The numerical result bears witness: more
than 1000 people killed in Gaza, a third or two thirds of them (depending on
who you ask) civilians, women and children, as against 6 (six) Israeli soldiers
killed by enemy fire. (Four more were killed by “friendly” fire.)
Kasher
states explicitly that it is justified to kill a Palestinian child who is in
the company of a hundred “terrorists”, because the “terrorists” might kill
children in Sderot. But in reality, it was a case of
killing a hundred children who were in the company of one “terrorist”.
If we strip this doctrine
of all ornaments, what remains is a simple principle: the state must protect
the lives of its soldiers at any price, without any limit or law. A war of zero casualties. That leads necessarily to a tactic
of killing every person and destroying every building that could represent a danger
to the soldiers, creating an empty space in front of the advancing troops.
Only one conclusion can
be drawn from this: from now on, any Israeli decision to start a war in a built-up
area is a war crime, and the soldiers who rise up against this crime should be
honored. May they be blessed.