Israel Palestine
Middle East Conflict
Uri Avnery
3.10.09
A Story
of Betrayal
TODAY IS the 1196th
day in captivity for the soldier Gilad Shalit.
A prisoner of war must not be
left in captivity. A wounded soldier must not be left in the field. The state
signs an unwritten contract with every person who joins the army, and most
definitely with everyone who serves in a combat unit.
The behavior of the Israeli
governments in these 1196 days, of the politicians and the generals who are
responsible for this outrage, is a violation of this contract, a betrayal of
trust. In short: an infamy. It enrages and infuriates every decent person, and
not only combat soldiers.
THE BETRAYAL is already in the
terminology used. In the words of the Book of Proverbs (18:21): “Death and life
are in the power of the tongue”.
A soldier captured by the enemy
in a military action is a prisoner of war – in every language, in every
country.
Gilad Shalit was captured in a military action. He was an armed
soldier in uniform. In this context, it does not matter whether the action
itself was legal or illegal, and whether the captors were regular soldiers or
guerrillas.
Gilad Shalit is a prisoner of war.
THE DENIAL started at the first
moment. The Israeli government refused to call the capture by its proper name
and insisted that it was an “abduction” or even
“kidnapping”.
The disciplined Israeli media,
marching behind the generals in lockstep like the Prussian guard, joined the
chorus. Not a single newspaper, not a single radio or TV announcer ever spoke
about the “prisoner of war”. All of them, almost without exception, from the
first day on, spoke about the “abducted” or “kidnapped” soldier.
The words are important. All
armies are familiar with exchanges of prisoners of war. Generally, this happens
after the end of hostilities, sometimes while the war is still going on. The
army releases the enemy fighters in return for the release of its own captured
soldiers.
This does not apply to abducted
persons. When criminals abduct a person and hold them for ransom, the question
arises whether the price should be paid. Payment may encourage more abductions and reward the criminals.
The moment Gilad
was defined as “abducted”, he was condemned to what followed.
He also lost his honor as a
soldier. A soldier is not “abducted”. The millions of soldiers captured during
World War II – Germans, Russians, Britons, Americans and all the others – would
have felt insulted by any suggestion that they were “abducted”.
THE GREATEST danger hovering over
the head of Gilad since falling into captivity does
not come from Hamas, but from our own army.
It was clear that, given an
opportunity, the army would try to free him by force. That is deeply embedded
in its basic ethos: Never give in to “abductors”.
If I were Gilad’s
father and a praying man, I would pray every day: Please, dear God, don’t let
the army find out where Gilad is being kept!
Our army commanders are prepared
to expose prisoners to immense risks in order to free them by force, instead of
exchanging them for Palestinian prisoners. For them it is a matter of honor.
In such an operation, the lives
of the liberators are put at risk. But above all, it’s the life of the prisoner
that is endangered.
One of the most celebrated operations
in the annals of the Israeli Army took place in Entebbe in July, 1976. It freed the 98 passengers of a hijacked Air
France plane, which had been forced to land at Entebbe airport in Uganda. The operation
elicited worldwide admiration. Only one of the liberators lost his life – the
brother of Binyamin Netanyahu.
In the ensuing intoxication of
success, one fact was overlooked: in the daring operation huge risks were
taken. If even one detail of the complex action had gone wrong, it would have
meant disaster for the abducted passengers. It could have ended in a bloodbath.
Since it succeeded, nobody dared to raise questions.
The results of the operation to release the abducted
athletes at the Munich Olympic games in 1972 were very
different. When the German police, with the encouragement of the Golda Meir
government, tried to free them by force, all the athletes lost their lives.
Most of them were probably killed by bullets from the guns of the German
policemen. How else to explain the fact that to this very day, the governments
of Israel and Germany have both refused to release the post mortem results?
The same happened two years later when the Israeli
army was ordered by Golda Meir and Moshe Dayan to free the 105 children who
were being held by Palestinian commandos in the Northern Israeli town of Ma’alot. The action miscarried, and 22 children and 3
teachers lost their lives. In this instance, too, it seems that some – if not
all – of them were killed by the bullets of the liberators. These post mortem
reports also remain unpublished.
The same happened in 1994 when the army tried to
free the “abducted” soldier Nachshon Waxman in the
West Bank. The army had exact intelligence, the action was planned
meticulously, something went wrong, and the prisoner was killed.
Lately it was learned that a senior officer had
called on his soldiers to commit suicide rather than be captured. He has given
orders to fire on the “abductors”, even when it means endangering the life of
the captured soldier.
It may well be that one of the reasons for the
prolongation of Gilad Shalit’s
suffering lies in the hope of the army commanders to obtain intelligence about
his whereabouts, so as to try to free him by force. It is no secret that the
Gaza Strip is crawling with informers. The dozens of “targeted killings” and
many of the actions of the “Molten Lead” operation would not have been possible
without a dense network of collaborators, recruited during the long years of
the occupation.
Incredibly – it borders on a miracle - the Israeli
security service has been unable to fulfill this hope. It seems that Shalit’s captors are succeeding in maintaining rigorous
secrecy. That, by the way, explains why his captors have adamantly refused to
have him meet with the International Red Cross representatives and to convey
letters by and to him, including parcels (that could well have contained
sophisticated locating devices). That may have saved his life.
It can be assumed that the video that was conveyed
yesterday by the German mediator, in exchange for the release of 21 female Palestinian
prisoners, was meticulously prepared so as to prevent any possibility of
identifying the place where he is being kept.
THIS AFFAIR also shows the absolute superiority of
the Israeli propaganda machine over all competitors – if there are any.
The world media have adopted, almost without
exception, the Israeli terminology. All over the world, they talk about the
“abducted” Israeli soldier, rather than about a prisoner of war. British or
German newspapers which use this word would not dream of applying it to one of
their own soldiers in Afghanistan.
The name of Gilad Shalit was mouthed by the world’s leaders as if he were, at
the very least, one of them. Nicolas Sarkozy and
Angela Merkel spoke about him freely, certain that the listeners at home knew
who he was. Liberating the “abducted Israeli soldier” has become a declared aim
of several governments.
This formulation is by itself a triumph for Israeli
propaganda. The negotiations are about an exchange of prisoners between Israel
and Hamas, with German and/or Egyptian mediation. An exchange of prisoners has
two sides – Shalit on the one side, Palestinian
prisoners on the other. But throughout the world, as in Israel, they speak only
about the release of the Israeli soldier. The Palestinian prisoners to be freed
are just objects, merchandise, not human beings. But don’t they also count the
days, like their parents and their children?
The greatest obstacle to such an exchange is mental,
a matter of language. If it had been about “Palestinian fighters” there would
have been no problem. The release of fighters in exchange for
a fighter. But our government – like all colonial governments before it –
cannot recognize local insurgents as “fighters” who act in the service of their
people. The colonial ethos – like the “ethical code” of our ethical Professor Assa Kasher – demands that they
be called “terrorists” with “blood on their hands”, base criminals, vile
murderers.
A touching Irish song tells of an
Irish freedom fighters who, on the morning of his execution, asks to be treated
like an “Irish soldier” and be shot, not “hanged like a dog”. His request was
denied.
When one speaks about the release of “hundreds of
murderers” in exchange for an Israeli soldier, one runs up against a huge
psychological obstacle. Life and death in the power of the
tongue.
IN SEVERAL respects, the Gilad
Shalit affair can be seen as a metaphor for the
entire historical conflict.
Charged words dictate the behavior of the leaders.
The different and opposing narratives prevent an understanding between the
parties even about minor matters. The psychological obstacles are immense.
The great propaganda advantage of the Israeli
government, so clearly shown in the Shalit affair, is
now also being tested in the matter of the Goldstone report. The efforts of the
Israeli government to prevent the referral of the report to the UN Security
Council or General Assembly, or to the International Criminal Court in The
Hague, are now supported by President Barack Obama and the European leaders.
The inhabitants of the Gaza Strip, like the Palestinians in Israeli jails, have
become mere tokens, objects without a human face.
And about Gilad Shalit: the negotiations must be speeded up so as to effect a prisoner exchange in the very nearest future. Until
then, the mediators should be given an unequivocal undertaking that there will
be no effort to free him by force, in return for an agreement by Hamas to let
him meet with Red Cross personnel, and perhaps also with his family.
Everything else is manipulation and lip service.