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Evidence of Israeli 'cowardly blending' comes
to light
By Jonathan Cook in Nazareth
01/04/08 "ICH" -- -- It apparently never occurred to
anyone in our leading human rights organisations or the
Western media that the same moral and legal standards ought
be applied to the behaviour of Israel and Hizbullah during
the war on Lebanon 18 months ago. Belatedly, an important
effort has been made to set that right.
A
new report, written by a respected Israeli human rights
organisation, one representing the country’s Arab minority
not its Jewish majority, has unearthed evidence showing that
during the fighting Israel committed war crimes not only
against Lebanese civilians -- as was already known -- but
also against its own Arab citizens. This is an aspect of the
war that has been almost entirely neglected until now.
The
report also sheds a surprising light on the question of what
Hizbullah was aiming at when it fired hundreds of rockets on
northern Israel. Until the report’s publication last month,
I had been all but a lone voice arguing that the picture of
what took place during the war was far more complex than
generally accepted.
The
new report follows a series of inquiries by the most
influential human rights groups, Amnesty International and
Human Rights Watch, to identify the ways in which
international law was broken during Israel’s 34-day assault
on Lebanon. However, both organisations failed to examine,
except in the most cursory and dismissive way, Israel’s
treatment of its own civilians during the war. That failure
may also have had serious repercussions for their ability to
assess Hizbullah’s actions.
Before examining the report’s revelations, it is worth
revisiting the much-misrepresented events of summer 2006 and
considering what efforts have been made subsequently to
bring the two sides to account.
The
war was the culmination of a series of tit-for-tat
provocations along the shared border following Israel’s
withdrawal from its two-decade occupation of south Lebanon
in 2000. Almost daily for those six years Israel behaved as
though the occupation had not ended, sending war planes into
Lebanese air space to create terrifying sonic booms and spy
on the country. (After the war, it resumed these flights
almost immediately.)
In
response Hizbullah, a Shia militia that offered the only
effective resistance during Lebanon’s period of occupation,
maintained its belligerent posture. It warned repeatedly
that it would capture Israeli soldiers, should the chance
arise, in the hope of forcing a prisoner exchange. Israel
had held on to a handful of Lebanese prisoners after its
pullback.
Hizbullah also demanded that Israel complete its withdrawal
from Lebanon in full by leaving a fertile sliver of
territory, the Shebaa Farms. Israel argues that the area is
Syrian territory, occupied by its army along with the Golan
Heights in 1967, and will be returned one day in
negotiations with Damascus. UN catrographers disagree,
backing Hizbullah’s claim that the area is Lebanese.
The
fighting began with a relatively minor incident (by regional
standards) and one that was entirely predictable: Hizbullah
attacked a border post, capturing two soldiers and killing
three more in the operation. Hizbullah’s leader Hassan
Nasrallah proposed a prisoner swap. Israel declared war the
very same day, unleashing a massive bombing campaign that
over the next month killed nearly 1,200 Lebanese civilians.
An
editorial in Israel’s leading newspaper Haaretz noted again
this week that, by rejecting Hizbullah’s overtures, “Israel
initiated the war”.
In
the last days of the fighting, as a UN-brokered ceasefire
was about to come into effect, Israel dropped more than a
million cluster bombs on south Lebanon, of which several
hundred thousand failed to detonate. Since the end of the
war, 39 Lebanese civilians have been killed and dozens more
maimed from these small landmines littering the countryside.
Israel’s own inquiry into its use of the cluster munitions
wrapped up last month by exonerating the army, even while
admitting that many of the bombs had been directed at
civilian population centres. In Israel’s books, it seems,
international law sanctions the targeting of civilians
during war.
Veteran Israeli reporter Meron Rapoport recently noted that
his newspaper, Haaretz again, has evidence that the army’s
use of cluster munitions was “pre-planned” and undertaken
without regard to the location of Hizbullah positions. The
only reasonable conclusion is that Israel wanted south
Lebanon uninhabitable at any cost, possibly so that another
ground invasion could be mounted.
Human Rights Watch, which has carried out the most detailed
examination of the war, was less forgiving than Israel’s own
investigators -- as might have been expected in the case of
such a flagrant abuse of the rules of war. Still, it has
failed to condemn Israel’s actions unreservedly. In a
typical press release it noted the wide dispersal of cluster
bombs over civilian areas of south Lebanon but concluded
only that their use by Israel “may violate the prohibition
on indiscriminate attacks contained in international
humanitarian law”.
In
this and other respects, HRW’s reports have revealed
troubling double standards.
During the war two charges were levelled against Hizbullah,
mainly by Israel’s supporters, and investigated by the human
rights group: that the Shia militia fired rockets on
northern Israel either indiscriminately or in a deliberate
attempt to target civilians; and that it hid its fighters
and weapons among its own Lebanese civilians (thereby
conveniently justifying Israel’s bombing of those
civilians).
Hizbullah was found guilty of the first charge, with HRW
arguing that it was irrelevant whether or not Hizbullah was
trying to hit military targets in Israel as its rockets were
not precision-guided. All its rockets, whatever they were
aimed at, were therefore considered indiscriminate by the
organisation and a violation of international law. Worthy of
note is that HRW expressed certainty about the
impermissibility of Hizbullah firing imprecise rockets but
not about Israel’s use of even less precise cluster bombs.
On
the second charge Hizbullah was substantially acquitted,
with HRW failing to find evidence that, apart from in a
handful of isolated instances, the militia hid among the
Lebanese population.
Regarding Israel, the human rights organisations
investigated the charge that it violated international law
by endangering Lebanese civilians during its bombing
campaigns. Given that Israel’s missiles and bombs were
supposed to have pinpoint accuracy, the large death toll of
Lebanese civilians provided indisputable evidence of Israeli
war crimes. HRW agreed.
Strangely, however, after submitting both Israel and
Hizbullah to the same test of whether their firepower
targeted civilians, HRW deemed it inappropriate to
investigate Israel on the second allegation faced by
Hizbullah: that it committed a war crime by blending in with
its own civilian population. Was there so little prima facie
evidence of such behaviour on Israel’s side that the
organisation decided it was not worth wasting its resources
on such an inquiry?
HRW
produced two lengthy reports in August 2007, one examining
events in Lebanon and the other events in Israel. But the
report on what happened inside Israel, “Civilians under
Assault”, failed to examine Israel’s treatment of its own
civilians and focused instead only on proving that
Hizbullah’s firing of its rockets violated international
law.
HRW
did made a brief reference to the possibility that Israeli
military installations were located close to or inside
civilian communities. It cited examples of a naval training
base next to a hospital in Haifa and a weapons factory built
in a civilian community. Its researchers even admitted to
watching the Israeli army firing shells into Lebanon from a
residential street of the Jewish community of Zarit.
This
act of “cowardly blending” by the Israeli army -- to echo
the UN envoy Jan Egeland’s unwarranted criticism of
Hizbullah -- was a war crime. It made Israeli civilians a
potential target for Hizbullah reprisal attacks.
So
what was HRW’s position on this gross violation of the rules
of war it had witnessed? After yet again denouncing
Hizbullah for its rocket attacks, the report was
mealy-mouthed: “Given that indiscriminate fire [by
Hizbullah], there is no reason to believe that Israel’s
placement of certain military assets within these cities
added appreciably to the risk facing their residents.”
In
other words, Israel’s culpability in hiding its war machine
inside civilian communities did not need to be assessed on
its own terms as a violation of international law. Instead
Israel was let off the hook based on the assumption that
Hizbullah’s rockets were incapable of hitting such
positions. It is dubious, to put it mildly, whether this is
a legitimate reading of international law.
An
additional criticism, one that I made on several occasions
during the war, was that Israel failed to protect its Arab
communities from rocket attacks by ensuring they had bomb
shelters or early warning systems -- unlike Jewish
communities. On this issue, the HRW report had only this to
say: “Human Rights Watch did not investigate whether Israel
discriminated among Jewish and Arab residents of the north
in the protection it provided from Hezbollah attacks.”
Of
Hizbullah’s indiscrimination, HRW was certain; of Israel’s
discrimination, it held back from judgment.
Fortunately, we no longer have to rely on Human Rights Watch
or Amnesty International for a full picture of what took
place during what Israelis call the Second Lebanon War. Last
month the Arab Association for Human Rights, based in
Nazareth, published its own report, “Civilians in Danger”,
covering the ground its much bigger cousins dared not touch.
The
hostile climate in Israel towards the fifth of the
population who are Arab has made publication of the report a
risky business. Azmi Bishara, Israel’s leading Arab
politician and a major critic of Israel’s behaviour during
the Lebanon war, is currently in exile under possible death
sentence. Israel has accused him of treason in helping
Hizbullah during the fighting, though the secret services
have yet to produce the evidence they have supposedly
amassed against him. Nonetheless they have successfully
intimidated most of the Arab minority into silence.
Also, much of the report’s detail, including many
place-names and maps showing the location of Hizbullah
rocket strikes, has had to be excised to satisfy Israel’s
strict military censorship laws.
But
despite these obstacles, the Human Rights Association has
taken a brave stand in unearthing the evidence to show that
Israel committed war crimes by placing much of its military
hardware, including artillery positions firing into Lebanon,
inside and next to Arab towns and villages. These were not
isolated instances but a discerible pattern.
The
threat to which this exposed Arab communities was far from
as theoretical as HRW supposes. Some 660 Hizbullah rockets
landed on 20 Arab communities in the north, apparently
surprising Israeli officials, who believed Hizbullah would
not target fellow Arabs. Of the 44 Israeli civilians killed
by the rockets, 21 were Arab citizens.
Israel has cited these deaths as further proof that
Hizbullah’s rocket fire was indiscriminate. The Human Rights
Association, however, reaches a rather different conclusion,
one based on the available evidence. Its research shows a
clear correlation between an Arab community having an
Israeli army base located next to it and the likelihood of
it being hit by Hizbullah rockets. In short, Arab
communities targeted by Hizbullah were almost exclusively
those in which the Israeli army was based.
“The
study found that the Arab towns and villages that suffered
the most intensive attacks during the war were ones that
were surrounded by military installations, either on a
permanent basis or temporarily during the course of the
war,” the report states.
Such
findings lend credibility to complaints made during the war
by Israel’s Arab legislators, including Bishara himself,
that Arab communities were being used as “human shields” by
the Israeli army -- possibly to deter Hizbullah from
targeting its positions.
In
early August 2006, Bishara told the Maariv newspaper: “What
ordinary citizens are afraid to say, the Arab Knesset
members are declaring loudly. Israel turned the Galilee and
the Arab villages in particular into human shields by
surrounding them with artillery positions and missile
batteries.”
Such
violations of the rules of war were occasionally hinted at
in reporting in the Israeli media. In one account from the
front line, for example, a reporter from Maariv quoted
parents in the Arab village of Fassuta complaining that
children were wetting their beds because of the frightening
bark of tanks stationed outside their homes.
According to the Human Rights Association’s report, Israel
made its Arab citizens vulnerable to Hizbullah’s rockets in
the following ways:
*
Permanent military bases, including army camps, airfields
and weapons factories, as well as temporary artillery
positions that fired thousands of shells and mortars into
southern Lebanon were located inside or next to many Arab
communities.
*
The Israeli army trained soldiers inside northern Arab
communities before and during the war in preparation for a
ground invasion, arguing that the topography in these
communities was similar to the villages of south Lebanon.
*
The government failed to evacuate civilians from the area of
fighting, leaving Arab citizens particularly in danger.
Almost no protective measures, such as building public
shelters or installing air raid sirens, had been taken in
Arab communities, whereas they had been in Jewish
communities.
Under the protocols to the Geneva Conventions, parties to a
conflict must “avoid locating military objectives within or
near densely populated areas” and must “endeavour to remove
the civilian population … from the vicinity of military
objectives”. The Human Rights Association report clearly
shows that Israel cynically broke these rules of war.
Tarek Ibrahim, a lawyer and the author of the Association’s
report, says the most surprising finding is that Hizbullah’s
rockets mostly targeted Arab communities where military
installations had been located and in the main avoided those
where there were no such military positions.
“Hizbullah claimed on several occasions that its rockets
were aimed primarily at military targets in Israel. Our
research cannot prove that to be the case but it does give a
strong indication that Hizbullah’s claims may be true.”
Although Hizbullah’s Katyusha rockets were not
precision-guided, the proximity of Israeli military
positions to Arab communities “are within the margin of
error of the rockets fired by Hizbullah”, according to the
report. In most cases, such positions were located either
inside the community itself or a few hundred metres from it.
In
its recommendations, the Human Rights Association calls for
the removal of all Israeli military installations from
civilian communities.
(Again noteworthy is the fact that Israel has built several
weapons factories inside Arab communities, including in
Nazareth. Arab citizens are almost never allowed to work in
Israel’s vast military industries, so why build them there?
Part of the reason is doubtless that they provide another
pretext for confiscating Arab communities’ lands and
“Judaising” them. But is the criticism by Arab legislators
of “human shielding” another possible reason?)
The
report avoids dealing with the wider issue of whether the
Israeli army located in Jewish communities too during the
war. Ibrahim explains: “In part the reason was that we are
an Arab organisation and that directs the focus of our work.
But there is also the difficulty that Israeli Jews are
unlikely to cooperate with our research.”
Israel has longed boasted of its “citizen army”, and in
surveys Israeli Jews say they trust the military more than
the country’s parliament, government and courts.
Nonetheless, the report notes, there is ample evidence that
the army based itself in some Jewish communities too. As
well as the eyewitness account of the Human Rights Watch
researcher, it was widely reported during the war that 12
soldiers were killed when a Hizbullah rocket struck the
rural community of Kfar Giladi, close to the northern
border.
A
member of the kibbutz, Uri Eshkoli, recently told the
Israeli media: “We deserve a medal of honor for our
assistance during the war. We opened our hotel to soldiers
and asked for no compensation. Moreover, soldiers stayed in
the kibbutz throughout the entire war.”
In
another report, in the Guardian newspaper, a 19-year-old
British Jew, Danny Young, recounted his experiences
performing military service during the war. He lived on
Kibbutz Sasa, close to the border, which became an army rear
base. “We were shooting missiles from the foot of this
kibbutz,” he told the paper. “We were also receiving
Katyushas.”
So
far the Human Rights Association’s report has received
minimal coverage in the Hebrew media. “We are facing a very
difficult political atmosphere in Israel at the moment,”
Ibrahim told me. “Few people inside Israel want to hear that
their army and government broke international law in such a
flagrant manner.”
It
seems few in the West, even the guardians of human rights,
are ready to hear such a message either.
Jonathan Cook is a journalist and writer based in Nazareth,
Israel. His latest book, “Israel and the Clash of
Civilisations: Iraq, Iran and the Plan to Remake the Middle
East”, is published by Pluto Press. His website is
www.jkcook.net
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