The Israeli War Crime That Goes Unmentioned
By Jonathan Cook
June 02, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - Here set out in black and
white in the Israeli media is a moral conundrum that western politicians,
diplomats and international human rights organisations are resolutely failing to
address – and one I have been highlighting since 2006.
It was then that Israel implemented for the first time its
Dahiya doctrine – turning Lebanon back to the Stone Age. It launched an horrific
assault that wrecked Lebanon’s infrastructure, killed 1,300 Lebanese – most of
them, as ever in Israel’s wars, civilians – and made refugees of more than a
million inhabitants of the country’s south. The exercise has been repeated in
Gaza on a regular basis ever since.
Last month the New York Times kindly
published an Israeli press release masquerading as a news report that
the Israeli army had photographic evidence that Hizbollah was moving its
military bases into villages all over south Lebanon. The evidence was paltry to
say the least. And the New York Times, quite bafflingly, said it had
not been able to “independently verify” the information, as though it
lacked reporters in Lebanon who could visit the sites named by its correspondent
in far-away Tel Aviv.
The clear implication of the story was that, when the next war
with Lebanon arrives, as the Israeli army keeps promising is just around the
corner, Israel will be able to blame Hizbollah when its attacks kill mostly
civilians.
As Israel’s Haaretz newspaper pointed out – possibly
inadvertently – in a headline, the New York Times was doing Israel’s
propaganda work for it: “Israel’s secret weapon in the war against Hezbollah:
The New York Times”.
Although the NYT’s propaganda role was noted by
several observers, no one seemed to make the point that, if Hizbollah is only
now moving its bases into these villages, how can one make sense of
the prominent justification for the high civilian death toll in Lebanon in 2006?
Then Israel argued – and was backed by the UN and others – that the civilian
deaths were a result of Hizbollah’s “cowardly blending” with the civilian
population by firing rockets from built-up areas, though no evidence was
produced at the time.
Look at what Amos Harel, Haaretz’s military
correspondent, writes now:
The [New York] Times reports that Hezbollah, as
part of the lessons it drew in the Second Lebanon War, in 2006, moved its
“nature reserves” – its military outposts in the south – from open farmland
into the heart of the Shi’ite villages that lie close to the border with
Israel. That in itself is old news.
Tell that to Jan Egeland, who was the United Nations
Undersecretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs at the time (and later joined
Human Rights Watch), as well as all those who echoed his accusation against
Hizbollah of “cowardly blending”.
There is another, even more vital point unnoticed by most
observers but highlighted in Harel’s report for Haaretz. One of the
problems for those at the receiving end of these savage Israeli attacks has
been: how to respond. Or rather: how to respond within the confines of
international law. While Israel has been doing most of the killing, western
politicians, diplomats and human rights groups like Human Rights Watch and
Amnesty International have been more exercised by the efforts of Hizbollah and
Hamas to retaliate in kind.
The international law argument supposedly goes something like
this: Israel has the right to defend itself and so long as it is aiming for
military targets with its precision armaments and acts proportionately then it
is within its rights to launch attacks, whether civilians are killed or not.
The argument’s flip side goes like this: However terrible the
suffering endured by their respective populations under this barrage, Hizbollah
and Hamas have no right to respond with their imprecise rockets, whether they
are aiming for a military target or not, because they cannot be sure their
rockets will not hit civilians. In short, anything they fire over the border is
a war crime by definition.
If that sounds problematic to you, check out my own public
engagement with Sarah Leah Whitson of HRW back in 2006
debating this very issue.
The problem when dealing with asymmetrical confrontations is
that traditional interpretations of international law are rigged to the
advantage of the stronger, better-armed side.
So how does the Israeli army feel about Hizbollah’s efforts to
improve its rockets to avoid this international law problem. Haaretz’s
Harel explains what his military contacts have been telling him:
Israel is apparently deeply concerned by Hezbollah’s
effort to improve the accuracy of its rockets. The organization has in its
possession vast numbers of missiles and rockets – 130,000, according to the
latest estimates – but upgrading its capability is dependent on improving
the weapons’ accuracy, which would enable Hezbollah to strike effectively at
specific targets, including air force-base runways and power stations.
In other words, Israel is “deeply concerned” that Hizbollah
might soon be able to operate within the terms of international law as laid down
by official arbiters like the UN and HRW.
How is Hizbollah trying to upgrade its rockets? Its allies,
Iran and Syria’s Bashar Assad, are trying to deliver more sophisticated weapons
to it through Syrian territory. How does Israel feel about this? Harel reports:
“Israel is upset at the smuggling of weapons by the Assad regime in Syria to
Hezbollah.” In fact, we know Israel is “upset” because it keeps violating
Syria’s sovereign air space to launch attacks in Syria to stop convoys it claims
are transporting such weapons reaching Hizbollah. It is similarly blockading
Gaza to make sure upgraded, precise weapons do not get into Hamas’ hands.
So who will be to blame when Israel gets the next war with
Lebanon or Gaza it wants and Hizbollah or Hamas respond by firing
their imprecise rockets in retaliation? When Israeli civilians die under those
rockets, will Hizbollah and Hamas be responsible or will it be Israel’s fault?
We will doubtless hear the answer from the United Nations,
Human Rights Watch and the New York Times soon.
www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/.premium-1.656516
Jonathan Cook is a Nazareth- based journalist and winner
of the Martha Gellhorn Special Prize for Journalism - See more at: http://www.jonathan-cook.net/blog/2015-06-02/the-israeli-war-crime-that-goes-unmentioned/#sthash.kC5VDNua.uxfs&st_refDomain=t.co&st_refQuery=/htIbGAILRJ
Jonathan Cook is a Nazareth- based journalist and winner of
the Martha Gellhorn Special Prize for Journalism -
http://www.jonathan-cook.net