Gita Hashemi on Tue, 9 Apr 2002 21:13:01 +0200 (CEST)
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[Nettime-bold] FWD: A Letter to the IDF's Paratrooper Commander
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Title: FWD: A Letter to the IDF's Paratrooper
Commander
From counterpunch.org.
----------------------------
April 8, 2002
A Letter to the IDF's Paratrooper
Commander
Colonel Aviv Kohavi, How Did You Become a War
Criminal?
By Dr. Neve
Gordon
To Colonel Aviv Kohavi
Brigade Commander
of the Israeli Defense Forces Paratroopers
I presume you remember me. In any event, I remember you. We first met
in the paratrooper brigade. I was a platoon sergeant in the corporals
company; you were a young platoon officer. Even then friends of mine
who were serving with you in the same post in Lebanon related that you
were a sensible, serious, and above all decent officer.
The better part of our acquaintance occurred, though, at Hebrew
University. We were studying towards our B.A. in Philosophy--you in
preparation for a career in the military, I as a human rights
activist. During that period we had more than one political
discussion. I couldn't help but admire you. I found you to be a
thinking person, imaginative, and judicious--quite different from the
typical army officer that one meets at the university, one who
registers merely to snatch a degree and to run off. Looking back, I
believe that you really enjoyed your studies, a number of which, it
should be noted, dealt with ethical theory.
Years have passed since we last met. You became the paratroopers'
brigade commander, I a lecturer in the department of politics and
government at Ben Gurion University. On Thursday, March 1, 2002 I once
again saw you, not face to face, but on television. You were on the
news program: the commander of the troops that entered Balata refugee
camp, near Nablus. You solemnly explained that at that very moment
your soldiers were transmitting a forceful message to the Palestinian
terrorists: the Israeli army will hunt them down in every nook and
cranny.
In the days after the interview, news began to trickle about what took
place in the camp: prior to the incursion the Israeli military reigned
terror on the inhabitants employing helicopters and tanks; then, Aviv,
you imposed a curfew on the camp, blew up the electric transmission
lines, cutting off electricity to 20,000 civilian inhabitants;
bulldozers ruined the water supply pipe lines. Your soldiers, Aviv,
then moved from house to house by smashing holes in the interior
walls; they destroyed furniture and other property, and riddled
bullets in water tanks on roof tops. The soldiers spread terror on the
inhabitants, most of whom were women, elderly, and children.
But that wasn't all. I learned that your soldiers also used
inhabitants as human shields. Also, in the first few hours of the
incursion the Palestinians had 120 wounded, and that you, Aviv,
refused to allow ambulances to enter and leave the camp.
There were, of course,
several battles in the camp during the incursion; two Palestinians and
one of your soldiers were killed. You also reported that you
confiscated weapons and that your operation prevented future terrorist
acts from happening. But you totally ignored the connection between
Israeli military violence perpetrated in the Occupied Territories and
Palestinian violence in Israel, as if the incursions into the camps
and the reign of terror that you and your soldiers imposed do not
drive Israel/Palestine into a blood bath from which none can
escape.
How, Aviv, do you think that
your incursion affected the children whom you locked up for hours with
other members of their families, while you searched their house and
blasted holes through their walls? Did your incursion contribute a
smithereen to peace, or did it instead spread seeds of hatred,
despondence, and death in the crowded, poverty stricken, hopeless
refugee camp?
I have not stopped thinking about you since that television interview,
trying to understand what was going on in your mind. What caused you
to lead your soldiers --soldiers of the paratrooper brigade -- to a
war against a civilian population?
Aviv, I am presently teaching a course entitled "The Politics of
Human Rights." One of the topics I discuss during the semester is
the intifada and its lessons with respect to human rights. From the
standpoint of international conventions, at least, your acts in Balata
constitute blatant violations of human rights. Such acts are, in fact,
war crimes.
Aviv, what happened to the sensible and judicious officer? How did you
become a war criminal?
Dr. Neve Gordon
Department of Political Science
Ben-Gurion University
Beer Sheva,
Israel
--
======
We must organize against the seige of Palestinian people by the
Israeli army. Our silence implicates us in the genocide.