Mahzor

New York Public Library

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Sarajevo Haggadah

Mah Nishtanah

Sarajevo haggadah

Antaea Darom

Israeli women's art

Action

Torah as music

Ben Heine

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ceramic bowl

Mohammad Said Kalash, "Offering Reconciliation" exhibit (photo: Ilan Amihai)

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Punch and Judy/Pinchas and Jamila

Avi Katz

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David Grossman

Ben Heine

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Eldrige Street shul

Lower East Side

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Dove

Ben Heine

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Two birds

Hoda Jamal

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Israeli and Palestinian boys

from documentary, Promises

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Cat in the Hat

Yiddish version

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Daylight through the Wall

Banksy: graffiti art on Separation Wall

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Maurice Sendak's Brundibar set

New Victory Theater (photo: Nan Melville/NYT)

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Daniel Barenboim, West-Eastern Divan Orchestra

Palestinian-Israeli musical ensemble (photo: Kerstin Joensson/AP)

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Great Day on Eldrige Street

N.Y.'s klezmer greats celebrate shul rededication (photo: Leo Sorel)

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Joint Appeal for Peace

(Avi Katz)

Joint Appeal for Peace

Ketubah, Ancona, Italy (1772)

(Jewish Theological Seminary library)

Ancona ketubah

Archive for September, 2010

Israel Liberates ‘@Israel’ from Twitter Porn King

Wednesday, September 15th, 2010

fake_israel twitterThe Israeli government has “liberated” the Twitter account “@Israel” from the clutches of a Spanish porn entrepreneur, who found he couldn’t make any money off it due to the onslaught of anti-Israel attacks that greeted his every erotic tweet:

Israel has acquired the user name @israel on Twitter, the microblogging Internet service, from the Spanish owner of a pornographic Web site, in an unusual transaction intended to help Israel exercise more influence over its image.

The owner of the user name, Israel Meléndez, got it in 2007, when Twitter was in its infancy. He struggled to use his account, however, because every posting prompted a flood of anti-Semitic or anti-Israel comments from Twitter users, in a case of mistaken identity.

“My account was basically unused because I was getting dozens of replies every day from people who thought the account belonged to the state of Israel,” Mr. Meléndez said.

Now, Israel can tweet like mad to the world exploiting the wonder of social networking to disseminate hasbara world-wide.  For example, the current tweet trumpets a Gaza attack on the IDF using RPGs.  You won’t see any tweets about yesterday’s massacre of a 91 year old shepherd and two young boys who were grazing sheep near the border fence.  I guess the government of Israel’s tweets only chirp about the “good news” and leave out the bad.
@israel twitter
Apparently, Israel’s name didn’t come cheaply.  The government paid our pornographer quite handsomely to regain use of its proper name.  All for the greater good of Israel.  Its spokesperson had this to say about its former owner and the use to which it will now be put:

Yigal Palmor, a spokesman for the Israeli Foreign Ministry, confirmed the purchase. He declined to say how much Israel paid, but he said that “it was not pro bono.”

We thought we could put it to better use than he did

You know, there are those who might disagree and even say that Israel’s current use is pornography of a different sort.  Not that I’m among them, you understand.  Every country needs its hasbara–and Israel more than most.

Not to be outdone, some mischievous fellow has followed up on Israel’s coup by creating an ‘evil twin’ Twitter account @fake_israel.  Idleness is the devil’s playground, so they say.

IDF: Palestinian Civilian Killings=300; Military Prosecutions=0

Tuesday, September 14th, 2010

From 2006-2009, over 1,700 Palestinian civilians were killed by IDF fire in the Occupied Territories.  Leaving aside non-combatant deaths attributed to Operation Cast Lead, that leaves over 600 killings.  Of those, the Israeli human rights NGO demanded an investigation into 300 of these deaths.  Of these, how many do you think resulted in a military prosecution?  Ten?  Five?  One?  Would you believe, none?  Yes, I know you would you cynic.

The ever intrepid B’Tselem with impeccable timing calibrated to the Israeli-Palestinian peace talks underway today in Sharm, reports the shameful news (Haaretz news article and full report in pdf) that the IDF military prosecutor does a miserable job of investigating and prosecuting wrongful civilian deaths:

Soldiers who killed Palestinians in the Occupied Territories are almost never held accountable, even if the circumstances raise a grave suspicion that they acted criminally…The army refrains, as a rule, from conducting a Military Police investigation in cases in which soldiers kill Palestinian civilians. In addition, the research shows that the Judge Advocate Generals’ Office routinely procrastinates in making decisions on files for many months, even years.

A word of explanation: the army does conduct an investigation (or more accurately a report) of such killings, but it is done in the field by the unit which committed the act.  You can imagine what kind of report will result from this sort of cozy self-interest.  Before the second Intifada, the IDF held a formal investigation of every such killing.  But then it stopped doing so, by classifying the Territories as in a state of “armed conflict,” which essentially meant that they were an ongoing battlefield.  This left the policing of such incidents in the hands of the commanders in the field.

Of the 600 deaths, B’Tselem demanded a formal military investigation into the deaths of half these civilians.  In only 15% (23) of the cases, did the military police open an investigation.  In the rest, it either declined or has yet to make any decision.  In those few cases when it did agree to investigate it did so after inordinate delay, thus impairing the investigation.  It isn’t unusual for a year or more to elapse from the date of the incident.  After the police complete their investigation and forward it to the military prosecutor for a decision on whether to charge anyone another delay of months or years ensues.  Finally this most telling statement from B’Tselem on its rate of success:

None of the cases in which B’Tselem referred to the JAG’s office led to criminal charges.

The Israeli NGO further analyzes the reasoning behind the IDF’s unwillingness to investigate itself:

…Investigations are not opened even where there is a grave suspicion that the law has been broken. Also, analysis of the files shows that the authorities’ interpretation of the events is based solely on the results of an operational inquiry and the statements of the soldiers, without any reliance on the eyewitness testimony of other persons and on other evidence that contradicts the soldiers’ position…This policy grants immunity to soldiers and officers,

Some of my readers will undoubtedly shrey about how mean and one-sided my reporting is concerning Israel and the IDF, which I of course dispute. But if you want to avoid reading posts like this do what you have to do to instill a discipline of accountability within the IDF. Reinstitute formal military investigations for every civilian killing, investigate them seriously, prosecute a few, send a soldier to prison once in a while. Then you may not have to read reports or posts like this one.

A final note: there were several egregious incidents in which civilians were killed and the circumstances were so blatant (the Aramin murder is one example) that the IDF DID open its own investigation without the prompting of B’Tselem. These few cases were not counted towards the numbers in the group’s report since it never requested an investigation.

Blog RSS Feed Not Updating Properly

Tuesday, September 14th, 2010

I regret to say that this blog’s RSS feed is not updating properly when using RSS readers like Google Reader, Feedburner or Feedblitz.  If you’re subscribed using these services, you’re probably not seeing my most recent posts.  I don’t know why this is happening.  Usually in situations like this there is a plugin conflict or it may have to do with issues related to my server in which the site has been down momentarily due to reaching memory limits.

At any rate, if you’re reading with a reader and it’s not updating properly I can suggest subscribing directly to my own notification plugins (per post or daily digest) which are updating reguarly with e mail notices.

Again, I apologize for the inconvenience.  And if you have any technical ideas why this may be happening or how to correct it let me know.

UPDATE: Thanks Jonathan for figuring out that W3 Total Cache plugin prevents the RSS feed from updating properly.  Other users take care.  Don’t allow it to cache your RSS feed unless you want trouble.

All Smiles at Sharm

Tuesday, September 14th, 2010
sharm peace talks

Hillary, Bibi and Mahmoud yuk it up at Sharm peace talks (Khaled El Fiqi/EPA)

Hillary Clinton and Bibi Netanyahu are shown all smiles today at the Sharm el Sheikh dog and pony show, in which Israel and the PA are attempting, with the intercession of various powers and allies like the U.S. Egypt, and Jordan, not to completely torpedo the chances of peace for the next five or ten years.  Yes, you can tell from my tone that I’m extremely skeptical.

First, you have the settlement freeze issue.  Bibi’s not going to extend it and Abbas claims he’ll walk out if he doesn’t.  But even if they overcome this biggie looming in the next two weeks (the deadline is September 26th), they’ve got to get down to tachliss sometime.  And man, that won’t be easy.

But the really egregious passage in today’s N.Y. Times report on the talks revealed just how clueless the American negotiators are:

Mrs. Clinton said she believed the two sides could find a creative solution to the impasse – steps that would allow the Palestinians to accept less than a full extension of the moratorium or could enable Mr. Netanyahu to sell an extension to his domestic constituency.

Among the options, American officials said, would be Palestinian recognition of Israel as the Jewish homeland..

Why, sure…the Palestinians will agree to this in a heartbeat.  Something not even all Jews agree with by the way.  And while we’re at it why don’t we demand that Israel recognize Palestine as a Muslim nation as well?

Yes, they’ll fudge things by using the term “Jewish homeland” rather than “Jewish nation,” assuming the Palestinians can agree to the vaguer term homeland.  But really, I have a much more fair formulation: let the Palestinians and Israeli agree together that Israel is a homeland for its Jewish AND Arab citizens.  First, it clearly IS.  Second, you simply cannot demand of the PA that it recognize Israel as a Jewish homeland while asking that it ignore the fact that there are 1-million Israeli Arab citizens for whom this state is their homeland.  The families of many of them predate the settlement of most Israeli Jews in this land.  So what does that make them?  Chopped-liver?

There is an air of delusion in these talks.  Granted that George Mitchell and perhaps even Hillary have the best of intentions and perhaps even the skill to pull this off.  But when you begin with premises like the one outlined above, it does make you wonder what they could be thinking.  Further, when they can be seen grasping at straws like this one, it makes you realize just how far apart both sides are and how impossible it will likely be to bridge those differences.

As far as I’m concerned, the ethnic definition of Israel or Palestine is something that is besides the point.  Why should recognizing Israel as Jewish even be part of the negotiations?  Yes, perhaps you reassure Israeli Jews to an extent if you get Palestinians to concede on this point.  But are the Americans even thinking about the unease with which this will be greeted by Israeli Palestinians AND those in the PA negotiating this deal?  The fact that they are grasping at irrelevancies is not a good sign.

One thing that is a good sign is that Mitchell flies afterward to Syria in an effort to sound out the parties about advancing Israel-Syria peace talks.  Given the saber-rattling on the northern border in the past few weeks, any such meetings can only be for the good.  The key is whether Israel is serious about peace with Syria.  Assad has already signalled his willingness to sue for peace as long as Israel returns the Golan.  It is Israel that has dithered, commenced a few wars in the interim, etc.  It’s up to Bibi and his far-right coalition.  As I wrote above, I’m dubious that he either can or wants to pull this off.  But who knows, if Obama pushes hard enough (unlikely I realize), a miracle might happen.

Shin Bet Climbs Down from Espionage Charges Against Kamm, Said; Stands Firm Against Makhoul (So Far)

Monday, September 13th, 2010

Israeli prosecutors are close to offering Anat Kamm a plea deal that would remove the charge of espionage, which carries a possible life sentence.  She took military documents while she served as a clerk in a senior IDF commander’s office and passed them to Uri Blau, who used them to write several stories that embarrassed the IDF.  One in particular showed that Kamm’s commanding officer specifically violated a Supreme Court ruling prohibiting the targeted killing of Palestinian militants if there was a danger of harming civilians or there were other options of apprehending them short of murder.  She also passed documents which revealed that the IDF planned a scorched earth attack on Gaza (before Cast Lead began) that would not spare civilians.  Though the military censor approved the story Blau wrote about this, it was later disapproved and the article was killed before publication.

Under the plea deal, she would be charged with passing a secret document to an unapproved source.  This too is still a very serious charge with a possible 15 year sentence.

Though the Shabak would never concede this, dropping the charge of espionage directly contradicts Yuval Diskin’s repeated claims that Kamm damaged the security of the state and revealed secret information that would be a “wet dream” for any foreign intelligence agency.  This represents yet another of many “climb downs” for which Diskin and the Shabak are noted.

They say the Canadian Mounties “always get their man.”  The Shabak hardly ever gets their man.  They just hold him or her in detention and hope to make a lesser charge stick with varying degrees of success.  Chaim Pearlman faced down the secret police and is now free and faces no charges or trial though he is suspected of murdering several Palestinian civilians in his very own personal Jewish settler terror campaign.

Haaretz reports that there is a legal provision under which Kamm would not guilty of any crime at all:

There is also a legal defense enshrined in law for someone who has transferred information to another person without authorization. The law states that if a person has honest intentions and intends to change public policy by legal means, it is not considered a crime.

omar said on release from israeli prison

Omar Said welcomed after his release from Israeli prison

But the only way for her to test whether a court would apply it to her case is for her to go to trial.  She has already served about nine months of house arrest.

In an unrelated security development, Omar Said, once accused along with Ameer Makhoul of engaging in espionage against the State in collaboration with Hezbollah, was released from prison today.  He had served five months of a longer sentence which he agreed to when the Shabak offered him a plea on a lesser charge. In his case too, the Shabak dropped the most severe charge of recruiting Israeli Arabs to spy for Hezbollah against Israel.  Note that in this case the Shabak didn’t have to prove anything to a court of law since Said copped a plea, which relieved the security agency of having to prove its case.

As Idan Landau writes so powerfully in his Hebrew post on this story, it looks like the mountain (that is, Shabak) gave birth to a mouse.  It called Said and Makhoul conspirators in terror, traitors, etc.  Headlines blared the charges. Rightists proclaimed all Arabs to be a Fifth Column.  What did all amount to?  Much of nothing.  Or again in Landau’s memorable phrase, the balloon that is Shabak emptied of all its hot air.

Did Said’s alleged crime warrant “disappearing” him for weeks after his arrest from family and attorneys?  Giving the Shabak an opportunity to both hold him incommunicado and abuse him?  Is this the same dangerous man who served only a  third of his original sentence and was let off on “good behavior?”

No, Said fell afoul of a comprehensive campaign by the security service to criminalize Israeli Palestinian nationalism and political activism.  That is the true crime.  The Shabak’s only problem?  Israeli “democracy” hasn’t quite caught up with it and hasn’t yet labelled political activism a crime.  That’s why it must dredge up these ridiculous charges, trumpet them before all Israel, and then fold it’s poker-hand quietly later.  We should remember, as Landau notes, that no less a figure than Diskin himself broadcast in 2007 his intent to target Israeli Palestinian nationalists even though they had committed no crime.  For him, the imaginary crime of “damaging the Jewish democratic character of Israel” would do as grounds for persecution.  Clearly, this policy found favor in the eyes of the political echelon, as Diskin has not only not been criticized–on the contrary he has been lionized as a successful intelligence chief.

I am proud of the role playing by this blog and others in breaking the vow of silence imposed by Shabak on this case.  They didn’t want any Israeli to know that they’d disappeared Said and Makhoul.  It was thanks to us and the efforts of many others that the secret police were forced to concede that they had whisked them away (in Makhoul’s case in the dead of night) from family, friends and community.  Together, the blogs and other activists told the world we knew what had happened and would not allow it.  Shabak eventually folded on this as well.  Or to be more exact, the courts realized the charade and allowed the secret to be exposed.

But justice has not yet been served in the case of Ameer Makhoul.  He remains in prison and his next court date is September 16th.  Though he has not yet been tried, he has already been imprisoned longer than Said and has fought a running battle with prison authorities demanding that they provide him the same rights criminal suspects are afforded.  In Israel, security suspects are provided far fewer rights than criminal suspects.  Again, the Shabak has not proved its case against Makhoul and I doubt it ever will if the detainee refuses to plea bargain.  Though it appears he can be held almost indefinitely by the security agency by stretching out his trial over a long period.

In case you’re wondering what might make Makhoul a more dangerous man than Said in the eyes of Shabak: the former supports the BDS movement.  And we have seen consistently that a government that imagines Iran poses an existential threat to the State can also imagine that BDS does the same.  And if Israel is prepared to go to war against Iran, it is certainly willing to wage a slightly less intense form of warfare against figures like Makhoul.  The truth is that BDS not only angers the powers that be in Israel, it actually poses, in their eyes, a supreme danger to it.  It may be hard for some to believe this, but alas it is true.

Paranoia strikes deep, and into your heart, Israel’s leaders, it will creep.

IDF Officer Accused of Manslaughter in Cast Lead

Monday, September 13th, 2010
idf officer accused of manslaughter in cast lead

IDF officer, C.S., accused of manslaughter for murdering unarmed Palestinian women holding white flags during Cast Lead

The Israeli military prosecutor has filed the most serious charge ever against an IDF officer regarding the Gaza massacre, Operation Cast Lead.  The charge of manslaughter against the Givati staff sergeant known only by the initials, C.S., (from his light-skinned complexion and blond hair, he appears to be of Russian origin) in the military indictment as released to the public, comes two years after the war and in the aftermath of the Goldstone Report.  In fact, one could say the officer is the equivalent of the Yom Kippur goat sent to Azazel, a sacrificial victim whose guilt will assuage international pressure and prevent the indictment of higher-ups who, by right, are the ones who really should be in the dock.

Not that C.S.’ behavior is anything worth defending.  The accusation is that while positioned next to his commanding officer he shot two Palestinian women holding white flags and that he did so without authorization from the commander.

Here is the victims’ family’s account of the incident from Ynetnews:

Youssef Abu Hajaj will never forget the day he lost his mother and sister. In the early hours of January 4, 2009, his family’s home near Gaza City was shelled. “My 13-year-old niece was injured so we rushed through the trees and bushes to the Safadi family’s home. We were looking for a hiding place a little further from the tanks,” he told Ynet.

Then came the incident over which an Israel Defense Forces soldier is slated to stand trial for Operation Cast Lead’s most severe violation, and is likely to face charges of manslaughter.

Hajaj said residents of the neighborhood were instructed to evacuate the area in the afternoon. “My sister Majda and Ahmad Safadi, the man who we were staying with, were waving white flags that were cut from sheets. We walked some 400 meters and then we were fired at.

“We fled again in the direction of the Safadi family home, but some 300 or 400 meters later, as we were returning in a group of 27 people, half of which were children – they opened fire at us again.”

He said his 35-year-old sister Majda, who was carrying a white flag, was hit in the shooting. “The fire was so intense that we had to leave her behind. My mother shouted, ‘Majda has fallen, Majda has fallen’. We prayed for her and kept going. Some 100 meters on there was another blow of fire, and this time, the bullets hit my mother Raya, 64-years-old, in her chest. She collapsed and we were forced to leave her behind as well.”

Hajaj said there was nothing unusual about their movement. “We were in a completely open area, but they still opened fire. We returned to the Safadi family’s home until the end of the war, and all attempts to coordinate the removal of the bodies were unsuccessful. Only at the end of the war, over two weeks afterwards, did we bury my mother and my sister.”

In his defense, the officer claims he felt the group of unarmed Gaza civilians waving white flags and walking toward him were a potential threat to his comrades and that he fired at their lower body.  The mother who was killed was shot in the chest.

C.S. was only questioned about the incident by investigators in 2009, doubtless as a result of the Goldstone Report.  Were it not for that and the testimonies compiled by B’Tselem of this and other incidents, the officer would’ve gotten away with impunity.  A lieutenant colonel and captain will also be disciplined in this incident.  Most likely their membership in the officer’s club will be suspended for a week (that’s a joke, I realize there likely isn’t an IDF officer’s club).

Sergeant C.S. must feel gratified to know that there is a Facebook group established to defend his honor, Alone Against All: Supporting S. in His Legal Fight.  One commenter on the Wall notes they explored NGOs that might help but that “there weren’t many whose mission was to help soldiers in this type of trouble.”  Hmmm.  I wonder why.  Perhaps they haven’t heard of Honenu, which is right up their alley.  Settler Assassin?  Call Honenu.  Killed an Arab or prime minister in cold blood?  Call Honenu.  Committed a war crime?  Call Honenu.

Ynet misleadingly labels this the worst case from Cast Lead, when in reality it is the worst one in which charges have been filed.  Goldstone and B’Tselem have identified other cases even worse (notably the Samouni massacre, the mosque bombing, and the UNWRA white phosphorus attack) but no charges have yet been filed in those cases.

Reasonable people will feel a sense of gratitude to Israeli NGOs like B’Tselem without which this case would’ve gone unnoticed.  For right-wing Israelis however, this is precisely the reason such NGOs should be driven out of existence.  I know which side I’m on.

H/t to reader Yakov.

IDF: Give ‘Em the Finger

Sunday, September 12th, 2010
abused palestinian prisoner

The most moral army in the world and the way it treats its captives

The IDF military prosecutor has arrested several soldiers in the ultra-Orthodox Nachal brigade for abusing a Palestinian prisoner last January near Jenin. They can be seen in several mobile phone images pointing their rifles at a bound Palestinian prisoner and giving him the finger with both hands.

The story was originally reported by Yediot in August and the IDF explained that the reason the soldiers were detained was the “ethical siege” which Israel faced in the aftermath of the Goldstone report. Defense lawyers claimed they were detained because of Israel’s fear of “what they would say in Europe.”  He also claimed that far worse images circulate on the internet of IDF soldiers standing by corpses of Palestinians like trophy kills.  Yet these soldiers were not prosecuted and his client was.

The Yediot coverage noted the international outcry that accompanied the release of the images of another IDF soldier, Eden Aberjil, as she posed next to blindfolded bound prisoners with a primping pose.  Apparently, the Israeli military feels it has less of a margin of tolerance for ethical excesses–at least those that are captured in the media and broadcast in Israel and around the world.

In other words, these acts do not offend the average Israeli who sees them as a small price to pay for the so-called security offered by the IDF to its fellow citizens.  The army only takes these acts seriously because they are taken seriously outside Israel.  Were it left to Israel alone, the soldiers would be home sleeping in their warm beds while the Palestinian would no doubt be rotting in some Israeli jail.  Indeed, the prosecutor acknowledges that the act itself isn’t terribly serious, but the assault Israel faces for its moral lapses IS–hence the arrests and imprisonment.

idf toruture screenshot

Screenshot from Channel 2 video documenting IDF torture of Palestinian detainee

The lawyer for two of the soldiers argued there should be no criminal charges filed since “no one was harmed in the incident and there was no intent to humiliate [the victim].”  The lawyer went on to argue that a criminal prosecution would cause “great harm” to other soldiers.  Really.  It seems the IDF has no appreciation of the dignity of Palestinians and only acknowledges the dignity of its own soldiers, even if they show none to “the enemy.”  After Palestinians, even bound and gagged ones, don’t deserve respect.  I wonder if this is inscribed in the IDF ethics manual prepared by that distinguished Israeli ethicist Menachem Kremnitzer?  I wonder what the rabbi of these Haredi soliders would say about their behavior.  Does halacha permit such gratuitous degradation of non-Jews?  If so, what is the worth of the so-called Jewish morality represented by their belief system (which thankfully is not the belief system embraced by all Jews)?

Channel 2 TV interviewed the Palestinian victim who recounted how the soldiers laughed at him as they demeaned him.  The TV news story also reveals the soldiers were originally investigated for dealing drugs.  When their cellphones were confiscated these images were discovered.  Strange to have Haredim selling drugs.  These must be the ultra-Orthodox who’ve fallen off the wagon.

The station also uncovered a separate troubling cell phone video showing a Palestinian prisoner in intense pain and begging for mercy because the plastic handcuffs on his wrists are too tight, cutting off his circulation.  On the video he moans in Arabic and basic Hebrew:

Soldier, soldier, excuse me…It’s the…It’s the…I beg you.  Hurts.  Soldier, it’s the plastic [handcuffs].  Soldier, please [screams in agony].

The TV news reporter notes that despite the pleas, the soldiers monitoring the detainee stood by and did nothing.  The reporter also notes there is a second video he has not yet been able to procure which contains even worse torture scenes.  Let’s keep in mind that this is not unusual.  This is a totally accidental event which came to public notice by happenstance.  You can imagine how many other Occupation scenes like this one occur virtually every day but whose images either never see the light of day or are not recorded at all, except in the minds of victim and perpetrator (if at all).

Shabak Caught With Its Pants Down…Again

Sunday, September 12th, 2010
Biderman cartoon

'In the Dungeons of Shabak': Yuval Diskin portrayed in his office and the dungeons below... (Biderman)

I’ve recounted here an earlier scandal involving the third-highest ranking Shabak officer, “Claude,” who not only fudged on his departmental budget and overspent by hundreds of thousands of dollars, but slept with a married female subordinate, promoted her, and then demoted her husband.  At the time this scandal was reported, Yuval Diskin, the head of said house of ill-repute, claimed he followed proper procedures, investigated fully, etc., etc.  The fact of the matter is that the randy culprit was only disciplined when the cuckholded husband filed a formal civil service complaint against the officer.  Just last week, the independent investigation expelled him from Shabak service for three years.

My question: why not forever?  Does the Israeli civil service believe that someone in such a trusted and sensitive position protecting the security of the State should be allowed to act in such a way and get a slap on the wrist of a three-year suspension from the intelligence services?  Well, at least they didn’t allow him to continue serving, which is what Diskin’s original proposal was.

Now we have yet another sex scandal (Hebrew): a senior Shin Bet officer, N. (with the equivalent rank of Brig. Gen.), carried on an affair with a female subordinate.  Then he had the audacity to appoint himself to the committee evaluating her for a promotion.  The offender himself was up for a major promotion that would’ve brought him the rank of Major General.

Not only can’t these guys keep it in their pants, they haven’t the least sensitivity to ethical issues.  This goes to a fundamental machismo within certain male Israeli circles especially involving men in positions of power in the military, politics and business worlds.  You have only to look at the cases of Haim Ramon and Moshe Katsav as recent examples.  The Israeli poet and peace activist Yitzhak Laor has also been accused of such predatory sexual behavior.

And lest anyone think I’m singling out Israeli males or the Israeli intelligence services for such opprobrium, let’s recall the CIA’a Algeria station chief accused of drugging and raping multiple Algerian women during the course of his “service” in that country.  Having power over people intoxicates some male egos and allows them to cross the boundaries of civilized behavior.  Apparently this happens more more frequently in Israel, and naturally in its security service as well.

Diskin perhaps learned a lesson from his shameful slap on the wrist that he offered as “punishment” for “Claude,” the first offender.  He immediately sought the second predator’s resignation.  Though the article does say that the initial complaint in this case was brought to the civil service commission (which is how Claude met his end), so it’s possible that even in this case Diskin wouldn’t act until an independent body forced his hand.

As a result of the resignation, the civil service case complaint against N. has been closed.  Hence, he will likely move on to some other employment (much like Katsav who left behind a long list of victims even before he became president), likely at an equivalent senior position, where he will continue similar behavior.

What does it tell you about the managerial skills of Diskin that he taps a sexual predator for promotion to a senior Shabak post?  And is it any wonder, given that the Shabak itself in some ways preys on its victims, both Jewish and Palestinian, often without any serious proof of a security offense?

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