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

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Archive for January, 2011

Bergman’s Critique of al-Mabouh Hit in GQ

Sunday, January 9th, 2011

Ronen Bergman has expanded on his article for Yediot of a few weeks ago in a long essay for GQ, which is one of the most comprehensive profiles I’ve read of the Mossad hit on Mahmoud al-Mabouh.  Until now, I don’t believe anyone knew that the Mossad had actually made a prior failed attempt on al-Mabouh’s life also in Dubai.  Further, while many believed the assassination of a Syrian general and confidant of Bashar Assad was the work of the Mossad, Bergman confirms this and reveals that the victim ran the country’s nuclear program.  If true, this offers a hitherto unknown and potent motive for the Mossad to assassinate him.

One of the values of the article is that Bergman describes, in al-Mabouh’s words, one of the operations he carried out in which he and an accomplice killed an IDF soldier.  The Hamas operative describes in cold-blooded detail and with great pride how his partner shot the young boy in the back seat of the car they’d used to pick him up on the highway.  Until now, few people got a real sense of who al-Mabouh was, and he wasn’t a nice guy.  But, when you come right down to it, was al-Mabouh that much different than Dagan himself?  Weren’t they both warriors on behalf of their people?  And aren’t all such warriors fundamentally flawed?

Bergman retells the story of the famous photo hanging in his office, a story which has always troubled me:

Several Mossad operatives who have attended meetings in Dagan’s office describe a ritual that he goes through when preparing a team for a dangerous mission. During the meeting, Dagan points to a large photograph hanging on his office wall of a bearded Jew wrapped in a prayer shawl, kneeling on the ground with his arms in the air. The man’s fists are clenched, and his piercing eyes look straight ahead. Next to him stand two German SS officers, one holding a club and the other a pistol. “This man,” Dagan says, “was my grandfather, Dov Ehrlich.” He then explains that shortly after the photo was taken, on October 5, 1942, his grandfather was murdered by the Nazis along with his family and thousands of other Jews in the small Polish town of Lukow.

“Look at this photograph,” Dagan tells the Caesarea fighters. “This is what must guide us and lead us to act on behalf of the State of Israel. I look at the picture and vow that I will do everything I can to ensure that something like this will never happen again.”

First, I have wondered how the grandchild of a Holocaust victim could ever find a photo of his relative at the precise moment of his execution.  While it is possible, the odds of it happening seem almost infinitesimal.  Rather, the entire enterprise smacks of an actor’s prop, a coach’s pep talk before a big game in which he uses a particularly heart-wrenching story to evoke the emotional response his players will need to succeed in their hour of execution.

I was also troubled, even if the picture was genuine, that the child of a victim would display it in such a public way and exploit the memory of his grandfather in such a way.  If it were me, such trauma would be a deeply personal matter.  I would discuss it, perhaps even use it to motivate others.  But displaying one’s own grandfather the moment before he died?  There is something cold and brutal about it.  Yes, I understand that for Dagan there is nothing more sacred than the mission to safeguard his people; so that exploiting his grandfather’s memory would be the means justifying the end.  But still it’s too much for me to comprehend.  I’d prefer my sorrow to be private, and not ostentatiously displayed to an entire nation as Dagan’s has.

Much of the rest of the article’s content is pretty inside stuff and more interesting to those truly interested in cloak and dagger and how such covert operations are executed.

But towards the end of the piece is where Bergman steps back and analyzes the repercussions of the assassination for the Mossad and Israel.  In contrast to Israeli intelligence analysts when they speak to the domestic audience and sing Meir Dagan‘s praises as Haaretz’s Ari Shavit did on Mabat yesterday, calling him the “greatest James Bond in the world,” Bergman takes a much more measured approach.  And this is where he shines.  He describes the hubris of the Mossad in its planning and execution of the operation:

…The more fundamental errors committed by the team had less to do with cloak-and-dagger disguises than with a kind of arrogance that seems to have pervaded the planning and execution of the mission.

Despite the fact that Dubai is a hostile environment—a distant Arab state with ties to Iran—many details of the mission suggest the Mossad treated it as if they were operating inside a base [friendly] country.

…One of the most serious mistakes made by the planners of the operation—certainly the one that caused the greatest embarrassment to the Mossad and to Israel—involved the use of forged foreign identities…Whenever the Mossad is found out, as has happened from time to time, a major diplomatic scandal erupts.

…What the blown identities of the operatives illustrate more than anything is the now seemingly insurmountable problem posed by twenty-first-century counterespionage systems. False identities and cover stories are no longer any match for well-placed security cameras, effective passport control, and computer software that can almost instantly track communications and financial transactions.

Here is the money passage in the entire piece, which gets at the fundamental flaw underlying not only the Dubai “job,” as Bergman calls it, but the entire premise of the Mossad.  There is also a bombshell below which I don’t believe has been previously exposed:

Why did the Mossad permit things to go so wrong in Dubai? In a word, the answer is leadership. Because Dagan refashioned the Mossad in his own image, and because he drove out anyone who was willing to question his decisions, there was no one in the agency to tell him that the Dubai operation was badly conceived and badly planned. They simply did not believe that a minnow in the world of intelligence services such as Dubai would be any match for Israel’s Caesarea [the name of the top-secret unit from which the assassins emerged] fighters.

As one very senior German intelligence expert told me: “The Israelis’ problem has always been that they underestimate everyone—the Arabs, the Iranians, Hamas. They are always the smartest and think they can hoodwink everyone all the time. A little more respect for the other side—even if you think he is a dumb Arab or a German without imagination—and a little more modesty would have saved us all from this embarrassing entanglement.”

The Dubai fiasco caused a great deal of damage to Israel, to the Mossad, and to its relations with other Western intelligence organizations. It led to unprecedented revelations of Mossad personnel and methods, far more than any previous bungled operation. A number of states who believe that their passports were forged or otherwise misused by the agency have expelled Mossad representatives. The British response in particular was furious. And Israel’s long-standing security-and-intelligence cooperation with Germany has also been dealt a hugely damaging blow.

In early June, the head of the Caesarea unit in the Mossad—who had been considered the leading contender to eventually replace Dagan—offered his resignation. As for Dagan’s future, before Dubai he had hoped that the liquidation of Al-Mabhouh would ensure yet another extension of his tenure as director of the agency. But that has not come to pass…And so the Mossad “with a knife between its teeth” [the term Ariel Sharon used when appointing Dagan to his job] likely is entering another period of confusion and self-doubt.

“There is no doubt Dagan received an organization on the verge of coma and brought it back to its feet,” one Mossad veteran of many years told me…”The problem is that multiplying its volume of activity many times over came with the price of compromising on security protocols. And along with success came hubris. Together, they brought the Dubai debacle. And now, in some areas, his successor will find a Mossad even worse off than Dagan found in 2002.”

When Bergman published a Hebrew version of this story he did not include the information that the director the Caesarea unit had offered his resignation.  But this an important indication that, despite popular opinion within Israel, the operation was a failure as Bergman states.  While Israel was crowing over the success and its apologists around the world and here in the comment threads were trumpeting the fact that Israel had rid the world of a bad guy, within the political leadership another stock taking was occurring.  Someone seems to have heard the massive outcry from Israel’s outraged allies whose citizens were compromised and endangered.

Palestinian Attempts to Buy Bankrupt East Jerusalem Real Estate Project, Debtholders and Residents Scandalized

Sunday, January 9th, 2011
nof tzion protest

Rightist protestors' placards: 'Nof Tzion is our (Jewish) home.' 'Jerusalem is Jewish, not Palestinian.' 'Don't sell Jerusalem to Palestinians.'

The East Jerusalem real estate  project known as Nof Tzion has been in deep financial difficult for months.  Then along came a white knight who offered to buy it, invest in it and pay off the outstanding loans of debt holders (at 60 agurot on the shekel).  The buyer’s attorney was Dov Weisglass, former confidant of Ariel Sharon.  All appeared to be glatt kosher.  That is, until the debt holders and residents of Nof Tzion discovered who the lead investor of the Cyprus-based venture was:, Basher Al-Masri, a Palestinian businessman.  Then all hell broke loose:

“This is an essential test of Zionism,” a Nof Zion resident said.  ”It would be the first time that Jewish land would be sold to a Palestinian.”

The irony seems lost to her that the founding of what became Israel was based on the purchase of land (back in the days when Jews actually bought land from Palestinians rather than stealing it) from what were then known as “Arabs.”  What’s good for the goose should be good for the gander, no?  And what does she mean by “Jewish” land?  How can a piece of land be intrinsically Jewish or anything else?  Did God say when he created it that only a Jew could ever own it?

At any rate, pure business, which is what this should deal should be if Israel is based on a capitalist rather than a Jewish cronyist model, seems to have taken a back seat to Jewish jingoism.  Another complicating factor was that one of the partners in the failed venture is the brother of Jerusalem’s nationalist, anti-Palestinian mayor.  It would look bad to the mayor and his political backers for a Jewish venture to be sold to a Palestinian.  A decisive vote on accepting the Palestinian offer has been postponed. And now there are rumors of an American-Jewish white knight whose aim is to torpedo the Palestinian offer.

Whatever racialist motives there were for delaying a vote and proceeding with Al-Masri’s offer weren’t reflected in the buyer’s own statement of his interest and intent:

This is business.  I’m no politician.  But rather a businessman of Palestinian nationality who knows how to work.  If my business benefits my own people, then I feel even better.

What alarms the Jewish investors and residents is that Al-Masri plans to complete the construction of the remaining 300 units in the complex and sell them to middle-class Palestinian buyers.  The Palestinian portion of the development would be separated physically, according to the description offered by Ynet, from the Jewish portion.  One of the fears being bruited about is that if Al-Masri does take over the project he will refuse to sell to Jews out of Palestinian nationalist motives.

No one yet knows the identity of the Jewish investor-spoiler who’s trying to take the project out from under Al-Masri.  There is a rumor that it may be Sheldon Adelson, though I don’t know how much weight to give to it.  Of course, Irving Moskowitz is another possibility though I believe he lives in Israel now and I’m not sure I’d describe him as “American” as the article described the mystery man.

If the Palestinian offer is spurned then I think it becomes impossible to say that Jerusalem isn’t an apartheid city.  If parts of the city are inalienably Jewish and may not be purchased by a Palestinian even under the terms of Israel’s capitalist system, then what else can you call it?

Democratic Congresswoman Severely Wounded, Chief Federal Judge Murdered in Arizona Rampage

Saturday, January 8th, 2011

Gbrielle Giffords with her astronaut husband, Mark Kelly, at happier times (NY Times)

Horrible news today of a shooting rampage in Tuscon, AZ in which a troubled 20 year-old with vague political motives shot and killed six, including chief federal judge, John Roll and severely wounded Cong. Gabrielle Giffords, a centrist Democrat, who was shot in the brain.  Her doctors say she will survive, but they have no idea what level of brain damage there might be.

From news reports quoting the rabbi who married her, it appears Giffords is Jewish.  It’s not yet known whether there were anti-Semitic motives to the attack.  Though the fact that he killed seemingly at random might preclue that theory.

Ironically, in order to be elected in Republican-leaning district, she had to embrace gun rights.  But she voted in favor of the health care bill and opposed Arizona’s draconian laws criminalizing being an immigrant there.  At an earlier similar constituent meeting police arrested a man who was armed with a pistol.  Giffords had received death threats, as had the federal judge.

During the recent Congressional campaign, Sarah Palin’s website featured Congressional districts represented by Democrats along with a bulls-eye targeting them.  The bulls-eyes, for some reason, were later removed.  In fact, the Congresswoman had this to say about being targeted:

…Giffords said last week in an interview:   “We’re on Sarah Palin’s targeted list, but the thing is that the way she has it depicted has the crosshairs of a gun sight over our district.   When people do that, they have to realize that there are consequences to that action.”

jared loughner's gun

From Jared Loughner's MySpace page

The killer, Jason Loughner, is 20 years old.  Somehow he appears to have procured a semiautomatic weapon for his killing spree.  His political views are rambling, incoherent, profoundly alienated and violent, though a friend who hadn’t seen him in seven years tweeted that when she knew him his views were quite left-wing.  They must’ve changed in the interim, as he lists Mein Kampf as one of his favorite books (along with the Communist Manifesto, go figure).

Many Democrats are blaming Tea Party rhetoric for the violent tone of political discourse in the country.  But the killer’s motivations appear confused.  It should be said though that many of his general views echo those of the Tea Party.

Arizona also seems to be a place that encourages the sort of hatred that must’ve fueled this carnage.  Today’s NY Times carries a story about the Repubican attorney general who railroaded a measure through the legislature that essentially criminalizes Chicano ethnic studies programs, which it defines thus:

The Arizona law warns school districts that they stand to lose 10 percent of their state education funds if their ethnic-studies programs are found not to comply with new state standards. Programs that promote the overthrow of the United States government are explicitly banned, and that includes the suggestion that portions of the Southwest that were once part of Mexico should be returned to that country.

Also prohibited is any promotion of resentment toward a race. Programs that are primarily for one race or that advocate ethnic solidarity instead of individuality are also outlawed.

On Monday, his final day as the state’s top education official, Mr. Horne declared that Tucson’s Mexican-American program violated all four provisions. The law gives the district 60 days to comply, although Mr. Horne offered only one remedy: the dissolution of the program.

Here’s more vintage Tom Horne (the attorney general):

“It’s propagandizing and brainwashing that’s going on there [in the Chicano Studies program]…Once they get told day after day that they are being victimized, they become angry and resentful….

“They are the ‘Bull Connors.’ They are the ones resegregating.”

If punishing ethnic identity is the prevailing norm in Arizona politics is it any wonder that some lunatic might get it into his head that those who support immigrants or identity with their cause might be so damaging to the republic that they should be eliminated?  No, Tom Horne didn’t kill John Roll nor did he put a bullet in Congresswomen Giffords brain.  But words matter and laws do too.  If you attempt to score political points on the backs of ethnic minorities and do so largely because they have the least power in society to stand up to your bullying, then you’ve created the environment that produces the Jason Loughners of the world.  And yes, that means Sarah Palin and the Tea Party too.  They’re less culpable, but a contributing factor nonetheless.

The county sheriff commented on the type of rhetoric that may’ve motivated Loughner to act:

The Sheriff of Pima County, Clarence Dupnick,  today said this:   “When you look at unbalanced people, how they respond to the vitriol that comes out of certain mouths about tearing down the government.   The anger, the hatred, the bigotry that goes on in this country is outrageous.”

By the way, Horne didn’t outlaw ethnic studies programs for African-Americans, Asians or Native Americans.  Those are apparently kosher; or else he’s worried he would bruise far more entrenched interests if he took them on.

I hate to be morbid but the only way the U.S. may get real national gun control is having a few other nutheads take potshots at other Congressmembers.  There’s nothing like self-preservation to change a person’s political views radically.  Or perhaps we should ask the NRA to provide protection for all members of Congress and the federal judiciary?

Again, I hate to be morbid but would anyone like to make a wager on whether the Arizona Republican Party and its Tea Party supporters are relishing the possibility they may get an opportunity to replace Giffords, should she not be able to resume her seat, with one of their kind?

NPR on Asgari: Buying into Mossad Narrative

Friday, January 7th, 2011

After listening to Mike Shuster’s disappointing report on Ali Reza Asgari on NPR yesterday, I’ve come to realize that the very mystery of this case allows everyone connected to it, whether journalist, analyst, politician, intelligence agent, to project their own political agenda onto the blank slate that is Asgari’s disappearance.  He’s a sort of Rorschach test.  You find in his story whatever you want or need.  The Iranian exiles advocating regime change like Pooya Dayanim and Amir Ebrahimi see in Asgari a way to dent the invincibility of the current Iranian government; a way to show that even the best and brightest of the Ayatollah’s crew can see the light and desert the sinking ship.  The Mossad and most Israeli journalists see a tool to use both to hurt Iran’s interests both inside the country and externally in Syria and Lebanon.  Western governments and intelligence agencies have a similar agenda and so are also inclined to see Asgari as a stick to use against the regime.  Even some Iran analysts with sterling reputations have tended to embrace the anti-regime narrative.

Thanks to reader Nico who informed me about NPR’s segment yesterday on Asgari.  I was worried that, since the reporter hadn’t bothered to contact me, that the report might be full of the speculation and dubious claims that characterized Laura Rozen’s reporting in Politico on the same story.  Though the NPR correspondent Mike Shuster did a better job than her, the report was sorely lacking in a number of ways.

First, Shuster began by reporting that Asgari disappeared three years ago, when it was four (in late 2006).  Second, he stated unequivocally that Asgari defected and never even discussed the equally plausible claim by Iran and other parties (including me) that he was kidnapped.  He interviewed two native Iranian experts who both supported the theory that Asgari defected.  One in fact dismissed a report of mine, whose source was a former senior IDF officer and government minister, that Asgari had been held in an Israeli prison by saying: “Why would Israel have to imprison him if he defected?”  The very question completely misunderstands my claim and the claim of those who say Asgari’s disappearance was not voluntary.

Shuster relies on one of his Iran experts who explains Asgari’s defection with the claim that he grew disgruntled with the regime when he returned from an assignment in Lebanon, where he was liaison to Hezbollah, only to be thrown into prison on a morals and corruption charge.  He allegedly was viciously tortured in prison and came out a changed man.  The only problem: this narrative was fed to western media by the same Ebrahimi who Allison Kaplan Sommer eviscerated in her own 2007 report on the Asgari disappearance.  Ebrahimi claims he was a fellow Revolutionary Guard functionary with Asgari, where they became friends.  Only problem, Ebrahimi was in Ansar Hezbollah, but never the IRG.

Ebrahimi also claims he facilitated Asgari’s defection in Istanbul and secured documents there gaining him asylum in the west.  Only problems, Sommer proves the documents were fake.  The defection narrative claims that Asgari escaped Iran without permission.  While it wouldn’t be entirely impossible for him to do so, it would be extremely difficult for a former top IRG officer who’s fallen out of favor with the regime to get out of Iran.  He would be watched like a hawk.  The mullahs and their secret police aren’t stupid or inept.  They would know how much damage such a person could do to them.

Again, Shuster completely ignores counter-reports that Asgari did have a passport to make a religious pilgrimage to sites in Syria which was the first leg of his journey.

Shuster completely buys into the notion that Asgari, when he defected, offered a treasure trove of intelligence information to his western interlocutors:

In the three years since his disappearance, reports have surfaced that Asgari provided information on a secret uranium enrichment site in Iran. And that he also provided information that led to the Israeli bombing of a possible nuclear site in Syria in 2007.

For many years Asgari had been the key Iranian liaison with Hezbollah in Lebanon, and it is likely he provided much information on Hezbollah, including information on one of its most dangerous characters, Imad Mughniyah.

Mughniyah was probably behind a number of devastating terrorist attacks on U.S. targets in Lebanon. He himself was killed by a car bomb two years ago in Syria, and it has been suggested that Asgari provided information that helped his assassins.

If the western media are to be believed Asgari told Israel and the CIA about Syria’s nuclear reactor, enabling Israeli to bomb it.  He testified before the Hariri tribunal that Hezbollah was behind the Hariri assassination.  He exposed the hitherto secret Qom nuclear site.  He gave up Imad Mugniyeh.  You name it, Asgari exposed it.  The problem: again, much of these claims arise from Ebrahimi.  Note that the best evidence Shuster can offer for his story is “reports have surfaced.”  Which reports?  By whom?  Where?

Where is Asgari now according to Shuster?  In the U.S.  Again, part of the defection narrative which ensconces him comfortably in a nice ranch house somewhere outside Virginia.  Those who believe this narrative should remember what happened to the left Iranian defector the U.S. brought to this country.  He ended up redefecting back to Iran.  This is one reason why I tend to disbelieve the claim that he’s living here in the U.S.  Along with noted Iran watcher Muhammad Sahimi, I find it hard to believe that a devout Muslim like Asgari would abandon two families in Iran and begin life over again in a country whose language, culture and politics he will know noting about.  Not a word about this in Shuster’s report.

Here is Sahimi’s perspective:

I find it very difficult to believe an IRGC officer would defect. These guys do not do that.  If they are dissatisfied, they simply leave the IRGC. Hundreds of such officers live quietly in Iran, after fighting bravely in the Iran-Iraq war.

In fact, Shuster had the ability to discuss his report with someone like Sahimi, who lives only a few miles from his studio in Los Angeles.  Shuster knows Sahimi’s work well and often uses it in his own reporting.  He inexplicably chose not to consult with Sahimi, who would’ve offered him not only a sounding board, but a challenge for his conception of what happened.  Shuster’s report is the weaker for not having done this.

The final problem with Shuster’s work on this story is that inadvertently he has embraced a narrative fostered by the Mossad and others with an anti-Iran regime agenda.  Now, there’s nothing wrong with being critical and suspicious of Iran’s agenda.  But Shuster seems oblivious to the possibility that those who favor regime change by violent or other means, or those who favor destroying Iran’s nuclear program by military assault aren’t putting out disinformation that gets swallowed hook line and sinker by journalists like Rozen and him.

Shuster also barely acknowledges my own reporting on this, attributing it to “an internet report.”  This is the type of attribution you offer to Matt Drudge or Debka Files thus telegraphing your disdain for the source.  This isn’t the way you acknowledge serious reporting.

Latest IDF Lies on Jawaher Abu Rahme Death: Hospital Killed Her

Friday, January 7th, 2011

I wrote recently about a Forward article which portrayed a 2002 study by IDF toxicologists which noted that high concentrations of CS gas could be lethal.  The article attempted to explain how Jawaher Abu Rahme could’ve been killed by the inhalation of CS gas at last week’s Bilin demonstration.

Today’s Haaretz references that study (without crediting the previously published Forward story) and adds new information–that the IDF is using a new tear gas launcher which can fire six canisters simultaneously, thus saturating an area more intensely than ever before.  Though the story notes that gas concentration would have to be 800 times the average level used to quell demonstrations in 2002, the new weapon, which dishonors the name of Beatle Ringo Star, could likely achieve such an level especially if the shells landed in very close proximity to each other and the victim.

Despite this, the IDF continues slinging the lies:

The IDF Spokesman responded that soldiers use the Ringo only “in compliance with the binding professional orders for using this weapon, and with the rules of engagement applicable under the circumstances. CS gas is less poisonous than other tear gases. Therefore, it is the tear gas commonly used worldwide.”

Here the official blows smoke up our asses by deliberately obfuscating the problem with the Ringo.  The problem isn’t that the weapon is being used contrary to specifications.  The problem is that it IS being used according to military orders and those orders are not only likely, but destined to kill someone.  In fact, at least one of the other 21 Palestinians killed at Separation Wall protests was killed from gas inhalation.  This isn’t a new problem for the IDF.

Again, the army placed blame squarely on the Palestinians for her death with more sophistry:

…The study found that “treating people exposed to CS gas is simple, and any medical crew can treat victims of the gas with simple and readily available medical means.” Therefore, it concluded, there is no reason “to change the policy for using the gas.”

Note the unproven claim that a 2002 study by Israeli army doctors found that under typical Israeli conditions is easily treatable.  However, conditions prevailing in 2002 don’t prevail now.  The IDF uses vastly greater firepower in confrontations with Palestinians; and when they are injured the medical facilities available to them are not as sophisticated as treatment available to Israelis.

brig gen alon nitzan

IDF Brig. Gen. Alon Nitzan speaks ill of the dead

Any IDF officer who makes a statement that it should not change a policy that kills people should be a candidate for the Hague.  Plain and simple.

I have yet another candidate in mind.  Without offering any proof whatsoever, Brig. Gen. Nitzan Alon blames Abu Rahme’s death on the Palestinian medical system:

“She most probably died as a result of other complications, combined with problems in the medical care she received at the Palestinian hospital,” Nitzan said.

Every piece of actual documented evidence I’ve read shows that the only complication Abu Rahme had was an inner ear infection treated before her death.  She was taking no medications at the time of her death.  She had no medical complications at the time of her death.  There is NO indication of anything remiss in the medical treatment offered to her in the Ramallah hospital that treated her.   I note that the IDF, just after her death, lied once again in claiming that the hospital released Abu Rahme and she went home where she died.  It was at that time attempting to insinuate that the hospital thought her condition mild enough that it released her.  This would thus absolve the IDF and CS gas of any responsibility in her death.

Now the IDF concedes that the victim did stay in the hospital till her death, but that medical treatment (or lack thereof) killed her.  Considering again that they offer no proof for this “theory” it’s worth about the same amount as the earlier nonsense they tried to peddle.

I am sorry to speak in such extremes but these people are not just cruel, or mean-spirited or self-serving.  It goes beyond this.  They are evil.  Or perhaps if you want to let them off the hook a bit you can say that they’re reinforcing an evil system and therefore have absorbed the immorality of that system.  But I believe that human beings have agency.  They have responsibility for moral thought.  Even soldiers.  Even senior officers.  Especially senior officers.

Israel and officers like Nitzan must know that no matter what their army and nation tells them to do, that there are others  watching this evil and keeping accounts.  That these accounts must be answered in time.  They will be held accountable.

When you think about it, even if Israel adopted a slightly more accommodating approach and admitted error or expressed remorse.  Even if it didn’t end the Occupation, it would still earn some measure of decency in the opinion of others and perhaps even some Palestinians (not that I advocate such half-measures).  But Israel disowns its actions by claiming that Jawaher died for her own sins.  It takes the approach of bullies and monsters throughout human history: if they admit any weakness, any error, their enemy will exploit it ruthlessly and that will be the end of their privileged, superior status.  And bullies never willingly relinquish their power.

This is the tragedy of modern Israel.  It could have half a loaf and everything that comes with it: peace, security, prosperity, good relations with its neighbors.  Instead, again like those bullies I mentioned, it will take the whole loaf or destroy everything trying to get it.

IAF Crew Member: After Assassinating Saleh Shehadeh, Talk About Ethics

Friday, January 7th, 2011

Amira Hass reports on a talk given by one of the flight crew that assassinated Saleh Shehadeh, and 14 civilians, including eight children and three women in 2002.  This was one of the seminal events of the second Intifada and is high on the list of international human rights activists for war crimes adjudication.

Later on the day of the attack the pilot tells us:

“The next day, actually the same day, they tell us that the strike killed Salah Shehadeh, his wife, his daughter, his son and others… The commander of the pilots called us all in for a talk about ethics, the first one I’d ever heard about…”

During the discussion in Tel Aviv, T. asked the teenagers, who are themselves, preparing for their military service, the following question: “Had I known that 14 other people were with him … what should I have done?”

A little late for that question, don’t you think?  The same holds true for the talk about ethics.

Of course there are many pro-Israel advocates who can and do easily justify the killing of the 14 innocents.  Like the pilot in this story, they can murder a man and his children and then sleep soundly.  There was a time when Jewish tradition would condemn such immorality, would in fact be horrified by it.  There are still rabbis who do so.  But morality in Israel has coarsened.  Life has coarsened too, for Israelis and Palestinians.

But mainly I want to know how the murderer has the chutzpah to talk about ethics.  By what right?

Palestine: Death of the Innocents Continues

Friday, January 7th, 2011
amr qawasme murder by idf

Amr Qawasme's widow displaying his portrait on bed where IDF murdered him (AFP)

A few days ago we had the killing of 36 year-old Jawaher Abu Rahme at a Bilin demonstration for the crime of standing outside her home watching the event.  Today, the IDF Central Command has blood on its hands with the execution of a 65 year-old Palestinian man in his bed while they held a gun to his wife’s head and told her to shut up.  Ynet: Victim shot to death for “unknown reasons:”

Amr Qawasme, 65, shot to death for unknown reason as soldiers raid house in Hebron area. ‘They put their hand to my mouth and a rifle to my head,’ man’s wife says. ‘I asked them, ‘What did you do?’ They asked me to shut up.’

You bet.  He died while Palestinian.  It’s getting to be where just sleeping while Palestinian is a death sentence.  Don’t need much more than that to become a victim of this occupying army.

Oops, it was all a case of mistaken identity.  They wanted a Hamas man who lived one flight down:

An IDF force arrived at a local house to arrest a Hamas member who was recently released from jail. According to neighbors, the detainee lives one storey below the killed Palestinian.

avi mizrahi murder

Maj. Gen. Avi Mizrahi commanded troops who murdered Amr Qawasme

So who do you think fucked this one up?  The Shabak or IDF intelligence?  Can you imagine giving soldiers the wrong floor of a home and they go in guns blazing and kill the wrong man?  It reminds me of the killing of Black Panther Fred Hampton by the FBI and Chicago Police.  A shande.

Edo, from whom I first heard this story, correctly calls for the Central Command senior officer to be tried as a criminal.  Your troops kill an old man in his bed.  What does that make you?  Are you any more than a dog?  Actually I love my dog so maybe you’re not even worthy of that distinction.

You want to prove you’re higher than that on the evolutionary scale?  Hold someone accountable for this crime.  If you don’t, you don’t even deserve to be called a dog.

Bibi’s Office Sprang a Leak: Did It Involve Exposing Name of New Shabak Chief?

Thursday, January 6th, 2011

Israeli media are reporting a major leak from the prime minister’s office to Israeli journalists.  Bibi was so worried that he called in the Shabak, which administered polygraphs to national security advisor and former Mossad spy, Uzi Arad and several others in his office (including his top press aide, who recently resigned).  Shabak is claiming that it didn’t discover anything amiss, which makes no sense if Bibi suspected a leak.  It merely means they didn’t find the culprit or didn’t find him where they thought they might.

Several readers of this blog immediately thought of Tikun Olam and our muckraking in connection with the investigation.  I don’t know what to say.  I’m deeply honored if Bibi is so concerned about leaks to me that he’d sic the Shabak on his own political flesh and blood.  But I have a feeling if they were talking about me they wouldn’t use the term “journalist” (in this Hebrew language report) but rather “blogger.”  But who knows, it’s too soon to tell who they’re really after and what they’re investigating.

UPDATE: Israeli news is now reporting that the leak concerned a meeting with a foreign leader (and presumably Bibi).  Anyone have any thoughts on which foreign leader involved the leak?  It’s got to be someone Bibi wouldn’t want anyone to know about.  Possibly that time he went to Russia to tell Putin not to give SU-300 anti-aircraft batteries to Iran?  From Haaretz in September, 2009:

…A senior Jerusalem official had confirmed that Prime Minister Netanyahu visited Russia on Monday in order to discuss the Kremlin’s arms deals with Iran and Syria, and the transfer of Russian military hardware to Hezbollah.

Netanyahu’s trip was kept secret and within the prime minister’s bureau and only the military affairs secretary, General Meir Kalifi and national security advisor, Uzi Arad were privy to details of the trip.

UPDATE I: And just to show that for every reaction there’s an equal and opposite reaction…this report was forwarded by a reader who says he heard this on a Reshet B news bulletin (it was broadcast in Hebrew on the channel show, Ha-Yom Ha-Zeh, listen starting at 9:30 till 12:28 to Shmuel Tal’s report).  This is rough summary and not an exact transcript:

Reporter: The Shabak confirms that it has investigated a leak of sensitive material…They’re not saying when, but it was somewhere around three months ago.

They [Shabak] investigated and gave polygraph tests to various members of the prime minister’s staff, who were relieved of any suspicion.  And they also investigated others outside his staff.  It’s not known whether they were found to be involved.

It’s not yet known whether this case will lead to opening a criminal filing, it’s still being investigated.  We can only say that the case involves secret material that is only dealt with in a closed political-security forum.  It concerns a matter critical to the security of Israel.

Interview:…Did it get into the media?

R: No, it wasn’t published nor will it be.  But we know that it concerned the fate of a certain personality.

After listening to this report, I don’t believe Bibi’s Russia trip was the cause of the investigation.  He traveled to Russia a year ago and they would’ve already investigated that some time ago if it were the cause.  Tal, if he is correct, notes that the leak happened around three months ago.  So we’ll have to examine events in that time period to discover the substance of the leak.

I note that Tal says the news was “not published nor will it be.”  I believe he means it was not published in Israel (and if I’m right about the subject of the leak, Tal is even wrong in this statement).  He may not be aware that it was possibly published outside Israel.  In fact, in late August, 2010, we reported here that the Shabak’s new director would be Yitzhak Ilan.  This news was published for about a heartbeat by an Israeli news source and then immediatey gagged.  But we here at Tikun Olam aren’t subject to Israeli gags and don’t believe in ‘em.

Then in late October, Channel One aired a story which also named Ilan (calling him “Y.”) as the director-designate.  If you do the math, October is about three months ago.  And the “fate of a certain person” might’ve concerned the promotion of Yitzhak Ilan.  If I’m right, perhaps someone should tell Shmuel Tal that there are other media outlets outside Israel which publish material that can’t be published inside Israel, and we here are one of those and proud of it.

Another interesting development, and for those of you who’ve ever seen a Kabuki play we’re about to enter that realm, comes from Haaretz reporter Amir Oren, who is a journalistic master of the art of allusion and inference.  You’ll recall just after Prisoner X died (or was murdered) he published a story about security prisoners being killed “in order to silence them.”  This lead me to associate the death (which had happened only days before) in Ayalon Prison with Oren’s murdered prisoner.

Now Oren writes another tantalizing story in which he praises the unique investigative skills of Yitzhak Ilan (who he calls “Y.” as is required in the Israeli press), specifically singling out his skills at administering polygraphs.  Now recall that the method of investigating the leak was administering polygraphs.  The rest of the story elaborately examines the who, what and why of the leak.  He also notes the Shabak has found the source of the leak and that it’s outside the prime minister’s office.  But Oren’s “tell” comes in the first few paragraphs of the story in his discussion about Ilan.  In other words, Y. + polygraph = Yitzhak Ilan (subject of leak).

I expect we’ll be in business breaking Israeli gag orders for many moons to come with or without the strong-arm tactics of the Shabak.  I kinda like being David to their Goliath.  And no, I don’t own a slingshot, just a blog.  But it can be pretty potent in certain circumstances.

Thanks to readers Dedi and Shmuel for letting me know of this story.

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