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Writers Articles And Opinions |
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13 February 2010 By Stephen
Lendman
"Breaking the Silence is an
organization of veteran Israeli soldiers that collects
anonymous testimonies of soldiers who served in the
Occupied Territories during the Second Intifada." They
recount experiences that deeply affected them,
including abusing Palestinians, looting, destroying
property, and other practices "excused as military
necessities, or explained as extreme and unique
cases."
They disagree in describing "the
depth of corruption which is spreading in the Israeli
military" to which its society and most Western
observers turn a blind eye. Since 2004, "Breaking the
Silence" collected over 650 testimonies, including
from combat veterans. Most remain anonymous to avoid
recriminations, but feel compelled to go public - to
"demand accountability regarding Israel's military
actions in the Occupied Territories perpetrated by us
in our name."
Last year, a collection of 54
damning testimonies from 30 Israeli soldiers was
published. On January 31, a new publication was
released titled, "Breaking the Silence: Women
Soldiers' Testimonies," a collection of 96 stories
from dozens of women who served in the Territories
since 2000.
On January 29, Israel's
ynetnews.com reported that "Female soldiers break
their silence," revealing accounts of "systematic
humiliation of Palestinians, reckless and cruel
violence, theft, killing of innocent people and
cover-up."
On July 15, 2009, Reuters
reported that participating IDF soldiers in the recent
Gaza conflict said "they were urged by commanders to
shoot first and worry later about sorting out
civilians from combatants. Accordingly, they (said,
they) went into Gaza with guns blazing," with comments
like the following typical of others:
-- "If you're not sure, kill;"
-- "Better hit an innocent than
hesitate to target an enemy;"
-- "In urban warfare, anyone is
your enemy; no innocents;" and
-- "They kept repeating to us
that this is war and in war opening fire is not
restricted....There was a clear feeling, and this was
repeated whenever others spoke to us, that no
humanitarian consideration played any role in the army
at present."
In his book titled, "The 'Good
Soldier' on Trial: A Sociological Study of Misconduct
by the US Military Pertaining to Operation Iron
Triangle, Iraq," Professor Stjepan Mestrovic
documented disturbing evidence of illegal US rules of
engagement (ROE); namely, that commanders order troops
to commit war crimes, citing an Army brigade colonel
saying kill every military-aged Iraqi on sight, even
civilians posing no threat.
Yet when the truth comes out,
low-ranking soldiers are blamed, prosecuted, and
punished to absolve superiors up the chain of command
to the top. Mestrovic correctly observed "that a crime
becomes a 'war crime' when it involves the government,
which is to say, when a crime is the result of
unlawful social policies and plans."
According to noted sociologist
Emile Durkheim, "The immorality of war depends
entirely on the leaders who willed it - the soldier
and even those government officials who had no part in
the decision remain innocent."
It's true in America, Israel and
all sides in times of war.
Anonymous
Testimonies of Female Combatants
Like their male counterparts,
courageous female soldiers went public, "shed(ding)
additional light on what happens in the back yard of
the State of Israel," that what once was
"exceptional," is now the norm. As a result, Israeli
society is sliding down "an ethical slope together
with the entire military system."
A Border Patrol First Sergeant
said:
"Somehow, a female combatant has
to prove herself more, on the ground too. Again a
female combatant who can lash out is a serious
fighter. Capable. A ball-breaker. There was one with
me when I got there, she'd been there long before, she
was - wow, everyone talked about what grit she had,
because she could humiliate Arabs without batting an
eyelash. That was the thing to do."
She had a good reputation in her
company until in the field and wasn't tough. Too
"wimpy," (she said), unlike "guys (who) need to prove
themselves less in this respect....We (talked about)
tough female combatant(s) having no problem beating up
Arabs....Take a look at that one, a real
'ball-breaker,' see her humiliating them, slapping
them, what a slap she gave that guy! You hear this
kind of talk all the time."
A Hebron Regional
Brigade/Education Corp officer said she witnessed two
soldiers "pacing around a detainee - blindfolded, his
hands shackled behind his back. Suddenly I see that
one of the guys simply approaches him, and without any
warning, knee-kicks him in the head."
She leapt at him saying, "You're
coming with me now," but he didn't understand how a
female soldier could order him around. Her rank
concealed under a fleeze jacket, "He shoved me off,
this was a big guy - he pushed me away and ran into
the barracks." Complaining to the deputy commander,
she was told "Let it go, it's pointless." She had a
hard time accepting it.
A Border Patrol First Sergeant
recounted incidents of violence, including harassment,
keeping Palestinians on their feet, in formation made
to sing and hop, and if anyone laughs he gets punched.
"It can last for hours" against anyone, including
women, children and the elderly. "Some (of us) had
absolutely no restraint and abused anyone."
A Gaza Division Education Corps
Officer described the "everyday routine of combat
service," saying only in retrospect did she realize
"to what extent I had not been a human being out
there....it's like a movie with a lot of death around
you, an unreasonable reality, with soldiers doing
inhumane things to others....doing irrational things
to other people."
Another Border Patrol First
Sergeant recalled chasing a Palestinian who was
ordered to halt when he began running. Even though he
wasn't a threat, they shot and killed him. "An
investigation was carried out. First they said it was
really an unjustified killing. He was a child about
nine years old....Eventually the army claimed he was
doing something (like) checking escape spots for
terrorists....And that was that, the file was
closed."
An Erez Crossing Sergeant said
"there was this procedure, before you released a
Palestinian back into the Strip, you'd take him into
the tent and beat him up." Commanders took
part....even if I let an illegal go at my side of the
checkpoint, until he'd get to Gaza he'd go through
hell. (He'd) be stopped along the way and every
soldier would take his turn beating him. Commanders,
too."
A Border Patrol Seam Zone
(between the Green Line and Separation Wall) First
Sergeant recalled "patroll(ing) the Fence and a group
of tiny children were standing near (it) and throwing
these little stones at the vehicles of the fence
construction firm." They weren't harming anyone, but
the commander ordered, "Okay, load rubber ammo," so
she loaded and explained that bullets come in units of
three, and soldiers peel off the rubber "because that
hurts more." It also kills or badly wounds.
She fired low, in the ground near
their feet, angering her operations officer who took
her gun and said, "You don't know how to shoot." She
responded, "Where do you want me to shoot? He came
along, fired....Straight at the belly. Fortunately he
missed. But he fired straight at their belly, and of
course they ran."
A Jenin Border Patrol First
Sergeant said she felt guilty about not having said
anything about what went on, but believes "it wouldn't
have made any difference....There is still an air of
violence so when "things get boring....let's invent an
incident." Make one up. "Get on the radio and report:
Stones have been thrown at me on this street. And then
you detain someone and start questioning
him....Naturally, when they're caught, they're beaten
up" even if nothing happened.
An Etzion Regional Brigade
Sergeant said stone-throwers "get beaten up and taken
to brigade headquarters....They beat the hell out of
(them) or take (them) to division headquarters....If
kids throw stones, all the shops in the village would
be shut down."
A Hebron Hills Border Patrol
First Sergeant spoke about daily roadblocks and her
position as a crew commander. "You've got to throw
your weight around, show authority....I mean, I've
never raised a hand against (Palestinians). There are
other ways to make them understand. Once we were
blocking a certain road and there were about ten vans
with 20 - 30 passengers each. (They) have to stand
waiting....everyone gets off with their belongings,
their permits, and they're checked one by one. (At
times) there were detector dogs, trackers, explosive
and weapons detectors that would join us."
She'd "start checking them (all).
They would wait inside the cars." Everyone is checked
on the police computer to learn who's authorized to
drive. Those who aren't are detained and turned over
to the police. They're fined and if they don't report
to a traffic police station in two day "there would be
an arrest warrant against (them) and more fines." The
idea is to teach them a lesson and make them pay so
"they'd not mess with us any more."
A Hebron Sergeant complained that
she wasn't cut out to be a combatant, then explained
that when "An Arab says something to her that he
shouldn't, for example - she calls some four guys from
her company to come handle him (and they) beat him to
a pulp." She then detains the person.
She said once when she was on
alert, there was a boom. "We heard a shot and of
course I was on patrol so we ran over to see what
happened, and there's a girl soldier standing like
this, facing an Arab bleeding on the ground, and she
says something like: 'He tried to attack me.' We look
at him and he's shot in the belly (and) we ask her.
What did he do? How did he attack you?"
She was confused and didn't know
what to say, then "told some story about asking him
for his ID and he wouldn't show it, and then he
attacked her and somehow she tried to get away and
turned around and shot him in the belly, something of
that sort. You look and see an Arab who's been shot at
point-blank range and he's holding his ID. And you say
to her: Listen, this is impossible. Your story doesn't
add up."
Apparently he approached to hand
her his ID. "She then shoved him off with her rifle"
and shot him in the belly. Instead of saying what have
I done, we hear her saying he tried to attack me. This
girl finally admitted he really got too close so she
shot him....And she was not prosecuted....She was
re-assigned to the Military Police. That was her
punishment."
The commander tried to cover up
the incident. He said "Just stop it! Stop asking her
what she means! Enough of this! She's telling you he
tried to attack her, what's there not to understand?"
So you can shoot someone, spit in
their face and never get caught. "I think that this
determination 'never to get caught' really shows that
what I'm doing is wrong - so I mustn't get
caught....It means everyone was pretty much aware of
what went on there, and that it's not right." But
soldiers do it all the time.
Another Hebron Sergeant talked
about Palestinian children fearing Israeli ones
because they threw stones at them as they passed by.
And their parents said nothing. It became routine.
"Since the one (throwing stones) was Jewish and the
other Palestinian, it seemed all right....And the
Palestinian had done nothing. I know this kid's
parents teach him to hate Palestinians. I'm a Jewish
Israeli soldier, and I'm supposed to be against the
Arabs who are my enemies, (but I think) the Jews are
wrong. So wait a minute, no, I have to switch my mind
and go on hating Arabs and justifying the Jews. But
wait," it's not okay.
So "on the one hand you're angry
at your own people for being here....On the other
hand, you also hate the Arabs because they kill your
buddies and give you a hard time." So you end up
hating everyone. "I'll swear" and spit at Arabs....it
was a cool thing to do. I mean I can't go around
boasting of having arrested anyone, or be proud of
having caught a terrorist....But I can spit at them
and humiliate and ridicule them."
Another Hebron Border Patrol
Sergeant recalled going on a weapons search mission at
2AM. "So we entered these people's home, the father
opens the door for us, in his robe, and the mother and
grandmother and two little kids woke up too....The
kids were absolutely horrified. The soldiers turned
their whole house inside out, I never imagined it like
this....you can open a drawer and throw all of its
contents out, and leave it like that....The soldiers
go on, opening and trashing and trashing just about
everything in the house....And we didn't find a thing.
Nothing."
They spent a hour "and were going
nuts because (we) were certain, (we) had information,
I don't know what, (we) were confident (we) were going
for a find. So (we) trashed and trashed and left not
one thing in its place. Then we went on to the second
house, and I couldn't understand why we do it this
way. And that was the first moment I realized why we
are looked at like that, and why we are so hated. You
enter in the most disgusting manner, without a drop of
humanity....And the owner keeps pleading, saying don't
do this to me....I just wanted to get out of there,
just get out." When the men entered, they kicked the
father in front of the kids.
A Hebron Sergeant told of an
Israeli girl who saw an Arab walk by so "she grabbed
this huge rock and ran toward him, leapt and boom! She
banged his head with it....And this man was just an
old man walking along the street. Then she started
yelling: 'Yuck, his blood is all over me, so
sickening!' (Then a soldier) charged at him (for
yelling at the girl) and punched him as though he was
threatening (her). I stood there in absolute shock."
A Hebron Medical Corp Lieutenant
recalled cases where Palestinians were denied aid. "In
Hebron, on the seam-line when a Palestinian got hit,
the first procedure was to summon the Red
Crescent....The medics of Kiryat Arba - Hebron do not
approach Palestinians to give them aid." Once, she
acted on her own initiative, spoke to the division
medical officer in charge, "and he yelled at me, no
way! We don't confirm such events. So I still
activated MDA Kiryat Arba, sent them in after all, in
other words lied to them and said it was authorized,
and yes, go on, take the guy in. I got yelled at on
every possible echelon later on....The division
medical officer (told her) to forget it. Who
cares....Yes....Right. He's a doctor."
A Seam Zone First Sergeant told
about women combatants slapping Palestinian women.
"There were two of them who really enjoyed hitting
out. But the guys, too, had no problem slapping women.
If she would scream they would (say) shut up and slap
her. It was routine violence there. Again, there were
guys who didn't, but everyone knew about this."
A Border Patrol First Sergeant
was teamed "with some guy, we stopped someone (and)
the soldier said: What are you laughing at? The guy
was not laughing, (but the soldier said) I'm not a
Border patrolman, let's fight. Obviously the guy is
not going to hit him back, only pleaded and pleaded
with him to let him go." The soldier kept taunting him
to punch back, so "he pick(ed) up his rifle and
start(ed) using it to hit the guy....This was routine
there."
A Gaza Erez Crossing Sergeant
described it, saying "It's constructed as a vast
compound with lots of concrete ledges, but not too
high. The checkpoint is huge. It's a giant
installation you can see from very far off....you can
always see the Palestinians moving around....It seemed
to me like a jail....there are these metal pens, with
people, soldiers scattered along several strategic
points. Everyone's armed of course....It's all metal
doors, a highly upgraded checkpoint as it were, hardly
any human contact at all."
Palestinians queue up when the
gates open at 3AM. "There's already crowding around
one AM, they'll wait and quarrel and all. Because
they're not told how many will be allowed in....Back
in the good old days....tens of thousands came
through....(Now) there are no humanitarian work
permits....In short, regulations have gotten much
tighter since I got there."
A Gaza Education Corp Lieutenant
said she was shocked by a video showing "some old
Palestinian farmer who got too close to the
(Separation) fence, and you simply see the tank shell
coming and blowing him up....It doesn't make sense and
it's inhuman." There were many other cases like it.
"Cases where Palestinians didn't mean to infiltrate or
anything like that, as it came out in inquiries after
the fact, but were shot" for being under
suspicion....it looked to me like some kind of video
game, you're not really seeing a human being." It's
like "it's not happening."
A Golani Brigade Sergeant said
she attended a class to learn some Arabic, basic
things like "open fire instructions (and) Stop! Stop
or I shoot!" Five minutes "into class time, a guy
stands up (and said to the instructor): "Listen,
cutie, forget it....We don't talk. We shoot. Then
maybe we talk." They see no one as innocent, so all
Palestinians are fair game.
A Menashe Regional Brigade First
Sergeant spoke of abused detainees brought in,
soldiers guarding them, ordering them around, kicking
them. "There were two detainees shackled, blindfolded,
the works, surrounded by at least fifteen guys who
were harassing them...It's fine, because they're Arabs
so they're terrorists."
An Erez Crossing Sergeant said
"It's terrible at the checkpoint....Palestinians came
with bags of clothes, they'd be ripped....women are
stripped" to their undergarments by female soldiers
but not gently....they do this all the time." Some are
entirely stripped. It's very degrading.
A Qalandiya Checkpoint Sergeant
called her checkpoint duty "very shocking. I had a
hard time....I felt uneasy from the first, found it
difficult to think about."
A Hebron Sergeant said "one
girl....slapped an Arab. He answered (her) rudely, so
(she) gave him a slap in the face....the mere thought
was just shocking. Other girls said they had done it
and threatened them. One aimed her rifle at his face
and coked it right there. I was shocked that they were
my friends....guys do it often, cocking their rifles
while threatening children, grownups, everyone."
A Gaza Lieutenant said that to
cope you have to see humans as not quite human. "It
means if you want to function, you have to protect
yourself somehow. You mustn't feel too much. You have
to be quite mechanical, quite detached. So I don't
think (of Palestinians) as bad people or beasts" or
our soldiers who abuse them. "I don't justify it for a
second, but I think I would go crazy under such
circumstances....I can imagine why a soldier
might....beat up people, go home and beat up the whole
world....because they've lost it much more than we
have....They're constantly in this state of tremendous
anger that is directed toward anything."
A Hebron Sergeant said a soldier
on this post attacked an Arab boy and broke his leg.
"I don't know who, and I don't know how it happened,
but I do know that two of our guys got him into a
Border Patrol jeep, and hardly two weeks later this
kid was moving around with his two arms and two legs
in plaster casts, in a wheelchair."
A Hebron Medical Corp Lieutenant
described her experience as "Lots of blood. A
nightmare....I only wanted to erase everything. Later,
after a while, it began to pop up again." In the
Territories, it's "a different world, different rules,
different manners."
An Erez Crossing Sergeant said
inspections are frustrating and scary. "I know the
Border patrolmen take out their frustrations on the
Palestinians. They are armed, it's the easiest way
out. The slave with the scepter, kind of. I mean, you
have the gun, the Palestinian doesn't. Usually he's
holding stuff because he's been at the checkpoint
since 2 in the morning, and he hasn't seen his wife
for three months already and he can't even remember
his kids' names." Still the Border patrolmen make fun
of them behind their backs. And they humiliate them
and tear their belongings. "I think it's horrible. I
thought it was horrible then, too."
A Hebron Sergeant said "we were
the good guys. The Border patrolmen were the bad guys.
They would settle accounts in a big way. As for
hitting - they were on jeeps the whole time, less on
foot, so they would simply take people into their
jeeps and beat them to a pulp. You'd see a jeep pass
by and a person thrown out of it suddenly....thrown
into the street.....They would check someone right
next to me and do it brutally....They were about
dominance."
A Seam Zone First Sergeant said
another patrolwoman with her talked about women
combatants being more violent than men. Some kids came
along with bags, and she called them out to come over.
"She opened their bags and found this kind of fly-swat
inside. So she (told them to run) up and down the hill
in ten seconds. They're scared....So they ran (but
she) hit him with that fly-swat. The kid began to
cry."
But she kept harassing them and
threatened to beat them up. Finally she let them go.
Guys did it, too, so she asked them "why are you
beating up this kid....treat him like a human being so
he won't want to blow himself up on you tomorrow.
There were guys who did listen, not everyone wants to
beat up Arabs. But there was definitely that
atmosphere and it was totally routine.
An Erez Crossing Sergeant
explained ways of harassing Palestinians, such as
saying: "You want to pass tomorrow? Bring me a pack of
cigarettes" or food or something else to take from
them. "It was the norm."
"You go down to the checkpoint
and your bullet-proof vests have "Death to Arabs"
written on them. "Stuff like that." You do all sorts
of things to humiliate them and brag "about all the
loot" you bring back. "The Arabs are the enemy. The
more you make them suffer, the better."
A Hebron Sergeant said "There was
this one single time I harassed an Arab
brutally....There were lots of soldiers punishing
Arabs," making them do all sorts of things, including
threatening them with pointed weapons or making them
wait for hours.
A Jenin Sergeant said she was
with her squadron-commander who shot a kid riding a
bicycle near the Separation Wall. Other soldiers
killed another boy when he got scared and ran away.
She related other incidents of firing rubber bullets
and tear gas at demonstrators. She herself was on
standby and didn't shoot.
Other incidents involved
shackling, blindfolding and slapping boys who threw
stones, then "dry them out in the sun." Property was
also destroyed and concussion grenades, tear gas, and
rubber bullets used freely against demonstrators.
A Hebron Sergeant said some
commanders and soldiers talk about human dignity,
"that it's really important. But when it comes to
facts on the ground, it's all bullshit. People behaved
as they pleased." They disregard people, shove them,
curse them, harass them in other ways.
A Hebron Sergeant said soldiers'
"brutality comes out in the toughest situations. And I
think the Border patrolmen I lived with for half a
year were people whose very language is violence. They
also communicate violently with each other. Verbal
aggression, plenty of dirty talk (and) that's how they
behave....Whether it's the Palestinians or each
other....The rules are just for appearances. There are
no rules."
Whenever there's an incident
investigation, it ends with no conclusion. Some of the
things gotten away with are awful because you're in a
position to do anything you want - harassing,
beatings, shootings, anything, including against
children. "It's horrifying," but goes on all the
time.
Abuses in Times
of War
The above abuses happened during
the second Intifada. During wars they're far worse. On
February 3, The (London) Independent's Donald
Macintyre quoted an Israeli commander saying: "We
rewrote the rules of war for Gaza." As a result,
civilians were freely targeted. People posing no
threat were shot or attacked by drones or helicopters.
A junior officer said the policy followed the 2006
Lebanon war to assure "literally zero risk to the
soldiers."
It was Israel's Dahiya Doctrine,
named after the Beirut suburb the IDF destroyed in the
conflict. The idea was to treat civilians the same as
combatants, an approved plan according to Northern
Command General Gabi Eisenkot at the time. Southern
Command General Yoav Galant used the strategy to "send
Gaza decades into the past," with no regard for the
safety or welfare of civilians or the entire
infrastructure of the territory. Major General Giora
Eiland said it was to destroy "the national
infrastructure and (inflict) intense suffering among
the population."
Dahiya tactics were central to
the overall war strategy to inflict mass civilian
deaths, injuries, destruction, and human suffering on
1.5 million Gazans. Israel waged its most brutal
offensive since its 1948 War of Independence. Still
under siege, Gaza is prevented from recovering, and
its people keep suffering.
Israeli
Conscription
Israel alone requires men and
women to perform military duty. In February 1948, all
19 - 25 year old married and single males became
obliged to serve. In August 1948, conscription of
single and married women without children became
mandatory - to "tak(e) care of the (IDF's) special
needs (serving as) nurses, signal operators, drivers,
clerks, quartermasters, cooks, and more." Additional
roles today include intelligence, technology, combat
support, and as volunteer combatants.
During Israel's War of
Independence, women performed combat service.
Afterward, they were exempted until the late 1990s. In
2001, its first female fighter pilot graduated. In the
2006 Lebanon war, 14% of female reserves saw combat
duty, many as medics.
During the British Mandate, the
Haganah operated as a paramilitary force. In May 1948,
the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) replaced it,
comprised of the Army, Air Force and small Navy.
Today, Israel's 1986 National
Defence Service Law is the legal basis for
conscription. It requires all Israeli citizens and
permanent residents to serve, both men and women.
However, the Ministry of Defence has discretion under
Article 36 to exempt non-Jews, except the Druze.
Israeli Arabs may volunteer, but they're not
encouraged, and very few do. Reserve service is also
required up to age 51 for men and 24 for women.
Exemptions are possible for
reasons of:
-- educational requirements;
-- religion (Orthodox Jews are
exempted);
-- health;
-- family considerations;
-- married or pregnant women or
those with children;
-- persons convicted of crimes;
-- the undereducated until they
complete at least eight years of school; and
-- other considerations at the
Defense Ministry's discretion.
Israeli law rejects conscientious
objection rights for men and only partly accepts them
for women on the basis of religion. Those refusing to
serve may be prosecuted and imprisoned.
Yet, as a UN Charter signatory,
Israel is obliged to comply with the UN International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. Its Article 18
guarantees everyone "the right to freedom of thought,
conscience and religion." So does the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights under Article 18 stating
the same thing.
By rejecting conscientious
objection and requiring those claiming it to serve,
Israel violates international law and a fundamental
human right afforded everyone under it. As a result,
under Article 35 (a) (2) of the National Defence
Service Law:
-- failure to fulfill an
obligated duty is punishable by up to two years
imprisonment;
-- evading military service is
subject to five years in prison;
-- refusing to perform reserve
duties calls for up to a 56 day sentence, renewable if
the objector refuses repeatedly;
-- helping someone avoid military
service is punishable by a fine and up to two years in
prison; and
-- disobeying call-up orders
means facing up to five years imprisonment, although
sentences rarely exceed 12 months.
Convictions are usually for the
following reasons:
-- refusal to obey an order;
-- absence without leave;
-- desertion; or
-- refusal to be mobilized.
Continued refusal can mean
discipline or court-martial, and repeat offenders face
re-imprisonment, in violation of Article 14, paragraph
7 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political
Rights stating:
"No one shall be liable to be
tried or punished again for an offence for which he
(or she) has already been finally convicted or
acquitted in accordance with the law and penal
procedure of each country."
Of course, international laws,
including the UN Charter, Geneva and Hague
Conventions, and Nuremberg Principles prohibit
premeditated aggressive wars (and participation in
them), defining crimes of war and against humanity,
exempting no nation ever, under all conditions without
exceptions.
Under Nuremberg's Principle VI,
"crimes against peace" were defined as:
-- "planning, initiation or
waging of a war of aggression or a war in violation of
international treaties, agreements or assurances;"
also participation in a plan or conspiracy to commit
these violations;
War crimes included, but were not
limited to:
-- "murder....ill-treatment of
prisoners of war....killing of hostages, plunder of
public or private property, wanton destruction of
cities, towns, or villages, or devastation not
justified by military necessity."
Crimes against humanity
included:
-- "murder, extermination,
enslavement, deportation, and other inhumane acts done
against any civilian population, or persecutions on
political, racial, or religious grounds when such acts
are done or such persecutions are carried on in
execution of or in connection with any crime against
peace or any war crime."
Throughout their history, Israel
and America committed grievous crimes of war and
against humanity, yet neither country has been held
accountable under international law so they repeatedly
commit them with impunity. So far, that is, until
their eventual day of reckoning because things that
can't go on forever won't.
Stephen Lendman is a Research
Associate of the Centre for Research on Globalization.
He lives in Chicago and can be reached at
lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net. Also visit his blog
site at sjlendman.blogspot.com and listen to the
Lendman News Hour on RepublicBroadcasting.org Monday -
Friday at 10AM US Central time for cutting-edge
discussions with distinguished guests on world and
national issues. All programs are archived for easy
listening. http://republicbroadcasting.org/Lendman
EsinIslam.Com
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