Israel's Future is Terrifying: Moshe Ya'alon and Israel's Disconcerting 'Morality'
19 July 2016By Ramzy Baroud
Israeli society is constantly swerving to the Right and, by doing so, the
country's entire political paradigm is redefined regularly. Israel is now
'ruled by the most extreme rightwing government in its history' has grown from
being an informed assessment to a dull cliché over the course of only a few
years.
In fact, that exact line was used in May 2015, when rightwing Prime Minister,
Benjamin Netanyahu, formed his thin majority government of like-minded
right-wingers, religious zealots and ultra-nationalists. The same sentiment,
with almost the exact wording, is being infused again, as Netanyahu has
expanded his coalition by bringing to the fold the ultra-nationalist, Avigdor
Lieberman.
As of Wednesday May 25, Lieberman has also become Israel's Defense Minister.
Considering Lieberman's rowdy and violent politics as demonstrated in his two
terms as Foreign Minister (from 2009 to 2012 and, again, from 2013 to 2015),
being a Defense Minister in Israel's 'most extreme rightwing government in
history' harbors all kind of terrifying prospects.
While many commentators rightly pointed to Lieberman's past provocations and
wild statements – for example, his 2015 statement threatening to behead
Palestinian citizens of Israel with an axe if they are not fully loyal to
Israel; advocating the ethnic cleansing of Palestinian citizens of Israel; his
death ultimatum to former Palestinian Prime Minister, Ismail Haniya, and so on
– his predecessor, Moshe Ya'alon, was spared much blame.
Worse, the former Defense Minister, Ya'alon, was regarded by some as an
example of professionalism and morality. He is 'well-regarded', wrote William
Booth in the Washington Post, compared to the 'polarizing maverick' Lieberman.
But 'well-regarded' by whom? By Israeli society, the majority of whom support
the cold-blooded murder of Palestinians?
Israel has adhered to its own definition of political terminology for a long
time. Its early 'socialism' was a blend of communal living, facilitated by
military onslaught and sustained by colonialism. Its current definition of
'left', 'right' and 'center' are also relative, only unique to Israel itself.
Thanks to Lieberman – the former Russian immigrant, club
bouncer-turned-politician who is constantly rallying the roughly one million
Israeli Russian Jews around his ever-violent political agenda – Ya'alon is now
an example of level-headedness and morality.
Indeed, the quote that has been reproduced numerous times in the media is that
of Ya'alon stating the reason behind his resignation is that he has lost
confidence in 'Netanyahu's decision- making and morals'.
Morals? Let's examine the evidence.
Ya'alon took part in every major Israeli war since 1973, and his name was
later associated with the most atrocious of Israeli wars and massacres, first
in Lebanon and, later, in Gaza.
His 'morality' never dissuaded him from ordering some of the most unspeakable
war crimes carried out against civilians, neither in Qana, Lebanon (1996) nor
in Shujaya, Gaza (2014).
Ya'alon refused to cooperate with any international investigation conducted by
the UN or any other monitoring group into his violent conduct. In 2005, he was
sued in a US court by the survivors of the Qana massacre in which hundreds of
civilians and UN peacekeepers were killed and wounded in Israeli military
strikes in Lebanon. In that case, neither Israeli nor American morality
prevailed, and justice is yet to be delivered.
Ya'alon, who received military training early in his career at the British
Army's Camberley Staff College, continued to rise in rank within the army
until 2002 when he was appointed Chief of Staff of the Israeli Defense Forces.
He was in that post for nearly three years, as a result of which he ordered
the assassination of hundreds of Palestinians and oversaw various massacres
that were carried out by the Israeli army during the Second Intifada.
His post was terminated by the then Defense Minister, Shaul Mofaz, in 2005. In
this case, too, it was immorality, not morality, that played a role in the
conflict between him and his superiors. Ya'alon was – and remains – an ardent
advocate for the illegal colonialization of Palestinian land. In 2005, he
vehemently rejected the so-called redeployment from the Gaza Strip, in which a
few thousands illegal settlers were relocated to Jewish colonies in the West
Bank.
His war crimes caught up with him in New Zealand in 2006 – over the
assassination of a Hamas commander, Saleh Shehade, together with 14 members of
his family and other civilians. An arrest order was issued but revoked later,
under heavy political pressure, allowing Ya'alon to escape the country.
He returned to the helm of the army in 2013, just in time to carry out the
devastating war on Gaza in 2014, which killed 2,257 Palestinians in 51 days.
The UN monitoring group, OCHA, estimated that over 70 percent of those killed
were civilians, including 563 children.
The destruction of Shujaya, in particular, was a calculated strategy devised
by Ya'alon himself. In a July 2013 meeting with UN Secretary-General, Ban-Ki-Moon,
Ya'alon informed the UN chief that he would bomb the entire neighborhood in
case of war. He did.
In May 2015, he was still unrepentant. Speaking at a conference in Jerusalem,
he threatened to kill civilians in case of another war on Lebanon. ''We are
going to hurt Lebanese civilians to include kids of the family,'' he said.
''We went through a very long deep discussion. We did it then, we did it in
(the) Gaza Strip, we are going to do it in any round of hostilities in the
future,'' he said. He also spoke implicitly of dropping a nuclear bomb on
Iran.
He repeatedly gave the Israeli Occupation army the green light to carry out
'shoot to kill' policy against Palestinians to fight rising 'tension' in the
Occupied Territories.
These are the words of Ya'alon during a visit to a military base in Gush
Etzion in November 2014:
''It must be clear that anyone who comes to kill Jews must be eliminated. Any
terrorist who raises a gun, knife or rock, tries to run over or otherwise
attack Jews, must be put to death.''
Hundreds of Palestinians have been killed in recent months in Occupied East
Jerusalem and the West Bank. Many of those killed are stone-throwing children
who are facing Israeli army vehicles along with thousands of trigger-happy
Jewish settlers.
In his first public remarks since his resignation, Ya'alon accused a 'vocal
minority' in Israel of targeting the country's ''basic values'', stating that
the country's ''moral compass'' has been lost.
The odd thing is that many Israelis agree with Ya'alon. They see the man who
has been accused of carrying out war crimes for most of his career as an
example of morality and basic values.
While Lieberman has demonstrated to be a loose cannon and a political
liability, Ya'alon has openly spoken of targeting children and repeatedly
lived up to his promises.
When the likes of Ya'alon, a man with a blood-stained record becomes the face
of morality in Israel, once can understand why the future of that country
brings little hope, especially now that Lieberman has brought his Israel Our
Home Party to Netanyahu's terrifying nest of political parties.
– Dr. Ramzy Baroud has been writing about the Middle East for over 20
years. He is an internationally-syndicated columnist, a media consultant, an
author of several books and the founder of PalestineChronicle.com. His books
include ‘Searching Jenin', ‘The Second Palestinian Intifada' and his latest
'My Father Was a Freedom Fighter: Gaza's Untold Story'. His website is:
www.ramzybaroud.net.
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