| Israeli
Reservists Reject West Bank, Gaza Duty Army relieves some dissenters of their commands Scores
have denounced oppression of Palestinians Mary Curtius - Los
Angeles Times staff writer.
JERUSALEM -- What began with a terse note tacked to a Tel Aviv University bulletin board has mushroomed into the most serious protest movement against the Israeli army's conduct in the West Bank and Gaza Strip in 16 months of fighting with the Palestinians--and it is coming from soldiers themselves.
In newspaper ads, more than 100 reserve combat officers and soldiers
have denounced the army for what they call immoral behavior toward Palestinian
civilians and have vowed that they will no longer serve in the West
Bank or Gaza. Alarmed by the declaration, the army has begun relieving
some of the dissenters of their commands and is threatening to court-martial
them.
Speaking to Israel Radio on Friday, Lt. Gen. Shaul Mofaz, the army's
chief of staff, said that if the protesters were "ideologically
motivated" by a political view that Jewish settlements should be
abandoned and the occupied territories handed to the Palestinians, then
"this is not only refusal but grave sedition."
The dissent has touched off a firestorm of debate in a nation where
army service is a pillar of citizenship and where the conflict with
the Palestinians that erupted in September 2000 is seen by most as an
existential threat that mandates national unity. The men represent a minuscule fraction of the tens of thousands of
Israelis who perform reserve duty annually, but their status as long-serving
reservists in combat units gives their criticism weight both inside
the army and in Israeli society.
The movement started when two reservists posted a note at Tel Aviv University,
where they study, that said: "If you are thinking about refusal
and you're having a hard time with it, call us." Within 10 days, more than 30 reserve personnel--many of them officers
in combat units--had called the attached number. More than 50 officers
and soldiers signed an ad published Jan. 25 in the mass-circulation
daily Yediot Aharonot, saying they will not serve. On Friday, more than
100 reservists signed a reprint of the letter that ran again in Yediot.
"We hereby declare that we will no longer fight the war for the
settlements' safety," the reservists wrote. "We will no longer
fight beyond the Green Line [Israel's pre-1967 border] with the purpose
of controlling, expelling, starving and humiliating an entire people."
The soldiers said that they will do reserve duty "in any assignment
that serves the defense of the state of Israel" but that "the
assignment of occupation and oppression does not serve this cause, and
we will have no part in it."
In a poll of 504 Israelis conducted by Israel Radio, whose results were
aired Thursday, about 30% of those questioned said they supported the
reservists' protest. Forty-five percent said they believed more reservists
will join the movement and refuse service in the West Bank and Gaza.
"We relate to this phenomenon seriously and severely," Mofaz
told Israel Radio. "Why seriously? Because some of those officers
who wrote the dissenting letter also volunteered in the past to take
on responsibility. They contributed to state security on many occasions.
They led soldiers to battle. They endangered their lives."
Prime Minister Ariel Sharon shared Mofaz's ambivalence about the dissenters.
"I see this as a very serious matter," Sharon told Yediot
in an interview Friday. "If the IDF [Israel Defense Forces] soldiers
don't carry out the decisions of the elected government, that will be
the beginning of the end of the democracy." But because the men
are combat veterans, Sharon said, he is considering meeting with them
to discuss their grievances.
Although they may not change the government's policy, the protesters
have already sparked the first real public debate here about the army's
conduct toward Palestinian civilians--and about whether the military
is routinely asking troops to carry out illegal orders--since the Palestinian
revolt began.
In interviews with Israel Television and the Maariv newspaper, retired
Adm. Ami Ayalon, former head of the Shin Bet, Israel's internal security
service, said he disagrees with the reservists' public protest. But
Ayalon also expressed surprise that more soldiers have not refused to
carry out what he said are "blatantly illegal orders" in the
West Bank and Gaza. Some of the dissenting reservists have given harrowing accounts to
Israeli reporters of acts they said they committed against Palestinian
civilians in the West Bank and Gaza, acts that some of them said they
feared constituted war crimes. "We were raised to be officers with values, and they've turned
us into combatants who deal in bloodshed and war crimes," said
Lt. David Zonshein, a 28-year-old software engineer who was one of the
founders of the movement. Zonshein told Yediot that he hopes to sign
up 500 reservists in the movement because "when we reach 500 people,
they will have to decide--occupation or the IDF."
The dissenters' allegations that troops are routinely asked to carry
out illegal orders have been strenuously denied by Mofaz, the army spokesman's
office and other reservists. They all insist that troops are serving
legally in the territories and that instances of abuse cited by the
protesting reservists are aberrations that are punished when uncovered
by army investigators.
"When there are illegal orders with a black flag, it is right not
to obey them," Mofaz said. "But I must say that in the fighting
that has been going on for over 16 months . . . I can say with full
confidence that very few armies in the world would . . . behave on the
same moral and value level as IDF soldiers and commanders do in the
field." In the past in Israel, dissenters have refused to serve in various
wars, as well as in the West Bank and Gaza after the Jewish state occupied
those areas in the wake of the June 1967 Middle East War. Usually, however,
such acts of protest have been carried out on an individual basis, rarely
as a collective, public act.
"These aren't just 50 guys," said Peretz Kidron, spokesman
for Yesh Gvul, a leftist group that counsels individual soldiers on
refusing to serve in the West Bank and Gaza. "They made a point
of mentioning their ranks and the reserve unit they serve in, and they
are all with highly regarded combat units. This is an elite group."
Two other groups of reservists responded to the dissenters with their
own ads Friday in Yediot. "We are ashamed of you as fighters whose duty it is to fight alongside
you, and we regret the decision of the army and state, who mistakenly
deemed you worthy of the right to serve and command," wrote one
group of nearly 100 reserve officers and soldiers in an open letter
to the protesters. "We are opposed to the explicit and implicit attempts to describe
the IDF's actions to protect security throughout Israel, including the
territories, as a war crime or illegal command," wrote a second
group of more than 100 reserve officers and soldiers in another letter.
"We trust the IDF's morality and that of the unity government guiding
it, even if we do not agree with every step of policy." Nir Abudram, one of the counter-movement's founders, told Yediot Aharonot
that his group, the Right to Serve, had collected more than 100,000
signatures in a single day of canvassing. The dissenting reservists are refusing to speak with foreign reporters.
A spokesman for the group, however, agreed to respond to some of the
criticisms in a chat with a Los Angeles Times reporter. "Our statements are aimed against a political system and not the
army," said Amit Mashiah, who is also a reservist. "The Israeli
army is the people's army. It is based on citizens who care about their
country. We never criticized the army--we criticized the people who
sent them there. Our movement is a part of a struggle in order to determine
the face of our society. We believe that what we are doing is for our
society and for our country."
Mashiah said that the group decided not to speak to foreign media because
it believes "this is an internal Israeli issue" that should
be debated within Israeli society. "We don't want to do anything
that would harm Israel," he said.
But in interviews with Israeli reporters, the dissenters have said that
they were asked too many times to carry out orders that violated their
consciences.
"I stopped ambulances at checkpoints as a paratroop officer,"
Zonshein told talk-show host Yair Lapid after the army relieved Zonshein
of his command last week. "I stripped areas clean of groves and
trees that are people's livelihood as a paratroop officer. I entered
houses and threatened the father as a paratroop officer, and I fired
at neighborhoods as a paratroop officer, and, as such, I signed the
letter, to say: Enough."
Sometimes, Zonshein said, he has allowed Palestinians in distress to
pass through roadblocks "against regulations" stipulating
that ambulances are supposed to coordinate their passage with the army
in advance of arriving at roadblocks. Israelis who criticize the dissenters, Zonshein said, "must remember
that everyone who signed the letter is willing to be killed for this
country--but there are basic moral conditions. Not everything is allowed,
not even in war." In an interview, reserve Col. Ron Shechner said he views the protest
movement as dangerous to both the army and Israeli democracy. It is
important, Shechner said, that the men who signed the ad be disciplined
for their act of disobedience. "There are moral dilemmas in every war," Shechner said. "But this group of reservists is dishonest and ungrateful. Claiming that the army is immoral is false. It is a lie. We are dealing with this whole difficult, complex situation with silk gloves, in a surgical way. We are endangering our own lives so as not to hurt innocent people." From
The Los Angeles Times - 1/15/2002 |
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