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March 2, 2010 - No. 45 -
Supplement
Israel Works to Change International Law
- Jeff Halper*, Palestine Telegraph,
February 22, 2010 -
The Israeli attack on Gaza in
December 2008/January 2009
was not merely a military assault on a primarily civilian population,
impoverished and the victim of occupation and besiegement these past 42
years. It was also part of an ongoing assault on international
humanitarian law by a highly coordinated team
of Israeli lawyers, military officers, PR people and politicians, led
by (no less) a philosopher of ethics. It is an effort coordinated as
well with other governments whose political and military leaders are
looking for ways to pursue "asymmetrical warfare" against peoples
resisting domination and the plundering of their
resources and labor without the encumbrances of human rights and
current international law. It is a campaign that is making progress and
had better be taken seriously by us all.
Since Ariel Sharon was indicted by a Belgian court in
2001 over his involvement in the Sabra and Chatila massacres and Israel
faced accusations of war crimes in the wake of its 2002 invasion of the
cities of the West Bank, with its high toll in civilian casualties
(some 500 people killed, 1500 wounded,
more than 4000 arrested), hundreds of homes demolished and the urban
infrastructure utterly destroyed, Israel has adopted a bold and
aggressive strategy: alter international law so that non-state actors
caught in a conflict with states and deemed by the states as
"non-legitimate actors" ("terrorists," "insurgents" and
"non-state actors," as well as the civilian population that supports
them) can no longer claim protection from invading armies. The urgency
of this campaign has been underscored by a series of notable setbacks
Israel subsequently incurred at the hands of the UN. In 2004, at the
request of the General Assembly, the
International Court of Justice in The Hague ruled that Israel's
construction of wall inside Palestinian territory is "contrary to
international law" and must be dismantled -- a ruling adopted almost
unanimously by the General Assembly, with only Israel, the US,
Australia and a few Pacific atolls dissenting. In 2006 the
UN Commission of Inquiry concluded that "a significant pattern of
excessive, indiscriminate and disproportionate use of force by the IDF
against Lebanese civilians and civilian objects, failing to distinguish
civilians from combatants and civilian objects from military targets"
together with the harsh criticism of the
UN's Goldstone report on Gaza accusing the Israeli government and
military again of targeting Palestinian civilians and causing
disproportionate destruction, has made this campaign even more urgent.
Fortunately, it is an uphill battle. The thrust of just
war theory, from which international humanitarian law (IHL) draws,
"...is to limit warfare, and in particular to regulate
its conduct and scope. Wars between states should never be total wars
between nations or peoples. Whatever happens to the two armies
involved, whichever one wins or loses, whatever the nature of the
battles or the extent of the casualties, the two nations,
the two peoples, must be functioning communities at the war's end. The
war cannot be a war of extermination or ethnic cleansing. And what is
true for states is also true for state-like political bodies such as
Hamas and Hezbollah, whether they practice terrorism or not. The people
they represent or claim to represent
are a people like any other." (Margalit and Walzer 2009)
Protecting the lives, property and human rights of
civilians caught up on warfare from the power and impunity of states is
especially relevant in our age when, as British General Rupert Smith
(2005) tells us, modern warfare is rapidly moving away from the
traditional inter-state model to what he calls
a "new paradigm" -- "war amongst the people" -- in which "We fight
amongst the people, not on the battlefield." A more popular term used
by military people, "asymmetrical warfare," is perhaps more honest and
revealing, since it highlights the vast power differential that exists
between states and their militaries
and the relative weakness of the non-state forces confronting them.
Now the issue of adapting laws and ethical approaches
coming out of traditional inter-state warfare to new forms of
"asymmetrical warfare" is a legitimate and vital endeavor. As Judge
Richard Goldstone indicated in the report of the United Nations Fact
Finding Mission on the Gaza Conflict (2009:5),
"The Mission interpreted [its] mandate as requiring it to place the
civilian population of the region at the centre of its concerns
regarding the violations of international law." Two prime issues of
concern arise here: protecting all non-combatants finding themselves
caught up in armed conflict, whether from state or
non-state adversaries, and the degree to which non-state actors must be
held accountable under IHL, no matter how just their cause may be. Thus
the Goldstone Report, recognizing the limitations under which non-state
actors operate, specified as well the obligation of Palestinian armed
groups "to exercise care and
take feasible precautions to protect the civilian population in Gaza
from the inherent dangers of the military operations."
Common sense and justice argue against a symmetry of
responsibility between heavily armed and coordinated state-sponsored
armies able to exert enormous force in order to exercise effective
control over a territory and its people (Israel over the Occupied
Palestinian Territories, in this case) and the
military weakness, financial constraints and fundamental difficulties
of non-state actors resisting oppression in either protecting their
people or creating a neutral "battleground" separate from its civilian
populations (as in the case of the Palestinians). Nonetheless, even a
certain implied symmetry introduced by the
Goldstone committee in which non-state actors possess legitimacy as "a
side" is unacceptable to Israeli political and military leaders. This,
despite the fact that, in 1960, the UN General Assembly's Declaration
on the Granting of Independence to Colonial Countries and Peoples
endorsed the right of peoples to
self-determination and, by extension, their right to resist "alien
subjugation, domination and exploitation" -- again, with the
obligations set out by the Goldstone Report. Nor is the notion that
states and their armies should be significantly constrained in their
military actions by IHL acceptable to Israeli decision-makers,
political and military. They seek, therefore, to alter international
law in ways that enable them -- and by extension other states involved
in "wars on terror" -- to effectively pursue warfare amongst the people
while eliminating both the legitimacy and protections enjoyed by their
non-state foes.
This campaign is led by two
Israeli figures: Asa Kasher,
a professor of philosophy and "practical ethics" at Tel Aviv
University, the author of the Israeli army's Code of Conduct, and Major
General Amos Yadlin, former head of the IDF's National Defense College,
under whose auspices Kasher and
his "team" formulated the Code of Conduct, and today the head of
Military Intelligence. And, Kasher vigorously asserts, it is completely
appropriate and understandable that an Israeli should be leading it.
"The decisive question," he says,
"...is how enlightened countries conduct themselves. We
in Israel are in a key position in the development of law in this field
because we are on the front lines in the fight against terrorism. This
is gradually being recognized both in the Israeli legal system and
abroad. After the debate before the High
Court of Justice on the issue of targeted killings there was no need to
revise the document [on the ethics of fighting terrorism] that Yadlin
and I drafted even by one comma. What we are doing is becoming the law.
These are concepts that are not purely legal, but also contain strong
ethical elements.
"The Geneva Conventions are based
on hundreds of years
of tradition of the fair rules of combat. They were appropriate for
classic warfare, where one army fought another. But in our time the
whole business of rules of fair combat has been pushed aside. There are
international efforts underway to
revise the rules to accommodate the war against terrorism. According to
the new provisions, there is still a distinction between who can and
cannot be hit, but not in the blatant approach which existed in the
past. The concept of proportionality has also changed." (quoted in Ha'aretz, Feb. 6, 2009)
"Customary international law accrues through an historic
process. If states are involved in a certain type of military activity
against other states, militias, and the like, and if all of them act
quite similarly to each other, then there is a chance that it will
become customary international law.... I am not optimistic
enough to assume that the world will soon acknowledge Israel's lead in
developing customary international law. My hope is that our doctrine,
give or take some amendments, will in this fashion be incorporated into
customary international law in order to regulate warfare and limit its
calamities..." (Kasher 2009:7)
In their assault on protections afforded to non-state
actors and the populations that support them by IHL, Kasher and Yadlin
go after two of the most fundamental principles of IHL: the Principle
of Distinction and the Principle of Proportionality.
The Principle of Distinction, embodied in the four
Geneva Conventions of 1949 and their two Additional Protocols of 1977,
lays down a hard-and-fast rule: civilians cannot be targeted by armies
and, on the contrary, must be protected. Article 3 of the Fourth Geneva
Convention states: "Persons taking
no active part in the hostilities shall in all circumstances be treated
humanely.... To this end the following acts are and shall remain
prohibited at any time and in any place whatsoever with respect to the
above-mentioned persons: violence to life and person ... and outrages
upon personal dignity."
The Principle of Proportionality,
embodied in the 1977
Protocols to the Fourth Geneva Conventions (to which neither the U.S.
nor
Israel is a signatory, but which nevertheless, as customary law, binds
them), considers it a war crime to intentionally attack a military
objective in the knowledge that the
incidental civilian injuries would be clearly excessive in relation to
the anticipated military advantage. "The presence within the civilian
population of individuals who do not come within the definition of
civilians," says Protocol I, Article 50 (3), "does not deprive the
population of its civilian character."
Undermining these principles is therefore a key to what
Kasher and Yadlin (2005) put forward as their "new doctrine of military
ethics." It is based on privileging states in their conflicts with
non-state actors and on giving them the authority to deem an adversary
"terrorist," a term lacking any agreed-upon
definition in IHL and one which obviously removes any legitimacy a
non-state actor so labeled might otherwise have. Indeed, Kasher and
Yadlin's "Just War Doctrine of Fighting Terror" is grounded on a
tendentious definition of "terrorism" custom-tailored to legitimizing
state policies and actions. We define an
"act of terror," they (2005:2) write,
"as an act, carried out by individuals or organizations,
not on behalf of any state, for the purpose of killing or otherwise
injuring persons, insofar as they are members of a particular
population, in order to instill fear among the members of that
population ('terrorize' them), so as to cause them to change
the nature of the related regime or of the related government or of
policies implemented by related institutions, whether for political or
ideological (including religious) reasons."
By defining terrorism is defined as "an act" carried out
by an individual or organization, Kasher and Yadlin both
de-contextualize and de-politicize the protracted struggles of
non-state actors, including those of all peoples oppressed by state
(and corporate) regimes. Although they admit a certain legitimacy
to "guerilla warfare," by reducing a popular struggle to a series of
discrete acts they makes it possible to label an entire resistance
movement "terrorist" purely on the basis of one or more particular
acts, with no regard to its situation or the justness of its cause.
Once this is done, it is easy to criminalize non-state resistance,
since terrorism is, in Kasher's words, "utterly immoral." When, for
example, Palestinians or the Hizbollah attack Israeli soldiers on
active duty, Kasher refers to these acts as "kidnapping" rather than
"capturing" them.
This very language and approach also has the effect of
privileging state actors, since it implies that state actions are by
definition legitimate and not "utterly immoral." Even when a country is
accused of war crimes, it is often able to justify its actions by
"military necessity." It is extremely difficult
to actually sanction or punish a country for war crimes even when they
are deemed to have occurred, and even when all this takes place, "war
crimes" possess a different meaning than the type of criminalization
applied to non-state actors. States may be sanctioned, but their
existential legitimacy is not removed. Germany
was judged as having committed horrendous war crimes during the Nazi
era, and paid certain penalties, but that did not prevent it from
rejoining the international community immediately after the war. Thus
Kasher and Yadlin define an act as terror by its "purpose" of
terrorizing a particular population without the slightest
thought of applying that principle to Israel's own policies and actions
over its occupation of 42 years, despite exhaustive documentation of
that terrorization.
Just how self-serving the
tendentious use of the concept
"terror" can be is evident in Israel's own attempts to have the Iranian
Revolutionary Guards declared a "terror organization," even though,
being an agent of a state, it would not fit into Kasher and Yadlin's
own state/non-state dichotomy. What, then,
should prevent the international community from naming the IDF and
various covert Israeli agencies such as the Mossad or the Shin Beit
(the General Security Services) as "terror organizations"? The
Goldstone Report itself concluded that Israel's offensive against Gaza
during Operation Cast Lead was "a deliberately
disproportionate attack designed to punish, humiliate and terrorize a
civilian population." Cognizant of this contradiction, Kasher and
Yadlin are careful to add a caveat: they define an act of terror as one
carried out "not on behalf of any state."
Having de-legitimized state-defined "acts of terrorism,"
Kasher and Yadlin then go on to further legitimize state actions such
as those taken by Israel against Hizbollah, Hamas or, indeed, all
Palestinian resistance by invoking "self-defense" -- again, a claim
which, according to Just War Theory and Article
51 of the UN Charter, only a state can make. In order to do so they
begins the narrative of events leading up the attack on Gaza with what
the "terrorist" organization alone had done, launching rockets on the
town of Sderot and its vicinity. Nothing of the fact that the vast
majority of Gazans are refugees from 1948,
denied their right of return and deprived of all their properties and
assets. Nothing of the occupation since 1967 and the deliberate
de-development of the Gazan economy; nothing of the exclusion since
1989 of Gazan workers from the Israel job market upon which they had
been made dependent, and thus their subsequent
impoverishment; nothing of the years of settlement in which 7000
Israelis lorded it over a million and a half Palestinians at a cost to
the Palestinians of much in terms of their lives and livelihoods;
nothing of the siege illegally imposed since 2006, or of the
transformation of Gaza into the world's largest open-air
prison; nothing of the fact that until today much of the land of Gaza
-- and the sea -- are off-limits to Palestinian farmers and fishermen;
nothing of the fact that Gazans live in mud and sewage created by
Israel's wholesale destruction of their infrastructure; nothing of the
wasted lives of the young people; nothing
of the fact that Hamas observed an 18 month cease-fire and was willing
to extend it, until Israel broke it on Nov. 4, 2008, setting off the
rocket attacks. Nothing, in short, which would call into question
whether the assault on Gaza was genuinely an act of self-defense.
Indeed, the process of de-contextualization is a
prerequisite to the ethics Kasher offers as the basis of international
morality, law, political practice and warfare. Rather than taking into
account of Israel's four decades and more of occupation over Gaza and
the West Bank, in which the Occupying Power
may be said to have at least a modicum of responsibility for what
transpires, Kasher instead bases his entire moral justification on what
Israel has done over the years on a disembodied "double effect"
principle, according to which, "when we are seeking a goal that is
morally justified in and of itself, then it is also
morally justified to achieve it, even if this may lead to undesirable
consequences -- on the condition that the undesirable consequences are
unavoidable and unintentional, and that an effort was made to minimize
their negative effects." As if maintaining a belligerent occupation for
almost a half century is unavoidable
and unintentional, and Israel actually took steps to minimize its
negative effects.

Two of the repeated
attacks by Israeli Occupation Forces on UN facilities took place during
Operation Cast Lead. Left: The UN Relief Works Agency in Gaza City is
set ablaze by an air strike on January 15, 2009. Right: A UN-run school
sheltering refugees in Beit Lahia is bombed with white phosphorous,
January 17, 2009.
This, then, sets up a hierarchy of priorities -- indeed,
"obligations" on states -- that turn IHL on its head. The Principle of
Distinction cannot be honored, Kasher and Yadlin argue, because
"terrorists do not play by the rules." Nothing less is required than a
fundamental "updating the concept of war."
"As we sought to try and formulate how to fight terror," Yadlin (2004)
writes,
"we understood that we were in a different kind of
war, where the laws and ethics of conventional war did not apply. It
involves not only the asymmetry of tanks The main asymmetry is in the
values of the two societies involved in the conflict -- in the rules
they obey....
"A new model of warfare -- the counter-terrorism war --
requires a new set of rules on how to fight it. The other side is
fighting outside the rules and we have to create new ethical rules for
the international law of armed conflict. The duty of the state is to
defend its citizens. Any time a terrorist gets
away because of concerns about collateral damage, we may be violating
our main duty to protect our citizens. We look for alternatives so as
not to cause collateral damage, or to cause the minimum amount of
collateral damage, but the main obligation is to defend our
citizens...."
Thus, says Kasher, in an area such as the Gaza Strip in
which the IDF does not have effective control, "the responsibility for
distinguishing between terrorists and noncombatants is not placed upon
[Israel's] shoulders, since it is not the effective ruler." Military
commanders must thus place prime importance
on achieving their military objectives, since this is what self-defense
depends upon. Next in priority is protecting soldiers' lives -- indeed,
Kasher and Yadlin define soldiers as "civilians in uniforms," thereby
eliding the principle of a state's duty to protect its citizens with
its deployment of trained and armed combatants
sworn to pursue its military aims. Only then does the army have to
worry about avoiding injury to civilian non-combatants. "Sending a
soldier [to Gaza] to fight terrorists is justified," writes Kasher,
"but why should I force him to endanger himself much more than that so
that the terrorist's neighbor isn't killed?"
asks Kasher. "From the standpoint of the state of Israel, the neighbor
is much less important. I owe the soldier more. If it's between the
soldier and the terrorist's neighbor, the priority is the soldier. Any
country would do the same."
Kasher's introduces a radically new principle of
distinction -- that in territories where it does not exercise effective
control a country does not bear the moral responsibility for properly
separating between dangerous individuals and harmless ones (Kasher
2010) -- as if simply asserting it lends it the necessary
authority. And this is, in fact, the point. "If you do something for
long enough," says Colonel (res.) Daniel Reisner, former head of the
IDF's Legal Department, "the world will accept it. The whole of
international law is now based on the notion that an act that is
forbidden today becomes permissible if executed
by enough countries.... International law progresses through
violations. We invented the targeted assassinations thesis [that
extra-judicial killings are permitted when it is necessary to stop a
certain operation against the citizens of Israel and when the role
played by the target is crucial to the operation] and we had to
push it. Eight years later it is in the center of the bounds of
legality" (quoted in Kearney 2010:29). Or, as Kasher (2010) puts it,
"The more often Western states apply principles that originated in
Israel to their own non-traditional conflicts in places like
Afghanistan and Iraq, then the greater the chance these principles
have of becoming a valuable part of international law."
Even the attempt to distinguish civilians from
combatants was abandoned in the assault on Gaza. According to another
report in Ha'aretz (3.2.10),
"The Israel Defense Forces chose to risk
civilians in Gaza in order to protect its soldiers during Operation
Cast Lead, a high-ranking Israeli military officer
told the British daily The Independent on Wednesday. The IDF officer
claimed the traditional 'means and intentions' engagement principle --
stating that a suspect must have both a weapon and a visible intent to
use it before being fired at -- was discarded during Israel's Gaza
incursion in late 2008 and early 2009."
Does that mean that states cannot engage in terrorism?
This is a pretty bold claim. In fact, the non-state "terrorism from
below" which so concerns Kasher and Yadlin pales in its horror when
compared to "terrorism from above," State Terrorism. In his book Death By Government (1994:13), R.J.
Rummel
points out that over the course of the 20th century about 170,000,000
innocent civilians were killed by non-state actors, a significant
figure to be sure. But, he adds,
"...during the first eighty-eight years of this [20th]
century, almost 170 million men, women and children have been shot,
beaten, tortured, knifed, burned, starved, frozen, crushed or worked to
death; buried alive, drowned, hung, bombed or killed in any other of
the myriad ways governments have inflicted
death on unarmed, helpless citizens and foreigners. The dead could
conceivably be nearly 360 million people."
And that doesn't include Zaire, Bosnia, Somalia, Sudan,
Rwanda, Saddam Hussein's reign, the impact of UN sanctions on the Iraqi
civilian population and other state-sponsored murders that occurred
after Rummel compiled his figures. It also does not account for all the
forms of State Terrorism that
do not result in death: torture, imprisonment, repression, house
demolitions, induced starvation, intimidation and all the rest.
"We do not deny," Kasher (2009) concedes, that a state
can act for the purpose of killing persons in order to terrorize a
population with the goal of achieving some political or ideological
goal." He then adds another crucial caveat:
"However, when such acts are performed by on behalf of a
state, or by some of its overt or covert agencies or proxies, we apply
to the ensuing conflict moral, ethical and legal principles that are
commonly held to pertain to ordinary international conflicts between
states or similar political entities. In
such a context, a state that killed numerous citizens of another state
in order to terrorize its citizenry would be guilty of what is commonly
regarded as a war crime."
Kasher's caveat -- "a state that killed numerous
citizens of another state in order to terrorize its citizenry" --
apparently means that states can neither be accused of terrorism nor
held accountable for war crimes arising out of killing or terrorizing
civilian populations such as the people of Gaza, since the
latter are not citizens of another state.
As for the Principle of Proportionality, that, too, is a
casualty of Kasher and Yadlin's assault on IHL. Their alternative is
what is known by the IDF as its Dahiya Doctrine. Coming out of the
second Lebanon war of 2006, in which Israel destroyed the Hizbollah
stronghold of Dahiya in Beirut, the Dahiya
Doctrine states attacks against Israel will be deterred by "harming the
civilian population to such an extent that it will bring pressure to
bear on the enemy combatants [...] through the damage and destruction
of civilian and military infrastructures which necessitate long and
expensive reconstruction actions which would
crush the will of those who wish to act against Israel" (PCATI 2009).
According to the Goldstone Report (2009:48),
"The tactics used by Israeli military armed forces in
the Gaza offensive are consistent with previous practices, most
recently during the Lebanon war in 2006. A concept known as the Dahiya
doctrine emerged then, involving the application of disproportionate
force and the causing of great damage and
destruction to civilian property and infrastructure, and suffering to
civilian populations. The Mission concludes from a review of the facts
on the ground that it witnessed for itself that what was prescribed as
the best strategy appears to have been precisely what was put into
practice."
It then goes on to quote the head of Israel's Northern
Command, Gen. Gadi Eisenkott: "What happened in the Dahiya quarter of
Beirut in 2006 will happen in every village from which Israel is fired
on. [...] We will apply disproportionate force on it and cause great
damage and destruction there. From
our standpoint, these are not civilian villages, they are military
bases. [...] This is not a recommendation. This is a plan. And it has
been approved." But here again, it is the assertion of a new version of
the principle that is important. Thus, declares Kasher, the Principle
of Proportionality does not have to do with
inflicting civilian injuries clearly excessive in relation to the
anticipated military advantage, as the international community now
thinks, but the exact opposite: "Proportionality is justifiability of
the collateral damage on grounds of the military advantage gained"
(Kasher 2010).
The upshot of Kasher and Yadlin's "updating the concept
of war" was clearly evident in the attack on Gaza. "When senior Israel
Defense Forces officers are asked about the killing of hundreds of
Palestinian civilians during the fighting in the Gaza Strip," Ha'aretz
(Feb.6, 2009) reported,
"they almost all give the same answer: The use of
massive force was designed to protect the lives of the soldiers, and
when faced with a choice between protecting the lives of Israeli
soldiers and those of enemy civilians under whose protection the Hamas
terrorists are operating, the soldiers take precedence.
The IDF's response to criticism does not sound improvised or
argumentative.... And it operated there not only with the backing of
the legal opinion of the office of the Military Advocate General, but
also on the basis of ethical theory, developed several years ago, that
justifies its actions.
"Prof. Asa Kasher of Tel Aviv University, an Israel
Prize
laureate in philosophy, is the philosopher who told the IDF that it was
possible. In a recent interview with Ha'aretz,
Kasher
said the army
operated in accordance with a code of conduct developed about five
years ago for fighting terrorism. 'The
norms followed by the commanders in Gaza were generally appropriate,'
Kasher said. In Kasher's opinion there is no justification for
endangering the lives of soldiers to avoid the killing of civilians who
live in the vicinity of terrorists. According to Kasher, IDF Chief of
Staff Gabi Ashkenazi 'has been very familiar
with our principles from the time the first document was drafted in
2003 to the present.'
"Kasher's argument is that in an area such as the Gaza
Strip in which the IDF does not have effective control the overriding
principle guiding the commanders is achieving their military
objectives. Next in priority is protecting soldiers' lives, followed by
avoiding injury to enemy civilians.... Prof. Kasher
has strong, long-standing ties with the army. He drafted the IDF
ethical code of conduct in the mid-1990's. In 2003 he and Maj. Gen Amos
Yadlin, now the head of Military Intelligence, published an article
entitled 'The Ethical Fight Against Terror.' It justified the targeted
assassination of terrorists, even at the price
of hitting nearby Palestinian civilians. Lt. Gen. Moshe Ya'alon, who
was the IDF Chief of Staff at the time, did not make the document
binding, but Kasher says the ideas in the document were adopted in
principle by Ya'alon and his successors. Kasher has presented them to
IDF and Shin Bet security service personnel
dozens of times."
Such arguments are also being taken up by "pro-Israeli"
critics of IHL. Amichai Cohen (2010), for example, writing in the Global Law Forum
of the neo-con Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs,
sums up Kasher and Yadlin's argument succinctly (though marshalling
numerous legal citations just as Kasher
mobilizes ethical arguments): "The concept of proportionality permits
military personnel to kill innocent civilians, provided that the
intended targets of the operation are enemy forces and not civilians."
And yet, when challenged, the philosophy, ethics and
principled argumentation of Kasher and Yadlin dissipate, and one is
found in the same kind of emotional and half-baked discourse that
typifies shouting matches in bars or on the street. When, for example,
Uri Avnery (2009) challenges Kasher's
reduction of the Gaza operation as merely a justified defensive
reaction to "continued rocket attacks on Israel by the terrorist
organizations in the Gaza Strip," Kasher (2009) retreats from his
philosophical argumentation into personal attacks: "Nor is it a
surprise," he writes, "that Avnery does not want us to use the
term 'terrorists' to describe the Palestinians -- with whom he
identifies -- because of these negative moral connotations. He himself
does not wish to be morally tainted as someone who identifies with
terrorists."
From here Kasher abandons intellectual analysis
completely and descends into mere personal opinion and unsupportable
suppositions. "Some people claim that a peace agreement between Israel
and the Palestinians would provide Israeli citizens with the best
protection against rockets and missiles, suicide
attacks, and other horrors of terrorism," he begins.
"It is true that a democratic state is required to seek
peace agreements with neighboring states and peoples. However, the idea
that it is possible to reach a political settlement with the
Palestinians that would be upheld by Hamas, Islamic Jihad, and other
terrorist organizations is quite doubtful. Even if
we accepted the plausibility of such a claim, it is all but certain
that rocket attacks on Israel would continue throughout the
negotiations. In fact, they would likely increase. Leaving a state's
citizens vulnerable to persistent threat is not morally justified by
the mere fact of ongoing negotiations. Nor can the fact that
negotiations are taking place justify avoiding the last-resort option
after all alternative courses of action have failed.... There are those
who call on Israel to engage in direct negotiations with Hamas, in
order to rid its citizens of the threats posed to them by rocket
attacks and other kinds of terrorist activity. This argument
warrants a similar response. From a moral standpoint, demanding that
Israel engage in direct negotiations with a terrorist organization that
does not recognize its right to exist cannot be justified..." (Kasher
2009).
Apparently this method is common when Israelis attempt
to alter IHL in order to justify unjustifiable practices. A few years
ago (April 15, 2005, p. 34) the Up
Front weekend magazine of The
Jerusalem Post published an interview with an Israeli "expert in
international law" who, tellingly, chose to
remain anonymous. This what s/he said:
"International law is the language of the world and it's
more or less the yardstick by which we measure ourselves today. It's
the lingua franca of
international organizations. So you have to play
the game if you want to be a member of the world community. And the
game works like this. As long as
you claim you are working within international law and you come up with
a reasonable argument as to why what you are doing is within the
context of international law, you're fine. That's how it goes. This is
a very cynical view of how the world works. So, even if you're being
inventive, or even if you're being
a bit radical, as long as you can explain it in that context, most
countries will not say you're a war criminal."
This is a serious stuff. We are in the midst of the
second battle of Gaza, a campaign not only to refute and defame the
UN's Goldstone Report and sanitize Israel's actions there but to change
international humanitarian law in a way that protects the powerful
states and their armies while removing the
fundamental rights of the world's poor and downtrodden to resist. The
stakes are high. What will happen to the Palestinians -- or oppressed
peoples everywhere -- if Kasher & Co. succeed in striking the
Principles of Distinction and Proportionality from international law?
Imagine an entire world unprotected against
occupation, invasions, exploitation and warehousing, a global Gaza. It
would be world that reflects current reality: everyone would be either
an Israeli Jew, part of a privileged global minority who main ethical
responsibility is towards defending itself against "terrorists," or a
Palestinian, part of an impoverished, occupied
majority with no control over its resources or its future, which
nevertheless carries responsibility for the well-being and security of
its violent "zero-tolerant" masters.
Standing on the ramparts of international law to
guarantee its integrity should be an integral part of the struggle
against oppression everywhere. If the people of Gaza can become fair
game, so can any of us. In terms of vulnerability as well as
solidarity, we are all, indeed, Palestinians. If IHL needs
to be altered to take into account the rise of no-state actors in
international conflicts -- and here we should note the increased use of
"outsourced" private military contractors by states and corporations,
the emergence of "failed states," many of which combine state apparatus
with criminal activity, and even the role
played by NGOs -- then it must be done in a way that continues to
protect civilians and oppressed peoples against states, often their
own. Kasher and Yadlin's assault on IHL, sponsored and legitimized by
the Israel government "in the name of" other states engaged in
so-called wars of terrorism, threatens to give
powerful governments, their militaries and allied corporations a free
hand in bringing about a global "order" friendly to their interests at
the expense of the world's peoples.
Given what Michael Klare calls "the new landscape of
global conflict" -- state-initiated resource wars (initiated or fueled,
it must be noted, primarily by the powerful democratic states which
control the global economic system and account for more than 80 percent
of the world's arms trade, whose revenues
reached $1.46 trillion in 2008) -- the prospect of states free of the
constraints of IHL should give us all pause. For, as it turns out, the
sites of future wars are largely in the very areas where people --
framed as "terrorists" -- are resisting the plundering of their
resources, neo-colonialism and their own permanent warehousing.
These sites, Klare (2001) tells us,
"will be places that harbor particularly abundant
supplies of vital materials -- oil, water, diamonds, minerals,
old-growth timber -- along with supply routes that connect these areas
to major markets around the world. These regions will command attention
from the media, dominate the deliberations of
international policy makers, and invite the heaviest concentrations of
military power.... [They comprise] a wide band of territory straddling
the equator."
Israel's attempt to globalize its legal, moral,
political and military justifications for what it did -- and continues
to do -- in Gaza, the West Bank and Lebanon should concern us all. Just
as Israel used Gaza as a laboratory for tactics and weapons of
"counterinsurgency" and urban warfare, so, too, is it
attempting to export its "new doctrines" in a way that fundamentally
compromises the well-being of people caught in conflicts worldwide. As
(Kasher and Yadlin 2005:4) write explicitly,
"the proposed principles are meant to be justified and
practically applicable under any parallel circumstances. Moreover,
those principles are intended to be universal in an additional crucial
sense.... The different defense agencies of a democratic state that
faces terror should follow principles that rest
on universal moral grounds and on the professional and organizational
ethical grounds related to each of those state agencies on its own, be
it military, regular police, combat police or preventive intelligence.
In this sense, everyone resisting oppression is a
Palestine. The stakes involved in losing this second battle of Gaza are
high indeed. Israel's attempt to "globalize" Gaza imperils us all.

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