The Best Cyprus Community

Skip to content


Israel's Impunity Must End

Everything related to politics in Cyprus and the rest of the world.

Israel's Impunity Must End

Postby boomerang » Fri Apr 03, 2009 8:02 am

Israel's Impunity Must End
Changing the Rules of War
By GEORGE BISHARAT

The extent of Israel's brutality against Palestinian civilians in its 22-day pounding of the Gaza Strip is gradually surfacing. Israeli soldiers are testifying to lax rules of engagement tantamount to a license to kill. One soldier commented: "That's what is so nice, supposedly, about Gaza: You see a person on a road, walking along a path. He doesn't have to be with a weapon, you don't have to identify him with anything and you can just shoot him."

What is less appreciated is how Israel is also brutalizing international law, in ways that may long outlast the demolition of Gaza.

Since 2001, Israeli military lawyers have pushed to re-classify military operations in the West Bank and Gaza Strip from the law enforcement model mandated by the law of occupation to one of armed conflict. Under the former, soldiers of an occupying army must arrest, rather than kill, opponents, and generally must use the minimum force necessary to quell disturbances.

While in armed conflict, a military is still constrained by the laws of war - including the duty to distinguish between combatants and civilians, and the duty to avoid attacks causing disproportionate harm to civilian persons or objects - the standard permits far greater uses of force.

Israel pressed the shift to justify its assassinations of Palestinians in the Occupied Territories, which clearly violated settled international law. Israel had practiced "targeted killings" since the 1970s - always denying that it did so - but had recently stepped up their frequency, by spectacular means (such as air strikes) that rendered denial futile.

President Bill Clinton charged the 2001 Mitchell Committee with investigating the causes of the second Palestinian uprising and recommending how to restore calm in the region. Israeli lawyers pleaded their case to the committee for armed conflict. The committee responded by criticizing the blanket application of the model to the uprising, but did not repudiate it altogether.

Today, most observers - including Amnesty International - tacitly accept Israel's framing of the conflict in Gaza as an armed conflict, as their criticism of Israel's actions in terms of the duties of distinction and the principle of proportionality betrays. This shift, if accepted, would encourage occupiers to follow Israel's lead, externalizing military control while shedding all responsibilities to occupied populations.

Israel's campaign to rewrite international law to its advantage is deliberate and knowing. As the former head of Israel's 20-lawyer International Law Division in the Military Advocate General's office, Daniel Reisner, recently stated: "If you do something for long enough, 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 assassination thesis and we had to push it. At first there were protrusions that made it hard to insert easily into the legal molds. Eight years later, it is in the center of the bounds of legitimacy."

In the Gaza fighting, Israel has again tried to transform international law through violations. For example, its military lawyers authorized the bombing of a police cadet graduation ceremony, killing at least 63 young Palestinian men. Under international law, such deliberate killings of civilian police are war crimes. Yet Israel treats all employees of the Hamas-led government in the Gaza Strip as terrorists, and thus combatants. Secretaries, court clerks, housing officials, judges - all were, in Israeli eyes, legitimate targets for liquidation.

Israeli jurists also instructed military commanders that any Palestinian who failed to evacuate a building or area after warnings of an impending bombardment was a "voluntary human shield" and thus a participant in combat, subject to lawful attack. One method of warning employed by Israeli gunners, dubbed "knocking on the roof," was to fire first at a building's corner, then, a few minutes later, to strike more structurally vulnerable points. To imagine that Gazan civilians - penned into the tiny Gaza Strip by Israeli troops, and surrounded by the chaos of battle - understood this signal is fanciful at best.

Israel has a lengthy history of unpunished abuses of international law - among the most flagrant its decades-long colonization of the West Bank. To its credit, much of the world has refused to ratify Israel's violations. Unfortunately, our government is an exception, having frequently provided diplomatic cover for Israel's abuses. Our diplomats have vetoed 42 U.N. Security Council resolutions to shelter Israel from the consequences of its often illegal behavior.

We must break that habit now, or see international law perverted in ways that can harm us all. Our government has already been seduced to follow, in Afghanistan and elsewhere, Israel's example of targeted killings. This policy alienates civilians, innocently killed and wounded in these crude strikes, and deepens the determination of enemies to harm us by any means possible.

We do not want civilian police in the United States to be bombed, nor to have anyone "knock on our roofs." For our own sakes and for the world's, Israel's impunity must end.

George Bisharat is a professor of law at Hastings College of the Law in San Francisco, and writes frequently on law and politics in the Middle East.

http://www.counterpunch.org/bisharat04022009.html



and the truth is starting to emerge from the barbaric attack on the innocents...
User avatar
boomerang
Main Contributor
Main Contributor
 
Posts: 7337
Joined: Sat May 14, 2005 5:56 am

Postby denizaksulu » Fri Apr 03, 2009 9:03 am

Hi Boomers.

Who is there to stop USA's 'spoilt brat'? Do you think Obama can/will stop them? I dont think so.
User avatar
denizaksulu
Forum Addict
Forum Addict
 
Posts: 36077
Joined: Thu May 10, 2007 11:04 am

Postby boomerang » Fri Apr 03, 2009 9:25 am

no one Deniz...especially when they are taking the escalation to another level by attacking Iran...
User avatar
boomerang
Main Contributor
Main Contributor
 
Posts: 7337
Joined: Sat May 14, 2005 5:56 am

Postby denizaksulu » Fri Apr 03, 2009 9:37 am

Armageddon on its way. :roll:
User avatar
denizaksulu
Forum Addict
Forum Addict
 
Posts: 36077
Joined: Thu May 10, 2007 11:04 am

Postby saravakos » Fri Apr 03, 2009 10:02 am

I see everyone who was defending them saying they were defending themselves have gone missing now...typical.
User avatar
saravakos
Contributor
Contributor
 
Posts: 770
Joined: Tue Sep 20, 2005 12:27 am
Location: N London

Postby purdey » Sun Apr 05, 2009 8:10 pm

Still here. See no point in argueing with people who have never been to Israel, Gaza or Lebannon.
purdey
Main Contributor
Main Contributor
 
Posts: 3549
Joined: Wed Jan 16, 2008 9:06 pm

Postby Jerry » Sun Apr 05, 2009 8:43 pm

purdey wrote:Still here. See no point in argueing with people who have never been to Israel, Gaza or Lebannon.


Such a smartarse, I have never been to Nazi Germany, Rwanda or Smyrna but I know of the genocides there. You'll be telling us next that the Battle of Hastings did not happen because we failed to witness it.
I suggest you learn to reason your arguments rather than posting biased emotive crap.
Jerry
Main Contributor
Main Contributor
 
Posts: 4730
Joined: Mon May 29, 2006 12:29 pm
Location: UK

Postby purdey » Sun Apr 05, 2009 8:46 pm

Do you have family in the area, I do, smartarse. If you don't like it, take up arms you couch potato coward !!!
By the way I have also been to Germany, Rwanda, Cambodia. Sierra Leon, Mostar, I could go on but I don't want to come accross as a smartarse.
purdey
Main Contributor
Main Contributor
 
Posts: 3549
Joined: Wed Jan 16, 2008 9:06 pm

Postby Jerry » Sun Apr 05, 2009 8:52 pm

purdey wrote:Do you have family in the area, I do, smartarse. If you don't like it, take up arms you couch potato coward !!!


Actionman, stop trying to defend the indefensible. You will be trying to justify the theft of Greek Cypriot land next - and please spare us the "God gave us this land crap"

I'm probably too old to take up arms. As for cowards, well I think the article in the first post tells us who they are.
Jerry
Main Contributor
Main Contributor
 
Posts: 4730
Joined: Mon May 29, 2006 12:29 pm
Location: UK

Postby purdey » Sun Apr 05, 2009 9:10 pm

Where did I mention "God gave us this land ". You make like to spare a thought for my mothers family though, they had everything taken from them during WW2, home, land, family and wealth, but that is not your concern.
Please don't call me action man, you know nothing about me or what I do. I do however get about and see things most only get to hear about by sitting on their couch and watching tv.
First hand experience in my mind speaks volumes, second hand info is genrally not worth squat. You are never too old to take up arms if you believe in what you are fighting for !
purdey
Main Contributor
Main Contributor
 
Posts: 3549
Joined: Wed Jan 16, 2008 9:06 pm

Next

Return to Politics and Elections

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 0 guests