- They're called "Refuseniks" but not for refusing
to serve. They've done it proudly and courageously, and here's how "Courage
to Refuse" members state their position:
-
- "We, reserve officers and soldiers of the Israel
Defense Forces (IDF)....have always served in the front lines....were first
to carry out any mission, light or heavy, (and we did it) to protect the
State of Israel and strengthen it.
-
- We....served....long weeks every year, in spite of dear
cost to our personal lives, have been on reserve duty all over the Occupied
Territories, and were issued commands and directives that had nothing to
do with the security of our country (but were only given to perpetuate)
our control over the Palestinian people. We('ve)....seen the bloody toll
this Occupation exacts from both sides.
-
- ....the commands issued to us in the Territories (have)
destroy(ed) all the values (we learned) growing up in this country.
-
- ....the (way) the Occupation (undermines the) IDF's human
character and (exposes) the corruption of the entire Israeli society.
-
- We....know that the Territories are not Israel, and that
all settlements are bound to be evacuated in the end.
-
- We hereby declare that we shall not continue to fight
this War of the Settlements.
-
- We shall not continue to fight beyond the 1967 borders
to dominate, expel, starve and humiliate an entire people.
-
- We hereby declare that we shall continue serving the
Israel Defense Forces in any mission that serves Israel's defense.
-
- The missions of occupation and oppression do not serve
this purpose - and we shall take no part in them."
-
- These are courageous men and some women, hundreds of
them. Their "Courage to Refuse - Combatant's Letter" web site
lists 550 by name. There are hundreds more as well. Their numbers are growing,
and their resistance is firm. There are five separate refusenik groups.
They're listed below. Courage to Refuse is one of them.
-
- Yesh Gvul (There is A Limit)
-
- Yesh Gvul combats the "misuse of the IDF for unworthy
ends" that includes the occupation of Palestine. It was established
during Israel's 1982 Lebanon invasion that they denounced as a "naked
(act of) aggression in which they wanted no part." It supports imprisoned
members and their families, holds vigils where they're held, informs the
public of their status, and embraces a peace agenda. They state that "as
responsible citizens (they) declare that (they) will take no part in the
continued oppression of the Palestinian people (nor will they) participate
in policing actions or in guarding the settlements."
-
- They further say that as "an Israeli peace group"
they oppose the occupation and support soldiers who refuse to be part of
it. They call the Israeli army's role "brutal" and "subjugating."
It places servicemen "in a grave and moral and political dilemma (because
it requires them) to enforce policies they deem illegal, immoral and ultimately
harmful to Israeli interests." Many of their members are combat officers,
they've served with distinction, and they rank from sergeant to major.
They hold different political views, support peace but no one specific
program, and they back a "two-state" solution they believe is
"key to (peacefully resolving) the Israeli-Palestinian conflict."
-
- The Shministim
-
- The Shministim is made up of high school seniors approaching
age 18 after which Jewish and Druze men and women face mandatory military
service, except for exemptions on religious, health and other accepted
grounds. The organization no longer maintains a web site.
-
- Courage to Refuse (The Combatants Letter)
-
- The organization was founded in 2002 by a group of 50
combat officers and soldiers after its members realized that their missions
had nothing to do with defending Israel. They're to colonize Palestine
and oppress its people. They further believe that many commands issued
them harm Israel's strategic interests and they refuse to obey them.
-
- They've served their country and support it, but they
determined that "fighting in Gaza and....West Bank (was counterproductive):
by obeying orders they would not be protecting the lives of their dear
ones." They believe "the Occupation poses a threat to the security
of Israel." They stated their beliefs openly in "The Combatant's
Letter." Hundreds of IDF members signed it and joined "Courage
to Refuse." New members join weekly, and Yaffee Center for Strategic
Studies surveys show that over 25% of Israelis sympathize with their struggle.
-
- They continue to perform reserve duty, but won't serve
in the Occupied Territories. Over 280 of them have been court-martialed
and jailed for up to 35 days. Yet they've "won a warm place for the
movement in the hearts of many Israelis" who support their self-sacrifice
and willingness to be imprisoned for their beliefs.
-
- Hundreds of Israeli professors signed petitions for them.
Sami Michael is acting chairman of the Israeli Association for Human Rights.
He said that refusing the occupation is not just a moral act, it's the
purest form of patriotism in Israel today. Their reasons for not serving
are stated above.
-
- The Pilots Group
-
- The Pilots Group maintains a web site in Hebrew only,
so it can't be monitored by non-Hebrew readers. In September 2003, 27 of
their members (including reserve Brigadier General Yiftah Spector) published
their statement for the first time. It declared they would no longer fly
missions against West Bank and Gaza civilians, that doing so is illegal
and immoral, and they denounced targeted assassinations.
-
- On Israeli television, one pilot said: "We veteran
pilots and active pilots alike....are opposed to carrying out illegal and
immoral attacks, of the type carried out by Israel in the Territories.
We....love the State of Israel (but) refuse to take part in air force attacks
in civilian populations centers. We refuse to continue harming innocent
civilians."
-
- They knew they could be punished for their stance and
for their "illegitimate" and "forbidden" statement,
according to Israel's chief of army staff, Moshe Ya'alon. Israeli Air Force
(IAF) chief Dan Halutz downplayed their action, said announcing it on national
television was "inappropriate," and called it "the mother
of all dangers to our people."
-
- Because of it, they were expelled from the IAF, denounced
as traitors, and went public again two months later to explain further.
One captain's comment was typical: "In the beginning, we were pilots
who believed our country would do all it could to achieve peace. We believed
in the purity of our arms and that we did all we could to protect unnecessary
loss of life. Somewhere in the last few years it became harder and harder
to believe that is the case."
-
- A single incident changed them. It was the bombing of
Hamas military leader Salah Shehade's home that killed him and 14 members
of his family, nine of whom were children. One pilot called it "murder,"
another "state terrorism," still another "vengeance,"
and all agreed they could no longer perform these missions.
-
- Lt. Colonel Avner Raanan was one of them. He's one of
Israel's most respected and decorated pilots. He signed the letter and
stated: "If you look at the past three years, you see that, if we
had a suicide bombing, the Israeli air force made a big operation in which
civilians were killed, and that looks to innocent eyes like revenge. You
hear it in the streets of Israel; people want revenge. But we should not
behave like that. We are not a mafia."
-
- Referring to an attack on Gaza's Nuseirat refugee camp,
another pilot added: "Is it legitimate to take F-15s and helicopters
designed to destroy enemy tanks, and use them against cars and houses in
one of the most heavily populated places in the world....we have become
blinded by the blood on our own faces. We cannot see that on the other
side....is a whole nation of innocent people."
-
- The pilots' action and statements shook Israeli society.
Their superiors condemned them, but over 500 supportive letters disagreed,
including one from a holocaust survivor and others from fellow pilots.
In addition, former left wing cabinet ministers also praised their courage.
-
- Sayeret Matkal
-
- This is an elite IDF commando unit that maintains no
web site. In December 2003, 13 of its reservists and officers (including
one major) wrote the Prime Minister declaring their refusal to serve henceforth
in the Territories. Their statement read: "We say to you today, we
will no longer give our hands to the oppressive reign in the territories
and the denial of human rights to millions of Palestinians, and we will
no longer serve as a defensive shield for the settlement enterprise."
-
- Members of this commando group carried out the 1976 Entebbe,
Uganda airport raid that rescued 100 hostages on an Air France hijacked
plane. They rarely serve in the Territories, but their announcement was
significant because of the group's standing in Israeli society. Former
Prime Minister Ehud Barak once commanded them and led a raid against a
1972 hijacked Sabena plane at Tel Aviv airport. He asked the signers to
reconsider, called their letter a grave mistake, and said "it's not
too late to correct it...." Other officials also condemned them, but
Meretz Knesset Member (MK) Roman Bronfman believed they acted bravely,
and Labor MK Ophir Pines said it requires that serious discussion be held.
-
- In May 2004, Haaretz journalist Gideon Levy was supportive.
He urged more soldiers to speak out, discuss their actions in the Territories,
and ask why they serve there "to protect groups of delusional settlers
(and) what their systematic abuse of the Palestinians has to do with security....how
many innocent people (have) they killed and (keep on) killing."
-
- He noted that Israelis don't know what goes on in the
Territories, so it's up to soldiers to "lift this screen....The Palestinians
aren't believed, the Israeli press (keeps) its distance from the Territories
and the international press is perceived as hostile. Only the soldiers
can break the vicious circle....No one (can) deny their accounts....it's
time (for them) to stand up and speak out....how they killed and jailed
and humiliated for no good reason."
-
- Excerpts From Soldiers Breaking the Silence
-
- Breaking the Silence (Shovrim Shtika) dedicates itself
to two purposes:
-
- -- exposing IDF oppression in occupied Palestine; and
-
- -- providing discharged Israeli soldiers and reservists
a platform to explain what they were ordered to do on the ground.
-
- In their own words, hundreds of their testimonies tell
shocking stories - the ordeal they faced, its moral price, and the corrupting
erosion it had on their values. They focus on orders gotten, rules of engagement
and operational procedures that include frequent illegal commands:
-
- -- firing at civilians posing no risk;
-
- -- revenge operations for collective punishment; and
-
- -- intentionally attacking Palestinian rescue forces,
including ambulances.
-
- Their accounts are disturbing. They portray institutionalized
moral corruption, universal contempt for Arabs, and how it affects everyone
from new recruits to commanders. Rules of engagement are unrestrained,
government oversight is non-existent, so reporting abuse is urgent. They
want it stopped and demand an independent body to do it.
-
- It goes on everywhere in occupied Palestine with Hebron
a prominent example because it's the only Palestinian city with an Israeli
settlement in its center. Sixty-four soldiers from the Nachal brigade spoke
out, they were there during the Second Intifada, and their testimonies
recount horrors on the ground they were ordered to commit.
-
- They call their experiences "shocking" with
photos for confirming evidence. Their collective statement says: "In
coping daily with the madness of Hebron, we couldn't remain the same people
beneath our uniforms. We saw our buddies and ourselves slowly changing....
-
- We were exposed to the ugly face of terror....an innocent
family killed while at the Sabbath table. Countless engagements, bereaved
families, innocent civilians injured, chase and arrests.
-
- The settlers....rioted, occupied houses, and confronted
the police and army....The constant curfew made Hebron into a ghost town....The
school in Jebl Ju'ar has been an army post....We asked ourselves why an
army platoon prevents children from going to school. We found no answers.
-
- We decided to speak out....to tell....Hebron isn't in
outer space....But it's light years away from Tel Aviv....Come, see, hear
and understand what's happening there."
-
- Here are more paraphrased comments:
-
- We man checkpoints, stop people from going somewhere,
humiliate them, but "I'm doing my duty (and) inflicting pain on people,
harming them unnecessarily." It affects your mind, your sleep the
longer you serve there. Jews do as they please. There are no laws. Anything
goes, breaking into shops, occupying Palestinian homes. Your judgment gets
impaired when everyday your enemy is an Arab. You don't look at them as
people. But they're not dogs, not animals, not inferior, yet they simply
don't count, and since they're your enemy you can kill them.
-
- At checkpoints, our job was don't let them pass. It was
absurd, there were old ladies who had to get through to go home. Why was
it forbidden to pass? It was collective punishment. "You're not allowed
to pass because you're not allowed to pass." Then there are the curfews.
"I'm certain that 80% of the time there was a curfew." We closed
all the stores and sent everyone home.
-
- I'm ashamed of myself because I realized I enjoy the
feeling of power. I'm the Law. It's a mighty feeling. It's because you
have a weapon, because you're a soldier, it's addictive. You can do whatever
you want, unsupervised, enter people's homes, conduct random searches.
Tell them what you want and they'll do it because they're afraid. Palestinians
feel you don't let them walk in the streets, work, live or breathe.
-
- I have a machine gun, it's loaded, the safety catch is
off. I can shoot you any time, for any reason, split your head open with
the gun butt and my commander will pat me on the back and say good job.
It's crazy, I'm just a kid, but Hebron hardens you. I say to myself I'm
doing something I don't believe in, and I'm putting myself in a position
where someone wants to kill me because of it. You see things that couldn't
possibly happen in your own home and shouldn't happen. But here everything
is different.
-
- Any time of day or night, whenever we feel like it, we
pick a house, any house, and we go in. We move all the men into one room,
the women in another, and place them under guard. We can do whatever we
want. There's no justification for it. It shouldn't be happening.
-
- Then there are the settlers. They run wild. There's no
law. They do what they please. So they burn another shop, trash another
home, occupy another one, no big deal, happens all the time. We just watch
and do nothing.
-
- If someone is sick and needs to go to the hospital, I
ask my commander if I can let her pass. No way if there's a curfew. She's
not going anywhere no matter how sick. All these stories are my daily routine
for over six months. When it ended, I questioned whether I protected myself
or my country. I began watching out for myself because I didn't believe
in the ideology.
-
- Serving in Hebron made me feel there's something different
about being a Jew. I can't explain it. I'm supposed to guard the settlers
who don't have the kind of morality I was raised to believe. I reached
a point where I didn't know who the enemy was anymore, Jews or Arabs. Maybe
I need to protect the Arabs, not the Jews who attack them. I feel emotionally
injured. If someone's caught breaking curfew, we can let them have it aggressively.
Hold them, make them wait eight hours with no water, sit and wait. "Why?
Because he walked outside. Because he dared go buy something. Because he
dared send his kid to school." We can even shoot them.
-
- Selected Israeli Organizations Supporting Refuseniks
-
- Several important ones are covered below:
-
- New Profile
-
- New Profile is a pluralistic feminist organization that
includes men and women. It's goal is to transform Israel from a militaristic
to a civil society. It opposes occupation and supports all conscientious
objectors - from pacifists opposed to war to refuseniks who won't serve
in occupied Palestine. Its charter states that "Israel is capable
of a determined peace politics. It need not be a militarized society."
It understands that "the words 'national security' have often masked
calculated decisions to choose military action for the achievement of political
goals."
-
- It no longer is "willing to take part in such choices.
We are no longer willing to go on being mobilized, raising our children
for mobilization....while those in charge of the country go on deploying
the army easily, rather than building other solutions."
-
- It's "hard to express this type opinion in Israel
today....An attitude that dares question the fundamental principle of willing
enlistment is almost incomprehensible in a soldiers' state." We reject
perpetuating war. We prioritize and protect life.
-
- "We oppose the use of the army, police, (and) security
forces in the ongoing oppression and discrimination of the Palestinian
citizens of Israel (and in the Occupied Territories)," in demolishing
their homes, "denying them building and development rights, (and)
using violence" against them. Thousands of young Israelis are opting
out and refuse to serve. They reject military service in Israel today.
The IDF states that only one-third of reserve forces in fact serve actively.
-
- Israeli law doesn't recognize conscientious objection.
"We regard Israeli conscription law as discriminatory and non-democratic,
and call for" recognizing every person's right to act according to
his or her conscience. They should have the right to fulfill their social
commitment by alternative civic or community means, including through non-governmental,
voluntary organizations.
-
- The Refuser Solidarity Network (RSN)
-
- It was founded in 2002 to support Israel's growing "Refuser
Movement." RSN supports Courage to Refuse, Combatants for Peace, Yesh
G'vul, the Shiministim, New Profile and other Israeli organizations advocating
peaceful conflict resolution in Occupied Palestine.
-
- Its original 2002 "Call to Action" declaration
said: "The time has come" to act against growing violence. Increasing
numbers of Israeli soldiers reject serving in Occupied Palestine. They've
seen what goes on, it has nothing to do with security, and its sole purpose
is "perpetuating our control over the Palestinian people." They
now declare they no longer will help "dominate, expel, starve and
humiliate an entire people."
-
- The time has come "to listen to our consciences,"
summon our courage, and publicly support them. Israel can never have peace
and security unless it withdraws from Occupied Palestine. This is a "crucial
moment, a potential turning point." Their campaign was initiated from
Chicago, but it resonates across the country as a "portal" in
support of the Refuser Movement in Israel.
-
- Combatants for Peace
-
- Former Palestinian and Israeli cycle of violence participants
are the founders - IDF soldiers and Palestinian resistance fighters. They
believe their actions were futile, decided another way is crucial, and
now work together for peace. Henceforth, they "refuse to take part
(in further) bloodletting." They will only act non-violently through
dialogue and reconciliation and work together cooperatively to understand
each other's aspirations.
-
- Their goal - end the occupation, halt the settlement
project, and establish a Palestinian state with its capital in East Jerusalem
alongside the State of Israel. They want to raise consciousness, educate
both sides, and create political pressure to establish a constructive dialogue
for resolution.
-
- They hold meetings, conduct educational lectures and
public forums, undertake joint projects, have bi-national media teams to
get out their message, and participate in non-violent demonstrations against
the occupation. It's motto reads: "Only by joining forces, will we
be able to end the cycle of violence."
-
- Israeli Laws Affecting Conscientious Objection and Refuseniks
-
- Conscription existed since Israel became a state in 1948.
Today, its legal basis comes under the country's 1986 National Defence
Service Law. It requires all Israeli citizens and permanent residents (men
and women) to serve. However, the Ministry of Defence has discretion under
Article 36 to exempt all non-Jews, except the Druze. Israeli Arabs may
volunteer, but they're not encouraged, and very few do it. 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 Ministry of Defence's
discretion.
-
- Israeli law rejects conscientious objection rights for
men and only partly accepts them for women on the basis of religion. Those
who cite it and refuse to serve are in trouble. They're subjected to unfair
procedures and hearings that may, and most often do, recommend prosecution
and imprisonment.
-
- Israel signed the United Nations Charter and must, under
its provisions, 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 where it repeats that "Everyone
has the right to freedom of thought, conscience and religion..." By
denying refuseniks this right, Israel violates international law and a
fundamental human right afforded everyone under it.
-
- No official figures exist, but refusenik numbers have
grown since the Second Intifada began in September 2000. Most opt out in
the Territories, and estimates of their numbers range from 1100 well-documented
cases to as many as double that number. Here's what they face.
-
- Article 35 (a) (2) of the National Defence Service Law
states that:
-
- -- failure to fulfill a duty under the law 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 that's renewable if the objector refuses repeatedly;
-
- -- helping someone avoid military service is punishable
by a fine and up to two years in prison;
-
- -- disobeying call-up orders means facing up to five
years imprisonment, although most often sentences rarely exceed 12 months.
-
- Refuseniks are generally sentenced on one of the following
charges:
-
- -- refusing to obey an order;
-
- -- absence without leave;
-
- -- desertion; or
-
- -- refusing to be mobilized.
-
- Where exemption applications are denied, individuals
are ordered to perform military or reserve duty. 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. It states: "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."
-
- Summary Comments
-
- Peace activists, people of conscience and most notably
Israeli refuseniks are in the front lines of a valiant struggle:
-
- -- to free Palestinians from 41 illegal occupation years,
-
- -- end decades of abuse, -- achieve a just and lasting
peace, and
-
- -- protect everyone's fundamental human rights and freedoms
that are guaranteed by the Universal Declaration of Human Rights for "all
members of the human family...."
-
- Israel must no longer be exempted from international
law, from being allowed to flaunt it brazenly, from ignoring over five
dozen UN Resolutions going back decades. Peace activists and refuseniks
condemn the Jewish state for its actions, deplore it for committing them,
and demand, call on and insist Israeli governments end them. Its lawlessness
must end, and collective resistance can achieve it. It's no longer an option.
It's an obligation to assure that everyone has equal dignity and the right
to life, liberty, security and freedom under universal international law.
-
- May 14 is the 60th anniversary of Israel's founding.
Commemorations there and in the West will celebrate it. People of conscience
won't participate. Refuseniks may not either. Use this time to demand an
illegal occupation end and that Israel no longer be allowed a pass on the
international law it disdains.
-
- Stephen Lendman lives in Chicago and can be reached at
lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net.
-
- Also visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com and
listen to The Global Research News Hour on RepublicBroadcasting.org Mondays
from 11AM - 1PM US Central time for cutting-edge discussions on world and
national topics with distinguished guests.
|