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[LAAMN] "A Battle Over What Happened in Gaza" - Article on the Front Page of Today's LA Times (Friday) - Written by Jeffrey Fleishman - Not Too Bad for a Mainstream American Newspaper

Frank Dorrel
Fri, 23 Jan 2009 21:06:35 -0800

 <http://www.latimes.com/> latimes.com

 

  _____  

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-gaza-aftermath23-2009jan
23,0,583082.story

>From the Los Angeles Times


A Battle Over What Happened in Gaza


Human rights groups say Israel may have committed war crimes. Israeli
officials deny the charges, saying every effort was made to minimize
civilian casualties.

 

By Jeffrey Fleishman

January 23, 2009

Reporting from Jerusalem - The graves are dug, the wounded tended, but the
battle over what happened in the Gaza Strip during Israel's 22-day offensive
remains unfinished.

International organizations, citing videos and witnesses, say Israel may
have committed war crimes in Gaza's villages and city alleys. The Israel
Defense Forces deny such allegations, issuing their own video clips and
assessments.

Ninety-four percent of Israelis supported the campaign to stop Hamas from
its long- standing practice of indiscriminately firing hundreds of rockets a
week into southern Israel. Human rights organizations say the Palestinian
militant group's targeting of towns such as Sderot and Ashkelon also
constitutes war crimes, as does the practice by Hamas leaders, regarded by
the West and a number of Arab countries as terrorists, of using civilians as
human shields.

The legal implications of the deaths of at least 1,300 Palestinians, more
than half of them civilians, will be debated, with much of the wrangling
likely to concern such issues as proportionality, targeting and how careful
efforts to not harm the innocent can go horribly wrong when tank shells
stray from their coordinates.

Moral questions also linger among Israeli peace activists troubled by the
relative lack of public introspection over the destruction and civilian
deaths wrought by their army's immense firepower during the fighting in the
cramped territory. They say Hamas' abuses do not erase Israel's
responsibility for such incidents as the shelling of a United Nations school
that killed dozens of civilians sheltered there. Even if Hamas had to be
weakened, they wonder how their nation, where memories of the Holocaust are
so thoroughly embedded, could look past the plight of 1.5 million
Palestinians trapped in a dense war zone they couldn't escape.

"We are witnessing a moral corrosion that is destroying everything at a
fantastic pace," said Michael Sfard, a lawyer with Volunteers for Human
Rights in Tel Aviv. "We've reached a threshold of insensitivity that we had
never reached in the past."

The offensive "on Gaza may be squeezing Hamas, but it is destroying Israel,"
<http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1055968.html> Ari Shavit wrote in the
left-leaning Haaretz in the days before the operation ended. "Destroying its
soul and its image. Destroying it on world television screens, in the living
rooms of the international community and most importantly, in Obama's
America."

"Wars must be just and proportional," he continued. "Without being just,
Israel cannot triumph on the battlefield."

Hamas' incessant rocket attacks and its decision to not renew a six-month
cease-fire in early December, after Israel did not end its 18-month blockade
of Gaza, allowed Israel to dwell less on second-guessing the consequences of
the military operation.

Even as its troops withdrew this week, Israel echoed with resolve over what
was hailed as a just mission in an endless conflict punctuated by air raid
sirens and suicide bombers. This is a nation, after all, that has faced the
rise of Hamas, the 2006 war with the militant group Hezbollah in Lebanon and
bellicose rhetoric from an Iran accused of pursuing nuclear weapons.

Twenty-eight Israelis have been killed in rocket and mortar attacks from
Gaza since 2001, Israeli officials say.

Suggestions that Israeli forces may have committed human rights violations
have led to new government restrictions on soldiers. To prevent military
officers from being named in potential war crimes or human rights lawsuits,
the government will allow officers to be interviewed on TV only if their
names are withheld and their faces blurred.

"The government will stand like a fortified wall to protect each and every
one of you from allegations of disrupting the moral [equation]," Prime
Minister Ehud Olmert reportedly told his military officers and commanders.
"If such a disruption exists, it is actually what is being directed against
us: For seven years the world was against rocket fire on Israel, but didn't
lift a finger."

More than previous Middle East military campaigns, and the round-the-clock
public relations efforts, this battle was accentuated by technology.
Palestinians with cellphone cameras documented bomb blasts and surrender
flags; Israel Defense Forces soldiers were ordered to film firefights as
evidence to later rebut any war crimes charges.

"I think the feeling of many Israelis is that Gaza's behind a wall and it's
not my responsibility," said Haim Yacobi, co-founder of Planners for
Planning Rights, a group of engineers and architects promoting human rights.
"It's the politics of fear. Israeli politicians are using it as a very
effective mechanism. It has to do with the dehumanization of Palestinians in
Gaza."

Israel, however, found itself on the public relations defensive, based on
sheer numbers if nothing else. Whereas at least 1,300 Palestinians were
reported killed, including 410 children and more than 100 women, Israel said
13 of its citizens died, 10 of them soldiers.

Human Rights Watch and other groups allege that Israel's tactics for
achieving a military advantage in Gaza led to disproportionate death and
suffering of a civilian population that was denied medical care, refuge and
electricity, especially in the urban warfare in and around Gaza City.

"Gaza became a kind of free fire zone for the Israelis," said Fred Abrahams,
senior emergencies researcher for Human Rights Watch.

The Israeli army saw a different picture: Guerrillas vanishing into tunnels,
popping up for ambushes, then slipping into civilian populations and firing
rockets that were edging closer to Tel Aviv. It was as if Hamas had used
Gaza as a dense, sprawling human shield to hide its militants, including its
leaders, who Israeli officials said used a bunker beneath a hospital as
their headquarters. With such a panorama, Israeli officials say, civilian
casualties were not intentional, but they were unavoidable.

Shortly after announcing the cease-fire Saturday, Olmert said Israel
regretted "the loss of civilian life among the citizens of Gaza who were not
involved in terror and served as hostages for the murders of Hamas. We did
not fight against them; we did not wish to harm them or their children or
their parents or their siblings."

Yet moral and legal questions surround the Jan. 6 Israeli shelling of a
school run by the United Nations Relief Works Agency in the Jabaliya refugee
camp in northern Gaza. Hundreds of Palestinians had sought shelter there.
The Israeli military says it encountered mortar rounds coming from the
school and returned fire. The U.N. said that 42 civilians died and that no
militants fired from the compound.

John Ging, the senior U.N. official in Gaza, who has called for an
independent inquiry on possible war crimes, said Israel's claims are
"unfounded and unsubstantiated. . . . That's been the position with all
these cases. They just throw this excuse out there."

Human rights groups have asked the Israeli attorney general's office to
investigate military actions that allegedly included the shooting of
ambulance workers, the blocking of humanitarian aid and the targeting of
civilian houses and government buildings. The Israeli military is looking
into whether its forces properly used phosphorus artillery shells. The
weapons, which cause severe burns, are not illegal but they are banned from
use in heavily populated areas.

While the legal issues are parsed, Israeli intellectuals are engaged in
stinging word battles. Novelist A.B. Yehoshua and prominent liberal
journalist Gideon Levy have penned open letters to each other.

"We are not bent on killing Palestinian children to avenge the killing of
our children,"  <http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1055977.html> Yehoshua
wrote in Haaretz. "All we are trying to do is get their leaders to stop this
senseless and wicked aggression."

Two days later, Levy responded to Yehoshua, saying the novelist had "fallen
prey to the wretched wave that has inundated, stupefied, blinded and
brainwashed us. You're actually justifying the most brutal war Israel has
ever fought. . . . Outcomes, not intentions, are what count -- and those
have been horrendous."

jeffrey.fleish...@latimes.com  

 



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]


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  • [LAAMN] "A Battle Over What Happened in Gaza" - Article on the Front Page of Today's LA Times (Friday) - Written by Jeffrey Fleishman - Not Too Bad for a Mainstream American Newspaper Frank Dorrel