Israel's Dirty Secrets in Gaza: It Was Pure Murder

By Donald Macintyre, The Independent. Posted March 21, 2009.

Army veterans reveal how they gunned down innocent Palestinian
families and destroyed homes and farms.

Israel onfronted a major challenge on Thursday night over the conduct
of its 22-day military offensive in Gaza after testimonies by its own
soldiers revealed that troops were allowed and, in some cases, even
ordered to shoot unarmed Palestinian civilians.

The testimonies – the first of their kind to emerge from inside the
military – are at marked variance with official claims that the
military made strenuous efforts to avoid civilian casualties and tend
to corroborate Palestinian accusations that troops used indiscriminate
and disproportionate firepower in civilian areas during the operation.
In one of the testimonies shedding harsh new light on what the
soldiers say were the permissive rules of engagement for Operation
Cast Lead, one soldier describes how an officer ordered the shooting
of an elderly woman 100 metres from a house commandeered by troops.

Another soldier, describing how a mother and her children were shot
dead by a sniper after they turned the wrong way out of a house, says
the "atmosphere" among troops was that the lives of Palestinians were
"very, very less important than the lives of our soldiers."

A squad leader said: "At the beginning the directive was to enter a
house with an armoured vehicle, to break the door down, to start
shooting inside and – I call it murder – to shoot at everyone we
identify. In the beginning I asked myself how could this make sense?
Higher-ups said it is permissible because everyone left in the city
[Gaza City] is culpable because they didn't run away."

The accounts, which also describe apparently indiscriminate
destruction of property, were given at a post-operation discussion by
graduates of the Yitzhak Rabin pre-military course at the Oranim
Academic College in northern Israel. The transcript of the session in
front of the head of the course – details from which were published by
the newspaper Haaretz – prompted the Israel Defence Forces (IDF)
military advocate general Avichai Mendelblit yesterday to announce a
military police investigation into the claims. Haaretz said the airing
of the "dirty secrets" would make it more difficult for Israelis to
dismiss the claims as Palestinian propaganda. The course principal,
Danny Zamir, told the newspaper that after being "shocked" by the
testimonies on 13 February he told the IDF chief of staff Gabi
Ashkenazi he "feared a serious moral failure" in the IDF.

In one account, an infantry squad leader describes how troops released
a family who had been held in a room of their house for several days.
He said: "The platoon commander let the family go and told them to go
to the right. One mother and her two children didn't understand and
went to the left, but they forgot to tell the sharpshooter on the roof
they had let them go and it was okay... The sharpshooter saw a woman
and children approaching him. He shot them straight away. I don't
think he felt too bad about it, because, as far as he was concerned,
he did his job according to the orders he was given. And the
atmosphere in general, from what I understood from most of my men who
I talked to, the lives of Palestinians, let's say, is something very,
very less important than the lives of our soldiers."

A second squad leader, who described the killing of the elderly woman,
says he argued with his commander over loose rules of engagement that
allowed the clearing out of houses by shooting without warning
residents beforehand. After the orders were changed, soldiers had
complained that "we should kill everyone there [in the centre of
Gaza]. Everyone there is a terrorist." The squad leader said: "To
write 'death to the Arabs' on walls, to take family pictures and spit
on them, just because you can. I think this is the main thing: To
understand how much the IDF has fallen in the realm of ethics."

Ehud Barak, Israel's Defence Minister, said: "I say to you that from
the chief of staff down to the last soldier, the most moral army in
the world stands ready to take orders from the government of Israel. I
have no doubt that every incident will be individually examined."

But Israeli human rights organisations, including B'Tselem and the
Association for Civil Rights in Israel, called for an independent
investigation and complained that the military police inquiry had only
been announced after Haaretz published the story, "three weeks after
the relevant materials reached the Chief of the General Staff. This
tardiness follows a pattern of failures to investigate suspicions of
serious crimes".

Amos Harel, the paper's respected military correspondent who broke the
story, wrote that Mr Zamir was sentenced in 1990 for refusing to guard
a settlers' ceremony at Joseph's tomb in the West Bank. But he added
that a reading of the transcript shows that Mr Zamir "acts out of a
deep concern for the spirit of the IDF".

In their own words: Soldiers' stories

Squad leader Aviv

"At the beginning the directive was to enter a house with an armoured
vehicle, to break the door down, to start shooting inside and to
ascend floor by floor and – I call it murder – to go from floor to
floor and to shoot at everyone we identify. In the beginning I asked
myself how could this make sense? Higher-ups said it is permissible
because everyone left in the city [Gaza City] is culpable because they
didn't run away. This frightened me a bit. I tried to influence it as
much as possible, despite my low rank, to change it. In the end the
directive was to go into a house, switch on loudspeakers and tell them
'you have five minutes to run away and whoever doesn't will be
killed'."

Soldier Ram

"There was an order to free the [confined] families. The platoon
commander set free the family and told them to turn right. A mother
and two children didn't understand and turned left. [Officers] had
forgotten to tell the sniper on the roof that they were being set free
and that everything was okay and he should hold fire. You can say that
he acted as he was supposed to, in accordance with the orders. The
sniper saw a woman and children approaching him, past lines that no
one was to be allowed to cross. He fired directly at them. I don't
know if he fired at their legs but in the end he killed them."
http://www.squidoo.com/tithes-and-offerings

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