-Caveat Lector-

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/World/Middle_East/2000-
11/ruthless061100.shtml

US report urges Arafat to use torture for peace
An influential think-tank advises Palestinian Authority to ruthlessly
repress militant elements without regard for basic human rights
By Robert Fisk in Gaza
6 November 2000
Palestinian leaders have been shocked to read an American think-
tank report which urges them to act "ruthlessly" against opponents
of the Oslo agreement – even if this involves "excessive force",
trials without due process of law and "interrogation methods that
border on psychological and/or physical torture."
A draft copy of the report by the influential Centre for Strategic and
International Studies (CSIS), which has close links with the United
States government, has been published on the internet and
circulated among dozens of members of the Palestinian Authority
in Gaza, including Yasser Arafat's most senior intelligence
officers.
The report says that even if peace follows the "Second Intifada",
"both sides [Palestinian and Israeli] will be forced to conduct
aggressive [sic] security operations for years to come" which "can
have a high price tag in terms of human rights." By way of
comparison, it adds that British security forces in Northern Ireland
"balanced" what it calls "effective security" with human rights –
even though "the British used excessive force, abused human
rights, and used extreme interrogation methods and torture."
Amnesty International and other human rights groups have
frequently condemned the use of arbitrary false arrest, detention
and torture by Arafat's "muhabarrat" security apparatus, pointing
out that CIA operatives appear to have been complicit in these
abuses.  Far from denouncing these practices, however, the draft
CSIS report appears to encourage their use, stating that "such
measures also tend to work".
The document is dated 18 October and bears the name of Anthony
H Cordesman – a former national security assistant to failed
Republican presidential candidate Senator John McCain – who is
now holder of the Arleigh A Burke Chair in Strategy at the CSIS,
named after the former Chief of US Naval Operations. His
document is heavily referenced to CIA, State Department and
Israeli sources and, according to Palestinian officials here, has
been circulated within the US and Israeli governments.
Entitled "Peace and War:  Israel versus the Palestinians", it
recounts the turbulent history of Israeli-Palestinian relations since
the 1993 Oslo agreement although its bias is obvious from the
frequent use of "terrorist" to describe violent Arab groups and the
almost ubiquitous use of "extremist" in reference to their violent
Israeli opposite numbers.
It excuses the use of Israeli live bullets against stone-throwers,
adding that CS gas and rubber bullets are often "not effective in
stopping large groups" and that "troops cannot let mobs armed
with stones and Molotov cocktails close on their positions, or rely
on the riot control gear used in civil disobedience."
In a section headed "The Need for Palestinian Authority
Ruthlessness and Efficiency", it states "there will be no future
peace, or stable peace process, if the Palestinian security forces
do not act ruthlessly and effectively. They must react very quickly
and decisively in dealing with terrorism and violence if they are to
preserve the momentum of Israeli withdrawal, the expansion of
Palestinian control, and the peace process. They must halt civil
violence even if this sometimes means using excessive force by
the standards of Western police forces. They must be able to halt
terrorist and paramilitary action by Hamas and Islamic Jihad even if
this means interrogations, detentions and trials that are too rapid
and lack due process. If they do not, the net cost to both peace
and the human rights of most Palestinians will be devastating."
The report says that permission must be obtained for any
publication of the contents, but copies have now been circulated
throughout the Palestinian Authority, including the offices of
Mohamed Dahalan and Jibril Rajoub, respectively heads of Arafat's
"Preventative Security" in Gaza and Ramallah. Both Dahalan and
Rajoub were sent to Langley, Virginia, for what was called "human
rights training" by US government intelligence services.
Although it condemns "Israeli terrorism" – a phrase used only once
and in reference to Jewish settlers' groups – the document
concludes with chilling advice to both Palestinians and Israelis.
"Every counter-terrorist force that has ever succeeded has had to
act decisively and sometimes violently," it says.
"Effective counter-terrorism relies on interrogation methods that
border on psychological and/or physical torture, arrests and
detentions that are 'arbitrary' by the standards of civil law, break-ins
and intelligence operations that violate the normal rights of privacy,
levels of violence in making arrests that are unacceptable in civil
cases, and measures that involve the innocent (or at least not
provably directly guilty) in arrests and penalties."
The issue, the report adds, "is not whether extreme security
measures will sometimes be used, or whether they are sometimes
necessary. The issue is rather how many such acts occur, how
well-focused they are on those who directly commit terrorism, and
how justified they are in terms of their relative cost-benefits."
Palestinian officials here noted with surprise how accurate was the
report's list of escalating Israeli responses to the current low-
intensity war, from Israeli mobilisation of armour to the sealing off of
Palestinian towns and "the use of helicopter gunships and snipers
to provide mobility and suppressive fire".  Apparently based on a
1996 Israeli test plan codenamed "Operation Field of Thorns", the
military responses end with the "forced evacuation" of Palestinians
from "sensitive areas". Palestine Authority officers, however, were
taken aback to read that the PA's "military strength" includes a
Lockheed Jetstar aircraft. The plane, they point out, happens to be
Arafat's personal executive jet.

###

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