International Arrest Warrants Awaiting 
Scores of Top-Ranking Israeli Officials 

By Richard Walker 

International laws are making it increasingly difficult for Israeli 
diplomats, intelligence officers, generals and even former top military 
officers to travel the globe without being arrested on international 
warrants. Judging by the sheer number of outstanding warrants, any Israelis 
deemed to have committed crimes against Palestinian civilians are now at a 
higher risk than ever of being seized at airports and handed over to the 
International Criminal Court in The Hague. 

The problem facing Israel has been highlighted by Interpol issuing arrest 
warrants for 27 Mossad agents directly involved in the recent planning and 
assassination of a Hamas leader in Dubai. That murder came on the heels of a 
UN report accusing Israel of war crimes during its siege and invasion of the 
Gaza Strip, making it even more likely that senior military and political 
figures involved in that operation could someday be arrested if they visit 
one of the many nations that are signatories to the international court. 

Israel's problem in respect to warrants is compounded by the fact that 
scores of retired military and intelligence figures earn a big money 
representing arms dealers and security companies. Others act in an advisory 
capacity to armies and militia groups worldwide. Those jobs involve 
considerable travel. Nowadays, with increased security at ports of entry in 
many nations, it is difficult for anyone to get on a plane, boat or train 
without leaving a trace of his or her identity. 

That level of security poses a risk to all those deemed to have committed 
crimes against humanity. For wanted Israelis, those crimes include the 
following: the shelling of civilian areas of Gaza; the bulldozing of 
Palestinian homes; unlawful arrest, interrogation, detention and torture of 
suspects; the political and military authorizing of phosphorus munitions 
against civilian neighborhoods; the wanton use of cluster bombs to 
contaminate farmland as happened in Lebanon and the destruction of civilian 
infrastructure in order to punish the population by denying people water, 
electricity, food, proper medical care and sewerage facilities. 

Rights groups and their lawyers say there is more than sufficient evidence 
to show that Israel has a case to answer for in all those criminal 
categories. 

Hidden in lawyers' desks throughout Europe are large numbers of warrants 
that have been drawn up at the request of human rights' organizations. The 
warrants are targeted at a wide range of Israeli figures, including serving 
and former Cabinet ministers, intelligence chiefs, generals and military 
officers down to brigade level. The danger for all of those named is that, 
if it is learned they are visiting relatives or attending conferences 
outside Israel, the warrants will be dusted off. 

Unfortunately, a country where no such warrant can be served is the United 
States because of political influence over "our" FBI. Nevertheless, Israel 
is well aware of the risks posed by international warrants. In the past 
warrants were issued in Colombia for three Israelis alleged to have trained 
paramilitaries who ran death squads. Colombia accused the three of having 
been at one time on the payroll of drug lord Pablo Escobar. Those warrants 
have not yet been served, just like the many warrants issued by the Russian 
authorities for Russian Jewish billionaires, who used their joint 
Israeli-Russian citizenship to find sanctuary in Israel after robbing 
Russia. 

It is well known that Israel has an unstated policy of refusing to hand over 
any of its citizens. That has encouraged Jews from many countries to hide 
out in Israel when faced with arrest or imprisonment. 

An indication of the risks facing Israel is that it almost lost one of its 
generals, Doron Almog, to a warrant on Sept. 10, 2005. He was on a flight to 
London's Heathrow Airport when the Israeli embassy in London got a tip-off 
that lawyers were waiting at the airport to serve him with a warrant from 
the International Court, alleging he had committed war crimes by bulldozing 
over 50 homes in Gaza. The embassy was also told that Scotland Yard had 
officers standing by to arrest him. The moment Almog's plane touched down in 
London, a diplomat from the embassy went on board and advised him not to 
leave, saying he had immunity because the plane was deemed to be Israeli 
territory. 

Almog did as he was told and returned to Israel on the same plane less than 
24 hours later. Reliable security sources accused the British authorities of 
tipping off the Israelis to avoid an international incident. 

Rights groups and their lawyers angrily pointed out that the plane was not 
sovereign Israeli territory, and police officers should have taken the 
general from the plane by force. [No one tried a "planes are sovereign 
territory" argument when Australian historian Frederick Toeben was arrested 
at Heathrow en route to Dubai- Ed.] There was such an outcry over the issue 
that it is believed an arrest will be made should a similar case happen 
again in London. 

In December 2009, an arrest warrant was issued in Britain for Tzipi Livni, 
who was the Israeli foreign secretary during the war in Lebanon and the 
invasion of Gaza. On hearing about the warrant, she canceled a planned trip 
to London. 

Weeks earlier, one of the Israeli prime minister's closest advisors also 
pulled out of a UK trip aimed at fundraising within the Jewish community. 

The most worrying issue for Israel is that the UN report accusing it of war 
crimes in Gaza has been closely scrutinized by rights groups, who have 
meticulously drawn up warrants for a long list of Israeli figures. 

The Iranians claim to have their own list of over 100 Israelis they say 
committed war crimes in Gaza. That list is believed to match one in the 
hands of many rights groups across Europe and in other parts of the world. 
Richard Walker is the pen name of a former N.Y. news producer. 




http://www.americanfreepress.net/html/international_arrest_warrants_.html 


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