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70% of Israelis Support Pardoning Soldier Who
Killed an Incapacitated Palestinian
By Ramzy Baroud
Al-Jazeerah,
CCUN, January 20, 2017 |
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Palestinian incapacitated
Abdul Fattah Al-Sharif, was killed by the Israel soldier Elor
Azaria, March 2016 |
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The Balancing Act is Over: What Elor Azaria Taught Us about
Israel
For some, the ‘manslaughter’ conviction - following the murder by Israeli
army medic, Elor Azaria, of already incapacitated Palestinian man, Abdul
Fattah Al-Sharif - is finally settling a protracted debate regarding where
Israelis stand on Palestinian human rights. Nearly 70 percent of
the Israeli public supports
calls to pardon the convicted soldier, who is largely perceived among
Israelis as the "child of us all." Israeli leaders are also lining
up to lend their support to Azaria and his family. These sympathetic
politicians include Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, and ministers Naftali
Bennett and Miri Regev, among others. Leading opposition leaders are also on
board. Pro-Israeli pundits, who never miss an opportunity to
highlight Israel's supposed moral ascendency took to social media,
describing how the indictment further demonstrates that Israel is still a
country of law and order. They seem to conveniently overlook
palpable facts. Reporting on the verdict, ‘The
Times of Israel’, for example, wrote that "last time an IDF soldier was
convicted of manslaughter was in 2005, for the killing of British civilian
Tom Hurndall two years earlier." Between these dates, and years
prior, thousands of Palestinians were killed in the Gaza Strip alone, mostly
in the Israeli wars of 2008-9, 2012 and 2014. Although thousands of children
and civilians were killed and wounded in Gaza and the rest of the Occupied
Territories and, despite international outcries against Israel's violations
of international law, there is yet to be a single conviction in Israeli
courts. But why is it that some commentators suggest that the
Azaria trial and the show of unity around his cause by Israeli society is an
indication of some massive change underway in Israel? Yoav Litvin,
for example, argues
in ‘TeleSur’ that the "precedent set by this case will further solidify
the complete dehumanization of Palestinians and pave the way for further
ethnic cleansing and genocide in the Occupied Palestinian Territories."
In an article, entitled: "Like Brexit and Trump, Azaria verdict exposes
a moment of transition in Israel", Jonathan
Cook also eluded to a similar idea. “The soldier’s trial, far from proof
of the rule of law, was the last gasp of a dying order,” he wrote.
Neither Litvin nor Cook are suggesting that the supposed change in Israel is
substantive but an important change, nonetheless. But if the past
and the present are one and the same, where is the 'transition', then?
The creation of Israel atop the ruins of Palestine, the ethnic cleansing
that made Israel’s ‘independence’ possible, the subsequent wars, occupation
and sieges are all devoid of any morality. Indeed, Israel was
established with the idea in mind that a "Jewish state" is possible without
the ethnic cleansing and genocide of the Palestinian Arabs.
In a letter to his son in 1937, David Ben Gurion, Israel’s first Prime
Minister after the country’s establishment in 1948, wrote: "We must expel
the Arabs and take their places and if we have to use force, to guarantee
our own right to settle in those places then we have force at our
disposal." In the year that Israel was established, the United
Nations defined
genocide in Article 2 of the ‘Convention on the Prevention and
Punishment of the Crime of Genocide’, as follows: "Any of the
following acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a
national, ethnical, racial or religious group, as such: killing members of
the group; causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group;
deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring
about its physical destruction in whole or in part.." In other
words, there is nothing new here since the ‘mainstreaming of genocide’ in
Israel took place before and during the founding of the country, and ever
since. Fortunately, some Israeli leaders were quite candid about
the crimes of that era. "Jewish villages were built in the place
of Arab villages. You do not even know the names of these Arab villages, and
I do not blame you because geography books no longer exist," former Israeli
leaders, Moshe Dayan
said while addressing the Technion as reported in ‘Haaretz’ on April 4,
1969. “There is not a single place built in this country that did not have a
former Arab population.” But throughout these years, Israel has
managed to sustain a balancing act, generating two alternate realities: a
material one, in which violence is meted out against Palestinians on a
regular basis, and a perceptual one, that of a media image through which
Israel is presented to the world as a 'villa in the jungle', governed by
democratic laws, which makes it superior to its neighbors in every possible
way. Former Israeli President, Moshe Katsav, demonstrate
the latter point best. "There is a huge gap between us (Jews) and our
enemies," he was quoted in the ‘Jerusalem Post’ on May 10. 2001. “They are
people who do not belong to our continent, to our world, but actually belong
to a different galaxy." In fact, Israeli commentators on the Left
often reminisce about the 'good old days', before extremists ruled Israel
and rightwing parties reigned supreme. A particular memory that is
often invoked was the mass
protest in Tel Aviv to the Israeli-engineered Sabra and Shatila
massacres of Palestinian refugees in South Lebanon in 1982.
Protesters demanded the resignations of then-Prime Minister, Menachem Begin,
and his Defense Minister, Ariel Sharon. Both men were accused of allowing
the massacres of Palestinians by Christian Phalange to take place. An
Israeli commission of investigation found Israel guilty of 'indirect
responsibility', further contributing to the myth that Israel's guilt lies
in the fact that it allowed Christians to kill Muslims, as Sharon
complained in his biography, years later. At the time, it did
not occur to Israeli protesters as odd the fact that Begin, himself, was the
wanted leader
of a terrorist gang before Israel's founding and that Sharon was accused
of orchestrated many other massacres. Many in Israeli and western
media spoke highly of the moral uprightness of Israeli society. Palestinians
were baffled by Israel's ability to carry out war crimes and to emerge in a
positive light, regardless. "Goyim kill Goyim and the Jews are
blamed," Begin
had then complained with a subtle reference to what he perceived as a
form of anti-Semitism. Aside from Sabra and Shatila, tens of thousands of
Lebanese and Palestinians were killed in the Israeli invasion of Lebanon in
1982. Historical fact shows that Israel is not experiencing a real
transition, but what is truly faltering is Israel’s balancing act: its
ability to perpetrate individual and collective acts of violence and still
paint an image of itself as law-abiding and democratic. Zionist
leaders of the past had played the game too well and for far too long, but
things are finally being exposed for what they really are, thanks to the
fact that Jewish settlers now rule the country, control the army, have
growing influence over the media and, therefore, define the Israeli course
and PR image. “This new army (of settlers) is no longer even
minimally restrained by concerns about the army’s ‘moral’ image or threats
of international war crimes
investigations,” wrote Cook. And with that new-found ‘freedom’, the
world is able to see Israel as it is. The balancing act is finally over.
- Dr. Ramzy Baroud has been writing about the Middle East for over 20
years. He is an internationally-syndicated columnist, a media consultant, an
author of several books and the founder of PalestineChronicle.com. His books
include “Searching Jenin”, “The Second Palestinian Intifada” and his latest
“My Father Was a Freedom Fighter: Gaza’s Untold Story”. His website is www.ramzybaroud.net.
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