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Goldstone’s Rethink: The Cleansing Of Israel's War Crimes
09 April 2011
By
Jonathan Cook
Israeli leaders have barely hidden their jubilation at
an opinion article in last Friday’s Washington Post by
the South African jurist
Richard Goldstone
reconsidering the findings of his United
Nations-appointed inquiry into
Israel’s attack on Gaza in winter 2008.
For
the past 18 months the
Goldstone Report
had forced Israel on to the defensive by suggesting
its army – as well as Hamas, the ruling faction in
Gaza – had committed war crimes and
crimes against humanity during Israel’s
three-week Operation Cast Lead. Some 1,400
Palestinians were killed, including hundreds of women
and children.
Goldstone’s report, Israeli officials worried, might
eventually pave the way to
war crimes trials
against Israeli soldiers at the
International Criminal Court in the
Hague.
In
what appeared to be a partial retraction of some of
his findings against Israel, Goldstone argued that he
would have written the report differently had Israel
cooperated at the time of his inquiry.
Benjamin Netanyahu,
the Israeli prime minister, immediately called on the
United Nations to shelve the Goldstone
Report;
Ehud Barak, the
defence minister, demanded an apology;
and
Avigdor Lieberman,
the foreign minister, said Israel’s actions in Gaza
had been “vindicated”.
Israel
would certainly like observers to interpret
Goldstone’s latest comments as an exoneration. In
reality, however, he offered far less consolation to
Israel than its supporters claim.
The
report’s original accusation that Israeli soldiers
committed war crimes still stands, as does criticism
of Israel’s use of unconventional weapons such as
white phosphorus, the destruction of
property on a massive scale, and the taking of
civilians as
human shields.
Instead Goldstone restated his position in two ways
that Israel will seek to exploit to the full.
The
first was an observation that since his report’s
publication in September 2009 “Israel has dedicated
significant resources to investigate over 400
allegations of operational misconduct”.
In the
past Goldstone has made much of the need for Israel
and Hamas to investigate incidents where civilians
were targeted, saying that otherwise his report should
be transferred to the ICC. In his article he
favourably compared Israel’s investigations to the
failure by Hamas to carry out any probes.
The
significance of Goldstone’s reassessment from Israel’s
point of view was underlined this week by comments to
the
Jerusalem Post newspaper
from a senior unnamed legal official in the Israeli
military. He said Goldstone’s professed confidence in
Israel’s investigatory system would help to forestall
future war cimes probes by the UN.
That
will be cause for Palestinian concern at a time when,
in response to renewed hostilities between Israel and
Hamas, some Israeli government ministers have called
for a Cast Lead 2.
Another unnamed commander told the popular
Israeli news
website Ynet yesterday that Goldstone’s change of tack
might lift the threat of arrest on
war crimes charges from Israeli soldiers
travelling abroad.
However, according to both
Israeli human rights
groups and a committee of independent legal experts
appointed by the UN to monitor implementation of the
report, Goldstone’s applause for Israel’s
investigations is unwarranted.
Sarit
Michaeli, a spokeswoman for B’Tselem, an Israeli
organisation monitoring human rights in the
occupied territories,
said Israel had failed to conduct a prompt,
independent or transparent inquiry.
“The
materials on which Israel has relied have not been
made available to us, so we are not in a position to
judge the quality of the investigations or the
credibility of the findings.”
Likewise, the UN committee of experts, led by a New
York judge, Mary McGowan-Davis, has complained that
the
Israeli army is
probing itself and questioned the effectiveness of the
investigations following “unnecessary delays” in which
evidence may have been “lost or compromised”.
Human
rights groups
have pointed out that, despite the large number of
deaths in Gaza, only three of the 400 investigations
cited by Goldstone have so far led to indictments.
One of
those cases involved the theft of a credit card.
Another, in which two soldiers used a nine-year-old
boy as a
human shield,
led to their being punished with three-month suspended
sentences and demotion.
The
second, more significant reassessment by Goldstone is
that he was wrong to conclude in his report that
Israel intentionally targeted civilians “as a matter
of policy”.
Despite Goldstone’s misleading wording in the article,
he is referring not to an Israeli order to
intentionally murder civilians but a policy in which
indiscriminate attacks were undertaken with a
disregard to likely casualties among civilians.
Strangely, he appears to base his revised opinion on
Israel’s own military investigations, even though no
evidence from them has yet been made public.
Rina
Rosenberg, the international advocacy director of the
Adalah legal centre in Israel, which has been
monitoring Israel’s investigations on behalf of
Palestinian legal groups, said Goldstone had given
Israel a “gift” with this observation.
“Israel has tried to focus the debate entirely on
whether it intended to kill civilians, as though a
war crime
depends only on intentionality. Israel knows that
intention – outside a policy like targeted
assassinations – is very difficult to prove.”
She
pointed out that there were other important standards
in international law for assessing war crimes,
including negilgence, disregard for the safety of
civilians, and indiscriminate use of force.
Also,
observers have wondered what new information has
emerged since Goldstone published his report to
justify a rethink on whether Israeli policy left
civilians in the line of fire.
His
original conclusion drew in part on public statements
by Israeli military commanders that in Gaza they had
applied the Dahiya doctrine – an Israeli
military strategy named after a suburb
of Beirut that Israel levelled during its 2006 attack
on
Lebanon. In his
article, Goldstone cast no fresh doubt on his earlier
premise that such a strategy would by definition
endanger civilians.
In
addition, Israeli group Breaking the Silence has
collected many testimonies from soldiers before and
since publication of the Goldstone Report indicating
that they received orders to carry out operations with
little or no regard for the safety of civilians. Some
described the army as pursuing a policy of “zero-risk”
to soldiers, even if that meant putting civilians in
danger.
Similarly, leaflets produced by the military rabbinate
– apparently with the knowledge of the army top brass
– urged Israeli ground troops in Gaza to protect their
own lives at all costs and show no mercy to
Palestinians.
The
timing of Goldstone’s article has raised additional
concern among Israeli and
Palestinian human rights
groups that he may have succumbed to political
pressure.
Late
last month the UN’s
Human Rights Council,
which set up the fact-finding mission, recommended
that the General Assembly refer the Goldstone Report
to the Security Council – the decisive stage in moving
it to the International Criminal Court.
It is
expected that the US, which has consistently opposed
such a referral, will block the report’s progress to
the ICC – further embarrassing Washington after its
recent veto at the UN of a Palestinian resolution
against Israeli settlements.
Shawan
Jabareen, director of the Palestinian legal rights
group al-Haq, said Goldstone’s article had provided
Israel and the US with a “new weapon” to discredit the
report even before it reached the Security Council.
Jonathan Cook is a writer and journalist based in
Nazareth, Israel.
His latest books are “Israel and the Clash of
Civilisations:
Iraq,
Iran
and the Plan to Remake the
Middle East”
(Pluto
Press) and “Disappearing Palestine:
Israel's Experiments in Human Despair” (Zed Books).
His website is
www.jkcook.net
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EsinIslam.Com
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