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Politics : DON'T START THE WAR -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Thomas M. who wrote (5350)2/4/2003 8:47:14 PM
From: Emile Vidrine  Respond to of 25898
 
Israeli officer tried for sabotaging raid on innocent civilians,

Guardian (UK), February 3, 2003
"An Israeli military intelligence officer has been court-martialled for refusing to obey an order he said targeted innocent Palestinians in retaliation for a suicide bombing, and was therefore illegal. The trial of the officer, who has been identified only as Lieutenant A, has divided the prestigious intelligence corps unit 8200. The officer was accused of deliberately withholding military intelligence needed to plan an air force attack on a Fatah office in the West Bank city of Nablus. The military high command ordered the assault in the wake of dual suicide bombings in Tel Aviv last month that claimed 23 lives. The Israeli newspaper Ma'ariv quoted colleagues of the lieutenant as saying he became suspicious about the order when he was asked to identify a building and find out how many people were likely to be in it at the time of the attack. It is more usual for intelligence officers to be asked to identify specific individuals the army wants to target and their whereabouts. The newspaper said that the officer took this to mean that the Israeli military intended 'to cause random casualties, and he balked at the order'. He continued to hold back intelligence at his disposal because he feared that the operation 'would lead to the death of innocent Palestinians', the newspaper added. Without the intelligence, the raid was abandoned. Lieutenant A was court-martialled by his unit commander. He argued in his defence that the order was illegal because it was primarily aimed at killing Palestinian civilians, not known fighters. The unit commander rejected the plea, dismissed Lieutenant A from the intelligence service and transferred him to low-level administrative work. But the case has divided the Israeli military. Senior officers said the young officer should have expressed his concerns to a superior officer, not unilaterally withheld intelligence and foiled the mission. The unit's commanders have also argued that it is not for intelligence officers to determine what is legal. They are merely obliged to provide the information; the decision on how to use it lies with combat units on the ground. But junior officers pointed to a law enacted after the Kafr Kassem massacre of 47 Arabs by Israeli border policemen in 1956. 'We are taught that law says it is illegal to kill except in very specific circumstances. This case is being widely talked about in the army now and there's a lot of people who think he was right to do what he did,' said one officer. 'You do not have to be the triggerman to be guilty of a crimr' ... In December, Israel's high court rejected a claim by eight reserve soldiers that they were not obliged to serve in the occupied Palestinian territories. The eight argued that it would be illegal for them to obey orders that maintain 'a system which consists entirely of collective punishment of a civilian population'".