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Geneva Conventions Still Hold Up
The Geneva Conventions-the bedrock of the laws of war and one of the world's most widely ratified treaties- turned 60 this month. But one government was not celebrating. In fact, Israel had already launched a campaign to undermine these essential rules for protecting civilians caught in war.
Shortly after a UN fact-finding mission led by former South African Justice Richard Goldstone issued a report this fall lambasting Israel (and Hamas) for war crimes, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu instructed his government "to examine the facilitating of an international initiative to change the laws of war in keeping with the spread of terrorism throughout the world." Israeli officials said the laws of war tied the hands of democratic governments.
Counter-terrorism
Israel is understandably frustrated by the difficulty of fighting Hamas, an urban-based armed group that indiscriminately attacks Israeli civilians. But the kind of asymmetric warfare that typifies combat with terrorist and other armed groups is nothing new. It was widespread at the time of the adoption of the Geneva Conventions in 1949, as illustrated by the militant Zionist group Irgun's fight against the British colonial rule of what was then Palestine. And it continued during the many wars of national liberation of the 1950s to 1970s.
The Geneva Conventions and their additional protocols have long imposed strict rules on the conduct of hostilities designed to protect civilians from the hazards of these conflicts. These rules apply to governments and armed groups alike, regardless of who is the defender or the aggressor.
Governments confronting difficult conflicts sometimes argue that violations by terrorists or armed groups, such as deliberately attacks on civilians or the use of civilians as "human shields," justify violations by opposing forces. But the laws of war are not built on reciprocity. They impose obligations on each warring party regardless of the conduct of others. The reason is that abuses are common in armed conflict, so if one side's misconduct could be cited to excuse another's, there would be an inevitable downward spiral of increasing abuse. Hamas firing rockets from civilian areas in Gaza into civilian areas in Israel thus does not justify Israel's unlawful conduct.
High-level Culpability
In fact, Israel's problem is not that the rules are inappropriate for asymmetric conflict, but that the government chose to ignore them in Gaza. As the Goldstone report pointed out, when the Israeli military used such weapons as heavy artillery, flechettes, and white phosphorous (which causes horrible burns) in densely populated areas of Gaza, and when it authorized the massive destruction of civilian infrastructure, it flouted the law. No other Western military doctrine today would permit such indiscriminate attacks or deliberate destruction.
Instead, there is strong evidence that Israel wanted Gazan civilians to pay the price for Hamas's abuses, and that the decision to impose that cost was taken not by junior officers in the field but by senior government officials. As Ehud Olmert, who was then the prime minister, put it during the Gaza war, "There is no justification for demanding we allow residents of Gaza to live normal lives while shells and rockets are fired from their streets and courtyards at Sderot and other communities in the south."
Or as the foreign minister at the time, Tzipi Livni, said during a wartime debate in parliament: "On my way here I heard that Hamas declared the man killed by a rocket in Ashkelon ‘one of the Zionists' despite being an Israeli Arab. They don't make a distinction, and neither should we." With culpability running to such senior levels of government, it is no surprise that Israel wants to rewrite the rules.
Punishing Civilians
Moreover, this stated rationale for ignoring the Geneva Conventions has nothing to do with the difficulties of fighting an urban-based militia such as Hamas. No one could credibly claim that an effective way to attack such a militia is by air-bursting white phosphorus or firing 155mm high-explosive shells indiscriminately over an area heavily populated by civilians.
Moreover, Olmert's suggestion that it is appropriate to punish the people of Gaza-in retaliation for having voted for Hamas or, insofar as they have a choice in the matter, tolerating its policies-is dangerous. Hamas could say the same about Israelis' support for their government to justify attacking them. That misguided argument is entirely contrary to the requirement that all sides in a conflict have a duty at all times to target only combatants and do everything feasible to spare civilians. This is the foundation of the laws of war.
Fortunately, most of the world seems to be strengthening its support for these principles. After the Bush administration's indifference to the laws of war in response to the 9/11 attacks, the Obama administration has firmly embraced the Geneva Conventions. Today, the prevailing U.S. doctrine-most notably in Afghanistan-stresses the importance of protecting civilians, even in asymmetric warfare, as the key to winning "hearts and minds" and thus depriving insurgents of the general population's support.
Israel's view that one prevails in asymmetric warfare by pummeling rather than protecting civilians is not only illegal but also counterproductive. Contrary to Netanyahu's claim, what needs rewriting is not the Geneva Conventions but Israel's abusive and illegal war strategy.
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16 Comments so far
Show AllThe problem "Israel" has is not the Geneva Convention. The problem for that entity, is it's lack of a rightful basis for it's existence and that it will forever be attacked in retribution for it's crimes against the people of Palestine.
Best bet for the people of "Israel" is to find common cause with the Palestinians create an all inclusive single state and learn to get along with their neighbors.
Jews come from many ethnic backgrounds, there is no such thing as an ethnic "Jew", the nazis and the zionists shared that same delusion. Hell if you scratched any of the Israeli high brass and did a DNA test you would probably find that person is not even a Semite!
Sophie Scholl-The Final Days
- Jews come from many ethnic backgrounds -
A certain person I know is Jewish. She was born in Uzbekistan. She was hated and abused for being Jewish, she was abused for being a female, she was derided for being poor.
Many Muslims treated her the same way as how I've described her treatment from other Jews.
Many Russian Jews of the 19th century became Menshevik or Bolshevik socialists. Why? Because it was much more exciting for these youngsters to discuss the writings of Marx, Engels and Lenin than to argue about the Torah.
There shouldn't even be wars, and here we are in the 21st century, not only engaging in multiple wars/military actions, but also unable to abide by our own universal rules for war.
And who exactly enforces these agreed-upon rules for war? Oh, (looking it up), it's the signatory nations themselves who are supposed to enforce them, upon themselves. Or sometimes the (fewer) cooperating nations who support the Int'l Criminal Court use that office.
It's interesting, isn't it, that ordinary people have a better sense of right and justice than do those elevated leaders who are supposed to dispense it. This is not looking good for humanity.
"No other Western military doctrine today would permit such indiscriminate attacks or deliberate destruction."
FALUJAH!
"Today, the prevailing U.S. doctrine-most notably in Afghanistan-stresses the importance of protecting civilians,"
yeah - right.
you were there?
did you see something you want to tell us about?
I agree, giving the Obama admin. credit for caring about civilians is a very big stretch!
Has Israel ever allowed any Palestinians to "live normal lives"?
Remember that imposing a blockade on Iran without UN approval is considered to be an act of war.
the u.s. is as guilty as israel. on march 20, 2003, we started a war against a country that would dare not attack us with rockets, a country that did not use against us the chemical weapons that we had sold it, even as we evicted its soldiers from kuwait in 1991 and slaughtered tens of thousands of those retreating on the infamous "highway of death". in 2004, we gassed and bombed falujah, using the same white phosphorous as the israelis used against the gazans, and we would not allow males of military age to flee falujah before the attack, so we sentenced thousands more to die, ignoring their rights under the geneva convention to vacate a battle zone. that , my friends, was ethnic cleansing, uncle sam style. of course, the annihilation could begin only after bush had safely defeated kerry, to keep the genocide out of the voters' minds. but, who knows? maybe if bush had levelled falujah on november 1, 2004 rather than 8 days later, he would have carried the land of wowed- at nascar crashes and cage fighting by a few more million votes!
White Phosphorous used as a Chemical Weapon = WARCRIME
DIME weapon testing in combat before formal weapon classification = WARCRIME
Disproportionate use of force = WARCRIME
Denying medical access = WARCRIME
Targeting medical service vehicles = WARCRIME
Three UN operated Palestinian schools shelled and bombed = WARCRIME
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KmT0MjlPpRo
This is an outstanding article and great analysis,
With that said did those at the top reaches of the Israeli government or the military or both take part in a conspiracy to cover up what really happened, And no this isn't attacking institutional analysis as Michael Parenti, likely one of, if not the brightest intellectuals among progressives would point out, but rather simply recognizing the fact that those in major and powerful organizations do plot to keep their power and privileges and to make themselves look good, To ignore this is to ignore the very nature of such organizations and to assume as Parenti insists that they simply sleepwalk through such matters oblivious to the consequences to them and their power and privileges,
Also let's now recognize that the right loves to stick the label conspiracy theorists on such prominent progressives as Michael Moore and Naomi Klein, and have done exactly that, This says much of what we need to know about assuming from a label that this or that is necessarily true,
AD
To defend any part of the ephemeral walled facade known as Israel, is foolish. The time has come to deny its legal existence and to refer the walled land stolen from innocents as Palestine. Israel at every level ought to be unrecognizable and unsupportable. The first step is to make sure you don't spend a single penny on any business or person who supports this foul infected group of murderers who refer to themselves as Israelis. The next step is to make sure you don't vote for anyone who might even want to continue funding the operations of this heinous group of murderers. We need brave people to step up to those who have cleverly placed their friends in positions of power. Don't be mistaken, if you allow this failed experiment in terror to continue, you will be where the Palestinians are today.