From sadanand@mail.ccsu.edu Tue May 7 11:30:05 2002
From: Sadanand, Nanjundiah (Physics)
<sadanand@mail.ccsu.edu>
To:
Subject: Israel persecutes dissenters/ Iraq bracing for U.S attack
Date: Tue, 7 May 2002 11:09:46 -0400
JERUSALEM - Until recently, Yaffa Yarkoni was one of Israel's most beloved singers. Since the modern state of Israel was formed in 1948 and through subsequent wars and crises, she has rallied national morale. She was even about to be honored last month with a prestigious gala tribute in Tel Aviv.
But then Ms. Yarkoni crossed a red line: She criticized the Israeli
army's behavior in its recent West Bank offensive and came out in
support of a controversial group of reserve soldiers who refuse to
serve there. We are a people who suffered the Holocaust. How can we
do such things?
she asked.
Retribution was swift. The Israel Artists Association cancelled the tribute, saying the seats would be empty anyway. Leading youth movements, which sang her songs, called for a boycott of her works. Only one pop star, Gidi Gov, came to Yarkoni's defense.
Within days, Limor Livnat, the education minister, urged the attorney general to prosecute for incitement Hebrew University professors who backed the conscientious objectors.
The reservists started out as a group of 50 three months ago. They
published a document saying they were ready to defend Israel but not
dominate, expel, starve, and humiliate an entire people
and
termed the fighting with the Palestinians, depicted by the government
as a war for survival, as the war for the settlements.
Their numbers have swelled to 443. The success or failure of the embattled reservists to gain more influence promises to affect whether Israel leaves or stays in the occupied territories. Similar refusal to serve in Lebanon during the early 1980s helped prompt the government's decision to pull troops out of much of that country in 1985.
The objectors, whose group is called The Courage to Refuse, have been increasingly shunned in recent weeks by the Israeli media, which is largely caught up in the patriotic consensus of the country. The popular Channel Two television station has a ban against interviewing them. Forty-one soldiers are currently in jail for refusing to serve, the largest number in two decades.
It is on university campuses that the ideological and moral challenge
they pose is reverberating most forcefully. Elli Hazan, spokesman of
the right-wing Lavi party at the Hebrew University arguing against the
petitioners: Refusal to serve is the first sign of the society
falling apart,
he said. Everyone will do whatever he wants, and
there will be no laws. We are waging a just war, defending our
homes.
Mr. Hazan conceded, though, that the petitioners are having an
impact, they have prompted discussion.
He is trying to organize a
petition of right-wing academics to counteract the professors who back
the reservists.
The reservists have in mind nothing less than catalyzing a full withdrawal from the West Bank and Gaza Strip and the dismantling of the settlements there. They say they are unfazed by the popularity of the military's West Bank offensive, Operation Defensive Shield, launched after a string of suicide bombings by Hamas.
The price of the current quiet is total oppression [of the
Palestinians]. As people are asked to do worse and worse things,
support for us will increase,
says Haim Weiss, a captain in the
armored corps.
In a society where the military is the most revered and powerful
institution, their website has a radical whiff: The entire system in
the West Bank is evil, they argue, and therefore it is not possible to
simply avoid carrying out individual illegal or immoral orders as the
mainstream left urges. We have created an entirely hallucinatory
reality in which the true humans, members of the Nation of Masters
could move and settle freely and safely, while the sub-humans, the
Nation of Slaves were shoved in the corner and kept invisible and
controlled under our Israel Defense Forces boots,
wrote Sgt. First
Class Assaf Oron. Another reservist, Capt. Dan Tamir wrote of how he
had reached the realization that his work as an intelligence officer
on a seemingly innocuous project to reorganize civil
neighborhoods
in the West Bank actually amounted to preparing
the ground for the establishment of ghettoes.
That pushed him to
sign the petition.
Gideon Ezra, the deputy minister of internal security, says the
reservists could harm the state by damaging our deterrent
capability.
But in Mr. Ezra's assessment, they don't enjoy a
lot of support and are not impacting on the army.
The biggest disappointment for the refuseniks has been the lack of support thus far from the moderate left. Most of the legislators from Meretz, the only Zionist opposition party, say that opposition to the occupation should be expressed through political protests and not by refusing military service.
Gad Barzilai, a Tel Aviv University political scientist, says the fate
of The Courage to Refuse depends on the course of military
action. If the military campaign will become tougher, longer, more
costly this might enlarge the scope of dissent. It all depends on the
nature of the conflict.