"What we are doing is becoming the law," says Asa Kasher, perhaps the most celebrated Israeli philosopher alive, referring to the Israeli army's setting of new "standards" of asymmetric warfare where the Geneva Conventions should no longer apply, according to him.
Kasher, with the current head of Israeli military intelligence wrote in 2003 a "Code of Conduct" as an ethical guidebook for the Israeli army in its operations against the Palestinian resistance. One of his most famous contributions was providing "ethical" justification for extrajudicial killings even when many Palestinian civilians are highly expected to be killed in the process.
Kasher's main point is that in the fight against "terror" (are there any better actors that define industrial-scale terror better than the US and Israel?!) the army's main objectives must be met, and the lives of its soldiers must be protected even if doing so causes the death of many civilians on the other side. Some western military strategists, particularly in the US and Britain, seem to subscribe to this same school of thought which basically aims at replacing international humanitarian law and the Geneva Conventions, in particular, with new rules made in the USA ... and Israel!
Morality aside, Kasher of course ignores that the indiscriminate bombing of Palestinians in Gaza and the resulting mass killings of Palestinian civilians (at least 1,000 civilians were killed until the end of the aggression and many are dying every week as a result of injuries sustained during the war) in Israel's recent masscre in Gaza was not at all justifiable by military necessity, as required by international law, and therefore constitute war crimes, pure and simple, as most objective legal experts concur. A woman interviewed on Aljazeera last night testified in total despair of life how her four children were screaming in pain as they were burning after being hit by white phosophorus in their home and how they begged her to save them, but she was injured herself and was completely unable to do anything. She watched the fire devour them before her very eyes. Burning children to death with white phosphorus in UN schools and residential areas cannot be shown, logically, to even save soldiers' lives.
The very fact that Kasher is among the most celebrated Israeli academics, laureate of the prestigious Israel Prize, and a very influential voice in the Israeli academy provides further evidence, if any is still needed, of Israel's moral collapse as a rogue state. It should also give yet another reason for a boycott of Israel, particularly its ethically bankrupt academy, which has been in bed with the military and intelligence community for six decades. As Ilan Pappe once said, most Israeli academics act as ambassadors of the state justifying, whitewashing, and otherwise contributing to its crimes and violations of international law.
Academic boycott initiatives against Israel started in Britain, crossed the Atlantic to Canada and the US very recently, and from there reached Australia and, to an extent, also spread to Spain. Academics in France, Ireland, Belgium, Greece, Norway, South Africa, several Latin American countries, among other places, are also in the process of launching their own campaigns soon. The time to boycott ALL Israeli academic institutions is NOW! They are shameful, immoral, literal "devil advocates" of the first degree.
Omar Barghouti
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1062127.html
Haaretz 06/02/2009
The philosopher who gave the IDF moral justification in Gaza
By Amos Harel
When senior Israel Defense Forces officers are asked about the killing of hundreds of Palestinian civilians during the fighting in the Gaza Strip, they almost all give the same answer: The use of massive force was designed to protect the lives of the soldiers, and when faced with a choice between protecting the lives of Israeli soldiers and those of enemy civilians under whose protection the Hamas terrorists are operating, the soldiers take precedence.
The IDF's response to criticism does not sound improvised or argumentative. The army entered Gaza with the capacity to gauge with relatively high certainty the impact of fighting against terror in such a densely populated area. And it operated there not only with the backing of the legal opinion of the office of the Military Advocate General, but also on the basis of ethical theory, developed several years ago, that justifes its actions.
Prof. Asa Kasher of Tel Aviv University, an Israel Prize laureate in philosophy, is the philosopher who told the IDF that it was possible. In a recent interview with Haaretz Kasher said the army operated in accordance with a code of conduct developed about five years ago for fighting terrorism.
"The norms followed by the commanders in Gaza were generally appropriate," Kasher said. In Kasher's opinion there is no justification for endangering the lives of soldiers to avoid the killing of civilians who live in the vicinity of terrorists. According to Kasher, IDF Chief of Staff Gabi Ashkenazi "has been very familiar with our principles from the time the first document was drafted in 2003 to the present."
Kasher's argument is that in an area such as the Gaza Strip in which the IDF does not have effective control the overriding principle guiding the commanders is achieving their military objectives. Next in priority is protecting soldiers' lives, followed by avoiding injury to enemy civilians. In areas where Israel does have effective control, such as East Jerusalem, there is no justification for targeted killings in which civilians are also hit because Israel has the option of using routine policing procedures, such as arrests, that do not endanger innocent people.
Prof. Kasher has strong, long-standing ties with the army. He drafted the IDF ethical code of conduct in the mid-1990's. In 2003 he and Maj. Gen Amos Yadlin, now the head of Military Intelligence, published an article entitled "The Ethical Fight Against Terror." It justified the targeted assassination of terrorists, even at the price of hitting nearby Palestinian civilians. Subsequently Kasher, Yadlin, and a team that included IDF legal experts wrote a more comprehensive document on military ethics in fighting terror. Lt. Gen. Moshe Ya'alon, who was the IDF Chief of Staff at the time, did not make the document binding but Kasher says the ideas in the document were adopted in principle by Ya'alon and his successors. Kasher has presented them to IDF and Shin Bet security service personnel dozens of times.
"The article was translated into English and published in a military ethics journal and is still being debated around the world," Kasher said. "The feedback is generally positive, although the message is difficult to digest. In the end, everyone acknowledges that they conduct themselves this way. There is no army in the world that will endanger its soldiers in order to avoid hitting the neighbors of an enemy or terrorist. The media don't understand the nature of international law. It's not like tough traffic laws. Much of it is customary law. The decisive question is how enlightened countries conduct themselves. We in Israel are in a key position in the development of law in this field because we are on the front lines in the fight against terrorism. This is gradually being recognized both in the Israeli legal system and abroad. After the debate before the High Court of Justice on the issue of targeted killings there was no need to revise the document that Yadlin and I drafted even by one comma. What we are doing is becoming the law. These are concepts that are not purely legal, but also contain strong ethical elements.
"The Geneva Conventions are based on hundreds of years of tradition of the fair rules of combat. They were appropriate for classic warfare, where one army fought another. But in our time the whole business of rules of fair combat has been pushed aside. There are international efforts underway to revise the rules to accommodate the war against terrorism. According to the new provisions, there is still a distinction between who can and cannot be hit, but not in the blatant approach which existed in the past. The concept of proportionality has also changed. There is no logic in comparing the number of civilians and armed fighters killed on the Palestinian side, or comparing the number of Israelis killed by Qassam rockets to the number of Palestinians killed in Gaza."
When asked whether the IDF should be guided in its operations in Gaza by the concept that there should be zero tolerance for endangering the lives of soldiers, Kasher responds, "The soldiers' lives are endangered by virtue of their very presence in Gaza, by virtue of the fact that we send them to an area where there are enemy snipers and explosives set to go off in areas where the IDF is present. Sending a soldier there to fight terrorists is justified, but why should I force him to endanger himself much more than that so that the terrorist's neighbor isn't killed? I don't have an answer for that. From the standpoint of the state of Israel, the neighbor is much less important. I owe the soldier more. If it's between the soldier and the terrorist's neighbor, the priority is the soldier. Any country would do the same."
The decision regarding the magnitude of force used to protect the lives of the soldiers is up to the commander in the field. "The commander must be skilled in gauging the appropriate use of force," Kasher said.'
2 opmerkingen:
Mensen, jullie moet echt even naar t filmpje kijken op de site van Sonja. Echt bizar. Vooral vanaf 3:45.
http://empire.blogsome.com/2009/02/06/cbs-60-minutes-exposing-israeli-apartheid/
Code of Conduct, o.a.:
"At the core of service in the IDF stand the love of the homeland and the commitment and devotion to the State of Israel-a democratic state that serves as a national home for the Jewish People-its citizens and residents."
Code of Conduct against militants and Palestinian civilians
Two Israeli soldiers on a street in the Palestinian territories
a In 2004 a team of professors, commanders and former judges, led by the holder of the Ethics chair at Tel Aviv University, Professor Asa Kasher, developed a code of conduct which emphasizes the right behavior in low intensity warfare against terrorists, where soldiers must operate within a civilian population. Reserve units and regular units alike are taught the following eleven rules of conduct, which are an addition to the more general IDF Spirit:
1. Military action can be taken only against military targets.
2. The use of force must be proportional.
3. Soldiers may only use weaponry they were issued by the IDF.
4. Anyone who surrenders cannot be attacked.
5. Only those who are properly trained can interrogate prisoners.
6. Soldiers must accord dignity and respect to the Palestinian population and those arrested.
7. Soldiers must give appropriate medical care, when conditions allow, to oneself and one's enemy.
8. Pillaging is absolutely and totally illegal.
9. Soldiers must show proper respect for religious and cultural sites and artifacts.
10. Soldiers must protect international aid workers, including their property and vehicles.
11. Soldiers must report all violations of this code.
??? Het moet wel een mooi papiertje zijn geweest.
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