Israel’s rule over 3 million Palestinian Arabs in the territories has forced it into a position of committing a number of moral outrages. To maintain our rule, we have in the past months committed war crimes, killing and maiming thousands of civilians. Rather than bring security, the occupation has caused a great number of casualties on both sides. Shooting civilians, bulldozing homes and firing at ambulances, we have violated the most important articles of the Geneva and Hague conventions.
How ironic and sad this is, considering that had the European countries abided by these conventions during World War II, Jews would have been saved from the Holocaust.
There is no such thing as an “enlightened occupation.” Our government has proven what was clear all along, namely that in the end, every occupying nation becomes cruel and barbaric, causing thousands of unnecessary casualties and mass destruction.
Resorting to cruel collective punishment is against our own heritage. One could consider our forefather Abraham as the first conscientious objector to collective punishment. He was even willing to risk punishment himself in order to try to dissuade God from his intention to mete out punishment to Sodom and Gomorrah.
His argument with God is described in Genesis:
“If there are 50 righteous within the city, will You indeed sweep away and not forgive the city for the 50? . . . It is far from You to do such a thing, to slay the righteous with the wicked . . . ? Shall not the Judge of all the earth do justly?” (Genesis 18:24-25).
Here Abraham courageously questions God and appeals his decision to mete out collective punishment. Finally, after a lengthy dispute with Abraham, God acknowledges that he will not punish the innocent with the guilty.
Instead of following Abraham, we have done the opposite. We have killed hundreds of unarmed men, women and children, destroyed buildings and property, and enclosed millions of Palestinians in their cities, towns and villages. Having enforced strict and cruel curfews, we have expropriated their land and other property.
Yes, we are undergoing difficult times in Israel. Working in Netanya, I have been twice within 100 yards of the terrible suicide bombings committed by fanatic Palestinian terrorists. I have mourned the loss of innocent lives.
But these acts of terror are no excuse for our continuing acts of aggression, for the tanks and helicopters firing at innocent civilians, razing residential areas, and wreaking havoc and destruction everywhere in the West Bank and Gaza Strip.
Since the Palestinian uprising began, I, as a lawyer, must sadly admit that Israel has behaved as a dictatorship that has strayed so far from the morality of order that it ceases to be a democratic legal system. Certainly, the extra-judicial killings of Palestinian political leaders are tantamount to premeditated murder.
These killings have the trademarks of terror groups. They have no justification in any sane polity. This leads to a conclusion that since Israel has implemented terror tactics, it has become itself a terror organization.
The U.S. government should consider adding Israel to its list of terrorist organizations.
In order to save our country from complete moral collapse, we have decided to refuse to serve in the occupied territories. It is our most imperative duty, both as soldiers and as human beings. Since our government has no intention of bringing an end to the occupation, it is now time for all officers and soldiers in the Israel Defense Force to come to the aid of their country and cry out loud: We will not commit these atrocities.
In a democracy, the elected government has every right to demand the obedience of its army. That rule still applies, and should, where Israel remains vibrantly democratic–inside the pre-1967 borders. But in the West Bank and Gaza no democracy has applied for 35 years; to demand citizens enforce a military occupation in the name of democracy is absurd.
No, we are not “self-hating Jews.” As soldiers in the Israeli army, we are still committed to defending Israel in its pre-1967 borders. But since the Israeli army has resorted to forays of terror and is committing daily atrocities in the service of a colonial regime, we have refused serving in the occupied territories. We would rather go to jail than suppress a just uprising of people who have been held in bondage for so many years.
Shamai Leibowitz is a criminal law attorney who lives in Tel Aviv. He is also a tank gunner in the reserves of the Israel Defense Force and a signer of “Courage to Refuse”
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