Israel: "Refuseniks" Say They
Won't Attack Civilians
IRIN News
Wednesday 09
August 2006
Called up to
serve in the conflict against Hezbollah, reserve soldier Israeli
Tom Mehagel decided he couldn't fight.
"I don't
believe that Hezbollah has any goal but destroying Israel," the
artillery staff sergeant told IRIN. "But we shouldn't use our
force against civilians."
Mehagel is
one of a small group of Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) reservists
who have refused to fight against Hezbollah in Lebanon because
they don't think it is right. Soldiers in Israel who refuse to
fight are known as "refuseniks."
Using
disproportionate force, including attacks against civilians, is a
violation of international humanitarian law. Human Rights Watch
(HRW) has accused both sides of committing war crimes,
specifically for attacking civilians.
IDF
spokesman Captain Erik Snider said that refuseniks are wrong to
believe the IDF is targeting Lebanese civilians. "Under no
circumstances does the IDF target those who are not involved with
terrorism," he said.
The current
conflict started after the armed wing of Lebanese political party
Hezbollah captured two Israeli soldiers on 12 July. In response,
Israel launched a military offensive that has focused largely on
the south of Lebanon, where Hezbollah has been firing rockets into
Israel from.
To date,
1,020 Lebanese, most of them civilians, have been killed by the
IDF, according to the Lebanese Higher Relief Council, a government
body set up specifically to manage relief efforts during this
conflict.
Meanwhile,
58 Israeli soldiers have died and 39 civilians have been killed by
Hezbollah, according to the IDF.
Every Jewish
Israeli male is required to serve in the IDF for three years from
the age of 18. After that, they are called in to train for a month
every year, and can be called up to serve, until they are in their
forties.
Mehagel was
among thousands called up by the IDF when it became clear that the
fight against Hezbollah would be prolonged.
About 4,000
Israelis have refused to serve in military campaigns since the
birth of the refusenik movement in the 1970s, according to Perets
Kitron, author of the book "Refusenik." Around a quarter of these
were sent to prison for their action.
Whether or
not refuseniks are sent to prison depends largely on the mood of
their commanding officer, said Kitron, a 73-year-old who refused
to serve in occupied territories. If the officer is angry about
the refusal, he may send the case to court. If he thinks it is
better to avoid the publicity surrounding a jailed refusenik, he
may just send the soldier home, he said.
Arab
Israelis are not obliged to serve, although refusing results in
them missing out on state benefits such as mortgage discounts for
ex-servicemen.
Although
there have been numerous small anti-war demonstrations, attracting
from a few dozen people to several thousand, the conflict has
broad public support in Israel.
Nonetheless,
Mehagel and other refuseniks say their conscience won't allow them
to take part in the fighting. "I didn't want to go into the army.
I might have helped people in Haifa or something but I didn't want
to open fire," said Mehagel, 29, who lives in Tel Aviv.
Israel's
attacks in southern Lebanon, which have killed hundreds of
civilians, do not help Israel's cause, he said. "The opposite, in
fact. It just fuels extremists."
He chose to
do a 'grey refusal' - not openly confronting the commanding
officers. "The officers asked me if I was willing to fight and I
told them I wasn't sure, that I was confused. After three days
they sent me home."
Mehagel also
refused to serve two years ago, when manning a roadblock in the
West Bank. He said his commanding officer told him the roadblock
had no purpose other than punishing the residents of three
villages because militants in the area had killed an Israeli
soldier 10 months before.
For
refusing, Mehagel was sent to jail for 28 days. Refusing can lead
not only to a jail sentence but also to bitter conflict with
family members and to discrimination in the Israeli job market,
Kitron said.
"The number
of refuseniks isn't very large but that's not the point. The
impact each individual refusenik has is enormous," Kitron said.
On 28 July,
reserve Captain Amir Pasteur became the first to be jailed for
refusing to fight in Lebanon. He is spending a month in a military
prison.
At his
trial, he said, "Taking part in this war runs contrary to the
values upon which I was brought up," according to the Yesh Gvul
group, which offers support and advice to refuseniks. The group
was formed in the early 1980s in reaction to Israel's war with
Lebanon; the name in Hebrew means 'There Is a Limit'.
Yesh Gvul's
spokesman, Ishai Menuchin, said tens more reserve officers and
soldiers who have received emergency call-up orders plan to refuse
to fight in Lebanon.
Kitron said,
"Pasteur is an officer, he has a prestigious position in the army
and by being prepared to go to jail he helps Israel sober up after
the initial euphoria of going to war."
Israeli
soldiers in the northern Israeli town of Kiryat Shmona preparing
for war took a dim view of the refuseniks' actions.
"I can
understand refusing in the occupied territories, but there's no
dilemma here - this is a war we have to fight," said one soldier,
who asked not to be named.
Another
soldier, who also requested anonymity, said, "They don't have
anything political to say - they are just scared to fight. If I
meet one after all this and I find out he refused, I will punch
him in the face."
http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/080906T.shtml
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