Inside the moral corruption of Israeli society
 
by Joseph Dana
December 16, 2010 
After being arrested in a Palestinian demonstration near Hebron some  time ago, I was handcuffed and blindfolded then sat in the direct sun  along with another Israeli activist. After some time, an  IDF commander arrived on the scene and asked one of his soldiers, "why are  those two in the sun?" The soldier reported that he just put us next to  some Palestinians that were arrested in the same demonstration. The  commander, clearly upset with his young soldier, ordered that we be  moved to the shade because `they are Jews." Then he personally inspected  the zip-tie handcuffs of the Palestinians, making sure that they were  as excruciatingly tight as possible. 
Hand-cuffed behind your back is a very uncomfortable experience. 
 
This was one of my first concrete experiences in the West Bank  in which I was able to see just how soldiers viewed Palestinians. It  was as if they were not fully human or at least, not as human as Jews.
Not fully human. Perfect description. 
Purposeless is a word that is used often in the new Breaking the Silence  collection of IDF soldiers' testimonies from the past ten years of  occupation in the West Bank. Testimony after testimony tells a story of  some experience where soldiers harassed, terrorized and `controlled'  Palestinians for seemingly no purpose at all.  
It is what they are trained to do. They do it well. 
 Soldiers would raid a house, arrest an unwanted man, or shoot unarmed  civilians while forcing families to stand in the cold wearing only night  cloths for no reason whatsoever. After telling their stories of abuse,  many soldiers say they saw no purpose in conducting these actions.  
When soldiers begin to question the mission, that is the end of the beginning, and not far from the beginning of the end. 
 From an operational standpoint, there is no purpose in arresting an  unwanted man or harassing a village with sound bombs at four in the  morning. However, there is a greater purpose for the constant harassment  of Palestinians. It is done to reinforce the notion that they are an  occupied and controlled people as well as to indoctrinate young soldiers  in the ways that the army understands the Palestinian population; as  not completely human. Viewing Palestinians as less than human is a  profound example of the moral corruption of Israeli society. 
Would not want to let them forget these things. 
 In order to occupy, with all the violations of the humanity of the occupied, the occupier must internalize a moral high ground.  
Must internalize the high moral ground.  Well, the internal organs will take a beating. 
 The `purposeless' arrests, night raids, and other violations of human  rights are a necessary component for soldiers to understand their high  ground.  The fact that most of the horrific crimes discussed in the  testimonies were conducted by commanders and others in supervisor  positions further reinforces this idea that `purposeless' operations are   done for a clear purpose. Breaking the Silence has given us a window  into the method of indoctrination in  Israel at its most sacred level, that of the army.
But the commanders and others in supervisor positions will never be charged.  Only in the trials at Nuremburg were the commanders charged.  And all of them were let out early. 
 One of the most recent testimonies from the book, reports of `purposeless' activities in  Ramallah and Hebron in 2008-2009:
 We also had arrests that  we  were  tired  of. There was a  feeling   that  they  were purposeless, for example looking for people who cut the  fence or people who threw stones or  were identified  at   demonstrations  against the fence or inciters.  
 It was a feeling of purposelessness. If in Hebron there was a feeling  that you were arresting an unfortunate person, the feeling here was that  we were doing nothing. There was one arrest, I don't remember in which  village it started heating up, and there was chaos and I remember the company commander  cocked his weapon and said they need to calm down, and the Shin Bet  came in the middle of the village among a few houses of a large family.
 Testimony 22 evokes another picture of terror. Titled, "The battalion commander marched him barefoot", a soldier recalls having his commander order a house raid in Gaza in 2002-3:
 We are taking everyone out of the house at four in the morning in the  freezing cold and leaving them outside in the cold, in robes, without a  minute of  warning to put on some clothes, and leaving them for a half  hour outside until you do the search. Up to cases where they come with a  Givati force in Gaza, they go in with the battalion commander; they  find someone there who isn't connected to anything, a house that's not  at the location they received, a different house. 
 And of course in every home in Bet Lahia, outside of the house, there  are pictures of Shahids so he says to him: "What's this?" And then he  decides to take him with us and he's barefoot. They walk three  kilometers from his house to the border and he's barefoot. He asked the  battalion commander if he could put shoes on, sandals, he asked him in  Hebrew and he goes to him: "No"! He started bleeding on the way.
 As I was reading this document in disbelief and sadness, I mentioned a  couple of testimonies to my flat mate who was an IDF commander three  years ago. I told him about one testimony which described how soldiers  in Hebron would train for house arrests  by selecting, at random, a Palestinian home. In the middle of the  night, they would raid the house and arrest whom they pleased. After the  terrorizing was over, the soldiers would release the innocent man (or  men) that they captured and have an operational debriefing to inspect  performance. 
 My flat mate, rather dismissively, asked if I was surprised by this. "I  used to do the same thing", he exclaimed and continued, "They are doing  the same right now somewhere out there in the West Bank."
Which makes it policy. 
 The majority of soldiers have committed similar actions or watched them  happen.  When soldiers, our national pride, bravely come forward and  speak of what happens behind our walls and checkpoints, we have a  privileged position to better analyze the national psyche. What is found  is that the occupation has led to a moral corrosion of Israeli society  which has almost reached a point of no return.
If your national pride is based on your soldiers, you have no nation; you have no pride; you are a corrupt and bereft society; and you shall vanish from the face of the map because of your own internal contradictions.  As has been foretold by the Ayatollah Rhomeni, and President Ahmajinadad.
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