By
sending vast amounts of military aid to
Israel, members of the US Congress,
President George W. Bush, President
Barack Obama and Defense Secretary Chuck
Hagel have aided and abetted the
commission of war crimes, genocide and
crimes against humanity by Israeli
officials and commanders in Gaza. An
individual can be convicted of a war
crime, genocide or a
crime against humanity [PDF] in the
International Criminal Court (ICC) if he
or she "aids, abets or otherwise
assists" in the commission or attempted
commission of the crime, "including
providing the means for its commission."
There is growing evidence that Israeli
leaders and commanders have committed
the following war crimes, genocide and
crimes against humanity as defined in
the Rome Statute for the ICC. US
military aid has aided, abetted and
assisted the commission of these crimes
by providing Israel with the military
means to commit them.
During Operation Protective Edge,
Israeli forces again used the Dahiye
Doctrine, which,
according to the UN Human Rights Council
[Goldstone] Report [PDF], involves
"the application of disproportionate
force and causing of great damage and
destruction to civilian property and
infrastructure, and suffering to
civilian populations."
A
summary of Israeli leaders' extensive
crimes is presented below.
US
military aid to Israel
According to the Congressional Research
Service, in 2007, the Bush
Administration agreed to provide Israel
with
$30 billion [PDF] in military
assistance from 2009 to 2018, provided
in annual increments of $3.1 billion.
During his March 2013 visit to Israel,
Obama
pledged that the US would continue
to provide Israel with multi-year
commitments of military aid subject to
the approval of Congress.
Since 2012, the US has
sent $276 million worth of weapons
and munitions to Israel, not including
exports of military transport equipment
and high technologies. From January to
May 2014, the US transferred to Israel
almost $27 million for rocket launchers,
$9.3 million worth of parts of guided
missiles and nearly $762,000 for bombs,
grenades and munitions of war.
On
July 20, 2014, Israel
requested additional ammunition,
including 140mm tank rounds and 40mm
illumination grenades, and the Defense
Department approved the sale three days
later. It came from a $1 billion
stockpile of ammunition the US military
stores in Israel for that country's use;
it is called War Reserve Stockpile
Ammunition-Israel. In early August 2014,
both houses of Congress
overwhelmingly passed, and Obama
signed, an appropriation of $225 billion
for Israel's Iron Dome missile defense
system, which has also been used in
Gaza. The Senate vote was unanimous.
With no debate, the House of
Representatives voted 395 to 8 to
approve the deal.
Here is a summary of the crimes, as
defined in the Rome Statute, Israeli
leaders have committed and US leaders
have aided and abetted:
War crimes
(1) Willful killing:
Israeli forces have
killed nearly 2,000 Palestinians
(more than
400 children and over 80%
civilians). Israel used 155-millimeter
artillery, which,
according to Human Rights Watch, is
"utterly inappropriate in a densely
populated area, because this kind of
artillery is considered accurate if it
lands anyplace within a 50-meter
radius."
(2) Willfully causing great
suffering or serious injury to body or
health: Nearly
10,000 people, 2,500 of them
children, have been wounded. Naban Abu
Shaar
told the Daily Beast that the dead
bodies from what appeared to be a "mass
execution" in Khuza'a looked like they
were "melted" and were piled on top of
each other; assault rifle bullet casings
found in the house were marked "IMI"
(Israel Military Industries). UNICEF
said the Israeli offensive has had a
"catastrophic and tragic impact" on
children in Gaza; about 373,000 children
have had traumatic experiences and need
psychological help. The UN Relief and
Works Agency for Palestine Refugees
(UNRWA)
said: "There's a public health
catastrophe going on. You know, most of
the medical facilities in Gaza are
non-operational."
(3) Unlawful and wanton,
extensive destruction and appropriation
of property not justified by military
necessity: Tens of thousands of
Palestinians have
lost their homes. More than 1,300
buildings were destroyed and 752 were
severely damaged. Damage to sewer and
water infrastructure has
affected two-thirds of Gazans. On
July 20, Israeli forces virtually
flattened the small town of Khuza'a; one
man
counted 360 shell attacks in one
hour. Reconstruction of Gaza is
estimated to
cost $6 billion. Israel
shrunk Gaza's habitable land mass by
44 percent, establishing a 3 km "no-go"
zone for Palestinians; 147 square miles
of land will be compressed into 82
square miles. Oxfam
described the level of destruction
as "outrageous ... much worse than
anything we have seen in previous
[Israeli] military operations."
(4) Willfully depriving a
prisoner of war or a civilian the rights
of fair and regular trial:
Nearly 2,000 Palestinians were arrested
by Israeli forces during July 2014,
according to the Palestinian
Prisoners Center for Studies. Prisoners
include 15 members of the Palestinian
Legislative Council, about 240 children,
dozens of women, journalists, activists,
academics and 62 former prisoners
previously released in a prisoner
exchange. Israeli forces executed many
prisoners after arrest, either by
directly firing on them, refusing to
allow treatment or allowing them to
bleed to death. More than 445 prisoners
are being held without charge or trial
under administrative detention.
(5) Intentionally directing
attacks against the civilian population,
civilian objects, or humanitarian
vehicles, installations and personnel:
"The civilian population in the Gaza
Strip is under direct attack,"
reads a joint declaration of over
150 international law experts. Israeli
forces violated the principle of
"distinction," which forbids deliberate
attacks on civilians or civilian
objects. Israeli forces bombed 142
schools (89 run by the UN), including
six UN schools in which civilians were
taking refuge. Israeli forces shot and
killed fleeing civilians (warnings,
which must effectively give civilians
time to flee before bombing, do not
relieve Israel from its legal
obligations not to target civilians).
Israeli forces repeatedly bombed Gaza's
only power plant and other
infrastructure, which are "beyond
repair." Israeli forces
bombed one-third of Gaza's
hospitals, 14 primary healthcare clinics
and 29 ambulances. At least five medical
staff were killed and tens of others
were injured.
(6) Intentionally launching
attacks with knowledge they will cause
incidental loss of life or injury to
civilians or damage to civilian objects
or long-term severe damage to the
natural environment, if they are clearly
excessive in relation to the anticipated
military advantage: The
principle of "proportionality" forbids
disproportionate and excessive civilian
casualties compared to the claimed
military advantage gained in the attack.
The Dahiye Doctrine directly
violates this principle. Responding
to Hamas' rockets with 155-millimeter
artillery is
disproportionate. Although nearly
2,000 Palestinians (over 80 percent
civilians)
have been killed, 67 Israelis (all
but three of them soldiers) have been
killed.
The coordinates of all UN
facilities were repeatedly
communicated to the Israeli forces;
they nevertheless
bombed them multiple times.
Civilians were
attacked in Shuja'iyyah market.
(7) Attacking or bombarding
undefended towns, villages, dwellings or
buildings, or intentionally attacking
religious, educational and medical
buildings, which are not military
objectives: On July 20, Israeli
forces virtually flattened the small
town of Khuza'a; one man
counted 360 shell attacks in one
hour. Israeli forces
bombed 142 schools (89 run by the
UN), one-third of Gaza's hospitals, 14
primary healthcare clinics, and
29 ambulances. Israeli shelling
completely
destroyed 41 mosques and partially
destroyed 120 mosques.
Genocide
(a) With the intent to destroy,
in whole or in part, a national,
ethnical, racial or religious group:
Palestinians, including primarily
civilians, and Palestinian
infrastructure necessary to sustain life
were deliberately targeted by Israeli
forces.
(b)
The commission of any of
the following acts
(i) killing members of the group:
Israeli forces
killed nearly 2,000 Palestinians.
(ii) causing serious bodily or
mental harm to members of the group:
Israeli forces
wounded 10,000 Palestinians.
(iii) deliberately inflicting on
the group conditions of life calculated
to bring about its destruction in whole
or in part: Israeli forces
devastated Gaza's infrastructure,
knocking out Gaza's only power plant,
and destroying homes, schools,
buildings, mosques and hospitals.
Crimes against humanity
(A) The commission of murder as
part of a widespread or systematic
attack against any civilian population:
Israeli forces relentlessly
bombed Gaza for one month, killing
nearly
2,000 Palestinians, more than 80
percent of whom were civilians. Israeli
forces intentionally destroyed Gaza's
infrastructure,
knocking out Gaza's only power
plant, and
destroying homes, schools,
buildings, mosques and hospitals.
(B) Persecution against a group
or collectivity based on its political,
racial, national, ethnic or religious
character, as part of a widespread or
systematic attack against any civilian
population: Israeli forces
killed, wounded, summarily executed, and
administratively detained Palestinians,
Hamas forces and civilians alike. Israel
forces intentionally destroyed the
infrastructure of Gaza, populated by
Palestinians. UN Secretary General Ban
Ki-moon
said: "the massive death and
destruction in Gaza have shocked and
shamed the world." He added the repeated
bombing of UN shelters facilities in
Gaza was "outrageous, unacceptable and
unjustifiable."
(C) The crime of apartheid
(inhumane acts committed in the context
of an institutional regime of systematic
oppression and domination by one racial
group over another racial group, with
the intent to maintain that regime):
Ali Hayek, head of Gaza's federation of
industries representing 3,900 businesses
that employ 35,000 people,
said: "After 30 days of war, the
economic situation has become, like,
dead. It seems the occupation
intentionally destroyed these vital
factories that constitute the backbone
of the society." Israel maintains an
illegal barrier wall that encroaches on
Palestinian territory and builds illegal
Jewish settlements on Palestinian lands.
Israel keeps Gazans caged in what many
call "the world's largest open air
prison." Israel controls all ingress and
egress to Gaza, limits Gazans' access to
medicine, subjects Palestinians to
arbitrary arrest, expropriates their
property, maintains separate areas and
roads, segregated housing, different
legal and educational systems for
Palestinians and Jews and prevents mixed
marriages. Only Jews, not Palestinians,
have the right to return to
Israel-Palestine.
Collective punishment
Although the Rome Statute does not
include the crime of collective
punishment, it is considered a grave
breach of the
Fourth Geneva Convention, which
constitutes a war crime. Collective
punishment means punishing a civilian
for an offense he or she has not
personally committed; it forbids
reprisals against civilians and their
property (civilian objects).
Ostensibly to rout out Hamas fighters,
Israel has
wreaked unprecedented devastation on
the people of Gaza, killing nearly 2,000
people (more than 80 percent of them
civilians) and destroying much of the
infrastructure of Gaza. This constitutes
collective punishment.
On
August 5, 2014, veteran Israeli military
advisor Giora Eiland advocated
collective punishment of Gaza's civilian
population,
saying: "In order to guarantee our
interests versus the other side's
demands, we must avoid the artificial,
wrong and dangerous distinction between
the Hamas people, who are 'the bad
guys,' and Gaza's residents, which are
allegedly 'the good guys.'" That is
precisely the strategy Israel has
employed during Operation Protective
Edge.
Israel's occupation of Palestinian lands
also constitutes collective punishment.
Israel maintains effective control over
Gaza's land, airspace, seaport,
electricity, water, telecommunications
and population registry. Israel deprives
Gazans of food, medicine, fuel and basic
services.
Prospects for criminal accountability
Both Israel and the US have refused to
ratify the Rome Statute. But if
Palestine were a party to the statute,
the ICC could exercise jurisdiction over
crimes committed by Israelis and
Americans in Palestinian territory. The
ICC could also take jurisdiction if the
UN Security Council refers the matter to
the ICC, or if the ICC prosecutor
initiates an investigation of the crime.
The US would veto any Security Council
referral to the ICC. And the ICC
prosecutor has not initiated an
investigation. So the question is
whether Palestine can ratify the
statute, thereby becoming a party to the
ICC.
In
2009, the Palestinian National Authority
filed a
declaration [PDF] with the ICC
accepting the court's jurisdiction. In
2012, the UN General Assembly
overwhelmingly
recognized Palestine as a non-member
observer state. During the present war,
the Palestinian minister of justice and
the deputy minister of justice both
submitted documents to the ICC
indicating that the 2009 declaration is
still valid. On August 5, 2014, the
Palestinian minister of foreign affairs
met with officials from the ICC and
inquired about the procedures for
Palestine to become a party to the
statute.
On
July 25, 2014, a French lawyer
filed a complaint with the ICC on
behalf of the Palestinian justice
minister. Citing Israel's military
occupation of Palestinian territories,
Israel's blockade of the Gaza Strip and
the ongoing military operations there,
the complaint alleges that Israel
committed war crimes and other crimes.
The Palestinian government has not
formally commented on this complaint.
On
July 23, 2014, the UN Human Rights
Council
established a commission of inquiry
into Israeli violations of international
human rights and international
humanitarian law. The resolution also
called on parties to the Fourth Geneva
Convention to convene and respond to the
alleged violations. That convention
requires parties to prosecute violators.
Countries can bring foreign nationals to
justice for war crimes, genocide and
crimes against humanity under the
well-established doctrine of universal
jurisdiction. Genocide charges could
also be brought under the Genocide
Convention, to which both Israel and the
United States are parties. That
convention also punishes complicity in
genocide; US leaders' provision of
military aid would constitute
complicity.
Although the Israeli and US governments
continue to maintain that Israel has
only acted in self-defense against
Hamas' terrorism, the weight of world
opinion points in the opposite
direction. There is overwhelming
opposition to Israeli aggression in Gaza
and calls for justice and
accountability.
Both Israeli and US leaders must be
criminally prosecuted for committing and
aiding and abetting these crimes.
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