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Children of Death by
Uri Avnery
The
story of its voyage so far: An Israeli helicopter gunship tried to kill
Abd-al-Aziz al-Rantisi, one of the leaders of the political wing of
Hamas. He miraculously survived. Immediately afterwards the gunships
killed other Hamas leaders. Clearly, this was the beginning of a
campaign to kill the leaders of all the wings of Hamas – military,
political, social, educational and religious. Such
a campaign is, of course, the outcome of long preparations, which take
weeks and months. It was evidently planned even before the Aqaba summit
conference convened, but postponed by In
establishing intent, all courts around the world act upon a simple
principle: a person who carries out an action with predictable results
is held to have intended that result. That is true for this campaign,
too. The
killing of the Hamas leaders (together with their wives, children and
casual bystanders) is intended to attain the following results: (a) acts
of revenge by Hamas, i.e. suicide bombings, (b) the failure of the
Palestinian Authority’s efforts to secure the agreement of Hamas to a
cease-fire, (c) the destruction of Abu Mazen’s political standing
right from the start, (d) the demolition of the Road Map, (e)
compensation for the settlers after the removal of some sham
“outposts.” All
five objectives have been achieved. Blood and fire cover the country,
the media on both sides are busy with funerals and mutual incitement,
the efforts to establish a hudnah (truce) have stopped, The
“dismantling” of the phony settlement-outposts, a joke to start
with, has been stopped. Construction activity in the settlements is in
full swing, and so is the building of the “fence” that is
establishing a new border deep inside the The
decision to kill Rantisi was, therefore, a decisive point in the history
of It
is easy to say who did not take it. Not
the government, which has become a choir of flatterers and yes-men. Not
the Knesset, which has reached an unprecedented low. It now openly
includes representatives of the underworld, a murderer who has asked for
(and received) a pardon, and some small politicians who look as if they
had been picked at random from the street. The Speaker is known as an
entertaining character. And
not the public at large, of course. All public opinion polls show that
the public wanted the Road Map to succeed. All believed that If
so, who took the decision? That
is no secret. The decision was taken by five generals:
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The Prime Minister, Ariel
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The Minister of Defense, Sha’ul Mofaz, a retired three-star general.
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The Chief-of-Staff, Moshe Ya’alon, a serving three-star general.
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The Mossad chief, Me’ir Dagan, a former one-star general.
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The Security Service chief, Avi Dichter, with a rank equivalent to a
three-star general. This
military quintet is now making decisions about the fate of We
have spoken more than once about the special status of generals – in
and out of uniform – in our state. It has no equivalent in the Western
world. In no democratic country does a general now serve as prime
minister. In no democratic country does a professional soldier serve as
minister of defense, certainly not one who was wearing a general’s
uniform right on the eve of his ministerial appointment. In no
democratic country does the Chief-of-Staff attend all cabinet meetings,
where he serves as the highest authority in all “security” matters
– which, in The
rule of the generals is based on an extensive infrastructure. An Israeli
general leaves the army, as a rule, in his early 40s. If he does not
join the top leadership of a political party (Likud, Labor and the
National Religious Party are at present led by generals, and Meretz is
practically led by a colonel), or manage to get elected as a mayor, his
comrades help him to settle down as the director of a large government
corporation, university or public utility. The
hundreds of ex-generals who man most of the key posts in government and
society are not only a group of veterans sharing common memories. The
partnership goes much deeper. Dozens of years of service in the regular
army form a certain outlook on life, a political world-view, ways of
thinking and even language. In all the years of On
the face of it, there are right-wing and left-wing generals, but that is
an optical illusion. This week it was particularly obvious: after the
assassination attempt on Rantisi and the Hamas revenge-attack, dozens of
generals appeared in the media. (An Israeli general, however stupid he
may be, automatically becomes a sought-after commentator in the media.)
For the sake of “balance,” generals-of-the-right and
generals-of-the-left were brought on screen, and lo and behold, they all
said the same thing, more or less, even using the same terminology. More
than in the “commentaries” themselves, this found expression in two
Hebrew words: Ben Mavet (“son of death,” meaning a person who must
be killed). As
if by order, this week these two detestable words entered the public
discourse. There was hardly a general, politician or correspondent who
did not roll them on his tongue with obvious relish. They had never been
heard before in the media. Now, suddenly, everybody has started to use
them. Rantisi was a “son of death.”
Sheikh Yassin was a “son of death.”
The other Hamas leaders were “children of death.” Perhaps
even Yasser Arafat himself. The
expression appears in the Bible, II Samuel, XII. King David has
committed a heinous crime, deliberately arranging for his most loyal
officer, Uriah the Hittite, to be killed in battle, so he can have his
wife, Bath-sheba, for himself. The prophet Nathan denounces him for this
deed, telling him the story of the rich man who slaughtered the only
sheep of a poor man. David gets very angry and tells the prophet: “As
the Lord liveth, the man that hath done this thing is a son of death!”
To which Nathan replies: “Thou art the man!” Ironically,
the Bible applied the term to the greatest leader of the people of But
this is not the most important point. It is more significant that the
Prime Minister and his small group of generals introduce these two
words, and all the people repeat them like a giant flock of parrots,
without thinking, without protesting. This is rather frightening in
itself, but when these words reflect a disastrous national decision and
the public accepts it without question, that is even more frightening. It
is not yet clear whether discuss this column in the forum Uri Avnery is a peace activist. |