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Sharons war crimes in Lebanon: the record
Part Three
By Jean Shaoul
25 February 2002
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Below we publish the third and final instalment of a series
examining Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharons role in the
war crimes committed during the Israeli invasion of Lebanon in
1982, culminating in the massacre of Palestinian refugees at Sabra
and Shatilla.
No sooner had Arafat and the last of the Palestine Liberation
Organisation (PLO) fighters departed Lebanon than Israels
relations with both its patron and vassal became strained, as
their interests diverged.
Firstly, the Americans, with a view to mollifying the Arab
regimes anxious about the impact of the war on their own domestic
stability launched a new peace initiative, known as the Reagan
Plan. This plan explicitly ruled out Israeli annexation, sovereignty
or permanent domination of the Occupied Territories. It called
for a freeze on expanding existing settlements or building new
ones and self government by the Palestinians of the West
Bank and Gaza in association with Jordan, otherwise known
as the confederation solution. Neither self-government nor the
boundaries of such an entity were defined and the PLO was to be
excluded, but despite its incoherence and inconsistencies, the
plan was more favourable to the Palestinians than anything previously
on offer.
However much Israel was reliant on the US, it was not going
to accept this and said so quite openly and defiantly. Sharon
said, Not only will Israel not accept it, it will not discuss
it.... The United States should have saved itself a lot of embarrassment
and frustration by not proposing it. Israel immediately
announced the establishment of new settlements in the West Bank
and the Golan Heights.
It should be noted that while conflicts between the US and
Israel mounted over the next 12 months, Reagan nevertheless increased
military aid to Israel in 1983, and proposed that it be maintained
at that level for 1984, while Congress increased aid even further.
Relations with Lebanese President-Elect Bashir Gemayel, upon
whom Israel was more dependent after the announcement of the Reagan
plan, also turned sour. As far as Begin was concerned, it was
now pay-back time. He summoned Gemayel to a meeting in Israel
and demanded that he sign a peace treaty on September 15.
However much he needed Israeli help, Gemayel was above all
a Lebanese nationalist. To retain control of a united Lebanon
meant that he had to cut a deal with the Muslim leaders. Signing
a deal with Israel, now almost universally perceived as the enemy,
would have precipitated the division of Lebanon.
Begin also demanded that Gemayel move into Sabra and Shatilla
and clear out the remaining terrorists, claiming that
Arafat had left behind 2,000 PLO fighters. This was another proposal
that Gemayel could not implement directly without destabilising
Lebanese political relations. He was also outraged by Begins
proposal to establish a military presence in a 45-kilometre area
in southern Lebanon under the control of another Israeli stooge,
Major Saad Haddad.
Israel had served notice that Gemayel would rule Lebanon only
at Israels behest. At one point in the meeting, Gemayel
held out his arms and said to Begin, Put the hand cuffs
on, before adding, I am not your vassal. He
threatened to charge Haddad with desertion and flatly refused
to sign any treaty or to authorise any move against the camps.
In truth, the Phalangists were hopelessly split. Some of the Phalange
were hostile to Israel and were now collaborating with the Syrians,
who were opposed to Gemayels relations with Israel. Gemayel
had to balance between them and the myriad of different factional
groups within Lebanon.
On September 3, Israel deployed its armed forces beyond the
ceasefire line previously set in agreement with Habib. Sabra and
Shatilla on the outskirts of Beirut had become refugee camps for
many Palestinians who fled their homes. They were the main areas
of the PLOs popular support. The Israeli forces cleared
landmines there and established observation posts overlooking
the camps. Despite the fact that it was in clear breach of the
US ceasefire agreement, neither the US nor any other contingent
of the international force appears to have demanded that the Israeli
armed forces withdraw.
Israel demanded that the Mourabitoun, the largest Muslim paramilitary
organisation and the PLOs staunchest ally in Lebanon, leave
Beirut. On September 11, the US pulled out the last of its forces
sent in to guarantee the safety of the Palestinians under the
Habib agreement, two weeks before its 30-day mandate expired.
The US withdrawal triggered the departure of the other international
forces. The net result was that the so-called international protectors
of the Palestinians had presided over the disarming of the Palestinians
and their allies and delivered them into the hands of those they
most feared: the Israelis and the Christian militia.
The Sabra and Shatilla massacre
On September 14, Gemayel was assassinated in a massive explosion
that demolished the central Phalangist headquarters in Beirut.
The Palestinian and Muslim leaders denied any responsibility.
Given that this was the most heavily guarded building in Beirut,
the attack must have had insider support. It was never clear which
of Gemayels enemies had killed him.
As soon as Begin heard about Gemayels assassination,
he ignored his promise to the US and ordered the Israeli Defence
Force (IDF) to enter West Beirut. He justified his action to Habibs
deputy, Morris Draper, as necessary to prevent acts of revenge
by the Christians against the Palestinians and to maintain
order and stability after Gemayels assassination. A few
days later, Sharon let the cat out of the bag. Our entry
into West Beirut was in order to make war against the infrastructure
left by the terrorists, he told the Knesset, Israels
parliament. By this he meant the Palestinian civilians and their
Muslim allies.
Sharon ordered Chief of Staff Rafael Eitan, later to form the
ultra-right-wing party, Tehiya, to let the Phalange militia enter
the camps in order to clean out the terrorists. The
IDF were not to carry the operation. Their proxies could do their
dirty work for them. New York Times correspondent David
Shipler explained why. He said that as early as mid-June, Israeli
officials were speaking privately of a plan, being considered
by Defence Minister Ariel Sharon, to allow the Phalangists to
go into West Beirut and the camps against the PLO. The calculation
was that the Phalangists, with old scores to settle and detailed
information on the Palestinian fighters, would be more ruthless
than the Israelis and probably more effective.
Eitan issued Order Number Six stating that the refugee
camps [Sabra and Shatilla] are not to be entered. Searching and
mopping up the camps will be done by the Phalangists and the Lebanese
army. He contacted Elie Hobeika, the murderous Phalangist
commander of the Damouri Brigade, and told him what he wanted
his men to do.
On September 15, the IDF re-entered Beirut and took control,
killing 88 people and wounding 254. It soon surrounded and sealed
off Sabra and Shatilla, having attacked smaller camps along the
way. At 11:20 a.m. on September 16, Israel admitted that it controlled
the camps. An Israeli press statement announced: The IDF
is in control of all the key points in Beirut. Refugee camps harbouring
terrorist concentrations remained encircled and enclosed.
That same day, about 50 Haddad troops that were virtually integrated
into the Israeli army and operated entirely under its command
were brought to Beirut. Together with about 100 Phalange militia
they entered Sabra and Shatillaa ridiculously small force
if there really had been arsenals of weaponry and 2,000 armed
guerrillas in the camps, as Sharon had alleged.
There are several journalists, including Robert Fisk, who have
written books on the harrowing events in Beirut based upon their
own and other eyewitness accounts and on-the-spot interviews with
survivors. Other aspects of the story have been pieced together
from evidence produced by the Kahan Commission, the Israeli official
inquiry into the massacre. But two points need to be stressed:
no one ever discovered any arms in the camps and the entry of
the Christian militia did not follow any fighting. In other words,
the events that followed were a premeditated massacre of innocent
civilians. In the next 36 hours, Israels proxies, the Christian
militia groups, went on a rampage, raping and killing people indiscriminately
with knives and guns. People were tortured, including pregnant
women, and the bodies of many of the victims were mutilated.
Eyewitnesses attributed most of the killings to Haddads
forces, but the Phalangists under the command of Elie Hobeika
were no less bloodthirsty. A Phalangist asked Hobeika over the
radio what should be done with 50 Palestinian women and children.
He replied, This is the last time you are going to ask me
a question like that. You know exactly what to do. The soldier
laughed in response.
There were numerous reports that hundreds of men were rounded
up during and after the massacre and taken to Israeli detention
camps in southern Lebanon. Many of them were never seen again.
While the exact number of those killed and injured is not known,
Israel estimates suggest that about 800 were killed, although
the Palestinian Red Crescent put the number at over 2,000. At
least a quarter of these were Lebanese Shiite Muslims.
The atrocities were carried out in full view of the Israeli
troops manning observation posts overlooking the camps. By the
evening, Lebanese soldiers were already telling the International
Red Crescent of atrocities reported to them by Palestinian women
in the camps. On the morning of September 17, Haaretz
journalist Zeev Schiff found out what was happening and
reported it to the Israeli government, although he did not make
it public, despite the fact that foreign journalists were beginning
to report the atrocities. Israeli Foreign Minister Yitzhak Shamir,
who later became prime minister, claimed he did not understand
the message. But even before then, a Phalange commander had radioed
General Yaron to tell him 300 civilians and terrorists had
been killed.
Later that day, Chief of Staff Eitan, Generals Drori and Yaron
met the Phalangist command and congratulated them on having
carried out good work and authorised them to bring in fresh
forces and complete their work. By the afternoon, at least 45
Israeli soldiers knew what was going on. The Palestinians were
pleading with them to stop the bloodbath. They refused.
US intelligence had also learned of the killings. Morris Draper,
the US special envoy, was in no doubt about Israels role.
On September 17, he demanded of Israel: You must stop the
massacres. They are obscene. I have an officer in the camp counting
the bodies. You ought to be ashamed. The situation is rotten and
terrible. They are killing children. You are in absolute control
of the area and therefore responsible for that area
(emphasis added).
Drapers words provide confirmation, if any is needed,
of Israels responsibility in international law and under
the terms of the Habib-brokered agreement for the safety of the
civilian population in Beirut. He had already warned on the previous
evening (September 16) when the massacre was already in full swing
of the horrible results that would follow if the militia
were allowed into the camps. But it was only on September 18,
36 hours after the carnage had begun, that the Israelis ordered
the militia out of the camps. General Yaron later testified that
they did so not for humanitarian reasons but because of pressure
from the Americans, an admission that only serves to highlight
the USs criminal refusal to rein in its client throughout
the whole period.
The record shows that by any objective reckoning, Sharon is
a war criminal whose history of murderous activities and violations
of the rules of war in pursuit of Zionisms political and
economic objectives stretch back for half a century.
The record also shows that not only was the massacre backed
by the Israelis, it was only made possible because the US flouted
its explicit guarantee upon which the agreement on the PLO evacuation
depended. The US never formally lodged a protest about either
the invasion of Beirut or what happened at Sabra and Shatilla.
Once again, whatever the public show of anger or displeasure,
in private Israel got the nod to proceed.
The Kahan Commission
While not one of the Arab regimes lifted a finger to help the
Palestinians, it was the Israeli working class that said it was
not prepared for its government to organise the elimination of
the Palestinians, and called a halt to the pogrom. Sabra and Shatilla
provoked sustained worldwide outrage, but more importantly, within
Israel itself 400,000 people, one in ten of the population, demonstrated
on the streets of Tel Aviv in opposition to the Begin government
and demanded an inquiry.
The Kahan Commission was established in an attempt to deflate
public anger. Its 1983 report was limited in scope and something
of a whitewash. Nevertheless, the evidence it produced confirmed
the broad outline of events on September 16-18 and Israels
role in them. Its conclusions, however, did not flow from the
evidence presented.
It limited its remit to the immediate circumstances and ignored
the context and the subsequent disappearance of Palestinians
at the hands of the IDF and its proxies in southern Lebanon. The
reports title ignored any mention of the Palestinians. It
excluded any consideration of Israels legal responsibilities
under international law and its obligations under the agreement
to which it was a party by the simple expedient of failing to
define Beirut as under the control of an occupying power. It concluded
that Israels armed forces were not participants in the slaughter,
a claim that had never seriously been made. The Commission accepted
the government and armed forces justification for sending
in the Christian militia and concluded that the IDF did not know
what was going on in the camps, despite eyewitness accounts to
the contrary.
While it rejected the accusation that the IDF had prior
knowledge of the consequences, it did not accept Begins
contention that the Israeli government had not expected or foreseen
the tragic consequences of sending the Christian militia into
the camps. The Commission noted that during secret meetings held
between Bashir Gemayel and Mossad agents, Israeli officials heard
things from [Bashir] that left no room for doubt that the intention
of the Phalange leader was to eliminate the Palestinian problem
in Lebanon when he came to powereven if it meant resorting
to aberrant methods against the Palestinians. Furthermore,
Israeli generals admitted that they used the Phalange militia
because they could give them orders that they could not give to
the Lebanese army.
Interestingly, the Commission heaped all the blame for the
atrocities on the Phalange led by Hobeika, and denied the rumours
that Haddad and his forces played any role in the slaughter or
were even present, even though numerous eyewitnesses testified
to their murderous activities. Yet the Phalange had been closer
political allies than Haddad: they had been trained by the Israelis,
armed with the same weapons and performed the same services for
Israel in Beirut, the Chouf and the Metn regions as Haddad did
in the south.
This willingness to point the finger at the Phalange can only
be understood in the context of Israels plans for the future.
As far as the Israelis were concerned, after Gemayels assassination
the Phalangists had outlived their political shelf life, although
they still had their military uses. This meant that Israel was
even more reliant on Haddads forces to play the key role
as its policeman in southern Lebanon. It also explains why Hobeikas
evidence to the Belgian court was expected to be so prejudicial
to Sharon. He was prepared to spill the beans, claiming he had
video recordings and other evidence that would confirm Sharons
role in the affair.
The Commission did assign some limited indirect responsibility
for the massacre on Israel. It condemned Begin, Sharon and the
generals with varying degrees of harshness, concluding that Sharon
bore personal responsibility for what happened in
the camps and recommending his removal from office. While Sharon
was removed from his post as defence minister, he retained his
seat in the cabinet as minister without portfolio.
The Commission made no recommendation about Chief of Staff
Rafael Eitanthe man who had expected the massacre, allowed
fresh troops in to replace those who had done such a good job,
and lied about the IDFs roleas he was due to retire
soon. Eitan went on to become a Knesset member as the founder
of an ultra-right-wing party.
General Yaron, who knew about the killings the very first evening
and did nothing, was to be suspended for three years. Shortly
afterwards he was put in charge of army manpower and training
and in 1986 was rewarded with the plum job of military attaché
in Washington. The Commission recommended that the director of
military intelligence be fired and placed considerable blame on
General Drori without recourse to any further recommendation.
It has taken nearly 20 years for Ariel Sharon, the man who
in 1983 was not fit to be minister of defence, to be deemed fit
for the highest office of prime minister. Sabra and Shatilla earned
him impeccable credentials as far as the right wing is concerned.
The Palestinian policy he has embodied for decadeseither
genocide or ethnic cleansinghas supplanted the promise of
a two state solution embodied in the 1993 Oslo Accords. Now the
far right is baying openly for a population transfer
from the West Bank, an end to restraint and the reoccupation
of territories seized in the 1967 war, measures that demand a
bloodbath that would dwarf Sabra and Shatilla in their savagery.
Concluded
Bibliography:
R. Brynon, Security and Survival: The PLO in Lebanon, Westview
Press, 1990.
N. Chomsky, The Fateful Triangle: The United States, Israel
and the Palestinians, Pluto Press, 1999.
R. Fisk, Pity the Nation, Oxford University Press, 1990
T. Friedman, From Beirut to Jerusalem, HarperCollins, 1989.
Z. Schiff and E. Yaari, Israels Lebanon War,
1985.
See Also:
Sharons war crimes in Lebanon: the
record
Part One
[22 February 2002]
Part Two
[23 February 2002]
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