Thursday, July 27, 2006

Civilians? What Civilians?

Here is a mind bending rationalization by Alan Dershowitz of Israel's indiscriminate attack on civilians. This is from the same person who suggested that shooting to kill a Palestinian teenager throwing stones at Israeli soldiers is justified and that the village from which a suicide bomber originates should be raised to the ground as a form of collective punishment. I learned of this article from the comment of an Israeli blogger who describes herself as someone working for peace and understanding in the Middle East but who praised the article! And I thought only Arabs suffered from self-delusional thinking.


'Civilian Casualty'? It Depends
Those who support terrorists are not entirely innocent.

(Los Angeles Times, July 22, 2006)

By Alan Dershowitz,

THE NEWS IS filled these days with reports of civilian casualties, comparative civilian body counts and criticism of Israel, along with Hezbollah, for causing the deaths, injuries and "collective punishment" of civilians. But just who is a "civilian" in the age of terrorism, when militants don't wear uniforms, don't belong to regular armies and easily blend into civilian populations?We need a new vocabulary to reflect the realities of modern warfare. A new phrase should be introduced into the reporting and analysis of current events in the Middle East: "the continuum of civilianality." Though cumbersome, this concept aptly captures the reality and nuance of warfare today and provides a more fair way to describe those who are killed, wounded and punished.

There is a vast difference — both moral and legal — between a 2-year-old who is killed by an enemy rocket and a 30-year-old civilian who has allowed his house to be used to store Katyusha rockets. Both are technically civilians, but the former is far more innocent than the latter. There is also a difference between a civilian who merely favors or even votes for a terrorist group and one who provides financial or other material support for terrorism.Finally, there is a difference between civilians who are held hostage against their will by terrorists who use them as involuntary human shields, and civilians who voluntarily place themselves in harm's way in order to protect terrorists from enemy fire.These differences and others are conflated within the increasingly meaningless word "civilian" — a word that carried great significance when uniformed armies fought other uniformed armies on battlefields far from civilian population centers. Today this same word equates the truly innocent with guilty accessories to terrorism.The domestic law of crime, in virtually every nation, reflects this continuum of culpability. For example, in the infamous Fall River rape case (fictionalized in the film "The Accused"), there were several categories of morally and legally complicit individuals: those who actually raped the woman; those who held her down; those who blocked her escape route; those who cheered and encouraged the rapists; and those who could have called the police but did not.No rational person would suggest that any of these people were entirely free of moral guilt, although reasonable people might disagree about the legal guilt of those in the last two categories. Their accountability for rape is surely a matter of degree, as is the accountability for terrorism of those who work with the terrorists.It will, of course, be difficult for international law — and for the media — to draw the lines of subtle distinction routinely drawn by domestic criminal law. This is because domestic law operates on a retail basis — one person and one case at a time. International law and media reporting about terrorism tend to operate on more of a wholesale basis — with body counts, civilian neighborhoods and claims of collective punishment.But the recognition that "civilianality" is often a matter of degree, rather than a bright line, should still inform the assessment of casualty figures in wars involving terrorists, paramilitary groups and others who fight without uniforms — or help those who fight without uniforms.Turning specifically to the current fighting between Israel and Hezbollah and Hamas, the line between Israeli soldiers and civilians is relatively clear. Hezbollah missiles and Hamas rockets target and hit Israeli restaurants, apartment buildings and schools. They are loaded with anti-personnel ball-bearings designed specifically to maximize civilian casualties.Hezbollah and Hamas militants, on the other hand, are difficult to distinguish from those "civilians" who recruit, finance, harbor and facilitate their terrorism. Nor can women and children always be counted as civilians, as some organizations do. Terrorists increasingly use women and teenagers to play important roles in their attacks.The Israeli army has given well-publicized notice to civilians to leave those areas of southern Lebanon that have been turned into war zones. Those who voluntarily remain behind have become complicit. Some — those who cannot leave on their own — should be counted among the innocent victims.If the media were to adopt this "continuum," it would be informative to learn how many of the "civilian casualties" fall closer to the line of complicity and how many fall closer to the line of innocence.Every civilian death is a tragedy, but some are more tragic than others.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

And the Israeli wonder why all the Arabs in the Middle East hate them...

It's karma, you get what you give, Israel had it's coming for as long as it's existed, from its atrocities committed against the Palestinians to the latest Hezbollah attacks. The only way out of this nightmare is Israel learning to keep cool and don't be so quick to jump to arms, and stop messing with the UN and being an arrogant asshole of a state. Your enemies aren't afraid and they will fight, fight and fight and your civilians with suffer. My dear Israeli, consider, what kind of society and world do YOU want to live in? You have to CHANGE, or everything will be in VAIN.

Ms Levantine said...

Amazing article, tks for posting it. I could hardly believe what I was reading. It should have been called Continuum of Stupidity. Anyway, I was glad to learn that Lebanese civilians are terrorists who are getting what they deserve. By the way the UN observes were terrorists too, just follow the Continuum. What is Moron in latin?

Rabi Tawil (AKA Abu Kareem) said...

Ofer,

Thank you for your comment. I find many things offensive in this article. First, what is the purpose of writing such an article except to whitewash what is happening to the Lebanese civilian population? Knowing what Dershowitz has written before I am certain of that despite the apparent rational tone of the article- he's a lawyer. So let's take individual statements as examples and see what they imply: "People who stayed behind are complicit": People stayed behind because they had no means, nowhere to go or simply wanted to protected their home and property. "Not even women and children are necessarily innocent": Do I need to comment on that. "Some civilian casualties are more tragic than others": how am I to read this except for its implication that Israeli civilians are more valuable than Lebanese civilians, a patently racist attitude.

Overall, I think the whole idea of trying to stratify civilians is dangerous. Who does the stratifying? How would you feel if the Lebanese created a similar continuum of "cvilianity" for the Israelis. I have made my feelings about Hizbollah clear in a previous post (http://levantdream.blogspot.com/2006/07/enough-delusions.html#links) so I am not excusing anybody in this bloody mess.

I read your post and I liked it as I did other posts on your blog. I disagree with you on one thing. You say that Lebanese moderates are not totally innocent in what happened. The moderate reformers have been trying hard to disarm Hizbollah by political means. It is not easy given the outside players and sensitive sectarian divides within Lebanon. Please remember that Lebanon lost over 150,000 people during the civil war including some 18,000 during the 1982 Israeli invasion.

I hope that you are not implying in your comment, that because they are not "totally innocent", that they deserve to be bombed. Taking that anology to your partial non-innocence about not reigning in fanatical settlers, justifies your being hit by a random rocket from Gaza. It doesn't and never will in my book.

PEACE