There is full agreement between all those who were in the
Jenin refugee camp on only one thing. A week after the end of the
fighting, foreign journalists and IDF soldiers, UN representatives and
hired hacks in the Israeli media, members of the welfare organizations and
government propagandists all report that a terrible stench of decomposing
bodies lingers everywhere.
Apart from that there is no agreement on anything. The
Palestinians speak about a massacre amounting to a second Sabra and
Shatila. The IDF speak about hard fighting, in which "the most humane army
in the world" did not intentionally hurt even one single civilian. The
Palestinians speak about hundreds of dead, the Minister of Defense asserts
categorically that exactly 43 were killed.
So what is the truth? The simple answer is: nobody knows.
Nobody can possibly know.
The truth lies buried under the debris, and it smells
atrociously.
But some facts are uncontestable. They are sufficient for
drawing conclusions.
First: During two weeks of fighting, the IDF did not allow
any journalist, Israeli or foreign, into the camp. Even after the fighting
had died down, no journalist was let in. The pretext was that the life of
the journalists would be endangered. But they did not ask the army to save
them. They were quite ready to risk their lives, as journalists and
photographers do in every war.
Simple common sense would hold that if one forcibly denies
access to journalists, one has something to hide.
Second: During the fighting and afterwards, ambulances and
rescue teams were not allowed to get close. Those that tried to approach
were shot at. The result was that the wounded bled to death in the
streets, even if they had relatively light injuries. This is a war crime,
a "manifestly illegal order", over which "the black flag of illegality"
flies. Under Israeli law, and even more so under international law and
conventions to which Israel is a party, soldiers are forbidden to obey
such an order.
It makes no difference whether civilians or "armed men",
one person or a hundred, died in these circumstances. As a method of
warfare it is inhuman.
Some journalists justified this method in advance when
they alleged that they had seen "with their own eyes" Palestinian
ambulances carrying arms. Even if there was such an incident, it would not
justify the use of such methods in any circumstances. (Until now, only one
instance has been proven: this week Israeli journalists reported proudly
that undercover soldiers used an ambulance in order to approach a house in
which a "wanted person" was hiding).
Third: Even after the end of the fighting, and until now,
heavy equipment and rescue teams have not been allowed in to remove the
debris and corpses, or, perhaps, save people still alive under the ruins.
The pretext was again that the corpses could be mined. So
what? If foreign and local teams want to risk their lives for this noble
purpose, why should the army prevent them from doing so?
Fourth: During all the days of fighting, no one was
allowed to bring in medications, water and food. I myself took part in a
mass march of Israeli peace activists who tried, after the fighting was
over, to accompany a convoy of trucks carrying such supplies to the camp.
The trucks were allowed, so it seemed, to pass the road-block which
stopped us – but it later became apparent that the supplies were unloaded
in an army camp and only four could reach their destination.
What does all this indicate? An objective person could
only draw the conclusion that the army wanted to prevent the entrance of
eye-witnesses into the camp at any price. The army knew that this would
give rise to rumors about a terrible massacre, but preferred this to the
disclosure of the truth. If one takes such extreme measures to hide
something, one cannot complain about the rumors.
What is the height of cynicism? When one blocks free
access to a place, and then argues that no one has the right to say what
happened there, because he has not seen it with his own eyes.
The most damning evidence about what happened is the fact
that immediately after the end of the fighting, top government and army
officials started to discuss ways of preventing a shock reaction in Israel
and abroad once the facts became known. This was no secret discussion, it
was held in public, in the media talk shows. All of us heard.
The decisions made were extremely effective in Israel, and
extremely ineffective abroad. I happened to be in England when the news
finally broke. They filled the first page of every important British
newspaper. The front-page headline in the Times was "Inside the Camp of
Death". Underneath was a giant photo and a report by a star war
correspondent, who wrote that in all the wars she had covered, such as
Bosnia, Kosovo, Chechnya and others, she had never seen such a terrible
sight as this. In almost all European countries the reaction was the same.
In Israel, however, the government propaganda machine, in
which all the media are now voluntarily integrated, did everything
possible to prepare the public in advance. It was said beforehand that the
Palestinians were about to spread a horrible lie, that they were ready to
heap dead bodies (from where?) in the streets. It got almost to the point
of saying that the Palestinians had blown up their houses over their
families in order to create a blood libel.
The IDF did "clean" part of the camp, removing the bodies
and ordering the ruins somewhat, and that is where compliant journalists
and innocent foreign visitors were brought. There they met humane officers
who assured them that there had not been any massacre. After all, only a
tiny part of the camp had been destroyed, so-and-so many yards by
so-and-so many yards, nothing really. It all reminds one of the methods of
certain regimes.
The result is that again a huge gap was created between
Israelis and the rest of the world. Around the world, many were horrified
that Jews, of all people, were capable of doing such things. Jews were
again confirmed in their belief that all Goyim are anti-Semites.
I hope that there will be a serious international inquiry,
and that the truth – whatever it may be – will emerge. But if even a part
of the rumored atrocity is confirmed, a question will be asked: What was
the intention? Why did the civilian and military leadership decide to deal
with the Jenin camp like this?
The only answer I can come up with is: in Jenin the
Palestinians decided to stand up and fight. The rape of Jenin was intended
to send a message to the Palestinians: This will be the lot of everyone
who resists the IDF. Also, it could cause a Deir Yassin-style mass flight,
Only a fool would believe that this will end the
resistance to the occupation.
[The author has closely followed the career of Sharon for four decades.
Over the years, he has written three extensive biographical essays about
him, two (1973, 1981) with his cooperation.]