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- <text id=89TT1656>
- <title>
- June 26, 1989: Middle East:Fighting Fire With Fire
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- June 26, 1989 Kevin Costner:The New American Hero
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 39
- MIDDLE EAST
- Fighting Fire with Fire
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Tired of stones, Israeli settlers launch their own revolt on
- the West Bank
- </p>
- <p>By Jon D. Hull/Hebron
- </p>
- <p> The Jewish settlers of the West Bank are not easily moved.
- Despite 18 months of rebellion by Palestinians who also lay claim
- to the land, most of the settlers are more determined than ever to
- stay put. But they are less sure about the government's commitment.
- Angered by the failure of the Israeli army to put down the uprising
- and its inability to provide them with sufficient protection from
- the daily onslaught of stones, some of the settlers have launched
- an intifadeh of their own. Hard-core extremists, numbering several
- thousand, have organized a vicious campaign of retaliation against
- Palestinian villages that is inflaming hatred, threatening to
- escalate the violence racking the Holy Land, and bringing the
- settlers into dangerous confrontation with the Israeli army itself.
- </p>
- <p> Chaim Waldman is one of the self-proclaimed vigilantes. A
- zealous American Jew who moved to the West Bank from Columbus,
- Ohio, seven years ago, Waldman considers himself a part-time
- commando waging a messianic struggle against his Palestinian
- neighbors. "When I go out in my car, I'm hunting for Arabs," says
- the 37-year-old engineer. "I put a bullet in the chamber of my M-16
- and keep it pointed out the window with the safety off." He
- deliberately shifts his Peugeot station wagon into low gear as he
- enters Palestinian villages to steady his aim in the event of
- attack. "There is a Jewish intifadeh now, and it can't be stopped,"
- he says. "We're headed for war."
- </p>
- <p> Waldman is an eager participant in the wave of retaliatory
- raids now igniting the occupied territories. Last month three dozen
- settlers went on a rampage in the Palestinian village of Kifl
- Harith, near Nablus, smashing and burning property, shooting
- animals and spraying houses with hundreds of rounds of automatic
- fire. A 16-year-old Palestinian girl was killed by stray bullets
- as she hid in her home. The Arab city of Hebron is a frequent
- target of Jewish raiders from nearby Kiryat Arba. Daily patrols of
- heavily armed settlers cruise the streets to prove they can still
- move freely around the city.
- </p>
- <p> Nothing short of mass expulsion will satisfy the more radical
- settlers. "The Jews who live here should be decorated for their
- patience," says Aharon Domb, 32, who runs a yeshiva in Hebron. From
- his bulging briefcase he pulls out an assortment of Palestinian
- weapons: rocks, metal spears, and spikes designed to rupture tires.
- By his count, 541 vehicles were damaged and 30 Jews injured in
- Hebron during April and May alone. "Look at what we have to live
- with," he says, displaying pictures of broken windshields and
- bleeding faces. "We accept that settling the land of Israel
- requires suffering, but this is too much."
- </p>
- <p> To defend themselves, the settlers often travel in convoys and
- maintain radio contact with situation rooms back home. They get
- army escorts to guard Jewish buses in the territories, and have
- persuaded the government to subsidize car owners who purchase
- shatterproof windows. However settlers travel, army-issued weapons
- are always within reach.
- </p>
- <p> But the extremists prefer an aggressive offense and conduct
- paramilitary patrols to protect and punish. Waldman describes their
- crude tactics: "After an Arab attack, we send out an alert, jump
- into our cars and head for the area. Then we destroy and burn."
- Already these vigilantes have killed at least 15 Palestinians,
- while one Jewish settler has been murdered by Arabs. Waldman, who
- took a sniper's course in the U.S. Army, won't comment on whether
- he is responsible for any of the deaths, but confides, "Arabs have
- good reason to fear me."
- </p>
- <p> Soldiers who dare to intervene have been threatened and
- harassed -- or merely ignored. When dozens of troops attempted to
- block vigilantes leaving Kiryat Arba, the settlers slipped out on
- foot or by back roads. Last week police arrested Hebron resident
- David Axelrod on charges of physically assaulting soldiers, but the
- army has generally been frustrated in its efforts to keep the
- vengeful settlers under control. Major General Amram Mitzna, who
- heads Israeli forces in the West Bank, has asked the government to
- "help us by stopping the settlers' incitement against the Israel
- Defense Forces." He warns, "We are in an explosive situation
- because of settler actions."
- </p>
- <p> But Israel's hard-line leaders are reluctant to criticize the
- behavior of their fellow nationalists across the "green line."
- Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir concedes that "no one is entitled to
- take the law into his own hands" but reserves his sympathy for the
- settlers' plight. Foreign Minister Moshe Arens praises West Bank
- Jews as the "frontline obstacle to the establishment of a
- Palestinian state." Still, the government hopes to cool off the
- settlers with a series of tough new measures against Arab
- demonstrators. Last week Chief of Staff Dan Shomron requested an
- amendment that would allow him to deport Palestinians before their
- appeals are heard. The Defense Ministry also asked lawmakers to
- double the period of detention without trial from six months to
- twelve months.
- </p>
- <p> The army insists it will punish Jews who break the law. But
- Palestinians say soldiers often stand by idly when settlers attack
- Arabs. Rafik, 31, who won't disclose his full name for fear of
- retaliation, recalls an attack on his home in the village of Halhul
- two weeks ago. Just as the family was finishing breakfast, five
- heavily armed men stepped from a car with Israeli license plates
- and unleashed a barrage of insults and indiscriminate gunfire. "It
- was an expression of raw hatred," says Rafik, pointing to broken
- windows and mirrors and a dozen bullet holes in the wall. When the
- army arrived, the settlers fled and soldiers fired several rounds
- of rubber bullets at the stunned Palestinians as they emerged from
- their house. "This violence and humiliation make it difficult to
- believe we can ever live together," he says.
- </p>
- <p> Most settlers realize that Jewish vigilantism makes for bad
- public relations at the least, but some Israelis fear the
- extremists have something more drastic in mind. As they see it, the
- situation will ultimately deteriorate into a full-scale war, what
- the more rabid call the "Big Bang," enabling Israel to expel the
- West Bank's 980,000 Arabs. Explains Domb: "Killing Arabs doesn't
- help our cause. That's why we talk about expulsions. It's more
- humane."
- </p>
- <p> What motivates many of these settlers is fear of a political
- solution based on territorial compromise. The most radical will
- fight that to the death. Vows Waldman: "If Israeli soldiers ever
- try to remove us, I'll go into the hills and fight a guerrilla
- war." His Arab neighbors can already attest to his brutal
- determination.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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