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- <text id=92TT1951>
- <title>
- Aug. 31, 1992: Deadly Force
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Aug. 31, 1992 Woody Allen: Cries and Whispers
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- MIDDLE EAST, Page 49
- DEADLY FORCE
- </hdr><body>
- <p>How Israeli commandos are waging an undercover war in the
- occupied territories
- </p>
- <p>By Lisa Beyer/Ramallah--With reporting by Ron Ben-Yishai/
- Ya'bad and Jamil Hamad/Ramallah
- </p>
- <p> The operation begins with careful primping: the five men,
- all commandos in the Israeli army, put on their makeup. To
- create a dark complexion, they smear a thick, oily foundation
- cream on face, hands and arms. One of the soldiers pastes on a
- fake mustache; another paints a jagged scar on his cheek. To
- complete their disguise--they are posing as Arab
- charcoalmakers today--the men, clad in T shirts, jeans and
- sneakers, smudge their faces with soot.
- </p>
- <p> Setting out from a hiding place in the woods near the
- Palestinian town of Jenin, they drive through the West Bank
- hills in a banged-up taxi and are greeted with friendly waves
- by Palestinians who clearly do not suspect that the men are
- Israeli infiltrators. Soon the commandos reach their
- destination, a small house outside Jenin. Inside, they hope to
- find Munir Jaradat, 18, allegedly a member of an armed
- Palestinian group that calls itself the Red Eagles. Weapons
- drawn, the soldiers storm the house, but they find only two
- frightened women, a boy and a younger child. No Jaradat. "Never
- mind," snaps the group commander. "Next time." Three weeks
- later, another commando team catches up with Jaradat in the
- nearby village of Silat al Harithiyah. According to the army's
- report, he is shot dead after he pulls a pistol on the soldiers.
- </p>
- <p> More and more, that is the pattern of confrontation these
- days in the Israeli-occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip. Even as
- Israeli and Palestinian negotiators were preparing to resume
- peace talks set for this week in Washington, their armed
- compatriots were shooting it out in the territories. The new
- pattern began to emerge eight months ago, when the Israeli army
- launched an all-out offensive to end what it describes as the
- "red intifadeh," resistance by an increasing number of
- Palestinians who have switched from stones to guns in their
- fight against the occupation. The army's campaign, which mainly
- employs undercover units--"Arabized" is the term used by the
- media--has produced a rash of Palestinian deaths under
- controversial circumstances. Palestinian leaders charge that the
- commando units are death squads. "We've seen this before, in
- Guatemala, Argentina, the Philippines," says Riad Malki, an
- activist associated with the outlawed Popular Front for the
- Liberation of Palestine. "The idea is not to capture fugitives
- but to eliminate them."
- </p>
- <p> Israeli and Palestinian human-rights groups charge that
- the force used is excessive. Three weeks ago, Education
- Minister Shulamit Aloni, whose leftist Meretz Party is part of
- Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin's governing coalition, said she was
- "opposed in principle to 18- or 19-year-old boys' passing
- judgment on Palestinians and then carrying out death sentences
- against them."
- </p>
- <p> Security authorities are unmoved by such complaints. They
- see the campaign as a success, since it has reduced the level
- of Palestinian violence directed against Israelis and prompted
- the surrender of scores of wanted activists. Rabin, a former
- general, has no intention of stopping the undercover
- operations. "This is the way to go," he said recently. "We
- intend to continue."
- </p>
- <p> So far, the activities of the special units, or sayarot,
- have not disrupted the Middle East peace process. Palestinian
- delegates to the talks have chosen not to make the killings a
- major issue, in part perhaps because of embarrassment over the
- fact that many of the militants targeted by the commandos are
- thought to have the blood of fellow Palestinians on their hands.
- Since the intifadeh began in 1987, Israeli security forces have
- killed 775 Palestinians in the territories; 680 more have been
- slain by their brethren, mainly for alleged collaboration with
- Israel.
- </p>
- <p> Far fewer Israelis (117) have been killed by Palestinians
- in that time. But a spate of armed assaults by Arabs last year
- prompted the army to expand the role of undercover units, which
- were first deployed against the intifadeh in 1988. Today the
- sayarot--their predecessors made the raid on Entebbe in 1976 a
- synonym for military derring-do--are conducting 200 or more
- operations every day in the occupied territories, though many of
- those sorties have limited objectives, such as gathering
- intelligence or spotting rock throwers.
- </p>
- <p> The military's aim in using the sayarot is to pinpoint
- Palestinian troublemakers and reduce contact and friction with
- the general population. Since the commandos went into
- large-scale action, the army has cut back routine patrols,
- maintained fewer outposts and limited the imposition of curfews
- in Palestinian towns and villages. Overall troop strength in the
- territories has been trimmed a third, from 10,000 soldiers to
- about 7,000.
- </p>
- <p> As a result of the new tactics, military officers say Arab
- attacks on Israeli targets declined 30% during the first four
- months of 1992, compared with the same period in 1991. So far
- this year, 1,000 Palestinians on the wanted list have been
- arrested and 39 killed. Militants are also said to be
- surrendering in unprecedented numbers--130 since Jan. 1--presumably because they prefer jail to possible death at the
- hands of the commandos. The military says the 130 are hard-core
- fighters, a claim many Palestinians dispute. Saleh Abdul Jawad
- Saleh, a West Bank political scientist who has studied
- Palestinian fugitives, says most of those who have given
- themselves up were wanted for lesser offenses, such as throwing
- rocks or painting nationalistic graffiti. The shooters, he adds,
- remain at large.
- </p>
- <p> One of them is "Ahmad," 23, a member of a militant
- Palestinian group known as the Black Panthers, who is constantly
- on the move to avoid being caught by the Israelis. Though he
- knows the odds are against him, Ahmad says he prefers to keep
- fighting rather than surrender. "One day," he says, fidgeting,
- drawing on his cigarette, looking nervously about, "it will be
- either them or me."
- </p>
- <p> It may be him. In encounters with real or suspected
- militants, the army takes no chances. Last February it removed
- a safety catch from regulations by giving soldiers the authority
- to open fire in a wider range of circumstances. As before, a
- soldier is permitted to shoot in two situations: if his life is
- in danger or if a fleeing suspect does not respond to a warning
- to stop. But under the new rules, the definition of a
- life-threatening situation has been expanded and the amount of
- warning that must be given to absconders has been reduced.
- </p>
- <p> The army insists that the soldiers are abiding by the
- rules. "We are not killers. We only try to catch the fugitives
- and make them talk," said Amir Rosenberg, one of the five
- commandos in the first raid in search of Jaradat; Rosenberg was
- shot to death by a Red Eagle last month. ``I have no problem
- with what we do. Whom are we talking about? About people who
- have already killed or committed a terrorist act." Added a
- comrade: "Believe me, if we used our guns as freely as the media
- say, the ground would be littered with hundreds of dead
- Palestinians."
- </p>
- <p> Human-rights organizations think otherwise; they contend
- that the sayarot shoot first and ask questions later. B'Tselem,
- one such group, maintains that only about half the Palestinians
- killed by the sayarot are armed. In a widely publicized
- incident, Jamal Rashid Ghanim, 23, was playing soccer in the
- West Bank town of Tulkarm when four undercover soldiers rushed
- him and, according to eyewitnesses, shot down the unarmed man
- in cold blood.
- </p>
- <p> Clearly, mistakes--sometimes lethal ones--are made, a
- fact the army concedes and says it is working to avoid. Before
- the unsuccessful raid to find Jaradat, the commandos who led it
- made a dozen mock attacks in which soldiers played the roles of
- Palestinians in the house. Each drill tested the raiders'
- adherence to the open-fire regulations; often they failed,
- "shooting" a "suspect" who moved merely to put his hand in an
- empty pocket.
- </p>
- <p> Despite the controversy, the army plans to press the hunt,
- above and below ground, for the 750 hard-core activists who
- remain on the wanted list. The struggle is bound to be bloody.
- Whatever the army's success rate, armed resistance is not likely
- to fade away altogether. As Saleh points out, the killing of a
- Black Panther or a Red Eagle often prompts volunteers to enlist
- in the cause. "The violence stems from a political problem," he
- says. "It requires a political solution"--and that, as
- Palestinians see it, means a settlement that would bring about
- Israeli withdrawal from the territories. Yet the very search for
- a peaceful solution risks more bloodshed: hard-line Palestinians
- are convinced that negotiating with the Israelis is tantamount
- to selling out the cause. Thus, Palestinian intellectual Sari
- Nusseibeh suggests, as the peace process resumes and perhaps
- accelerates, that Palestinian militants may continue to try to
- sabotage it by force of arms. In that case, the sayarot will be
- here to stay.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-