Israel Flotilla Attack

Why Israel should have known better

An Israeli journalist wonders why his nation's leaders stupidly ordered the raid on the Mavi Marmara

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Why Israel should have known betterThe view from aboard an Israeli naval vessel, as Israeli navy soldiers intercept several boats headed toward the Gaza Strip, while in international waters, early Monday.

Today’s Wall Street Journal features a disturbing essay on the Gaza flotilla tragedy by Ronen Bergman, an investigative journalist for the Israeli news organization Yediot Ahronot, who specializes in intelligence and terrorism (and is by no means a “leftist”). Reviewing Israel’s past experience with potentially similar incidents, Bergman explores why its leaders would once more issue orders that were so stupid and so damaging to the interests of the Jewish state — a decision he finds hard to comprehend. (As do I.)

The horrific outcome — so far nine killed and dozens wounded — has caused irreparable damage to Israel’s image. Even if the video evidence proves beyond doubt that the activists on board the ships were armed and that they were the first to attack, the battle for public opinion (which, after all, is what the flotilla exercise was really about) was lost the moment the first Israeli soldier set foot on the deck of the Mavi Marmara — the Turkish ferry that served as the flagship.

What makes the flotilla fiasco all the more astounding is that Israel has been preparing for this confrontation for months. It has had time to run various scenarios, and even to review strategies it has previously employed for similar events.

Bergman points out that when Palestinians and their supporters sought to reach Gaza by ship on previous occasions, Israeli leaders were careful to avoid direct confrontation. In 1988, the Mossad simply blew up the Al Awda, a PLO vessel docked in Cyprus, before it could embark for Gaza with 131 deported intifada activists aboard. (The sabotaged boat was empty when it sank.) In August 2006, another boat bound from Cyprus with peace activists and food supplies aboard was stopped, boarded peacefully and searched by Israeli naval officers — and then allowed to proceed to Gaza.

According to Bergman, the Netanyahu government must have known that this time would be very different for a variety of reasons — and that “any attempt to take control of the vessels would almost certainly result in violent confrontation.”

This is what makes inexplicable the IDF’s decision to have members of the Flotilla 13 commando unit board the Marmara. These men are not trained to deal with civilian protestors. And there were other options available to the IDF, such as disabling the ships at sea and towing them to an Israeli port.

Why then did Israel act so recklessly, with self-destructive consequences? Bergman’s troubling conclusion suggests a new kind of weary intransigence:

Many observers, myself included, often resort to the concept of siege mentality when attempting to make sense of Jerusalem’s approach to international relations. It is also true that the memory of the Holocaust still looms large in Israel, especially when existential threats — in which category I emphatically do not include a grab-bag collection of Turkish boats — emerge on Israel’s horizon. But until recently, even with its siege mentality, the Israeli government always made an attempt — half-hearted, or ill-conceived, or badly executed, but an attempt nonetheless — to act in a way that would minimize possible harm to the state’s international image.

What we witnessed in the early hours of Monday morning was symptomatic of a new degree of fatigue in Israeli governing circles. The fact that both the political and the military authorities could sign off on such an irresponsible operation suggests that the leadership of the country has given up what it has concluded is ultimately a Sisyphean attempt to accommodate world opinion. Isolation is no longer a threat to be fought, their thinking seems to go, because Israel is terminally isolated. What remains is to concentrate exclusively on what is best for Israel’s survival, shedding any regard for the opinion of others.

“It makes no difference what we do, or how careful we are, or how we tackle the matter of the flotilla,” I was told by a very senior military source two days before the operation. “Whatever we do, they’ll all be against us, they’ll condemn us at the U.N., and we’ll be scolded. We might as well at least preserve our national dignity and maintain the blockade of Gaza.” In other words, the war over world opinion is over — and Israel has lost …

Israel’s fatigue and deep sense of ostracism is, to say the least, unhealthy. It would be unhealthy for any country at the best of times. But it is particularly troubling when the country in question is at perpetual war, and when it is repeatedly threatened with annihilation by the leader of a country who is actively pursuing nuclear weapons. And, of course, it is profoundly disturbing when the fatigued and isolated country itself has the means to strike pre-emptively and punishingly at its enemies, including in ways from which, realistically, there may be no return.

And there is not much else to say — except that the implications for Obama’s hopes of reviving the peace process are just as grim.  

Joe Conason blogs in Salon several times a week and writes a weekly column for the New York Observer. His latest book is "It Can Happen Here: Authoritarian Peril in the Age of Bush."

American student loses eye in protest in Israel

21-year-old Emily Honochowicz was protesting Israel's deadly raid of a humanitarian flotilla

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American student loses eye in protest in Israel

A student at New York’s Cooper Union School of Art is recovering in an Israeli hospital after being shot in the face with a tear gas canister on Monday during a demonstration at a check point between Israel and the West Bank. Emily Henochowicz, 21, lost her left eye and surgeons at Hadassah Hospital inserted three metal plates into her face Tuesday. She is now recovering with her father by her bedside.

Henochowicz, a junior at Cooper Union who is currently studying at Bezalel Academy of Arts and Design in Jerusalem, was protesting Israel’s raid of the Gaza Freedom Flotilla. According to the International Solidarity Movement (ISM), a Palestinian-led activist group with which Henochowicz volunteers, an Israeli soldier fired the tear gas projectile directly at Henochowicz.

“They fired many canisters at us in rapid succession. One landed on either side of Emily, then the third one hit her in the face,” said Soren Johanssen, a Swedish ISM volunteer who was standing with Henochowicz at the protest.

During the two months Henochowicz had been working with ISM prior to Monday’s demonstration, she attended numerous pro-Palestinian non-violent protests and spent time with Palestinian families who had been evicted from their East Jerusalem homes.

Henochowicz is the second American in so many years to be critically injured while protesting in Israel. California-born Tristan Anderson, 38, sustained permanent brain injury after he was shot in the head by a high velocity teargas canister fired by Israeli forces on March 13, 2009.

Despite Anderson sustaining severe injury at a civilian demonstration, the Israeli Ministry of Defense declared the incident “an act of war” and denied liability for damages — including over seven months of hospitalization and intensive reconstructive surgery to Anderson’s skull.

Jolene Travis, a spokesperson for Henochowicz’s art school, Cooper Union, relayed messages of sympathy for their student. “Our thoughts and prayers are with Emily and her family as she recovers from this devastating injury,” she said.

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Natasha Lennard covers the Occupy movement for Salon. A British-born, Brooklyn-based journalist, she has been covering Occupy Wall Street since before the first sleeping bag was unrolled in Zuccotti Park. One of the first journalists arrested at an Occupy action, she has managed to enrage Andrew Breitbart, Rush Limbaugh and Glenn Beck. You can follow her on Twitter (@natashalennard), and email her any Occupy updates/videos/ideas to natasha.lennard@gmail.com

Thomas Friedman on the flotilla raid: It was definitely a “setup”

The official Mustache of Elite Opinion has nothing against Turkey, of course, but they were asking for it

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Thomas Friedman on the flotilla raid: It was definitely a

SkyLounges across this flat world, take note! Opinion guru Thomas Friedman has issued his important, moderate, hot, crowded opinion on the disastrous raid by Israeli commandos on a humanitarian aid flotilla headed to Gaza!

Thomas Friedman is not mad at Turkey for forcing Israel to raid their ships in international waters and kill at least four Turks. He is just… disappointed:

As a friend of both Turkey and Israel, it has been agonizing to watch the disastrous clash between Israeli naval commandos and a flotilla of “humanitarian”activists seeking to break the Israeli blockade of Gaza. Personally, I think both Israel and Turkey have gotten out of balance lately, and it is America’s job to help both get back to the center — urgently.

Yes, Thomas Friedman, friend to Turkey, places “humanitarian” in scare quotes. But there is his diagnosis: the sides are “out of balance.” Back to the center with you two! Everyone has to get back to the Thomas Friedman-defined “center!”

(Thomas Friedman knows how to solve this problem in the Gulf of Mexico, too: the oil must get back to the center of the pipe.)

“I have long had a soft spot for Turkey,” Friedman then says. Because “Turkey’s role” is “one of the critical pivot points that helps keep the world stable.” So… I guess traders calculate Turkey’s role to decide if they are bullish or bearish on world stability, then? That is, I think, what that means.

But now Thomas Friedman is done proving that he is not just reflexively pro-Israel and anti-those-other-guys. He loves Turkey. Turkey is his friend. But, come on, this is all totally Turkey’s fault.

This is Friedman’s problem with Turkey: they complain way too much, and too loudly, about the Israeli blockade of Gaza. The Turkish leader has been complaining so, so much about how that blockade is immoral and inhumane, lately! Why can’t he just shut up about it?

I have no problem with Turkey or humanitarian groups loudly criticizing Israel. But I have a big problem when people get so agitated by Israel’s actions in Gaza but are unmoved by Syria’s involvement in the murder of the prime minister of Lebanon, by the Iranian regime’s killing of its own citizens demonstrating for the right to have their votes counted, by Muslim suicide bombers murdering nearly 100 Ahmadi Muslims in mosques in Pakistan on Friday and by pro-Hamas gunmen destroying a U.N.-sponsored summer camp in Gaza because it wouldn’t force Islamic fundamentalism down the throats of children.

Ok, but, Tom. It is nice that you have no problem with Turkey or humanitarian groups (where did those scare quotes go?) criticizing Israel, loudly. Except that the rest of your paragraph there seems to describe the problem you have with that.

The “why can’t Israel get away with being as vile and violent and criminal as the worst nations and terror groups in the world??” argument does not reflect well on Israel’s knee-jerk defenders. How many of those states and regimes are explicitly supported, armed, and funded by the government of the United States of America? How often are the actions of the Iranian regime repeatedly and vociferously defended on the New York Times op-ed page and by partisan cable news hosts from both sides of the crazy divide?

But we are not even to the best part, yet! Emphasis mine:

Turkey has a unique role to play linking the East and West. If Turkey lurches too far East, it may become more popular on some Arab streets, but it would lose a lot of its strategic relevance and, more importantly, its historic role as a country that can be Muslim, modern, democratic [Thomas Friedman has an interesting view of Turkish history! --AP] — and with good relations with both Israel and the Arabs. Once this crisis passes, it needs to get back in balance.

Ditto Israel. There is no question that this flotilla was a setup. Israel’s intelligence failed to fully appreciate who was on board, and Israel’s leaders certainly failed to think more creatively about how to avoid the very violent confrontation that the blockade-busters wanted.

No question! No question, at all, that this flotilla was a setup, designed to trick the Israeli commandos into boarding it, from a helicopter. That is why those “humanitarian” activists were so well-armed with… poles and chairs and sticks and things one would find on a boat. They had set a trap, for Israel, to trick Israel into killing between 9 and 20 people. (But because Friedman is very balanced he admits that it was very stupid of Israel to fall for this trap and kill those people.)

You must always remember that while reasonable people consider Thomas Friedman to be a joke — a barely literate cartoon mustache of oversimplification whose understanding of global politics is slightly less comprehensive than a USA Today infographic and who possesses about as much insight into world events as a lightly vandalized Wikipedia stub entry — the sort of people who ineptly manage and run the nation take him very seriously and look to him to form their opinions about important subjects outside (and sometimes relating to) their immediate expertise, be that foreclosing on families or running the Defense Department for the Bush Administration.

So this is the official Moderate Elite Opinion on the flotilla raid: Maybe Israel could’ve found a smarter way to prevent basic goods from reaching the people of Gaza, but those “humanitarian” activists were fucking asking for it.

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Alex Pareene

Alex Pareene writes about politics for Salon and is the author of "The Rude Guide to Mitt." Email him at apareene@salon.com and follow him on Twitter @pareene

Israel discusses easing Gaza blockade after deadly raid

In dialogue with international community to expand the amount of goods entering Gaza. Egypt opens border

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Israel discusses easing Gaza blockade after deadly raidA Palestinian woman and youth pass in front of shops closed as part of a general strike by Palestinians to protest against the Israeli naval commando raid on a flotilla attempting to break the blockade on Gaza, inside Damascus gate, in Jerusalem's Old City, Tuesday, June 1, 2010. Activists seized by Israeli authorities in the deadly raid on a Gaza-bound aid flotilla returned home to European nations Tuesday, including a Turkish woman who brought her one-year-old baby on the voyage. Israel has released some activists, but barred access to others taken off the six boats. (AP Photo/Tara Todras-Whitehill)(Credit: AP)

Israel and Egypt signaled a temporary easing of the Gaza Strip blockade Tuesday following harsh international condemnation of the deadly Israeli raid on an aid flotilla en route to the sealed-off Palestinian territory.

Egypt said it was freely opening its border with Gaza for the first time in more than a year to allow in humanitarian aid, setting off a mad rush to the crossing by thousands of residents, while an Israeli official said there is an “ongoing dialogue” with the international community on how to expand the amount of goods entering the area.

At the same time, Israel began expelling some of the nearly 700 activists it rounded up in the naval raid, and strongly rejected criticism of its heavy-handed tactics. The government said late Tuesday it would deport almost all of them within the next two days, but about 50 would be held for investigation into their part in the violence on at sea.

Israel pledged to halt a new attempt by pro-Palestinian groups to sail more ships into Gaza, and claimed some of the arrested activists carried weapons and large quantities of cash, raising questions about whether they were mercenaries.

Worldwide condemnation has been flooding in since Israeli naval commandos halted the aid flotilla in international waters overnight Monday, setting off a melee that left nine activists dead and dozens wounded. Turkey, an unofficial backer of the flotilla, has led the criticism, accusing Israel of committing a “massacre,” and the U.N. Security Council demanded an impartial investigation.

There were signs, however, that the long-term strategic partnership between Israel and Turkey — the Jewish state’s most important Muslim ally — would endure.

Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak spoke to his Turkish counterpart Tuesday, and they agreed the raid wouldn’t affect weapons deals, defense officials said. Among them is the planned delivery to Turkey of $183 million in Israeli drones this summer. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were discussing sensitive military ties.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton supported a Security Council statement that condemned the “acts” that cost the lives of the pro-Palestinian activists off the Gaza coast. But U.S. officials did not say whether they blamed Israel or the activists for the bloodshed.

In remarks to reporters at the State Department, Clinton did not call for an end to the blockade, but she pressed Israel to allow greater access for humanitarian relief supplies, “including reconstruction and building supplies.”

In a jab at Israel, Clinton said the situation in Gaza, which is controlled by Hamas and under an Israeli blockade, is “unsustainable and unacceptable.”

The flotilla was meant to draw attention to the Israeli and Egyptian blockade of Gaza, imposed three years ago after Hamas militants violently seized power. Israel says the blockade is needed to prevent Hamas, which has fired thousands of rockets into the Jewish state, from building up its arsenal. Critics note the closure has failed to hurt Hamas, while damaging Gaza’s already weak economy.

Late Tuesday, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu rejected world criticism, telling top security officials that Israel must prevent Gaza’s militant Hamas rulers from rearming.

“In Gaza, there is a terrorist state under Iranian sponsorship,” he said. “Opening a sea route to Gaza would present a grave danger to our citizens. Therefore we are maintaining our policy of a naval blockade.”

A new confrontation appeared to be brewing.

Greta Berlin said the Free Gaza Movement, which organized the flotilla, would not be deterred and that another cargo vessel was off the coast of Italy en route to Gaza. A second boat carrying about three dozen passengers is expected to join it, with both arriving in the region late this week or early next week, she said.

“This initiative is not going to stop,” she said from the group’s base in Cyprus.

Despite the rising tension, Netanyahu’s spokesman, Mark Regev, indicated Israel would consider ways to ease the blockade to allow more goods into Gaza — a policy that has been quietly under way in recent months.

“We have been expanding the assistance that has been going into the Gaza Strip — both the volume and the variety of goods — and we have ongoing dialogue with the international community,” he said.

Egypt, which has cool relations with Hamas, announced the opening of the border to allow aid in what it called a humanitarian gesture. It was unclear, however, when Gaza’s Hamas rulers would allow people to cross into Egypt and how long they would be permitted to pass.

The Rafah border crossing in Egypt is the main gateway for Gazans to leave. Egypt has kept it largely shuttered since a devastating Israeli military offensive in early 2009, periodically opening the crossing to allow aid shipments and humanitarian cases to pass through.

Several thousand Gazans — some in cars with suitcases piled on their roofs, others on foot — rushed to the Egyptian border, hoping to take advantage of a rare chance to escape. After milling about for several hours, they were sent home by Hamas security forces.

The Hamas Interior Ministry said police were not prepared to open the crossing and did not say when they would do so.

Amid the tensions, the Israeli military said it carried out an airstrike in Gaza on Tuesday, killing three militants who fired rockets into Israel. Two militants infiltrating into Israel from Gaza were killed in a separate incident Tuesday, the military said.

The pro-Palestinian flotilla was headed to Gaza with 10,000 tons of aid that Israel bans from Gaza. After days of warnings, Israel intercepted the flotilla under the cover of darkness early Monday, setting off the violent clashes. Most of the dead were believed to be Turks, and the wounded included seven soldiers, two of whom were apparently shot with weapons taken from soldiers by the activists.

Three Israeli helicopters dropped 45 commandos on the largest ship, the Turkish-flagged Mavi Marmara, to face more than 500 activists on board. Israel said Tuesday about 50 of them were deployed for battle, armed with knives and clubs, some wearing gas masks. In all, about 700 Israeli troops took part in the takeover of the six ships, sailing in more than 20 Israeli vessels. The 700 included surveillance and support troops alongside those who boarded the ships.

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, an outspoken critic of Israel, told lawmakers the Israeli raid was a “bloody massacre.”

Turkey’s Foreign Ministry said four Turkish citizens were confirmed slain by Israeli commandos and five others were also believed to be Turks. Israeli authorities were trying to confirm their nationalities.

Within Israel, the raid sparked intense debate over the military operation, which the daily Maariv, in a front-page headline, called a “debacle.” Analysts criticized the poor preparations.

Israel sent the commandos onto the six ships after mission organizers ignored government calls to bring the cargo to an Israeli port. After inspection, some of the aid was transferred to Gaza over land on Tuesday.

In most cases, the passengers quickly surrendered. But on the Marmara, the forces encountered unexpected resistance.

Video released by the army showed commandos dropping onto the ships on ropes from a helicopter and being attacked by angry activists with metal rods and firebombs. One soldier was thrown overboard and others jumped in the water to escape. Israeli authorities said they were attacked by knives, clubs and live fire from the two pistols wrested from soldiers.

The soldiers said they were armed with paint guns — normally used as a non-lethal crowd-control tactic — and were ordered to use pistols only as a last resort.

Israel has accused the Istanbul-based Foundation for Human Rights and Freedoms and Humanitarian Relief, which helped organize the flotilla, of fomenting the violence. Israel has outlawed the group, claiming it has close ties with Hamas — a charge the charity denies.

In a meeting with Netanyahu, Israel’s naval commander, Adm. Eliezer Marum, called the incident a premeditated ambush, raising the possibility that some of the activists were hired mercenaries, according to a meeting participant.

Marum said about 40 men were armed with military-style gear and carrying large sums of money. The participant spoke on condition of anonymity because the meeting was closed.

Israel said 679 people were arrested, and about 50 of those had left the country voluntarily. Hundreds who refused to cooperate remained jailed, although the Israeli government said Tuesday night that it would deport all but 50 of the remaining activists, probably within 48 hours. Those who remain would be investigated by police for their roles in the violence aboard the ship.

The Al-Jazeera satellite TV channel said four of its reporters were among those detained.

Israeli Interior Ministry spokeswoman Sabine Haddad said more than half of those arrested were from Turkey, with others coming from more than 30 other countries, including Britain, Algeria, Jordan, Kuwait, Germany and the U.S.

Haddad said 124 people from countries with no diplomatic ties with Israel would be transferred to Jordan overnight. Israeli police said four Arab Israeli citizens would face criminal charges.

Israel did not allow access to the activists, but a handful who were deported arrived home Tuesday, including a Turkish woman and her 1-year-old son, six Greeks and three German lawmakers.

“There was a massacre on board,” said the woman, Nilufer Cetin, whose husband, Ekrem, is the Marmara’s engineer and remained in Israeli custody. “The ship turned into a lake of blood.”

Norman Paech, a former member of Germany’s Left Party who was aboard the Marmara, said he only saw three activists resisting.

“They had no knives, no axes, only sticks that they used to defend themselves,” Paech told reporters in Berlin after he and four other Germans returned from Tel Aviv. He said he could “not rule out” that others used weapons somewhere else on the boat.

The raid has set off a legal debate over whether acted illegally by venturing into international waters.

Israel’s Justice Ministry issued a statement saying the actions were permissible under international law since the vessels were clearly headed toward a hostile territory.

Joe Powderly, an international law researcher at the T.M.C. Asser Institute in the Netherlands, rejected claims by some critics that Israel committed an act of piracy.

But he said “the usual mantra of disproportionate response applies here,” Powderly said. “It seems to have been disproportionate use of force.”

——

Associated Press writers Karin Laub, Grant Slater and Matti Friedman in Jerusalem; Rizek Abdel Jawad in Rafah, Gaza Strip; Ashraf Sweilam in Sinai, Egypt; Selcan Hacaoglu and Suzan Fraser in Ankara, Turkey; and Mike Corder in The Hague contributed to this report.

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