Israeli soldier in Jenin
Israel's Ha'aretz newspaper had an editorial on
Friday which said that a massacre in Jenin could not be covered-up in
Israel. Too many people know people in the
fighting there. If we wanted to make a safe
massacre, we would have bombed from the skies (how
many people were killed in Afghanistan recently? Any
figures out there??
How many Palestinians were killed by the Joradanians? the
Iraqis? War is a terrible thing.....
The following excerpts are from the original message
by Moshe Chertoff, Kibbutz Shomrat, Western Galilee, Israel
Hello to all,
My close colleague came back into the office on Thursday
afternoon, the end of our work week, still in
uniform with his M-16 and pistol on him. This
was the day that the IDF left the Jenin refugee camp
to reassemble in the area, returning to the status quo that existed
before the Passover Eve Massacre (in which so many at the Park Hotel in
Netanyia we murdered by a suicide bomber).
He was called up for emergency reserve duty (they
call it an Order-8, or tzav shmonae) and is the officer in charge of the
military field infirmary, assigned to the reserve unit who lost the
nine soldiers in that one incident last week. So what I'm passing on here was
told directly to me, just hours after he left the Jenin area, while in
Yokne'am--19 kilometers from Jenin (where we both work and he lives). I didn't
record his exact words, but am using the exact expressions, emphasis and am
remaining true to his stories. These are not pleasant stories, so you
might want to stop here, if you think your "stomach" won't be able to handle it. I'm
purposely not going to amplify or soften his words. I'm going to try to
give you the feeling that your sitting in my office listening to him.
I was looking at a battered soul. Unshaven, you could see both relief
and shock on his face. Having served on the border (and beyond) for 22
years in the IDF, I immediately recognized his expression
and I was having a hard time holding back MY tears and realizing (generally)
what he had been through.
After inquiring as to his own state, the inevetable
question arose,
"So?" That was enough to set him in motion. It was
obvious that he needed
someone "on the outside" to spill to. He
emphatically started with, "This
was
not a slaughter! It was not a massacre!" The
soldiers were hearing the
reports
of what the press was publicizing. "The Nazis would
go into an area or town
and puposefully pull out the women and children and
either murder them or
send them off to death camps. The men got only the
first option, murdered
on
the spot. That is massacre. This was not the case in
Jenin. You can't
believe what you see. I saw it with my own two
eyes."
Let me clarify that although he is a trained
infantry soldier, his job
is the commanding officer of the field infirmary
that was established
specifically for this operation on the outskirts of
the town and refugee
camp of Jenin. He, and his men, would only go into
the area to either
rescue the injured or "retrieve" the dead Israelis.
Although they were
assigned
to the reserve unit that took part, they treated all
the injured of all theunits in the fighting-as well as any Palestinians
who would allow
themselves to be taken for treatment. (I''ll relate
to that problem 3
paragraphs
down, in the body of his words.)
"First, we didn't think we were going into 'war.' We
weren't ready for
what we found there. The whole place was one big
booby trap with secret
tunnels and enough explosives to blow up all of
Israel twice. Don't forget,
this
is a place (specifically the Jenin Refugee Camp)
that not even the
Palestinian Authority could go into. This was the
undispuuted territory of
the
Islamic Jihad and the Hamas.
"Our guys were getting picked off like sitting
ducks. I saw our dead as
they were brought back to the infirmary. Each was
hit by one bullet to the
head or neck. They had sharpshooters at every
strategic location possible
and
all were well trained and their rifles were exactly
calibrated. One sniper
would shoot from atop of some home, and the same guy
would pop up a
minute or two later from on top of another home on
the other side of the
street. We found that they had an elaborate system
of tunnels in which to
get
around in. We were paying the price for our policy
of deliberately not
attacking non-fighters in the midst of close
conflict. We could have saved
a lot
of our guys had we just used the missles or bombs of
the F-16s to demolish
buildings at a distance. We tried all we could to
hit only those who
were shooting at us.
"When we'd get to a building from which we were
being constantly shot
at, we'd try returning fire when we could. But they
knew the camp to its
millimeter, and realized exactly where they could
pin us down. We'd use
bullhorns to call for anyone in the building to come
out before we would
raise the level of our response. Again, this was out
of concern for
innocent lives. One time, and I saw this right
before my eyes, a couple of
families came out. There was a man, a woman, some
boys, girls and even
babies.
Another family of more or less the same makeup also
emerged. Now, we're
in our armoured vehicles. We couldn't open the
hatches or step out cause
every time we tried, we'd be shot in the first
second. We called for them
to raise their shirts so that we could be sure that
they weren't "wearing" any
explosives. Only the men raised their shirts. When
we called for
everyone to do the same, the second the women raised
their garments...B O O M.
Everybody standing there was blown all over the
place. They exploded
themselves-entire families! It was horrific. It was
also obvious that we
would be blamed
for having slaughtered them. It was insane.
"Sometimes, when all else failed, we'd call in an
Apache helicopter that
would fire its rapid fire gun into the window from
where the fire was
coming. Within seconds, the shots continued down at
us. The Apache would
then fire an exact hit of a missile into that same
window. It wouldn't
help-the fire continued down on us. Too many
soldiers were injured or
killed when they tried to enter a house, only to
find it booby trapped or
see
the fighters firing from behind the family who lived
in the house. Many
died
because they wouldn't fire into innocent civilian
shields. When nothing
else would end the standoff, a new vehicle was
called in to take out the
fire. When nothing else would end the standoff, a
D-9" (a new vehicle,
modeled
from a Caterpillar construction chain-tractor, but
armored so that
almost nothing can damage it) "was called in to take
out the fire. Again,
as in
the other instances, we called a few times for
everyone to come out and
that, if necessary, we would destroy the building.
When no one did, the D-9
nudged a corner of the building to give them a
warning. Again we gave a
verbal
warning over the loudspeaker. Again, no response.
The D-9 would take out
a corner pillar of the building and we would wait
for some response.
Again, the verbal warning would go out. And so on
till the the assasin
would
fall with the building. Only afterward can one
accurately find out who was
in
the building. Horrific.
"A commander I knew went into one of the houses from
where there was
firing. He found a Kalatch (AK-47 Kalatchnikov
automatic rifle) on the
table and
picked it up. It was booby trapped and exploded. The
explosion detonated
a grenade on his belt and blew away the lower half
of his body. Horrible
stuff. You can't imagine. I was carrying soldiers
out, under fire, on my
back. The rain was relentless, creating waist deep
mud from the hashed
earth where the tanks had passed. I was filthy with
my uniform and face
black
with mud. When I was out of the rain for a while, I
still felt that my back
was wet. When I took off my shirt, I saw that it was
soaked in the blood of
the soldiers who I'd carried. A young Nachal
soldier, a kid; we worked on
him for an hour and a half. When we finally got a
helicopter down to take
him to hospital, the copter doctor checked him and
said, 'Sorry-too late.'
I'd
been stroking his forehead for an hour and a half.
And he was gone. Just a
kid. What can I tell his mother?"
I asked him how he was dealing with it all. He told
me that he went many
hours without sleep and was exhausted. He might be
able to sleep "well"
for a few nights, but having gone through what he's
gone through, he'll
never be the same.
While he was still in Jenin, the IDF pulled out of
Tulkarem. It wasn't
longafter that pullout when a suicide bomber
suceeded in getting on a bus
to
Jerusalem and exploding himself, 15 minutes in front
of me on my daily
routeto work. You cannot give in to terror. Yet the
ineffectiveness of this
mini-war was clarified this evening on the Friday
Night News (the most
watched news program of the week-other than by the
religious) when it
was stated that only 10-15% of the list of most
wanted terrorists given to
Tennat were either arrested or killed. So, another
85% of them are still
out there; now with greater impetus, waiting for the
opportunity to send
some other martyr-to-be to strike another blow to
Israelis. They kill Jews,
Arabs, Druze and whoever is in the unlucky
proximity. The main reason
that they haven't succeeded in taking out a few
thousand in one operation
(as
in the attack on the World Trade Center) is our
constant security effort.
We have not stopped terror. In many ways, we have
actually spilled fuel
on their fires. It's a horrific dilemna. ...... But
most Israelis
are still hurting from one terror attack or another.
They tell all good
Americans, "Go sit and make peace with Bin
Laden-11,000 miles away from
your closest city. It may take a while. More
innocent civilians may die in
the meantime. Then, you can tell us how to 'exercise
restraint,' 10 miles
away."
As the owner of an Israeli hi-tech company just
wrote the Danish prime
minister (after the deal to sell his company to a
Danish one was aborted
in protest to Israel's policies), "If I have to
chose between my daughter's
safety and life and your money, keep it!"
..... I said, in a message 3 days before the terror
attacks on
America-immediately following the suicide bombing in
Nahariya-terror is
terror. It is not limited by
boundries. If it can thrive somewhere, it can hit
anywhere. Even in
America. And guess what...it ain't over. D-9s and
B-52s can't take
it out.
Please act responsibly in your protests and actions.
But do act. Try not
to add fuel to anybody else's fire. (That's
easy-blame someone or
something. Simplify the conflict into one solution.
SORRY! Doesn't work.)
There are
no easy solutions and we must all become active in
working to solve the
many complex problems. It will take time. I hope we
have it.
Sincerely,
Moshe Chertoff
Kibbutz Shomrat
25218
Israel

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