Thursday, February 28

Something bad is happening to us


Haaretz Editorial

Three years ago, the CBS television network broadcast
photos of American soldiers abusing prisoners in the
Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq. The horrifying pictures led
to the trials of eight soldiers, dismissals and a storm of
outrage in America. At the trial of one prison guard,
who was sentenced to eight years in jail, a psychologist
gave his evaluation: that the man was an entirely
ordinary person, without any particular violent
tendencies, who served as a guard for many years in
civilian life but never behaved sadistically toward
American prisoners. The situation of occupier and
occupied, as opposed to that of citizen versus citizen,
causes ordinary people to become violent and lose
restraint. At Abu Ghraib, the trial found, there was
institutionalized contempt at every level. The prison
guards understood that "this is the way to behave here."

Last night, the investigative television program
"Fact" broadcast pictures of our own Abu Ghraib
affair. It is doubtful whether a country that has
grown used to 40 years of occupation, and the stories
that accompany it, will be shocked. We have become
accustomed to treating the Palestinians as inferior
people. Generations come and go, and new soldiers
abuse the residents of occupied Hebron in almost the
same manner. Stories similar to those broadcast
last night were exposed by the Breaking the
Silence group three years ago. The saying
"occupation corrupts" has become a slogan of the
left instead of a warning signal to everyone.

This time, it was regular soldiers in the Kfir Brigade.
They exposed their backsides and sexual organs to
Palestinians, pressed an electric heater to the face
of a young boy, beat young boys senseless, recorded
everything on their mobile phones and sent it to
their friends. One of their "mischievous acts" was
to test how long a Palestinian who was being
choked could survive without breathing. When
he passed out, the experiment was stopped.
The soldiers described activities to "break the
routine" that consisted entirely of abuse. It
was enough for a boy "to look at us the wrong way"
for him to be beaten.

Earlier, at the trial of First Lieutenant Yaakov Gigi,
officers spoke of burnout, of "something bad happening
to the brigade," of a Wild West, of a moral crisis. The
commander of the brigade, Colonel Itai Virov, said
"we failed on several parameters." His words reflect
a denial of the depth of the failure. This continuing
routine, far from the eyes of the commanders,
must lead to a series of investigations, and perhaps
to dismissals as well. It is unconscionable for the
head of the Hebron Brigade, the division commander,
the GOC Central Command and even the chief of
staff to ignore the ongoing behavior of soldiers in
the brigade responsible for routine security in the
West Bank
. Colonel Virov admitted that there was
a conspiracy of silence in the brigade - in other words,
a norm of abuse and its concealment. To change
norms, one has to shock and be shocked, not be
satisfied with a few imprisonments and empty words
about a loss of values.

Perfectly ordinary people, as the American
psychologist said of the Abu Ghraib abusers, are capable
of behaving like monsters when they receive a message
from the top that it is permissible to abuse, beat,
choke, burn, make people miserable and generally
do anything that man's evil genius is capable of
inventing to others who are under their control.
Something bad is happening to us, they are saying
in the Kfir Brigade. That "something" is the occupation.
Share:

0 Have Your Say!:

Post a Comment