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Ben Gurion University
Shadowplays
by NEVE
GORDON
The
Nation
[from
the March 24, 2008 issue]
http://www.thenation.com/doc/20080324/gordon
As dawn broke on March 22, 2004, an Israeli
helicopter gunship hovered over the al- Mujama al-Islami mosque in
Gaza City. Suddenly, the whoosh of missile rockets was heard, and
then explosions. Shouts and screams filled the streets, followed by
news bites from all over the world: Hamas's spiritual and political
leader, Sheikh Ahmed Yassin, had been killed as he was leaving the
mosque to return to his nearby home. About three weeks later, on
April 17, Gaza's newly chosen Hamas leader, Abdel Aziz al-Rantisi,
was also assassinated from the air. Rantisi had taken extra
precautions to protect himself--surrounding himself with bodyguards,
constantly switching hiding places and never traveling in his own
car. Still, he could not escape the long arm of Israel's security
services either.
Yassin and al-Rantisi are just two of the more
prominent Palestinian political leaders and militants assassinated
by Israel since the eruption of the second intifada in September
2000. To date, more than 400 people have been killed in similar
operations. While the morality and legality of Israel's
assassination policy are debated in the Israeli press, little has
been said or written about the logistical dimensions of such
extrajudicial executions. This is unfortunate, since seemingly
mundane questions--such as how Israel manages to ascertain the exact
whereabouts of people like Rantisi--can broaden our understanding of
the Israeli-Palestinian conflict in unexpected and valuable ways.
Although the Israeli military does not reveal
its intelligence sources, it's well-known that despite innovations
in surveillance technology (a pilotless drone, for instance, aided
the helicopter gunship that fired on Yassin), Palestinian
collaborators are indispensable to Israel's covert operations in
Gaza and the West Bank. Brig. Gen. Yair Golan, who until recently
headed Israel's military forces in the West Bank, said as much at
the Van Leer Institute in Jerusalem last year. Moreover, meticulous
readers of assassination coverage in Israeli newspapers have long
been able to detect the fingerprints of collaborators at the crime
scene. Consider a few lines from an article about the murder of
Aiman Halaweh, published on October 23, 2001, in the Israeli paper
Ma'ariv: "Halaweh, 27 years old, was driving in the middle of Nablus
in a new car he had received a few days earlier, when suddenly a
forceful bomb detonated inside the vehicle. The car was totally
ruined from the blast, while Halaweh was killed on the spot." The
careful reader understands that the "new car" was the bomb and that
Halaweh must have received the vehicle from a Palestinian
collaborator working for Israel.
The recruitment and deployment of Palestinian
collaborators is not a new phenomenon. It is a longstanding Zionist
practice, almost as old as Zionism itself. Already in the early
1920s, the Zionist Executive's Arab department employed
collaborators to establish the Muslim National Associations as a
counterweight to the Muslim-Christian Associations, which at the
time was the hub of the Palestinian national movement. During the
same era the Zionist movement adopted a similar scheme, establishing
a loose network of Palestinian political parties, known as the
farmers' parties, to challenge and undermine Palestinian urban
nationalists. In fact, Zionist institutions employed collaborators
throughout the British Mandate period to advance their goals. In
1932 a collaborator relayed information about sermons given by
sheikh Izz al-Din al-Qassam, a Palestinian militant who was killed
by British troops in 1935 and is remembered by Palestinians to this
day, not least because the military wing of Hamas has appropriated
his name.
In his groundbreaking book Army of Shadows,
Hillel Cohen, a research fellow at Hebrew University's Truman
Institute for the Advancement of Peace, exposes this particularly
nefarious side of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Cohen has spent
years in numerous Israeli and British archives gathering information
that many would prefer to forget, and in Army of Shadows he summons
his findings to document the actions of a seemingly endless number
of Palestinian mukhtars (village leaders), land merchants,
informers, weapons dealers, journalists, businessmen, farmers and
teachers who collaborated with the Jews between 1917 and 1948. By
focusing on them, Army of Shadows chronicles a tragic chapter in the
people's history of Palestine, one that many Arab scholars have
refrained from writing because it contradicts the dominant ethos of
Palestinian national unity. Zionists have abstained from recording
it as well because it undermines their claim that the Palestinians
were able to unify and fight against the establishment of a Jewish
state after the UN partition resolution of November 29, 1947. Cohen
reveals that many Palestinians signed pacts with the Zionists during
the 1948 war and that some even fought with the Jews against the
Arab armies.
Collaboration is a very thorny issue, primarily
because of its corrosive blend of betrayal, exploitation and deceit,
so it's not surprising that Army of Shadows created a stir when the
Hebrew edition was published in 2004. Both liberal Jews and
Palestinians found the book difficult to digest because each group
found its side portrayed in unflattering terms. Many Jewish readers
were upset by Cohen's revelation that the prestate Zionist
intelligence agency, Shai, and the Jewish Agency's Arab bureau
exploited almost every honest Jewish and Palestinian relationship to
advance narrow Zionist interests. There were, Cohen notes, many Jews
who desired only friendship or good business relations with
Palestinians but were eventually identified by the Shai, which used
them to collect information and enlist Palestinian collaborators.
The Jewish Agency even helped establish and finance Neighborly
Relations Committees, which initiated mutual visits and
Jewish-Palestinian projects, ranging from pest control to the
sending of joint petitions to the Mandatory government. The
rationale for the creation of these committees was not only to
enhance coexistence but also to recruit informers.
Ezra Danin, head of the Shai's Arab department
from 1940 to 1948, identified twenty-five occupations and
institutions in which Jews and Palestinians mixed company, among
them trucking, shipping, train and telecommunications systems,
journalism, Jewish-Arab municipalities, prisons and the offices of
the British Administration. He proposed that the Jews in these walks
of life enlist Arab collaborators, adding that "such activity should
be similar to the way the Nazis worked in Denmark, Norway, and
Holland--touching on every area of life." Cohen explains that this
approach was different from that of British intelligence, which
allowed only political and military organizations and subversive
bodies to be targeted as pools for potential informers. This
revelation, besides shedding light on some of the ruthless tactics
employed by the intelligence agencies, helps explain why, from
Zionism's very beginnings, it was almost impossible for many Jews to
develop loyal relationships with indigenous Palestinians.
Army of Shadows also disturbed Palestinian
readers because it reveals for the first time the extent of
Palestinian collaboration with the Jews during the Mandate period
and the ensuing 1948 war. Some Palestinians were opportunists who
collaborated with the Zionists to make money or advance their
careers--these were primarily land brokers and people seeking
administrative jobs. Others were mukhtars who wished to advance
their regional or village interests or, in cases of internal
competition, to solidify their leadership with the Zionists. Still
others can be characterized as Palestinian patriots who simply
disagreed with the dominant national leadership. Finally, there were
those who had Jewish friends and did not view Zionist immigration as
a catastrophe. The problem, though, as Cohen points out, is that
regardless of the motivation, collaboration contributed to the
fragmentation of Palestinian society at a time when its very fate
was being determined.
Simultaneously, Cohen underscores the
Palestinian leadership's failure to cultivate a unified national
ethos. While disunity among a people is in no way unique, in this
case, as Cohen shows, it was aggravated in two ways. First, a
totally different and competing national movement was making claims
on the same territory, and this movement knew how to profit from
splits within Palestinian society in order to undermine national
aspirations. Indeed, the Zionists exploited the fissures to recruit
and deploy collaborators, and this ultimately served to deepen
internal Palestinian discord and frustrate Palestinian nation
building.
Second, and more disturbing for a Palestinian
readership, Cohen stresses that instead of capitalizing on the fact
that Palestinian Arabs shared a national consciousness and were
divided mostly on pragmatic questions about how to achieve their
goals, the dominant Palestinian group, led by Hajj Amin al-Husseini
and loosely organized under the auspices of the Arab Party
(established in 1935), defined all competing nationalist views and
actions as treasonous. Collaborators, accordingly, were no longer
just those who aided the Zionists' military efforts; they were local
and regional leaders, merchants who traded with Jews, journalists
who wrote in favor of the Zionist project and, most important, land
dealers who helped Jewish institutions locate and purchase
Palestinian land. Cohen tells us that On a clear day in mid-May
1936, an Arab boy set out on a trip from Jerusalem. With him in his
car were two Jewish girls. The boy's name was Victor Lulas. To the
nationalists he was a criminal two times over. He was driving a car,
in violation of the leadership's strike orders, and he had
maintained his social ties with Jews. When he reached the turn in
the road by the village of Abu-Ghosh, a group of young men stopped
him. They dragged him out of the car, beat him, and then sent him on
his way.
People like Victor Lulas were the new traitors.
Without changing their ways and habits, they found themselves
outside the norms of Palestinian society. Patronizing a Jewish
doctor, employing a Jewish worker or being employed by a Jew--all
became illegitimate. Thus, Husseini's uncompromising maximalist
positions, alongside his camp's unwillingness to tolerate the views
of its opponents, paradoxically ended up expanding the definition of
traitor and collaborator. Simply put, many of those who continued to
live as they had in the past were branded as collaborators;
collaboration not only became a common occurrence but a defining
aspect of Palestinian society and politics.
Army of Shadows joins a growing shelf of books
about Mandatory Palestine written by the so-called Israeli New
Historians, among them Benny Morris and Tom Segev. (Segev has
furnished Cohen's book with a nice blurb.) Like Morris and Segev,
Cohen is a positivist: a scrupulous archivist who spends hours
poring over files and old newspapers in order to make sense of the
past and to bring it, as it were, to light. (Cohen's fluency in
Arabic gives him an important advantage over Morris and Segev.) As
die-hard positivists, though, these New Historians are uninterested
in theory; they refrain from examining the implications of their
revelations and claims on our understanding of important concepts
such as nationalism, hegemony and collaboration. There is little, if
any, abstraction in their writings.
Devotion to the archives hasn't hampered
Segev's storytelling talents. In One Palestine, Complete: Jews and
Arabs Under the British Mandate (2000), he beautifully and
masterfully interweaves remarkable anecdotes to create a gripping
and irresistible tale. Yet after reading it, I find myself agreeing
with Segev's thesis--that the British were more pro-Zionist than
many Israelis have traditionally believed--but unsure about the
proof. Segev's great narrative skills are also his Achilles' heel:
the fabric of his story is too tightly woven. Where are the messy
contradictions and ambiguities that characterize history? This is
not the question one is left with after reading Cohen, another great
storyteller, whose narratives accommodate the inconsistencies and
variations that history is made of. Cohen distinguishes himself even
more from Morris, who in Righteous Victims: A History of the
Zionist-Arab Conflict, 1881- 1999 (1999) chronicles the history of
national institutions while eliding the people's history of
Palestine. The significance of unearthing the people's history is
that it often brings to light a story less amenable to hegemonic
perceptions and existing paradigms, if only because the people talk
in many voices: they contradict the dominant ethos, they resist
authority, they tell the truth, they lie.
If, for instance, Morris presents the 1948 war
as a conflict between Jews and Arabs, Cohen documents numerous cases
of Palestinians refusing to attack Jews. This unwillingness to do
battle pervaded the country. In December 1947, Cohen writes, "the
inhabitants of Tulkarm refused to attack Jewish towns to their west,
to the chagrin of the local Holy Jihad commander, Hasan Salameh.
Sources in Ramallah reported at the same time that many were
refusing to enlist, and reports from Beit Jibrin indicated that 'Abd
al-Rahman al-'Azzi," the head of a very influential family, "was
doing all he could to keep his region quiet. The villagers of the
Bani-Hassan nahiya southwest of Jerusalem decided not to carry out
military actions within their territory, and the people of al-Maliha
refused a request from 'Abd al- Qader al-Husseini to attack the
Jewish neighborhoods of Mekor Hayyim and Bayyit va-Gan." In these
places as well as in many others mentioned in the book, Palestinians
did not feel that war with the Jews would advance their interests.
In some cases local Palestinian leaders were collaborators; in
others, fear of the Jewish forces was the source of reluctance; and
in still others it was friendship that had survived many years of
national strife. "Palestinian Arab interest in fighting the Jews
seems not to have been very high," Cohen concludes.
In the late 1990s, in the midst of writing Army
of Shadows, Cohen stumbled on an array of documents in the Israeli
State Archives that had been declassified by mistake. Whereas most
of these files dealt with thieves, brothels and numerous petty
crimes, some relayed sensitive information about the employment of
Palestinian informers during the 1950s and '60s. Before the
archivists' error was discovered and the material reclassified and
sealed, Cohen managed to read and take extensive notes on thousands
of files, which provided him with a unique glimpse into the
clandestine techniques used to recruit and deploy Palestinian
citizens as undercover agents within their own communities. Cohen
revealed the guarded secrets of scores of Palestinian collaborators
in the sequel to Army of Shadows, Aravim Tovim (Good Arabs), which
was published in 2006 and stayed on Ha'aretz's bestseller list for
thirteen weeks. Pickups filled to the brim delivered the paperback
edition to Palestinian villages throughout Israel, where people
waited impatiently to peruse the book. Many of them turned first to
the index to see whether family members or acquaintances were
implicated, making Aravim Tovim probably the only book written in
Hebrew that is read backward--that is, from left to right.
Like Army of Shadows, Aravim Tovim, which
covers the years 1948 to 1967, questions pervasive truths. In 1948,
during what Israel calls the War of Independence and the
Palestinians refer to as the Nakba, or "catastrophe," the vast
majority of Palestinian leaders and intelligentsia either fled or
were expelled from urban centers. The relatively small percentage of
Palestinians who stayed put were unorganized rural dwellers who
found themselves in a new state that did not want them. They were
ultimately granted citizenship but were nonetheless considered a
fifth column and forced to live under the Emergency Regulations,
which restricted the movement of Palestinian citizens within the
Jewish state until 1966. For years, it has been a widely held
assumption that the first generation of Palestinian citizens of
Israel was timid, afraid to challenge the Israeli government and
demand basic rights. Such is the story told in Coffins on Our
Shoulders: The Experience of the Palestinian Citizens of Israel
(2005), in which Dan Rabinowitz and Khawla Abu-Baker distinguish the
1948 generation of Palestinians from their grandchildren, "the
stand-tall generation," which Rabinowitz and Abu-Baker describe as
being assertive, confident, determined and possessed with a sense of
entitlement.
But is this really the case? The same
mistakenly declassified archival files that Cohen used in Army of
Shadows to open a window on Palestinian collaboration also reveal
the existence of ongoing Palestinian resistance to Israeli rule. I
vividly recall my friend Fareed Ghanem, a Palestinian Druse from
Mghar, calling to tell me that he had just finished reading Aravim
Tovim and that his father, Qassem, who was a schoolteacher in the
early 1960s, figures in the book. Qassem Ghanem appears in a chapter
about the governmental Committees for Arab Affairs, the major
objective of which was to monitor and control the Palestinian
minority within Israel. Cohen quotes an Israeli memo about Qassem
Ghanem's hometown. Mghar, the memo states, had been "known in the
past as outstanding in its loyalty to Israel, [but] recently
nationalistic activities and incitement against the government have
been exposed. At the center of these activities," the memo
continues, "are a group of teachers who in broad daylight oppose the
government.... The village notables and collaborators stand helpless
in light of these activities and are certain that if the culpable
teachers were harmed a bit it would do a great deal towards
pacifying the spirits in the village and restoring the calm." Cohen
goes on to suggest that the Regional Committee for Arab Affairs
invoked the Emergency Laws in order to fire Qassem, together with
two other teachers, from the education system.
This relatively minor incident, which takes up
no more than seven lines in Cohen's book, conveys a sense of the
vast covert world of informers and operators, backed by government
offices, responsible for fragmenting the Palestinian minority and
cultivating Palestinian Arab support for the Jewish state. While
many Israelis--Jews and Palestinians alike--already had a sense that
these shadowplays were part of the state's history, Aravim Tovim
supplies the evidence. Case after case is summoned to illustrate how
collaboration permeated all aspects of Palestinian society. The
schools were a major arena for spying. Students squealed on
teachers, teachers informed on colleagues and principals reported on
their students. Other arenas where collaborators operated included
mosques, where an imam might criticize the government; cafes, where
friends might discuss recent political events; and even weddings,
where Palestinian nationalist songs were at times sung. Big
Brother's eyes and ears were always on the alert.
Cohen's riveting chapter about the Jewish-Arab
Communist Party illustrates especially well how the mechanisms of
control were put to use. During the first two decades of Israel's
existence, the Communists were practically the only ones to fight
for egalitarian treatment of the Palestinian minority. They also led
the campaign against the expropriation of Palestinian land and
fought for the right of refugees to return to their villages. Cohen
shows how every dirty trick in the game was used to sabotage their
efforts. Collaborators were tapped not only to listen and report but
also to burn down Communist clubs and offices, to violently attack
Communist leaders and to sway votes in municipal councils. Aravim
Tovim proves for the first time that allegations voiced by the
Communists fifty years ago about the dirty tricks of the government
and its agents were true.
The intelligence agencies recognized that it
would be easier to control individuals than to manage a politically
conscious and organized public. Therefore, they instructed their
subordinates to prevent the establishment of municipal councils,
sports associations, neighborhood clubs and the like, while
simultaneously using an array of methods to create friction and
strife among different Palestinian families, neighborhoods and
villages. The objective was to create endemic distrust among the
indigenous inhabitants, to monitor public opinion and to identify
Palestinians who could potentially act against the state. By
frightening and silencing the population, the different government
agencies hoped to fabricate the Israeli-Arab, a "new Arab" whose
first and only loyalty was to the Jewish state.
By chronicling the deep penetration of Israeli
collaborators into all pockets of Palestinian life, Aravim Tovim
ends up--perhaps necessarily--producing a people's history of
Palestinian resistance within Israel, since collaboration is, after
all, firmly linked to the existence of resistance. First-generation
Palestinians did not keep their heads low, and through their
resistance they achieved a number of things. One was their ability
to hide and defend thousands of Palestinian refugees who, after the
1948 war, infiltrated back into Israel. Despite clear government
injunctions to surrender such "infiltrators" and the ongoing work of
hundreds if not thousands of collaborators, about 20,000 refugees,
who at the time made up approximately 15 percent of the Palestinian
population in Israel, managed to settle down and ultimately received
citizenship.
The second achievement involved the
establishment of numerous Palestinian municipal councils, despite
the Committees for Arab Affairs' stated policy of crushing all
efforts to establish such councils. The third has to do with
Palestinian collective memory. The Israeli Ministry of Education,
together with the Israeli security services, tried to undermine
Palestinian nationalism by attempting to prevent the development and
dissemination of a national historical narrative. School curriculums
were limited to a Zionist interpretation of events, while any form
of Palestinian nationalistic expression was vigorously suppressed.
Yet despite all the state's efforts, Cohen shows how ongoing
grassroots defiance guaranteed that the national history of the
people was not erased.
Considering the prominent place of resistance
in Aravim Tovim, it's not surprising that those first-generation
Palestinians who participated in such activities in the 1950s and
'60s are not only proud to read the book but are also insisting that
the "stand-tall generation" read it too. This is one reason the book
made it to the bestseller list. Another reason has to do with the
fact that many Palestinians read the book as a manual for
understanding the current situation in Gaza and the West Bank. In
this sense too, Aravim Tovim cannot be separated from Army of
Shadows. Both books describe the methods and tactics used by
Israel's security agencies to penetrate, fragment and control
Palestinian society through the production of profound distrust. In
turn, they provide the necessary background for understanding how
Israel effectively exploits existing conditions in order to recruit
collaborators.
Today a request to exit the Gaza Strip to
receive medical treatment, visit a dying relative or study in the
West Bank or abroad is often contingent upon one's willingness to
collaborate. In early January a number of patients were referred
from Gaza--where they could not receive medical treatment--to
Maqassed Hospital in East Jerusalem, and received permits to leave
the region. At the border, though, they were interrogated by Israeli
security service officers, who demanded that they become
collaborators. According to Hadas Ziv of Physicians for Human
Rights, Israel, those patients who refused had their travel permits
annulled and were sent back home. While these patients managed to
resist the temptation to collaborate, despite their medical ills,
others do not. The persistence of collaboration is a result of not
only the historical processes Cohen eloquently describes but also
the harsh conditions under which Palestinians currently live.
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