Tel Aviv University
Tel Aviv University - Aviad Kleinberg (Dept of History) thinks
Israeli soldiers are a bunch of thugs
'Very nice. All of us can feel very good about
ourselves. Again it turned out that our army, as the defense
minister and chief of staff declare regularly, is the world’s most
moral military. It is so moral that a failure to kill innocents is
perceived as such an unusual and surprising incident that it
deserves a medal.
'We are implicitly led to believe that a
regular IDF soldier would have opened fire on the unarmed women and
children, just to be on the safe side. However, the Duvdevan officer
and his three soldiers overcame this IDF instinct, and therefore
they deserve a citation. ... Moreover, the Duvdevan unit gave rise
to an amazing, unusual, and unique team that in two separate and
well-documented cases did not hurt innocents. Yes, hard to believe.
Once upon a time, refraining from shooting at innocents was the
norm. Those who deviated from it were punished.'
Nation of citations
Aviad Kleinberg disturbed by citations given to IDF soldiers for
avoiding innocent casualties
Aviad Kleinberg
04.07.09
We recently found out that that IDF Central
Command Chief Gadi Shamni presented an officer and three fighters
belonging to the Duvdevan unit with a citation for avoiding innocent
casualties in two clashes with wanted Palestinians in the West Bank.
In the first incident, the four raided a home
in Nablus’ Old City. The soldiers wounded the wanted suspect, but
reportedly refrained from hurting his wife, who was also present at
the apartment. In the second case, the team raided an apartment
where the wife and young children of a wanted suspect were present.
Although an M-16 rifle was also found in the apartment, the fighters
overcame the suspect without firing at him, thereby sparing the
lives of innocents. For these operations, the troops won a citation.
Very nice. All of us can feel very good about
ourselves. Again it turned out that our army, as the defense
minister and chief of staff declare regularly, is the world’s most
moral military. It is so moral that a failure to kill innocents is
perceived as such an unusual and surprising incident that it
deserves a medal.
We are implicitly led to believe that a regular
IDF soldier would have opened fire on the unarmed women and
children, just to be on the safe side. However, the Duvdevan officer
and his three soldiers overcame this IDF instinct, and therefore
they deserve a citation.
I have great respect for soldiers who are given
citations. Anyone who saves a soul, even if it isn’t a Jewish one,
saves a whole world. Yet I have a problem with the normative
expectations that the cited soldiers contradicted. It appears that
the IDF’s amazement with the conduct of the four troops tells us
about the norm more than a thousand denials by the chief military
prosecutor ever could, and more than the thousand commissions of
inquiry that all found that our arms are pure and our soldiers are
pure and their intentions are pure.
Moreover, the Duvdevan unit gave rise to an
amazing, unusual, and unique team that in two separate and
well-documented cases did not hurt innocents. Yes, hard to believe.
Once upon a time, refraining from shooting at
innocents was the norm. Those who deviated from it were punished.
Those who acted in line with it were simply alright. There were
times where integrity was the norm and an honest person was taken
for granted. Today, we have professional honest people (such as
Benny Begin and Tzipi Livni); politicians whose claim to fame is
their integrity. They deserve a citation.
Incredible
possibilities
Yet not only they. A whole world of moral
distinction and citations has been opened up to the Middle East’s,
and possibly the world’s, most moral nation; citations that we can
throw in the faces of our anti-Semitic critics.
For example, the “he didn’t steal too much”
citation. We can show that some of our elected representatives,
despite being given the opportunity to plunder the public coffers,
only took little, in order to guarantee their children’s future.
And what about the “he promised but didn’t
deliver, because it was the right thing for the nation” citation,
which can be given to Ehud Barak and Avishay Braverman, for example,
who truly risked their lives for the sake of the State and the
coalition?
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