As the Israeli military campaign
against Gaza rages on, the propaganda campaign on both sides has been forced to
focus once again on the issue of Hamas' using Palestinians as human shields and
civilian structures as military structures. As much as the practice of using
human shields is reprehensible, the defenders of Israel forget the simple fact
that there is no moral defense for targeting civilians just because they have
been used, willingly or not, as human shields. As Amnesty
International, puts it, "Under international humanitarian law even if 'human
shields' are being used, Israel's obligations to protect these civilians would
still apply."
Notice that they put the term human
shields in scare quotes. This is because the term is so loosely defined that is
almost impossible to pin down. Consider the wording of The Protocol Additional
to the Geneva Conventions of 12 August 1949, and relating to the Protection of
Victims of International Armed Conflicts (Protocol I), 8 June 1977:
General
protection of civilian objects
1.
Civilian objects shall not be the object of attack or of reprisals. Civilian
objects are all objects which are not military objectives as defined in paragraph
2.
2.
Attacks shall be limited strictly to military objectives. In so far as objects
are concerned, military objectives are limited to those objects which by their
nature, location, purpose or use make an effective contribution to military
action and whose total or partial destruction, capture or neutralization, in
the circumstances ruling at the time, offers a definite military advantage.
3.
In case of doubt whether an object which is normally dedicated to civilian
purposes, such as a place of worship, a house or other dwelling or a school, is
being used to make an effective contribution to military action, it shall be
presumed not to be so used.
The slippery term is found in items
2 and 3 in the word effective. It
seems the attacker considering whether to bomb a civilian object is free to
decide what shall be judged an "effective
contribution to military action… leading to a definite military advantage." As the attackers consider this
decision, they are also sure to think about how likely it is that they would be
condemned in an international tribunal and penalized for their decision,
according the terms of Article 52. The terms are so vague and fluid that there
could be a way to defend almost any decision to destroy a civilian object. Call
it the "we felt threatened" defense.
But the loose definitions work both
ways. The rationale for placing weapons and soldiers inside or in proximity to civilian
objects can be justified if the political entity defending itself is such a
small territory that civilian and military objects have to exist side by side. Besides,
the boundary between civilian and military objects is always fuzzy. Ever since
WWII, the targets of bombing campaigns have been anything that adds to "the
enemy's ability to wage war." This includes factories, infrastructure, and,
taken its logical end, women who give birth to the next generation of soldiers.
As one Israeli MP, a member of an extremist minority party, recently put it, Israel
needs to kill all the mothers who give birth to the “little
snakes” who grow up to be the next generation of Palestinian fighters.
Nuclear weapons and nuclear power
plants have a major role in this discussion of human shields and civilian
objects because wherever they exist they threaten the civilians who live near
and far from them. Just as the Israel Defense Forces now feel justified in
destroying a hospital where they believe Hamas' weapons have been buried, there
could be other entities who feel threatened by a neighboring state's possession
of nuclear weapons. Or they might feel that their neighbor's nuclear power
plant is really a weapons factory. Or they might just have a bad feeling that
the country next door is managing its nuclear reactors so unsafely that they wish
they could destroy them in a preemptive raid. But look, the sly, devious
scoundrels have put their nuclear facilities right in the middle of civilian
populations that would be blanketed in fallout! What to do? Of course, the only
moral thing is to forget about the raid and spare lives. It may be frustrating
to accept, but the enemy's use of human shields has foiled any plan for a
preemptive attack.
As it turns out, Israel is one of
the worst examples of this phenomenon because it is small and densely
populated. Its military installations are scattered throughout the civilian
population. Hamas could rightly accuse Israel of turning its entire population
into human shields. Furthermore, the Negev Nuclear Research Center near Dimona,
Israel’s undeclared nuclear bomb factory, is only about 50 km from the city of
Beersheeba, population 200,000. With an enormous hazard like this existing in
the theater of military operations, it becomes somewhat pointless for one side
or the other to point fingers about the abuse of human shields.
For further information on Israel's
secret programs for developing weapons of mass destruction, see the website Armagedon,
especially its page on nuclear
weapons development at Dimona. The website was created by a group of "Israeli
journalists, writers, philosophers and activists who oppose WMD." They have
used the Internet to challenge the veil of secrecy that has existed in Israel
for sixty years. Their website is hosted in New Zealand, and they defend their
actions by adding that nothing they have published is a state secret. They are
merely commenting on and promoting information that has already been published
in various places throughout the world.
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