Zionist denials
Zionist Denials are cases in which Zionists have deliberately and falsely denied actions which they have either admitted to or most likely committed. In a few cases, the state of Israel has admitted culpability, liability and/or has paid compensation for incidents they originally denied.
Included in this category are cases in which Israel has obstructed access or failed to assist investigators. This is broadly similar to the reporting of incidents such as Tiananmen Square where the state party has acted in a non-transparent fashion and has allowed a presumption of guilt to be widely (though not necessarily generally) held.
There are some other cases, in which Israel has paid compensation but not admitted culpability eg the USS Liberty incident. On that occasion, both parties agreed to describe this action as a case of friendly fire, an accident.
Lastly, there are a few cases where Zionist policies have been denied but later accepted (eg Transfer) or fraudulent accusations of "Blood-Libel" have been made or death-tolls changed in a suspicious fashion.
Contents
Incidents post-2000
2008/9 Gaza Massacre, Operation Cast Lead
All entry to Gaza was blocked during the action, and access since has been difficult, though many observers have succeeded. The investigations made by some bodies have not been able to question potential Israeli participants.
White Phosphorus use in Gaza
Initially denied and then later admitted by Israel.
Amnesty Report
Ban Ki-Moon ordered a UN Headquarters Board of Inquiry led by Ian Martin to independently investigate the nine most serious attacks on UN personnel and property. Israel was faulted in seven of the nine cases, and Hamas was found guilty in one of the nine. One of those included an attack near a UNRWA school in Jabalia that the UN says killed between 30 and 40 people, while the IDF says 12 - most of them militants - died. The report accused Israel of "gross negligence" and also stated that allegations that militants had fired from within U.N. premises "were untrue, continued to be made after it ought to have been known that they were untrue, and were not adequately withdrawn and publicly regretted." The report confirmed that Hamas militants fired from near the school and then ran beside it. Ban plans to seek up to $11 million in damages from Israel.
2006 Lebanon
Use of White Phosphorus
Initially denied and later admitted by Israel.
A further allegation that Depleted Uranium ammunition had been fired was rejected by the UN, amid doubts as to the scientific testing of samples.
2002/2003 Death of activists
Rachel Corrie
The Corries were told the report on her death was secret until they found that the Israeli government was covertly distributing it among members of the US Congress to prevent an independent investigation.[1]
James Miller
Compensation paid.
Tom Hurndall
The family's insistence eventually "forced the IDF to investigate and to acknowledge that Tom had been wearing the fluorescent jacket of a non-combatant and had not been caught in Palestinian crossfire" as claimed.[2] In 2004 Taysir Hayb, an IDF soldier, was convicted of Tom's manslaughter and sentenced to eight years in prison. The army investigation had said that a sniper in a watchtower fired at a man wearing camouflage clothes and carrying a gun.
Iain Hook
Head of reconstruction, inside the UNRWA compound of Jenin. According to the Times "The army falsely claimed he was shot while standing among Palestinian gunmen in the UN compound. Israel paid compensation to Hook's family but attached confidentiality clauses which suppressed a public admission of culpability for what some of the UN worker's colleagues have called "cold-blooded murder"".[3] and "All three families [Hook, Turndall, Miller] have accused the authorities of fabricating evidence, suppressing investigations and covering-up deliberate killings."
2002 Assault on Jenin
c. April 5th to April 11th. All humanitarian aid and journalists refused entry until late on 14th and was very restricted until 18th and further endangered by shootings for months afterwards. Humanitarian relief was hampered by explosives (UN report quotes the government of Jordan saying that the explosives had been laid by IDF, the IDF claims Palestinians did so). EU equipment to defuse bombs was refused entry for two weeks. The UN investigation team was refused entry to Israel/the West Bank.
Incidents before 2000
1996 Qana
1982 Lebanon
1967 War
Israel initially claimed that it had come under attack, though all sources later agree it carried out a pre-emptive strike.
USS Liberty Incident
While many Israel-firsters continue to insist that this was an accident, the argument has largely turned against them. Even the Wikipedia article[4] gives little credence to the Zionist version. A turning point in the debate may have been the article in the Chicago Tribune of 2nd Oct 2007[5] which, as the Wikipedia says contains "numerous previously unreported quotes from former military personnel with first-hand knowledge of the incident. Many of these quotes directly contradict the US National Security Agency's position that it never intercepted the communications of the attacking Israeli pilots, claiming that not only did transcripts of those communications exist, but also that it showed the Israelis knew they were attacking an American naval vessel."
1960s Israel's development of nuclear arsenal
Still never officially accepted, but all sources accept the evidence presented eg testimony of the technician Vanunu who had worked at Dimona and whistle-blew to the Sunday Times. Estimates of the capability range from around 70 to 400 war-heads, with delivery by plane, missile and submarine.
1954 Qibya
Ben-Gurion blamed
1954 Lavon Affair
Medals for the surviving perpetrators of the fire-bomb attacks in Cairo were handed out in 2005.
1950 Baghdad bombings
1948 Tantura
While Israel rejects the claims made in the doctoral thesis, no investigation has been carried out on the mass-grave known to be under a carpark and the number of victims (either 70-80 or around 250) buried there being in doubt.
Pre-Israel actions
Some pre-Israel actions were condemned by the Yishuv but were later admitted to have been carried out under their control/instigation. There are only a small number which were admitted before May 1948.
1948 Deir Yassin massacre
5 weeks before the Independence of Israel. Condemned by the Yishuv at the time. Shortly thereafter it was discovered that it was the Palmach that had actually overcome the small number of defenders and allowed the massacre of the village. Official denial/re-writing continued in some quarters until at least the 1970s. A ravine where some of the bodies are thought to lie has been filled with refuse.
1946 Bombing of the King David Hotel
Denied and condemned at the time. Binyamin Netanyahu attended a two-day 60th anniversary celebration in July 2006, with a tour of the hotel given by one of the surviving perpetrators.
1944 assassination of Lord Moynes
Denied and condemned at the time, the bodies of the perpetrators were brought back to Israel and buried in honour on Mount Herzel in 1975, provoking outrage in the British Parliament. James Callaghan, then Foreign Secretary and later Prime Minister, ordered a formal protest "to make it clear to the Israeli government that the British government very much regretted that an act of terrorism should be honoured in this way."
1940 sinking of the Patria
Death of over 200 Jews. Denied and condemned (?) at the time, in 195? one of the perpetrators went public and explained the previously unknown actions of the Haganah.
Denial of Zionist Policies
Denial of Transfer
Supporters of Israel (including many of the most prominent such as Alan Dershowitz, Melanie Phillips, Daniel Piper) in the West deny that "transfer" (ie "ethnic cleansing") was always intended by the founders of Israel. They claim that "peace" between the parties, living in the same places as they are now, is a realistic option and the aim of Israel.
Rabbi Chaim Simons lived in Kiryat Arba, the notorious Hebron settlement which may have displaced 30,000 Palestinians. He believed in ethnic cleansing and full annexation of the West Bank to Israel. In 1990 he listed many of the pre-1948 claims[6] that transfer was necesary and continues: "As we shall see, this phenomenon of restricting transfer plans to diaries, private correspondence and closed meetings, was not the prerogative of Herzl, "but has been emulated by many other Zionist leaders."
Blood-libel allegations
In many cases, when allegations have been made against Zionists, the critics have been accused of making blood-libels or of general anti-semitism. In some cases, the allegations against the Zionists have either been proved true or found to be very well evidenced.
2009 - Israel T-shirt affair
2009 - Organ harvesting affair
When a Swedish newspaper broke the organ-harvesting story, Israeli Deputy Prime Minister demanded that Sweden condemn the piece, compared it to the Dreyfus Affair and compared Sweden's response to its "silence" during the Holocaust.[7] Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu "echoed colleagues in comparing the article to medieval "blood libels," which alleged Jews used the blood of Christian babies in religious rites" and curbs were placed on Swedish journalists.[8][9]
In fact, it was an old story - Dr Yehuda Hiss, Israeli chief pathologist at Abu Kabir, had been exposed in 2000 by investigative reporters at the Yediot Aharonot newspaper, was on tape talking about it and had been reprimanded in 2005.[10]
1948 - Deir Yassin
eg the book "Blood Libel at Deir Yassin" a book by Uri Milstein.
Interference with the historical record
In some cases, Israel has claimed to be using Palestinian sources for total death-counts and the revised figures have been carried by reliable sources but it has proved difficult or impossible to find the primary evidence eg the death-toll at Deir Yassin reduced from 254 to around 107, toll at Jenin 2002 reduced from "around 500" to 56.
Notes
- ↑ Rachel Corrie The Corries had been told the report was secret until they found that the Israeli government was covertly distributing it among members of the US Congress to prevent an independent investigation. Guardian 20 October 2003.
- ↑ Tom Hurndall "Family ... forced the IDF to investigate and to acknowledge that Tom had been wearing the fluorescent jacket of a non-combatant" Times 7th Oct 2008.
- ↑ Iain Hook "The army falsely claimed he was shot while standing among Palestinian gunmen in the UN compound." Guardian 20 October 2003.
- ↑ Wikipedia article on the "USS Liberty Incident" gives little credence to the Zionist version that it was an accident, a case of "friendly fire".
- ↑ "New revelations in attack on American spy ship" Chicago Tribune. 2nd Oct 2007.
- ↑ Rabbi Chaim Simons of the Kiryat Arba settlement in Hebron lists many of the pre-1948 claims that transfer was necesary "As we shall see, this phenomenon of restricting transfer plans to diaries, private correspondence and closed meetings, was not the prerogative of Herzl, but has been emulated by many other Zionist leaders."
- ↑ A bewildering response The government should, of course, have condemned every bit of the Swedish organ harvesting story. Haaretz, 23rd Aug 2009.
- ↑ Israel curbs Swedish media over "blood libel" Israel placed curbs on Swedish journalists on Sunday as Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu urged Sweden's government to condemn a newspaper article that Israeli officials say recalled historic hatred of Jews in Europe. Reuters, Aug 23, 2009.
- ↑ Updating an Old Blood Libel "Sweden’s Aftonbladet started it. The fact that both the article’s author and the paper’s editor admitted they had no corroborating evidence meant little to Jew haters “antiZionists”. Now it’s spreading like wildfire throughout Islamic lands". Sept 16, 2009.
- ↑ Body Parts and Bio-Piracy Tissue, Skin, Bone and Organ Harvesting at Israel's National Forensic Institute, 25th Oct 2010.