David Ben-Gurion was Israel's first prime minister. On March 10, 1948,
he met with leading Zionists and young Jewish military officers in
Tel-Aviv's "Red House." They finalized plans to ethnically cleanse
Palestine through a process of siege, intimidation and terror - to bomb
and depopulate villages and cities; massacre innocent people; burn
homes, property and goods; and prevent expelled Palestinians from
returning.
Dalet (Plan D) was the final master plan. It was for
war without mercy - mass slaughter, targeted assassinations, rapes,
other atrocities, displacement and destruction. It was to establish an
exclusive Jewish State without an Arab presence.
It took six
months to complete, consider the toll, and understand the Nakba's
meaning. It displaced 750,000 to 800,000 people - men, women, children,
the elderly and infant civilians. Many hundreds or thousands of others
were killed. Sweeping destruction was carried out. It erased 531
villages and 11 urban neighborhoods in Tel-Aviv, Haifa, Jerusalem and
other cities.
The plan's roots went way back:
— to the birth of Zionism;
— the 1901Jewish National Fund (JNF) beginning; it was to compile a
detailed registry of Arab villages so later Zionists knew what to
colonize and where; it was also to buy and occupy Palestinian land;
— by the late 1930s, it was a detailed topographic blueprint of every
Arab village and urban area; its information included husbandry,
cultivated land, number of trees, quality of fruits, crops, average
amount of land per family, number of cars, shop owners, Palestinian
clans and their political affiliation, description of mosques and names
of their imams, civil servants and more;
— by 1947, it also
included "wanted" persons, by villages, to be targeted for elimination
- leaders to be arrested and summarily executed in cold blood to create
a power vacuum;
— the process began in December 1947, five
months before the British Mandate ended; Britain did nothing to deter
it; David Ben-Gurion led it from the 1920s to the 1960s; after
ethnically cleansing Palestine he said: "We have come and we have
stolen their country....We must do everything to insure they never do
return." Ten years earlier he wrote to his son: "We will expel the
Arabs and take their places....with the force at our disposal;"
— other Israeli leaders expressed the same mindset; two were former
prime ministers - Golda Meir said: "There are no Palestinians" and
Menachem Begin and Nobel Peace Prize recipient called Palestinians
"two-legged beasts" and said Jews were the "Master Race" and "divine
gods on this planet;"
— Labor Party leader Haim Herzog was more
discreet in expressing disdain for the Arabs; in 1972, he said "I am
not prepared to consider (Palestinians) as partners in any respect in a
land that has been consecrated in the hands of our nation for thousands
of years. For the Jews of this land there cannot be any partner."
Earlier
in 1969, Israeli Defense Forces Chief of Staff Moshe Dayan described
the 1947 - 49 success: "Jewish villages were built in place of Arab
(ones). You do not know the names of these Arab villages (because they)
no longer exist....There is not one single place built in this country
that did not have a former Arab population." Like other leading
Israelis, Dayan expressed scorn for all Palestinians and told his Labor
Party colleagues that they "shall continue to live like dogs...."
The Palestinian Holocaust
Alnakba.org
recounts the toll. It lists the destroyed villages in 14 Palestinian
Districts, including Gaza, Jerusalem, Haifa, Jaffa, Nazareth and
Hebron. One was Deir Yassin in the Jerusalem District. On April 9,
1948, it was the site of an infamous Nakba massacre. Israeli soldiers
entered the village, machine-gunned houses randomly and killed many
inside them. The remaining villagers were assembled and murdered in
cold blood. Included were children, infants, the elderly and women who
were first raped. The total number killed is uncertain but best
estimates place it between 93 and 120. In addition, dozens more were
killed in the fighting that ensued, and many other villages met the
same fate in the systematic cleansing plan - to seize as much
Palestinian land as possible leaving the fewest number of Arabs on it.
In
December 1947, Jews in Palestine numbered 600,000 compared to 1.3
million Palestinians. Ben-Gurion ordered them removed with commands
like: "Every attack has to end with occupation, destruction and
expulsion." He meant depopulation; obliteration; homes blown up, burned
or bulldozed; their inhabitants inside killed; shooting anything that
moved, especially fighting-age men and boys who might pose a combat or
resistance threat; and leaving behind rubble, a forgotten landscape and
a proud history erased.
The Lifta ruins can be seen from
Jerusalem. All that was left in Dayr Aban were piles of rubble,
collapsed roofs and part of some standing walls. Only two houses
remained in Barqa. One is deserted. The other is a warehouse. Jura
became the city of Ashqelon. Its Jewish population is now about
117,000. The only Arab remains in al-Faluja are the village mosque
foundations and fragments of walls. The Israeli town of Qiryat Gat now
stands on land between al-Faluja and Iraq al-Manshiyya and on al-Faluja
land as well. Hundreds of other Arab villages have similar stories.
They were erased and replaced by Jewish-only development.
An eye witness to the Deir Yassin massacre recounts the horror:
"I
was (there) when the Jews attacked....(They) closed on the village amid
exchanges of fire with us. Once they entered the village, fighting
became very heavy in the eastern side and later it spread to other
parts, to the quarry, to the village center until it reached the
western edge....The Jews used all sorts of automatic weapons, tanks,
missiles, cannons. They enter(ed) houses and kill(ed) women and
children indiscriminately. The (village) youths....fought bravely.
We
had no aid or support....They took about 40 prisoners....After the
battle was over, they took them to the quarry where they shot them dead
and threw their bodies in the quarry....they took (other) prisoners and
killed them....they killed the youths."
Other accounts spoke of
shootings, bombs exploding and a mother being killed with her husband,
son and brother. A nurse was shot dead as well as the daughter of a
friend and her baby. "Whomever tried to run away was shot dead." It was
cold-blooded murder.
After the battle, "the Jews took elderly
men and women and youths, including four of my cousins and a nephew.
They took them all. Women who had on them gold and money, were stripped
of their gold. After the Jews removed their dead and wounded, they took
the men to the quarry and sprayed them all with bullets." One woman
watched her son shot to death. "They later poured kerosene on his body
and" burned it.
The men were fighting. "Eyewitnesses were only
women. The elderly men were (used) to remove the dead, Arabs and Jews."
The Arab ones "were thrown in a well in the village center." It all
happened five weeks before the State of Israel was founded. Arabs died
and were displaced to make Plan D a success. It worked because western
powers supported it, and Arab neighbors were indifferent. Their
intervention held off until May 15, five and a half months after the UN
partition. When it began, it was with an inferior force that was no
match against Israeli superiority, despite popular myth to the contrary.
It
recounts how an outnumbered and outgunned Jewish force prevailed
against overwhelming odds. Pure rubbish. In fact, the Jews held a clear
advantage. As long as the British stayed out (and they did), the
outcome was never in doubt. Egypt, Syria, Lebanon, Jordan and Iraq held
off intervening as long as possible, then reluctantly stepped in with
token forces. It was too little, too late, and, for its part, Jordan
(with its potent military) stayed out entirely in return for most of
the West Bank as a payoff.
Intervening Arab forces performed
poorly. They overstretched their supply lines, ran out of ammunition,
mostly used antiquated weapons, and had no effective command and
control. It was a testimony to their lack of commitment, not their
ability to fight had they wished to.
Jews, in contrast, were
supplied effective armaments from Soviet Russia and other Eastern bloc
countries. They easily outgunned the Arabs and outclassed and
outnumbered them as well. The outcome was never in doubt that a new
Jewish State would emerge. On May 14, 1948, Israel signed separate
armistice agreements with its four major warring adversaries. It gave
Israel 78% of British Mandatory Palestine, 40% above its UN allotment.
Palestinians got the other 22% comprising the West Bank and Gaza.
On
December 11, 1948, a historic General Assembly resolution passed - UN
Resolution 194 consisting of 15 articles. Four were most important.
Article 7 protected and provided free access to the Holy Places.
Article 8 demilitarized Jerusalem and placed it under UN control.
Article 9 called for free access to Jerusalem, and Article 11 is most
remembered for granting Palestinian refugees the right of return or to
be compensated for their loss if they chose not to. >From 1948, to
the present, Israel defied the UN mandate and got away with it. It was
because of western support and Arab indifference. As a result, it was
able to terrorize remaining Arabs inside Israel, and set in motion the
eventual Gaza and West Bank occupation.
The War Ended - State Terrorism Was Just Beginning
Throughout
1949 in the war's aftermath, Israel pursued another one - a war of
terror against the remaining Arab population. It set a six decade
precedent. Israel now belonged to Jews. Arabs were unwelcome. State
security forces cracked down to show how much.
Thousands of
displaced Palestinians were rounded up and imprisoned. Others were
targeted, harassed and abused. They lost everything - their land,
homes, fields, crops, places of worship, freedom of movement and
expression, and any hope for fair treatment in the new Jewish State.
Naked
and undisguised racism confronted them. They were issued identity cards
with penalties up to 1.5 years in prison and immediate transfer to an
"unauthorized" and "suspicious" Arab pen if caught without them.
Persecution
was relentless, much the way it is today. Roadblocks and checkpoints
went up, curfews imposed, violators shot on sight, and systematic abuse
inflicted. In addition, thousands of Palestinians were conscripted,
sent to labor camps, and forced to help build the new Jewish state.
Conditions there were deplorable. Quarry laborers performed arduous
work, carried heavy rocks, and had to live on one potato and half a
dried fish for daily sustenance. Complainers or slackers were beaten,
many severely. Others, considered a threat, were simply shot.
Other
Arabs weren't treated much better. Human rights abuses were appalling.
The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) documented them.
Palestinians (now Israeli citizens) got no protections and were
afforded no rights. They were subjected to relentless abuses. Their
mosques were profaned, schools vandalized, homes robbed and at times
stripped bare in broad daylight. Palestinians reported that not a
single home or Arab shop escaped the onslaught. Authorities did nothing
to deter it. They made things worse.
Palestinians (inside
Israel) were transfered from their homes, moved to undesired locations,
crammed into confined ghettos, they became open-air prisons, and
treatment there was horrific. The ICRC and UN reported beatings, rapes
and other abuses. Israel was undergoing transformation. Its Arab
character was being erased. It affected about 150,000 remaining Arab
Israelis in the new Jewish State.
Formal ethnic cleansing ended
in 1949, dispossession and displacements nonetheless continued, and a
new Committee for Arab Affairs was established to defuse growing
international pressure to enforce UN Resolution 194, especially the
right of return under Article 11.
Arab Israelis lost all their
rights and were placed under military rule. In addition, discriminatory
laws were passed, like the Law of the Land of Israel. It stipulated
that the Jewish National Fund (JNF - the Jewish State landowner) was
forbidden to sell or lease land to non-Jews.
>From inception,
Israel has had no formal constitution. It's governed instead by its
Basic Law. Nine laws were passed between 1958 and 1988, all of which
pertained to the institutions of state. No basic rights were enacted
until 1992. That year, the Basic Law: Human Dignity and Freedom was
passed authorizing the Knesset to overturn laws contrary to the right
to dignity, life, freedom, privacy, property and to leave and enter the
country. The law states: "There shall be no violation of the life, body
or dignity of any person. All persons are entitled to protection" of
these rights, and "There shall be no deprivation or restriction of the
liberty of a person by imprisonment, arrest, extradition or otherwise."
Israeli
Basic Laws are for Jews only. Arab Israelis have no rights under them
with one exception - the right to run for public office in the Knesset,
become a nominal legislative member, but have no power beyond a public
stage for their views to be shouted down and ignored.
Palestinians
have endured six decades of shattered hope and dreams. They were
uprooted from their homes, denied their basic rights, given little
outside recognition or aid, blamed for Israeli crimes, terrorized
without mercy, falsely promised peace, yet condemned to a state of
siege under which nothing will change without outside pressure to force
it.
Since 1948, Palestinians have lived in a state of limbo.
Their Nakba never ended. What's left of their country is occupied. They
have no recognized nation and no power over their daily lives. They
live in constant fear. They're economically strangled; dispossessed of
their land and homes; isolated under siege; collectively punished;
denied free movement; casually murdered; ruthlessly arrested,
imprisoned and tortured; afflicted by random curfews; invaded, bombed,
and shot at; extra-judicially assassinated; and constricted by
roadblocks, checkpoints, electric fences and the Separation Wall that
the World Court ruled illegal.
Israel: The World's "Worst Brand"
That's
according a 2006 National Brands Index (NBI) study. On November 22,
2006, Israel Today reported the findings. They were compiled by
"government advisor Simon Anholt and powered by global market
intelligence solutions provider GMI (Global Market Insite, Inc.)."
The
survey polled 25,903 "online consumers" in 35 countries across the
world. It was to measure respondents perceptions "across six areas of
national competence," including governance, people, culture, heritage
and immigration.
"Israel's brand (was) by a considerable margin
the most negative we have ever measured in the NBI, and (came) at the
bottom of the ranking on almost every question (asked about 36
countries)."
Israel was ranked the least desired country to
visit. Its people were ranked the "most unwelcoming in the world."
Surprisingly, Americans were as negative as others. They "ranked Israel
slightly above China in terms of its conduct in the areas of
international peace and security."
Other recent opinion surveys
report similar results. It's encouraging to know that well over half of
all Europeans rank Israel "the biggest threat to world peace" according
to a 2003 European Commission poll. Israel is a pariah state. That's
the view of millions around the world in spite of dominant media
efforts to say otherwise. Israel calls it growing anti-Semitism. That,
of course, is rubbish. Jews and Israelis aren't being singled out -
only their criminal leaders. World public opinion justifiably condemns
them.
Commemorating the Unforgivable
Jews in Israel and
around the world will commemorate May 14. It's the 60th anniversary of
the State of Israel's founding. Thousands of other Jews everywhere
along with everyone of conscience stand with the Canadian Palestine
Support Network (CalPalNet). They cannot celebrate. They will not
celebrate. They remember the Nakba. They know it continues. They
condemn 41 years of occupation; the starving and bombing of Gaza; the
oppressive Separation Wall; the theft of Palestinian land; the building
of illegal settlements; the denial of the right of return; the
killings, torture, imprisonment and harassment; the denial of basic
human rights; and Israel's disdain for international law.
They
"can (and) will continue (their) efforts to end these injustices,
uphold international law," and support every UN resolution demanding
it. "This is the only road map to peace." They, with millions of
others, won't ever stop working for it.
Stephen Lendman lives in Chicago and can be reached at lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net.
Also
visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com and listen to The Global
Research News Hour on RepublicBroadcasting.org Mondays from 11AM to 1PM
US Central time for cutting edge discussion with distinguished guests.
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=8867