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This article is a credit to its author, Gideon Levy, his newspaper and a credit to Israeli society. This article and others like it show why it is unjust to compare Israel to Nazi Germany: no German ever stood up to Hitler this way. Those who are truly guilty for Beit Hanoun and other crimes without number are the people who pay for it all, the institutions and ultimately the people of the United States of America: nothing this harsh would be allowed to be printed in the USA. The furor caused by Mearsheimer and Walt and their timid questioning of the Zionist Lobby is the clearest indictment of our "collective guilt". DS
This article is a credit to its author, Gideon Levy, his newspaper and a credit to Israeli society. This article and others like it show why it is unjust to compare Israel to Nazi Germany: no German ever stood up to Hitler this way. Those who are truly guilty for Beit Hanoun and other crimes without number are the people who pay for it all, the institutions and ultimately the people of the United States of America: nothing this harsh would be allowed to be printed in the USA. The furor caused by Mearsheimer and Walt and their timid questioning of the Zionist Lobby is the clearest indictment of our "collective guilt". DS
Abstract: Nineteen inhabitants of Beit Hanun were killed with malice aforethought. There is no other way of describing the circumstances of their killing. Someone who throws burning matches into a forest can't claim he didn't mean to set it on fire, and anyone who bombards residential neighborhoods with artillery can't claim he didn't mean to kill innocent inhabitants. Therefore it takes considerable gall and cynicism to dare to claim that the Israel Defense Forces did not intend to kill inhabitants of Beit Hanun. Even if there was a glitch in the balancing of the aiming mechanism or in a component of the radar, a mistake in the input of the data or a human error, the overwhelming, crucial, shocking fact is that the IDF bombards helpless civilians. Even shells that are supposedly aimed 200 meters from houses, into "open areas," are intended to kill, and they do kill. In this respect, nothing new happened on Wednesday morning in Gaza: The IDF has been behaving like this for months now. But this isn't just a matter of "the IDF," "the government" or "Israel" bearing the responsibility. It must be said explicitly: The blame rests directly on people who hold official positions, flesh-and-blood human beings, and they must pay the price of their criminal responsibility for needless killing. Attorney Avigdor Klagsbald caused the death of a woman and her child without anyone imagining that he intended to hit them, but nevertheless he is sitting in prison. And what about the killers of women and children in Beit Hanun? Will they all be absolved? Will no one be tried? Will no one even be reprimanded and shunned?(...) The heedless and arrogant reaction to such deeds contains a dangerous moral message. If it is possible to dismiss mass killing with a wealth of technical excuses, and not take any drastic measure against those who are truly guilty of it, then Israel is saying that, as far as it is concerned, nothing happened apart from the faulty component in the radar system or the glitch in balancing the sights. But what happened at Beit Hanun, what happened in Israel on the day after and what is continuing to happen in Gaza day after day is a far more frightening distortion than the calibrating of a gun sight. READ ALL
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