Israel maintains robust arms trade with rogue regimes
Israel maintains robust arms trade
with rogue regimes
Al Jazeera October 23rd 2017
Israel has not divulged details of
its ties to Myanmar's military government, but public records show that it has
sold the military there armed patrol boats, guns and surveillance equipment
Tel Aviv - Human rights activists are stepping up
efforts to expose Israel's long and covert history of supplying weapons and
military training to regimes while they actively commit massacres, ethnic
cleansing and genocide.
The issue of Israel's trade
with rogue regimes has been thrust into the spotlight again after revelations
that it is sending weapons to Myanmar,
in defiance of a US and European arms embargo.
Formerly known as Burma,
Myanmar was condemned last
month by the United Nations for conducting what it called a "textbook
ethnic cleansing" of the Rohingya,
a Muslim minority. Hundreds of thousands of Rohingya are reported to have fled
to neighbouring Bangladesh in
recent weeks, after evidence of the torching of entire villages, massacres and
systematic rapes.
Israel has not divulged
details of its ties to Myanmar's military government, but public records show
that it has sold the military there armed patrol boats, guns and surveillance
equipment. Myanmar's special forces have also been trained by Israelis.
Human rights groups are set
to stage a protest outside Israel's parliament on October 30, calling for an
immediate halt to the weapons sales to Myanmar.
Israeli firms have also
broken with the United States and Europe by supplying weapons and surveillance
equipment to militias in South Sudan, where a civil war has raged since late
2013. Some 300,000 Sudanese are believed to have been killed in the fighting.
Eitay Mack, a human rights
lawyer, has submitted a spate of petitions to the Israeli courts in an attempt
to bring to light details of Israel's trade with such regimes. He said the
cases were designed to hasten war crimes investigations of the officials and
contractors involved.
"Many Western states
sell arms, but what's unique about Israel is that, wherever war crimes and
crimes against humanity are being committed, you find Israel is present,"
Mack told Al Jazeera.
"The companies selling
the weapons, and the officials who quietly approve the trade, must be held
accountable. Otherwise, why would this ever stop?"
Clandestine practice
Mack said that Israel's
collusion with Myanmar's military was part of a pattern of aiding rogue regimes
that went back decades and reflected the importance of the arms trade to
Israel's economy.
Over the summer, it was
revealed that Israeli defence officials approve 99.8 percent of all requests
for arms export licenses.
As well as fueling the
current violence in Myanmar and South Sudan, Israel has been accused of
clandestinely providing arms used in notorious past episodes of genocide and
ethnic cleansing in places such as Rwanda, the Balkans, Chile, Argentina, Sri
Lanka, Haiti, El Salvador and Nicaragua. Israel also cultivated close ties to
apartheid South Africa, Mack noted.
Yair Auron, a genocide
researcher at Israel's Open University, said that Israel's supply of weapons to
regimes such as Myanmar should be compared to the sending of arms to Nazi
Germany during the Holocaust.
"These sales turn me and
all Israelis into criminals, because they are sent in our name," he told
Al Jazeera. "We are abetting genocide."
Efforts by human rights
groups to shed light on Israel's collusion with Myanmar have so far been
frustrated by Israeli authorities and the courts.
The Haaretz daily accused
Defence Minister Avigdor Lieberman of "lying" when he claimed in
parliament last month that Israel's policy in Myanmar accorded with that of the
"enlightened world".
Officials refused to disclose
information of arms exports to the military government during a hearing at
Israel's Supreme Court last month on a petition to halt the sales. Lawyers for
the state insisted on closed-door sessions when discussing relations with
Myanmar.
The three judges hearing the
case issued a gag order to prevent publication of their decision, widely
assumed to have approved the continuation of arms sales. They justified the
blackout on the grounds that publicity risked damaging Israel's foreign
relations.
Late last year, the same
court rejected a petition demanding that officials release documents showing
Israel's role in arming Serbian forces that carried out massacres of Bosnians
in the 1990s.
Campaigners are waiting on
hearings in a host of other cases concerning South Sudan, Rwanda, Chile, Haiti
and Argentina.
In August, Israeli officials
argued before the Supreme Court that its exports to militias in South Sudan
were "lawful".
Evidence suggests that Israel
sold rifles and surveillance equipment to militias and the army in South Sudan.
A UN report found that the Israeli-made Ace and Galil rifles were in widespread
use there.
'No oversight'
Next week, the Supreme Court
is due to hear a petition on Israel's involvement in Rwanda, where it
reportedly armed Hutus who carried out genocidal attacks against Tutsis.
Mack noted that there were a
handful of officials in the Israeli Defence Ministry overseeing some 400,000
annual permits issued for weapons sales. "That means in practice, there is
no oversight at all," he said.
Israeli companies, meanwhile,
are authorised to sell arms to some 130 countries, though activists say there
are other states with which Israel deals covertly.
Israel is the only major
weapons exporter that has consistently bucked the global trend of a downturn in
arms sales. In March, it was reported that Israel's weapons trade in 2016 was
worth some $6.5bn, up from $5.7bn the year before. That included a 70 percent
jump in sales to Africa.
African states accused of
widespread human rights abuses were among more than 100 countries that attended
the annual Israel Defence Exhibition, a weapons trade fair, in June.
Despite its tiny size, Israel
is believed to be the sixth biggest arms exporter in the world - and the
largest one per capita.
That has made arms sales
integral to the Israeli economy, accounting for possibly as much as 8 percent
of gross domestic product. As many as 100,000 Israeli households are reported
to be dependent on the arms industry.
John Brown, an investigative
journalist with the Haaretz newspaper who writes under a pseudonym, said there
was a long history of what he called "Uzi diplomacy" - referring to
the Israeli sub-machine gun that became a favourite with security forces around
the world from the 1960s onwards.
"If countries want the
best arms, then they probably go to the US and Europe. But when no one else
will sell to you, then you turn to Israel," he told Al Jazeera.
"The benefits for Israel
are not just measured in money. Often even more important are the diplomatic
and strategic alliances Israel can gain from this arms trade."
A conduit for drones
Mack said that mounting
international outrage over the plight of Myanmar's Muslim minority provided an
opportunity to shine a light on Israel's long role in supporting regimes in the
midst of ethnic cleansing and genocide.
In what sounded like a rare
rebuke to Israel, Nikki Haley, the US ambassador to the UN, said last month:
"Any country that is currently providing weapons to the Burmese military
should suspend these activities until sufficient accountability measures are in
place."
Although the Israeli courts
have blocked access to documents that could shed light on what arms have gone
to Myanmar, activists have been able to identify some dealings from open
sources.
In September 2015, Min Aung
Hlaing, the commander of Myanmar's army, posted on social media details of a
"shopping trip" to Israel that included visits to leading Israeli
weapons manufacturers and a meeting with the Israeli military's chief of staff,
Gadi Eisenkott.
A year later, Michael Ben
Baruch, an Israeli defence ministry official in charge of exports, visited
Myanmar to meet its army's top brass to sign a deal for patrol boats.
Shortly afterwards, the
website of TAR Ideal Concepts, an Israeli company, posted images of its staff
training Myanmar special forces and teaching them how to handle Israeli-made
Corner-Shot guns.
Other analysts have suggested
that Israel has also been acting as a conduit for Chinese weapons, including
drones, to Myanmar, allowing Beijing to bypass the embargo.
"There is no statute of
limitations on war crimes and crimes against humanity, so we will keep putting
Israeli officials under pressure till the trade stops," Mack said.
"They will have to endure a regular 'walk of shame' in the courts, forcing
them to explain their policies and why the documents remain secret."
He noted that Israel's
success in arms dealing was intimately tied to five decades of its control over
the occupied Palestinian territories.
"Israeli companies
exploit Israel's long experience there to sell arms, arguing that the weapons
and training have been tested in real-world conditions."
Brown said that Israel
appeared to be indifferent towards the victims of the violence it helped to
stoke. This was especially evident during the so-called "Dirty War"
in Argentina, through much of the 1970s, when 30,000 left-wing activists were
"disappeared", he said. Israel is believed to have supplied the
military government there with some $700m in weapons.
"Of those killed,
probably some 2,000 were Argentinian Jews," he said. "Israel knew
that the weapons it was selling were being turned on Jews, but that did not
stop it selling arms. It simply didn't care."
My response:
I’m glad that this situation
is being brought into the light, and overall seems to be being dealt with well.
This seems to be a good case of the world holding each other accountable and
that Israel isn’t simply allowed to go on continuing this practice. That
Israelis are some of the strongest voices in speaking out is encouraging, they
seem to know what is right and are not just criticizing their government but
advocating for change. Will this “shaming” of Israel be enough to close the market?
Most likely not due to what a substantial support this trade brings to Israel,
but it is a step in reaching the solution by raising awareness. I know there is
bias in every article but in a subject like this it is harder to pinpoint. It’s
clear what Israel is doing is wrong, a possible bias could be that Aljazeera
from a more Arab perspective delights in the opportunity to expose one of
Israel’s flaws. Some Israelis would probably not see eye to eye on this issue and
argue on their government’s defense, believing the excuses their leaders have
provided. Both doing nothing about an issue and letting it happen to lending
your hand behind your back to help are the same to committing the act with your
own hands. That the people who could potentially benefit the most by going
along with it are refusing to stay silent and are speaking up I believe will
bring change.
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