Source: Boiling Frogs Post
Andrew Gavin Marshall
Andrew Gavin Marshall
Organized Terror & Ethnic Cleansing in Palestine
The official Israeli government
explanation for the ‘disappearance’ of 750,000 Palestinian Arabs from
the land (roughly half the Arab population in Palestine in 1948) was
that they left “voluntarily.” The “new history” of Israel emerged within
the past couple decades due to declassified documents relating to the
1948 war and its origins, and with a number of Israeli historians
recreating the history of Israel and challenging the official story.
David Ben-Gurion, who would become Israel’s first Prime Minister, was a
leading Zionist at the time. He and other Zionists “accepted” the UN
partition plan, wrote Jerome Slater, “only as a necessary tactical step
that would later be reversed.” In a 1937 letter to his son, Ben-Gurion
wrote:
A partial Jewish state is not the end, but only the beginning. The establishment of such a Jewish state will serve as a means in our historical efforts to redeem the country in its entirety… We shall organize a modern defense force… and then I am certain that we will not be prevented from settling in other parts of the country, either by mutual agreement with our Arab neighbors or by some other means… We will expel the Arabs and take their places… with the forces at our disposal. [1]
In the same year, Ben-Gurion also
wrote that, “The Arabs will have to go, but one needs an opportune
moment for making it happen, such as a war.”[2] A year later, in 1938,
Ben-Gurion told a Zionist meeting that, “I favor partition of the
country because when we become a strong power after the establishment of
the state, we will abolish partition and spread throughout all of
Palestine.” Palestine, as defined by the Zionists, had included the West
Bank, Golan Heights in Syria, Jerusalem, southern Lebanon, and a
significant degree of Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula.[3]
For any settler colonies, as the
Zionists were, there are roughly four conditions which have to be met if
they are to survive. Graham Usher, an Israeli journalist, wrote that:
They must obtain a measure of political, military, and economic independence from their metropolitan sponsors. They must achieve military hegemony over, or at least normal relations with, their neighboring states. They must acquire international legitimacy. And they must solve their “native problem.”[4]
The
Jewish state, as defined by leading Zionists such as David Ben-Gurion,
was not to simply be Jewish in its sociopolitical structure, explained
Ilan Pappé, “but also in its ethnic composition.” Further, this would be
made possible “only by force.” To accomplish this task, an efficient
military organization was built over several years, with extensive
financial resources. The main Jewish paramilitary organization in
Palestine was founded in 1920 in order to protect the Jewish colonies,
assisted by “sympathetic” British officers. Orde Wingate, a British
officer, was central to convincing Zionist leaders of the need for such a
military organization, associating the idea of a Jewish state with
militarism and an army. Wingate was assigned to Palestine in 1936, and
had established close connections between the Jewish paramilitary
organization Haganah and the British forces during the 1936-39 Arab
Revolt.[5]
In 1940, Ben-Zion Luria, a historian
at Hebrew University who was also employed by the Jewish Agency in
Palestine suggested that the Jewish National Fund (JNF) should conduct a
registry of all the Arab villages in Palestine, numbering some 1,200 in
all, which had spread across the countryside for hundreds of years.
Luria stated that, “This would greatly help the redemption of the land”
into Jewish hands. The Jewish National Fund (JNF) was founded in 1901 as
one of the principal colonization organizations focused on buying
Palestinian land to settle Jewish colonies. By the end of the Mandate in
1948, the Zionists had control over 5.8% of the land in Palestine.[6]
When news about the “village files”
reached Yossef Weitz, the chief of the JNF settlement department (a
major Zionist colonialist), he suggested that it be transformed into a
“national project.” Other top Zionists became very enthusiastic about
the project, of which the main emphasis was on mapping the villages. In
several cases, these maps in the Israeli State Archives are all that
remains of the entire villages. The British, aware of these projects,
were unable to find the headquarters for the secret intelligence network
that was established to construct the maps. By the later 1940s, the
“village files” included much more than mere locations of villages, but
rather had details about road access, the quality of the land, water
resources, common sources of income for the local population, religious
and sociopolitical affiliations, and even the age of individual men
within the village. One important category, explained Israeli historian
Ilan Pappé, was the index of “hostility,” referring to those individuals
and communities which were ‘hostile’ to the Zionist project of
colonization, which was largely determined according to examining the
participation of certain villages and people in the Arab Revolt of
1936-39, which “included lists of everyone involved in the revolt and
the families of those who had lost someone in the fight against the
British. Particular attention was given to people alleged to have killed
Jews.”[7]
The British, who had the Mandate over
Palestine from 1923, when it was given to the British by the League of
Nations, always saw Palestine as a highly strategic and vital imperial
possession, largely due to its proximity to the Suez Canal, and thus,
the route to Britain’s colonial “Jewel”, India. Palestine was considered
a ‘buffer’ in the Middle East, in a land of potentially hostile peoples
infused with the ideas of Arab nationalism. Just prior to World War II,
the Arab population in Palestine revolted against the British rule in
reaction to the dramatically increased rate of Jewish immigration and
colonization of the land. The Arab Revolt (1936-39) presented the
British with a civil war situation, which was suppressed by force of
arms. Where the Arabs were a major problem for the British in the 1930s,
the Zionists became a problem for the British in the 1940s, for they
too turned to terrorist tactics to make British rule over Palestine
impossible. Following World War II, the British Security Service (MI5),
according to declassified documents from the agency, focused on the
threat to Britain posed by Zionist terrorism, both within the Mandate
and within Britain itself. The two main organizations identified by MI5
as terrorist groups were the Irgun Zvai Leumi and the Stern Gang, who
had planned on taking the war against Britain to its home, hoping to
send several terrorist “cells” to London to “beat the dog in his own
kennel.” As the secret documents reveal, “MI5 was actually more
concerned about the threat of Zionist terrorism than about the looming
threat of the Soviet Union.”[8]
MI5’s
wartime Director-General, Sir David Petrie, stated in 1946 in regards
to the threat of Zionist terrorism that, “the red light is definitely
showing.” From a network of informers within Zionist organizations,
Britain uncovered plots to assassinate British politicians associated
with Palestine policy, including the Prime Minister himself. The Stern
Gang had, in 1944, assassinated the British Minister of State in the
Middle East, Lord Moyne, and had also tried (on several occasions) to
assassinate the British High Commissioner for Palestine, Sir Harold
MacMichael. On July 22, 1946, the Irgun bombed the King David Hotel in
Jerusalem, which was home to British government officials and personnel,
and resulted in the deaths of 91 individuals, some of them Jews. Both
MI5 and MI6 had offices in the Hotel at the time. As Britain responded
with force against Zionist terrorist groups and other organizations, the
extremist nature of the groups naturally increased. In October of 1946,
the Irgun bombed the British Embassy in Rome, and conducted several
sabotage operations against British military transportation routes in
occupied Germany. In April of 1947, the British Colonial Office in
London discovered an Irgun bomb consisting of 24 sticks of explosives,
but the timer had broken, so the bomb did not detonate. In June of 1947,
the Stern Gang launched a letter bomb campaign in Britain, “targeting
every prominent member of the Cabinet,” totaling 21 in all, but none of
them ultimately got through to their targets. Another letter bomb
assault was undertaken by the Stern Gang in 1948.[9]
In June of 1946, the British Army in
Palestine undertook a search for the Jewish Agency, Haganah, and Palmach
to retrieve their arms and arrest specific members and leaders. The
Zionist organizations, however, had infiltrated the British just as the
British had infiltrated the Zionist organizations; thus, the Zionists
had advanced warning of the raid and some top officials were able to
avoid arrest. The chief of the Haganah, Moshe Sneh, which was the
military branch of the Jewish Agency, was in liaison with the terrorist
organizations Irgun and Lehi. David Ben-Gurion, the president of the
Jewish Agency, was also wanted by the British for his complicity in
terrorist attacks. All in all, during the raid, roughly 2,700 people
were arrested, including a significant portion of the political
leadership within the Palestinian Jewish community, and some arms caches
were retrieved. The result, predictably, was to multiply the violence
committed against the British in retribution for the raids and arrests.
Thus, the British High Commissioner in Palestine, Sir Alan Cunningham,
concluded that, “immediate partition is the only solution which gives a
chance of stability.”[10]
This
was largely the result of the Jewish Resistance Movement (JRM) which
had emerged and developed between 1945 and 1946, consisting of the
Haganah, Palmach, Irgun and Lehi, “directed and coordinated by the
Jewish Agency for Palestine, despite the objections of some of its
left-wing members.” The aims of the JRM were to “weaken or destroy
British rule in Palestine.” The Haganah was founded as a territorial
militia to defend Zionist settlements in Palestine, and in 1938, several
Haganah units worked with the British to help crush the Arab Revolt.
The British created the Palmach during World War II as an “elite
offensive unit” in order “to assist [the British] in the event of a
German invasion of Palestine.” In 1945, the Haganah engaged in a secret
agreement with the terrorist groups Irgun and Lehi against the British
Mandate government. The Irgun was formed in 1931 when several officers
separated from the Haganah over socialist sympathies within the defense
forces, and became a right-wing paramilitary army, standing in
opposition to the original conception of socialist and labour Zionism.
The Stern Gang (also known as Lehi) separated from the Irgun during
World War II when the Irgun agreed to cooperate with the British. The
Stern Gang was a radical far-right group which held many fascist
sympathies, and even “pursued agreements with Mussolini and the Nazis in
1940,” though unsurprisingly, Hitler did not respond to the
requests.[11]
It
was within these various terrorist and paramilitary organizations that
Plan D was formed among several Zionist leaders, most notably, David
Ben-Gurion, to plan for the ethnic cleansing of Palestine. Throughout
the 1940s, the planning stages of the village files went through many
revisions, and encapsulated Plans A through D. In the planning stages
during 1940, as one member of the data collection team, Moshe Pasternak,
later recalled:
We had to study the structure of the Arab village. This means the structure and how best to attack it. In the military schools, I had been taught how to attack a modern European city, not a primitive village in the Near East. We could not compare it [an Arab village] to a Polish, or an Austrian one. The Arab village, unlike the European ones, was built topographically on hills. That meant we had to find out how best to approach the village from above or enter it from below. We had to train our “Arabists” [the Orientalists who operated a network of collaborators] how best to work with informants. [12]
A large network of informants had
been established to gain intelligence on the Palestinian villages
throughout the Mandate. The intelligence which was provided allowed for
even more details into the village files, especially after 1943, as the
expanded information included: “detailed descriptions of the husbandry,
cultivation, the number of trees in plantations, the quality of each
fruit grove (even of individual trees!), the average land holding per
family, the number of cars, the names of shop owners, members of work
shops, and the names of the artisans and their skills.” As time passed,
and the village files collected more information, political affiliations
were added in regards to individuals within the villages, and in 1945,
information regarding village mosques, the names of the imams and even
accounts of the inside of particular homes. As the end of the Mandate
grew close, the village files increasingly provided information of a
more militaristic nature: “the number of guards in each village (most
had none) and the quantity and quality of arms at the villagers’
disposal (generally antiquated or even nonexistent).” In 1944, a small
village was home to the training of informants and spies and from which
they would conduct reconnaissance missions. The final report for the
village files was in 1947, focusing on forming lists of “wanted”
individuals. As Ilan Pappé explained:
In 1948, Jewish troops used these lists for the search-and-arrest operations they carried out as soon as they had occupied a village. That is, the men in the village would be lined up and those whose names appeared on the lists would be identified, often by the same person who had informed on them in the first place, but now wearing a cloth sack over his head with two holes cut out for his eyes so as not to be recognized. The men who were picked out were often shot on the spot… Among the criteria for inclusion in these lists, besides having participated in actions against the British and the Zionists, were involvement in the Palestinian national movement (which could apply to entire villages) and having close ties to the leader of the movement, the Mufti Haj Amin al-Husayni, or being affiliated with his political party. Given the Mufti’s dominance of Palestinian politics since the establishment of the Mandate in 1923, and the prominent positions held by members of his party in the Arab Higher Committee that became the embryo government of the Palestinians, this offense too was very common.[13]
Villages of roughly 1,500 people had
about 20-30 individual “suspects” within them. In November of 1947, the
Zionist military command concluded that, “the Palestine Arabs had nobody
to organize them properly,” and that, “If not for the British, we could
have quelled the Arab riot [the opposition to the UN Partition
Resolution in 1947] in one month.” The Arabs, while constituting a
demographic challenge to the Zionist aspirations for Palestine, were not
a military threat. Their military structures and leadership were
largely destroyed by the British during the Arab Revolt and the Zionists
were also aware that the Arab states were disorganized and hesitant to
move forward on the Palestine issue. Thus, it was the British that
primarily stood in the way of the Zionist plans for Palestine, and with
100,000 troops stationed in the an area with roughly 2 million people,
it was no small force to contend with. Thus, the Zionist leadership, and
specifically David Ben-Gurion, began advocating to support the
Partition in the hopes of establishing a small Jewish state in order to
have a base from which to expand. In 1946, Ben-Gurion told a gathering
of the Zionist leadership that they could accept a smaller state, but
that, “We will demand a large chunk of Palestine.” Within a few months,
the Jewish Agency created a map of a partitioned Palestine. The UN
produced a partition map with less land allotted for the Jewish state.
After the 1948-49 war, however, the new Jewish state had – through
ethnic cleansing – established itself along the lines set out for it in
the Jewish Agency map: all of Palestine, save the West Bank and
Gaza.[14]
It was in this context that Plan C
was evolved from Plans A and B. The British could not repress the
eventual Jewish uprising in Palestine after World War II as they had the
Arab Revolt prior to the war, and it was clear to the Zionist
leadership that the British were on the way out, in no small part due to
pressure from Zionist terrorism. In 1946, Plan C was finalized to
prepare the Jewish military structures for their offense against the
Palestinian population, including striking against political leadership,
anti-Zionist Arabs, senior Arab officials, transportation routes,
economic infrastructure, etc. Plan C added upon the village files
information regarding leaders and activists within the Arab population
and other “potential human targets.” Within a few months, the addition
of “operational specifics” became the basis for Plan D, which envisioned
a Jewish State composed of 78% of the land of Palestine, as set out in
the Jewish Agency map. As for the one million Palestinians within those
lands, Plan D was very specific:
These operations can be carried out in the following manner: either by destroying villages (by setting fire to them, by blowing them up, and by planting mines in their rubble), and especially those population centers that are difficult to control permanently; or by mounting combing and control operations according to the following guidelines: encirclement of the villages, conducting a search inside them. In case of resistance, the armed forces must be wiped out and the population expelled outside the borders of the state.[15]
As Ghazi Falah wrote in the journal, Annals of the Association of American Geographers,
Plan D’s “underlying objective was the nationwide conquest and control
of territories.” Among the tactical objectives of Zionist forces were to
occupy “all police fortresses/stations evacuated by British forces, and
of Arab villages close to Jewish settlements; creating continuity
between Jewish cities and neighbouring Jewish settlements; gaining
control of lines of communications; besieging enemy cities; capturing
forward bases of the enemy; counter attacks both inside and outside the
borders of the State.”[16]
In November of 1947 the UN proposed
the partition plan into two states, with Jerusalem and Bethlehem as an
international zone. The UN partition plan vastly increased the amount of
land for the Zionists, as Jewish land amounted to less than 7% of the
total of Palestine in 1947, which was increased to 56% in the UN
partition plan, leaving 42% for the Palestinians, who prior to partition
had over 90% of the land. The Zionists immediately began the ethnic
cleansing in December of 1947 prior to the British leaving, and the
first Arab army did not invade until May of 1948, when the British left.
Thus, under British rule, wrote Falah, “Jewish forces initiated a war
of demographic and territorial expansion which took on the dimension of
space purification – expulsion and prevention on the return of the
expellees.” All able-bodies Jews within Palestine were mobilized by the
Zionist forces to partake in the operation, with civilian Jews settling
in the depopulated Palestinian villages in order to prevent any possible
return of refugees. Civilians also imposed economic sanctions,
disseminating propaganda, and preventing Palestinians from harvesting
their crops. Destruction of Arab crops was a general policy, or to have
Jewish settlers move in and harvest existing Arab fields in cleansed
towns.[17]
Certain
towns were then selected for massacres, usually carried out in small
villages which had previously good relations with their Jewish
neighbours. These towns were selected with the specific purpose of
providing “lessons in toughness” for other Palestinians villages to
incite them to leave and not return. Between May 1947 and March 1948,
there were 92 cases of Zionist terrorism and massacres against
Palestinians, organized by the Haganah in cooperation with the Irgun and
Stern Gang. The small villages were chosen to be “victims,” to be an
example – a terror campaign – to incite fear in the Palestinian
population. One such massacre in April of 1948 killed 254 Arab civilians
in one village. On top of the massacres, the rape of Arab Palestinian
women, whether Christian or Muslim, was also a prominent feature of the
more brutal cleansings. When the British left Palestine and the Arab
states invaded, they prevented the Zionist forces from occupying the
West Bank and the Gaza Strip.[18]
All in all, some 400 Palestinian
villages were cleansed, forcing roughly 750,000 Palestinians to flee,
leaving roughly 100,000 Palestinians within the newly conquered Jewish
territories, who remained under a virtual state of martial law and
concentrated in small pales within Israel, the state which was declared
by the Zionists in May of 1948. Massive Jewish immigration commenced for
survivors of the Holocaust as well as Jews from Arab nations and the
Soviet Union.[19]
The men who carried out the ethnic
cleansing of Palestine became the mythical heroes of the founding of the
state of Israel, most notably David Ben-Gurion, and the future leaders
of the Israeli army, Yigael Yadin and Moshe Dayan, along with prominent
Arabist academics, who, much like the intellectuals of the Nazi state,
were among the most systematically malevolent, responsible for the final
decisions regarding which villages were to be eradicated and which
villagers were to be executed. The operations of the Arabists –
Orientalist intellectuals – “were supervised by Issar Harel, who later
became the first head of Mossad and the Shin bet, Israel’s secret
services.”[20] The ruthless murders, assassinations, and massacres –
even of women and children – were not a mere ‘result’ of the war, as
many historians have claimed, but were a matter of policy. As Ezra
Dannin, the Israeli government adviser on Arab affairs stated that, “If
the High Command believes that by destruction, killing, and human
suffering its aims will be achieved faster, then I would not stand in
its way. If we don’t hurry up, our enemies will do the same things to
us.”[21]