Ehud Barak rips Goldstone
After enduring eight years of ongoing rocket fire—in which 12,000 missiles were launched against our cities, and after all diplomatic efforts to stop this barrage failed—it was my duty as defense minister to do something about it. It's as simple and self-evident as the right to self-defense.
While such logic eluded Mr. Goldstone and his team, it was crystal clear to the thousands of Israeli children living in southern Israel who had to study, play, eat and sleep while being preoccupied about the distance to the nearest bomb shelter. When I accompanied then-presidential candidate Barack Obama on his visit to the shelled city of Sderot, he said "If somebody was sending rockets into my house where my two daughters sleep at night, I'm going to do everything in my power to stop that. And I would expect Israelis to do the same thing." Too bad the Human Rights Council wasn't listening.
Whenever we are forced to defend our own lives, it is our obligation to do so in a way that ensures that the lives of innocent civilians on the other side are protected. This duty becomes extremely difficult when we have to face an enemy that intentionally deploys its forces in densely populated areas, stores its explosives in private homes, and launches rockets from crowded school yards and mosques. In Gaza, we reached out to the civilians via millions of leaflets, telephone calls and text messages urging them to leave areas before we acted.
So when the Goldstone mission gathers testimony from local residents in Hamas-ruled Gaza, but forgets to ask them whether they happened to notice any armed Palestinians during the Israeli operation, or didn't realize that its impartially chosen witnesses happened to be known Hamas operatives according to Israeli intelligence, I begin to question the methodology of such a "fact-finding" effort.
Although I am incensed by the Goldstone Report, I must admit that I was not surprised. It is, more than anything else, a political statement—not a legal analysis.
Hopefully. So far, I'm not sure that the Europeans see it.
Read the whole thing.
Israel Matzav: Ehud Barak rips Goldstone
1 comment:
The lawyer accusing Barak of war crimes is a 59 Palestian from East Jerusalem who resides in London. This e lawyer who represented Haneir Hussian, who tried to blow up planes and was setenced to 32 years in jail, Omar Said, who attempted to ikill the Israeli Ambassador in 1982, who gave legal advice to the Syrian in the murder of Rafik Harriri, who gave legal advice to Sudan's Omar Bashir with regard to the genocide in Drafur.
In other words, a the Terrorists' lawyer accuses the Israeli Minister of Defense of terrorism. What a joke
Post a Comment