Confessing to a crime we didn't commit: Investigating
the Gaza War
by David Benjamin
The Jerusalem Post, January 3, 2010
The initiative reportedly under discussion
to establish a judicial investigative committee to review the IDF's investigations
relating to Operation Cast Lead would amount to confessing under duress
to a crime we didn't commit.
One of the aims of this initiative is to deflect the criticism
leveled in the Goldstone report at Israel's investigation process. The
word Goldstone used in an interview to describe the investigation process
was "pusillanimous" ("lacking courage or resolution"
- Webster).
However, the establishment of a special review committee
would only serve to vindicate Goldstone's disparaging comments about our
legal system.
Goldstone says our investigations should be conducted in
conformity with "international standards." We shouldn't have
a problem with this demand, since it means, in effect, that we can drop
our standards. The fact is that Israel probably has the highest level
of accountability of the military under the law in the world.
Let’s take a look at the investigation process as
stipulated by Israeli law: Firstly, the IDF is required to investigate
every complaint into misconduct by its troops, from the severe to the
trivial. The IDF will also launch investigations even when no complaint
has been filed, such as when alleged misconduct is brought to light in
the media. Generally, the initial investigation may take one of two forms:
either a criminal investigation by the Military Police or an operational
enquiry by senior officers.
The former is appropriate when the criminality
of the alleged misconduct is clear, e.g. looting, assault of detainees.
The latter is employed where the circumstances do not necessarily point
to a criminal act, e.g. civilian casualties as a result of a bombing raid.
There is nothing to preclude the military advocate general (MAG) from
ordering a criminal investigation at the outset in any case, including
in cases concerning operational activity (note that Goldstone erroneously
claims that this is not so) and the MAG has in fact done so on a number
of occasions.
The MAG is authorized to review the findings of all operational
enquiries for the purpose of deciding whether or not to order a criminal
investigation. Moreover, the civilian attorney-general is authorized to
review and overturn the decisions of the MAG in this regard. Most significantly,
the Supreme Court can review and overturn any such decision.
Also, the MAG's decision whether to press charges - and
if so, what charges - is also reviewable and can be overturned both by
the attorney-general and by the Supreme Court.
The point is that all decisions by the military and civil
authorities in relation to investigations and prosecutions, including
questions of "pusillanimity," are ultimately reviewable by the
highest court in the land.
The likelihood of such review taking place is far from hypothetical.
Anyone with a legitimate interest can petition the High Court to review
any decision by any Israeli authority, civilian or military. It has been
long established that Palestinian residents of Gaza and the West Bank
as well as Israeli human rights organizations have the right of standing
in the High Court.
The thousands of petitions brought annually
against the IDF are testimony to the routine nature of such proceedings.
It is important to note that unlike the US Supreme Court, which can select
the cases it wishes to adjudicate, the High Court has no such luxury and
is obliged to give its attention to every petition. The bottom line is
that anybody who is unhappy with the Cast Lead investigation process in
general, or with any individual investigation in particular, has a clear
path to the High Court once they have exhausted other remedies.
There is a recent, well-publicized example of this type
of judicial review: Battalion commander Lt.-Col. Omri Borberg was indicted
by the MAG for "conduct unbecoming an officer" for an incident,
captured on film, in which a soldier in Borberg's battalion shot a bound
Palestinian suspect in the foot with a rubber bullet. This happened while
Borberg was standing next to the suspect. Following a petition by Israeli
human rights groups, the High Court overturned the MAG's decision and
ordered him to ratchet up the charges against Borberg.
One would think that the near certainty of having to explain
one's actions to the High Court at the end of the day would provide a
reasonable deterrent to the "pusillanimous" against whitewashing
investigations. Moreover, if this deterrence doesn't work, it doesn't
matter, since in any event, the High Court will have the last word.
The High Court is the only court in the world that routinely
hears petitions regarding military operations, including those carried
out beyond the borders of the state and including in real time. Every
IDF commander performs his duties in the knowledge that he may be called
to account for his decisions in the High Court at any time. There is no
parallel to this anywhere. This goes far beyond what are considered to
be "international standards" of accountability.
Whether Goldstone chose to ignore these
features of Israel's legal system or whether he was simply unaware of
them, his criticism and derogatory remarks are blatantly unjustified.
Setting up a judicial review committee would be seen as a tacit acknowledgement
that Israel's legal institutions somehow don't make the cut. It would
be akin to an innocent person confessing to a crime.
The writer, a reserve lieutenant-colonel, is a former
senior legal adviser to the IDF, an advocate, consultant and lecturer
in international law, the law of armed conflicts and counterterrorism.
Facts and Logic About the Middle East
P.O. Box 590359
San Francisco, CA 94159
Gerardo Joffe, President
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