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At Israel’s Ben Gurion Airport,
security resides in a lot more than confiscating gels,
liquids and pointy objects.
- This article, written from Linn’s perspective, is the second in a series based on Linn’s February trip to Israel as part of the Ultimate Counter Terrorism Mission.
- HSToday’s Anthony Kimery gets a first-hand look at Israel’s hundreds of miles of fencing
Linn & Ari
Armstrong
March 17, 2008
(original location: http://gjfreepress.com/article/20080317/OPINION/894071471)
This article, written from Linn’s perspective,
is the second in a series based on Linn’s February
trip to Israel as part of the Ultimate Counter Terrorism
Mission.
During my trip to Israel I observed the nation’s
concern with law, the legality of its military operations
and the rights of both Israelis and Palestinians.
One of the organizations that has had success
countering terrorism is the Shurat HaDin Israel Law Center
(IsraelLawCenter.org), a nonprofit, independent body unaffiliated
with the Israeli government or any political party. One
main function of Shurat HaDin is to take the perpetrators
and supporters of Islamic terror to court to strip them
of their resources in order to compensate victims.
Nitsana Darshan-Leitner, sometimes known
as the “warrior for justice” (and who was very
pregnant when I met her) directs the organization. Darshan-Leitner
has assisted hundreds of Israeli terror victims in filing
civil suits against Palestinian terrorist groups and their
financial patrons. She said, “My clients are innocent
people who were made to suffer, and this is the only way
they have to fight back.”
Darshan-Leitner also represents Palestinian
clients, usually when they are accused of collaborating
with Israel. She applied to the Palestinian minister of
justice for permission to represent some of these clients
in West Bank courts. She said in Striking Back magazine
that she heard back only after the suspects had been convicted
and executed.
One of the cases that Darshan-Leitner passionately
related involved three Israeli army reservists who took
a wrong turn and an ended up in the city of Ramallah. The
three reservists went to a police station for help. The
station was surrounded, and the police did nothing to protect
the men. The reservists were dragged out and hanged by the
mob. Shurat HaDin filed a lawsuit against the Palestinian
Authority for about $15 million.
Another interesting individual was Brig.
Gen. Shaul Gordon, who is currently providing legal advice
on matters of administration and operation for the Israeli
Police. Gordon also spent over 15 years in the army, had
a private law practice for five years and is the former
chief justice of the military Court of Appeals for Judea,
Samaria and the Gaza Strip. As a judge in 2002, Gordon heard
over 3,500 administrative detention cases involving suspected
terrorists.
Israel has a legal system for those who commit
or are suspected of committing terrorist acts. Israel faces
difficult questions regarding the legal treatment of suspected
terrorists: How does a country advance a rights-respecting
democracy and at the same time protect itself from terrorists
seeking to destroy it and its institutions?
The conflicts in the Middle East can seem
intractable, as Gordon indicated in a story. Leonid Brezhnev,
Jimmy Carter and Menachem Begin are all standing before
God, and God tells them that they can each ask one question.
Brezhnev asks if he will see the end of Communism. God answers,
“Yes my son, you will, but not in your administration.”
Carter asks if he will see the end of the cold war. God
answers, “Yes, my son, you will, but not in your administration.”
Begin asks if he will see the end of the Arab-Israel conflict.
God answers, “Yes, my son, you will.” But then
God hesitates and adds, “But not in my administration.”
The military base Machane Ofer sits 10 minutes
from Jerusalem. This is the base where terrorist detainees
are taken and security trials of Hamas terrorists are held.
Judge Menachm Liberman took time out of his busy schedule
to show us around the military courts and brief us about
a pending a trial of a suspected terrorist.
Haim Ben-Ami briefed us about the interrogation
tactics of the Shabak, or General Security Service. Ben
Ami, an intense figure, discussed the techniques, methods,
strategies and legal challenges to law enforcement and intelligence
forces’ struggle to lawfully extract information about
terrorist activities.
Ben-Ami began by noting that he himself had
been the victim of a terrorist attack; a hand grenade was
thrown into a vehicle in which he was riding. He then tapped
a table with his artificial leg. He said, “You need
to balance the human rights of a terrorist versus the human
rights of the 20 or 30 victims.” He also noted that,
in fighting terrorism, one must separate how one deals with
criminals and terrorists.
Some American critics of Israel deride the
tiny nation for taking the steps it does to preserve itself
and its people in a region where many of Israel’s
neighbors would as soon see the nation utterly destroyed.
Most Americans do not know friends and family members who
have been blown up by terrorist bombs. Yet Americans should
remember the destructive force of terrorism the next time
the U.S. government is tempted to coddle state sponsors
of terror in the Middle East.
Linn Armstrong is a local political
activist and firearms instructor with the Grand Valley Training
Club. His son, Ari, edits FreeColorado.com from the Denver
area.
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