Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, January/February
2005, pages 21, 23
Special Report
Israel Washes Away the Sins of Former Army Chief of Staff Rafael
Eitan
By Delinda C. Hanley
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Rafael Eitan in July
1999. The mastermind of Israel’s 1982 invasion of Lebanon,
he was quoted the following year as saying, “When we
have settled the land, all the Arabs will be able to do about
it will be to scurry around like drugged cockroaches in a
bottle” (AFP Photo-Avichai Nitzan). |
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“WHEN WE HAVE settled the land, all the Arabs will be
able to do about it will be to scurry around like drugged cockroaches
in a bottle.”—Rafael Eitan, April 14, 1983
“We declare openly that the Arabs have no right to settle
on even one centimeter of Eretz Israel...Force is all they do
or ever will understand. We shall use the ultimate force until
the Palestinians come crawling to us on all fours.”—Rafael
Eitan, April 13, 1983
Former Israeli Army Chief of Staff Rafael “Raful” Eitan,
75, died Nov. 23 when he was swept off a breakwater by a “giant
wave” while working on a renewal project at Ashdod Port,
south of Tel Aviv. Eitan was lost in the rough seas for more than
an hour, before IAF helicopters and navy rescue ships found his
body. Paramedics, who failed to resuscitate him, described cuts
and bruises on his hands, likely caused by his attempts to grasp
rocks off the breakwater.
The powerful wave that took Eitan’s life also managed to
wash away in Israeli minds and memories his many sins. When he
emerged from the sea, the man whose racist remarks helped dehumanize
Arabs for generations of Israelis was heralded as a man of principle.
“The man was courageous, a true leader, and embodied the
true qualities of a fighter,” according to former President
Ezer Weizman, who as defense minister appointed Eitan to
head the Israel Defense Forces (IDF). “He will always be
remembered as a symbolic fighter that embodies the Jewish people’s
struggle in the Land of Israel,” Weizman said.
Eitan, whom the Jerusalem Post described as personifying
the “gruff boorish Sabra character of the new Israeli state,” exuded
hatred toward Arabs. Nevertheless, after his death his leather-clad
tattooed friend and comrade-in-arms, Shlomo Kuba, told Jerusalem
Post reporters: “He was a leader, teacher, educator,” adding
for good measure that his fellow paratrooper was “the salt
of the earth and a pathfinder.”
Eitan’s second wife, Ofra Meyerson, described him as “analytical,
balanced and a man of deeds,” and a “humanist who worked
for the good of all.”
Thousands of Israelis came to bid farewell to the “warrior-farmer-politician,
carpenter and builder, and sabra-Zionist” as his Israeli-flag
draped coffin lay in state, the Jerusalem Post reported.
Only Asaf Harel, host of an Israeli late-night talk show, dared
to joke about the full military funeral and many eulogies when
he quipped, “There are hundreds of soldiers who wanted to
attend Raful’s funeral, but they were stuck at Kiryat Shaul
[in coffins at an Israeli military cemetery].
Eitan, one of Israel’s founders, was born in the Moshav
Tel Adashimm in northern Palestine in 1929. Drafted into the Palmach
when he was 17, Eitan served in the Israeli military for 37 years
and was army chief from 1978 to 1983.
He fought and was severely injured in the battle for Jerusalem
in 1948. He became a paratrooper and was the first to parachute
into the Mitla Pass during the Sinai invasion of 1956. During the
1967 Six-Day war Eitan again was critically injured, this time
in the head, but survived to fight in the 1973 Yom Kippur war.
Eitan will be remembered as the mastermind of the 1982 invasion
of Lebanon, and the man who ordered the bombardment of Beirut.
In fact, as Gideon Levy reminded Haaretz readers, Eitan
suggested bombing from the air a packed stadium in Beirut. Thousands
of Palestinian and Lebanese civilians and 650 Israeli soldiers
were killed during Israel’s senseless 18-year occupation
of its northern neighbor.
Along with the current Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, Eitan was
reprimanded by Israel’s Kahan Commission for allowing the
massacre by Israeli-allied Christian Phalangist militiamen of Palestinians
in Beirut’s Sabra and Shatila refugee camps. On the eve of
that massacre, he promised, with ghoulish humor, that “the
Phalange will organize tiny little houses for the Palestinians.” On
another day he said, “It’s a pleasure to see how the
Arabs are killing one another.”
After leaving the Israeli army Eitan founded the hawkish ultranationalist
Tzomet party, which later joined the Likud party of current Israeli
Prime Minister Ariel Sharon. The right-wing Tzomet party opposed
the return of Palestinian land as well as peace talks, and even
called for the expulsion of non-Jews from Palestine. Eitan advocated
cutting off the Bedouin in the Negev from their sources of water
and electricity and preventing them from marrying other Palestinians
in the territories.
After losing an election he finally left political life in 1999,
having served during his career as a member of parliament, agriculture
and environment minister, and deputy prime minister.
Even in his last days, Eitan remained an unrepentant Arab-hater.
After surviving four grievous wounds in battle he went to his watery
grave unchanged. In an interview earlier this year with Tel
Aviv Newspaper regarding his work at the port, Eitan took the
opportunity to blast Sharon’s “disengagement plan”: “All
these efforts will come to naught. With the Arabs it will never
be possible to make peace,” Eitan told the reporter. “This
is a struggle between civilizations. We are a foreign culture,
and in my opinion, Islam will never make peace with our foreign
entity, and with the fact that it has political independence and
even defeats them in wars...The Arabs wage negotiations with us
in three ways: pretense, deception, and violence.”
Sharon, Defense Minister Shaul Mofaz, former prime ministers Shimon
Peres, Ehud Barak and Finance Minister Binyamin Netanyahu
attended Eitan’s internment ceremony, and extolled his heroic
service to his country. Israelis carefully swept away Eitan’s
deeds and words and accorded him a new and sanitized biography.
Delinda C. Hanley is news editor of the Washington Report on Middle
East Affairs. |