Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, May/June
1998, Page 81
Middle East HistoryIt Happened in June
Jewish Terrorists Try To Kill Three Mayors Of
Palestinian Cities
By Donald Neff
It was 18 years ago, on June 2, 1980, that Jewish
terrorists tried to assassinate three Palestinian mayors. Bombs
exploded in the cars of Mayors Karim Khalaf of Ramallah and Bassam
Shakaa of Nablus. Khalaf lost a foot and Shakaa both legs. A third
bomb planted in the car of El Bireh Mayor Ibrahim Tawil was discovered
before it could injure him.1
The bombings occurred at the end of the 30-day mourning
period for six Jewish settlers killed in Hebron on May 2 by Palestinian
terrorists. A day after the Hebron killings a group of 20 Jewish
settlers from Kiryat Arba reacted to the massacre by secretly forming
a Jewish Makhteretundergroundto strike fear in
the Palestinians. The group was known as TNTTerror against
Terror.
TNT was led by Menachem Livni, commander of a reserve
army battalion of combat engineers and a follower of Gush Emunim
leader Moshe Levinger. Livni later recalled: I met with Rabbi
Moshe Levinger, and I expressed my view that for this kind of task
pure people should be selected, people who are deeply religious,
people who would never sin, people who havent got the slightest
inclination for violence.2
Reported Robert Friedman, an expert on Israeli extremism:
The Makhteret would become the most violent anti-Arab
terrorist organization since the birth of Israel.3
TNT was active over the next four years until the
gang was finally arrested in 1984. A study of Jewish terrorism between
1980-1984 showed a sharp increase in Jewish terrorist incidents.
There were 30 in 1980, 48 in 1981, 69 in 1982, 119 in 1983, and
118 in 1984. The number of Palestinians killed in the incidents
was 23, with 191 injured.4
The New York Times reported in early 1983:
Bombs have been planted at mosques. Shots have been fired
into Arab homes and automobiles. Arab youths accused of throwing
stones at Israeli cars have been seized from schoolyards by angry
settlers and taken to settlements or military headquarters....In
the past, vigilantism in the West Bank usually went unpunished,
for settlers argued effectively that the army was not doing enough
to protect them in a hostile environment....Most of the clashes
in the last few years in which settlers have shot and killed Arabs
have produced no arrests, and none have resulted in a conviction.5
TNTs bloodiest act came on July 26, 1983, when
masked gunmen invaded the Islamic College in Hebron and killed three
Palestinian students and wounded 33 other students and teachers.
Despite the carnage, Gush Emunim leader Levinger declared: Whoever
did this has sanctified Gods name in public.6
TNTs potentially most dramatic act came on Jan.
27, 1984, when it tried to blow up the two holiest Muslim shrines
in Jerusalemthe Dome of the Rock and Al Aqsa mosques on the
Haram al-Sharif, known to Jews as the Temple Mount. TNT members
smuggled 22 pounds of explosives and 18 hand grenades of Israeli
army issue onto the Haram al-Sharif. The terrorists were discovered
by a Muslim guard and fled before they could be arrested.7
Yehoshua Caspi, commander of Israels southern
police district, said the army-issue hand grenades pointed to Jews
as the perpetrators. He had good reason to be suspicious. During
the previous month, 13 Israeli army hand grenades had been discovered
planted as booby traps at mosques and churches in Palestinian villages.
Three Palestiniansa Greek Orthodox nun, a Muslim imam and
a Muslim worshipperhad been wounded in explosions.8
It was in late April 1984 that TNT was finally broken.
More than three dozen Jews were arrested after three members attached
bombs to five buses parked beside the homes of their Arab drivers
in East Jerusalem. Shin Bet agents had infiltrated the group and
dismantled the bombs before they detonated.9
The trial ground on for 13 months and was highly unpopular
among a number of Israelis, who were sympathetic with the accused
terrorists.10
Three Jews were convicted on July 22, 1985, for the
Hebron Islamic College slaughter and other crimes, while others
were exonerated or convicted of lesser crimes and mainly pardoned.
The convicted murderers were TNT leader Livni, 41, and members Shaul
Nir, 34, and Uzi Sharabaf, 28. All were highly regarded in the Jewish
settler community, well educated, very religious, and Livni had
a distinguished military record. They were sentenced to life imprisonment,
but served less than seven years, including the time of their incarceration
during the trial.11
President Chaim Herzog personally reduced their sentences
three separate times. On Dec. 26, 1990, a parole committee freed
them. At their release they were greeted as heroes by fellow settlers.12
RECOMMENDED READING:
Aronson, Geoffrey. Creating Facts: Israel, Palestinians
and the West Bank, Washington, DC: Institute for Palestine Studies,
1987.
Chomsky, Noam. The Fateful Triangle, Boston:
South End Press, 1983.
*Friedman, Robert I., Zealots for Zion: Inside
Israels West Bank Settlement Movement, New York, Random
House, 1992.
*Halsell, Grace. Prophecy and Politics: Militant
Evangelists on the Road to Nuclear War, Westport, CT: Lawrence
Hill & Company, 1986.
Nakhleh, Issa. Encyclopedia of the Palestine Problem
(2 vols), New York: Intercontinental Books, 1991.
Shipler, David K. Arab and Jew: Wounded Spirits
in a Promised Land, New York: Times Books, 1986
Sprinzak, Ehud. The Ascendance of Israels
Radical Right , New York: Oxford University Press, 1991.
FOOTNOTES
1 Aronson, Creating Facts, pp. 207-10;
Robert I. Friedman, Village Voice, 11/12/85; Shipler, Arab
and Jew , p. 105. Also see Chomsky, The Fateful Triangle,
pp. 56-57; Halsell, Prophecy and Politics, p. 108; Sprinzak,
The Ascendancy of Israels Radical Right, pp.91-93.
2 Friedman, Zealots for Zion, p. 23.
Also see Sprinzak, The Ascendancy of Israels Radical Right,
p. 94.
3 Friedman, Zealots for Zion, p. 23.
4 Nakhleh, Encyclopedia of the Palestine
Problem, p. 709. Also see Halsell, Prophecy and Politics,
pp. 108-10, for a report on the attitudes of the Jewish terrorists.
5 David K. Shipler, New York Times, 3/14/83.
A list of instances in which no arrests were made for violence against
Palestinians is in David K. Shipler, New York Times, 6/5/83.
6 Friedman, Zealots for Zion, p. 29.
7 David K. Shipler, New York Times,
1/30/84.
8 Ibid.
9 Friedman, Zealots for Zion, pp. 30-32.
10 The text of charges against the suspects is in
Journal of Palestine Studies, Documents and Source
Material, Summer 1984, pp. 211-13.
11 Thomas L. Friedman, New York Times, 12/8/85;
New York Times, 12/27/90.
12 Associated Press, New York Times, 12/27/90. |