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JERUSALEM (AP) - Israel on Thursday temporarily grounded reserve air
force pilots who - in an unprecedented protest - condemned airstrikes in
the West Bank and Gaza Strip as "immoral" and refused to fly such
sorties.
The
declaration by 27 pilots, including nine on active duty, was widely
criticized in Israel as subversive at a time of war, but it also revived
a flagging debate on the ethics of Israel's three-year war on
Palestinian militants.
The
protest struck a nerve because many Israelis believe their military has
higher moral standards than that of their neighbors, and that other
countries would have been much more ruthless.
The
military is also seen as an institution that binds the fractious nation;
Israelis get jittery at signs of cracks in the ranks. The air force in
particular is considered key to Israel's survival, and pilots are held
in the highest regard. Critics also say such talk gives ammunition to
Israel's enemies.
Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon said the rebel pilots would be dealt
with swiftly.
"Everyone can express his opinion, but it is unacceptable that a group
of people in the military would interfere in a subject that does not
apply to them," he told Israel TV.
The
air force quickly tried to contain the damage. Commander Maj. Gen. Dan
Halutz said the nine active pilots, grounded for now, could face
suspension and perhaps military jail if they don't retract.
He
said the rebels are a tiny minority among thousands of pilots. Hundreds
of pilots began circulating declarations Thursday that expressed support
for their commanders.
The
protesters came under fire for mixing their moral dilemma with political
opinion - their declaration said the continued occupation of the West
Bank and Gaza Strip corrupts society.
Even
moderate Israelis said this is a mistake, because it could set a
precedent. "When the time comes, say, to remove settlers from their
homes, other people in the army or in the air force will say they don't
want to obey these orders in the same way," said Col. Uri Dromi, an air
force reservist.
Veteran journalist Dan Margalit wrote in a front-page commentary in the
Maariv daily that the pilots abused their exalted standing.
"If
their idea is accepted, Ahmed Yassin and his compatriots in the Hamas
leadership will be able to plan the next murder of Jewish children on a
Jerusalem bus without interference," Margalit wrote, referring to an
August bus bombing that killed 23 people, six of them children.
Only
veteran leaders of Israel's dovish left, including Yossi Sarid and
Shulamit Aloni of the Meretz party, defended the pilots.
Several hundred Israelis have refused to serve in the West Bank and
Gaza. There have been protests such as last weekend's Tel Aviv rally in
which several thousand called for ending the occupation. But no major
anti-war movement has emerged during the current fighting with the
Palestinians, and most Israelis support the military's actions.
The
group of 27 is informally led by Brig. Gen. Yiftah Spector, a highly
decorated retired pilot who, according to Israeli media, took part in
the bombing of an Iraqi nuclear reactor in 1981.
In
their petition, the pilots said airstrikes on crowded Palestinian areas
are "illegal and immoral."
In
three years of fighting, Israeli pilots have carried out hundreds of
airstrikes, targeting Palestinian police installations and weapons
workshops of militants. The most controversial involve targeted killings
in which helicopters - and sometimes warplanes - fire rockets and bombs
at cars and homes of Palestinian militants.
Some
140 wanted Palestinians have died in targeted raids, according to
Palestinian medical officials, though the figure also includes those
killed resisting arrest. More than 100 bystanders have also died, they
said.
The
Israeli public, traumatized by a Palestinian suicide bombing campaign
that has killed hundreds since September 2000, largely supports the
targeted killings.
A
watershed for some pilots was last year's attack on Salah Shehadeh,
leader of the Hamas military wing. A one-ton bomb killed Shehadeh, an
assistant and 14 civilians, nine of them children. Halutz, the air force
commander, had said he felt the bombing was morally correct.
In
response to last month's Jerusalem bombing, Israel accelerated targeted
attacks, killing 13 Hamas members and six bystanders in nearly a dozen
airstrikes in Gaza City.
One of
the 27 pilots, identified only as Capt. Alon, told the Yediot Ahronot
daily he was now ashamed to be a member of the air force. "It's an
organization that has no qualms about dropping bombs ... on the densest
neighborhoods in the world ...," he was quoted as saying.
Brig.
Gen. Eliezer Shakedi, a senior air force official, said great efforts
are made to keep Palestinian civilians from harm, and that some missions
were aborted if the risk to innocents was too high.
It was
the first time pilots have come out openly against air force policy. In
the 1982 invasion of Lebanon, some expressed reservations about bombing
cities and refugee camps but did not go public.
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