By Lawrence Henry on 7.16.02 @ 12:02AM
A heroic resistance that receives no coverage aside from the scattered reports when its members are cruelly executed.
There is a great unreported story in the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict, what amounts to an unreported war: the war of the
Palestinian resistance. And no, the Palestinian Authority and its
terrorist accomplices -- Hamas, Hezbollah, the Al Aqsa Martyrs'
Brigade, and the rest -- are not a "resistance" movement. They are,
rather, the dictatorship against which the resistance struggles.
The real resistance, anonymous, not even properly described, is the
fight against terror within the West Bank and Gaza by a fifth
column of Israel sympathizers.
This resistance gets reported only under one rubric --
"suspected collaborators" -- and only under one circumstance -- the
execution of those "suspected collaborators." Sometimes these
executions take place under a thin cloak of criminal procedure, as
sentences carried out by the Palestinian Authority after trial.
More often lately, they are simply slaughters in the street, often
accompanied by mobs baying for blood and mutilation -- and getting
it.
The collaborators are not Jewish spies, though certainly the
Mossad must provide them some support, and must debrief them when
it can. When they are identified at all, it is evident they are
Arabic and Muslim.
What they do is not pretty. They identify leaders and technical
experts among the terrorist groups, guide the Israeli Defense Force
to those terrorists, and help in getting them arrested or killed.
People naively and wonderingly look back at the Nazi scourge in
World War II and wonder why no "good Germans" arose to bump off
Nazi party leaders and SS generals.
This is why:
"GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip (AP) January 13, 2001 -- Yasser Arafat's
Palestinian Authority put two men before firing squads Saturday for
collaborating with Israel in killings of Palestinian militiamen,
executing them before weeping family members and crowds of hundreds
amid cries of 'God is Great!'
"Palestinian courts in Gaza City and the West Bank town of
Nablus on Friday convicted Majdi Makawi, 28, and Alam Bani Odeh,
25, of involvement in separate attacks that killed Jamal Abdel
Razek, a leader of Arafat's Fatah movement, and Palestinian
bomb-maker Ibrahim Bani Odeh. Arafat upheld the courts' execution
orders.
"In Nablus, the 3-year-old daughter of Bani Odeh clung to his
hand as he waited for execution, his mother and wife crying beside
him."
So is this:
"The Independent, By Robert Fisk in Ramallah, August 9, 2001 --
Preferring to avoid the controversial trials that have condemned
nine alleged collaborators to death, Yasser Arafat's intelligence
operatives are now murdering Palestinians suspected of spying for
Israel, killing at least 20 men in the past nine months, at least
six of whom were more than 50 years old.
"Palestinian police no longer investigate the 'mysterious'
killings of men believed to have worked for Israel's Shin Bet
intelligence service, who in some cases helped the Israelis to
murder Palestinian militants; many of the Palestinian killers have
been masked, at least one victim has been gunned down by men
wearing Palestinian police uniforms while another was killed by
fellow prisoners in a Majido prison in Nablus -- under the full
control of Arafat's Palestinian Authority."
And this:
"The Telegraph (U.K.) | Alan Philps April 24, 2002 -- Gunmen
pumped dozens of bullets into three suspected Palestinian informers
and strung one up yesterday in a gruesome ceremony at the site of a
burnt-out vehicle where the Israeli air force had killed two
leading militants."
And most recently, these paragraphs, buried at the bottom of a July
14 story by AP's Ibrahim Barzak:
"More than a dozen Palestinians are now on death row after being
convicted of collaborating with Israel in the targeted killings of
militants.
"Two convicted informers were executed in January 2001. But
Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat, who gives the final authorization
for an execution, came under international pressure to stop the
executions and has not permitted any more since then.
"However, Palestinian militias have taken the law into their
hands, rounding up and executing suspected collaborators. Dozens
have been killed."
If, as Ibrahim Barzak reports, "dozens have been killed," there
must be hundreds of such "collaborators."
Heroes are dying here, heroes who have braved the insanity
gripping their people to fight for real freedom -- freedom from the
thuggish tyranny of the terrorist gangs, freedom from ignorance and
hatred. Mostly we do not know their names, and we never will. We
are almost never told that they are winning. As Uri Dan wrote in
the New York Post on July 13:
"Three weeks ago in Israel, in a single day, there were 58
terror alerts -- some 'very hot' -- of planned Palestinian attacks.
But none was carried out -- thanks to an enormous security blanket
thrown over the West Bank that has given Israelis a long stretch
without the deadly bombings that have claimed hundreds of
lives."
A key element in that "security blanket," as Dan reported, is
"greater collaboration from Palestinians who either oppose homicide
bombers or are paid informers."
Perhaps some historian of the future will tell the story of
these heroes. Except in passing, no reporter today is doing it.
topics:
Law, Israel