Elie Hobeika´s Assassination: Covering Up the Secrets of Sabra and Shatilla (JCPA-JERUSALEM CENTER PUBIC AFFARIRS) Vol.1, No.17 01/30/02)
Source: http://www.jcpa.org/art/brief1-17.htm
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Elie Hobeika knew the truth of Israel´s innocence in the Sabra and
Shatilla massacres, and for that reason many interested parties
wanted him silenced.
Elie Hobeika, the former Lebanese Christian militia leader, was
killed by a car bomb outside his home in a Beirut suburb on January
24, 2002. Lebanese officials immediately blamed Israel for the
assassination, since Hobeika had stated that he planned to testify in
a Belgian court case which is deliberating allegations against
Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon regarding his purported
connection with the massacre of Palestinians in the Sabra and
Shatilla refugee camps during the 1982 Lebanon War.
Yet a careful examination of recent material on Sabra and Shatilla
indicates that Hobeika was far more concerned about what a Belgian
court would reveal about his own role in the massacre, rather than
the accusations made in Belgium against Israel´s prime minister.
The Legacy of the Kahane Commission
Israel established its own commission of inquiry into the events that
transpired at the Sabra and Shatilla refugee camps. The Kahane
Commission Report, issued on February 8, 1983, concluded:
Israel had no direct responsibility for the massacre of Palestinians
which had been conducted by Lebanon´s main Christian militia, the
Lebanese Forces (that also included the Phalangists), between
September 16 and the morning of September 18, 1982. When the Israel
Defense Forces (IDF) first informed Defense Minister Ariel Sharon of
the Christians attacks against the Palestinians, the IDF insisted
that the massacres had already ended. Estimates of the number of dead
vary from 328 (Red Cross) to 800 (Israeli military sources).
Despite efforts to impute Israeli responsibility by charging the
involvement of the Israeli-supported South Lebanon Army (SLA) of
Major Haddad, SLA forces at this time were actually located south of
the Awali River, and hence not in the area of Sabra and Shatilla.
Neither the Mossad nor Israeli military intelligence warned the
Israel Defense Forces or the political echelon in Israel that
Lebanon´s Christian militia might conduct a massacre if they were
allowed to enter the Palestinian refugee camps. After the
assassination of pro-Israeli Lebanese President Bashir Gemayel on
September 14, 1982, Israel was compelled to enter West Beirut to
prevent disorder; it preferred that the regular Lebanese Army enter
the Palestinian camps, where Palestinian terrorist groups were still
active, but the Lebanese Army refused.
Nonetheless, the Kahane Commission charged Prime Minister Menahem
Begin, IDF Chief of Staff Lt. General Rafael Eitan, and Defense
Minister Ariel Sharon with "indirect responsibility" for the deaths
of the Palestinians, claiming that they should have anticipated the
massacres, despite the lack of any intelligence warning. Still, its
report adds: "We do not say that the decision to have the Phalangists
enter the camps should under no circumstances have been made and was
totally unwarranted."
The Testimony of Eli Hobeika´s Security Chief, Robert Hatem
Robert Hatem, code-named "Cobra," was Eli Hobeika´s security chief in
the early 1980s. In 1999, he published an unauthorized biography of
Hobeika, From Israel to Damascus, that was banned in Lebanon. Hatem
brought to light new evidence about the role of Elie Hobeika in the
massacres of Sabra and Shatilla:
In the afternoon of September 16, 1982, before the Lebanese Forces
entered the Palestinian refugee camps, "Sharon had given strict
orders to Hobeika (who served as chief of intelligence for the
Lebanese Forces) to guard against any desperate move, should his men
run amuck." Yet contrary to this advice, Elie Hobeika gave his own
instructions to his men: "Total extermination...camps wiped out."
Elie Hobeika maintained a secret channel to Syria in 1982 and had
meetings the same year with Abdul Halim Khaddam, who had served as
Syria´s foreign minister. Hatem charges that Hobeika actually sought
to serve Syrian interests by conspiring in the murder of President
Bashir Gemayel and by his efforts "to tarnish Israel´s reputation
world-wide" through Sabra and Shatilla. The massacres, in fact,
created an entirely new strategic situation on the ground, forcing
Israel to withdraw from the Beirut area and accept the insertion of
international forces (Itamar Rabinovich, The War for Lebanon, 1970-
1983 [1984]).
Hobeika filed suit against the editor of the Arabic magazine al-
Hawadess for having published an interview with Robert Hatem. Hobeika
had another concern with Hatem´s revelations: For Hatem asserts that
Hobeika was responsible for the kidnapping and murder of four Iranian
diplomats in 1982. This charge would have made Hobeika a potential
target of the pro-Iranian Hizbullah.
Hobeika may have been interested in testifying in Belgium in order to
clear his name with Lebanon´s Christian community, which came to view
him as a Syrian agent. Yet there were those, like Syria, that might
have been concerned where Hobeika´s testimony could lead. It is
noteworthy that Hobeika was careful not to accuse Sharon. A Belgian
senator, Vincent Van Quickenborne, who visited Hobeika just before
his death, told Qatar´s satellite television network al-Jazira on
January 26, 2002, that Hobeika had specifically stated that he did
not plan to identify Sharon as being responsible for Sabra and
Shatilla (IMRA, January 27, 2002).
International Responses to the Sabra and Shatilla Case
Sabra and Shatilla was a horrible massacre, which certain determined
groups in the international community are trying to link directly to
Israel, despite the conclusions of the Kahane Commission. Notably,
the other attacks against innocent Lebanese civilians that punctuated
Lebanon´s civil war have been ignored. In just one example, on
January 21, 1976, the PLO was directly responsible for the slaughter
of 260 Christian residents in the Lebanese town of Damour. The
selective focus on Israel, which had no direct responsibility for
Sabra and Shatilla, indicates that this initiative in the Belgian
courts is motivated largely by political concerns rather than by
considerations of international justice.
The singling out of Israel appears to be particularly blatant when
other instances of more recent attacks on civilians in armed
conflicts are examined. In July 1995, a Bosnian Serb Army unit
slaughtered nearly 8,000 Bosnian Muslims in the UN "safe area" of
Srebrenica; a Dutch UN battalion, part of the UNPROFOR peacekeeping
force, failed to take minimal measures to protect the Bosnian
Muslims. UNPROFOR was under a French officer.
While the killings went on for weeks, no adequate response was
adopted by those with operational responsibility to immediately
terminate the attacks. Yet no European state (or the UN) faulted the
ministerial level in the Netherlands, France, or in UN headquarters
with respect to the Srebrenica case (Manfred
Gerstenfeld, "Srebrenica: The Dutch Sabra and Shatilla," Jerusalem
Viewpoints, No. 458, July 15, 2001). No state suggested a doctrine
of "indirect responsibility," as did Israel. Clearly, Israel held
itself to a much higher standard in 1982-83 than many other
international bodies have held themselves since. (www.jcpa.org. ©
Copyright 01/30/02)
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