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104. Report of the Commission of Inquiry into the events at the
refugee camps in Beirut, 8 February 1983.
The
Commission determined that the massacre at Sabra and Shatilla was
carried out by a Phalangist unit, acting on its own but its entry was
known to Israel. No Israeli was directly responsible for the events
which occurred in the camps.
But the Commission
asserted that Israel had indirect responsibility for the massacre
since the I.D.F. held the area, Mr. Begin was found responsible for
not exercising greater involvement and awareness in the matter of
introducing the Phalangists into the camps. Mr. Sharon was found
responsible for ignoring the danger of bloodshed and revenge when he
approved the entry of the Phalangists into the camps as well as not
taking appropriate measures to prevent bloodshed. Mr. Shamir erred by
not taking action after being alerted by communications Minister
Zippori. Chief of Staff Eitan did not give the appropriate orders to
prevent the massacre. The Commission recommended that the Defense
Minister resign, that the Director of Military Intelligence not
continue in his post and other senior officers be removed. Full text
follows:
Introduction
At
a meeting of the Cabinet on 28 September 1982, the Government of
Israel resolved to establish a commission of inquiry in accordance
with the Commissions of Inquiry Law of 1968. The Cabinet charged the
commission as follows:
"The matter which will be subjected to inquiry is: all the facts and
factors connected with the atrocity carried out by a unit of the
Lebanese Forces against the civilian population in the Shatilla and
Sabra camps."
In
the wake of this resolution, the President of the Supreme Court, by
virtue of the authority vested in him under Section 4 of the
aforementioned law, appointed a commission of inquiry comprised as
follows:
Yitzhak Kahan, President of the Supreme Court commission chairman;
Aharon Barak, Justice of the Supreme Court; Yona Efrat, Major General
(Res.).
The commission held 60 sessions, hearing 58 witnesses. As per the
commission's requests of the Cabinet Secretary, the Office of the
Minister of Defense, the General Staff of the Israel Defense Forces
(henceforth, the I.D.F.), the Ministry for Foreign Affairs, and other
public and governmental institutions, the commission was provided with
many documents, some of which were, in the course of the
deliberations, submitted to the commission as exhibits. The commission
decided, in accordance with section 13(A) of the law, that there was a
need to collect data necessary for its investigation. Appointed as
staff investigators were:
Ms. Dorit. Beinish, Deputy State Attorney, and Ms. Edna Arbel, Senior
Assistant to the District Attorney (Central District), who were
seconded to the commission by the Attorney General; and Assistant
Police Commander Alex Ish-Shalom, who was seconded to the commission
by the Inspector General of the Israel Police. Judge David Bartov was
appointed commission coordinator. The staff investigators collected,
by virtue of the authority vested in them under Sections 13(C), 180
statements from 163 witnesses. Before the commission began its
deliberations, it visited Beirut, but it was not allowed to enter the
area of the events. The commission also viewed television footage
filmed near the time of the events at the camps and their
surroundings.
The commission published notices to the public in the press and other
media, inviting all who wish to testify or submit a document or bring
any information to the commission's attention to submit to the
commission in writing details of the material he possessed or wished
to bring to the commission's attention. There was not much response to
these appeals. The commission made an effort to collect testimony also
from people who live outside the juridical boundaries of the State of
Israel; and all necessary steps were taken to bring witnesses from
outside of Israel, when this was possible. The commission's requests
in this matter were not always honored. For example, the "New York
Times" correspondent Mr Thomas Friedman, who published in the
aforementioned newspaper a famous article on what transpired during
the period under deliberation here, refused to appear before the
commission, claiming that this was contrary to his paper's editorial
policy. We did not receive a satisfactory answer as to why the paper's
publisher prevented its reporter from appearing before the commission
and thus helping it uncover all the important facts.
Some of the commission's hearings were held in open session, but most
of the sessions were in camera. In this matter we acted in accordance
with the instructions of Section 18(A) of the law, according to which
a commission of inquiry is required to deliberate in open session but
is entitled to deliberate in camera if it is convinced that "it is
necessary to do so in the interest of protecting the security of the
State... the foreign relations of the State..." and for other reasons
stipulated in that section. It became clear to the commission that
with regard to certain matters about which witnesses testified before
it, open hearings would be liable to affect adversely the nation's
security or foreign relations; and therefore it heard most of its
testimony in camera. It should be noted that during sessions held in
camera, witnesses also said things whose publication would not cause
any harm; however, because of the difficulty in separating those
things whose publication would be permissible from those whose
publication would be forbidden, it was imperative in a substantial
number of cases to hear the entire testimony in camera.
In
accordance, with Section 20(A) of the law, this report is being
published together with an appendix that will be called Appendix A. In
the event that we will need recourse in this report to testimony whose
publication would not be damaging to the nation's security or foreign
relations, we shall present it in a section of the report that will be
published. On the other hand, in accordance with Section 20(A) of the
law, a portion of this report, to be called Appendix B, will not be
published, since, in our opinion, non-publication of this material is
essential in the interest of protecting the nation's security or
foreign relations.
As
we have said, the commission's task, as stipulated by the Cabinet's
resolution, is "to investigate all the facts and factors connected
with the atrocity which was carried out by a unit of the Lebanese
Forces against the civilian population of the Shatilla and Sabra
camps." These acts were perpetrated between Thursday, 16 September
1982, and Saturday, 18 September 1982. The establishment of the facts
and the conclusions in this report relate only to the facts and
factors connected with the acts perpetrated in the aforementioned time
frame, and the commission did not deliberate or investigate matters
whose connection with the aforementioned acts is indirect or remote.
The commission refrained, therefore, from drawing conclusions with
regard to various issues connected with activities during the war that
took place in Lebanon from 6 June 1982 onward or with regard to policy
decisions taken by the Government before or during the war, unless
these activities or decisions were directly related to the events that
are the subject of this investigation. Descriptions of facts presented
in this report that deviate from the framework of the commission's
authority (as defined above) have been cited only as background
material, in order to better understand and illustrate the chain of
events.
In
one area we have found it necessary to deviate somewhat from the
stipulation of the Cabinet's resolution, which represents the
commission's terms of reference. The resolution speaks of atrocities
carried out by "a unit of the Lebanese Forces." The expression
"Lebanese Forces" refers to an armed force known by the name
"Phalangists" or "Ketaib" (henceforth, Phalangists). It is our opinion
that we would not be properly fulfilling our task if we did not look
into the question of whether the atrocities spoken of in the Cabinet's
resolution were indeed perpetrated by the Phalangists, and this
question will indeed be treated in the course of this report.
The commission's deliberations can be divided into two stages. In the
first stage, the commission heard witnesses who had been summoned by
it, as well as witnesses who had expressed the desire to appear before
it. The commission asked questions of these witnesses, and they were
given the opportunity of bringing before the commission everything
known to them of the matters that constitute the subject of the
investigation. When this stage terminated, the commission issued a
resolution in accordance with Section 15(A) of the aforementioned law,
concerning the harm that might be caused certain people as a result of
the investigation or its results; this was done in order to enable
these people to study the material, to appear before the commission
and to testify (for the text of the resolution, see section I of
appendix A). In accordance with this resolution, the chairman of the
commission sent notices to nine people; the notices detailed how each
one of them might be harmed. The material in the commission's
possession was placed at the disposal of those receiving the notices
and of the attorneys appointed to represent them. During the second
stage of the deliberations, we heard witnesses who had been summoned
at the request of the lawyers, and thus some of the witnesses who had
testified during the first stage were cross-examined.
Afterwards, written summations were submitted, and the opportunity to
supplement these summations by presenting oral arguments was given. We
should already note that involving the lawyers in the commission's
deliberations did not in any way make the commission's work more
difficult; it even helped us in fulfilling our task. The lawyers who
appeared before us were able to clarify properly, though not at
excessive length, the various points that were the subject of
controversy; and thus they rendered valuable assistance to the
commission's task, without in any way prejudicing their professional
obligation to properly represent and defend their clients.
When we resolved to issue, in accordance with Section 15(A) of the
law, notices about harm to the nine people, we were not oblivious to
the fact that, during the course of the investigation, facts were
uncovered that could be the prima facie basis for results that might
cause harm to other persons as well. Our consideration in limiting the
notices about possible harm to only nine persons was based on [the
conception] that it is our duty, as a public judicial commission
dealing with an extremely important issue - one which had raised a
furor among the general public in Israel and other nations - to
deliberate and reach findings and conclusions with regard to the major
and important things connected with the
aforementioned events, and to the question of the responsibility of
those persons whose decisions and actions could have decisively
influenced the course of events. We felt that with regard to the other
people who were involved in one way or another in the events we are
investigating, but whose role was secondary, it would be better that
the clarification or investigation, if deemed necessary, be carried
out in another manner, and not before this commission, viz., before
the military authorities, in accordance with the relevant stipulations
of the military legal code and other legislation. We chose this path
so that the matters under investigation would not expand and become
overly-complicated and so that we could complete our task in not too
long a time.
In
the course of the investigation, not a few contradictions came out
regarding various facts about which we had heard testimony. In those
cases where the contradictions referred to facts important for
establishing findings and drawing subsequent conclusions, we shall
decide between the variant versions in accordance with the usual
criteria in judicial and quasi-judicial tribunals. Our procedures are
not those of a criminal court; and therefore the criterion of criminal
courts that stipulates that in order to convict someone his guilt must
be proven beyond a reasonable doubt, does not apply in this case.
Nevertheless, since we are aware that our findings and conclusions are
liable to be of significant influence from a social and ethical
standpoint, and to harm also in other ways persons involved in our
deliberations, no finding of significant harm was established with
regard to any one of those to whom notices were sent, unless
convincing evidence on which to base such a finding was found, and we
shall not be satisfied with evidence that leaves room for real doubt.
We shall not pretend to find a solution to all the contradictions in
testimony. In many instances, these contradictions relate to the
content of conversations that took place between various people
without the presence of witnesses, or when the witnesses' attention
was not focused on the content of the conversation, and there are no
exact notes on these conversations. In such cases, it is only natural
that there exist several versions with regard to what was said, and
the differences between them do not necessarily derive from a desire
to conceal the truth but rather are sometimes the natural result of a
failure of the human memory. We do not see the need to rule about
those contradictions which surround unimportant details that do not
influence the decision about points in controversy.
We
shall conclude this part of the report by expressing appreciation and
gratitude to all those who helped us in fulfilling our task. It is
only fitting that we note that all the institutions and various
functionaries in the Government, the I.D.F., and other authorities
whose help we needed rendered us all the necessary assistance and
placed at our disposal all the relevant material, without reservation.
Our special thanks go to the coordinator of the commission, Judge
David Bartov, who showed great capability in handling the
administrative aspects of the commission's work and without whose
enterprise and devoted and efficient work it is very doubtful whether
we would have succeeded in properly carrying out our task. Our
appreciation and gratitude go also to the staff investigators, Dorit
Beinish, Edna Arbel and Alex Ish-Shalom, who, by virtue of their
expertise, initiative and dedication, succeeded in placing at our
disposal much material which served as the basis of the commission's
deliberations and findings. Similarly, our thanks go to the entire
staff of commission employees, whose loyalty and faithfulness enabled
us to carry out and complete our task.
A Description of the
Events
The Period Before the
Events in Beirut
In
1975, civil war broke out in Lebanon. This war began with clashes in
Sidon between the Christians and Palestinian terrorists and
subsequently widened in a manner to encompass many diverse armed
forces - under the auspices of ethnic groups, political parties, and
various organizations - that were active in Lebanon. In its early
stages, this war was waged primarily between the Christian
organizations on the one hand, and Palestinian terrorists, Lebanese
leftist organizations, and Muslim and Druze organizations of various
factions on the other. In the course of the civil war, Syrian army
forces entered Lebanon and took part in the war, for a certain period
of time on the side of the Christian forces, and subsequently on the
side of the terrorists and the Lebanese leftist organizations. During
the early years of the war, massacres on a large scale were
perpetrated by the fighting forces against the civilian population.
The Christian city of Damour was captured and destroyed by Palestinian
terrorists in January 1976. The Christian residents fled the city, and
the conquering forces carried out acts of slaughter that cost the
lives of many Christians. In August 1976, the Christian forces
captured the Tel Zaatar refugee camp in Beirut, where Palestinian
terrorists had dug in, and thousands of Palestinian refugees were
massacred. Each massacre brought in its wake acts of revenge of a
similar nature. The number of victims of the civil war has been
estimated at close to 100,000 killed, including a large number of
civilians, among them women and children.
The Palestinians' armed forces organized and entrenched themselves in
camps inhabited by refugees who had arrived in Lebanon in various
waves, beginning in 1948. There are various estimates as to the number
of Palestinian refugees who were living in Lebanon in 1982. According
to the figures of U.N.R.W.A. (the United Nations Relief and Works
Agency), the Palestinian refugees numbered approximately 270,000. On
the other hand, the leaders of the Christian armed forces estimated
the number of Palestinian refugees at approximately 500,000 or more.
This estimate is most probably exaggerated, and the more realistic
estimate is the one that puts the number of Palestinian refugees at
approximately 300,000 - and in any case, not more than 400,000.
The main Christian armed force that took part in the civil war
consisted mainly of Maronite Christians, though a small number of
Shiites joined them. This force comprised several armed Christian
organizations, the largest among them being the organizations under
the leadership of the Chamoun family and of the Jemayel family. The
head of the Jemayel family, Mr. Pierre Jemayel, founded the Phalangist
organization; and the leader of this organization in recent years was
Pierre's son, Bashir Jemayel. In the course of time, the Phalangist
organization became the central element in the Christian forces; in
1982, the Phalangists ruled the Christian armed forces. Even though
the "Lebanese Forces" formally comprised several Christian
organizations, the dominant and primary force in this organization, at
the time under our scrutiny, was the Phalangists, led by the Jemayel
family.
When the war broke out in Lebanon in June 1982, the Phalangist force
included a nucleus of approximately 2,000 full-time recruited
soldiers. In addition, the Phalangists had a reserve armed force -
that is, men who served part-time in their free hours or when they
were called up for special service. When fully mobilized, the number
of Phalangist soldiers reached 5,000. Similarly, the Phalangists had
militias in the villages. There were no ranks in this military force,
but it was organized along military lines, with Bashir Jemayel as the
military and political leader who enjoyed unimpeachable authority. The
Phalangists had a general staff comprised of several commanders. At
the head of this general staff was a commander named Fadi Frem; at the
head of the Phalangists' intelligence division was a commander by the
name of Elie Hobeika.
The link between the Christian forces and the State of Israel was
formed shortly after the start of the civil war. In the course of
time, this link grew stronger, from both political and military
standpoints. The Christian forces were promised that if their
existence were to become endangered, Israel would would come to their
aid. Israel extended significant aid to the Christian armed forces,
supplying arms, uniforms, etc., and also training and instruction,
Over the course of time, a considerable number of meetings were held
between leaders of the Phalangists and representatives of the
Government of Israel and the I.D.F. In the course of these meeting,
the ties between the leaders of the two sides grew stronger. The
Institute for Intelligence and Special Assignments (henceforth, the
Mossad) was made responsible for the link with the Phalangists; and
representatives of the Mossad maintained - at various times, and in
various ways - a rather close connection with the Phalangist
leadership. In the course of these meetings, the Phalangist leaders
brought up various plans for strengthening the Christian forces'
position, as well as various ways of bringing about the end of the
civil war in Lebanon and restoring the independence of that nation,
while [simultaneously] buttressing the status of the Phalangists and
those allied with them in a regime that would be established in
Lebanon. Israel's representatives expressed various reservations with
regard to these plans and Israel's involvement in their realization.
A
separate armed force is the military force in South Lebanon - the
"Army of Free Lebanon" under the command of Major Haddad. This force
comprises several hundred full-time soldiers. In addition, there is in
South Lebanon a National Guard, which, under the command of local
officers, does guard duty in the villages. Relations between the
Phalangists and Haddad's men are not particularly close, for various
reasons, and there were points of tension between these two forces. In
1982, soldiers of both Major Haddad and the Phalangists wore uniforms
provided by Israel - and similar to those worn by the I.D.F. The
Phalangists' uniforms bore an emblem consisting of the inscription
"Ketaib Lubnaniyeh" and the drawing of the cedar, embroidered over the
shirt pocket. Major Haddad's soldiers had an emblem on the epaulet
inscribed with the words "Army of Free Lebanon" in Arabic and the
drawing of a cedar. During the war, Haddad's force advanced and
reached the Awali River. Pursuant to I.D.F. orders, Haddad's army did
not proceed north of the Awali River.
The subject of the Palestinian population in Lebanon, from among whom
the terrorist organizations sprang up and in the midst of whom their
military infrastructure was entrenched, came up more than once in
meetings between phalangist leaders and Israeli representatives. The
position of the Phalangist leaders, as reflected in various
pronouncements of these leaders, was, in general, that no unified and
independent Lebanese state could be established without a solution
being found to the problem of the Palestinian refugees, who, according
to the Phalangists' estimates, numbered half a million people. In the
opinion of the Phalangists, that number of refugees, for the most part
Muslims, endangered [both] the demographic balance between the
Christians and Muslims in Lebanon and (from other standpoints as well)
the stability of the State of Lebanon and the status of the Christians
in that country. Therefore, the Phalangist leaders proposed removing a
large portion of the Palestinian refugees from Lebanese soil, whether
by methods of persuasion or other means of pressure. They did not
conceal their opinion that it would be necessary to resort to acts of
violence in order to cause the exodus of many Palestinian refugees
from Lebanon.
As
we have said, the Mossad was the organization that actually handled
the relations between the Phalangists and Israel, and its
representatives maintained close contacts with the Phalangist
leadership. In addition, the Intelligence branch of the I.D.F.
(henceforth Military Intelligence) participated, albeit in a more
limited capacity, in the contacts with the Phalangists; and it, by
virtue of its job, was to issue a not insignificant number of
evaluation papers on the Phalangists, their leaders, their aims, their
fighting ability, etc. The division of labor between the Mossad and
Military Intelligence with regard to the Phalangists, was spelled out
in a document (exhibit 189). While this division of duties left room
for misunderstandings and also duplication in various areas, there is
no room for doubt that both the Mossad and Military Intelligence
specifically dealt with drawing up evaluations on the Phalangists, and
each one of them was obligated to bring these evaluations to the
attention of all interested parties. Neither the head of the Mossad
nor the director of Military Intelligence disagreed with this in his
testimony before us.
From the documents submitted to us and the testimony we heard, it
emerges that there were differences of opinion between the Mossad and
Military Intelligence with regard to the relations with the
Phalangists. The Mossad, to a not inconsiderable extent under the
influence of constant and close contact with the Phalangist elite,
felt positively about strengthening relations with that organization,
though not ignoring its faults and weaknesses. This approach of the
Mossad came out clearly in the testimony we heard from the person who
was in charge of the Mossad's contacts with the Phalangists. The head
of the Mossad, in his testimony before us on 27.12.82, said, inter
alia (p. 1437), that "the Mossad tried, to the best of its ability,
throughout this period, to present and approach the subject as
objectively as possible; but since it was in charge of the contacts, I
accept as an assumption that subjective, and not only objective,
relations also emerged. I must accept that in contacts, when you talk
to people, relationships are formed." In contrast, Military
Intelligence was to emphasize in its evaluations the danger in the
link with the Phalangists, primarily because of this organization's
lack of reliability, its military weakness, and other reasons we need
not specify here. A characteristic expression of the difference in
approach between these two agencies, whose responsibility it was to
provide evaluations on the Phalangists and the desirability of
relations with them, can be found in the exchange of documents when
one of the intelligence officers (henceforth intelligence officer A,
whose full name appears in the list of names in section I of Appendix
B) who served as a liaison officer on behalf of Military Intelligence
in the Mossad's representation at Phalangist headquarters at the
beginning of the war submitted an assessment (exhibit 171) on
cooperation with the Phalangists. This Military Intelligence officer
rendered a negative evaluation, from Israel's standpoint, of the
Phalangists' policy during the war and their aims for the future. This
criticism was vigorously rejected by the Mossad (exhibit 172).
The "Peace for the Galilee" war (henceforth the war) began on 6.6.82
On 12-14 June, J.D.F. forces took over the suburbs of Beirut and
linked up with the Christian forces who controlled East Beirut. On 25
June the encirclement of West Beirut was completed and I.D.F. forces
were in control of the Beirut-Damascus road. There followed a period
of approximately one and a half months of negotiations on the
evacuation of the terrorists and the Syrian forces from West Beirut,
and during this time various targets in West Beirut were occasionally
shelled and bombed by the I.D.F.'s, Air Force and artillery. On
19.8.82 the negotiations on the evacuation of the terrorists and the
Syrian forces from West Beirut were completed On 23.8.82 Bashir
Jemayel was elected president of Lebanon. His term of office was
supposed to begin on 23 September 1982.
On
21-26 August, a multi-national force arrived in Beirut, and the
evacuation of the terrorists and the Syrian forces began. The
evacuation was completed on I September; however, according to
information from various sources, the terrorists did not fulfill their
obligation to evacuate all their forces from West Beirut and hand
their weapons over to the Lebanese army but left in West Beirut,
according to various estimates, approximately 2,000 fighters, as well
as many arms caches, some of which were handed over by the terrorists
to the Lebanese leftist militia "Mourabitoun." This militia numbered
approximately 7,000 men in west Beirut, and it cooperated with the
terrorists. After the evacuation was completed, the multi-national
force left Lebanon (10- 12 September 1982; cf. section 2 of Appendix A
for dates of stages of the war).
At
the beginning of the war, the Chief of Staff [Lt.-Gen. Rafael Eitan]
told the Phalangists that they should refrain from all fighting. This
order was issued because of the fear that if the Phalangists' force
got into trouble while fighting, the I.D.F. would be forced to come to
its aid, thereby disrupting the I.D.F.'s plan of action. Even after
I.D.F. forces reached the Damour-Shouf line, the I.D.F.'s orders were
that the Phalangists would not participate in fighting (testimony of
the Chief of Staff, pp. 195-6). After I.D.F. forces reached the area
under Christian control, the Phalangist commanders suggested that a
company of theirs of approximately 300 men set up a training base at a
place called Beit Ad-Din, a site of historical importance in Lebanon.
The Chief of Staff agreed to this, but made his agreement conditional
on the Phalangist forces' exercising restraint and discipline, as the
area was Druze. At first, this condition was honored; afterwards,
there were outbursts of hostilities between the Phalangists and the
Druze in Beit Ad Din. The Druze committed some murders, and the
Phalangists took revenge; a small I.D.F. force was stationed in the
area in order to prevent such actions. In the early stages of the war
there were also some acts of revenge and looting on the part of the
Christians in Sidon; these were stopped by the I.D.F.
When I.D.F. forces were fighting in the suburbs of Beirut and along
the Beirut-Damascus road, the Phalangists were asked to cooperate with
the I.D.F.'s actions by identifying terrorists, a task at which the
Phalangists' expertise was greater than that of the Israeli security
forces. During these actions there were generally no acts of vengeance
or violence against the Palestinian civilian population by the
Phalangists who were operating with the I.D.F. Another action of the
Phalangists' military force was the capture of the technical college
in Reihan, a large building in Beirut not located in a built-up area.
The Phalangists captured this place from the armed Shiite organization
"Amal." One day after the place was taken, the Phalangists turned the
building over to the I.D.F. and left the site (testimony of the Chief
of Staff, pp. 198-200).
The fighting actions of the Phalangists during that time were few, and
in effect the fighting was all done by I.D.F. forces alone. This state
of affairs aroused criticism and negative reactions from the Israeli
public, and among I.D.F. soldiers as well. This dissatisfaction was
expressed in various ways; and in the political echelon, as well as in
the media, there was amazement that the Phalangists were not
participating in the fighting, even though the war was their battle as
well, and it was only right that they should be taking part in it. The
feeling among the Israeli public was that the I.D.F. was "pulling the
chestnuts out of the fire" for the Phalangists. As the number of
I.D.F. casualties mounted, public pressure for the Phalangists to
participate in real fighting increased. The plan formulated in
mid-June 1982, when it was still uncertain whether the terrorists
would agree to leave West Beirut, was that the Christian forces would
fight to take control of West Beirut; the I.D.F. would not take part
in that operation; and only in the event that it became necessary
would the I.D.F. help out the Phalangists with long-range artillery
fire. This plan was discussed in the Cabinet meeting of 15.6.82, where
it was proposed by the Prime Minister, and his proposal was adopted by
the Cabinet, namely, that I.D.F. forces would not enter West Beirut,
and this job was to be done by other forces (meaning the Phalangists)
with help they would be given by the I.D.F. (transcript of the Cabinet
meeting of 15.6.82, exhibit 53). Even after this resolution, no real
fighting was done by the Phalangists for the purpose of extending
control over West Beirut; and, as we have said, eventually the
terrorists were evacuated as the result of a political agreement,
after the I.D.F. had shelled various targets in West Beirut.
In
all the testimony we have heard, there has been unanimity regarding
[the fact] that the battle ethics of the Phalangists, from the
standpoint of their attitude to non-combatants, differ greatly from
those of the I.D.F. It has already been noted above that in the course
of the civil war in Lebanon, many massacres had been perpetrated by
the various forces that had taken part in the fighting. When the war
began in June 1982, the prevailing opinion among the Mossad agents who
had maintained contacts with the Phalangist leadership was that the
atrocities and massacres were a thing of the past, and that the
Phalangist forces had reached a stage of political and organizational
maturity that would ensure that such actions would not repeat
themselves. This opinion was based both on personal impressions of the
character of the Phalangist leadership, as well as on the recognition
that the interest of the Phalangist elite to eventually rule an
independent Lebanese nation, half or more of whose population is
Muslim and would be interested in maintaining relations with the Arab
world, requires moderations of actions against Palestinians and
restraint as to modes of operation. At the same time, there were
various facts that were not compatible with this outlook. During the
meetings that the heads of the Mossad held with Bashir Jemayel, they
heard things from him that left no room for doubt that the intention
of this Phalangist leader was to eliminate the Palestinian problem in
Lebanon when he came to power - even if that meant resorting to
aberrant methods against the Palestinians in Lebanon (testimony on
pps. 16, 17, and 168 of the transcripts; exhibit 85 of 30 June 1982,
clause 14 - section 2 of Appendix B). Similar remarks were heard from
other Phalangist leaders. Furthermore, certain actions of the
Phalangists during the war indicated that there had been no
fundamental change in their attitude toward different segments of the
Lebanese population, such as Druze and Palestinians, whom the
Phalangists considered enemies. There were reports of Phalangist
massacres of women and children in Druze villages, as well as the
liquidation of Palestinians carried out by the intelligence unit of
Elie Hobeika (testimony no. 105 of intelligence officer B before the
staff investigators, part of which appears in section 3 of Appendix B;
also, a document which mentions the Phalangist attitude toward
terrorists they had taken prisoner - section 4 of Appendix B, exhibit
39). These reports reinforced the feeling among certain people - and
especially among experienced intelligence officers - that in the event
that the Phalangists had an opportunity to massacre Palestinians, they
would take advantage of it.
The Assassination of
Bashir Gemayel and the I.D.F.'s entry into West Beirut
On
Tuesday afternoon, 14.9.82, a large bomb exploded in a building in
Ashrafiyeh, Beirut, where Bashir Jemayel was [meeting] with a group of
commanders and other Phalangists. For the first few hours after the
explosion, it was not clear what had happened to Bashir, and there
were rumors that he had only been slightly wounded. Word of the
attempt on his life reached the Prime Minister, the Defense Minister,
the Chief of Staff, the director of Military Intelligence [Major
General Yehoshua Saguy] and others in the early hours of the evening.
During the evening, before it became clear what had befallen Bashir,
the Defense Minister spoke with the Chief of Staff, the director of
Military Intelligence, the head of the Mossad, and the head of the
General Security Services about possible developments. He also spoke a
number of times with the Prime Minister. Moreover, there were a number
of conversations that evening between the Prime Minister and the Chief
of Staff. Word of Bashir's death reached Israel at about 11.00 p.m.,
and it was then that the decision was taken in conversations between
the Prime Minister and the Minister of Defense and between the Prime
Minister and the Chief of Staff - that the I.D.F. would enter West
Beirut. In one of the consultations between the Minister of Defense
and the Chief of Staff, there was mention of including the Phalangists
in the entry into West Beirut. The question of including the
Phalangists was not mentioned at that stage in conversations with the
Prime Minister.
Once the decision was made to have the I.D.F. enter West Beirut, the
appropriate operational orders were issued. Order Number I was issued
at 12.20 a.m. on the night between 14.9.82 and 15.9.82, Orders Number
2 and 3 were issued on Wednesday, 15.9.82, and Order Number 4 was
issued that same day at 2.00 p.m.; Order Number 5 was issued at 3.00
a.m. on 16.9.82; and Order number 6 was issued on the morning of
16.9.82. The first five orders said nothing about entering the refugee
camps, and only in Order Number 6 were the following things stated
(clause 2, document no. 6, exhibit 14):
"The refugee camps are not to be entered. Searching and mopping up the
camps will be done by the Phalangists/ Lebanese Army."
Clause 7 of the same order also states that the Lebanese Army "is
entitled to enter any place in Beirut, according to its request."
Execution of the I.D.F.'s entry into West Beirut began during the
early morning hours of 15.9.82.
On
the night between 14.9.82 and 15.9.82, the Chief of Staff flew to
Beirut with a number of people and met there with the G.O.C. Northern
Command [Major General Amir Drori] and with the commander of the
division (henceforth the division). Afterwards, the Chief of Staff,
together with the people accompanying him, went to the Phalangists'
headquarters, where, according to his testimony (p. 210), he ordered
the Phalangist commanders to effect a general mobilization of all
their forces, impose a general curfew on all the areas under their
control, and be ready to take part in the fighting. The response of
the Phalangist commanders who took part in that meeting was that they
needed 24 hours to organize. The Chief of Staff requested that a
Phalangist liaison officer come to the place where the division's
forward command post was located (henceforth forward command post)
under the command of Brigadier-General Amos Yaron. At that meeting,
the Phalangist commanders were told by the Chief of Staff that the
I.D.F. would not enter the refugee camps in West Beirut but that the
fighting this entails would be undertaken by the Phalangists (Chief of
Staff's testimony, p. 211). The Chief of Staff testified that the
entry of the Phalangists into the refugee camps was agreed upon
between the Minister of Defense and himself at 8.30 p.m. on the
previous evening. The camps in question were Sabra and Shatilla. After
the meeting in the Phalangists' camps, the Chief of Staff went to the
forward command post.
The forward command post was located on the roof of a five-storey
building about 200 meters southwest of the Shatilla camp. The borders
of the two camps were not defined exactly. The Sabra camp extended
over an area of some 300 x 200 meters and Shatilla over an area of
about 500 x 500 meters (testimony of the deputy assistant to the
director of Military Intelligence, p. 29). The two camps were
essentially residential neighborhoods containing, in the area entered
by the Phalangists, as will be stated below, low permanent structures
along narrow alleys and streets. From the roof of the forward command
post it was possible to see the area of the camps generally but - as
all the witnesses who visited the roof of the command post stated, and
these were a good number of witnesses whose word we consider reliable
- it was impossible to see what was happening within the alleys in the
camp from the roof of the command post, not even with the aid of the
20 x 120 binoculars that were on the command post roof. Appended to
this report are an aerial photograph and map of the area of the camps,
as well as a general map of Beirut (sections 3, 4, and 5 of Appendix
A).
It
was not possible to obtain exact details on the civilian population in
the refugee camps in Beirut. An estimate of the number of refugees in
the four refugee camps in west Beirut (Burj el-Barajneh, Fakahni,
Sabra and Shatilla) is about 85,000 people. The war led to the flight
of the population, but when the fighting subsided, a movement back to
the camps began. According to an inexact extimate, in mid-September
1982 there were about 56,000 people in the Sabra camp (protocol, p.
29), but there is no assurance that this number reflects reality.
The Chief of Staff was in the forward command post from the early
morning hours of Wednesday, 15.9.82. The I.D.F. began to enter west
Beirut shortly after 6:00 a.m. During the first hours of the I.D.F.
entry, there was not armed resistance to the I.D.F. forces, evidently
because the armed forces that were in West Beirut were taken by
surprise. Within a few hours, the I.D.F. forces encountered fire from
armed forces that remained in a number of places in west Beirut, and
combat operations began. The resistance caused delays in the I.D.F.'s
taking over a number of points in the city and caused a change in the
route of advance. In the course of this fighting three I.D.F. soldiers
were killed and more than 100 were wounded. Heavy fire coming out of
Shatilla was directed at one I.D.F. battalion (henceforth the
battalion) advancing east of Shatilla. One of the battalion's soldiers
was killed, 20 were injured, and the advance of the battalion in this
direction was halted. Throughout Wednesday and to a lesser degree on
Thursday and Friday (16-17.9.82), R.P.G. and light-weapons fire from
the Sabra and Shatilla camps was directed at the forward command post
and the battalion's forces nearby, and fire was returned by the I.D.F.
forces.
On
Wednesday, 15.9.82, the Minister of Defense arrived at the forward
command post between 8:00 and 9:00 a.m. He met with the Chief of Staff
there, and the latter reported on what had been agreed upon with the
Phalangists, namely, a general mobilization, curfew, and the entry of
the Phalangists into the camps. The Minister of Defense approved this
agreement. From the roof of the command post, the Minister of Defense
phoned the Prime Minister and informed him that there was no
resistance in Beirut and that all the operations were going along
well.
During the aforementioned meeting between the Minister of Defense and
the Chief of Staff, present on the roof of the forward command post
were the Defense Minister's aide, Mr. Avi Dudai; the director of
Military Intelligence, who came to this meeting together with the
Minister of Defense; representative A of the Mossad (his full name
appears in the list of names, section 1, Appendix B); Major-General
Drori; Brigadier-General Yaron; Intelligence officer B; the head of
the General Security Services; Deputy Chief of Staff Major-General
Moshe Levi; and other I.D.F. officers who were accompanying the
Minister of Defense. Dudai recorded in his notebook what was said and
agreed upon at that meeting. According to Dudais testimony, he later
copied these notes into another notebook, pages of which were
presented before us (exhibit 103). These notes stated, inter alia,
that the Phalangists were to be sent into the camps. The Minister of
Defense spoke with the Prime Minister twice from the roof of the
command post. According to the record of these conversations (exhibits
100 and 101), in one of them the wording of the I.D.F. Spokesman's
announcement was agreed upon as follows:
"Following the murder of President-elect Bashir Jemayel, I.D.F. forces
entered West Beirut tonight to prevent possible grave occurrences and
to ensure quiet.
"The entry of the I.D.F. forces was executed without resistance."
From the forward command post the Minsiter of Defense went to the
Phalangist headquarters. A record was made of this meeting, which was
attended by a number of Phalangist commanders as well as the Minister
of Defense, the director of Military Intelligence, the head of the
General Security Services and representatives of the Mossad (exhibit
79). At that meeting, the Minister of Defense stated, inter alia, that
the I.D.F. would take over focal points and junctions in West Beirut,
but that the Phalangist army would also have to enter West Beirut
after the I.D.F. and that the Phalangist commanders should maintain
contact with Major-General Drori, G.O.C. Northern Command, regarding
the modes of operation. A record of this meeting was made by
Intelligence officer B (exhibit 28). From there the Minister of
Defense went to Bikfaya, to the Jemayel family home, to pay a
condolence call.
From the meeting with the Jemayel family in Bikfaya, the Minister of
Defense went to the airport, and on the way he met with Major-General
Drori at a gas station. This meeting took place in the presence of a
number of people, including the director of Military Intelligence, the
head of the General Security Services, Mr. Duda'i, and the bureau
chief of the director of Military Intelligence, Lieutenant-Colonel
Hevroni. The situation of the forces was discussed at this meeting,
and Major-General Drori reported on the course of events during the
I.D.F.'s entry into West Beirut. From there the Minister of Defense
went on to the airport and met there with the Chief of Staff and the
Deputy Chief of Staff at about 2:00 p.m., after which the Minister of
Defense returned to Israel.
That same day, 15.9.82, while the Minister of Defense was in Beirut, a
meeting took place at 11:30 a.m. in the Prime Minister's Office
between the Prime minister and others from the American embassy in
Israel. During that meeting (protocol of the meeting, exhibit 120),
the Prime Minister informed Mr. Draper that I. D.F. forces had entered
West Beirut beginning in the morning hours, that there were no real
clashes, that the I.D.F. action was undertaken in order to prevent
certain possible events, and that we were concerned that there might
be bloodshed even during the night. The Prime Minister also said that
the Phalangists were behaving properly; their commander had not been
injured in the assassination and was in control of his forces; he is a
good man and we trust him not to cause any clashes, but there is no
assurance regarding other forces. He added that the primary immediate
task was to preserve quiet, for as long as quiet is maintained it will
be possible to talk; otherwise there might have been pogroms, and the
calm was preserved for the time being (exhibit 120).
At
4:00 p.m. on Wednesday, 15.9.82, a briefing took place at the office
of the Deputy Chief of Staff with the participation of the I.D.F.
branch heads, including the assistant for research to the director of
Military Intelligence. The meeting began with a review by the
assistant for research to the director of Military Intelligence of
possible political developments in Lebanon following the death of
Bashir Jemayel. He stated, inter alia (page 4 of the transcript
of the discussion, exhibit 130), that the I.D.F.'s entry into West
Beirut was perceived as vital not only by the Christians but also by
the Muslims, who regarded the I.D.F. as the only factor that could
prevent bloodshed in the area and protect the Sunni Muslims from the
Phalangists. The Intelligence officer also stated that according to
what was known to Military Intelligence, the attack on Bashir was
carried out by the Mourabitoun, though that was not certain. During
the meeting, the head of Operations Department announced that the
Phalangists "are encouraging entry into the camps" (p. 7 of exhibit
130). The Deputy Chief of Staff reported his impressions of the
meeting at Phalangist headquarters in Beirut that day and said that
the intention was to send the Phalangists into the refugee camps and
afterwards perhaps into the city as well. He added that this "might
create an uproar," because the armed forces in West Beirut that were
then quiet might stir up a commotion upon learning that Phalangists
are coming in behind the I.D.F. (page 11, exhibit 130).
At
6:00 p.m. the Minister of Defense spoke with the Prime Minister from
his home and reported (exhibit 99) that by evening the I.D.F. would be
in all the places; that he had conveyed the Prime Minister's words to
Pierre Jemayel; and that "everything is in order" and the decision
made on the previous night to send the I.D.F. into Beirut had been
most important and [indeed] should not have been delayed.
The Chief of Staff remained at the forward command post in Beirut and
followed the development of the I.D.F. actions from there. On that day
the Phalangist officers did not arrive at the forward command post to
coordinate operations, but Major-General Drori met with them in the
evening and told them generally that their entry into the camps would
be from the direction of Shatilla. Major-General Drori, who was not at
ease with the plan to send the Phalangists into the camps, made an
effort to persuade the commanders of the Lebanese Army that their
forces should enter the camps and that they should prevail upon the
Prime Minister of Lebanon to agree to this move. The reply of the
Lebanese Army at the time was negative.
In
the early morning hours of Thursday, 16.9.82, the Chief of Staff left
the forward command post and returned to Tel Aviv. That same morning,
in the wake of political pressure, an order was issued by the Minister
of Defense to halt the I.D.F.'s combat operations; but after a short
time the Minister of Defense rescinded the order. At 10:00 a.m. the
Minister of Defense held a consultation in his office with the Chief
of Staff; the director of Military Intelligence, Brigadier-General Y.
Saguy; Lieutenant-Colonel Zecharin, the Chief of Staffs bureau chief;
and Mr. Dudai (exhibit 27 is a record of what was said at that
meeting). The meeting was opened by the Chief of Staff, who announced
that "the whole city is in our hands, complete quiet prevails now, the
camps are closed and surrounded; the Phalangists are to go in at
11:00-12:00. Yesterday we spoke to them... The situation now is that
the entire city is in our hands, the camps are all closed." Later on
in his statement, while pointing to a map, the Chief of Staff stated
that the areas marked on the map were in the hands of the 1. D. F. and
that the Fakahani, Sabra, and Shatilla camps were surrounded. He also
said that if the Phalangists came to a coordinating session and wanted
to go in, it was agreed with them that they would go in and that the
Lebanese Army could also enter the city wherever it chose. At this
discussion, the Minister of Defense spoke of the heavy American
pressure to have the I.D.F. leave West Beirut and of the political
pressure from other sources. In the course of the meeting, the Chief
of Staff repeated a number of times that at that moment everything was
quiet in West Beirut. As for going into the camps, the Minister of
Defense stated that he would send the Phalangists into the refugee
camps (p. 5, exhibit 27). At the time of the consultation, the
Minister of Defense informed the Prime Minister by phone that "the
fighting has ended. The refugee camps are surrounded. The firing has
stopped. We have not suffered any more casualties. Everything is calm
and quiet. Sitting opposite me is the chief of Staff, who has just
come from there. All the key points are in our hands. Everything's
over. I am bringing the Chief of Staff to the Cabinet meeting. That's
the situation as of now..." After this conversation, the Chief of
Staff reported on the contacts during the night of 14.9.82 with the
members of the Mourabitoun, in which the members of this militia said
that they were unable to hide, that they were Lebanese, and that they
would undoubtedly all be killed by the Phalangists, whether
immediately or some time later. The Chief of Staff added that "there's
such a dual kind of situation that they're confused. They're seething
with a feeling of revenge, and there might have been rivers of blood
there. We won't go into the refugee camps" (p. 7, exhibit 27). As
stated, participating in this consultation was the director of
Military Intelligence, who in the course of the discussion stated a
number of things that appear in the aforementioned record.
The commanders of the Phalangists arrived for their first coordinating
session regarding the entry of their forces into the camps at about
11:00 a.m. on Thursday, 16.9.82, and met with Major-General Drori at
the headquarters of one of the divisions. It was agreed at that
meeting that they would enter the camps and coordinate this action
with Brigadier-General Yaron, commander of the division. This
coordination between Brigadier-General Yaron and the Phalangist
commanders would take place on Thursday afternoon at the forward
command post. It was likewise agreed at that meeting that a company of
150 fighters from the Phalangist force would enter the camps and that
they would do so from south to north and from west to east.
Brigadier-General Yaron spoke with the Phalangists about the places
where the terrorists were located in the camps and also warned them
not to harm the civilian population. He had mentioned that, he stated,
because he knew that the Phalangists' norms of conduct are not like
those of the I.D.F. and he had had arguments with the Phalangists over
this issue in the past, Brigadier-General Yaron set up lookout posts
on the roof of the forward command post and on a nearby roof even
though he knew that it was impossible to see very much of what was
going on in the camps from these lookouts. An order was also issued
regarding an additional precautionary measure whose purpose was to
ascertain the actions of the Phalangist forces during their operation
in the camps (this measure is cited in section 5, Appendix B). It was
also agreed that a Phalangist liaison officer with a communications
set would be present at all times on the roof of the forward command
post - in addition to the Mossad liaison officer at the Phalangist
headquarters. The Phalangist unit that was supposed to enter the camps
was an intelligence unit headed, as we have said, by Elie Hobeika.
Hobeika did not go into the camps with his unit and was on the roof of
the forward command post during the night (testimony of
Brigadier-General Yaron, p. 726). This unit was assigned the task of
entering the camps at that time for two reasons, first - since the ...
Phalangists had difficulty recruiting another appropriate force till
then; second - since the members of this unit were considered
specially trained in discovering terrorists, who tried to hide among
the civilian population.
On 16.9.82
a document was issued by the Defense Minister's office, signed by the
personal aide to the Defense Minister, Mr. Avi Dudai, which contained
"The Defense Minister's Summary of 15 September 1982." This document
is (exhibit 34) a summary of the things which Mr. Dudai had recorded
during his visit with the Defense Minister in Beirut on 15.9.82, as
detailed above. In various paragraphs of the document there is mention
of the Defense Minister's instructions regarding the entry into West
Beirut. The instruction in paragraph F. is important to the matter at
had; it is stated there:
"F. Only
one element, and that is the I.D.F., shall command the forces in the
area. For the operation in the camps the Phalangists should be sent
in."
The
document is directed to the Chief of Staff, the Deputy Chief of Staff
and the director of Military Intelligence. The document was received
at the office of the director of Military Intelligence, according to
the stamp appearing on the copy (exhibit 35), on 17.9.82.
In the
testimonies we have heard, different interpretations were given to the
instruction that only the I.D.F. command the forces in the area.
According to one interpretation, and this is the interpretation given
the document by the Chief of Staff (p. 257), the meaning of the
instruction is that in contacts with external elements, and especially
with the Phalangists, only the I.D.F., and not another Israeli
element, such as the Mossad, will command the forces in the area - but
this does not mean that the Phalangist force will be under the command
of the I.D.F. On the other hand, according to the interpretation given
the document by the director of Military Intelligence (pp. 127, 1523),
the meaning is that all forces operating in the area, including the
Phalangists, will be under the authority of the I.D.F. and will act
according to its instructions.
The entry
of the Phalangists into the camps began at about 18.00 on Thursday,
16.9.82 At that time there were armed terrorist forces in the camps.
We cannot establish the extent of these forces, but they possessed
various types of arms,
which they
used - even before the entry of the Phalangists - against I.D.F.
forces that had approached the area, as well as against ' the I.D.F.
headquarters at the forward command post. It is possible to determine
that this armed terrorist force
had not
been evacuated during the general evacuation, but had stayed in the
camps for two purposes, which were - renewal of underground terrorist
activity at a later period, and to protect the civilian population
which had remained in the camps, keeping in mind that given the
hostility prevailing between the various sects and organizations, a
population without armed protection was in danger of massacre. It
should be added here that during the negotiations for evacuation, a
guarantee for the safety of the Muslims in West Beirut was given by
the representative of the United States who conducted the
negotiations, following assurances received from the government of
Israel and from Lebanon.
Meanwhile,
as we have said, the multi-national force left Lebanon, and all the
previous plans regarding the control of West Beirut by the Lebanese
government were disrupted due to the assassination of President-elect
Bashir Jemayel.
The Events
from the Entry of the Phalangists into the Sabra and Shatilla Camps
until their Departure
On
Thursday, 16.9.82, at approximately 18:00 hours, members of the
Phalangists entered the Shatilla camp from the west and south. They
entered in two groups, and once they had passed the battery
surrounding the camps their movements within the camps were not
visible from the roof of the forward command post or from the
observation sites on other roofs. The Divisional Intelligence Officer
tried to follow their movements using binoculars which he shifted from
place to place, but was unable to see their movements or their
actions. With the entry of the Phalangists into the camps, the firing
which had been coming from the camps changed direction; the shooting
which had previously been directed against the I.D.F. now shifted in
the direction of the Phalangists' liaison officer on the roof of the
forward command post. G. (his full name appears in the list of names,
Section 1, Appendix B) requested the I.D.F. to provide illumination
for the force which was moving in, since its entry was taking place
after dark. Initially, the illumination was provided by a mortar
company, and subsequently also by aircraft; but because the
illumination from the planes interfered with the evacuation of
casualties of an I.D.F. unit, this source of illumination was halted;
mortar illumination continued intermittently throughout the night.
At
approximately 8:00 p.m., the Phalangists' liaison officer, G., said
that the Phalangists who had entered the camps had sustained
casualties, and the casualties were evacuated from the camps. Major
General Drori was at the forward command post from approximately 7:30
p.m. and followed the fighting as it was visible from the roof of the
forward command post. He left the site after 8:00 p.m.
Several
Intelligence Branch personnel, headed by the Division Intelligence
Officer, were in the building on whose roof the forward command post
was situated. The Intelligence officer, who wanted to obtain
information on the Phalangists' activities, ordered that two actions
be carried out to obtain that information (these actions are detailed
in Section 5, Appendix B). No information was obtained in the wake of
the first action. As a result of the second action the Intelligence
Officer received a report according to which the Phalangists' liaison
officer had heard via radio from one of the Phalangists inside the
camps that he was holding 45 people. That person asked what he should
do with the people, and the liaison officer's reply was "Do the will
of God," or words to that effect. The Intelligence Officer received
this report at approximately 20:00 hours from the person on the roof
who heard the conversation. He did not convey the report to anyone
else, because an officers' briefing was scheduled to take place at
field headquarters shortly afterward.
At about
the same time or slightly earlier, at approximately 7:00 p.m.,
Lieutenant Elul, who was then serving as Chief of Bureau of the
Divisional Commander, overheard another conversation that took place
over the Phalangists' transmitter. According to Lt. Elul's testimony,
while he was on the roof of the forward command post, next to the
Phalangists' communications set, he heard a Phalangist officer from
the force that had entered the camps tell Elie Hobeika (in Arabic)
that there were 50 women and children, and what should he do. Elie
Hobeika's reply over the radio was: "This is the last time you're
going to ask me a question like that, you know exactly what to do;"
and then raucous laughter broke out among the Phalangist personnel on
the roof. Lieutenant Elul understood that what was involved was the
murder of the women and children. According to his testimony,
Brigadier General Yaron, who was also on the forward command post roof
then, asked him what he had overheard on the radio; and after
Lieutenant Elul told him the content of the conversation, Brigadier
General Yaron went over to Hobeika and spoke with him in English for
about five minutes (for Lt. Elul's testimony, see pp. 1209-1210a). Lt.
Elul did not hear the conversation between Brigadier General Yaron and
Hobeika.
Brigadier
General Yaron, who was on the roof of the forward command post,
received from Lt. Elul a report of what he had heard. According to
Brigadier General Yaron's testimony, the report conveyed to him by Lt.
Elul stated that one of the Phalangists had asked the commander what
to do with 45 people, and the reply had been to do with them what God
orders you to do (testimony of Brigadier General Yaron, pp. 696 and
730). According to Brigadier General Yaron, he understood from what he
had heard that the reference was to 45 dead terrorists. In his
testimony, Brigadier General Yaron linked this report with what he had
heard in the update briefing that evening - which will be discussed
below - from the Divisional Intelligence Officer. From Brigadier
General Yaron's remarks in his testimony it emerges that he regarded
the two reports - from Lt. Elul and from the Intelligence officer - as
being one report from two different sources. We have no doubt that in
this instance there were two different and separate reports. As noted
the report which the Intelligence Officer obtained originated in a
conversation held over the radio with Elie Hobeika. Although both
reports referred to a group of 45-50 persons, and it is, not to be
ruled out that the questions asked over the radios referred to the
same group of persons, it is clear, both from the fact that the
replies given were different in content - the reply of the liaison
officer was to do with the group of people as God commands, while
Hobeika's reply was different - that two different conversations took
place regarding the fate of the people who had fallen into the
Phalangists' hands. As noted, Brigadier General Yaron did not deny in
his testimony that Lt. Elul had translated for him and told him what
he had heard when the two of them were on the roof of the forward
command post. We have no reason to think that Lt. Elul did not inform
Brigadier General Yaron of everything he had heard. It is noteworthy
that Lt. Elul testified before us after Brigadier General Yaron had
testified and before the notices were sent in accordance with section
15(A) of the law; and his statement to the Staff Investigators (no.
87) was also given after Brigadier General Yaron's testimony.
Brigadier General Yaron did not testify again after the notice in
accordance with section 15(A) had been sent, nor was there any request
on his part to question Lt. Elul. We assert that Lt. Elul informed
Brigadier General Yaron of the content of the conversation which took
place with Elie Hobeika as specified above.
An
additional report relating to the actions of the Phalangists in the
camps vis-a-vis the civilians there came from liaison officer G. of
the Phalangists. When he entered the dining room in the forward
command post building at approximately 8:00 p.m., that liaison officer
told various people that about 300 persons had been killed by the
Phalangists, among them also civilians. He stated this in the presence
of many I.D.F. officers who were there, including Brigadier General
Yaron. We had different versions of the exact wording of this
statement by Phalangist officer G., but from all the testimony we have
heard it is clear that he said that as a result of the Phalangists'
operations up to that time, 300 terrorists and civilians had been
killed in the camps. Shortly thereafter, Phalangist officer G.
returned to the dining room and amended his earlier report by reducing
the number of casualties from 300 to 120.
At 20:40
hours that evening an update briefing was held in the forward command
post building with the participation of various I.D.F. officers who
were in the building at that time, headed by Brigadier General Yaron.
The remarks made at that meeting were recorded by a Major from the
History Section in the Operations Branch/ Training Section. We were
given the tape recording and a transcript thereof (exhibit 155). At
the meeting Brigadier General Yaron spoke of the I.D.F.'s progress and
deployment, and about the Phalangists' entry into the camps and the
combing operations they were carrying out. Following that briefing,
the Divisional Intelligence Officer spoke. In the course of his
intelligence survey regarding the terrorists and other armed forces in
west Beirut, he said the following (pp. 4 and 5 of the transcript,
exhibit 155):
"The
Phalangists went in today. I do not know what level of combat they are
showing. It is difficult to see it because it is dark... The
impression is that their fighting is not too serious. They have
casualties, as you know - two wounded, one in the leg and one in the
hand. The casualties were evacuated in one of their ambulances. And
they, it turns out, are pondering what to do with the population they
are finding inside. On the one hand, it seems, there are no terrorists
there, in the camp; Sabra camp is empty. On the other hand, they have
amassed women, children and apparently also old people, with whom they
don't exactly know what to do (Amos, this refers back to our talk),
and evidently they had some sort of decision in principle that they
would concentrate them together, and lead them to some place outside
the camps. On the other hand, I also heard (from - the Phalangists'
liaison officer G.)... that 'do what your heart tells you, because
everything comes from God. 'That is, I do not -"
At this
point Brigadier General Yaron interrupted the Intelligence Officer and
the following dialogue ensued between them:
Brigadier
General Yaron:
"Nothing, no, no. I went to see him up top and they have no problems
at all."
Intelligence Officer:
"People remaining in the field? Without their lives being in any
danger?"
Brigadier
General Yaron:
"It will not, will not harm them."
Following
this exchange, the Intelligence Officer went on to another subject.
The Phalangists' actions against the people in the camps were not
mentioned again in this update briefing.
In his
testimony, Brigadier General Yaron explained his remark about his
visit "with him up top and they have no problems at all" by saying
that he had spoken several times that evening with the Phalangist
officers on the roof of the forward command post after he had heard
the first report about 45 people and also after the further report
about 300 or 120 casualties; and even though he had been skeptical
about the reliability of these reports and had not understood from
them that children, women or civilians had been murdered in massacres
perpetrated by the Phalangists, he had warned them several times not
to harm civilians and had been assured that they would issue the
appropriate orders to that effect. (pp. 731-732).
Between
approximately 22:00 hours and 23:00 hours the Divisional Intelligence
Officer contacted Northern Command, spoke with the Deputy Intelligence
Officer there, asked if Northern Command had received any sort of
report, was told in reply that there was no report, and told the
Deputy Intelligence officer of Northern Command about the Phalangist
officer's report concerning 300 terrorists and civilians who had been
killed, and about the amendment to that report whereby the number of
those killed was only 120. The divisional Intelligence Officer asked
the Deputy Intelligence Officer of Northern Command to look into the
matter more thoroughly. Intelligence Officer A. was in the room while
that conversation took place, and when he heard about that report he
phoned Intelligence Branch Research at the General Staff, spoke with
two Intelligence Branch officers there and told them that Phalangist
personnel had so far liquidated 300 terrorists and civilians
(testimony of Intelligence Officer A., p. 576). He went on to add that
he had a heavy feeling about the significance of this report, that he
regarded it as an important and highly sensitive report which would
interest the senior responsible levels, and that this was the kind of
report that would prove of interest to the Director of Military
Intelligence personally. In the wake of these remarks, the personnel
in Intelligence Branch research of the General Staff Branch who had
been given the report carried out certain telephone clarifications,
and the report was conveyed to various persons. The manner in which
the report was conveyed and the way it was handled are described in
Section 6, Appendix B. Suffice it to note here that a telephone report
about this information was conveyed to Lt. Col. Hevroni, Chief of
Bureau of the director of Military Intelligence, on 17.9.82 at 5:30
a.m. The text of the report, which was distributed to various
Intelligence units and, as noted, also reached the office of the
director of Military Intelligence, appears in Appendix A of Exhibit 29
That document contained a marking, noting that its origin lay with the
forward command post of Northern Command, that it was received on
16.9.82 at 23:20 hours, and that the content of the report was as
follows:
"Preliminary information conveyed by the commander of the local
Phalangist force in the Shatilla refugee camp states that so far his
men have liquidated about 300 people. This number includes terrorists
and civilians."
The action
taken in the wake of this report in the office of the Director of
Military Intelligence will be discussed in this report below.
On
Thursday, 16.9.82, at 19:30 hours, the Cabinet convened for a session
with the participation of - besides the Prime Minister and the Cabinet
Ministers (except for 5 Ministers who were abroad) - a number of
persons who are not Cabinet members, among them the Chief of Staff,
the head of the Mossad and the director of Military Intelligence. The
subject discussed at that meeting was the situation in Lebanon in the
wake of the assassination of Bashir Jemayel. At the start of the
session, the Prime Minister reported on the chain of events following
the report about the attempt on Bashir's life. The Minister of Defense
then gave a detailed survey. The Chief of Staff provided details about
the I.D.F.'s operation in West Beirut and about his meetings with
Phalangist personnel. He said, inter alia, that he had informed
the Phalangist commanders that their men would have to take part in
the operation and go in where they were told, that early that evening
they would begin to fight and would enter the extremity of Sabra, that
the I.D.F. would ensure that they did not fail in their operation but
I.D.F. soldiers would not enter the camps and would not fight together
with the Phalangists, rather the Phalangists would go in there "with
their own methods" (p. 16 of the minutes of the meeting, Exhibit 122).
In his remarks the Chief of Staff explained that the camps were
surrounded "by us," that the Phalangists would begin to operate that
night in the camps, that we could give them orders whereas it was
impossible to give orders to the Lebanese Army, and that the I.D.F.
would be assisted by the Phalangists and perhaps also the Lebanese
Army in collecting weapons. With respect to the consequences of
Bashir's assassination, the Chief of Staff said that in the situation
which had been created, two things could happen. One was that the
entire power structure of the Phalangists would collapse, though as
yet this had not occurred. Regarding the second possibility, the Chief
of Staff said as follows (pp. 21-22 of Exhibit 122):
"A second
thing that will happen - and it makes no difference whether we are
there or not - is an eruption of revenge which, I do not know, I can
imagine how it will begin, but I do not know how it will end. it will
be between all of them, and neither the Americans nor anyone else will
be of any help. We can cut it down, but today they already killed
Druze there. What difference does it make who or what? They have
already killed them, and one dead Druze is enough so that tomorrow
four Christian children will be killed; they will find them
slaughtered, just like what happened a month ago; and that is how it
will begin, if we are not there - it will be an eruption the likes of
which has never been seen; I can already see in their eyes what they
are waiting for.
"Yesterday
afternoon a group of Phalangist officers came, they were stunned,
still stunned, and they still cannot conceive to themselves how their
hope was destroyed in one blow, a hope for which they built and
sacrificed so much; and now they have just one thing left to do, and
that is revenge; and it will be terrible."
At this
point the Chief of Staff was asked "if there is any chance of knowing
who did it, and to direct them at whoever perpetrated the deed," and
he continued:
"There is
no such thing there. Among the Arabs revenge means that if someone
kills someone from the tribe, then the whole tribe is guilty. A
hundred years will go by, and there will still be someone killing
someone else from the tribe from which someone had killed a hundred
years earlier...
"I told
Draper this today, and he said there is a Lebanese Army, and so on. I
told him that it was enough that during Bashir's funeral Amin Jemayel,
the brother, said 'revenge'; that is already enough. This is a war
that no one will be able to stop. It might not happen tomorrow, but it
will happen.
"It is
enough that he uttered the word 'revenge' and the whole establishment
is already sharpening knives..."
Toward the
end of his remarks, the Chief of Staff referred to a map and explained
that with the exception of one section everything was in the hands of
the I.D.F., the I.D.F. was not entering the refugee camps, "and the
Phalangists are this evening beginning to enter the area between Sabra
and Fakahani" (p. 25). At that meeting the Head of the Mossad also
gave a briefing on the situation after the assassination of Bashir,
but made no reference to the Phalangists' entry into the camps. There
was considerable discussion in that meeting about the danger of the
United States at the I.D.F.'s entry into West Beirut, the general
opinion being that the decision to go in was justified and correct.
Toward the close of the meeting there was discussion regarding the
wording of a resolution, and then Deputy Prime Minister D. Levy said
that the problem was not the formulation of a resolution, but that the
I.D.F.'s continued stay in Beirut was liable to generate an
undesirable situation of massive pressure regarding its stay there.
Minister Levy stated that he accepted the contention regarding the
I.D.F.'s entry into Beirut, and he then continued (p. 91):
"We wanted
to prevent chaos at a certain moment whose significance cannot be
disregarded. When confusion exists which someone else could also have
exploited, the situation can be explained in a convincing way. But
that argument could be undercut and we could come out with no
credibility when I hear that the Phalangists are already entering a
certain neighborhood - and I know what the meaning of revenge is for
them, what kind of slaughter. Then no one will believe we went in to
create order there, and we will bear the blame. Therefore, I think
that we are liable here to get into a situation in which we will be
blamed, and our explanations will not stand up..."
No
reaction was forthcoming from those present at the meeting to this
part of Deputy Prime Minister D. Levy's remarks. Prior to the close of
the session the Prime Minister put forward a draft resolution which,
with certain changes, was accepted by all the Ministers. That
resolution opens with the words:
"In the
wake of the assassination of the President-elect Bashir Jemayel, the
I.D.F. has seized positions in West Beirut in order to forestall the
danger of violence, bloodshed and chaos, as some 2,000 terrorists,
equipped with modern and heavy weapons, have remained in Beirut, in
flagrant violation of the evacuation agreement..."
Here we
must note that the Director of Military Intelligence was present at
the outset of the meeting but left, after having received permission
to do so from the Minister of Defense, not long after the start of the
session, and certainly a considerable time before Minister D. Levy
made the remarks quoted above.
Brigadier-General Yaron did not inform Major-General Drori of the
reports which had reached him on Thursday evening regarding the
actions of the Phalangists vis-a-vis non-combatants in the
camps, and reports about aberrations did not reach Major-General Drorl
until Friday, 17.9.82, in the morning hours. On Friday morning
Major-General Drori contacted Brigadier-General Yaron, received from
him a report about various matters relating to the war, and heard from
him that the Phalangists had sustained a number of casualties, but
heard nothing about casualties among the civilian population in the
camps (testimony of Major-General Drori, p. 404). That same morning
Major General Drori spoke with the Chief of Staff and heard from him
that the Chief of Staff might come to Beirut that day.
In the
early hours of that morning a note lay on a table in the Northern
Command situation room in Aley. The note read as follows:
"During
the night the Phalangists entered the Sabra and Shatilla refugee
camps. Even though it was agreed that they would not harm civilians,
they 'butchered.' They did not operate in orderly fashion but
dispersed. They had casualties, including two killed. They will
organize to operate in a more orderly manner - we will see to it that
they are moved into the area."
Lieutenant-Colonel Idel, of the History Section in Operations
Branch/Training Section, saw this note on the table and copied it into
a notebook in which he recorded details about certain events, as
required by his position. It has not been clarified who wrote the note
or what the origin was of the information it contained, even though on
this matter the staff investigators questioned many persons who held
various positions where the note was found. The note itself was not
found, and we know its content only because Lieutenant-Colonel Idel
recorded it in his notebook.
The G.O.C.
held a staff meeting at 8:00 a.m. in which nothing was said about the
existence of reports regarding the Phalangists' actions in the camps.
Already
during the night between Thursday and Friday, the report about
excesses committed by the Phalangists in the camps circulated among
I.D.F. officers who were at the forward command post. Two Phalangists
were killed that night during their operation in the camps. When the
report about their casualties reached the Phalangists' liaison
officer, G., along with a complaint from one of the Phalangist
commanders in the field that the I.D.F. was not supplying sufficient
illumination, the liaison officer asked Lieutenant-Colonel Treiber,
one of the Operations Branch officers at the forward command post, to
increase the illumination for the Phalangists. Lieutenant-Colonel
Treiber's response was that the Phalangists had killed 300 people and
he was not willing to provide them with illumination (testimony of
Lieutenant Elul, pp. 1212-1213). Lieutenant-Colonel Treiber
subsequently ordered that limited illumination be provided for the
Phalangists.
In the
early hours of the morning, additional officers at the forward command
post heard from the Phalangists' liaison officer, G., that acts of
killing had been committed in the camps but had been halted
(statements 22 and 167).
At
approximately 9:00 a.m. on Friday, Brigadier General Yaron met with
representatives of the Phalangists at the forward command post and
discussed with them the entry of an additional force of Phalangists
into the camps. Afterwards, according to the testimony of Major
General Drori (p. 1600), he met with Brigadier General Yaron in the
Cite of Beirut, where they discussed the activity of the I.D.F. troops
and other matters related to the war; but Brigadier General Yaron said
nothing to him at that meeting about excesses committed by the
Phalangists.
Brigadier
General Yaron's testimony contains a different version of the talk
between him and Major General Drori that morning. According to that
testimony, Brigadier General Yaron received reports that morning about
a woman who claimed that she had been struck in the face by
Phalangists, [and] about a child who had been kidnapped and whose
father had complained to the Divisional Operations Officer; and
Brigadier General Yaron had seen liaison officer G. arguing with other
Phalangists. From all this Brigadier General Yaron inferred that
something was amiss, or as he put it, "something smelled fishy to me"
(p. 700). He phoned Major General Drori and told him something did not
look right to him, and as a result of this conversation, Major General
Drori arrived at the forward command post at approximately 11:00 a.m.
According to Major General Drori, he arrived at the forward command
post without having heard any report that something was wrong in the
camps, simply as part of a routine visit to various divisions. We see
no need to decide between these two versions.
When Major
General Drori arrived at the Divisional forward command post he spoke
with Colonel Duvdevani and with Brigadier General Yaron. We also have
differing versions regarding what Major General Drori heard on that
occasion. In his statement (No. 2) Colonel Duvdevani related that he
said he had a bad feeling about what was going on in the camps.
According to his statement, this feeling was caused by the report of
liaison officer G. about 100 dead and also because it was not known
what the Phalangists were doing inside the camps. Colonel Duvdevani
did not recall whether Major General Drori had asked him about the
reasons for his bad feeling. Brigadier General Yaron testified (p.
701) that he had told Major General Drori everything he knew at that
time, namely those matters detailed above which had caused his bad
feeling. According to Major General Drori's testimony, he heard about
three specific matters on that occasion. The first was the blow to the
woman's head; the second - which was not directly related to the camps
- was that in one neighbourhood, namely San Simon, Phalangists had
beaten residents; and the third matter was that a feeling existed that
the Phalangists were carrying out "an unclean mopping-up" - that is,
their soldiers were not calling on the residents - as I.D.F. soldiers
do - to come out before opening fire on a house which was to be
"mopped up," but were "going into the house firing" (testimony of
Major General Drori, pp. 408, 1593-1594). No evidence existed that, at
that meeting or earlier, anyone had told Major General Drori about the
reports of 45 people whose fate was sealed, or about the 300 killed;
nor is there any clear evidence that he was told of a specific number
of people who had been killed. After Major General Drori heard what he
heard from Colonel Duvdevani and Brigadier General Yaron, he ordered
Brigadier General Yaron to halt the operations of the Phalangists,
meaning that the Phalangists should stop where they were in the camps
and advance no further. Brigadier General Yaron testified that he
suggested to Major General Drori to issue this order (p. 701). The
order was conveyed to the Phalangist commanders. On that same occasion
Major General Drori spoke with the Chief of Staff by phone about
several matters relating to the situation in Beirut, told him that he
thought the Phalangists had perhaps "gone too far" and that he had
ordered their operation to be halted (p. 412). A similar version of
this conversation appears in the Chief of Staff's testimony (pp.
232-233). The Chief of Staff testified that he had heard from Major
General Drori that something was amiss in the Phalangists' actions.
The Chief of Staff asked no questions, but told Major General Drori
that he would come to Beirut that afternoon.
As
mentioned above, the cable report (appendix exhibit 29) regarding 300
killed reached the office of the director of Military Intelligence on
17.9.82 at 5:30 a.m. The text of this cable was transmitted to the
director of Military Intelligence at his home in a morning report at
6:15 a.m., as part of a routine update transmitted to the director of
Military Intelligence every morning by telephone. From the content of
the cable, the director of Military Intelligence understood that the
source of the report is Operations and not Intelligence, and that its
source is the Northern Command forward command post. According to the
testimony of the director of Military Intelligence, the details of
which we shall treat later, he did not know then that it had been
decided to send the Phalangists into the camps and that they were
operating there; therefore, when he heard the report, he asked what
the Phalangists were doing - and he was told that they had been
operating in the camps since the previous day (p. 120, 123). When the
director of Military Intelligence arrived at his office at 8:00 a.m.,
he asked his bureau chief where the report had originated, and he was
told that it was an "Operations" report. He ordered that it be
immediately ascertained what was happening in the Sabra and Shatilla
camps. The clarifications continued in different ways (described in
section 6 of appendix B) during Friday morning, but no confirmation of
the report was obtained; and the intelligence personnel who dealt with
the clarifications treated it as a report which for them is
unreliable, is unconfirmed, and therefore it would not be proper to
circulate it according to the standard procedure, by which important
and urgent intelligence reports are circulated. The content of the
cable was circulated to a number of intelligence personnel (whose
positions were noted on the cable form) and was conveyed to the Mossad
and the General Security Services. Since the source of the report
seemed to those Intelligence Branch personnel who dealt with the
matter to be Operations, it was not accorded the standard treatment
given reports from Intelligence sources, but rather the assumption was
that Operations personnel were dealing with the report in their own
way. The answers received by the director of Military Intelligence to
his demand for clarification were that there were no further details.
The director of Military Intelligence did not know that the report had
been transmitted by Intelligence Officer A. The report was transmitted
verbally, incidentally, by the assistant to the bureau chief of the
director of Military Intelligence to Lieutenant Colonel Gai of the
Defense Ministry's situation room, when the latter arrived at about
7:30 a.m. at the office of the director of Military Intelligence. One
of the disputed questions in this inquiry is whether Lieutenant
Colonel Gai transmitted, the report to Mr. Dudai; we shall discuss
this matter separately. Suffice it to say here that we have no
evidence that the report was transmitted to the Defense Minister or
came to his knowledge in another way.
At 7:30
a.m. on Friday there was a special morning briefing at the [office of]
the assistant for research to the director of Military Intelligence.
At the meeting, in which various intelligence personnel participated,
the aforementioned report was discussed, and it was said that it can
not be verified. The assistant for research to the director of
Military Intelligence gave an order to continue checking the report.
He knew that the source of the report was Intelligence officer A. The
assistant for research to the director of Military Intelligence also
treated this report with skepticism, both because the number of killed
seemed exaggerated to him and since there had been no additional
confirmation of the report (pp. 1110-1113). The director of Military
Intelligence took no action on his part regarding the aforementioned
report, except for requesting the clarification, and did not speak
about it with the Chief of Staff or the Minister of Defense, even
though he met with them that morning.
As
mentioned above, the reports of unusual things occurring in the camps
circulated among the officers at the forward command post already
during the night and in the morning hours of Friday, and they reached
other I.D.F. officers and soldiers in the area. At approximately 8:00
a.m., the journalist Mr. Ze'ev Schiff received a report from the
General Staff in Tel Aviv, from a man whose name he has refused to
disclose, that there was a slaughter in the camps. The transmitter of
the report used the Arabic expression dab'h. He was not told of the
extent of the slaughter. He tried to check the report with Military
Intelligence and Operations, and also with the Mossad, but received no
confirmation, except the comment that "there's something." At 11:00
a.m. Mr. Schiff met with Minister Zipori at the minister's office and
spoke with him about the report he had received. Minister Zipori tried
to contact the director of Military Intelligence and the head of the
General Security Services by phone, but did not reach them. At
approximately 11:15 a.m., he called the Foreign Minister, Mr. Yitzhak
Shamir, and spoke with him about the report he had received from Mr.
Schiff. According to the testimony of Minister Zipori, he said in that
telephone conversation with Mr. Shamir that he had received reports
that the Phalangists "are carrying out a slaughter" and asked that
Minister Shamir check the matter with the people who would be with him
momentarily and whose planned visit was known to Minister Zipori
(Minister Zipori's testimony, p. 1097). According to Mr. Schiff's
statement to the staff investigators (no. 83), Minister Zipori said in
that conversation that "they are killing in the camps" and proposed
that "it is worth checking the matter through your channels."
We heard a
different version of the content of the conversation from Minister
Shamir. Minister Shamir knew of the entry of the Phalangists into the
camps from what he had heard at the aforementioned cabinet meeting of
16.9.82. According to him, Minister Zipori told him in the
aforementioned telephone conversation that he knows that Minister
Shamir was to meet soon with representatives of the United States on
the situation in West Beirut, and therefore he deems it appropriate to
report what he had heard about what is occurring there. The situation
in West Beirut is still not as quiet as it may seem from the media,
and he had heard that three or four I.D.F. soldiers had been killed,
and had also heard "about some rampage by the Phalangists" (p. 1232).
Minister Shamir said in his testimony that as far as he could remember
there was no mention in that conversation of the words massacre or
slaughter. According to him, he was not asked by Minister Zipori to
look into the matter, he did not think that he was talking about
massacre, [rather] he got the impression from the conversation that
its main aim was to inform him of the losses suffered by the I.D.F.,
and therefore he himself made no check and also did not instruct
Foreign Ministry personnel to check the report, but asked someone in
the Foreign Ministry whether new reports had arrived from Beirut and
was satisfied with the answer that there is nothing new.
In
addition, Minister Shamir thought, according to his testimony, that
since a meeting would shortly be held at his office with Ambassador
Draper, in which the Defense Minister, the director of Military
Intelligence, the head of the General Security Services and their
aides would be participating on the Israeli side, then he would hear
from them about what is happening in West Beirut. This meeting was
held at the Foreign Minister's office at 12:30, between Ambassador
Draper and other representatives of the United States and a group of
representatives of Israel, including the Minister of Defense, the
director of Military Intelligence, and the head of the General
Security Services (exhibit 124). The Foreign Minister did not tell any
of those who came to the meeting about the report he had received from
Minister Zipori regarding the actions of the Phalangists, and he
explained this inaction of his by the fact that the matter did not
bother him, since it was clear to him that everything going on is
known to the persons sitting with him, and he did not hear from them
any special report from Beirut (p. 1238). The meeting ended at 3:00
p.m., and then the Foreign Minister left for his home and took no
additional action following the aforementioned conversation with
Minister Zipori.
Let us
return to what occurred on that Friday in West Beirut.
In the
morning hours, Brigadier General Yaron met with Phalangist commanders
for coordination, and agreed with them that a larger Phalangist force
would organize at the airport, that this force would not be sent in to
the camps until it receives approval from the Chief of Staff and after
the Chief of Staff holds an additional meeting at Phalangist
headquarters (pp. 705-706).
Already
prior to the Chief of Staff's arrival, Major General Drori held a
meeting with the commander of the Lebanese Army in which he again
tried to persuade the commander, and through him the Prime Minister
and Ambassador Draper, that the Lebanese Army enter the camps. Major
General Drori told that commander, according to his testimony, the
following (p. 1633):
"You know
what the Lebanese are capable of doing to each other; when you go now
to Wazzan (the Prime Minister of Lebanon) tell him again, and you see
what is out here, and the time has come that maybe you'll do
something, and you're going to Draper, to meet with Draper... get good
advice from him this time, he should give it to you this time, he
should agree that you enter the camps, it's important, the time has
come for you to do it, and get good advice this time from Draper, or
permission from him to enter or do it."
Major
General Drori explained in his testimony that he had approached the
commander so that the latter would speak with Ambassador Draper, since
he had heard that Ambassador Draper had told the commander of the
Lebanese Army a day earlier that the Americans would get the Israelis
out of Beirut, that they should not talk to them and not negotiate
with them. The answer which Major General Drori later received to his
request from the commander of the Lebanese Army was negative.
On Friday,
17.9.82, already from the morning hours, a number of I.D.F. soldiers
detected killing and violent actions against people from the refugee
camps. We heard testimony from Lieutenant Grabowsky, a deputy
commander of a tank company, who was in charge of a few tanks which
stood on an earth embankment - a ramp - and on the adjacent road, some
200 meters from the first buildings of the camps. In the early morning
hours he saw Phalangist soldiers taking men, women and children out of
the area of the camps and leading them to the area of the stadium.
Between 8:00 and 9:00 a.m. he saw two Phalangist soldiers hitting two
young men. The soldiers led the men back into the camp, after a short
time he heard a few shots and saw the two Phalangist soldiers coming
out. At a later hour he went up the embankment with the tank and then
saw that Phalangist soldiers had killed a group of five women and
children. Lieutenant Grabowsky wanted to report the event by
communications set to his superiors, but the tank crew told him that
they had already heard a communications report to the battalion
commander that civilians were being killed, [and] the battallion
commander had replied, "We know, it's not to our liking, and don't
interfere." Lieutenant Grabowsky saw another case in which a
Phalangist killed a civilian. In the afternoon hours his soldiers
spoke with a Phalangist who had arrived at the spot, and at the
request of Grabowsky, who does not speak Arabic, one of the soldiers
asked why they were killing civilians. The answer he received was that
the pregnant women will give birth to terrorists and children will
grow up to be terrorists. Grabowsky left the place at 16:00 hours.
Late in the afternoon he related what he had seen to his commander in
the tank battalion and to other officers. At their suggestion he
related this to his brigade commander at 20:00 hours (Grabowsky
testimony, pp. 380-388). In various statements made to the staff
investigators, soldiers and officers from Lieutenant Grabowsky's unit
and from other units stationed nearby related that they saw on Friday
various acts of maltreatment by the Phalangist soldiers against men,
women and children who were taken out of the camp, and heard
complaints and stories regarding acts of killing carried out by the
Phalangists. One of those questioned heard a communications report to
the battalion commander about the Phalangists "running wild."
The
battalion commander did not confirm in his statements (no. 21 and no.
175) and testimony that he had received reports on Friday from any of
his battalion's soldiers about acts of killing or violent actions by
the Phalangists against the residents of the camps. According to him,
he indeed heard on Thursday night, when he was in the forward command
post, about 300 killed, a number which was later reduced to 120
killed; but on Friday the only report he received was about the escape
of a few dozen beaten or wounded persons northward and eastward, and
this was in the afternoon. At a later date, after the massacre in the
camps was publicized, the battalion commander made special efforts to
obtain a monitoring report of the battalion's radio frequency and he
submitted this report to us (exhibit 1240). In this document no record
was found of a report of acts of killing or maltreatment by the
Phalangists on Friday.
We did not
send a notice as per Section 15 to this battalion commander, and this
for the reasons explained in the Introduction. We have not arrived at
any findings or conclusions on the contradictory versions regarding
the report to the battalion commander, and it appears to us that this
subject can and should be investigated within the framework of the
I.D.F., as we have proposed in the Introduction. For the purposes of
the matters we are discussing, we determine that indeed I.D.F.
soldiers who were near the embankment which surrounded the camp saw
certain acts of killing and an attempt was made to report this to
commanders of higher ranks; but this report did not reach Brigadier
General Yaron or Major General Drori.
The Chief
of Staff reached the airport at Khalde near Beirut at 15:30 hours with
a number of I.D.F. officers. At the airport he met with Major General
Drori and travelled with him to a meeting at Phalangist headquarters.
Major General Drori testified that he had told the Chief of Staff on
the way what he knew regarding the Phalangists' actions. The Chief of
Staff was satisfied with what he had heard and did not ask about
additional matters (Drori testimony, pp. 451, 416). Brigadier General
Yaron joined those travelling to the meeting with the Phalangist
commanders. The Chief of Staff testified in his first appearance that
he had heard from Major General Drori and from Brigadier General Yaron
only those things which he had heard on the telephone, and does not
remember that he asked them how the improper behavior of the
Phalangists had expressed itself. In that testimony he explained that
he had refrained from asking additional questions since the discussion
had dealt mainly with the situation in the city, that he generally
does not like to talk while travelling, and the he thought the matter
would be clarified at Phalangist headquarters, where they were headed
(testimony of the Chief of Staff, pp. 243, 234). In his additional
testimony before us, when the Chief of Staff was asked for his
response to Major General Drori's testimony that the latter had told
the Chief of Staff about the three things which he knew about (see
above), the Chief of Staff said that he is prepared to accept that
these were the things said to him, but emphasized that the meaning of
the things he had heard was not from his point of view that there had
been acts of revenge and bloodshed by the Phalangists (p. 1663). In
any case, according to his second testimony as well, the Chief of
Staff was satisfied with hearing a short report from Major General
Drori about the reasons for the halting of the Phalangists' actions,
and did not pose questions regarding this.
At about
16:00 hours, the meeting between the Chief of Staff and the Phalangist
staff was held. We have been presented with documents containing
summaries from this meeting. In a summary made by Mossad
representative A who was present at the meeting (exhibit 80 A) it was
said that the Chief of Staff "expressed his positive impression
received from the statement by the Phalangist forces and their
behavior in the field" and concluded that they "continue action,
mopping up the empty camps south of Fakahani until tomorrow at 5:00
a.m., at which time they must stop their action due to American
pressure. There is a chance that the Lebanese Army will enter instead
of them." Other matters in this summary do not relate to the matter of
the two camps (a summary with identical contents appears in exhibit
no. 37). We heard more precise details on the content of the meeting
from witnesses who participated in it. The Chief of Staff testified
that the Phalangists had reported that the operation had ended and
that everything was alright that the Americans are pressuring them to
leave and they would leave by 5:00 a.m., and that they had carried out
all the objectives. His reaction was "O.K., alright, you did the job."
According
to the Chief of Staff, the discussion was very relaxed, there was a
very good impression that the Phalangists had carried out the mission
they had been assigned or which they had taken upon themselves, and
there was no feeling that something irregular had occurred or was
about to occur in the camps. During the meeting they requested a
tractor from the I.D.F. in order to demolish illegal structures; the
Chief of Staff saw this as a positive action, since he had long heard
of illegal Palestinian neighborhoods, and therefore he approved their
request for tractors (pp. 234-239). In his second testimony, the Chief
of Staff added that the commander of the Phalangists had said that
there was almost no civilian population in the camps, and had reported
on their killed and wounded (p. 1666). He did not ask them questions
and did not debrief them about what had happened in the camps. They
wanted to send more forces into the camps, but he did not approve
this; and there was no discussion at that meeting of relieving forces
(pp. 1667-1670). At the same meeting, the Chief of Staff approved the
supply of certain arms to the Phalangists, but this has nothing to do
with events in Beirut. Major General Drori testified during his first
appearance that the commander of the Phalangist force, who was present
at the meeting, gave details of where his forces were and reported
heavy fighting - but did not make mention of any irregularities, and
certainly not of a massacre. The Phalangist commanders spoke of
American pressure [on them] to leave the camps. When Major General
Drori was asked for additional details of that conversation he replied
that he could not recall (pp. 415-420, 444-444). Brigadier General
Yaron also testified that at that meeting the Phalangists commanders
had said nothing about unusual actions in the camps, [that] the reason
given for departure from the camps the next morning was American
pressure, and that it seemed to him that the Chief of Staff even had
had some good words to say, from a military standpoint, about their
action. It was also agreed at that meeting that they would get
tractors in order to raze illegal structures. At the end of the
meeting it was clear to Brigadier General Yaron, as he testified, that
the Phalangists could still enter the camps, bring in tractors, and do
what they wanted - and that they would leave on Saturday morning (pp.
709-716).
In the
matter of sending in additional Phalangist forces, Brigadier General
Yaron testified that he did not think that limitations had been
imposed on them with regard to bringing in an additional force, and he
did not know whether they brought in an additional force after that
meeting - but since they were supposed to leave at 5:00 a.m. on the
following morning, there was no need for additional forces. On the
same subject, Brigadier General Yaron also said that there was no
restriction on the Phalangists' bringing in additional forces; it
seemed to him that they had brought in a certain additional force -
although the major force, at the airport, was not sent into the camps.
He did not check whether they did or did not bring in additional
forces, and from his point of view there was no impediment to their
bringing in additional forces until Saturday morning (pp. 715-747).
Also
present at that same meeting were the Deputy Chief of Staff, Mossad
representative A, the divisional intelligence officer (who took the
minutes of the meeting) and other Israeli officers; and there is no
need to go into details here of their testimony on this matter, since
the things they said generally agree with what has already been
detailed above. We would add only that in the matter of the tractors,
the Mossad representative recommended to the Chief of Staff that
tractors be given to the Phalangists; but at the conclusion of the
meeting, an order was given to supply them with just one tractor and
to remove I.D.F. markings from the tractor. The one tractor supplied
later was not used and was returned immediately by the Phalangists,
who had their own tractors which they used in the camps that same
night and the following morning.
It is
clear from all the testimony that no explicit question was posed to
the Phalangist commanders concerning the rumors or reports which had
arrived until then regarding treatment of the civilian population in
the camps. The Phalangist commanders, for their part, didn't
"volunteer" any reports of this type, and this matter was therefore
not discussed at all at that meeting. The subject of the Phalangists'
conduct toward those present in the camps did not come up at all at
that meeting, nor was there any criticism or warning on this matter.
During the
evening, between 18:00-20:00 hours, Foreign Ministry personnel in
Beirut and in Israel began receiving various reports from U.S.
representatives that the Phalangists had been seen in the camps and
that their presence was liable to lead to undesirable results - as
well as complaints about actions by I.D.F. soldiers in the hospital
building in Beirut. The Foreign Ministry personnel saw to the
clarification of the complaints, and the charges against I.D.F.
soldiers turned out to be unfounded.
After the
Chief of Staff returned to Israel, he called the Defense Minister
between 20:00-21:00 hours and spoke with him about his visit to
Beirut. According to the Defense Minister's testimony, the Chief of
Staff told him in that conversation that he had just returned from
Beirut and that "in the course of the Phalangists' actions in the
camps, the Christians had harmed the civilian population more than was
expected." According to the Defense Minister, the Chief of Staff used
the expression that the Lebanese Forces had "gone too far," and that
therefore their activity had been stopped in the afternoon, the entry
of additional forces had been prevented, and an order had been given
to the Phalangists to remove their forces from the camps by 5:00 a.m.
the following morning. The Defense Minister added that the Chief of
Staff also mentioned that civilians had been killed (testimony of the
Defense Minister, pp. 293-294). According to the Defense Minister's
statements, this was the first report that reached him of irregular
activity by the Phalangists in the refugee camps. The Chief of Staff
did not confirm that he had told the Defense Minister all the above.
According to him, he told the Defense Minister that the Phalangists
had carried out their assignment, that they had stopped, and that they
were under pressure from the Americans and would leave by 5:00 a.m.
does not recall that he mentioned disorderly behaviour by the
Phalangists, but he is sure he did not speak of a massacre, killing or
the like. When the Chief of Staff was asked whether the Defense
Minister had asked him questions in that same conversation, his reply
was that he didn't remember (p. 242). In his second round of
testimony, the Chief of Staff said that it was possible and also
reasonable that he had told the Defense Minister the content of what
he had heard from Major General Drori, although he reiterated that he
didn't recall every word that was said in that same conversation (pp.
1687-1688). At the conclusion of his second round of testimony, the
Chief of Staff denied that there had been discussion, in the telephone
conversation with the Defense Minister, of killing beyond what had
been expected (p. 1692).
This
conversation was not recorded by anyone, and the two interlocutors
testified about it from memory. It is our opinion that the Defense
Minister's version of that same conversation is more accurate than the
Chief of Staff's version. It is our determination that the Chief of
Staff did tell the Defense Minister about the Phalangists' conduct,
and that from his words the Defense Minister could have understood,
and did understand, that the Phalangists had carried out killings of
civilians in the camps. Our opinion finds confirmation in that,
according to all the material which has been brought before us in
evidence, the Defense Minister had not received any report of killings
in the camps until that same telephone conversation; but after that
conversation, the Defense Minister knew that killings had been carried
out in the camps - as is clear from a later conversation between him
and Mr. Ron Ben-Yishai, which we will discuss further on.
On Friday
at approximately 4:00 p.m., when the television military correspondent
Mr. Ron Ben-Yishai was at the airport in Beirut, he heard from several
I.D.F. officers about killings in the camps. These officers were not
speaking from personal knowledge, but rather according to what they
had heard from others. Likewise, he saw Phalangist forces comprising
about 500-600 men deployed at the airport. The Phalangist officer with
whom Mr. Ben-Yishai spoke at that time told him that the Phalangist
forces were going to the camps to fight the terrorists, so as to
remove the terrorists and the arms caches in the camps. Asked what
explanation had been given to the soldiers, the officer replied that
it had been explained to them that they must behave properly and that
they would harm their image if they didn't behave in the war like
soldiers in all respects. He heard members of the forces in the field
shouting condemnations and making threatening motions toward
Palestinians, but he attached no importance to this, since he had
encountered this phenomenon many times, during the war. Mr Ben-Yishai
went from the airport to Baabda; and there, at 8:30 p.m., he heard
from various officers that they had heard about people being executed
by the Phalangists. At 23:30 hours, Mr. BenYishai called up the
Defense Minister and told him that a story was circulating that the
Phalangists were doing unacceptable things in the camps. To the
Defense Minister's questions, Mr. Ben-Yishai replied that he had heard
this story from people he knew who had heard about civilians being
killed by the Phalangists. The Defense Minister did not react to these
words (statement 10 by Mr. Ben-Yishai, and testimony by the Defense
Minister, p. 298). According to the Defense Minister, what he heard
from Mr. Ron Ben-Yishai was nothing new to him, since he had already
heard earlier about killings from the Chief of Staff-, and he also
knew that as a result of the report, entry by additional forces had
been halted and an order had been given to the Phalangists to leave
the camps (p. 298).
In
concluding the description of the events of Thursday and Friday, it
should be noted that no information on the reports which had arrived
during those two days regarding the Phalangists' deeds, as these were
detailed above, was given to the Prime Minister during those same two
days. It should also be added that on Friday evening, there were
several calls from U.S. representatives complaining about entry by
Phalangist forces and about the consequences which might ensue, as
well as about actions that had been taken in other parts of West
Beirut. Foreign Ministry personnel handled these complaints, and a
summary of them was also sent to the situation room at the Defense
Ministry and was brought to the Defense Minister's attention at
approximately 22:00 hours.
The
Departure of the Phalangists and the Reports of the Massacre
The
Phalangists did not leave by 5:00 a.m. on Saturday, 18.9.82. Between
6:30-7:00 a.m., a group of Phalangist soldiers entered the Gaza
Hospital, which is located at the end of the Sabra camp and which is
run by the Palestinian Red Crescent organization. These soldiers took
a group of doctors and nurses, foreign nationals working in that same
hospital, out of the hospital and led them under armed escort via
Sabra St. We heard from three members of the group, Drs. Ang and
Morris and the nurse Ellen Siegel, about what happened in that
hospital from the time of Bashir's murder until Saturday morning. As
this group passed along Sabra St., the witnesses saw several corpses
on both sides of the street, and groups of people sitting on both
sides of the street with armed soldiers guarding them. The members of
the group also saw bulldozers moving along Sabra St. and entering the
camp's alleyways. The group of doctors and nurses arrived, with those
who were leading them, at a plaza at the end of Sabra St.; they passed
by the Kuwaiti Embassy building and were brought into a former U.N.
building by their guards. There several members of the group were
interrogated by the Phalangists, but the interrogation was halted,
their passports restored to them, and they were taken to a building
where there were I.D.F. soldiers - that is, the forward command post.
After a while, the members of the group were taken by I.D.F. soldiers
to another part of Beirut, where they were released; and several of
them, at their request, returned to the hospital after receiving from
one of the I.D.F. officers a document which was meant to grant them
passage as far as the hospital. We will return again later to the
testimony of three of the members of this group.
When
Brigadier General Yaron realized that the Phalangists had not left the
camps by 06:30 hours, he gave the Phalangist commander on the scene an
order that they must vacate the camps without delay. This order was
obeyed, and the last of the Phalangist forces left the camps at
approximately 8:00 a.m. Afterwards there was an "announcement" - that
is, it was declared over loudspeakers that people located in the area
must come out and assemble in a certain place, and all those who came
out were led to the stadium. There, refugees from the camps gathered,
and the I.D.F. gave them food and water. In the meantime, reports
circulated about the massacre in the camps, and many journalists and
media personnel arrived in the area.
The Chief
of Staff testified before us that on Saturday morning, the Prime
Minister phoned him and told him that the Americans had called him and
complained that the Phalangists had entered the Gaza Hospital and were
killing patients, doctors, and staff workers there. The Chief of
Staff's reply was that as far as he knew, there was no hospital called
"Gaza" in the western part of the city, but he would look into the
matter. At his order, an investigation was conducted in the Northern
Command and also in the Operations Branch, and the reply he received
was that there was indeed a hospital called "Gaza" but that no
killings had been perpetrated, and he so informed the Prime Minister.
According to the Chief of Staff's initial testimony, the Prime
Minister called him on this matter at approximately 10:00 a.m. (p.
243). In his second round of testimony, when the Chief of Staff was
presented with the fact that the Prime Minister was in synagogue at
8:00 a.m. on that same Saturday, the first day of the Rosh Hashana
holiday, the Chief of Staff said that the first telephone conversation
with the Prime Minister had apparently taken place at an earlier hour
of the morning. The Prime Minister stated in his testimony that he had
gone to synagogue at 8:15-8:30 hours, returning at 13:15-13:30 hours;
that he had had no conversation with the Chief of Staff before going
to synagogue; that there had been no American call to him regarding
the Gaza Hospital; and therefore, the conversations regarding the Gaza
Hospital about which the Chief of Staff testified (pp. 771-772) had
not taken place. The Defense Minister testified that the Chief of
Staff apparently spoke with him by phone between 9:00-10:00 on
Saturday morning and told him that the Prime Minister had called his
attention to some occurrence at the Gaza Hospital; but the Defense
Minister was not sure that such a conversation had indeed taken place,
and said that he things that there was such a conversation (p. 300).
We see no need, for the purpose of determining the facts in this
investigation, to decide between the two contradictory versions
regarding the conversations about Gaza hospital. We assume that the
contradictions are not deliberate, but stem from faulty memory, which
is understandable in view of the dramatic turn of events taking place
in those days.
On
Saturday, the Defense Minister received additional reports about the
acts of slaughter. He heard from the Director-General of the Foreign
ministry, Mr Kimche, that Ambassador Draper had called him to say that
I.D.F. soldiers had entered banks on the Street of Banks and that
Palestinians had been massacred. It emerged that the report about the
entry into the banks was incorrect. Regarding the report about the
massacre, the Defense Minister's reply to the Foreign Ministry
Director-General, which was given at about 13:00 hours, was that the
Phalangists' operation had been stopped, the entry of additional
forces blocked, and all the forces in the camps had been expelled. At
15:00 hours, Major General Drori spoke with the Defense Minister and
told him about the reports concerning the massacre, adding that the
Phalangists had already left the camps and that the Red Cross and the
press were inside (testimony of Maj. Gen. Drori, pp. 428-429). At
about 17:00 hours, Major General Drori met with a representative of
the Lebanese army and appealed to him to have the Lebanese army enter
the camps. The representative of the Lebanese army replied that he had
to get approval for such a move. Between 21:30 and 22:00 hours the
reply was received that the Lebanese army would enter the camps. Its
entry into the camps was effected on Sunday, 19.9.82.
After the
Phalangists had left the camps, Red Cross personnel, many journalists
and other persons entered them, and it then became apparent that in
the camps, and particularly in Shatilla, civilians - including women
and children -had been massacred. It was clear from the spectacle that
presented itself that a considerable number of the killed had not been
cut down in combat but had been murdered, and that no few acts of
barbarism had also been perpetrated. These sights shocked those who
witnessed them; the reports were circulated by the media and spread
throughout the world. Although for the most part the reports said that
the massacre had been executed by members of the Phalangists,
accusations were immediately hurled at the I.D.F. and at the State of
Israel, since, according to the reports published at that time, the
Phalangists' entry into the camps had been carried out with the aid
and consent of the I.D.F. On Saturday and the days following, the
I.D.F. refrained as far as possible from entering the camps, for fear
that should any I.D.F. soldiers be seen there, accusations would be
forthcoming about their participation in the massacre. The burial of
the dead was carried out under the supervision of the Red Cross, and
the victims' families also engaged in their burial.
It is
impossible to determine precisely the number of persons who were
slaughtered. The numbers cited in this regard are to a large degree
tendentious and are not based on an exact count by persons whose
reliability can be counted on. The low estimate came from sources
connected with the Government of Lebanon or with the Lebanese Forces.
The letter (exhibit 153) of the head of the Red Cross delegation to
the Minister of Defense stated that Red Cross representatives had
counted 328 bodies. This figure, however, does not include all the
bodies, since it is known that a number of families buried bodies on
their own initiative without reporting their actions to the Red Cross.
The forces who engaged in the operation removed bodies in trucks when
they left Shatilla, and it is possible that more bodies are lying
under the ruins in the camps or in the graves that were dug by the
assailants near the camps. The letter noted that the Red Cross also
had a list of 359 persons who had disappeared in West Beirut between
18 August and 20 September, with most of the missing having
disappeared from Sabra and Shatilla in mid-September. According to a
document which reached us (exhibit 151), the total number of victims
whose bodies were found from 18.9.82 to 30.9.82 is 460. This figure
includes the dead counted by the Lebanese Red Cross, the International
Red Cross, the Lebanese Civil Defense, the medical corps of the
Lebanese army, and by relatives of the victims. According to this
count, the 460 victims included 109 Lebanese and 328 Palestinians,
along with Iranians, Syrians and members of other nationalities.
According to the itemization of the bodies in this list, the great
majority of the dead were males; as for women and children, there were
8 Lebanese women and 12 Lebanese children, and 7 Palestinian women and
8 Palestinian children. Reports from Palestinian sources speak of a
far greater number of persons killed, sometimes even of thousands.
With respect to the number of victims, it appears that we can rely
neither on the numbers appearing in the document from Lebanese
sources, nor on the numbers originating in Palestinian sources. A
further difficulty in determining the number of victims stems from the
fact that it is difficult to distinguish between victims of combat
operations and victims of acts of slaughter. We cannot rule out the
possibility that various reports included also victims of combat
operations from the period antedating the assassination of Bashir.
Taking into account the fact that Red Cross personnel counted no more
that 328 bodies, it would appear that the number of victims of the
massacre was not as high as a thousand, and certainly not thousands.
According
to I.D.F. intelligence sources, the number of victims of the massacre
is between 700 and 800 (testimony of the director of Military
Intelligence, pp. 139-140). This may well be the number most closely
corresponding with reality. It is impossible to determine precisely
when the acts of slaughter were perpetrated; evidently they commenced
shortly after the Phalangists entered the camps and went on
intermittently until close to their departure.
According
to the testimony we heard, no report of the slaughter in the camps was
made to the Prime Minister on Saturday, with the possible exception of
the events in the Gaza Hospital, regarding which we made no finding.
The Prime Minister heard about the massacre on a B.B.C. radio
broadcast towards evening on Saturday. He immediately contacted the
Chief of Staff and the Defense Minister, who informed him that the
actions had been halted and that the Phalangists had been removed from
the camps (p. 771).
When a
public furor erupted in Israel and abroad in the wake of the reports
about the massacre, and accusations were levelled that the I.D.F. and
Haddad's men had taken part in the massacre, several communiqués were
issued by the I.D.F. and the Foreign Ministry which contained
incorrect and imprecise statements about the events. These communiqués
asserted explicitly or implied that the Phalangists' entry into the
camps had been carried out without the knowledge of - or coordination
with - the I.D.F. The incorrect statements were subsequently amended,
and it was stated publicly that the Phalangists' entry into the camps
had been coordinated with the I.D.F. There is no doubt that the
publication of incorrect and imprecise reports intensified the
suspicions against Israel and caused it harm.
After the
end of the Rosh Hashanah holy day, at 21:00 hours on Sunday, 19.9.82,
a Cabinet meeting took place at the Prime Minister's residence with
the participation of, in addition to the Cabinet members, the Chief of
Staff, the head of the Mossad, the director of Military Intelligence,
Major General Drori, and others. The subject discussed in that meeting
was "the events in West Beirut - the murder of civilians in the
Shatilla camp" (minutes of the meeting, Exhibit 121). At that meeting
the Prime Minister, the Minister of Defense, the Chief of Staff and
Major General Drori reported on the course of events. The Defense
Minister stressed that the I.D.F. had not entered the camps, which
were terrorist bastions, because it was our interest not to endanger
even on soldier in the camps (p. 5, minutes of the meeting). He added
that on the day following the entry, "when we learned what had taken
place there, the I.D.F. intervened immediately and removed those
forces" (p. 6). According to him (p. 7) no one had imagined that the
Phalangists would commit such acts. It his remarks, the Chief of Staff
stressed, among other points, that in previous Cabinet meetings
various Ministers had asked why the Phalangists were not fighting -
after all, this was their war. He, too, noted that no one could have
known in advance how the Phalangists would behave, and in his view
even the Phalangists' commanders did not know what would happen, but
had lost control of their men. The Chief of Staff added that "the
moment we learned how they were behaving there, we exerted all the
pressure we could, we removed them from there and we expelled them
from the entire sector" (pp. 9, 10). Major General Drori said that
even before the Phalangists entered the camps, "we made them swear,
not one oath but thousands, regarding their operation there. There was
also their assurance that the kind of actions that were committed
would not be committed. The moment it became clear to us what had
happened, we halted the operation and demanded that they get out - and
they got out." Major General Drori also told about the group of 15
persons, among them doctors, whom the I.D.F. had extricated from the
hands of the Phalangists, thus preventing a major complication. He
gave details of his appeal to the heads of the Lebanese army that they
agree to enter the camps, and about the negative replies he had
received (pp. 18-22). Afterward the Chief of Staff spoke again, and
according to the recorded minutes (p. 25) he said as follows:
"On
Friday, I met with them at around noon, at their command post. We did
not yet know what had happened there. In the morning we knew that they
had killed civilians, so we ordered them to get out and we did not
allow others to enter. But they did not say they had killed civilians,
and they did not say how many civilians they had killed; they did not
say anything..."
In his
second testimony the Chief of Staff explained that by his words, "in
the morning we knew they had killed civilians," he was referring to
reports that existed on Saturday morning and not to the reports that
existed Friday morning, as might have perhaps been understood (p.
1665). The remarks quoted above are not unequivocal; they are
ambivalent. We accept the Chief of Staff's explanation that he was not
referring to the reports in his possession on Friday, but to the
reports that reached him on Saturday morning. This interpretation of
the Chief of Staff's remarks is consistent with his other statements
in this section of his remarks.
Several
remarks were made in that meeting by the Prime Minister, who opened
the session with a general survey in which he complained about
accusations - in his view unfounded - which had been levelled against
Israel. Various ministers took part in the discussion. In response to
the remark of Minister Modai that the Prime Minister had spoken of
"protecting life" as one of the goals of the entry into West Beirut,
the Prime Minister stated (p. 73, exhibit 121):
"That was
our pure and genuine intention. That night I also spoke of this with
the Chief of Staff. I told him that we must seize positions precisely
to protect the Muslims from the vengeance of the Phalangists. I could
assume that after the assassination of Bashir, their beloved leader,
they would take revenge on the Muslims."
To this,
Minister Hammer commented that "if we suspected that they would commit
murder, we should have thought before we let them enter." The Prime
Minister's reply was, "In the meantime days have passed. What are you
objecting to? At night I said that we must prevent this." When in the
course of his testimony the Prime Minister's attention was drawn to
these remarks of his - that on the night when the decision about the
entry into West Beirut was taken, he had spoken with the Chief of
Staff about the goal "to protect the Muslims from the vengeance of the
Phalangists" - he confirmed having said this, although he had not
known at that time that the Phalangists would enter the camps (p.
764). In the Cabinet meeting of 19.9.82 the Chief of Staff did not
react to these remarks by the Prime Minister, and did not deny them.
In his second testimony the Chief of Staff said that in the
conversation between him and the Prime Minister that night, the Prime
Minister might have said "that there must be no rioting... they must
not cross over or flee or not do things like... crossing from side to
side"; but the Prime Minister had not gone into any greater detail (p.
1690). Since that night conversation was not taken down and it is
difficult to rely on the memory of the conversants regarding the
accuracy of what was said, we cannot determine with certainty what the
Prime Minister said at that time, except for the fact that he
mentioned that one of the purposes of the entry was to prevent
rioting. The meeting concluded with a resolution to issue a communique
expressing deep regret and pain at the injuries to a civilian
population done by a Lebanese unit which had entered a refugee camp
"at a place distant from an I. D.F. position." The resolution added
that "immediately after learning about what had happened in the
Shatilla camp, the I.D.F. had put a stop to the murder of innocent
civilians and had forced the Lebanese unit to leave the camp." It was
stressed in the resolution that the accusations regarding I.D.F.
responsibility for the human tragedy in the Shatilla camp were in the
nature of "a blood libel against the Jewish state and its Government,"
were groundless, and "the Government rejects them with repugnance."
The resolution also stated that had it not been for the intervention
of the I.D.F., the number of losses would have been far greater, and
that it had been found that the terrorists had violated the evacuation
agreement by leaving 2,000 terrorists and vast stocks of weapons in
West Beirut. The resolution concludes:
"No one
will preach to us moral values or respect for human life, on whose
basis we were educated and will continue to educate generations of
fighters in Israel."
The furor
that erupted in the wake of the massacre, and various accusations that
were levelled, led those concerned to carry out debriefings and
clarifications. A clarification of this kind was carried out on behalf
of the General Staff (exhibit 239) and in the office of the director
of Military Intelligence (exhibit 29 from October 1982). The summation
of the Military Intelligence report states that "it emerges from a
retrospective examination that the telephone report... had its source
in a rumour/'gut feeling' that the (Intelligence Officer A) had
happened to overhear, and that he himself was unable to verify that
rumor in his on-site examinations, or in reaction to the briefings he
had received..." The cable in question is Appendix A to Exhibit 29,
which has already been quoted above; and from what has already been
said above it is clear that it was not based on a "gut feeling." This
investigative report contains other inaccuracies, which we shall note
when we come to discuss the responsibility of Mr. A. Duda'i. A more
detailed clarification was carried out in a Senior Command Meeting (SCM)
with the participation of the Chief of Staff. The minutes of that
meeting were submitted to us (exhibit 241). At that meeting, the Chief
of Staff said, inter alia, that whereas prior to the I. D.F.'s entry
into Lebanon atrocities had been perpetrated throughout that country,
after the I.D.F.'s entry "the Phalangists did not commit any excesses
officially and did nothing that could have indicated any danger from
them," and they looked to him to be a regular, disciplined army. In
his remarks the Chief of Staff also stressed the pressure from various
elements for the Phalangists to take part in the combat operations.
Major General Drori related the course of events from his point of
view, which in general lines is consistent with what he related in his
testimony before us. He said, inter alia, that he had originally
wanted the I.D.F. or the Lebanese army to enter the camps, and that he
did not concur in the considerations which had led to the decision
regarding the entry of the Phalangists. Major General Drori was asked
by one of the participants why a tractor had been needed, and he
replied that there was a plan of the Lebanese administration,
including the Phalangists and the Lebanese army, to destroy all the
illegal structures, including the many structures in the camps.
Brigadier General Yaron also related the course of events. He said,
inter alia, that when he had been informed by the command that
approval had come to let the Christians into the refugee camp he had
expressed no opposition or reservation, but had been quite pleased
because it was clear to him that this camp contained many terrorists
and the battalion had come under quite heavy fire from it. Brigadier
General Yaron stressed that he had warned the Phalangists not to harm
civilians, women, children, old people or anyone raising his hands,
but to clean out the terrorists from the camps, with the civilians to
go to the area of the stadium. He said that until Saturday morning he
did not know what was happening and when he saw the group of doctors
and nurses, they had not told him about the acts of slaughter either.
Following a quite lengthy debate, Brigadier General Yaron responded to
the remarks of the participants by stating, inter alia (pp. 85 to 87,
exhibit 241):
"The
mistake, as I see it, the mistake is everyone's. The entire system
showed insensitivity. I am speaking now of the military system. I am
not speaking about the political system. The whole system manifested
insensitivity...
"On this
point everyone showed insensitivity, pure and simple. Nothing else. So
you start asking me, what exactly did you feel in your gut on
Friday... I did badly, I admit it. I did badly. I cannot, how is it
possible that a divisional commander - and I think this applies to the
Division Commander and up - how is it possible that a Division
Commander is in the field and does not know that 300, 400, 500 or a
thousand, I don't know how many, are being murdered here? If he's like
that, let him go. How can such a thing be"? But why didn't he know?
Why was he oblivious? That's why he didn't know and that's why he
didn't stop it... but I take myself to task...
"I admit
here, from this rostrum, we were all insensitive, that's all."
At the
conclusion of his remarks, the Chief of Staff stressed that if the
I.D.F. had provided the Phalangists with the tank and artillery
support they had requested, far more people would have been killed (p.
121).
On 28.9.82
a Senior Command Meeting was held with the Defense Minister, who
related the course of events from his point of view. His remarks at
that meeting are consistent with what we heard in his testimony.
Several senior I.D.F. officers expressed their views at that meeting
(exhibit 242).
The
Responsibility for the Massacre
In this
section of the report, we shall deal with the issue of the
responsibility for the massacre from two standpoints: first from the
standpoint of direct responsibility - i.e., who actually perpetrated
the massacre - and then we shall examine the problem of indirect
responsibility, to the extent that this applies to Israel or those who
acted on its behalf.
The Direct
Responsibility
According
to the above description of events, all the evidence indicates that
the massacre was perpetrated by the Phalangists between the time they
entered the camps on Thursday, 16.9.82,. at 18:00 hours, and their
departure from the camps on Saturday, 18.9.82, at approximately 8:00
a.m. The victims were found in those areas where the Phalangists were
in military control during the aforementioned time period. No other
military force aside from the Phalangists was seen by any one of the
witnesses in the area of the camps where the massacre was carried out,
or at the time of the entrance into or exit from this area. The camps
were surrounded on all sides: on three sides by I.D.F. forces, and on
the fourth side was a city line (that divided between East and West
Beirut) that was under Phalangist control. Near the point of entry to
the camps a Lebanese army force was encamped, and their men did not
see any military force besides the Phalangist one enter the camps. It
can be stated with certainty that no organized military force entered
the camps at the aforementioned time besides the Phalangist forces.
As we have
said, we heard testimony from two doctors and a nurse who worked in
the Gaza hospital, which was run by and for Palestinians. There is no
cause to suspect that any of these witnesses have any special sympathy
of Israel, and it is clear to us - both from their choosing that place
of employment and from our impression of their appearance before us -
that they sympathize with the Palestinians and desired to render
service to Palestinians in need. From these witnesses' testimony as
well it is clear that the armed military unit that took them out of
the hospital on Saturday morning and brought them to the building that
formerly belonged to the U.N. was a Phalangist unit. The witness Ms.
Siegel did indeed tell of a visit to the hospital at 7:00 p.m. on
Friday evening of two men dressed in civilian clothes who spoke to the
staff in German, and she hinted at the possibility that perhaps they
were Sephardic Jews; but this assumption has no basis in fact, and it
can be explained by her tendentiousness. Ms. Siegel even said that
these men looked like Arabs (pp. 499-500). It is clear that these men
did not belong to an armed force that penetrated the camps at the
time. The two doctors Ang and Morris did not see any other military
force aside from the Phalangists, who presented themselves as soldiers
of a Lebanese force. Dr. Ang also saw soldiers with a band with the
letters M.P. in red on it. There is evidence that some of the
Phalangist units who came to the camps wore tags with the letters M.P.,
and along the route the Phalangists travelled to the camps, road
directions containing the letters M.P. were drawn. To be sure, Dr.
Morris did not say specifically that the armed men who came to the
hospital were Phalangists, but he described their uniforms, which bore
Arabic inscriptions, and also heard them talking among themselves in
Arabic and with someone from the hospital staff in French. Dr. Morris
does not read Arabic, but Ms. Siegel, who does read Arabic, testified
that the Arabic inscription was the one that signifies Phalangists.
Therefore, the testimony of these three witnesses also indicates that
the only military force seen in the area was a Phalangist one. A
similar conclusion can be drawn from the statement of Norwegian
journalist John Harbo (no. 62).
In the
course of the events and also thereafter, rumors spread that personnel
of Major Haddad were perpetrating a massacre or participating in a
massacre. No basis was found for these rumors. The I.D.F. liaison
officer with Major Haddad's forces testified that no unit of that
force had crossed the Awali River that week. We have no reason to
doubt that testimony. As we have already noted, the relations between
the Phalangists and the forces of Major Haddad were poor, and friction
existed between those two forces. For this reason, too, it is
inconceivable that a force from Major Haddad's army took part in
military operations of the Phalangists in the camps, nor was there any
hint of such cooperation. Although three persons from southern Lebanon
- two of them from the Civil Guard in southern Lebanon - were in West
Beirut on Friday afternoon, and got caught in the exchanges of fire
between an I.D.F. unit and Jumblatt's militia, with one of them being
killed in those exchanges, this did not take place in the area of the
camps; and the investigation that was carried out showed that the
three of them had come to Beirut on a private visit. There is no
indication in this event that Haddad's men were at the site where the
massacre was perpetrated. We can therefore assert that no force under
the command of Major Haddad took part in the Phalangists' operation in
the camps, or took part in the massacre.
It cannot
be ruled out that the rumors about the participation of Haddad's men
in the massacre also had their origin in the fact that Major Haddad
arrived at Beirut airport on Friday, 17.9.82. From the testimony of
the I.D.F. liaison officer with Major Haddad's forces, and from Major
Haddad's testimony, it is clear that this visit by Major Haddad to the
suburbs of Beirut and the vicinity had no connection with the events
that took place in the camps. Major Haddad arrived at Beirut airport
in an air force helicopter at 8:30 a.m. on 17.9.82. The purpose of his
visit was to pay a condolence call on the Jemayel family at Bikfaya.
At the, airport he was met by three vehicles with members of his
escort party, who had arrived that morning from southern Lebanon. En
route, they were joined by another jeep with three of Haddad's
commanders, who also arrived to pay a condolence call. Major Haddad
and his escorts paid their condolence visit at Bikfaya, and then for
security reasons returned via a different route, arriving at the point
where the road from Bikfaya meets the coastal road. From there, Major
Haddad, along with about eight of his men, went to visit relatives of
his in Jouniyeh. Following that visit to his relative, Major Haddad
returned that same afternoon to his home in southern Lebanon, from
where he phoned the aforementioned liaison officer that evening.
Hints were
made about the participation of Haddad's men in the massacre on the
basis of a southern Lebanese accent which several of the survivors
mentioned, and they also said that a few of the participants in the
massacre had Moslem names. This, too, does not constitute concrete
evidence, since among the Phalangist forces there were also Shiites -
albeit not many - and they were joined also by persons who had fled
from southern Lebanon.
We cannot
rule out the possibility - although no evidence to this effect was
found either - that one of the men from Major Haddad's forces who was
visiting in Beirut during the period infiltrated into the camps,
particularly in the interim period between the departure of the
Phalangists and the entry of the Lebanese army, committed illegal acts
there; but if this did happen, no responsibility, either direct or
indirect, is to be imputed to the commanders of Major Haddad's forces.
Here and
there, hints, and even accusations, were thrown out to the effect that
I.D.F. soldiers were in the camps at the time the massacre was
perpetrated. We have no doubt that these notions are completely
groundless and constitute a baseless libel. One witness, Mr. Franklin
Pierce Lamb, of the United States, informed us of the fact that on
22.9.82 a civilian I.D. card and a military dogtag belonging to a
soldier named Benny Haim Ben Yosef, born on 9.7.61, were found in the
Sabra camp. Following that testimony, these details were investigated
and it was found that a soldier bearing that name was in hospital
after having undergone operations for wounds he sustained during the
entry into West Beirut. A statement was taken from this soldier in Tel
Hashomer Hospital. It emerged from his remarks that he is a soldier in
the battalion, he arrived in Beirut on Wednesday, 15.9.82, his unit
was moving not far from the Shatilla camp and was fired on; he was hit
and the protective vest he was wearing began to burn. A medic cut the
vest with scissors and threw it to the side of the road, as it
contained grenades which were liable to explode. Personal documents
belonging to the soldier were in the pocket of the vest. He was
evacuated on a stretcher and taken by helicopter to Rambam Hospital.
Already in the initial medical treatment his left arm was amputated;
he was also wounded in the legs and in his upper left hip. It is clear
that he was not in the camps at all. This testimony is confirmed by
the statement of the medic Amir Hasharoni (statement 117). Evidently,
someone who found the documents on the side of the road brought them
to the camp, where they were discovered. The discovery of these
documents belonging to an I.D.F. soldier in the camp does not indicate
that any I.D.F. soldiers were in the camp while the massacre was being
perpetrated.
Mr. Lamb
also testified - not from personal knowledge but based on what he had
heard from others - that cluster bombs were placed under bodies found
in the camps, apparently as booby-traps. According to the witness, the
I.D.F. used cluster bombs when the camps were shelled; these bombs
exploded easily and considerable caution is required in handling them,
with only specially trained people having the technical knowledge to
make use of these bombs as booby-traps. He raised the question whether
the Phalangists, or the forces of Major Haddad - if any of them were
in the camps - possessed the requisite technical skills to make use of
these bombs as booby-traps. This question implies that the bombs were
placed beneath the bodies by I.D.F. personnel. That implication is
totally without foundation. As noted, Mr. Lamb had no personal
knowledge regarding the use of such bombs as booby-traps, and it would
be extremely far-fetched to view this section of Mr. Lamb's testimony
as containing anything concrete pointing to direct involvement of
anyone from the I.D.F. in the massacre that was perpetrated in the
camps.
Following
the massacre, the Phalangist commanders denied, in various interviews
in the media, that they had perpetrated the massacre. On Sunday,
19.9.82, the Chief of Staff and Major General Drori met with the
Phalangist commanders. Notes of that meeting were taken by a
representative of the Mossad who was present (exhibit 199). The Chief
of Staff told the Phalangist commanders that he had come from the
camps, it was said that a massacre had taken place there, and that for
the sake of their future they must admit to having perpetrated the
acts and explain the matter, otherwise they would have no future in
Lebanon. Their reaction was that if the Chief of Staff says they must
do so, they would. The Chief of Staff formed the impression that they
were bewildered, that it was possible that they did not know what had
happened in the camps and had no control over their people there
(testimony of the Chief of Staff, p. 251). Even after that meeting the
Phalangist heads continued in their public appearances to deny any
connection with the massacre. That denial is patently incorrect.
Contentions and accusations were advanced that even if I.D.F.
personnel had not shed the blood of the massacred, the entry of the
Phalangists into the camps had been carried out with the prior
knowledge that a massacre would be perpetrated there and with the
intention that this should indeed take place; and therefore all those
who had enabled the entry of the Phalangists into the camps should be
regarded as accomplices to the acts of slaughter and sharing in direct
responsibility. These accusations too are unfounded. We have no doubt
that no conspiracy or plot was entered into between anyone from the
Israeli political echelon or from the military echelon in the I.D.F.
and the Phalangists, with the aim of perpetrating atrocities in the
camps. The decision to have the Phalangists enter the camps was taken
with the aim of preventing further losses in the war in Lebanon; to
accede to the pressure of public opinion in Israel, which was angry
that the Phalangists, who were reaping the fruits of the war, were
taking no part in it; and to take advantage of the Phalangists'
professional service and their skills in identifying terrorists and in
discovering arms caches. No intention existed on the part of any
Israeli element to harm the non-combatant population in the camps. It
is true that in the war in Lebanon, and particularly during the siege
of West Beirut, the civilian population sustained losses, with old
people, women and children among the casualties, but this was the
result of belligerent actions which claim victims even among those who
do not fight. Before they entered the camps and also afterward, the
Phalangists requested I.D.F. support in the form of artillery fire and
tanks, but this request was rejected by the Chief of Staff in order to
prevent injuries to civilians. It is true that I.D.F. tank fire was
directed at sources of fire within the camps, but this was in reaction
to fire directed at the I.D.F. from inside the camps. We assert that
in having the Phalangists enter the camps, no intention existed on the
part of anyone who acted on behalf of Israel to harm the non-combatant
population, and that the events that followed did not have the
concurrence or assent of anyone from the political or civilian echelon
who was active regarding the Phalangists' entry into the camps.
It was
alleged that the atrocities being perpetrated in the camps were
visible from the roof of the forward command post, that the fact that
they were being committed was also discernible from the sounds
emanating from the camps, and that the senior I.D.F. commanders who
were on the roof of the forward command post for two days certainly
saw or heard what was going on in the camps. We have already
determined above that events in the camps, in the area where the
Phalangists entered, were not visible from the roof of the forward
command post. It has also been made clear that no sounds from which it
could be inferred that a massacre was being perpetrated in the camps
reached that place. It is true that certain reports did reach officers
at the forward command post - and we shall discuss these in another
section of this report - but from the roof of the forward command post
they neither saw the actions of the Phalangists nor heard any sounds
indicating that a massacre was in progress.
Here we
must add that when the group of doctors and nurses met I.D.F. officers
on Saturday morning, at a time when it was already clear to them that
they were out of danger, they made no complaint that a massacre had
been perpetrated in the camps. When we asked the witnesses from the
group why they had not informed the 1. D. F. officers about the
massacre, they replied that they had not known about it. The fact that
the doctors and nurses who were in the Gaza Hospital - which is
proximate to the site of the event and where persons wounded in
combative action and frightened persons from the camps arrived - did
not know about the massacre, but only about isolated instances of
injury which they had seen for themselves, also shows that those who
were nearby but not actually inside the camps did not form the
impression, from what they saw and heard, that a massacre of hundreds
of people was taking place. Nor did members of a unit of the Lebanese
army who were stationed near the places of entry into the camps know
anything about the massacre until after the Phalangists had departed.
Our
conclusion is therefore that the direct responsibility for the
perpetration of the acts of slaughter rests on the Phalangist forces.
No evidence was brought before us that Phalangist personnel received
explicit orders from their command to perpetrate acts of slaughter,
but it is evident that the forces who entered the area were steeped in
hatred for the Palestinians, in the wake of the atrocities and severe
injuries done to the Christians during the civil war in Lebanon by the
Palestinians and those who fought alongside them; and these feelings
of hatred were compounded by a longing for revenge in the wake of the
assassination of the Phalangists' admired leader Bashir and the
killing of several dozen Phalangists two days before their entry into
the camps. The execution of acts of slaughter was approved for the
Phalangists on the site by the remarks of the two commanders to whom
questions were addressed over the radios, as was related above.
The
Indirect Responsibility
Before we
discuss the essence of the problem of the indirect responsibility of
Israel, or of those who operated at its behest, we perceive it to be
necessary to deal with objections that have been voiced on various
occasions, according to which if Israel's direct responsibility for
the atrocities is negated - i.e., if it is determined that the blood
of those killed was not shed by I.D.F. soldiers and I.D.F. forces, or
that others operating at the behest of the state were not parties to
the atrocities - then there is no place for further discussion of the
problem of indirect responsibility. The argument is that no
responsibility should be laid on Israel for deeds perpetrated outside
of its borders by members of the Christian community against
Palestinians in that same country, or against Muslims located within
the area of the camps. A certain echo of this approach may be found in
statements made in the cabinet meeting of 19.9.82, and in statements
released to the public by various sources.
We cannot
accept this position. If it indeed becomes clear that those who
decided on the entry of the Phalangists into the camps should have
foreseen - from the information at their disposal and from things
which were common knowledge - that there was danger of a massacre, and
no steps were taken which might have prevented this danger or at least
greatly reduced the possiblity that deeds of this type might be done,
then those who made the decisions and those who implemented them are
indirectly responsible for what ultimately occurred, even if they did
not intend this to happen and merely disregarded the anticipated
danger. A similar indirect responsibility also falls on those who knew
of the decision; it was their duty, by virtue of their position and
their office, to warn of the danger, and they did not fulfill this
duty. It is also not possible to absolve of such indirect
responsibility those persons who, when they received the first reports
of what was happening in the camps, did not rush to prevent the
continuation of the Phalangists' actions and did not do everything
within their power to stop them. It is not our function as a
commission of inquiry to lay a precise legal foundation for such
indirect responsibility. It may be that from a legal perspective, the
issue of responsibility is not unequivocal, in view of the lack of
clarity regarding the status of the State of Israel and its forces in
Lebanese territory. If the territory of West Beirut may be viewed at
the time of the events as occupied territory - and we do not determine
that such indeed is the case from a legal perspective - then it is the
duty of the occupier, according to the rules of usual and customary
international law, to do all it can to ensure the public's well-being
and security. Even if these legal norms are invalid regarding the
situation in which the Israeli government and the forces operating at
its instructions found themselves at the time of the events, still, as
far as the obligations applying to every civilized nation and the
ethical rules accepted by civilized peoples go, the problem of
indirect responsibility cannot be disregarded. A basis for such
responsibility may be found in the outlook of our ancestors, which was
expressed in things that were said about the moral significance of the
biblical portion concerning the "beheaded heifer" (in the Book of
Deuteronomy, chapter 21). It is said in Deuteronomy (21:6-7) that the
elders of the city who were near the slain victim who has been found
(and it is not known who struck him down) "will wash their hands over
the beheaded heifer in the valley and reply: our hands did not shed
this blood and our eyes did not see." Rabbi Yehoshua ben Levi says of
this verse (Talmud, Tractate Sota 38b):
"The
necessity for the heifer whose neck is to be broken only arises on
account of the niggardliness of spirit, as it is said, 'Our hands have
not shed this blood.' But can it enter our minds that the elders of a
Court of Justice are shedders of blood! The meaning is, [the man found
dead] did not come to us for help and we dismissed him, we did not see
him and let him go - i.e., he did not come to us for help and we
dismissed him without supplying him with food, we did not see him and
let him go without escort." (Rashi explains that escort means a group
that would accompany them; Sforno, a commentator from a later period,
says in his commentary on Deuteronomy, "that there should not be
spectators at the place, for if there were spectators there, they
would protest and speak out.')
When we
are dealing with the issue of indirect responsibility, it should also
not be forgotten that the Jews in various lands of exile, and also in
the Land of Israel when it was under foreign rule, suffered greatly
from pogroms perpetrated by various hooligans; and the danger of
disturbances against Jews in various lands, it seems evident, has not
yet passed. The Jewish public's stand has always been that the
responsibility for such deeds falls not only on those who rioted and
committed the atrocities, but also on those who were responsible for
safety and public order, who could have prevented the disturbances and
did not fulfill their obligations in this respect. It is true that the
regimes of various countries, among them even enlightened countries,
have side-stepped such responsibility on more than one occasion and
have not established inquiry commissions to investigate the issue of
indirect responsibility, such as that about which we are speaking; but
the development of ethical norms in the world public requires that the
approach to this issue be universally shared, and that the
responsibility be placed not just on the perpetrators, but also on
those who could and should have prevented the commission of those
deeds which must be condemned.
We would
like to note here that we will not enter at all into the question of
indirect responsibility of other elements besides the State of Israel.
One might argue that such indirect responsibility falls, inter alia,
on the Lebanese army, or on the Lebanese government to whose orders
this army was subject, since despite Major General Drori's urgings in
his talks with the heads of the Lebanese army, they did not grant
Israel's request to enter the camps before the Phalangists or instead
of the Phalangists, until 19.9.82. It should also be noted that in
meetings with U.S. representatives during the critical days, Israel's
spokesmen repeatedly requested that the U.S. use its influence to get
the Lebanese Army to fulfill the function of maintaining public peace
and order in West Beirut, but it does not seem that these requests had
any result. One might also make charges concerning the hasty
evacuation of the multi-national force by the countries whose troops
were in place until after the evacuation of the terrorists. We will
also not discuss the question of when other elements besides Israeli
elements first learned of the massacre, and whether they did all they
could to stop it or at least to immediately bring the reports in their
possession to Israeli and other elements. We do not view it as our
function to discuss these issues, which perhaps should be clarified in
another framework; we will only discuss the issue of Israel's indirect
responsibility, knowing that if this responsibility is determined, it
is not an exclusive responsibility laid on Israel alone.
Here it is
appropriate to discuss the question whether blame may be attached
regarding the atrocities done in the camps to those who decided on the
entry into West Beirut and on including the Phalangists in actions
linked to this entry.
As has
already been said above, the decision to enter West Beirut was adopted
in conversations held between the Prime Minister and the Defense
Minister on the night between 14-15 September 1982. No claim may be
made that this decision was adopted by these two alone without
convening a cabinet session. On that same night, an extraordinary
emergency situation was created which justified immediate and
concerted action to prevent a situation which appeared undesirable and
even dangerous from Israel's perspective. There is great sense in the
supposition that had I.D.F. troops not entered West Beirut, a
situation of total chaos and battles between various combat forces
would have developed, and the number of victims among the civilian
population would have been far greater than it ultimately was. The
Israeli military force was the only real force nearby which could take
control over West Beirut so as to maintain the peace and prevent a
resumption of hostile actions between various militias and
communities. The Lebanese army could have performed a function in the
refugee camps, but it did not then have the power to enforce order in
all of West Beirut. Under these circumstances it could be assumed that
were I.D.F. forces not to enter West Beirut, various atrocities would
be perpetrated there in the absence of any real authority; and it may
be that world public opinion might then have placed responsibility on
Israel for having refrained from action.
Both the
Prime Minister and the Defense Minister based the participation of the
Phalangists in the entry into West Beirut on the Cabinet resolution
adopted at the session of 15.6.82. We are unable to accept this
reasoning. Although there was much talk in the meeting of 15.6.82
(Exhibit 53) about the plan that the I.D.F. would not enter West
Beirut, and that the entry would be effected by the Phalangists with
support from the I.D.F. - but the situation then was wholly different
from the one that emerged subsequently. During the discussion of
15.6.82 the terrorists and Syrian forces had not yet been evacuated
from West Beirut, and the entire military picture was different from
the one that developed after the evacuation was executed and after
Bashir's assassination. However, even if the Phalangists'
participation was not based on a formal Cabinet resolution of 15.6.82,
we found no cause to raise objections to that participation in the
circumstances that were created after Bashir's assassination. We wish
to stress that we are speaking now only of the Phalangists'
participation in connection with the entry into West Beirut, and not
about the role they were to play in the camps.
The demand
made in Israel to have the Phalangists take part in the fighting was a
general and understandable one; and political, and to some extent
military, reasons existed for such participation. The general question
of relations with the Phalangists and cooperation with them is a
saliently political one, regarding which there may be legitimate
differences of opinion and outlook. We do not find it justified to
assert that the decision on this participation was unwarranted or that
it should not have been made.
It is a
different question whether the decision to have the Phalangists enter
the camps was justified in the circumstances that were created. From
the description of events cited above and from the testimony before
us, it is clear that this decision was taken by the Minister of
Defense with the concurrence of the Chief of Staff and that the Prime
Minister did not know of it until the Cabinet session in the evening
hours of 16.9.82. We shall leave to another section of this report -
which will deal with the personal responsibility of all those to whom
notices were sent under Section 15(A) of the law - the discussion of
whether personal responsibility devolves upon the Defense Minister or
the Chief of Staff for what happened afterward in the camps in the
wake of the decision to have the Phalangists enter them. Here we shall
discuss only the question of whether it was possible or necessary to
foresee that the entry of the Phalangists into the camps, with them in
control of the area where the Palestinian population was to be found,
was liable to eventuate in a massacre, as in fact finally happened.
The heads
of Government in Israel and the heads of the I.D.F. who testified
before us were for the most part firm in their view that what happened
in the camps was an unexpected occurrence, in the nature of a disaster
which no one had of hostile actions between various militias and
communities. The Lebanese army could have performed a function in the
refugee camps, but it did not then have the power to enforce order in
all of West Beirut. Under these circumstances it could be assumed that
were I.D.F. forces not to enter West Beirut, various atrocities would
be perpetrated there in the absence of any real authority; and it may
be that world public opinion might then have placed responsibility on
Israel for having refrained from action.
Both the
Prime Minister and the Defense Minister based the participation of the
Phalangists in the entry into West Beirut on the Cabinet resolution
adopted at the session of 15.6.82. We are unable to accept this
reasoning. Although there was much talk in the meeting of 15.6.82
(Exhibit 53) about the plan that the I.D.F. would not enter West
Beirut, and that the entry would be effected by the Phalangists with
support from the I.D.F. - but the situation then was wholly different
from the one that emerged subsequently. During the discussion of
15.6.82 the terrorists and Syrian forces had not yet been evacuated
from West Beirut, and the entire military picture was different from
the one that developed after the evacuation was executed and after
Bashir's assassination. However, even if the Phalangists'
participation was not based on a formal Cabinet resolution of 15.6.82,
we found no cause to raise objections to that participation in the
circumstances that were created after Bashir's assassination. We wish
to stress that we are speaking now only of the Phalangists'
participation in connection with the entry into West Beirut, and not
about the role they were to play in the camps.
The demand
made in Israel to have the Phalangists take part in the fighting was a
general and understandable one; and political, and to some extent
military, reasons existed for such participation. The general question
of relations with the Phalangists and cooperation with them is a
saliently political one, regarding which there may be legitimate
differences of opinion and outlook. We do not find it justified to
assert that the decision on this participation was unwarranted or that
it should not have been made.
It is a
different question whether the decision to have the Phalangists enter
the camps was justified in the circumstances that were created. From
the description of events cited above and from the testimony before
us, it is clear that this decision was taken by the Minister of
Defense with the concurrence of the Chief of Staff and that the Prime
Minister did not know of it until the Cabinet session in the evening
hours of 16.9.82. We shall leave to another section of this report -
which will deal with the personal responsibility of all those to whom
notices were sent under Section 15(A) of the law - the discussion of
whether personal responsibility devolves upon the Defense Minister or
the Chief of Staff for what happened afterward in the camps in the
wake of the decision to have the Phalangists enter them. Here we shall
discuss only the question of whether it was possible or necessary to
foresee that the entry of the Phalangists into the camps, with them in
control of the area where the Palestinian population was to be found,
was liable to eventuate in a massacre, as in fact finally happened.
The heads
of Government in Israel and the heads of the I.D.F. who testified
before us were for the most part firm in their view that what happened
in the camps was an unexpected occurrence, in the nature of a disaster
which no one had imagined and which could not have been - or, at all
events, need not have been - foreseen. It was stressed in the remarks
made in testimony and in the arguments advanced before us, that this
matter should not be discussed in terms of hindsight, but that we must
be careful to judge without taking into account what actually
happened. We concur that special caution is required so as not to fall
into the hindsight trap, but that caution does not exempt us from the
obligation to examine whether persons acting and thinking rationally
were duty-bound, when the decision was taken to have the Phalangists
enter the camps, to foresee, according to the information that each of
them possessed and according to public knowledge, that the entry of
the Phalangists into the camps held out the danger of a massacre and
that no little probability existed that it would in fact occur. At
this stage of the discussion we shall not pause to examine the
particular information possessed by the persons to whom notices were
sent under Section 15(A) of the law, but shall make do with an
examination of the knowledge possessed by everyone who had some
expertise on the subject of Lebanon.
In our
view, everyone who had anything to do with events in Lebanon should
have felt apprehension about a massacre in the camps, if armed
Phalangist forces were to be moved into them without the I.D.F.
exercising concrete and effective supervision and scrutiny of them.
All those concerned were well aware that combat morality among the
various combatant groups in Lebanon differs from the norm in the I.D.F.
that the combatants in Lebanon belittle the value of human life far
beyond
what is necessary and accepted in wars between civilized peoples, and
that various atrocities against the non-combatant population had been
widespread in Lebanon since 1975. It was well known that the
Phalangists harbor deep enmity for the Palestinians, viewing them as
the source of all the troubles that afflicted Lebanon during the years
of the civil war. The fact that in certain operations carried out
under close I.D.F. supervision the Phalangists did not deviate from
disciplined behavior could not serve as an indication that their
attitude toward the Palestinian population had changed, or that
changes had been effected in their plans - which they made no effort
to hide - for the Palestinians. To this backdrop of the Phalangists'
attitude toward the Palestinians were added the profound shock in the
wake of Bashir's death along with a group of Phalangists in the
explosion at Ashrafiya, and the feeling of revenge that event must
arouse, even without the identity of the assailant being known.
The
written and oral summations presented to us stressed that most of the
experts whose remarks were brought before the commission - both
Military Intelligence personnel and Mossad personnel - had expressed
the view that given the state of affairs existing when the decision
was taken to have the Phalangists enter the camps, it could not be
foreseen that the Phalangists would perpetrate a massacre, or at all
events the probability of that occurring was low; and had they been
asked for their opinion at the time they would have raised no
objections to the decision. We are not prepared to attach any
importance to these statements, and not necessarily due to the fact
that this evaluation was refuted by reality. It is our impression that
the remarks of the experts on this matter were influenced to a certain
extent by the desire of each of them to justify his action or lack
thereof, the experts having failed to raise any objection to the entry
of the Phalangists into the camps when they learned of it. In contrast
to the approach of these experts, there were cases in which other
personnel, both from Military Intelligence, from other I.D.F.
branches, and from outside the governmental framework, warned - as
soon as they learned of the Phalangists' entry into the camps, and on
earlier occasion when the Phalangists' role in the war was discussed -
that the danger of a massacre was great and that the Phalangists would
take advantage of every opportunity offered them to wreak vengeance on
the Palestinians. Thus, for example, Intelligence Officer G. (whose
name appears in Section I of Appendix B), a branch head in Military
Intelligence/ Research, stated that the subject of possible injury by
the Phalangists to the Palestinian population had come up many times
in internal discussions (statement no. 176). Similarly, when
Intelligence Officer A. learned on Thursday, in a briefing of
Intelligence officers, that the Phalangists had entered the camps, he
said, even before the report arrived about the 300 killed, that he was
convinced that the entry would lead to a massacre of the refugee
camps' population. In a working meeting held at 7:00 p.m. between
Major General Drori and the liaison officer with the Lebanese army at
Northern Command [headquarters], the officer was told by Major General
Drori that the Phalangists were about to enter the Sabra and Shatilla
refugee camps; his reaction was that this was a good solution, but
care should be taken that they not commit acts of murder (statement
No. 4 and testimony of Major General Drori, pp. 402-403). In his
statement, Captain Nahum Menahem relates that in a meeting he had with
the Defense Minister on 12.9.82, he informed the Defense Minister of
his opinion, which was based on considerable experience and on a study
he had made of the tensions between the communities in Lebanon, that a
"terrible" slaughter could ensue if Israel failed to assuage the
inter-communal tensions in Lebanon (statement No. 161, p. 4). We shall
mention here also articles in the press stating that excesses could be
expected on the part of the Christian fighters (article in the journal
Bamahane from 1.9.82, appended to the statement - No. 24 - of the
article's author, the journal's military reporter Mr. Yinon Shenkar)
and that the refugee camps in Beirut were liable to undergo events
exceeding what had happened at El Tel Za'atar (article in a French
paper in Beirut from 20.8.82 appended to the statement, No. 76, of the
journalist M. Strauch). We do not know whether the content of these
articles was made known to the decisionmakers regarding the operation
of the Phalangists in West Beirut, or to those who executed the
decision. We mention them solely as yet another indication that even
before Bashir's assassination the possibility of the Phalangists
perpetrating a massacre in the camps was not esoteric lore which need
not and could not have been foreseen.
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.
Serious considerations existed in favor of such a decision; and on
this matter we shall repeat what has already been mentioned, that an
understandable desire existed to prevent I.D. F. losses in hazardous
combat in a built-up area, that it was justified to demand of the
Phalangists to take part in combat which they regarded as a broad
opening to assume power and for the restoration of Lebanese
independence, and that the Phalangists were more expert than the I.D.F.
in uncovering and identifying terrorists. These are weighty
considerations; and had the decision-makers and executors been aware
of the danger of harm to the civilian population on the part of the
Phalangists but had nevertheless, having considered all the
circumstances, decided to have the Phalangists enter the camps while
taking all possible steps to prevent harm coming to the civilian
population, it is possible that there would be no place to be critical
of them, even if ultimately it had emerged that the decision had
caused undesirable results and had caused damage. However, as it
transpired no examination was made of all the considerations and their
ramifications; hence the appropriate orders were not issued to the
executors of the decisions and insufficient heed was taken to adopt
the required measures. Herein lies the basis for imputing indirect
responsibility to those persons who in our view did not fulfill the
obligations placed on them.
To sum up
this chapter, we assert that the atrocities in the refugee camps were
perpetrated by members of the Phalangists, and that absolutely no
direct responsibility devolves upon Israel or upon those who acted in
its behalf. At the same time, it is clear from what we have said above
that the decision on the entry of the Phalangists into the refugee
camps was taken without consideration of the danger - which the makers
and executors of the decision were obligated to foresee as probable -
that the Phalangists would commit massacres and pogroms against the
inhabitants of the camps, and without an examination of the means for
preventing this danger. Similarly, it is clear from the course of
events that when the reports began to arrive about the actions of the
Phalangists in the camps, no proper heed was taken of these reports,
the correct conclusions were not drawn from them, and no energetic and
immediate actions were taken to restrain the Phalangists and put a
stop to their actions. This both reflects and exhausts Israel's
indirect responsibility for what occurred in the refugee camps. We
shall discuss the responsibility of those who acted in Israel's behalf
and in its name in the following chapters.
The
Responsibility of the Political Echelon
Among
those who received notices sent by the committee in accordance with
Section 15(A) of the Commissions of Inquiry Law were the Prime
Minister and two ministers, and in this matter no distinction was made
between Cabinet ministers and officeholders and other officials. We
took this course because, in our opinion, in principle, in the matter
of personal responsibility, no distinction should be made between
Cabinet members and others charged with personal responsibility for
actions or oversights. We wish to note to the credit of the lawyers
who appeared before us that none of them raised any argument to the
effect that in the investigation being conducted before us, the status
of Cabinet members differed from that of others. In our view, any
claim that calls for a distinction of this sort is wholly untenable.
We shall discuss this argument below, although it was raised not in
the deliberations of the commission but outside them.
In the
report of the "Commission of Inquiry - the Yom Kippur War" (henceforth
the Agranat Commission), the subject of "personal responsibility of
the government echelon" was discussed in Clause 30 of the partial
report. It is appropriate to cite what was stated there, since we
believe that it reflects the essence of the correct approach, from a
legal and public standpoint, to the problem of the personal
responsibility of the political echelon. The partial report of the
Agranat Commission states (Section 30):
"In
discussing the responsibility of ministers for an act or failure to
act in which they actually or personally took part, we are obligated
to stress that we consider ourselves free to draw conclusions, on the
basis of our findings, that relate only to direct responsibility, and
we do not see it as our task to express an opinion on what is implied
by parliamentary responsibility.
"Indeed,
in Israel, as in England - whence it came to us - the principle
prevails that a member of the Cabinet is responsible to the elected
assembly for all the administrative actions of the apparatus within
his ministry, even if he was not initially aware of them and was not a
party to them. However, while it is clear that this principle
obligates him to report to the members of the elected assembly on such
actions, including errors and failures; to reply to parliamentary
questions; to defend them or to report on what has been done to
correct errors - even the English experience shows that the traditions
have not determined anything regarding the question of which cases of
this kind require him to resign from his ministerial office; this
varies, according to circumstances, from one case to the next. The
main reason for this is that the question of the possible resignation
of a Cabinet member in cases of this kind is essentially a political
question par excellence, and therefore we believe that we should not
deal with it..."
Later on
in the partial report, the Agranat Commission deals (in Section 31)
with the "direct personal responsibility of the Minister of Defense"
and arrives at the conclusion that "according to the criterion of
reasonable behavior demanded of one who holds the office of Minister
of Defense, the minister was not obligated to order additional or
different precautionary measures..."
The
Agranat Commission also dealt (in Section 32 of its partial report)
with the personal responsibility of the Prime Minister and arrived at
the conclusion that she was not to be charged with any responsibility
for her actions at the outbreak of the Yom Kippur War and afterwards.
From the
above it is clear that the Agranat commission did not in any way avoid
dealing with the question of the personal responsibility of the Prime
Minister and other ministers, and regarding responsibility of this
kind it did not distinguish between ministers and other people whose
actions were investigated by the commission. The Agranat Commission
did not discuss the question of a minister's responsibility for the
shortcomings and failures of the apparatus he heads and for which he
should not be charged with any personal responsibility. It is not
necessary to deal in this report with the question of a minister's
responsibility for the failures of his apparatus which occurred
without any personal blame on his part, and we shall not express an
opinion on it.
The claim
has been made, albeit not in the framework of the commission's
deliberations, that the matter of a minister's judgment cannot serve
as the subject of investigation of a commission of inquiry according
to the Commissions of Inquiry Law, 1968, because a minister's
judgments are political judgments; there are no set norms regarding
judgments of this kind; and therefore one cannot subject such
judgments to scrutiny. We reject this view. It is unfounded from both
a legal and a public point of view. From a legal standpoint, it is a
well known rule, and attested by many rulings of the Supreme Court
(sitting in its capacity as the High Court of Justice), that any
judgment of a public authority, including that of ministers, is
subject to scrutiny and examination in court. Decisions made on the
basis of unwarranted, irrelevant, arbitrary, unreasonable, or
immaterial considerations have more than once been disqualified by the
courts.
In
examining the considerations that served as the basis for decisions,
the court never distinguished between the obligations of a minister
and those of any other public authority. The fact that there exists no
hard and fast law stating that a public authority must reach its
decision on the basis of correct and reasonable considerations after
examining all matters brought before it in a proper manner, has not
prevented the courts from imposing obligations of this sort on every
public authority.
This has
no bearing on the principle that the court does not substitute its own
judgment for the judgment of the public authority and usually does not
intervene in the policy that the authority sets for itself.
This is
all the more reason for rejecting the above-mentioned view when the
matter under discussion is the deliberations of a commission of
inquiry that is obligated to consider not necessarily the legal
aspects of the subject but also, and occasionally primarily, its
public and moral aspects. The absence of any hard and fast law
regarding various matters does not exempt a man whose actions are
subject to the scrutiny of a commission of inquiry from
accountability, from a public standpoint, for his deeds or failures
that indicate inefficiency on his part, lack of proper attention to
his work, or actions executed hastily, negligently, unwisely, or
shortsightedly when - considering the qualifications of the man who
holds a certain office and the personal qualities demanded of him in
fulfilling his duties -he should have acted perspicaciously. No
commission of inquiry would fulfill its role properly if it did not
exercise such scrutiny, in the framework of its competence, vis-a-vis
any man whose actions and failures were under scrutiny, regardless of
his position and public standing.
In
conclusion, regarding personal responsibility, we will not draw a
distinction between the political echelon and any other echelon.
Personal
Responsibility
In
accordance with a resolution adopted by the Commission on 24.11.82,
notices were sent under Section 15(A) of the Commissions of Inquiry
Law, 1968, to nine persons regarding the harm liable to be done to
them by the inquiry and its results. We shall now consider the matter
of each of those who received such a notice.
The Prime
Minister, Mr. Menachem Begin
The notice
sent to the Prime Minister, Mr. Menachem Begin, stated that he was
liable to be harmed if the Commission were to determine "that the
Prime Minister did not properly weigh the part to be played by the
Lebanese Forces during and in the wake of the I.D.F.'s entry into West
Beirut, and disregarded the danger of acts of revenge and bloodshed by
these forces vis-a-vis the population in the refugee camps."
The Prime
Minister's response to the notice stated that in the conversations
between him and the Defense Minister in which the decision was taken
to have I.D.F. units enter West Beirut, and in the conversations he
had held with the Chief of Staff during the night between 14.9.82 and
15.9.82, nothing at all was said about a possible operation by the
Lebanese Forces.
The Prime
Minister testifies that only in the Cabinet session of 16.9.82 did he
hear about the agreement with the Phalangists that they would operate
in the camps, and that until then, in all the conversations he had
held with the Defense Minister and with the Chief of Staff, nothing
had been said about the role of the Phalangists or their participation
in the operations in West Beirut. He added that since this matter had
not come up in the reports he received from the Defense Minister and
the Chief of Staff, he had raised no questions about it. The Prime
Minister's remarks in this regard are consistent with the testimony of
the Defense Minister and the Chief of Staff, and with the existing
documents concerning the content of the conversations with the Prime
Minister. We have described above the two conversations between the
Prime Minister and the Defense Minister from the roof of the forward
command post on Wednesday, 15.9.82, in the morning hours. According to
the testimony and the notes of those conversations, the matter of the
Phalangists was not mentioned in them at all. In a further
conversation between the Defense Minister and the Prime Minister, on
Wednesday at 18:00 hours, nothing was said about the participation of
the Phalangists in the entry into Beirut. Similarly, on Thursday,
16.9.82, when the Defense Minister spoke by phone with the Prime
Minister during the discussion in the Defense Minister's office, the
Defense Minister said nothing about the Phalangists. According to the
content of the conversation (see Exhibit 27), his report to the Prime
Minister was in an optimistic vein: that the fighting had ended, the
I.D.F. held all the key points, and it was all over. The only mention
of the camps in that conversation was that they were encircled.
We may
certainly wonder that the participation of the Phalangists in the
entry to West Beirut and their being given the task of "mopping up"
the camps seemed so unimportant that the Defense Minister did not
inform the Prime Minister of it and did not get his assent for the
decision; however, that question does not bear on the responsibility
of the Prime Minsiter. What is clear is that the Prime Minister was
not a party to the decision to have the Phalangists move into the
camps, and that he received no report about that decision until the
Cabinet session on the evening of 16.9.82.
We do not
believe that we ought to be critical of the Prime Minister because he
did not on his own initiative take an interest in the details of the
operation of the entry into West Beirut, and did not discover, through
his own questions, that the Phalangists were taking part in that
operation of the entry into West Beirut. The tasks of the Prime
Minister are many and diverse, and he was entitled to rely on the
optimistic and calming report of the Defense Minister that the entire
operation was proceeding without any hitches and in the most
satisfactory manner.
We have
cited above passages from remarks made at the Cabinet session of
16.9.82, during which the Prime Minister learned that the Phalangists
had that evening begun to operate in the camps. Neither in that
meeting nor afterward did the Prime Minister raise any opposition or
objection to the entry of the Phalangists into the camps. Nor did he
react to the remarks of Deputy prime Minister Levy which contained a
warning of the danger to be expected from the Phalangists' entry into
the camps. According to the Prime Minister's testimony, "no one
conceived that atrocities would be committed... simply, none of us, no
Minister, none of the other participants supposed such a thing..." (p.
767). The Prime Minister attached no importance to Minister Levy's
remarks because the latter did not ask for a discussion or a vote on
this subject. When Minister Levy made his remarks, the Prime Minister
was busy formulating the concluding resolution of the meeting, and for
this reason as well, he did not pay heed to Minister Levy's remarks.
We have
already said above, when we discussed the question of indirect
responsibility, that in our view, because of things that were well
known to all, it should have been foreseen that the danger of a
massacre existed if the Phalangists were to enter the camps without
measures being taken to prevent them from committing acts such as
these. We are unable to accept the Prime Minister's remarks that he
was absolutely unaware of such a danger. According to what he himself
said, he told the Chief of Staff on the night between 14 and 15
September 1982, in explaining the decision to have the I.D.F. occupy
positions in West Beirut, that this was being done "in order to
protect the Moslems from the vengeance of the Phalangists," and he
could well suppose that after the assassination of Bashir, the
Phalangists' beloved leader, they would take revenge on the
terrorists. The Prime Minister was aware of the mutual massacres
committed in Lebanon during the civil war, and of the Phalangists'
feelings of hate for the Palestinians, whom the Phalangists held
responsible for all the calamities that befell their land. The purpose
of the I.D.F.'s entry into West Beirut - in order to prevent bloodshed
- was also stressed by the Prime Minister in his meeting with
Ambassador Draper on 15.9.82. We are prepared to believe the Prime
Minister that, being preoccupied at the Cabinet session with
formulating the resolution, he did not pay heed to the remarks of
Minister Levy, which were uttered following lengthy reviews and
discussions. However, in view of what has already been noted above
regarding foresight and probability of acts of slaughter, we are
unable to accept the position of the Prime Minister that no one
imagined that what happened was liable to happen, or what follows from
his remarks: that this possibility did not have to be foreseen when
the decision was taken to have the Phalangists move into the camps.
As noted,
the Prime Minister first heard about the Phalangists' entry into the
camps about 36 hours after the decision to that effect was taken, and
did not learn of the decision until the Cabinet session. When he heard
about the Phalangists' entry into the camps, it had already taken
place. According to the "rosy" reports the Prime Minister received
from the Defense Minister and the Chief of Staff, the Prime Minister
was entitled to assume at that time that all the operations in West
Beirut had been performed in the best possible manner and had nearly
been concluded. We believe that in these circumstances it was not
incumbent upon the Prime Minister to object to the Phalangists' entry
into the camps or to order
their
removal. On the other hand, we find no reason to exempt the Prime
Minister from responsibility for not having evinced, during or after
the Cabinet session, any interest in the Phalangists' actions in the
camps. It has already been noted above that no report about the
Phalangists' operations reached the Prime Minister, except perhaps for
the complaint regarding the Gaza Hospital, until he heard the BBC
broadcast towards evening on Saturday. For two days after the Prime
Minister heard about the Phalangists' entry, he showed absolutely no
interest in their actions in the camps. This indifference would have
been justifiable if we were to accept the Prime Minister's position
that it was impossible and unnecessary to foresee the possibility that
the Phalangists would commit acts of revenge; but we have already
explained above that according to what the Prime Minister knew,
according to what he heard in the Thursday cabinet session, and
according to what he said about the purpose of the move into Beirut,
such a possibility was not unknown to him. It may be assumed that a
manifestation of interest by him in this matter, after he had learned
of the Phalangists' entry, would have increased the alertness of the
Defense Minister and the Chief of Staff to the need to take
appropriate measures to meet the expected danger. The Prime Minister's
lack of involvement in the entire matter casts on him a certain degree
of responsibility.
The
Minister of Defense, Mr. Ariel Sharon
The notice
sent to the Minister of Defense under Section 15(A) stated that the
Minister of Defense might be harmed if the commission determined that
he ignored or disregarded the danger of acts of revenge or bloodshed
perpetrated by Lebanese forces against the population of the refugee
camps in Beirut and did not order the adoption of the withdrawal of
the Lebanese forces from the refugee camps as quickly as possible and
the adoption of measures to protect the population in the camps when
information reached him about the acts of killing or excesses that
were perpetrated by the Lebanese forces.
In his
testimony before us, and in statements he issued beforehand, the
Minister of Defense also adopted the position that no one had imagined
the Phalangists would carry out a massacre in the camps and that it
was a tragedy that could not be foreseen. It was stressed by the
Minister of Defense in his testimony, and argued in his behalf, that
the director of Military Intelligence, who spent time with him and
maintained contact with him on the days prior to the Phalangists'
entry into the camps and at the time of their entry into the camps,
did not indicate the danger of a massacre, and that no warning was
received from the Mossad, which was responsible for the liaison with
the Phalangists and also had special knowledge of the character of
this force.
It is true
that no clear warning Was provided by military intelligence or the
Mossad about what might happen if the Phalangist forces entered the
camps, and we will relate to this matter when we discuss the
responsibility of the director of Military Intelligence and the head
of the Mossad. But in our view, even without such warning, it is
impossible to justify the Minister of Defense's disregard of the
danger of a massacre. We will not repeat here what we have already
said above about the widespread knowledge regarding the Phalangists'
combat ethics, their feelings of hatred toward the Palestinians, and
their leaders' plans for the future of the Palestinians when said
leaders would assume power. Besides this general knowledge, the
Defense Minister also had special reports from his not inconsiderable
[number of] meetings with the Phalangist heads before Bashir's
assassination.
Giving the
Phalangists the possibility of entering the refugee camps without
taking measures for continuous and concrete supervision of their
actions there could have created a grave danger for the civilian
population in the camps even if they had been given such a possibility
before Bashir's assassination; thus this danger was certainly to have
been anticipated - and it was imperative to have foreseen it - after
Bashir's assassination. The fact that it was not clear which
organization had caused Bashir's death was of no importance at all,
given the known frame of mind among the combatant camps in Lebanon. In
the circumstances that prevailed after Bashir's assassination, no
prophetic powers were required to know that concrete danger of acts of
slaughter existed when the Phalangists were moved into the camps
without the I.D.F.'s being with them in that operation and without the
I.D.F. being able to maintain effective and ongoing supervision of
their actions there. The sense of such a danger should have been in
the consciousness of every knowledgeable person who was close to this
subject, and certainly in the consciousness of the Defense Minister,
who took an active part in everything relating to the war. His
involvement in the war was deep, and the connection with the
Phalangists was under his constant care. If in fact the Defense
Minister, when he decided that the Phalangists would enter the camps
without the I.D.F. taking part in the operation, did not think that
that decision could bring about the very disaster that in fact
occurred, the only possible explanation for this is that he
disregarded any apprehensions about what was to be expected because
the advantages - which we have already noted - to be gained from the
Phalangists' entry into the camps distracted him from the proper
consideration in this instance.
As a
politician responsible for Israel's security affairs, and as a
Minister who took an active part in directing the political and
military moves in the war in Lebanon, it was the duty of the Defense
Minister to take into account all the reasonable considerations for
and against having the Phalangists enter the camps, and not to
disregard entirely the serious consideraton mitigating against such an
action, namely that the Phalangists were liable to commit atrocities
and that it was necessary to forestall this possibility as a
humanitarian obligation and also to prevent the political damage it
would entail. From the Defense Minister himself we know that this
consideration did not concern him in the least, and that this matter,
with all its ramifications, was neither discussed nor examined in the
meetings and discussion held by the Defense Minister. In our view, the
Minister of Defense made a grave mistake when he ignored the danger of
acts of revenge and bloodshed by the Phalangists against the
population in the refugee camps.
We have
already said above that we do not assert that the decision to have the
Phalangists enter the camps should under no circumstances ever have
been made. It appears to us that no complaints could be addressed to
the Defense Minister in this matter if such a decision had been taken
after all the relevant considerations had been examined; however, if
the decision were taken with the awareness that the risk of harm to
the inhabitants existed, the obligation existed to adopt measures
which would ensure effective and ongoing supervision by the I.D.F.
over the actions of the Phalangists at the site, in such a manner as
to prevent the danger or at least reduce it considerably. The Defense
Minister issued no order regarding the adoption of such measures. We
shall not dwell here on what steps might have been taken; this we
shall consider below. Regarding the responsibility of the Minister of
Defense, it is sufficient to assert that he issued no order to the
I.D.F. to adopt suitable measures. Similarly, in his meetings with the
Phalangist commanders, the Defense Minister made no attempt to point
out to them the gravity of the danger that their men would commit acts
of slaughter. Although it is not certain that remarks to this effect
by the Defense Minister would have prevented the acts of massacre,
they might have had an effect on the Phalangist commanders who, out of
concern for their political interests, would have imposed appropriate
supervision over their people and seen to it that they did not exceed
regular combat operations. It was related above that a few hours after
the Phalangists entered the camps, soldiers at the site asked what to
do with the people who had fallen into their hands, and the replies
they were given not only did not bar them from harming those people,
but even urged them to do so. It is a highly reasonable assumption
that had the commanders who gave that reply heard from the Defense
Minister or from higher Phalangist commanders a clear and explicit
order barring harm to civilians and spelling out the damage this was
liable to cause the Phalangists, their reply to these questions would
have been different.
Had it
become clear to the Defense Minister that no real supervision could be
exercised over the Phalangist force that entered the camps with the
I.D.F.'s assent, his duty would have been to prevent their entry. The
usefulness of the Phalangists' entry into the camps was wholly
disproportionate to the damage their entry could cause if it were
uncontrolled. A good many people who heard about the Phalangists'
entry into the camps were aware of this even before the first reports
arrived about the massacre. The Chief of Staff in effect also held the
same opinion, as emerges from his reply to a question whether he would
have issued orders for additional measures to be taken or would have
sufficed with the steps that were in fact taken, had it been expected
that the Phalangists would commit excesses. He replied as follows (p.
1677):
"No, if I
had expected that this was liable to happen, or if someone had warned
me that this was liable to happen, they would not have entered the
camps."
In reply
to another question, whether he would have taken additional measures,
the Chief of Staff said:
"They
would not have entered the camps; I would not have allowed them to
enter the camps."
Asked if
he would not have allowed the Phalangists to enter the camps despite
the aim of having them operate together with the I.D.F. and spare the
I.D.F. losses, the Chief of Staff replied:
"Then
maybe we should have acted differently, by closing the camps, by
surrounding them, or bringing them to surrender in another week or in
another few days, or shelling them with all our might from the air and
with artillery. As for me, if I had anticipated that this is what
would happen, or if such a warning had been given, they would not have
entered the camps."
And the
Chief of Staff added that if he had suspected or feared that what
happened would happen, "they would not have entered the camps at all,
they would not have come anywhere near the camps." We quote these
remarks here in order to show that despite the usefulness of having
the Phalangists enter the camps, that step should have been abandoned
if a massacre could not have been prevented using the means in the
I.D.F.'s hands.
We do not
accept the contention that the Defense Minister did not need to fear
that the Phalangists would commit acts of killing because in all
outward aspects they looked like a disciplined and organized army. It
could not be inferred from the Phalangists' orderly military
organization that their attitude toward human life and to the
non-combatant population had basically changed. It might perhaps be
inferred from their military organization that the soldiers would heed
the orders of their commanders and not break discipline; but at the
very least, care should have been taken that the commanders were
imbued with the awareness that no excesses were to be committed and
that they give their men unequivocal orders to this effect. The
routine warnings that I.D.F. commanders issued to the Phalangists,
which were of the same kind as were routinely issued to I.D.F. troops,
could not have had any concrete effect.
We shall
remark here that it is ostensibly puzzling that the Defense Minister
did not in any way make the Prime Minister privy to the decision on
having the Phalangists enter the camps.
It is our
view that responsibility is to be imputed to the Minister of Defense
for having disregarded the danger of acts of vengeance and bloodshed
by the Phalangists against the population of the refugee camps, and
having failed to take this danger into account when he decided to have
the Phalangists enter the camps. In addition, responsibility is to be
imputed to the Minister of Defense for not ordering appropriate
measures for preventing or reducing the danger of massacre as a
condition for the Phalangists' entry into the camps. These blunders
constitute the non-fulfillment of a duty with which the Defense
Minister was charged.
We do not
believe that responsibility is to be imputed to the Defense Minister
for not ordering the removal of the Phalangists from the camps when
the first reports reached him about the acts of killing being
committed there. As was detailed above, such reports initially reached
the Defense Minister on Friday evening; but at the same time, he had
heard from the Chief of Staff that the Phalangists' operation had been
halted, that they had been ordered to leave the camps and that their
departure would be effected by 5:00 a.m. Saturday. These preventive
steps might well have seemed sufficient to the Defense Minister at
that time, and it was not his duty to order additional steps to be
taken, or to have the departure time moved up, a step which was of
doubtful feasibility.
The
Foreign Minister Mr. Yitzhak Shamir
The
Foreign Minister, Mr. Yitzhak Shamir, was sent a notice under Section
15(A) that he might be harmed if the commission determined that after
he heard from Minister Zipori on 17.9.82 of the report regarding the
Phalangists' actions in the refugee camps, he did not take the
appropriate steps to clarify whether this information was based in
fact and did not bring the information to the knowledge of the Prime
Minister or the Minister of Defense.
In the
memorandum that the Foreign Minister submitted to us in response to
the aforementioned notice, he explained that what he had heard from
Minister Zipori about the "unruliness" of the Phalangists did not lead
him to understand that it was a matter of a massacre; he thought,
rather, that it was a matter of fighting against terrorists. Since he
knew that many of them had remained in Beirut, together with their
weapons, he could have had the impression from Minister Zipori's
statement that perhaps the Phalangists' combat operations were carried
out in a manner that differed from the way a battle was conducted by
the I.D.F., but he did not understand that a massacre of civilians,
women and children, was taking place. The Foreign Minister also
explained his attitude to Minister Zipori's statement by stating that
he knew that Minister Zipori had been long and consistently opposed to
cooperation with the Phalangists, and he was also known in the Cabinet
as a constant critic of the Minister of Defense, the Chief of Staff,
and their actions. For these reasons the Foreign Minister restricted
himself to asking a member of his ministry's staff whether there was
any news from West Beirut and satisfied himself that there was no need
for further investigation after the Minister of Defense and others
responsible for security affairs came to his office and did not
mention that anything extraordinary had occurred in Beirut.
It is not
easy to decide between the conflicting versions of what Minister
Zipori said to the Foreign Minister. We tend to the opinion that in
the telephone conversation Minister Zipori spoke of a "slaughter"
being perpetrated by the Phalangists, and it is possible that he also
spoke of "unruliness." He had heard from the journalist Ze’ev Schiff
of reports that a massacre was going on in the camps and had treated
Schiff's information seriously; and it is difficult to find a reason
why he would not have told the Foreign Minister what he had heard when
the point of the telephone communication was to inform the Foreign
Minister what he had learned from Schiff. Mr. Schiff, in a statement
he has submitted, confirms Minister Zipori's version. Nevertheless, we
are unable to rule out the possibility that the Foreign Minister did
not catch or did not properly understand the significance of what he
heard from Minister Zipori. The Foreign Minister likewise did not
conceal that in relating to what Minister Zipori had told him, he was
influenced by his knowledge that Minister Zipori was opposed to the
policy of the Minister of Defense and the Chief of Staff regarding the
war in Lebanon, and particularly to cooperation with the Phalangists.
The
phenomenon that came to light in this case - namely, that the
statement of one minister to another did not receive the attention it
deserved because of faulty relations between members of the Cabinet -
is regrettable and worrisome. The impression we got is that the
Foreign Minister did not make any real attempt to check whether there
was anything in what he had heard from Minister Zipori on the
Phalangists' operations in the camps because he had an a priori
skeptical attitude toward the statements of the minister who reported
this information to him. It is difficult to find a justification for
such disdain for information that came from a member of the Cabinet,
especially under the circumstances in which the information was
reported. As stated, the conversation between the two ministers was
preceded by a Cabinet meeting on 16.9.82 at which Minister Levy had
expressed a warning of the danger involved in sending the Phalangists
into the camps. That Friday was the end of a week in which dramatic
events had occurred, and the situation as a whole was permeated with
tension and dangers. In this state of affairs, it might have been
expected that the Foreign Minister, by virtue of his position, would
display sensitivity and alertness to what he had heard from another
minister - even if we were to accept unconditionally his statement
that the point under discussion was only the "unruliness" of the
Phalangists. The Foreign Minister should at least have called the
Defense Minister's attention to the information he had received and
not contented himself with asking someone in his office whether any
new information had come in from Beirut and with the expectation that
those people coming to his office would know what was going on and
would tell him if anything out of the ordinary had happened. In our
view, the Foreign Minister erred in not taking any measures after the
conversation with Minister Zipori in regard to what he had heard from
Zipori about the Phalangist actions in the camps.
The Chief
of Staff, Lieutenant General Rafael Eitan
The notice
sent to the Chief of Staff, Lieutenant General Rafael Eitan, according
to Section 15(A), detailed a number of findings or conclusions that
might be harmful to the Chief of Staff if the commission established
them.
The first
point in the notice has to do with the Chief of Staff disregarding the
danger of acts of vengeance and bloodshed being perpetrated by the
Phalangists, against the population of the refugee camps and his
failure to take the appropriate measures to prevent this danger. In
this matter, the Chief of Staff took a position similar to that of the
Minister of Defense which was discussed above and which we have
rejected. The Chief of Staff stated in his testimony before us that it
had never occurred to him that the Phalangists would perpetrate acts
of revenge and bloodshed in the camps. He justified this lack of
foresight by citing the experience of the past, whereby massacres were
perpetrated by the Christians only before the "Peace for Galilee" War
and only in response to the perpetration of a massacre by the Muslims
against the Christian population, and by citing the disciplined
conduct of the Phalangists while carrying out certain operations after
the I.D.F.'s entry into Lebanon. The Chief of Staff also noted the
development of the Phalangists from a militia into an organized and
orderly military force, as well as the interest of the Phalangist
leadership, and first and foremost of Bashir Jemayel, in behaving
moderately toward the Muslim population so that the president-elect
could be accepted by all the communities in Lebanon. Finally, the
Chief of Staff also noted, in justifying his position, that none of
the experts in the I.D.F. or in the Mossad had expressed any
reservations about the planned operation in the camps.
We are not
prepared to accept these explanations. In our view, none of these
reasons had the power to cancel out the serious concern that in going
into the refugee camps, the Phalangist forces would perpetrate
indiscriminate acts of killing. We rejected arguments of this kind in
the part of this report that dealt with indirect responsibility, as
well as in our discussion of the responsibility borne by the Minister
of Defense, and the reasons we presented there likewise hold for the
Chief of Staff's position. Here we will restrict ourselves to brief
reasoning.
Past
experience in no way justified the conclusion that the entry of the
Phalangists into the camps posed no danger. The Chief of Staff was
well aware that the Phalangists were full of feelings of hatred
towards the Palestinians and that their feelings had not changed since
the "Peace for Galilee" War. The isolated actions in which the
Phalangists had participated during the war took place under
conditions that were completely different from those which arose after
the murder of Bashir Jemayel; and as one could see from the nature of
[those] operations, in the past there had been no case in which an
area populated by Palestinian refugees had been turned over to the
exclusive control of the Phalangists. On a number of occasions, the
Chief of Staff had harsh and clear-cut things to say about the manner
of fighting between the factions and communities in Lebanon, and about
the concept of vengeance rooted in them; and in this matter we need
only refer to the detailed facts presented in this report. We have
already said a number of times that the traumatic event of the murder
of Bashir Jemayel and of a group of Phalangists was sufficient reason
to whip up the Phalangists. It is difficult to understand how it was
possible to justify ignoring the effect of this event on arousing a
feeling of vengeance and hatred toward all those who were inimical to
the Phalangists, and first and foremost the Palestinians. The
consideration that the military organization of the Phalangists and
their orderly and disciplined appearance attested to a change in their
mode of fighting was specious, and we have already pointed this out.
The
absence of a warning from experts cannot serve as an explanation for
ignoring the danger of a massacre. The Chief of Staff should have
known and foreseen - by virtue of common knowledge, as well as the
special information at his disposal - that there was a possibility of
harm to the population in the camps at the hands of the Phalangists.
Even if the experts did not fulfill their obligation, this does not
absolve the Chief of Staff of responsibility.
The
decision to send the Phalangists into the camps was taken by the
Minister of Defense and the Chief of Staff, and the Chief of Staff
must be viewed as a partner to this decision and as bearing
responsibility both for its adoption and for its implementation. The
Chief of Staff did not express any opposition to or reservation about
the decision to the Minister of Defense, and no one disputed that it
was taken with his consent. There is no reason to doubt that had the
Chief of Staff expressed opposition or reservation, this fact would
have borne serious weight in the consideration of the decision; and
had there been a difference of opinion between him and the Minister of
Defense, he could easily have brought the matter before the Prime
Minister for his decision. It emerges quite clearly from the Chief of
Staff's testimony, as cited above, that his opposition to sending the
Phalangists into the camps would have meant that they would not have
been sent in, and other means (which he detailed in the statement
cited above) would have been adopted for taking control of the camps.
If the
Chief of Staff did not imagine at all that the entry of the
Phalangists into the camps posed a danger to the civilian population,
his thinking on this matter constitutes a disregard of important
considerations that he should have taken into account. Moreover,
considering the Chief of Staff's own statements quoted above, it is
difficult to avoid the conclusion that the Chief of Staff ignored this
danger out of an awareness that there were great advantages to sending
the Phalangists into the camps, and perhaps also out of a hope that in
the final analysis, the Phalangist excesses would not be on a large
scale. This conclusion is likewise prompted by the Chief of Staff's
behavior during later stages, once reports began to come in about the
Phalangists' excesses in the camps.
It has
been argued by the Chief of Staff, and in his behalf, that appropriate
steps were taken to avoid the danger. A similar claim has been made by
Major General Drori and Brigadier General Yaron. In our opinion, this
claim is unfounded.
As stated,
one of the precautions was a lookout posted on the roof of the forward
command post and on another roof nearby. It may be that this lookout
was of value in obtaining certain military information on combat
operations, but it was worthless in terms of obtaining information on
the Phalangists' operations within the camps. Another step was taken
to obtain information on exchanges over the communications sets
between the Phalangist forces in the field and their commanders. It is
difficult to regard this step as an efficient way to discover what was
going on in the camps, because it was based on the assumption that
what was said over the communications network would provide an
accurate picture not only of the combat operations but also of any
atrocities, and this assumption was not sufficiently grounded. It is
true that the first reports of the massacres came from this source of
information, but that was merely fortuitous; and just as questions had
been asked about the fate of 45 to 50 people, it could have happened
that such questions would not have gone over the communications
network. As stated, the fact of 300 dead was not discovered as a
result of listening in on the communications set; and it is a fact
that whatever was said over these sets did not reveal the fact that
the massacre of hundreds of people was going on in the camps. The
final means whereby it was hoped that the Phalangists' operations in
the camps would be revealed was by placing a Phalangist liaison
officer on the roof of the forward command post and a liaison officer
from the Mossad in the Phalangist headquarters. The obtaining of
information from these two sources was likewise based upon unfounded
assumptions. As to the Phalangist officer, there was no reason to
believe that on his own initiative, he would tell the I.D.F. officers
about the Phalangist operations, for he knew that the I.D.F. would
vigorously oppose them if word of such operations came to its
attention. While Phalangist liaison officer G. did tell of 300 dead,
this was evidently a slip of the tongue on his part, for he
immediately tried to play down the assessment by decreasing the number
of casualties to 120. No information was received from the Mossad
liaison officer; and the hope that he would be able to supply
information of this sort was based on the unrealistic expectation that
the Phalangist commanders would let him in on all the information that
came in about the Phalangists' actions, even if it was a report on an
action they knew the I.D.F. would vigorously oppose.
We asked
the witnesses why an I.D.F. liaison officer was not attached to the
Phalangist force that entered the camps, and we received the reply
that there were two reasons: first, the point was that the I.D.F.
should not enter the refugee camps, and the presence of an I.D.F.
liaison officer would contradict that point; second, there was fear
for the life of any such liaison officer, for obvious reason. We are
prepared to accept this explanation and have no criticism of the fact
that this step was not adopted. On the other hand, no explanation was
given for falling to provide special briefings to the I.D.F. units
that were in the vicinity of the camps - something which should have
been done, considering the importance of the matter.
The claim
that every possible step was taken to obtain detailed information on
the excesses of the Phalangists - in the event that such excesses
would take place - is not congruent with the claim that such excesses
were not foreseen at all. But we do not wish to go into this logical
contradiction, as in any case it is clear that the steps which were
adopted fell far short of satisfying the need to know what was going
on in the camps; and in fact, the truth about what was happening there
only came out after the Phalangists left the camps.
We find
that the Chief of Staff did not consider the danger of acts of
vengeance and bloodshed being perpetrated against the population of
the refugee camps in Beirut; he did not order the adoption of the
appropriate steps to avoid this danger; and his failure to do so is
tantamount to a breach of duty that was incumbent upon the Chief of
Staff.
The other
matter for which a notice was sent to the Chief of Staff under Section
15(A) was that when reports reached him about acts of killing or
actions that deviated from usual combat operations, he did not check
the veracity of these reports and the scope of these actions and did
not order the cessation of the operations, the removal of the
Phalangists from the camps as quickly as possible, and the adoption of
steps to protect the population of the camps. In a meeting with the
Phalangist commanders on the morning of 17.9.82, he approved the
continuation of their operations until the morning of 18.9.82 and
ordered that they be provided with assistance for that purpose.
As related
in the description of the events in this report, the Chief of Staff
first heard of the excesses perpetrated by the Phalangists when Major
General Drori contacted him by phone on Friday morning. The Chief of
Staff did not ask Major General Drori at that time what he knew about
the excesses and what moved him to halt the Phalangist operation; and
one should not take him to task for this, because he had decided to go
to Beirut and preferred to clarify the matter during a personal visit,
rather than try to clear it up in a phone conversation. On the other
hand, it is difficult to understand or justify the Chief of Staff's
actions after he reached Beirut, and especially during the meeting
with the Phalangist commanders. Upon reaching Beirut, the Chief of
Staff heard from Major General Drori what the latter knew about the
Phalangist actions; he contented himself with this report and asked no
question about this matter either of Major General Drori or of
Brigadier General Yaron. If it is still possible to comprehend this
reticence as stemming from the Chief of Staff's expectation that he
would hear more exact details during his meeting with the Phalangist
commanders, what took place at that meeting raises questions to which
we have not found a reasonable answer. The Chief of Staff did not
raise with the Phalangist commanders any question about the aberrant
operations or the grave actions that might have been perpetrated in
the camps. It is clear from his testimony that he thought that if any
such actions had been perpetrated, the Phalangist commanders would
have told him about them on their own initiative. There was no real
basis for this naive belief. It is impossible to understand how the
Chief of Staff concluded, from the fact that the Phalangist commanders
told him nothing about the operations against the civilian population
in the camps, that the suspicions that had arisen about those actions
had no basis in reality.
The
outstanding impression that emerges from the Chief of Staff's
testimony is that his refraining from raising the issue of the
Phalangists' excesses against the population in the camps stemmed from
a fear of offending their honor; but this fear was out of place and
should not have been a cause for the lack of any clarification of what
had happened, when the Chief of Staff had gotten reports that should
have served as a warning about the grave harm caused to the population
in the camps and when, as a result of these reports, Major General
Drori had issued an order to halt the advance of the Phalangists. Not
only did the Chief of Staff not raise the subject of the Phalangists'
behavior in the camps at the meeting which was called to clarify what
was happening in the camps, but he expressed his satisfaction with the
Phalangist operation and agreed to their request to provide them with
tractors so they could complete their operations by Saturday morning.
It is difficult to avoid the conclusion that this conduct on the Chief
of Staffs part during the meeting at the Phalangists' headquarters
stemmed from his disregard of the suspicions that the Phalangists were
perpetrating act of slaughter, and this disregard went so deep that
even the information that had arrived in the meanwhile and reached the
Chief of Staff did not shake it.
It emerges
from the Chief of Staffs testimony that after the meeting with the
Phalangists, he felt assured that everything was proceeding properly,
that nothing out of the ordinary had happened that would require the
immediate removal of the Phalangists from the camps, and that there
was nothing wrong with - and perhaps there was benefit to be derived
from - their completing their operation through Saturday morning. It
is impossible to reconcile what we heard from the Chief of Staff
regarding this matter with what he told the Minister of Defense in a
phone conversation when he returned to Israel. We have already
established above that in this conversation, the Chief of Staff told
the Minister of Defense things about the conduct of the Phalangists
that could have led the Minister of Defense to understand that the
Phalangists had perpetrated the murder of civilians in the camps. But
even if we go by the Chief of Staffs version of that conversation,
according to which he said only that the Phalangists had "overdone
it," it is difficult to reconcile this statement with the absence of
all suspicion on his part regarding what had happened in the camps and
the possibility of further similar actions.
Likewise,
after the meeting, the Chief of Staff did not issue any order to major
General Drori or Brigadier General Yaron to prevent the entry of
additional Phalangist forces or to send in or replace [Phalangist]
forces, because he did not have the impression that there was any
reason to stop them.
In our
opinion, after the Chief of Staff received the information from Major
General Drori in a telephone conversation that the Phalangists had
"overdone it" and Major General Drori had halted their operation, this
information should have alerted him to the danger that acts of
slaughter were being perpetrated in the camps and made him aware of
his obligation to take appropriate steps to clarify the matter and
prevent the continuation of such actions if the information proved to
be of substance. Toward that end, the Chief of Staff should have held
a detailed clarification [session] with Major General Drori, Brigadier
General Yaron, and other officers of the division, as well as with the
Phalangist commanders, immediately upon his arrival in Beirut. If, as
a result of this clarification, he was not satisfied that excesses had
not been committed in the camps, he should have ordered the immediate
removal of the Phalangist forces from the camp, admonished the
Phalangist commanders about the aberrant actions, and demanded that
they issue immediate orders to their forces to refrain from any act
that would cause harm to civilians while they were still in the camp.
None of these things were done by the Chief of Staff. On the contrary,
the Phalangist commanders could have gotten the impression from the
Chief of Staff's words and from his agreement to supply them with
tractors that they could continue their operations in the camp without
interference until Saturday morning and that no report of excesses had
reached the I.D.F. - and if they had reached the I.D.F., they had not
roused any sharp reaction.
We
determine that the Chief of Staff's inaction, described above, and his
order to provide the Phalangist forces with tractors, or a tractor,
constitute a breach of duty and dereliction of the duty incumbent upon
the Chief of Staff.
Director
of Military Intelligence Major General Yehoshua Saguy
In the
notice sent to the Director of Military Intelligence, Major General
Yehoshua Saguy, non-fulfillment of duty was ascribed to him because he
did not give sufficient attention to the decision regarding sending
the Phalangists into the camps and did not warn after the murder of
Bashir Jemayel of the danger of acts of revenge and bloodshed by these
forces against the Palestinian population in West Beirut, and
especially in the refugee camps.
The
Director of Military Intelligence testified that he did not know at
all about the decision regarding the sending of the Phalangists into
the camps and did not hear about the role assigned to the Phalangists
in connection with the entry into Beirut until he discovered the
matter in the cable regarding the 300 killed on Friday morning
(17.9.82). We find it difficult to accept this claim. The decision
regarding the sending of the Phalangists into the camps was discussed
on the roof of the forward command post on Wednesday morning, 15.9.82,
in conversations between the Minister of Defense, the Chief of Staff
and Major General Drori; and we find it hard to believe that a
decision discussed in these conversations did not at all reach the
Director of Military Intelligence, who was present on the roof of the
forward command post. According to the description of the detailed
discussions which were held that morning on the roof of the forward
command post, the Director of Military Intelligence had ample
opportunities to hear on that occasion about the plans regarding the
participation of the Phalangists in the entry to Beirut and about the
role assigned to them. If indeed the Director of Military Intelligence
did not hear then about the plan to send the Phalangists into the
camps, then the only reason that can be given for this is that he was
completely indifferent to what was being said and what was happening
at that time on the roof of the forward command post, and showed no
interest in the subjects which by virtue of his position should have
interested him.
From the
forward command post the Director of Military Intelligence travelled
together with the Defense Minister to the meeting at Phalangist
headquarters; and there the Defense Minister said that the Phalangist
forces would enter West Beirut - though he apparently did not say
explicitly that they would enter the camps. Regarding this meeting,
Major General Saguy testified that it seems to him that it was said
that the Phalangists should participate in something, but he does not
remember exactly (p. 1561). After that meeting as well, the Director
of Military Intelligence evinced no special interest in the question
of what would be the role of the Phalangists in the entry into Beirut.
He spent a considerable amount of time with the Defense Minister and
did not find it necessary to pose any question to him regarding this
matter. An additional meeting in which the Director of Military
Intelligence could have, if he had wanted to, obtained information on
the plans regarding the roles of the Phalangists in West Beirut took
place at a gas station, after the condolence call in Bikfaya, when
Major General Drori reported to the Defense Minister on the course of
events during the I.D.F.'s entry into Beirut and showed him maps. This
opportunity was also missed, for some reason, by the Director of
Military Intelligence. An additional discussion in which the Director
of Military Intelligence participated and in which the entry of the
Phalangists into the camps was explicitly mentioned was in the meeting
at the Defense Minister's office on Thursday, 16.9.82, at 10:00 a.m.
According to Major General Saguy he did not pay attention to things
said at that meeting on the sending of the Phalangists into the camps.
The inattention [displayed] in this meeting as well is surprising and
inexplicable. Major General Saguy was present at the beginning of the
Cabinet meeting on Thursday evening and left the meeting a short time
after it had begun. It has not been explained why Major General Saguy
did not demonstrate sufficient interest in the role of the Phalangists
in the entry into West Beirut and left the place without even trying
to ascertain from anyone present there who knew what was happening in
Beirut what the plan was for involving the Phalangists. To all this it
should be added that already on Wednesday, 15.9.82, the assistant for
research to the Director of Military Intelligence heard at a meeting
in the office of the Deputy Chief of Staff about the plan that the
Phalangists would enter the camps (p. 7 in exhibit 130).
We cannot
believe that no information about the plan to send the Phalangists
into the camps reached the Director of Military Intelligence until
Friday morning, keeping in mind that he was present at a number of
meetings in which this plan was mentioned and he had ample
opportunities to ascertain the role given to the Phalangists. Even if
we were to unreservedly accept Major Saguy's testimony in this matter,
his statements would have been surprising. The Director of Military
Intelligence, who is required to provide an intelligence assessment
regarding the Phalangists, knows that the I.D.F. is entering Beirut,
knows that in the past there had been complaints about the
non-involvement of the Phalangists in the fighting, hears, at the
latest on Wednesday morning during the meeting at Phalangist
headquarters, that these forces will cooperate with the I.D.F. in the
entry into West Beirut, he does not demonstrate any interest and does
not raise any question as to the role assigned them and does not make
any comment to the Defense Minister or the Chief of Staff on this
matter in the meetings in which he participated. The picture received
according to the testimony of Major General Saguy himself is of
indifference and a conspicuous lack of concern, of shutting of eyes
and ears to a matter regarding which it was incumbent on the director
of the intelligence arm of the I.D.F. to open his eyes and listen well
to all that was discussed and decided.
The only
explanation which can be found for the aforementioned behavior of the
Director of Military Intelligence apparently lies in the fact that the
approach of the Director of Military Intelligence to the Phalangists
and to cooperation between Israel and these forces was much more
skeptical that the sympathetic approach of the Mossad, and that he
knew that the Defense Minister, Chief of Staff and perhaps also the
Prime Minister accept the Mossad's approach, and Military
Intelligence's approach had been rejected in favor of the Mossad's
approach. Therefore, the Director of Military Intelligence was
satisfied with Intelligence reports compiled and sent on his behalf,
in which, according to his claim, there is sufficient warning of the
dangers to be expected from cooperation with the Phalangists.
In our
opinion, the Director of Military Intelligence did not fulfill his
duty by [providing only] these situation evaluations. The verbal
warning following the murder of Bashir, about which the Defense
Minister testified, was given rather weakly. According to Major
General Saguy's testimony (pp. 105-106), he said in a telephone
conversation with the Defense Minister on the night of 14.9.82, when
it became clear that Bashir had been killed, that there were two
possibilities: one, that there would be acts of revenge on the part of
the Phalangists; and two, that they would fall apart. It is difficult
to view these vague statements as a substantial warning. On 15.9.82,
at about 18:00 hours, Intelligence Branch prepared a document (exhibit
26) bearing the title, "Main Emphases for Situation Assessment," and
the only thing said there regarding the danger of acts of revenge by
the Phalangists is that the I.D.F.'s entry into West Beirut could "be
received by some of the parties involved, and perhaps even among some
of the Muslim elements, as a development which might contribute, at
least temporarily, to stability in the city, and provide them with
protection from possible acts of revenge by the Phalangists"
(paragraph I-a in exhibit 26). This document cannot be considered a
clear warning of the danger of involving the Phalangists in the
I.D.F.'s entry into Beirut or an indication of the need to take
special precaution in order not to enable the Phalangists to carry out
acts of revenge against the Palestinians. In an additional
Intelligence document which was issued on 15.9.82 and bears the title
"The Murder of Bashir Jemayel - Main Implications," it was said that
"the assassination creates conditions for heightening the polarization
between the rival Lebanese power elements, for mutual settling of
accounts, and for deterioration, which, in the absence of a
stabilizing element, is liable to develop into a general civil war"
(paragraph 4, exhibit 25). Neither can this be considered a
substantial warning which draws attention to the dangers of acts of
revenge by the Phalangists entering West Beirut with the I.D.F. or in
its wake.
The
director of Military Intelligence said in his testimony that for the
issue of sending the Phalangists into the camps to have been discussed
and clarified properly, situation-assessment discussions ought to have
been held to examine the various topics (which he enumerated in his
testimony, p. 1587) connected with the Phalangists' entry into the
camps. In his opinion, such a clarification could have been made
within a short time; and had it emerged in such a discussion that it
were possible to ensure the coordination with - and the command by -
the I.D.F. "all the way," he would have supported the entry of the
Phalangists, and not the I.D.F., into the camps. We accept these
statements of his; but it appears to us that the director of Military
Intelligence should have demonstrated sufficient interest in the
matter in order to ascertain the role assigned the Phalangists, if for
some reason he had not heard about it in the meetings in which he had
participated; and it was incumbent upon him to demand that a
clarification or discussion be held regarding those topics which he
raised in his testimony before us. The fact which the director of
Military Intelligence and his representatives point out, namely that
the combat morals of the Phalangists and the massacres carried out in
the past during the civil war in Lebanon were known to everyone, did
not exempt the director of Military Intelligence from the fulfillment
of his duties, especially when the issue was cooperation with the
Phalangists after the murder of Bashir Jemayel - and this, even if
there had not been an organized discussion of this matter.
Less so is
there any satisfactory explanation for the lack of substantial action
by the director of Military Intelligence in connection with the entry
of the Phalangists into the camps, after he had heard on Friday
morning not only about the entry of the Phalangists into the camps,
but also about the killing of 300 persons in this operation. All he
did was give an order to check the veracity of this report, and
nothing else. He made no attempt to contact the Chief of Staff or the
Defense Minister, to make them aware of the danger in the very
operation of the Phalangists in the camps, especially after receipt of
the report of the killing of 300 persons. Indeed, this report was
unconfirmed, and he thought that it was from an Operations and not
Intelligence source; but it contained information which could have
confirmed his fears regarding actions by the Phalangists. In his
testimony, the director of Military Intelligence explained why he had
made no attempt to warn at that stage of the danger in the situation
which had been created. His remarks on this matter are as follows:
I "I am
labelled as one who has always opposed the Phalangists, not from
today, [but] for four years already. In the morning, I read that the
Phalangists were inside the camps; and I know that this is as per the
Defense Minister's orders - since I have the Dudai document in hand -
and that it is under the command of the I.D.F. So what could I say
now? Why did you send it [sic] in without asking me? Or should I act
insulted? No, I simply step aside in this matter. That's all. "
We believe
that in these remarks Major General Saguy revealed the main reason why
he "stepped aside" regarding the whole issue; and these remarks of his
explain not only his inaction after receiving the report on Friday,
but also his behavior at previous stages, as we have described. In our
opinion, it was the duty of the director of Military Intelligence, as
long as he occupies this post, to demonstrate alertness regarding the
role of the Phalangists in the entry into Beirut after Bashir's
assassination, to demand an appropriate clarification, and to
explicitly and expressly warn all those concerned of the expected
danger even prior to receipt of the report on Friday, and certainly
after receipt of the report. The fear that his words would not receive
sufficient attention and be rejected does not justify total inaction.
This inaction constitutes breach of the duty incumbent on the director
of Military Intelligence in this capacity.
Head of
the Institute for Intelligence and Special Projects (Mossad)
The head
of the Mossad was sent a notice under Section 15(A) of the law in
which it is stated that he is liable to be harmed if the commission
determines that he did not pay appropriate attention to the decision
taken regarding the roles to be played by the Phalangists during the
I.D.F.'s entry into West Beirut, and did not warn after the murder of
Bashir Jemayel of the danger of bloodshed by these forces against the
Palestinian population.
The head
of the Mossad testified that he first learned of the role given to
Phalangists to enter the camps, only at the cabinet meeting on
Thursday 16.9.82 On Friday, 15.9.82, he received cables from the
Mossad representative in Beirut (exhibits 161 and 162) in which it was
reported to him about the meetings of the Chief of Staff and Defense
Minister with the Phalangist elite; but in neither of these documents
is there any report of the role given the Phalangists in the camps,
but rather there is general mention in them that the Phalangists will
enter West Beirut after the I.D.F. and will assist the I.D.F. in its
operations. In a third cable (exhibit 163), sent on Thrusday at 12:00,
it was stated that there had been a coordination meeting with the
G.O.C. to prepare the Phalangists "for operations to clear the city of
terriorists." In an additional cable sent at that time (exhibit 164)
it was said that the Phalangists would start work at the Burj el-Barajneh
camp.
Apparently, the Mossad was not explicitly informed of the Phalangists'
entry into the camps, and the head of the Mossad did not know of the
decision which had been made on this matter. The testimony of the head
of the Mossad should therefore be accepted, that only at the cabinet
meeting of Thursday evening did he hear of the decision regarding the
role of the Phalangists and of their entry into the camps, which by
then had already taken place.
In the
aforementioned circumstances it does not appear to us that the head of
the Mossad was obligated, before knowing of the decision regarding the
role of the Phalangists, to offer at his initiative an assessment
regarding the situation which was liable to develop, if the
Phalangists would be given the opportunity to take revenge on the
Palestinians and attempt to carry out their plans for them in West
Beirut. The head of the Mossad was present at the cabinet meeting
until its conclusion. He heard what was said there, but did not
himself give a situation assessment regarding the entry of the
Phalangists into the camps, and did not express any reservation about
this entry. He spoke at that meeting about the Mossad's assessment
regarding the situation created after the murder of Bashir, but his
remarks did not explicitly deal with the issue of the Phalangists'
entry into the camps or with the problems which could ensue therefrom.
A certain hint of the danger of irregular actions by the Phalangists
can be found in the following remarks made by the head of the Mossad
at that meeting (p. 26 in exhibit 122):
"When we
learned of the death of Bashir - and this was close to midnight – we
thought that there could be two phenomena: one, that the whole forest
would catch fire, and the Phalangist forces themselves, which were
suddenly left without a commander, [and] with a desire for revenge,
could also have taken uncontrolled action; and on the other hand,
those Palestinians and Lebanese organizations which were in West
Beirut, when they suddenly learned that the leader of the Phalangists
is dead and possibly the Phalangists have been weakened following
this, it was possible that they would start up - i.e., there was
definitely the possibility that a situation of total conflagration
would flare up in the city."
These
remarks should not be considered an unequivocal warning of the danger
entailed in the entry of the Phalangists into the camps, an entry
about which the head of the Mossad made no comment in the situation
assessment which he gave at the cabinet meeting. The head of the
Mossad did not express any reservation about the entry of the
Phalangists into the camps. In his first testimony he said that had he
been asked at that meeting about the entry of the Phalangists into the
camps, he would have recommended this "with the warning that they not
carry out a massacre" and with the belief that such a warning would be
effective - and this, according to the Mossad's experience with
certain operations carried out together with the Phalangists in the
past (p. 173). In his additional testimony, the head of the Mossad
said that the data which the Mossad had at the time of the cabinet
meeting did not indicate and did not warn of the possibility of
atrocities in the camps.
The data
which he presented (p. 1428) were that according to the reports
received, despite the murder of Bashir, the military commander of the
Phalangists was in control of his forces; and in addition, according
to the information which the Mossad had, the murder of Bashir was
carried out not by the Palestinians but by the Mourabitoun. This last
argument is far from convincing. It is not at all certain that the
Phalangists knew at that time who carried out the assassination; and
even if they had known this, it is most doubtful whether this would
have moderated their actions against the Palestinians, whom they
considered the source of all the tragedies which had befallen Lebanon,
and who had cooperated with the Mourabitoun in the fighting against
the Phalangists.
The
question is whether this inaction by the head of the Mossad
constitutes breach of a duty incumbent upon the head of the Mossad.
The answer
to this question is not easy. As mentioned above, the view of the
Mossad, which had been expressed for a fairly long period prior to the
I.D.F.'s entry into Lebanon, as well as afterwards, was that there
should be greater cooperation with the Phalangists. The view prevalent
in the Mossad, as expressed in various documents, was that the
Phalangists are a trustworthy element which can be relied upon, and
this despite the Phalangists' past regarding their attitude to the
Palestinians and their statements on the way to solve the Palestinian
problem once they reach power. The head of the Mossad himself noted in
part of his testimony mentioned above, that this approach of the
Mossad was influenced by the development of subjective feelings by
representatives of the Mossad, who were in constant contact with the
leaders of the Phalangists. We do not believe that the head of the
Mossad can be held responsible for the existence of such a
"conception." He assumed the position of head of the Mossad only on
12.9.82 that is, two days before the murder of Bashir. He had
previously been the deputy head of the Mossad and was acquainted with
the Mossad's affairs; but the responsibility for the way in which the
Mossad operated was not his. The entry of the Phalangists into the
camps did not contradict the Mossad's situation assessment; and
therefore it is difficult to expect that the head of the Mossad would
have reservations about this decision when he heard about it at the
Cabinet meeting on 16.9.82. In this matter as well, it should be taken
into account that he had then been serving as head of the Mossad for
only four days, and that this was the first Cabinet meeting in which
he participated in this capacity.
It appears
to us, that even in the situation described above, the head of the
Mossad was obligated to express his opinion at the Cabinet meeting on
the entry of the Phalangists and deal in this expression of opinion
with the dangers involved in the Phalangists' operations - especially
after he had heard Minister David Levy's remarks. In consideration of
all the aforementioned circumstances, it is our opinion that this
inaction of the head of the Mossad should not be considered serious.
G.O.C.
Northern Command Major General Amir Drori
In the
notification sent to G.O.C. Northern Command Amir Drori, it was stated
that he is liable to be harmed if the commission determines that he
did not take appropriate or sufficient steps to prevent the
continuation of the Phalangists' actions in the refugee camps when he
received reports of acts of killing or acts which deviate from regular
combat operations which were carried out in the camps.
On
Thursday night, the division intelligence officer transmitted the
report of 300 killed to the Northern Command, but this report did not
reach Major General Drori and he did not hear a thing about what was
happening in the camps until Friday morning.
We have
enumerated above the differences between the versions of Major General
Drori and Brigadier General Yaron regarding the circumstances
surrounding Major Drori's visit to the forward command post, the
conversation which preceded this visit, and the conversation which
took place during the visit. According to the testimony of Major
General Drori, the visit was made at his initiative, without his
knowing that any problem had arisen regarding the camps, while
according to Brigadier General Yaron's version, Major General Drori's
appearance was the result of a conversation in which Brigadier General
Yaron reported his uneasy feelings regarding what was being done in
the camps. We do not find that the differing versions on this subject
are important in the matter before us.
Neither
was there a uniform version regarding the reports transmitted to Major
General Drori during his meeting at the forward command post. Colonel
Duvdevani said in his statement that he had told Major General Drori
about 100 killed in the Phalangists' operations; while according to
Major General Drori's testimony, he did not hear in this visit about
killing in the camps or about a specific number of killed. From
Brigadier General Yaron's remarks it is apparent that he did not
report to Major General Drori about the reports of the 300 killed and
the 45 persons who had been captured by the Phalangists, since he had
thought that these reports were unsubstantiated. Regarding the things
Major General Drori heard from Brigadier General Yaron, Major General
Drori's version differs only in unimportant details from Brigadier
General Yaron's version. It appears to us that it is not possible to
determine with sufficient certainly that clear reports were given to
Ma . or General Drori about killing in the camps. We believe, however,
that in his testimony before us, Major General Drori belittled the
importance and significance of the things about which he had heard in
the meeging at the forward command post, as well as the impression
these had made on him. It should be noted that Major General Drori was
aware that the Phalangists were liable to act in an uncontrolled way,
and this not necessarily from his conversation with an officer
connected with the Lebanese Army on Thursday evening, but mainly from
his knowledge of the Phalangists, based on his constant contact with
them. There is therefore no room for doubt that after the
conversations which he held on the roof of the forward command post on
Friady morning, he was aware that the continuation of the Phalangists'
actions in the refugee camps posed a danger. Three actions which he
took are evidence of this. The first - the order he gave regarding
cessation of the Phalangists' actions; the second - a telephone report
to the Chief of Staff that the Phalangists "had overdone it" and that
he had ordered their operation stopped; and the third - the
continuation of his efforts to impress upon the commander of the
Lebanese Army that this army enter the camps instead of the
Phalangists. Here we should mention that in this persuasion effort,
Major General Drori told the commander of the Lebanese Army, "You know
what the Lebanese are capable of doing to each other." These remarks,
in the context in which they were made, in a section of Major General
Drori's testimony as cited above, show that Major General Drori had
realized the gravity of the matter and the need to make efforts to
terminate the Phalangists' operations in the camps.
Taking
into consideration that it has not been proved that Major General
Drori had [received] explicit reports about acts of killing and about
their extent, it appears to us that he acted properly, wisely, and
responsibly, with sufficient alertness at this stage. He heard from
the Chief of Staff that the latter was to arrive in Beirut in the
afternoon hours and could rely on the fact that this visit by the
Chief of Staff, which was to take place within a few hours, would lead
to positive results regarding the Phalangists' activity in the camps.
In the
notification as per Section 15(A) of the law, Major General Drori was
informed that he is liable to be harmed if it is determined that he
did not warn the Chief of Staff when the latter arrived in Beirut on
17.9.82 of the danger posed to the population in the camps from the
continued activity or continued presence of the Phalangists in the
camps, and did not try - at a meeting with the Phalangist commanders,
or shortly thereafter - to prevent the continuation of such activity.
According
to the testimony of Major General Drori, it was clear that he was
satisfied with an absolutely passive role regarding the issue of the
Phalangists in the camps, from the time the Chief of Staff arrived in
Beirut and later. Major General Drori did not emphasize to the Chief
of Staff before the meeting with the Phalangist commanders that it was
necessary to end the Phalangists' presence in the camps or take some
kind of action which could ensure that the Phalangists' actions
against the non-combatant populace would stop. This refraining from
bringing the importance and seriousness of the matter to the attention
of the Chief of Staff was explained by Major General Drori by the fact
that after the meeting on the roof of the forward command post with
Brigadier General Yaron, the acuteness of his sense of imminent danger
diminished, for two reasons. The first reason was that a few hours had
gone by before the Chief of Staff arrived, and no additional reports
had come in. The second reason which calmed Major General Drori was
that at his meeting with the commander of the Lebanese Army, he had
not heard anything about irregular occurrences in the camps, despite
the fact that the Lebanese Army was deployed around the camps,
including at the places where the Phalangists had entered, and
Lebanese Army personnel should have known if something unusual had
happened in the camps (Major General Drori's testimony, pp.
1611-1615).
These
reasons for the diminished sense of the matter's importance are not
convincing. It is difficult to consider the lack of additional reports
a calming factor, when only few hours are involved and when Major
General Drori made no special efforts, while on the roof of the
forward command post and while speaking with the officers there, to
investigate and testify the details of the reports reaching him, and
did not give orders to conduct special checks on what was going on in
the camps. He also did not speak during the meeting on the roof of the
the forward command post with the Phalangists' liaison officer, who
was present there. At the meeting with the commander of the Lebanese
Army, Major General Drori did not ask whether the commander had any
reports on events in the camps, but drew his conclusion which reduced
his alertness solely from the fact that this commander did not
"volunteer" any information.
We
described above what happened at the meeting with the Phalangist
commanders, in which the subject of the Phalangist forces' behavior in
the camps did not come up at all. In our opinion, even though the
Chief of Staff conducted the meeting for the Israeli side, it was
Major General Drori's duty to at least make an attempt to raise the
issue at this meeting. He also made no attempt to persuade the Chief
of Staff to raise the matter at the meeting with the Phalangists, but
was satisfied with sitting idly by. Major General Drori is a senior
commander with a very important task, who bears heavy responsibility
for events on a wide front. A commander at such a level and rank
should be expected to take the initiative when he sees that the Chief
of Staff does not intend to deal with the issue which was the main
cause of his coming to Beirut and holding a meeting with the
Phalangist staff. If this passive behavior by Major General Drori was
the result of a significant decline in his alertness during the time
which had gone by since ordering a halt to the Phalangists'
operations, then we have already said above that this reduced
alertness was not at all justified. Also, after the conclusion of the
meeting with the Phalangist commanders, Major General Drori did
nothing about the behavior of the Phalangists and did not raise the
matter for discussion with the Chief of Staff. The Phalangists'
request that the I.D.F. supply them with tractors should have
increased the suspicion that actions which are difficult to describe
as combat operations were being carried out in the camps; and
apparently this suspicion arose, since the order was to provide the
Phalangists with only one tractor and remove the I.D.F. markings from
it. We cannot find justification for Major General Drori's
disengagement from any treatment of the subject of Phalangist behavior,
from the moment the Chief of Staff arrived in Beirut and until after
the departure of the Phalangists from the camps.
We
determine that it was the duty of the G.O.C. to warn the Chief of
Staff when the latter arrived in Beirut on 17.9.82 and during the rest
of the Chief of Staff's stay in Beirut, that the population in the
camps is endangered by the continued presence of the Phalangist forces
in the camps, and that they should be removed from there immediately
-or that at least steps be taken to ensure the safety of the
population in the camps or to reduce the danger they face to the
barest possible minimum. Major General Drori's refraining from any
action regarding the danger facing the civilian population from the
Phalangist forces, from the time the Chief of Staff arrived in Beirut
and until Saturday, 18.9.82, constitutes, in our opinion, a breach of
the duty which was incumbent on Major General Drori.
Division
Commander Brigadier General Amos Yaron
The first
issue specified in the notice sent to Brigadier General Amos Yaron
under section 15(A) of the law is that Brigadier General Yaron did not
properly evaluate and did not check reports that reached him
concerning acts of killing and other irregular actions of the
Phalangists in the camps, did not pass on that information to the
G.O.C. and to the Chief of Staff immediately after it had been
received on 16.9.82, and did not take the appropriate steps to stop
the Phalangists' actions and to protect the population in the camps
immediately upon receiving the reports.
We
determined in the specification of the facts that Brigadier General
Yaron received reports of acts of killing in the evening and night
hours of 19.9.82. He received the first report from Lieutenant Elul,
and from it it should have been
clear to
him that the Phalangists were killing women and children in the camps.
Brigadier General Yaron heard an additional report that same evening
from the division intelligence officer concerning the fate of the
group of 45 people who
were in
the Phalangists' hands. A third report was delivered by the
Phalangists liaison officer, G., about 300 killed, a number which was
later reduced to 120. Even if we suppose that the first and second
report were considered by Brigadier
General '
Yaron to be about the same event, nevertheless, from all the reports,
it became known to Brigadier General Yaron that the Phalangists were
perpetrating acts of killing which went beyond combat operations, and
were killing women
and
children as well. That evening he was satisfied with reiterating the
warnings to the Phalangists' liaison officer and to Elie Hobeika not
to kill women and children; but beyond that he did nothing to stop the
killing. He did not pass
on the
information that he had received to Major General Drori that evening
nor on the following day in the morning call, nor when they met before
noon. When Brigadier General Yaron heard from the division
intelligence officer, in
the
briefing on 16.9.82, about the report indicating the danger that women
and children were being killed, he interrupted him - and it appears
from the transcript of the conversation that took place then that
Brigadier General Yaron wished to
play down
the importance of the matter and to cut off the clarification of the
issue at that briefing. Brigadier General Yaron testified that he was,
indeed, aware that the Phalangists' norms of behavior during wartime
are different from those of the I.D.F. and that there is no sense in
arguing with them to change their combat ethics; but since in previous
Phalangist operations conducted jointly with the I.D.F. they had not
behaved aberrantly, he trusted that his reiterated warnings not to
kill women and children would suffice, the Phalangist commanders'
promises would be kept, and the steps that he had taken in order to
obtain information on the Phalangists' operations would enable him to
follow their actions. We are not prepared to accept this explanation.
We have already determined that the means of supervision over what the
Phalangists were doing in the camps could not ensure the flow of real
and immediate information on their actions. It is difficult to
understand how Brigadier General Yaron relied on these warnings and
assurances, when he knew about the Phalangists' combat ethics. He also
did not take into account the influence of the assassination of Bashir
on the fanning of the Phalangists' feelings of revenge. Already
shortly after the Phalangists' entrance into the camps, he started
receiving reports which should have clarified to him the gravity of
the danger of a massacre being perpetrated in the camps and which
should have spurred him to take immediate steps, whether on his own
cognizance or by authorization from the G.O.C. or the Chief of Staff,
to prevent the continuation of operations of these kinds. No action
was taken by Brigadier General Yaron, and neither did he see to
conveying the information in his possession to his superiors.
An
additional explanation by which Brigadier General Yaron tried to
justify his behavior was that in the situation which existed that
night, the reports about 300, or fewer, killed did not seem to him
sufficiently important to spur him to check whether they were true,
since on that night, in his role as division commander, he had combat
problems which were much more important than the matter of the
Phalangists in the camps (testimony of Brigadier General Yaron on p.
699). We cannot accept this explanation either. If Brigadier General
Yaron could find the time to hold a briefing, he could also have
issued orders to pass on the reports and to take appropriate measures
such as were called for by the information received.
Perhaps it
is possible to find an explanation for Brigadier General Yaron's
refraining from any substantial reaction to the serious information
which had reached him Thursday evening in that he was interested that
the Phalangists continue to operate in the camps so that I.D.F.
soldiers would not have to engage in fighting in that area. Brigadier
General Yaron had no reservations about admitting the Phalangists into
the camps; he testified that he was happy with this decision and
explained his position in that "we have been fighting here for four
months already and there is a place where they can take part in the
fighting, the fighting serves their purposes as well, so let them
participate and not let the I.D.F. do everything" (p. 695). It is
possible to show understanding for this feeling, but it does not
justify a lack of any action on the part of Brigadier General Yaron,
considering the reports that had reached him.
During
Friday as well, Brigadier General Yaron did not act properly with
regard to the Phalangist operation in the camps. When he met with
Major General Drori, he was obligated to report all the information
that had reached him, but he did not do so. As a result of this
failure, Major General Drori was not apprised of all the information
that had reached the division by that time. A number of times,
Brigadier General Yaron approached the Phalangist officers who were at
the forward command post, including Elie Hobeika and repeated the
admonition not to do harm to women and children; but other than this
he did not take any initiative and only suggested that the Phalangists
be ordered not to advance - and an order to this effect was issued by
Major General Drori. This order might have been regarded as enough of
a precaution by Major General Drori, who had not heard about instances
of killing; but Brigadier General Yaron should have known that halting
the advance did not ensure an end to the killing.
The notice
sent to Brigadier General Yaron under Section 15(A) also speaks of the
failure to provide any warning to the Chief of Staff when the latter
reached Beirut on 17.9.82, as well as of Brigadier General Yaron's
granting the Phalangists permission to send a new force into the camps
without taking any steps that would bring a stop to the excesses. When
the Chief of Staff came to Beirut, Brigadier General Yaron did not
tell him everything he had heard and did not make any suggestion to
him about the continuation of the Phalangist operation in the camps.
From the time he saw the Chief of Staff (after his arrival in Beirut)
until the Chief of Staff left Beirut, no warning was heard from
Brigadier General Yaron - not even a significant comment regarding the
danger of a massacre. Brigadier General Yaron was not oblivious to
this danger. We have evidence that on Friday he had spoken to the
Phalangist liaison officer charging that his men were killing women
and children (statement No. 23 by Colonel Agmon), but he did not
express this awareness clearly in his meetings with Major General
Drori and the Chief of Staff.
Brigadier
General Yaron's inaction regarding the continuation of the Phalarigist
operation in the camps was epitomized by the fact that he did not
issue, any order to prevent them from replacing forces on Friday and
did not impose any supervision on the movement of the Phalangist
forces to and from the camps, despite the fact that the order halting
the operation was not rescinded.
We have
already cited Brigadier General Yaron's statement at the Senior
Command Meeting in which he admitted with laudible candor that this
was an instance of "insensitivity" on his part and on the part of
others concerned. As we have already stated above, Brigadier General
Yaron's desire was to save I.D.F. soldiers from having to carry out
the operation in the camps, and this appears to be the main reason for
his insensitivity to the dangers of the massacre in the camps. This
concern of a commander for the welfare of his men would be
praiseworthy in other circumstances; but considering the state of
affairs in this particular instance, it was a thoroughly mistaken
judgment on the part of Brigadier General Yaron, and a grave error was
committed by a high-ranking officer of an I.D.F. force in this sector.
We
determine that by virtue of his failings and his actions, detailed
above, Brigadier General Yaron committed a breach of the duties
incumbent upon him by virtue of his position.
Mr. Avi
Dudal, Personal Aide to The Minister of Defense
The sole
issue regarding which the notice was sent to Mr. Dudai was "that on
17.9.82, during the morning hours or before noon, Mr. Dudai received a
report about killings that had been perpetrated by the Lebanese Forces
in the refugee camps, and did not pass this report on to the Minister
of Defense."
In his
testimony, Mr. Dudai denied that any report on what was happening in
the camps was given him on 17.9.82. Yet Lieutenant Colonel Gai, an
officer in the National Security Unit, testified before us that on
Friday morning, 17.9.82, he was in the office of the director of
Military Intelligence, where he met one of the officers who works in
the office, Captain Moshe Sinai, who told him (according to Lt. Col.
Gai) "as a piece of gossip" that about 300 persons had been killed in
the camps in Beirut, and that, at around 11:00- 11:30 that same day,
he - Lt. Col. Gai - in one of his telephone conversations with Dudai,
told Dudai what he had heard from Captain Sinai (testimony by Gai, pp.
921-923). In his second round of testimony, too, Gai stood by his
story that he had passed this report on to Dudai; except that
according to this testimony, the report was not given at about 11:00
but rather at a later hour, between 12:30 - when Dudai arrived at the
Foreign Ministry, whence he spoke with Gai - and 15:00 hours.
Lieutenant
Colonel Hevroni, bureau chief to the director of Military
Intelligence, testified that he had been with Dudai at the Sde Dov
airfield for a meeting that the Defense Minister had summoned there,
[and] afterwards had come to Jerusalem with Dudai for a meeting at the
Foreign Minister's office which had lasted until 15:00 hours; and
during that same period of time, Dudai asked him what was happening
regarding Gai's and Sinai's story - and the reply was that there was
no verification of this report. It was clear to Hevroni from this
conversation that Duda'i had gotten the report which Gai had received
from Sinai (testimony of Hevroni, pp. 876-877). We also heard
additional testimony which was intended to show that post factum,
Dudai admitted, in the presence of Gai and the witness Colonel
Kniazher (called Zizi), that Gai had told him about the report on
Friday; but from Colonel Kniazher's testimony (pp. 1466-1468) it turns
out that Gai wasn't present at the time he spoke with Dudai, and
Duda'i wasn't present at the time that Kniazher spoke with Gai (p.
1466); and there is no evidence in Kniazher's testimony that Duda'i
had heard about the report from Gai on 17.9.82.
As has
been said, an investigation was held in the director of Military
Intelligence's bureau after the event, as a result of which an
investigative report was drawn up (exhibit 29). In Paragraph 6 of this
report, it is stated that the visit by Lt. Col. Gai between the hours
of 7:30-8:00 was intended to clarify what had happened to two Military
Intelligence documents which had not yet reached the Defense Minister.
From the
testimonies we have heard, it becomes apparent that Gai's visit in the
morning hours was for the purpose of receiving reports from Military
Intelligence about that attack on the tank which had occurred in West
Beirut. Gai did pay two visits to the director of Military
Intelligence's bureau that same day, but this second visit was at
about 11:00 hours and was carried out on an order that Duda'i
transmitted by phone from Sde Dov to Gai, so that the latter would
clarify the matter of the documents. This inaccuracy would indeed
appear tiny, but it has a certain significance in that it fits in with
testimonies that on that same Friday morning, Dudai complained to
those who work in his office, including Gai, that there were defects
in the reporting of what was happening in Lebanon and that reports
weren't reaching the Defense Ministery. Here it should be noted that
on that same day, the Defense Minister's military adjutant was not in
the office because he was on vacation, and Dudai was taking his place.
In
paragraph 13 of exhibit 29, it is said "that in retrospect (in
reconstruction) it turned out that Lt. Col. Gai - after receiving the
report from the bureau chief of the director of Military Intelligence
- looked into the matter on the morning of 17 September with
Operations Branch, after he, too, had gotten the impression that an
operations report/ occurrence was at issue; and in the investigation,
he was told that Operations did not know about such an action by the
Phalangists." In his testimony, Gai said that these statements were
inaccurate, and that he had only inquired at Operations if there was
anything new from Beirut and had received a negative reply. In
paragraph 14 of exhibit 29, it is said that in a second update between
minister's aide Avi Dudai and Lt. Col. Gai, Dudai reported that he had
spoken with the bureau chief of the Director of Military Intelligence,
who had told him that the report had not received verification from
Military Intelligence personnel who had looked into the matter." What
is said here was not confirmed by Lt. Col. Gai's testimony; and as
mentioned, Dudai denied receiving any report. The rather obvious
general trend of exhibit 29 regarding the report to Gai is: to show
that report on the contents of the cable on the 300 killed was
conveyed from the Director of Military Intelligence's bureau to the
Defense Minister's bureau. According to Lt. Col. Gai's testimony, the
conversation between him and Captain Sinai cannot be viewed as more
than "an exchange of gossip," and it is difficult to treat such a
conversation as a proper act of conveying an important report.
Captain
Sinai gave a statement to the staff investigators (No. 112) in which
he said that he had read the cable (Appendix A, exhibit 29) in front
of Lt. Col. Gai, and that the latter had reacted to it with the words,
"Listen, that's very interesting" - and, as far as Sinai recalls, he
said, " I spoke with the minister during the night, and I'll go talk
with him in a little while; the story is very interesting, and the
minister will be very happy to bear the report." According to Sinai,
this is more or less the version he heard from Gai. We find it
difficult to attribute importance to this statement. In his statement,
Sinai gave exact details concerning a search for the two documents
which preceded the conversation between Gai and himself, and at
present it is already clear that he erred in this, because the search
for the documents was not conducted in the early hours of the morning,
but rather close to the noon hour. It is not reasonable [to suppose
that ] if Gai did indeed receive Sinai's report as an interesting or
important report, he would not immediately convey it to Dudai, who on
that same morning complained several times about a lack of reporting
on what was happening in Lebanon and inquired after such reports from
time to time.
It is our
opinion that it cannot be determined that Gai did indeed pass on the
contents of the above report to Dudai on Friday. The doubt stems not
only from contradictions revealed in the witnesses' statements, but
also from [the fact] that the witnesses who told about the conveying
of the report have an interest in showing that they fulfilled their
obligation in transmitting the report from the director of Military
Intelligence's bureau to the Defence Minister's aide. It is also
difficult to treat Gai's testimony as testimony by someone who is a
disinterested party in the matter, since it is in his interest to
show, after all that happened, that he did not keep the contents of
the report he'd heard from Sinai to himself. Gai also did not give a
satisfactory explanation as to why, according to his version, he had
told Dudai about this report only in the afternoon, despite the fact
that Duda'i was constantly asking whether reports had come in from
Lebanon and was complaining about a lack of reports. In view of the
entire body of evidence, we do not determine that Dudai indeed
received the report about the 300 people killed on Friday, 17.9.82,
and it therefore cannot be determined that he refrained from
fulfilling an obligation which was incumbent upon him, as was stated
in the notice of (possible] harm which was sent to him.
The
Functioning of Establishments
Thus far
we have dealt with the findings and conclusions regarding the course
of events, and the responsibility for them of those persons whose
actions had a decisive effect on the course of events. As we noted, we
decided not to discuss the activities of other persons who were close
to the course of events but who played a secondary role. All these
persons, whether they had central or secondary roles, operated within
organizational frameworks whose functioning was flawed.
In this
section of the the report we wish to dwell briefly on the flaws in the
functioning of these organizational establishments. We shall devote
only a few comments to this important topic, with the aim of pointing
to a number of flaws which seem to us worrisome, and to bring about a
situation in which all the responsible authorites - civil and military
- will take all the requisite measures so that the reasons and causes
for these flaws will be examined and analyzed, the lessons therefrom
learned, and so that what requires amending will indeed be amended. As
in this entire report, we shall deal only with the functioning of the
various establishments from the time the decision was taken on the
entry of the Phalangists into the camps until their departure. Within
this framework, too, we shall offer our opinion only regarding
outstanding matters which are especially noteworthy. Unquestionably,
there were many establishments that functioned properly, even
excellently; but in the nature of things our attention is directed
toward those establishments in which were revealed flaws that are
relevant to the subject of the commission's scrutiny. Hence, the major
part of our attention is directed to two key topics which concern us:
one is the flaws in the course of decision-taking by the policy-making
institutions; the other is the flaws in the manner of handling the
information which was received.
The
decision on the entry of the Phalangists into the refugee camps was
taken on Wednesday (15.9.82) in the morning. The Prime Minister was
not then informed of the decision. The Prime Minister heard about the
decision, together with all the other ministers, in the course of a
report made by the Chief of Staff at the Cabinet session on Thursday
(16.9.82) when the Phalangists were already in the camps. Thereafter,
no report was made to the Prime Minister regarding the excesses of the
Phalangists in the camps, and the Prime Minister learned about the
events in the camps from a BBC broadcast on Saturday (18.9.82)
afternoon. This state of affairs is unsatisfactory on two planes:
first, the importance of the decision on the entry of the Phalangists,
against the backdrop of the Lebanese situation as it was known to
those concerned, required that the decision on having the Phalangists
enter the camps be made with the prior approval of the Prime Minister.
Moreover, once the decision had been taken without the Prime
Minister's participation, orderly processes of government required
that the decision be made known to him at the earliest possible
moment. It is not proper procedure for the Prime Minister to hear
about this decision in an incidental manner along with the other
Cabinet ministers during a Cabinet session, when the Phalangists were
already in the camps.
Second,
once the decision was taken, orderly processes of government required
that the Prime Minister be informed of any excesses committed. What
the Defense Minister, the Chief of Staff and the General Command knew
on Friday and on Saturday morning, the Prime Minister ought also to
have known. It is inconceivable that the Prime Minister should receive
his information about this from a foreign radio station.
As we have
seen, the decision on the Phalangists' entry into the camps took final
shape on Wednesday morning (15.9.82) on the roof of the divisional
forward command post. When this decision was taken its ramifications
were not examined, nor were its advantages and disadvantages weighed.
This is explicable in that the decision was taken under pressure of
time. Nonetheless, enough time existed before the Phalangists' entry
on Thursday evening (16.9.82) to carry out a situation appraisal in
which the decision, its manner of execution and its possible results
could be examined. No such deliberation in fact took place. The
discussion held by the Defense Minister on Thursday morning (exhibit
27), in which he said, "I would move the Phalangists into the camps,"
cannot be regarded as a situation appraisal in the usual sense of the
term. The Chief of Staff told us that on Wednesday he ordered his
deputy to hold a consultation among branch heads. Such a discussion
did in fact take, place in the late afternoon hours (exhibit 130), but
it was a briefing and not a situation appraisal. The issue of the
Phalangists' entry was mentioned in that discussion in a general
manner, but the decision was not presented in detail, no examination
was made of the security measures to be taken, and no evaluation was
made of the possible ramifications of the decision.
The way in
which decisions are to be taken and the appropriate bodies to that end
have been laid down in the procedures. These formats ought to be
exploited in order to enhance the prospect that when decisions are
taken, all the information at hand, the various positions, the pros
and cons, and the possible ramifications of the decision will be taken
into account.
Experience
and intuition are very valuable, but it is preferable that they not
constitute the sole basis on which decisions are taken.
The
absence of the required staff discussion regarding the entry of the
Phalangists into the camps was accompanied by another inevitable flaw.
The information about the decision was not transmitted in an orderly
fashion to all the parties who should have known about it. We have
already seen that the Prime Minister was unaware of the decision. The
Foreign Minister, too, learned of the Phalangists' entry only in the
Cabinet session. We have already cited the account of the director of
Military Intelligence that he, too, did not learn about the decision
until Friday morning. Although we have stated that we find it
difficult to accept that account, this cannot justify the absence of
an orderly report about the decision being made to all the various
staff elements.
Thus, for
example, it emerged that the Command Intelligence officers were first
briefed by the Command Intelligence Officer about the fact that the
Phalangists would enter the camps on Thursday, some two hours after
the operation had already commenced. According to the testimony of the
Military Intelligence/ Research officers whose task it is to prepare
situation appraisals, they received no prior information about the
decision to have the Phalangists enter the camps.
As a
result, that department was unable to prepare its own appraisals, as
would have been expected of it prior to the Phalangists' entry into
the camps. This also had a certain effect on the manner in which that
department functioned at the stage when it received the report about
the 300 killed (Secion 6, Appendix B).
The head
of the Mossad learned of the decision only at the Cabinet session.
Despite the fact that Mossad personnel were in Beirut when the events
occurred, and maintained ongoing contacts with the Phalangist
commanders, no report was received from them regarding the special
role of the Phalangists in the camps prior to their entry, nor did
they collect any data at all on events in the camps after the
Phalangists had entered.
This is
not a satisfactory state of affairs. Orderly processes require that
the decision on the entry of the Phalangists be reported in an orderly
and documented manner to the various bodies that should know about it,
so that they can direct their activities and assessments accordingly.
The
military establishments are based, inter alia, on diverse channels of
reporting. An examination of the events on the dates relevant here
indicates the existence of considerable flaws in these channels of
reporting. Matters that should have been reported were not reported at
all, or were reported late and in fragmentary fashion. For example,
the report about the behavior of the Phalangists in the field was not
transmitted to Divisional Intelligence. For its part, the latter did
not relay the reports about the 45 civilians - which was brought to
its attention already on Thursday evening - to Command Intelligence.
As for Command Intelligence, despite the fact that it received a
report from the Division regarding the 300 killed, it did not convey
it to General Staff/Military Intelligence. The transmission of the
report to Military Intelligence was the result of the fine initiative
of Intelligence officer A.
We find a
similar picture also in the Operations Branch channels. Operations
Branch Command did not receive an orderly report of what was happening
in the field. As we have seen, already on Thursday evening and Friday
morning -and throughout Friday - reports were collected by a
considerable number of soldiers and officers who were near the camps.
Only some of those reports - and those in fragmentary fashion - were
brought to the attention of the Divisional Operations elements.
Divisional Operations for its part did not relay the information it
had in an orderly fashion to Command Operations elements. Thus, for
example, the reports in the possession of Divisional Operations about
the 300 killed (or the 120 killed) were not transmitted at all to
Command Operations. The latter did not report (not even on the actual
entry of the Phalangists into the camps) to Operations Branch/
Operation. Thus, for example, the report about the 300 killed was
received already on Thursday evening in Command Intelligence. For some
reason that report was not conveyed (neither in its telephone form nor
in the form of the subsequent cable) to the knowledge of the Command
Intelligence Officer. The report was not transmitted to Command
Operations, and ipso facto was not brought to the knowledge of the
G.O.C., either that evening or the following day. Similarly, no
orderly report was made regarding the decision of the G.O.C. Northern
Command about halting the operations of the Phalangists. These flaws
in the reporting require examination and analysis, since in the
absence of an orderly and proper report the decision-makers at the
various levels lack the information required for their decisions.
The
reports that were received via the various channels were also not
always handled according to the standing procedures, the result being
that the reports sometimes became worthless. Sometimes, reports
received were not recorded in the designated log books; reports that
were relayed were sometimes transmitted with important omissions,
which prevented their being handled properly. Reports that were dealt
with (such as the handling of the report about the 300 killed within
the framework of Military Intelligence/ Research) were at times
handled superficially, with a fruitless internal runaround and without
exhausting the various possibilities for verification and examination.
Other Intelligence means employed sometimes failed to produce the
information that was expected of them (see Section 5 Appendix B).
Reports that were received and which required a preliminary evaluation
to determine their significance and possible implications were not
dealt with properly and in the meantime were rendered worthless due to
a protracted process of examining their authenticity.
In the
course of the testimony we heard, we often came across conversations -
whether face-to-face or over the telephone or radio - between highly
responsible personnel. Contradictions were often evident in the
testimony about these conversations - not out of any intention to
conceal the truth, but as a natural result of flaws in human memory.
There is no satisfactory explanation of why no notes were taken of
these conversations. The Prime Minister held many conversations with
the Defense Minister and the Chief of Staff, including the
conversations in which the decision was taken to seize key positions
in West Beirut. It is not surprising, therefore, if a certain
difference exists between the Prime Minister's version of a guideline
issued by him, and that of the Chief of Staff regarding the guideline
he received.
The
Defense Minister and the Chief of Staff held a conversation on Tuesday
evening in which a number of important decisions were taken. This
conversation was not recorded in any form.
We believe
that it is desirable to determine guidelines in this matter in order
to prevent a situation in which important decisions are not
documented. Precisely because human memory is often faulty, it is
desirable to determine a proper method and procedure for recording
those conversations which, according to criteria to be determined, it
is important to keep on record.
Recommendations and Closing Remarks
Recommendations
With
regard to the following recommendations concerning a group of men who
hold senior positions in the Government and the Israel Defense Forces,
we have taken into account [the fact] that each one of these men has
to his credit [the performance of] many public or military services
rendered with sacrifice and devotion on behalf of the State of Israel.
If nevertheless we have reached the conclusion that it is incumbent
upon us to recommend certain measures against some of these men, it is
out of the recognition that the gravity of the matter and its
implications for the underpinnings of public morality in the State of
Israel call for such measures.
The Prime
Minister, The Foreign Minister, and the Head of the Mossad
We have
heretofore established the facts and conclusions with regard to the
responsibility of the Prime Minister, the Foreign Minister, and the
head of the Mossad. In view of what we have determined with regard to
the extent of the responsibility of each of them, we are of the
opinion that it is sufficient to determine responsibility and there is
no need for any further recommendations.
G.O.C.
Northern Command Major General Amir Drori
We have
detailed above our conclusions with regard to the responsibility of
G.O.C. Northern Command Major General Amir Drori. Major General Drori
was charged with many difficult and complicated tasks during the week
the I.D.F. entered West Beirut, missions which he had to accomplish
after a long period of difficult warfare. He took certain measures for
terminating the Phalangists' actions, and his guilt lies in that he
did not continue with these actions. Taking into account these
circumstances, it appears to us that it is sufficient to determine the
responsibility of Major General Drori without recourse to any further
recommendation.
The
Minister of Defense, Mr. Ariel Sharon
We have
found, as has been detailed in this report, that the Minister of
Defense bears personal responsibility. In our opinion, it is fitting
that the Minister of Defense draw the appropriate personal conclusions
arising out of the defects revealed with regard to the manner in which
he discharged the duties of his office - and if necessary, that the
Prime Minister consider whether he should exercise his authority under
Section 21-A(a) of the Basic Law: the Government, according to which
"the Prime Minister may, after informing the Cabinet of his intention
to do so, remove a minister from office."
The Chief
of Staff, Lt.-Gen. Rafael Eitan
We have
arrived at grave conclusions with regard to the acts and omissions of
the Chief of Staff, Lt-Gen. Rafael Eitan. The Chief of Staff is about
to complete his term of service in April, 1983. Taking into account
the fact that an extension of his term is not under consideration,
there is no [practical] significance to a recommendation with regard
to his continuing in office as Chief of Staff, and therefore we have
resolved that it is sufficient to determine responsibility without
making any further recommendation.
The
Director of Military Intelligence, Major General Yehoshua Saguy
We have
detailed the various extremely serious omissions of the Director of
Military Intelligence, Major General Yehoshua Saguy, in discharging
the duties of his office. We recommend that Major General Yehoshua
Saguy not continue as Director of Military Intelligence.
Division
Commander Brigadier General, Amos Yaron
We have
detailed above the extent of the responsibility of Brigadier General
Amos Yaron. Taking into account all the circumstances, we recommend
that Brigadier General Amos Yaron not serve in the capacity of a field
commander in the Israel Defense Forces, and that this recommendation
not be reconsidered before three years have passed.
In the
course of this inquiry, shortcomings in the functioning of [several]
establishments have been revealed, as described in the chapter dealing
with this issue. One must learn the appropriate lessons from these
shortcomings, and we recommend that, in addition to internal comptrol
in this matter, an investigation into the shortcomings and the manner
of correcting them be undertaken by an expert or experts, to be
appointed by a Ministerial Defense Committee. It in the course of this
investigation it be found that certain persons bear responsibility for
these shortcomings, it is fitting that the appropriate conclusions be
drawn in their regard, whether in accordance with the appropriate
provisions of the military legal code, or in some other manner.
Closing
Remarks
In the
witnesses' testimony and in various documents, stress is laid on the
difference between the usual battle ethics of the I.D.F. and the
battle ethics of the bloody clashes and combat actions among the
various ethnic groups, militias, and fighting forces in Lebanon. The
difference is considerable. In the war the I.D.F. waged in Lebanon,
many civilians were injured and much loss of life was caused, despite
the effort the I.D.F. and its soldiers made not to harm civilians. On
more than one occasion, this effort caused I.D.F. troops additional
casualties. During the months of the war, I.D.F. soldiers witnessed
many sights of killing, destruction, and ruin. From their reactions
(about which we have heard) to acts of brutality against civilians, it
would appear that despite the terrible sights and experiences of the
war and despite the soldier's obligation to behave as a fighter with a
certain degree of callousness, I.D.F. soldiers did not lose their
sensitivity to atrocities that were perpetrated on non-combatants
either out of cruelty or to give vent to vengeful feelings. It is
regrettable that the reaction by I.D.F. soldiers to such deeds was not
always forceful enough to bring a halt to the despicable acts. It
seems to us that the I.D.F. should continue to foster the
[consciousness of] basic moral obligations which must be kept even in
war conditions, without prejudicing the I.D.F.'s combat ability. The
circumstances of combat require the combatants to be tough - which
means to give priority to sticking to the objective and being willing
to make!
sacrifices
- in order to attain the objectives assigned to them, even under the
most difficult conditions. But the end never justifies the means, and
basic ethical and human values must be maintained in the use of arms.
Among the
responses to the commission from the public, there were those who
expressed dissatisfaction with the holding of an inquiry on a subject
not directly related to Israel's responsibility. The argument was
advanced that in previous instances of massacre in Lebanon, when the
lives of many more people were taken than those of the victims who
fell in Sabra and Shatilla, world opinion was not shocked and no
inquiry commissions were established. We cannot justify this approach
to the issue of holding an inquiry, and not only for the formal reason
that it was not we who decided to hold the inquiry, but rather the
Israeli Government resolved thereon. The main purpose of the inquiry
was to bring to light all the important facts relating to the
perpetration of the atrocities; it therefore has importance from the
perspective of Israel's moral fortitude and its functioning as a
democratic state that scrupulously maintains the fundamental
principles of the civilized world.
We do not
deceive ourselves that the results of this inquiry will convince or
satisfy those who have prejudices or selective consciences, but this
inquiry was not intended for such people. We have striven and have
spared no effort to arrive at the truth, and we hope that all persons
of good will who will examine the issue without prejudice will be
convinced that the inquiry was conducted without any bias.
Publication of the Report
In
accordance with Section 20(a) of the Commissions of Inquiry Law, this
report and the attached Appendix A will be published after the report
is submitted to the Government. Appendix B to this report will not be
published, since we are convinced that this is necessary to protect
the security of the state and its foreign relations.
Transcripts from the commission hearings which were conducted in open
session have already been made public. In accordance with regulation
8(b) of the Commission of Inquiry Regulations (Rules of Procedure)
1969, we resolve that the right to examine the transcripts from those
sessions which were held in camera, as well as Appendix B to the
report, will be given to all members of the cabinet, all members of
the Knesset Defense and Foreign Affairs Committee, the General Staff
of the Israel Defense Forces, and any person or class of persons which
may be determined by the Ministerial Defense Committee. Similarly, the
right to examine Appendix B is given to those persons who received a
notice in accordance with section 15(a) of the law, and to their
representatives who appeared before the commission.
This
report was signed on 7 February 1983.
Yitzhak
Kahan
Commission Chairman
Aharon Barak
Commission Member
Yona Efrat
Commission Member
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