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Israeli military finds cluster bomb use in Lebanon war was legal | Israeli military finds cluster bomb use in Lebanon war was legal |
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| Written by News Editor | |
| Thursday, 27 December 2007 | |
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The Israeli military has found that it did not violate international law when it used cluster bombs while fighting Hizbullah in Lebanon last summer, despite fierce international condemnation of its decision to drop the ordnance in and near populated civilian areas. The Associated Press reports that the Military Advocate General of the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) announced Monday that it found no violations of international law during its investigation into the use of cluster bombs during the Israel-Hizbullah war in the summer of 2006.
Israel faced harsh criticism from the United Nations and human rights groups for its use of cluster bombs in and near populated areas in Lebanon. The British Broadcasting Corp. writes that the UN called Israel's use of the bombs in the last 72 hours of the war, when it was clear a cease-fire was imminent, "shocking and immoral." Cluster bombs frequently do not detonate on impact, effectively turning them into land mines that threaten civilians long after their original deployment. The IDF's investigation into its use of cluster bombs began shortly after the fighting ended in 2006. The Jerusalem Post reports that Judge Advocate General Brig. Gen. Avihai Mandelblit, who announced the IDF's findings, said that the use of cluster bombs was "a concrete military necessity" in order to stop Hizbullah rockets from being fired into Israel.
Israeli daily Haaretz writes that Israel promised the United States, which sold it the cluster bombs, that it would not use them in populated areas, and that the IDF commander during the war, Lt. Gen. Dan Halutz, issued orders to that effect to the IDF forces fighting Hizbullah. But the investigation found that those orders were not always followed.
The IDF's announcement was lambasted as a political move by a Lebanese government official, AP reports. "The Israeli decision indicates that there is no difference between the judicial authority and political authority in Israel. They all work to commit and cover up crimes which are against humanity," the official told AP. An editorial in the Seattle Post-Intelligencer similarly condemned the IDF's findings, saying that cluster bombs are "still not OK."
The editorial notes that just last week a Lebanese man was killed by a cluster bomb as he was out collecting firewood. Additionally, an international conference was held earlier this month to try and establish a ban on cluster bombs, though Associated Press writes that "the meeting was marred by disagreements over how to define the deadly devices and how broad to make a ban, as well as by the absence of key producers and stockpilers — the United States, Russia, China and Israel." |
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