The Haganah in Jerusalem, 1936-1938
MEMO, September 20, 2010
Celebrations have taken place in Israel to commemorate the 90th anniversary of the founding of the Haganah, the Jewish paramilitary organisation which paved the way for the establishment of the state of Israel and the Israeli Defence Forces. A headline in the Jewish Chronicle refers to "the generation that established Israel" above a photograph of some elderly veterans rather sadly wearing military uniforms.
Describing the veterans as the "heroes of Israel", the IDF's Chief of General Staff, Gabi Ashkenazi, is quoted by the JC, saying, "You were the ones to pave the way for the IDF as the army of the Jewish people, and as a body that can promise to the world 'never again', a reference to the Holocaust.
The past few years have seen many celebrations of the diminishing band of survivors from the First and Second World Wars. History is written by the victors, and it is true to say that the exploits of Allied troops in both world wars were not entirely devoid of unacceptable actions long since covered up and forgotten about by official historians. While not exactly a whitewash, it has had the same effect. The same is true of the Haganah "heroes", to the extent that it is surprising that a British-based publication can laud an organisation which first cooperated with (including receiving training by British officers) and then agitated and fought against British Mandate rule in Palestine.
Ostensibly formed to defend early Jewish settlements in Palestine, by 1939 the Haganah was helping to organise illegal Jewish immigration to Palestine. Post-Second World War it joined with two more extreme splinter groups, Irgun and Lehi ("the Stern Gang") to form the "Jewish Resistance Movement". It was the Stern Gang which assassinated Lord Moyne, the British Minister for the Middle East, in 1944. The Haganah and its elite Palmach commando unit, along with the Stern Gang and Irgun, carried out numerous terrorist acts against British governmental installations across Palestine between 1944 and 1947, including the following:
Haifa district
12 Feb 1944 Immigration offices bombed
27 Feb 1944 Tax offices bombed
23 Mar 1944 Police station bombed
25 July 1945 Railway bridge bombed
31 Oct 1945 Police launches mined in harbour
9 Sep 1946 British policeman killed
21 Mar 1947 Oil refineries destroyed
26 Apr 1947 Head of British CID killed
Tel Aviv and Jaffa district
23 Mar 1944 Police station bombed
25 Apr 1946 Seven British soldiers killed in arms raid
2-17 Mar 1947 Martial law imposed; 14 Britons killed
Nathanya district
29 Dec 1946 British army officer captured and flogged
29 July 1947 Two British army sergeants hanged; their bodies were booby-trapped
Jerusalem district
12 Feb 1944 Immigration and tax offices bombed
23 Mar 1944 Police station bombed
27 Sep 1944 Four police stations attacked
29 Sep 1944 British policeman killed
27 Dec 1944 Police HQ attacked
22 July 1946 King David Hotel bombed; 91 killed
24 Oct 1946 Bombs explode at roadblocks around the city
30 Oct 1946 Suitcase bomb left at railway station
Cairo
6 Nov 1944 Lord Moyne assassinated
Railways
31 Oct 1945 Several hundred bombs exploded on railways all over Palestine
10 June 1946 Three trains destroyed
16 June 1946 Eight railway bridges destroyed around the borders of Palestine
- Source: Guerrilla Warfare from 1939 to the present day, Robin Corbett
Although efforts have been made to distance the Haganah from the overtly terrorist activities of Irgun and the Stern Gang, Robin Corbett claims that "Zionist armed resistance... included the much larger, nut more moderate, Haganah self-defence force [sic]". David Ben-Gurion "insisted" to the British and American Governments that "his Jewish Agency and the Haganah were opposed to the Irgun and its terrorism". According to Alan Hart in Zionism: The real enemy of the Jews, this was plainly not true: "The truth was not only that the Haganah and so the Jewish Agency were colluding with the terrorists. After initially saying "No" to Operation Chick – the codename for the plan to blow up the King David Hotel – the Haganah ordered the Irgun to execute it." Ben-Gurion, of course, went on to become Israel's first Prime Minister; the brains behind the bombing of the hotel, in which 91 people were killed, Menachim Begin, was one of Ben-Gurion's successors at the helm of Israeli politics. To his dying day Begin was wanted by the British authorities for terrorist crimes, as was another ex-Israeli Prime Minister, Yitzhak Shamir, a leading figure in the Stern Gang; for this reason, neither ever visited the UK. In a foretaste of things to come, money was donated "by organisations... across America to support illegal Jewish immigration into Palestine and to raise funds for Zionist terrorism". (Hart, volume 1, page 193)
Alan Hart also gives a detailed account of the circumstances which led to the Haganah supplying weapons and ammunition to the Irgun and the Stern used in the assault on the village of Deir Yassin in 1945, in which, according to a report by the International Red Cross, 254 Palestinians were murdered, 145 of them women (of whom 35 were pregnant at the time).
Given the propensity for the Israeli Defence Forces to commit crimes against civilians, it is perhaps fitting that their roots lie in a group which was itself responsible for terrorist acts across Palestine. What is not so fitting is the way that these roots are overlooked by legal authorities around the world. The real irony is that Israel's current batch of leaders and their supporters in the West blithely label legitimate Palestinian resistance against the illegal military occupation of Palestine as "terrorism", knowing full well that Zionist militias committed terrorist acts against Palestinians and the British alike in the run-up to and beyond the Zionist state's declaration of independence in May 1948. It is fair to say that the state of Israel was founded upon the terrorism of Zionist militia groups, including the Haganah. The fact that General Ashkenazi can then call members of the Haganah "heroes of Israel" speaks volumes for the morality underpinning the Zionist state, a far cry from the "purity of arms" claimed to this day by the Israeli Defence Forces.
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