Israelis trained US troops in Jenin-style urban warfare
By Justin Huggler in Amman
29 March 2003
http://news.independent.co.uk/world/middle_east/story.jsp?story=391823
The American military has been asking the Israeli army for advice on fighting
inside cities, and studying fighting in the West Bank city of Jenin last
April, unnamed United States and Israeli sources have confirmed. Reports
that US troops trained with Israeli forces for street-to-street fighting
have been denied.
If the US army believes the road to Baghdad lies through Jenin, there is
reason for Iraqi civilians to be concerned. During fighting in the Jenin
refugee camp last April, more than half the Palestinian dead were civilians.
There was compelling evidence that Israeli soldiers targeted civilians, including
Fadwa Jamma, a Palestinian nurse shot dead as she tried to treat a wounded
man. A 14-year-old boy was killed by Israeli tank-fire in a crowded street
after the curfew was lifted. A Palestinian in a wheelchair was shot dead,
and his body was crushed by an Israeli tank.
Israeli soldiers prevented ambulances from reaching the wounded and refused
the Red Cross access. Using bulldozers, the Israeli army demolished an entire
neighbourhood ? home to 800 Palestinian families ? reducing it to dust and
rubble.
Martin van Creveld, a professor of military history and strategy at Jerusalem's
internationally respected Hebrew University, has told reporters that, following
his advice to US Marines, the American military bought nine of the converted
bulldozers used in the Jenin demolitions from Israel.
Professor van Creveld said he gave advice to marines last year in Camp Lejeune,
North Carolina. He said he was questioned about Israeli tactics in Jenin,
and told them the giant D9 bulldozers, manufactured for civilian use in the
US but fitted with armour-plating in Israel, were among the most useful weapons.
Israeli troops at first found they could not get their tanks and armoured
vehicles into the narrow alleys of the refugee camp, so they bulldozed wide
swaths through houses to get them in.
If the US military intends to use converted D9 bulldozers in Iraqi cities,
there is cause for concern. When reporters got into the Jenin refugee camp,
we found the fronts of houses neatly scythed off so the insides of the houses
were visible from the street, with personal belongings, sofas, beds, children's
toys, hanging precariously from half-collapsed floors.
Israeli use of the bulldozers has not been limited to clearing the way for
tanks. They have also been used in collective punishment, such as the destruction
of an entire neighbourhood in Jenin after the fighting ended.
In Nablus last April, eight members of the al-Shubi family were killed when
an Israeli soldier bulldozed their home, burying them alive, despite shouted
warnings from neighbours that they were still inside. The Israeli military
has supplied US forces with video of incursions by Israeli soldiers into
Palestinian cities, said unnamed "security sources". They added that Israeli
officers have given their American counterparts extensive briefings on Israeli
tactics.
One of the tactics identified was the Israeli army's practice of moving from
house to house by knocking holes in connecting walls to avoid being exposed
in the streets, a practice that has wrecked the homes of thousands of Palestinians.
The Israeli army has also routinely used Palestinian civilians as human shields
to protect them as they advance, a practice that has continued despite Israeli
court rulings forbidding it. There was no word on whether Israeli officers
had briefed American troops on this tactic.
There were reports in the US and Israel media last November that American
troops had been trained by Israeli instructors in a mock-up of a Palestinian
city inside an army base in Israel. Those reports have been denied, but an
unnamed Israeli source told the Associated Press that US officers did visit
the mocked-up Palestinian city and attended a briefing on Israeli training
methods.
There have also been reports that Palestinians who have fought against Israeli
forces in Jenin and other Palestinian cities during Israeli offensives last
year have telephoned friends and acquaintances in Iraq to advise them on
tactics to use against American and British forces if street-to-street fighting
begins.
There is another lesson to drawn from Jenin. The Palestinians who defended
the city were armed only with assault rifles and crude, home-made booby-traps
and pipe-bombs, against the massively better-equipped Israeli army.
But they held out for 11 days, and managed to kill 23 Israeli soldiers, 13
of them in a single ambush. When the Palestinians ran out of ammunition,
they kept fighting and started throwing stones at the Israeli soldiers. If
the much better-equipped Iraqi forces take the same attitude to defending
Baghdad and other cities the battles could be bloody.