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Hans Blix to Nes Ziona: by James Brooks Some of the victims were demonstrators.
Some were children in their homes, trying to get away from the gas seeping
under the door. Some were old men walking down the street. One of the
victims was a thirteen year-old boy, playing in a schoolyard when a
gas canister enveloped him in a cloud of poisonous smoke.(1) Like many
of the others, he suffered recurring severe convulsions for days.
Ambulance drivers responding to one of
the gas attacks found people on the street jumping around, thrashing
their limbs in uncontrollable spasms. The victims seemed unaware of
their actions and surroundings. One driver said, "If they had anything
in their hand - a woman carrying her child might throw him down without
realizing it. She'd just drop him and start clawing at herself from
the gas." Many adults were required to restrain each violently convulsing
victim.(2)
These attacks with an unknown poison gas
were reported in a prestigious regional newspaper by respected journalists.(3-4)
They appeared on European wire services, and on at least one US military
Web site.(5-8) They were repeatedly documented by an award-winning human
rights organization affiliated with the UN.(9-13) Graphic film documentation
of the victims' suffering is available on VHS and DVD.(14) Three days
after the attacks began, the leader of the targeted people publicly
alleged the use of "poison gas" against civilians and demanded that
it stop. Yet the attacks broadened in scope and continued for the next
six weeks, until they ceased as mysteriously as they had begun.(15)
These facts are all in plain sight. But
chances are you've never heard about this chemical warfare against innocent
civilians. It was not the work of Saddam Hussein, or the Russians, or
terrorists, at least as the term is generally understood. It didn't
occur in the 1980s, and it didn't require the satellite data and battle
planning that the US military provided Iraq for its chemical warfare
against Iran.
These poison gas attacks were perpetrated
just two years ago, by Israeli troops against civilians in the Occupied
Palestinian Territories. Although they are documented by a small mountain
of detailed and consistent open-source information, they remain a silent,
ignored, seemingly untouchable story. At least eight separate attacks
were reported from February 12 through March 30, 2001, first in the
Gaza Strip and later in the West Bank. Several hundred civilians are
reported to have suffered from exposure to the gas. Many required prolonged
hospitalization. Six weeks after the initial attacks, a doctor caring
for victims at Ali Nasser Hospital in Gaza said, "We still have 10 cases
who we would like to send abroad for treatment."(16)
The poison gas canisters were unfamiliar,
marked only with a few numerals and Hebrew letters. The smoking gas
they released was non-irritating and initially odorless. After a few
minutes a sweet, minty fragrance would emerge. One victim recalled that
"the smell was good. You want to breathe more. You feel good when you
inhale it." The smoke often spewed in a "rainbow" of changing colors,
ending in a steady billow of black soot.
From five to thirty minutes after breathing
the gas, victims began to feel sick and have difficulty breathing. A
searing pain would begin to wrench their gut, followed by vomiting,
sometimes of blood, then complete hysteria and extremely violent convulsions.
Many victims suffered a relentless syndrome for days or weeks afterward,
cycling between convulsions and periods of conscious, twitching, vomiting
agony. Palestinians agreed: "This is like nothing we've ever seen before."(17)
Eyewitness reports identify thirty-three
distinct symptoms induced by the gas. All but three are typical of nerve
gas poisoning.(18) Tareg Bey, a chemical warfare expert at the University
of California-Irvine, told the Chicago Reader that the symptoms "all
fit really well to nerve gas", though he was puzzled by the reported
fragrance and skin rashes.(19) The gas, which caused no recorded fatalities,
may have been a novel "nerve agent" developed in Israel's CBW laboratories
at Nes Ziona, where they've been making nerve gases, and many other
things, for decades.(20)
Were these gas attacks an "experiment"? What has become of the victims? Who made the decision to conduct this criminal and inhuman campaign? These and many other questions about Israel's willingness to use chemical weapons demand answers. The silence about these attacks must end. Failure to investigate them and bring their perpetrators to justice is a violation of the Geneva Accords. America cannot make a case for war over potential chemical weapons in Iraq, yet turn a blind eye to the actual chemical warfare conducted by its "staunchest ally."
Originally published February 13, 2003: Media Monitors Network - Antiwar.com - Dissident Voice - News Insider - Palestine Media Center - Online Journal
(1) Vale of tears: Tear or poison gas? By Jonathan Cook, Al-Ahram Weekly On-line, 5-11 April 2001, Issue No.528, http://www.ahram.org.eg/weekly/2001/528/re3.htm (2) Selected Interviews recorded for the
documentary film Gaza Strip by James Longley, transcripts, http://www.littleredbutton.com/gas_interviews/interviews.pdf
(3) Unprepared for the worst, by Graham
Usher, Al-Ahram Weekly Online, Feb. 15-21, 2001, Issue No.
521 http://www.ahram.org.eg/weekly/2001/521/re1.htm
(4) Vale of tears: Tear or poison gas?
By Jonathan Cook, Al-Ahram Weekly On-line, 5-11 April 2001,
Issue No.528, http://www.ahram.org.eg/weekly/2001/528/re3.htm
(5) BBC Monitoring Middle East - Political,
February 13, 2001
(6) Deutsche Presse-Agentur, February 14,
2001, BC Cycle, 00:45 CET
(7) AFX News Limited, AFX European Focus,
February 13, 2001
(8) Protests of U.S. and U.K. Air Strikes,
Fort Bragg Web site, Feb 19, 2001 http://www.bragg.army.mil/sid/wwwthreat/CountriesGHI/iraq.htm
(9) Palestinian Centre for Human Rights
(PCHR) Weekly Report, Feb. 8-14, 2001, http://www.pchrgaza.org/files/W_report/English/15-02-2001.htm
(10) PCHR Weekly Report, February 15-21,
2001, http://www.pchrgaza.org/files/W_report/English/22-02-2001.htm
(11) PCHR Weekly Report, March 1-7, 2001,
http://www.pchrgaza.org/files/W_report/English/07-03-2001.htm
(12) PCHR Weekly Report, March 22-29, 2001,
http://www.pchrgaza.org/files/W_report/English/29-03-2001.htm
(13) PCHR Weekly Report, March 29-April
4, 2001, http://www.pchrgaza.org/files/W_report/English/05-04-2001.htm
(14) Gaza Strip, a documentary by James
Longley, February, 2002, http://www.littleredbutton.com/gaza
(15) The Israeli Poison Gas Attacks: A
Preliminary Investigation, James Brooks, Media Monitors Network,
January 8, 2003, http://www.mediamonitors.net/jamesbrooks2.html
(16) Selected Interviews recorded for the
documentary film Gaza Strip by James Longley, transcripts, http://www.littleredbutton.com/gas_interviews/interviews.pdf
(17) ibid.
(18) Symptoms - The Israeli Poison Gas
Attacks: A Preliminary Investigation, James Brooks, http://www.vtjp.org/report/Symptoms.htm
(19) Gas Attack/What Was It?/News Bites, Michael
Miner, Chicago Reader, August 23, 2002 Reader Archive--Article:
2002/020823/HOTTYPE
(20) Israel and Chemical/Biological Weapons:
History, Deterrence, and Arms Control, Avner Cohen, The Nonproliferation
Review, Vol. 8, No. 3 (Fall-Winter), pp. 27-53 http://www.puaf.umd.edu/CISSM/Scholars/Cohen.pdf
For additional references, see:
The Israeli Poison Gas Attacks: A Preliminary Investigation, James Brooks http://www.vtjp.org/report/The_Israeli_Poison_Gas_Attacks_Project.htm |
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