Israel
Defense Forces IDF Hero Doron Almog Takes On UK Police, Justice
By Joel
Leyden
Israel News Agency
Jerusalem,
Israel ---- August 6, 2009 ..... Israel has a rich history of
brave Jewish heroes which include King David, the Maccabiahs and
hundreds of Israel Defense Forces, Mossad and Shabak men and women
who have made the ultimate sacrifice.
But of all
these Jewish heroes, one stands very tall among the others for
the professional work he has dedicated himself to for over three
decades.
IDF Major
General Doron Almog (res.) has served in the Israel
Defense Forces from 1969-2004.
Almog served
as head of the IDF Doctrine and Training Division at General Headquarters
(GHQ), where he applied the management principle of Learning
Organization to the IDF, establishing simulation and war
games to improve the learning process and developing strategies
for force activation, combat doctrine and management doctrine.
During his
army service General Almog accumulated a great deal of operational
experience in leading people during war and battle conditions
and in managing complex divisions.
Key landmarks in his IDF army career include commanding of the
first task force to land in the Entebbe airport rescue operation
in 1976, command of the elite paratroopers brigade force on its
journey from the Awali River to Beirut during the first Israel
Lebanon War, and the airlift of about 6,000 Ethiopian Jews during
various clandestine missions.
"This
was not an attack on me," Almog said. "This was
an attack on every Israel soldier, every Israel citizen,
every Jew around the world."
But it was
his role as head of the IDF Southern Command during the years
2000-2003, where he led the battle against Palestinian terrorism,
Hamas rockets slamming into Israel cities and towns and his success
in deterring every suicide bombing attempt to breech IDF defenses,
that has placed him against the UK police and judicial system.
Almog, now retired and targeting his voluntary activities on the
establishment of the Aleh
Negev-Nahalat Eran Rehabilitative Village on behalf of disabled
children and young adults was faced with an arrest and possible
prison time as he was about to leave an El-Al Israel airways civilian
aircraft in England in September 2005.
Maj. General
Almog and his wife had flown to the UK for social and charitable
visits to Jewish communities in Solihull, in the West Midlands
and Manchester.
But lawyers
acting for Palestinian terror groups lobbied the UK Metropolitan
Police to act over blatant lies that Almog had ordered the destruction
in 2002 of more than 50 innocent Palestinian homes in the Gaza
Strip. These were homes, facilities and people where Hamas and
other Islamic Jihad terrorists were using as human and physical
shields to launch attacks on Israel civilian population.
News of the
UK arrest warrant reached the Israel Embassy. Israel officials
told the general and his wife not to leave the El Al flight which
sat for two long hours at a London airport terminal.
"This
was not an attack on me," Almog said. "This was an attack
on every Israel soldier, every Israel citizen, every Jew around
the world."
Could one
just imagination the humiliation of seeing Almog handcuffed, fingerprinted,
photographed and had DNA swabs taken from his mouth by the London
Metropolitan Police?
Almog, who
currently serves as Chairman of Athlone Global Security (AGS),
a capital group that invests in high-tech Israel companies specializing
in the development and distribution of homeland security-related
solutions, most likely sat eating peanuts with a smile as he awaited
for the El-Al aircraft to return him to Israel.
The brave
men of the Met police initially refused to get involved, citing
massive pressures on counter-terrorism teams in the wake of the
London 7/7 Islamic terror bombings.
But the legal
representatives successfully applied to a UK judge for an arrest
warrant for prosecution.
Almog, who
has served as an anti-terror consultant to several governments,
knew that his best defense in this situation was to duck, avoid
a media PR bullet by Palestinian terror groups and get safely
back to Tel Aviv.
Since September
2005, Almog has had no desire to visit the UK.
Nor should
he.
One should
not place blame on the London Met Police but rather the UK justice
system which was about to embarrass them as well. Someone at the
UK Ministry of Defense could have stated that Almog for purposes
of UK national security should be allowed into the the UK without
an arrest, without humiliation, without harassment. But this never
happened.
In the same
manner that Geert Wilders, a Dutch MP who had been invited to
Westminster to show his 17-minute anti-terror film Fitna,
by a member of the House of Lords, and then deported at the airport,
both men fell victim to Islamic extremist pressure in the UK.
Jacqui Smith, the Home Secretary refused Wilders entry because
his opinions "would threaten community security and therefore
public security" in the UK.
When Maj.
Gen Almog arrived back in Israel, the planned arrest caused a
minor diplomatic storm, with Israel foreign minister Silvan Shalom
describing the incident as an "outrage".
In turn, the
then UK Foreign Secretary Jack Straw apologised to his counterpart
for any embarrassment caused.
John O' Connor,
a former head of Scotland Yard's flying squad, told the BBC: "All
they needed to do was to stop the plane from taking off and negotiate
through the Foreign Office."
He said he
felt the arrest had been "written off", putting "British
justice is in the dock."
O'Connor had
it wrong.
There was no British justice involved.
Today, as
the recent Gaza war stirs up more accusations of offenses, Israel
and Islamic groups are gearing up for more potential criminal
cases against IDF officers and Israel political leaders in Europe
and possibly elsewhere.
But instead
of international tribunals or the Israel justice system, the main
venue for the cases is expected to be European domestic courts
that cite a legal approach known as "universal jurisdiction"
that allows for the trial of cases of heinous acts, torture, or
war crimes that allegedly occur outside their own borders.
Israel considers
the threats part of an ongoing political witch hunt. Palestinians
and so-called humanitarian activists, on the other hand, see the
domestic courts as the only forum to argue whether war crimes
were committed.
"The
systems in place across a number of countries will be tested....
We have legal teams working across and beyond European countries"
on behalf of Palestinian plaintiffs claiming war crimes, says
Daniel Machover, an Israeli-born British lawyer who works in coordination
with the Gaza-based Palestinian Center for Human Rights and pushed
for Almog's arrest in 2005. "There's no other way a country
under occupation or a land under occupation can seek justice."
Machover also
helped bring before a Spanish national court the case of the Israel
assassination of a Hamas terror chief in 2002.
Recently,
a Spanish judge announced an investigation, sparking tension between
Israel and Spain, and spurring more speculation in Israel of war
crimes efforts.
Dogged by
a series of allegations ranging from targeting civilian locations
to preventing the evacuation of noncombatants, Israel's government
in recent weeks reaffirmed a commitment to offer legal defense
to IDF soldiers and politicians implicated in the cases. It has
also decided to keep the identities of soldiers secret to protect
as many as possible from prosecution.
One Israel
legal expert dismissed the effort to try the war crimes abroad
as an extension of a "media war" against the Jewish
state for the Gaza operation. Daniel Reisner, the former head
of the Israel military's international division, says universal
jurisdiction is being used to pursue allegations against Israel
only and not Hamas.
"The
danger to Israel now are those countries that have extra territorial
jurisdiction that don't have a nationality requirement,"
says Reisner. "The question is whether that is a major danger
or a minor danger."
A Belgian
court considered in 2001 an indictment of former Israel Prime
Minister Ariel Sharon for his role in alleged massacres during
the Israeli invasion of Lebanon in 1982.
Meanwhile,
Doron Almog shies away from the media and a coordinated PR campaign
to clear his name in Europe.
He has placed his priorities into helping disabled children in
the Negev walk and smile.
This Jewish
hero has gone from protecting all of Israel from terror attacks
and rockets emanating from Gaza to providing comfort and support
to children confined to hospital beds and wheelchairs.
As chairman
of Aleh Negev, Almog leads a project to maintain Israel's first
facility for the care of severely disabled adults - like Eran.
The 100-dunam village recently constructed near the Negev town
of Ofakim provides a home for 200 mentally and physically disabled
adults. The spacious facility includes a special education school,
paramedical center, hospital wing, workshop for rehabilitative
aids and occupational and professional framework along with a
full range of therapies - from music and art to hydrotherapy and
horseback riding.
"The
idea is to provide these adults with a homey, warm atmosphere
and, at the same time, help them use their full potential and
become productive," explains Almog.
It appears
that Almog has his priorities finely targeted, while the UK continues
to bow under Islamic terror pressure.
Britain has
blocked the sale of spare parts for Israels fleet of missile
gunships because they were used in the recent campaign in Gaza.
The first
country to revoke an arms licence in response to the war in Gaza
six months ago, Britain told the Israel Embassy in London that
five of the export requests for parts for the Saar 4.5 gunships
had been rejected because the vessels had fired on Gaza during
Operation Cast Lead, Israels controversial 23-day campaign
against the terror group Hamas. The spare parts were intended
for the ships guns.
As for global
terrorism, Iran institutions not only continue to operate in the
UK but continue to use the UK justice and court system. A London
based subsidiary of Iran's largest bank, Bank Melli, said that
it would take action in British courts to challenge the legality
of sanctions imposed on Iran by the European Union.
The subsidiary,
Melli Bank Plc, said it would apply to the British courts for
judicial review and an interim injunction to suspend the application
of an EU asset freeze.
The EU agreed
on the move because of the parent bank's alleged role in financing
firms linked to Iran nuclear and missile programmes.
It was also
recently revealed by the Jewish Chronicle in London that
British taxpayers are funding anti-Israel and extremist teaching
in the Palestinian territories.
The TaxPayers
Alliance (TPA) said millions of pounds had been spent on Palestinian
Authority-funded TV broadcasts, school textbooks and newspaper
articles discouraging a two-state solution.
The TPA report,
Palestinian Hate Education since Annapolis, concludes that money
from the UK Department for International Development (DFID), which
totalled almost £100 million in the 2007/08 financial year,
is being used directly to promote hatred of Israel and the West.
The United
Kingdom, a proud, democratic Anglo nation which once served as
the birthplace of the Magna Carta, now shivers in the face of
Islamic MP's and Islamic terror pressure groups.