The Commission determined that the massacre at Sabra and Shatilla
was carried out by a Phalangist unit, acting on its own but its
entry was known to Israel. No Israeli was directly responsible for
the events which occurred in the camps. But the Commission asserted
that Israel had indirect responsibility for the massacre since the
I.D.F. held the area, Mr. Begin was found responsible for not
exercising greater involvement and awareness in the matter of
introducing the Phalangists into the camps. Mr. Sharon was found
responsible for ignoring the danger of bloodshed and revenge when he
approved the entry of the Phalangists into the camps as well as not
taking appropriate measures to prevent bloodshed. Mr. Shamir erred
by not taking action after being alerted by communications Minister
Zippori. Chief of Staff Eitan did not give the appropriate orders to
prevent the massacre. The Commission recommended that the Defense
Minister resign, that the Director of Military Intelligence not
continue in his post and other senior officers be removed. Full text
follows:
Introduction
At a meeting of the Cabinet on 28 September 1982, the Government
of Israel resolved to establish a commission of inquiry in
accordance with the Commissions of Inquiry Law of 1968. The Cabinet
charged the commission as follows:
"The matter which will be subjected to inquiry is: all the
facts and factors connected with the atrocity carried out by a unit
of the Lebanese Forces against the civilian population in the
Shatilla and Sabra camps."
In the wake of this resolution, the President of the Supreme
Court, by virtue of the authority vested in him under Section 4 of
the aforementioned law, appointed a commission of inquiry comprised
as follows:
Yitzhak Kahan, President of the Supreme Court commission
chairman; Aharon Barak, Justice of the Supreme Court; Yona Efrat,
Major General (Res.).
The commission held 60 sessions, hearing 58 witnesses. As per the
commission's requests of the Cabinet Secretary, the Office of the
Minister of Defense, the General Staff of the Israel Defense Forces
(henceforth, the I.D.F.), the Ministry for Foreign Affairs, and
other public and governmental institutions, the commission was
provided with many documents, some of which were, in the course of
the deliberations, submitted to the commission as exhibits. The
commission decided, in accordance with section 13(A) of the law,
that there was a need to collect data necessary for its
investigation. Appointed as staff investigators were:
Ms. Dorit. Beinish, Deputy State Attorney, and Ms. Edna Arbel,
Senior Assistant to the District Attorney (Central District), who
were seconded to the commission by the Attorney General; and
Assistant Police Commander Alex Ish-Shalom, who was seconded to the
commission by the Inspector General of the Israel Police. Judge
David Bartov was appointed commission coordinator. The staff
investigators collected, by virtue of the authority vested in them
under Sections 13(C), 180 statements from 163 witnesses. Before the
commission began its deliberations, it visited Beirut, but it was
not allowed to enter the area of the events. The commission also
viewed television footage filmed near the time of the events at the
camps and their surroundings.
The commission published notices to the public in the press and
other media, inviting all who wish to testify or submit a document
or bring any information to the commission's attention to submit to
the commission in writing details of the material he possessed or
wished to bring to the commission's attention. There was not much
response to these appeals. The commission made an effort to collect
testimony also from people who live outside the juridical boundaries
of the State of Israel; and all necessary steps were taken to bring
witnesses from outside of Israel, when this was possible. The
commission's requests in this matter were not always honored. For
example, the "New York Times" correspondent Mr Thomas
Friedman, who published in the aforementioned newspaper a famous
article on what transpired during the period under deliberation
here, refused to appear before the commission, claiming that this
was contrary to his paper's editorial policy. We did not receive a
satisfactory answer as to why the paper's publisher prevented its
reporter from appearing before the commission and thus helping it
uncover all the important facts.
Some of the commission's hearings were held in open session, but
most of the sessions were in camera. In this matter we acted in
accordance with the instructions of Section 18(A) of the law,
according to which a commission of inquiry is required to deliberate
in open session but is entitled to deliberate in camera if it is
convinced that "it is necessary to do so in the interest of
protecting the security of the State... the foreign relations of the
State..." and for other reasons stipulated in that section. It
became clear to the commission that with regard to certain matters
about which witnesses testified before it, open hearings would be
liable to affect adversely the nation's security or foreign
relations; and therefore it heard most of its testimony in camera.
It should be noted that during sessions held in camera, witnesses
also said things whose publication would not cause any harm;
however, because of the difficulty in separating those things whose
publication would be permissible from those whose publication would
be forbidden, it was imperative in a substantial number of cases to
hear the entire testimony in camera.
In accordance, with Section 20(A) of the law, this report is
being published together with an appendix that will be called
Appendix A. In the event that we will need recourse in this report
to testimony whose publication would not be damaging to the nation's
security or foreign relations, we shall present it in a section of
the report that will be published. On the other hand, in accordance
with Section 20(A) of the law, a portion of this report, to be
called Appendix B, will not be published, since, in our opinion,
non-publication of this material is essential in the interest of
protecting the nation's security or foreign relations.
As we have said, the commission's task, as stipulated by the
Cabinet's resolution, is "to investigate all the facts and
factors connected with the atrocity which was carried out by a unit
of the Lebanese Forces against the civilian population of the
Shatilla and Sabra camps." These acts were perpetrated between
Thursday, 16 September 1982, and Saturday, 18 September 1982. The
establishment of the facts and the conclusions in this report relate
only to the facts and factors connected with the acts perpetrated in
the aforementioned time frame, and the commission did not deliberate
or investigate matters whose connection with the aforementioned acts
is indirect or remote. The commission refrained, therefore, from
drawing conclusions with regard to various issues connected with
activities during the war that took place in Lebanon from 6 June
1982 onward or with regard to policy decisions taken by the
Government before or during the war, unless these activities or
decisions were directly related to the events that are the subject
of this investigation. Descriptions of facts presented in this
report that deviate from the framework of the commission's authority
(as defined above) have been cited only as background material, in
order to better understand and illustrate the chain of events.
In one area we have found it necessary to deviate somewhat from
the stipulation of the Cabinet's resolution, which represents the
commission's terms of reference. The resolution speaks of atrocities
carried out by "a unit of the Lebanese Forces." The
expression "Lebanese Forces" refers to an armed force
known by the name "Phalangists" or "Ketaib"
(henceforth, Phalangists). It is our opinion that we would not be
properly fulfilling our task if we did not look into the question of
whether the atrocities spoken of in the Cabinet's resolution were
indeed perpetrated by the Phalangists, and this question will indeed
be treated in the course of this report.
The commission's deliberations can be divided into two stages. In
the first stage, the commission heard witnesses who had been
summoned by it, as well as witnesses who had expressed the desire to
appear before it. The commission asked questions of these witnesses,
and they were given the opportunity of bringing before the
commission everything known to them of the matters that constitute
the subject of the investigation. When this stage terminated, the
commission issued a resolution in accordance with Section 15(A) of
the aforementioned law, concerning the harm that might be caused
certain people as a result of the investigation or its results; this
was done in order to enable these people to study the material, to
appear before the commission and to testify (for the text of the
resolution, see section I of appendix A). In accordance with this
resolution, the chairman of the commission sent notices to nine
people; the notices detailed how each one of them might be harmed.
The material in the commission's possession was placed at the
disposal of those receiving the notices and of the attorneys
appointed to represent them. During the second stage of the
deliberations, we heard witnesses who had been summoned at the
request of the lawyers, and thus some of the witnesses who had
testified during the first stage were cross-examined.
Afterwards, written summations were submitted, and the
opportunity to supplement these summations by presenting oral
arguments was given. We should already note that involving the
lawyers in the commission's deliberations did not in any way make
the commission's work more difficult; it even helped us in
fulfilling our task. The lawyers who appeared before us were able to
clarify properly, though not at excessive length, the various points
that were the subject of controversy; and thus they rendered
valuable assistance to the commission's task, without in any way
prejudicing their professional obligation to properly represent and
defend their clients.
When we resolved to issue, in accordance with Section 15(A) of
the law, notices about harm to the nine people, we were not
oblivious to the fact that, during the course of the investigation,
facts were uncovered that could be the prima facie basis for results
that might cause harm to other persons as well. Our consideration in
limiting the notices about possible harm to only nine persons was
based on [the conception] that it is our duty, as a public judicial
commission dealing with an extremely important issue - one which had
raised a furor among the general public in Israel and other nations
- to deliberate and reach findings and conclusions with regard to
the major and important things connected with the
aforementioned events, and to the question of the responsibility
of those persons whose decisions and actions could have decisively
influenced the course of events. We felt that with regard to the
other people who were involved in one way or another in the events
we are investigating, but whose role was secondary, it would be
better that the clarification or investigation, if deemed necessary,
be carried out in another manner, and not before this commission,
viz., before the military authorities, in accordance with the
relevant stipulations of the military legal code and other
legislation. We chose this path so that the matters under
investigation would not expand and become overly-complicated and so
that we could complete our task in not too long a time.
In the course of the investigation, not a few contradictions came
out regarding various facts about which we had heard testimony. In
those cases where the contradictions referred to facts important for
establishing findings and drawing subsequent conclusions, we shall
decide between the variant versions in accordance with the usual
criteria in judicial and quasi-judicial tribunals. Our procedures
are not those of a criminal court; and therefore the criterion of
criminal courts that stipulates that in order to convict someone his
guilt must be proven beyond a reasonable doubt, does not apply in
this case. Nevertheless, since we are aware that our findings and
conclusions are liable to be of significant influence from a social
and ethical standpoint, and to harm also in other ways persons
involved in our deliberations, no finding of significant harm was
established with regard to any one of those to whom notices were
sent, unless convincing evidence on which to base such a finding was
found, and we shall not be satisfied with evidence that leaves room
for real doubt. We shall not pretend to find a solution to all the
contradictions in testimony. In many instances, these contradictions
relate to the content of conversations that took place between
various people without the presence of witnesses, or when the
witnesses' attention was not focused on the content of the
conversation, and there are no exact notes on these conversations.
In such cases, it is only natural that there exist several versions
with regard to what was said, and the differences between them do
not necessarily derive from a desire to conceal the truth but rather
are sometimes the natural result of a failure of the human memory.
We do not see the need to rule about those contradictions which
surround unimportant details that do not influence the decision
about points in controversy.
We shall conclude this part of the report by expressing
appreciation and gratitude to all those who helped us in fulfilling
our task. It is only fitting that we note that all the institutions
and various functionaries in the Government, the I.D.F., and other
authorities whose help we needed rendered us all the necessary
assistance and placed at our disposal all the relevant material,
without reservation. Our special thanks go to the coordinator of the
commission, Judge David Bartov, who showed great capability in
handling the administrative aspects of the commission's work and
without whose enterprise and devoted and efficient work it is very
doubtful whether we would have succeeded in properly carrying out
our task. Our appreciation and gratitude go also to the staff
investigators, Dorit Beinish, Edna Arbel and Alex Ish-Shalom, who,
by virtue of their expertise, initiative and dedication, succeeded
in placing at our disposal much material which served as the basis
of the commission's deliberations and findings. Similarly, our
thanks go to the entire staff of commission employees, whose loyalty
and faithfulness enabled us to carry out and complete our task.
A Description of the Events
The Period Before the Events in Beirut
In 1975, civil war broke out in Lebanon. This war began with
clashes in Sidon between the Christians and Palestinian terrorists
and subsequently widened in a manner to encompass many diverse armed
forces - under the auspices of ethnic groups, political parties, and
various organizations - that were active in Lebanon. In its early
stages, this war was waged primarily between the Christian
organizations on the one hand, and Palestinian terrorists, Lebanese
leftist organizations, and Muslim and Druze organizations of various
factions on the other. In the course of the civil war, Syrian army
forces entered Lebanon and took part in the war, for a certain
period of time on the side of the Christian forces, and subsequently
on the side of the terrorists and the Lebanese leftist
organizations. During the early years of the war, massacres on a
large scale were perpetrated by the fighting forces against the
civilian population. The Christian city of Damour was captured and
destroyed by Palestinian terrorists in January 1976. The Christian
residents fled the city, and the conquering forces carried out acts
of slaughter that cost the lives of many Christians. In August 1976,
the Christian forces captured the Tel Zaatar refugee camp in Beirut,
where Palestinian terrorists had dug in, and thousands of
Palestinian refugees were massacred. Each massacre brought in its
wake acts of revenge of a similar nature. The number of victims of
the civil war has been estimated at close to 100,000 killed,
including a large number of civilians, among them women and
children.
The Palestinians' armed forces organized and entrenched
themselves in camps inhabited by refugees who had arrived in Lebanon
in various waves, beginning in 1948. There are various estimates as
to the number of Palestinian refugees who were living in Lebanon in
1982. According to the figures of U.N.R.W.A. (the United Nations
Relief and Works Agency), the Palestinian refugees numbered
approximately 270,000. On the other hand, the leaders of the
Christian armed forces estimated the number of Palestinian refugees
at approximately 500,000 or more. This estimate is most probably
exaggerated, and the more realistic estimate is the one that puts
the number of Palestinian refugees at approximately 300,000 - and in
any case, not more than 400,000.
The main Christian armed force that took part in the civil war
consisted mainly of Maronite Christians, though a small number of
Shiites joined them. This force comprised several armed Christian
organizations, the largest among them being the organizations under
the leadership of the Chamoun family and of the Jemayel family. The
head of the Jemayel family, Mr. Pierre Jemayel, founded the
Phalangist organization; and the leader of this organization in
recent years was Pierre's son, Bashir Jemayel. In the course of
time, the Phalangist organization became the central element in the
Christian forces; in 1982, the Phalangists ruled the Christian armed
forces. Even though the "Lebanese Forces" formally
comprised several Christian organizations, the dominant and primary
force in this organization, at the time under our scrutiny, was the
Phalangists, led by the Jemayel family.
When the war broke out in Lebanon in June 1982, the Phalangist
force included a nucleus of approximately 2,000 full-time recruited
soldiers. In addition, the Phalangists had a reserve armed force -
that is, men who served part-time in their free hours or when they
were called up for special service. When fully mobilized, the number
of Phalangist soldiers reached 5,000. Similarly, the Phalangists had
militias in the villages. There were no ranks in this military
force, but it was organized along military lines, with Bashir
Jemayel as the military and political leader who enjoyed
unimpeachable authority. The Phalangists had a general staff
comprised of several commanders. At the head of this general staff
was a commander named Fadi Frem; at the head of the Phalangists'
intelligence division was a commander by the name of Elie Hobeika.
The link between the Christian forces and the State of Israel was
formed shortly after the start of the civil war. In the course of
time, this link grew stronger, from both political and military
standpoints. The Christian forces were promised that if their
existence were to become endangered, Israel would would come to
their aid. Israel extended significant aid to the Christian armed
forces, supplying arms, uniforms, etc., and also training and
instruction, Over the course of time, a considerable number of
meetings were held between leaders of the Phalangists and
representatives of the Government of Israel and the I.D.F. In the
course of these meeting, the ties between the leaders of the two
sides grew stronger. The Institute for Intelligence and Special
Assignments (henceforth, the Mossad) was made responsible for the
link with the Phalangists; and representatives of the Mossad
maintained - at various times, and in various ways - a rather close
connection with the Phalangist leadership. In the course of these
meetings, the Phalangist leaders brought up various plans for
strengthening the Christian forces' position, as well as various
ways of bringing about the end of the civil war in Lebanon and
restoring the independence of that nation, while [simultaneously]
buttressing the status of the Phalangists and those allied with them
in a regime that would be established in Lebanon. Israel's
representatives expressed various reservations with regard to these
plans and Israel's involvement in their realization.
A separate armed force is the military force in South Lebanon -
the "Army of Free Lebanon" under the command of Major
Haddad. This force comprises several hundred full-time soldiers. In
addition, there is in South Lebanon a National Guard, which, under
the command of local officers, does guard duty in the villages.
Relations between the Phalangists and Haddad's men are not
particularly close, for various reasons, and there were points of
tension between these two forces. In 1982, soldiers of both Major
Haddad and the Phalangists wore uniforms provided by Israel - and
similar to those worn by the I.D.F. The Phalangists' uniforms bore
an emblem consisting of the inscription "Ketaib
Lubnaniyeh" and the drawing of the cedar, embroidered over the
shirt pocket. Major Haddad's soldiers had an emblem on the epaulet
inscribed with the words "Army of Free Lebanon" in Arabic
and the drawing of a cedar. During the war, Haddad's force advanced
and reached the Awali River. Pursuant to I.D.F. orders, Haddad's
army did not proceed north of the Awali River.
The subject of the Palestinian population in Lebanon, from among
whom the terrorist organizations sprang up and in the midst of whom
their military infrastructure was entrenched, came up more than once
in meetings between phalangist leaders and Israeli representatives.
The position of the Phalangist leaders, as reflected in various
pronouncements of these leaders, was, in general, that no unified
and independent Lebanese state could be established without a
solution being found to the problem of the Palestinian refugees,
who, according to the Phalangists' estimates, numbered half a
million people. In the opinion of the Phalangists, that number of
refugees, for the most part Muslims, endangered [both] the
demographic balance between the Christians and Muslims in Lebanon
and (from other standpoints as well) the stability of the State of
Lebanon and the status of the Christians in that country. Therefore,
the Phalangist leaders proposed removing a large portion of the
Palestinian refugees from Lebanese soil, whether by methods of
persuasion or other means of pressure. They did not conceal their
opinion that it would be necessary to resort to acts of violence in
order to cause the exodus of many Palestinian refugees from Lebanon.
As we have said, the Mossad was the organization that actually
handled the relations between the Phalangists and Israel, and its
representatives maintained close contacts with the Phalangist
leadership. In addition, the Intelligence branch of the I.D.F.
(henceforth Military Intelligence) participated, albeit in a more
limited capacity, in the contacts with the Phalangists; and it, by
virtue of its job, was to issue a not insignificant number of
evaluation papers on the Phalangists, their leaders, their aims,
their fighting ability, etc. The division of labor between the
Mossad and Military Intelligence with regard to the Phalangists, was
spelled out in a document (exhibit 189). While this division of
duties left room for misunderstandings and also duplication in
various areas, there is no room for doubt that both the Mossad and
Military Intelligence specifically dealt with drawing up evaluations
on the Phalangists, and each one of them was obligated to bring
these evaluations to the attention of all interested parties.
Neither the head of the Mossad nor the director of Military
Intelligence disagreed with this in his testimony before us.
From the documents submitted to us and the testimony we heard, it
emerges that there were differences of opinion between the Mossad
and Military Intelligence with regard to the relations with the
Phalangists. The Mossad, to a not inconsiderable extent under the
influence of constant and close contact with the Phalangist elite,
felt positively about strengthening relations with that
organization, though not ignoring its faults and weaknesses. This
approach of the Mossad came out clearly in the testimony we heard
from the person who was in charge of the Mossad's contacts with the
Phalangists. The head of the Mossad, in his testimony before us on
27.12.82, said, inter alia (p. 1437), that "the Mossad tried,
to the best of its ability, throughout this period, to present and
approach the subject as objectively as possible; but since it was in
charge of the contacts, I accept as an assumption that subjective,
and not only objective, relations also emerged. I must accept that
in contacts, when you talk to people, relationships are
formed." In contrast, Military Intelligence was to emphasize in
its evaluations the danger in the link with the Phalangists,
primarily because of this organization's lack of reliability, its
military weakness, and other reasons we need not specify here. A
characteristic expression of the difference in approach between
these two agencies, whose responsibility it was to provide
evaluations on the Phalangists and the desirability of relations
with them, can be found in the exchange of documents when one of the
intelligence officers (henceforth intelligence officer A, whose full
name appears in the list of names in section I of Appendix B) who
served as a liaison officer on behalf of Military Intelligence in
the Mossad's representation at Phalangist headquarters at the
beginning of the war submitted an assessment (exhibit 171) on
cooperation with the Phalangists. This Military Intelligence officer
rendered a negative evaluation, from Israel's standpoint, of the
Phalangists' policy during the war and their aims for the future.
This criticism was vigorously rejected by the Mossad (exhibit 172).
The "Peace for the Galilee" war (henceforth the war)
began on 6.6.82 On 12-14 June, J.D.F. forces took over the suburbs
of Beirut and linked up with the Christian forces who controlled
East Beirut. On 25 June the encirclement of West Beirut was
completed and I.D.F. forces were in control of the Beirut-Damascus
road. There followed a period of approximately one and a half months
of negotiations on the evacuation of the terrorists and the Syrian
forces from West Beirut, and during this time various targets in
West Beirut were occasionally shelled and bombed by the I.D.F.'s,
Air Force and artillery. On 19.8.82 the negotiations on the
evacuation of the terrorists and the Syrian forces from West Beirut
were completed On 23.8.82 Bashir Jemayel was elected president of
Lebanon. His term of office was supposed to begin on 23 September
1982.
On 21-26 August, a multi-national force arrived in Beirut, and
the evacuation of the terrorists and the Syrian forces began. The
evacuation was completed on I September; however, according to
information from various sources, the terrorists did not fulfill
their obligation to evacuate all their forces from West Beirut and
hand their weapons over to the Lebanese army but left in West
Beirut, according to various estimates, approximately 2,000
fighters, as well as many arms caches, some of which were handed
over by the terrorists to the Lebanese leftist militia
"Mourabitoun." This militia numbered approximately 7,000
men in west Beirut, and it cooperated with the terrorists. After the
evacuation was completed, the multi-national force left Lebanon (10-
12 September 1982; cf. section 2 of Appendix A for dates of stages
of the war).
At the beginning of the war, the Chief of Staff [Lt.-Gen. Rafael
Eitan] told the Phalangists that they should refrain from all
fighting. This order was issued because of the fear that if the
Phalangists' force got into trouble while fighting, the I.D.F. would
be forced to come to its aid, thereby disrupting the I.D.F.'s plan
of action. Even after I.D.F. forces reached the Damour-Shouf line,
the I.D.F.'s orders were that the Phalangists would not participate
in fighting (testimony of the Chief of Staff, pp. 195-6). After
I.D.F. forces reached the area under Christian control, the
Phalangist commanders suggested that a company of theirs of
approximately 300 men set up a training base at a place called Beit
Ad-Din, a site of historical importance in Lebanon. The Chief of
Staff agreed to this, but made his agreement conditional on the
Phalangist forces' exercising restraint and discipline, as the area
was Druze. At first, this condition was honored; afterwards, there
were outbursts of hostilities between the Phalangists and the Druze
in Beit Ad Din. The Druze committed some murders, and the
Phalangists took revenge; a small I.D.F. force was stationed in the
area in order to prevent such actions. In the early stages of the
war there were also some acts of revenge and looting on the part of
the Christians in Sidon; these were stopped by the I.D.F.
When I.D.F. forces were fighting in the suburbs of Beirut and
along the Beirut-Damascus road, the Phalangists were asked to
cooperate with the I.D.F.'s actions by identifying terrorists, a
task at which the Phalangists' expertise was greater than that of
the Israeli security forces. During these actions there were
generally no acts of vengeance or violence against the Palestinian
civilian population by the Phalangists who were operating with the
I.D.F. Another action of the Phalangists' military force was the
capture of the technical college in Reihan, a large building in
Beirut not located in a built-up area. The Phalangists captured this
place from the armed Shiite organization "Amal." One day
after the place was taken, the Phalangists turned the building over
to the I.D.F. and left the site (testimony of the Chief of Staff,
pp. 198-200).
The fighting actions of the Phalangists during that time were
few, and in effect the fighting was all done by I.D.F. forces alone.
This state of affairs aroused criticism and negative reactions from
the Israeli public, and among I.D.F. soldiers as well. This
dissatisfaction was expressed in various ways; and in the political
echelon, as well as in the media, there was amazement that the
Phalangists were not participating in the fighting, even though the
war was their battle as well, and it was only right that they should
be taking part in it. The feeling among the Israeli public was that
the I.D.F. was "pulling the chestnuts out of the fire" for
the Phalangists. As the number of I.D.F. casualties mounted, public
pressure for the Phalangists to participate in real fighting
increased. The plan formulated in mid-June 1982, when it was still
uncertain whether the terrorists would agree to leave West Beirut,
was that the Christian forces would fight to take control of West
Beirut; the I.D.F. would not take part in that operation; and only
in the event that it became necessary would the I.D.F. help out the
Phalangists with long-range artillery fire. This plan was discussed
in the Cabinet meeting of 15.6.82, where it was proposed by the
Prime Minister, and his proposal was adopted by the Cabinet, namely,
that I.D.F. forces would not enter West Beirut, and this job was to
be done by other forces (meaning the Phalangists) with help they
would be given by the I.D.F. (transcript of the Cabinet meeting of
15.6.82, exhibit 53). Even after this resolution, no real fighting
was done by the Phalangists for the purpose of extending control
over West Beirut; and, as we have said, eventually the terrorists
were evacuated as the result of a political agreement, after the
I.D.F. had shelled various targets in West Beirut.
In all the testimony we have heard, there has been unanimity
regarding [the fact] that the battle ethics of the Phalangists, from
the standpoint of their attitude to non-combatants, differ greatly
from those of the I.D.F. It has already been noted above that in the
course of the civil war in Lebanon, many massacres had been
perpetrated by the various forces that had taken part in the
fighting. When the war began in June 1982, the prevailing opinion
among the Mossad agents who had maintained contacts with the
Phalangist leadership was that the atrocities and massacres were a
thing of the past, and that the Phalangist forces had reached a
stage of political and organizational maturity that would ensure
that such actions would not repeat themselves. This opinion was
based both on personal impressions of the character of the
Phalangist leadership, as well as on the recognition that the
interest of the Phalangist elite to eventually rule an independent
Lebanese nation, half or more of whose population is Muslim and
would be interested in maintaining relations with the Arab world,
requires moderations of actions against Palestinians and restraint
as to modes of operation. At the same time, there were various facts
that were not compatible with this outlook. During the meetings that
the heads of the Mossad held with Bashir Jemayel, they heard things
from him that left no room for doubt that the intention of this
Phalangist leader was to eliminate the Palestinian problem in
Lebanon when he came to power - even if that meant resorting to
aberrant methods against the Palestinians in Lebanon (testimony on
pps. 16, 17, and 168 of the transcripts; exhibit 85 of 30 June 1982,
clause 14 - section 2 of Appendix B). Similar remarks were heard
from other Phalangist leaders. Furthermore, certain actions of the
Phalangists during the war indicated that there had been no
fundamental change in their attitude toward different segments of
the Lebanese population, such as Druze and Palestinians, whom the
Phalangists considered enemies. There were reports of Phalangist
massacres of women and children in Druze villages, as well as the
liquidation of Palestinians carried out by the intelligence unit of
Elie Hobeika (testimony no. 105 of intelligence officer B before the
staff investigators, part of which appears in section 3 of Appendix
B; also, a document which mentions the Phalangist attitude toward
terrorists they had taken prisoner - section 4 of Appendix B,
exhibit 39). These reports reinforced the feeling among certain
people - and especially among experienced intelligence officers -
that in the event that the Phalangists had an opportunity to
massacre Palestinians, they would take advantage of it.
The Assassination of Bashir Gemayel and the I.D.F.'s entry into
West Beirut
On Tuesday afternoon, 14.9.82, a large bomb exploded in a
building in Ashrafiyeh, Beirut, where Bashir Jemayel was [meeting]
with a group of commanders and other Phalangists. For the first few
hours after the explosion, it was not clear what had happened to
Bashir, and there were rumors that he had only been slightly
wounded. Word of the attempt on his life reached the Prime Minister,
the Defense Minister, the Chief of Staff, the director of Military
Intelligence [Major General Yehoshua Saguy] and others in the early
hours of the evening. During the evening, before it became clear
what had befallen Bashir, the Defense Minister spoke with the Chief
of Staff, the director of Military Intelligence, the head of the
Mossad, and the head of the General Security Services about possible
developments. He also spoke a number of times with the Prime
Minister. Moreover, there were a number of conversations that
evening between the Prime Minister and the Chief of Staff. Word of
Bashir's death reached Israel at about 11.00 p.m., and it was then
that the decision was taken in conversations between the Prime
Minister and the Minister of Defense and between the Prime Minister
and the Chief of Staff - that the I.D.F. would enter West Beirut. In
one of the consultations between the Minister of Defense and the
Chief of Staff, there was mention of including the Phalangists in
the entry into West Beirut. The question of including the
Phalangists was not mentioned at that stage in conversations with
the Prime Minister.
Once the decision was made to have the I.D.F. enter West Beirut,
the appropriate operational orders were issued. Order Number I was
issued at 12.20 a.m. on the night between 14.9.82 and 15.9.82,
Orders Number 2 and 3 were issued on Wednesday, 15.9.82, and Order
Number 4 was issued that same day at 2.00 p.m.; Order Number 5 was
issued at 3.00 a.m. on 16.9.82; and Order number 6 was issued on the
morning of 16.9.82. The first five orders said nothing about
entering the refugee camps, and only in Order Number 6 were the
following things stated (clause 2, document no. 6, exhibit 14):
"The refugee camps are not to be entered. Searching and
mopping up the camps will be done by the Phalangists/ Lebanese
Army."
Clause 7 of the same order also states that the Lebanese Army
"is entitled to enter any place in Beirut, according to its
request."
Execution of the I.D.F.'s entry into West Beirut began during the
early morning hours of 15.9.82.
On the night between 14.9.82 and 15.9.82, the Chief of Staff flew
to Beirut with a number of people and met there with the G.O.C.
Northern Command [Major General Amir Drori] and with the commander
of the division (henceforth the division). Afterwards, the Chief of
Staff, together with the people accompanying him, went to the
Phalangists' headquarters, where, according to his testimony (p.
210), he ordered the Phalangist commanders to effect a general
mobilization of all their forces, impose a general curfew on all the
areas under their control, and be ready to take part in the
fighting. The response of the Phalangist commanders who took part in
that meeting was that they needed 24 hours to organize. The Chief of
Staff requested that a Phalangist liaison officer come to the place
where the division's forward command post was located (henceforth
forward command post) under the command of Brigadier-General Amos
Yaron. At that meeting, the Phalangist commanders were told by the
Chief of Staff that the I.D.F. would not enter the refugee camps in
West Beirut but that the fighting this entails would be undertaken
by the Phalangists (Chief of Staff's testimony, p. 211). The Chief
of Staff testified that the entry of the Phalangists into the
refugee camps was agreed upon between the Minister of Defense and
himself at 8.30 p.m. on the previous evening. The camps in question
were Sabra and Shatilla. After the meeting in the Phalangists'
camps, the Chief of Staff went to the forward command post.
The forward command post was located on the roof of a five-storey
building about 200 meters southwest of the Shatilla camp. The
borders of the two camps were not defined exactly. The Sabra camp
extended over an area of some 300 x 200 meters and Shatilla over an
area of about 500 x 500 meters (testimony of the deputy assistant to
the director of Military Intelligence, p. 29). The two camps were
essentially residential neighborhoods containing, in the area
entered by the Phalangists, as will be stated below, low permanent
structures along narrow alleys and streets. From the roof of the
forward command post it was possible to see the area of the camps
generally but - as all the witnesses who visited the roof of the
command post stated, and these were a good number of witnesses whose
word we consider reliable - it was impossible to see what was
happening within the alleys in the camp from the roof of the command
post, not even with the aid of the 20 x 120 binoculars that were on
the command post roof. Appended to this report are an aerial
photograph and map of the area of the camps, as well as a general
map of Beirut (sections 3, 4, and 5 of Appendix A).
It was not possible to obtain exact details on the civilian
population in the refugee camps in Beirut. An estimate of the number
of refugees in the four refugee camps in west Beirut (Burj
el-Barajneh, Fakahni, Sabra and Shatilla) is about 85,000 people.
The war led to the flight of the population, but when the fighting
subsided, a movement back to the camps began. According to an
inexact extimate, in mid-September 1982 there were about 56,000
people in the Sabra camp (protocol, p. 29), but there is no
assurance that this number reflects reality.
The Chief of Staff was in the forward command post from the early
morning hours of Wednesday, 15.9.82. The I.D.F. began to enter west
Beirut shortly after 6:00 a.m. During the first hours of the I.D.F.
entry, there was not armed resistance to the I.D.F. forces,
evidently because the armed forces that were in West Beirut were
taken by surprise. Within a few hours, the I.D.F. forces encountered
fire from armed forces that remained in a number of places in west
Beirut, and combat operations began. The resistance caused delays in
the I.D.F.'s taking over a number of points in the city and caused a
change in the route of advance. In the course of this fighting three
I.D.F. soldiers were killed and more than 100 were wounded. Heavy
fire coming out of Shatilla was directed at one I.D.F. battalion
(henceforth the battalion) advancing east of Shatilla. One of the
battalion's soldiers was killed, 20 were injured, and the advance of
the battalion in this direction was halted. Throughout Wednesday and
to a lesser degree on Thursday and Friday (16-17.9.82), R.P.G. and
light-weapons fire from the Sabra and Shatilla camps was directed at
the forward command post and the battalion's forces nearby, and fire
was returned by the I.D.F. forces.
On Wednesday, 15.9.82, the Minister of Defense arrived at the
forward command post between 8:00 and 9:00 a.m. He met with the
Chief of Staff there, and the latter reported on what had been
agreed upon with the Phalangists, namely, a general mobilization,
curfew, and the entry of the Phalangists into the camps. The
Minister of Defense approved this agreement. From the roof of the
command post, the Minister of Defense phoned the Prime Minister and
informed him that there was no resistance in Beirut and that all the
operations were going along well.
During the aforementioned meeting between the Minister of Defense
and the Chief of Staff, present on the roof of the forward command
post were the Defense Minister's aide, Mr. Avi Dudai; the director
of Military Intelligence, who came to this meeting together with the
Minister of Defense; representative A of the Mossad (his full name
appears in the list of names, section 1, Appendix B); Major-General
Drori; Brigadier-General Yaron; Intelligence officer B; the head of
the General Security Services; Deputy Chief of Staff Major-General
Moshe Levi; and other I.D.F. officers who were accompanying the
Minister of Defense. Dudai recorded in his notebook what was said
and agreed upon at that meeting. According to Dudais testimony, he
later copied these notes into another notebook, pages of which were
presented before us (exhibit 103). These notes stated, inter alia,
that the Phalangists were to be sent into the camps. The Minister of
Defense spoke with the Prime Minister twice from the roof of the
command post. According to the record of these conversations
(exhibits 100 and 101), in one of them the wording of the I.D.F.
Spokesman's announcement was agreed upon as follows:
"Following the murder of President-elect Bashir Jemayel,
I.D.F. forces entered West Beirut tonight to prevent possible grave
occurrences and to ensure quiet.
"The entry of the I.D.F. forces was executed without
resistance."
From the forward command post the Minsiter of Defense went to the
Phalangist headquarters. A record was made of this meeting, which
was attended by a number of Phalangist commanders as well as the
Minister of Defense, the director of Military Intelligence, the head
of the General Security Services and representatives of the Mossad
(exhibit 79). At that meeting, the Minister of Defense stated, inter
alia, that the I.D.F. would take over focal points and junctions in
West Beirut, but that the Phalangist army would also have to enter
West Beirut after the I.D.F. and that the Phalangist commanders
should maintain contact with Major-General Drori, G.O.C. Northern
Command, regarding the modes of operation. A record of this meeting
was made by Intelligence officer B (exhibit 28). From there the
Minister of Defense went to Bikfaya, to the Jemayel family home, to
pay a condolence call.
From the meeting with the Jemayel family in Bikfaya, the Minister
of Defense went to the airport, and on the way he met with
Major-General Drori at a gas station. This meeting took place in the
presence of a number of people, including the director of Military
Intelligence, the head of the General Security Services, Mr. Duda'i,
and the bureau chief of the director of Military Intelligence,
Lieutenant-Colonel Hevroni. The situation of the forces was
discussed at this meeting, and Major-General Drori reported on the
course of events during the I.D.F.'s entry into West Beirut. From
there the Minister of Defense went on to the airport and met there
with the Chief of Staff and the Deputy Chief of Staff at about 2:00
p.m., after which the Minister of Defense returned to Israel.
That same day, 15.9.82, while the Minister of Defense was in
Beirut, a meeting took place at 11:30 a.m. in the Prime Minister's
Office between the Prime minister and others from the American
embassy in Israel. During that meeting (protocol of the meeting,
exhibit 120), the Prime Minister informed Mr. Draper that I. D.F.
forces had entered West Beirut beginning in the morning hours, that
there were no real clashes, that the I.D.F. action was undertaken in
order to prevent certain possible events, and that we were concerned
that there might be bloodshed even during the night. The Prime
Minister also said that the Phalangists were behaving properly;
their commander had not been injured in the assassination and was in
control of his forces; he is a good man and we trust him not to
cause any clashes, but there is no assurance regarding other forces.
He added that the primary immediate task was to preserve quiet, for
as long as quiet is maintained it will be possible to talk;
otherwise there might have been pogroms, and the calm was preserved
for the time being (exhibit 120).
At 4:00 p.m. on Wednesday, 15.9.82, a briefing took place at the
office of the Deputy Chief of Staff with the participation of the
I.D.F. branch heads, including the assistant for research to the
director of Military Intelligence. The meeting began with a review
by the assistant for research to the director of Military
Intelligence of possible political developments in Lebanon following
the death of Bashir Jemayel. He stated, inter alia (page 4 of
the transcript of the discussion, exhibit 130), that the I.D.F.'s
entry into West Beirut was perceived as vital not only by the
Christians but also by the Muslims, who regarded the I.D.F. as the
only factor that could prevent bloodshed in the area and protect the
Sunni Muslims from the Phalangists. The Intelligence officer also
stated that according to what was known to Military Intelligence,
the attack on Bashir was carried out by the Mourabitoun, though that
was not certain. During the meeting, the head of Operations
Department announced that the Phalangists "are encouraging
entry into the camps" (p. 7 of exhibit 130). The Deputy Chief
of Staff reported his impressions of the meeting at Phalangist
headquarters in Beirut that day and said that the intention was to
send the Phalangists into the refugee camps and afterwards perhaps
into the city as well. He added that this "might create an
uproar," because the armed forces in West Beirut that were then
quiet might stir up a commotion upon learning that Phalangists are
coming in behind the I.D.F. (page 11, exhibit 130).
At 6:00 p.m. the Minister of Defense spoke with the Prime
Minister from his home and reported (exhibit 99) that by evening the
I.D.F. would be in all the places; that he had conveyed the Prime
Minister's words to Pierre Jemayel; and that "everything is in
order" and the decision made on the previous night to send the
I.D.F. into Beirut had been most important and [indeed] should not
have been delayed.
The Chief of Staff remained at the forward command post in Beirut
and followed the development of the I.D.F. actions from there. On
that day the Phalangist officers did not arrive at the forward
command post to coordinate operations, but Major-General Drori met
with them in the evening and told them generally that their entry
into the camps would be from the direction of Shatilla.
Major-General Drori, who was not at ease with the plan to send the
Phalangists into the camps, made an effort to persuade the
commanders of the Lebanese Army that their forces should enter the
camps and that they should prevail upon the Prime Minister of
Lebanon to agree to this move. The reply of the Lebanese Army at the
time was negative.
In the early morning hours of Thursday, 16.9.82, the Chief of
Staff left the forward command post and returned to Tel Aviv. That
same morning, in the wake of political pressure, an order was issued
by the Minister of Defense to halt the I.D.F.'s combat operations;
but after a short time the Minister of Defense rescinded the order.
At 10:00 a.m. the Minister of Defense held a consultation in his
office with the Chief of Staff; the director of Military
Intelligence, Brigadier-General Y. Saguy; Lieutenant-Colonel
Zecharin, the Chief of Staffs bureau chief; and Mr. Dudai (exhibit
27 is a record of what was said at that meeting). The meeting was
opened by the Chief of Staff, who announced that "the whole
city is in our hands, complete quiet prevails now, the camps are
closed and surrounded; the Phalangists are to go in at 11:00-12:00.
Yesterday we spoke to them... The situation now is that the entire
city is in our hands, the camps are all closed." Later on in
his statement, while pointing to a map, the Chief of Staff stated
that the areas marked on the map were in the hands of the 1. D. F.
and that the Fakahani, Sabra, and Shatilla camps were surrounded. He
also said that if the Phalangists came to a coordinating session and
wanted to go in, it was agreed with them that they would go in and
that the Lebanese Army could also enter the city wherever it chose.
At this discussion, the Minister of Defense spoke of the heavy
American pressure to have the I.D.F. leave West Beirut and of the
political pressure from other sources. In the course of the meeting,
the Chief of Staff repeated a number of times that at that moment
everything was quiet in West Beirut. As for going into the camps,
the Minister of Defense stated that he would send the Phalangists
into the refugee camps (p. 5, exhibit 27). At the time of the
consultation, the Minister of Defense informed the Prime Minister by
phone that "the fighting has ended. The refugee camps are
surrounded. The firing has stopped. We have not suffered any more
casualties. Everything is calm and quiet. Sitting opposite me is the
chief of Staff, who has just come from there. All the key points are
in our hands. Everything's over. I am bringing the Chief of Staff to
the Cabinet meeting. That's the situation as of now..." After
this conversation, the Chief of Staff reported on the contacts
during the night of 14.9.82 with the members of the Mourabitoun, in
which the members of this militia said that they were unable to
hide, that they were Lebanese, and that they would undoubtedly all
be killed by the Phalangists, whether immediately or some time
later. The Chief of Staff added that "there's such a dual kind
of situation that they're confused. They're seething with a feeling
of revenge, and there might have been rivers of blood there. We
won't go into the refugee camps" (p. 7, exhibit 27). As stated,
participating in this consultation was the director of Military
Intelligence, who in the course of the discussion stated a number of
things that appear in the aforementioned record.
The commanders of the Phalangists arrived for their first
coordinating session regarding the entry of their forces into the
camps at about 11:00 a.m. on Thursday, 16.9.82, and met with
Major-General Drori at the headquarters of one of the divisions. It
was agreed at that meeting that they would enter the camps and
coordinate this action with Brigadier-General Yaron, commander of
the division. This coordination between Brigadier-General Yaron and
the Phalangist commanders would take place on Thursday afternoon at
the forward command post. It was likewise agreed at that meeting
that a company of 150 fighters from the Phalangist force would enter
the camps and that they would do so from south to north and from
west to east. Brigadier-General Yaron spoke with the Phalangists
about the places where the terrorists were located in the camps and
also warned them not to harm the civilian population. He had
mentioned that, he stated, because he knew that the Phalangists'
norms of conduct are not like those of the I.D.F. and he had had
arguments with the Phalangists over this issue in the past,
Brigadier-General Yaron set up lookout posts on the roof of the
forward command post and on a nearby roof even though he knew that
it was impossible to see very much of what was going on in the camps
from these lookouts. An order was also issued regarding an
additional precautionary measure whose purpose was to ascertain the
actions of the Phalangist forces during their operation in the camps
(this measure is cited in section 5, Appendix B). It was also agreed
that a Phalangist liaison officer with a communications set would be
present at all times on the roof of the forward command post - in
addition to the Mossad liaison officer at the Phalangist
headquarters. The Phalangist unit that was supposed to enter the
camps was an intelligence unit headed, as we have said, by Elie
Hobeika. Hobeika did not go into the camps with his unit and was on
the roof of the forward command post during the night (testimony of
Brigadier-General Yaron, p. 726). This unit was assigned the task of
entering the camps at that time for two reasons, first - since the
... Phalangists had difficulty recruiting another appropriate force
till then; second - since the members of this unit were considered
specially trained in discovering terrorists, who tried to hide among
the civilian population.
On 16.9.82 a document was issued by the Defense Minister's
office, signed by the personal aide to the Defense Minister, Mr. Avi
Dudai, which contained "The Defense Minister's Summary of 15
September 1982." This document is (exhibit 34) a summary of the
things which Mr. Dudai had recorded during his visit with the
Defense Minister in Beirut on 15.9.82, as detailed above. In various
paragraphs of the document there is mention of the Defense
Minister's instructions regarding the entry into West Beirut. The
instruction in paragraph F. is important to the matter at had; it is
stated there:
"F. Only one element, and that is the I.D.F., shall command
the forces in the area. For the operation in the camps the
Phalangists should be sent in."
The document is directed to the Chief of Staff, the Deputy Chief
of Staff and the director of Military Intelligence. The document was
received at the office of the director of Military Intelligence,
according to the stamp appearing on the copy (exhibit 35), on
17.9.82.
In the testimonies we have heard, different interpretations were
given to the instruction that only the I.D.F. command the forces in
the area. According to one interpretation, and this is the
interpretation given the document by the Chief of Staff (p. 257),
the meaning of the instruction is that in contacts with external
elements, and especially with the Phalangists, only the I.D.F., and
not another Israeli element, such as the Mossad, will command the
forces in the area - but this does not mean that the Phalangist
force will be under the command of the I.D.F. On the other hand,
according to the interpretation given the document by the director
of Military Intelligence (pp. 127, 1523), the meaning is that all
forces operating in the area, including the Phalangists, will be
under the authority of the I.D.F. and will act according to its
instructions.
The entry of the Phalangists into the camps began at about 18.00
on Thursday, 16.9.82 At that time there were armed terrorist forces
in the camps. We cannot establish the extent of these forces, but
they possessed various types of arms,
which they used - even before the entry of the Phalangists -
against I.D.F. forces that had approached the area, as well as
against ' the I.D.F. headquarters at the forward command post. It is
possible to determine that this armed terrorist force
had not been evacuated during the general evacuation, but had
stayed in the camps for two purposes, which were - renewal of
underground terrorist activity at a later period, and to protect the
civilian population which had remained in the camps, keeping in mind
that given the hostility prevailing between the various sects and
organizations, a population without armed protection was in danger
of massacre. It should be added here that during the negotiations
for evacuation, a guarantee for the safety of the Muslims in West
Beirut was given by the representative of the United States who
conducted the negotiations, following assurances received from the
government of Israel and from Lebanon.
Meanwhile, as we have said, the multi-national force left
Lebanon, and all the previous plans regarding the control of West
Beirut by the Lebanese government were disrupted due to the
assassination of President-elect Bashir Jemayel.
The Events from the Entry of the Phalangists into the Sabra and
Shatilla Camps until their Departure
On Thursday, 16.9.82, at approximately 18:00 hours, members of
the Phalangists entered the Shatilla camp from the west and south.
They entered in two groups, and once they had passed the battery
surrounding the camps their movements within the camps were not
visible from the roof of the forward command post or from the
observation sites on other roofs. The Divisional Intelligence
Officer tried to follow their movements using binoculars which he
shifted from place to place, but was unable to see their movements
or their actions. With the entry of the Phalangists into the camps,
the firing which had been coming from the camps changed direction;
the shooting which had previously been directed against the I.D.F.
now shifted in the direction of the Phalangists' liaison officer on
the roof of the forward command post. G. (his full name appears in
the list of names, Section 1, Appendix B) requested the I.D.F. to
provide illumination for the force which was moving in, since its
entry was taking place after dark. Initially, the illumination was
provided by a mortar company, and subsequently also by aircraft; but
because the illumination from the planes interfered with the
evacuation of casualties of an I.D.F. unit, this source of
illumination was halted; mortar illumination continued
intermittently throughout the night.
At approximately 8:00 p.m., the Phalangists' liaison officer, G.,
said that the Phalangists who had entered the camps had sustained
casualties, and the casualties were evacuated from the camps. Major
General Drori was at the forward command post from approximately
7:30 p.m. and followed the fighting as it was visible from the roof
of the forward command post. He left the site after 8:00 p.m.
Several Intelligence Branch personnel, headed by the Division
Intelligence Officer, were in the building on whose roof the forward
command post was situated. The Intelligence officer, who wanted to
obtain information on the Phalangists' activities, ordered that two
actions be carried out to obtain that information (these actions are
detailed in Section 5, Appendix B). No information was obtained in
the wake of the first action. As a result of the second action the
Intelligence Officer received a report according to which the
Phalangists' liaison officer had heard via radio from one of the
Phalangists inside the camps that he was holding 45 people. That
person asked what he should do with the people, and the liaison
officer's reply was "Do the will of God," or words to that
effect. The Intelligence Officer received this report at
approximately 20:00 hours from the person on the roof who heard the
conversation. He did not convey the report to anyone else, because
an officers' briefing was scheduled to take place at field
headquarters shortly afterward.
At about the same time or slightly earlier, at approximately 7:00
p.m., Lieutenant Elul, who was then serving as Chief of Bureau of
the Divisional Commander, overheard another conversation that took
place over the Phalangists' transmitter. According to Lt. Elul's
testimony, while he was on the roof of the forward command post,
next to the Phalangists' communications set, he heard a Phalangist
officer from the force that had entered the camps tell Elie Hobeika
(in Arabic) that there were 50 women and children, and what should
he do. Elie Hobeika's reply over the radio was: "This is the
last time you're going to ask me a question like that, you know
exactly what to do;" and then raucous laughter broke out among
the Phalangist personnel on the roof. Lieutenant Elul understood
that what was involved was the murder of the women and children.
According to his testimony, Brigadier General Yaron, who was also on
the forward command post roof then, asked him what he had overheard
on the radio; and after Lieutenant Elul told him the content of the
conversation, Brigadier General Yaron went over to Hobeika and spoke
with him in English for about five minutes (for Lt. Elul's
testimony, see pp. 1209-1210a). Lt. Elul did not hear the
conversation between Brigadier General Yaron and Hobeika.
Brigadier General Yaron, who was on the roof of the forward
command post, received from Lt. Elul a report of what he had heard.
According to Brigadier General Yaron's testimony, the report
conveyed to him by Lt. Elul stated that one of the Phalangists had
asked the commander what to do with 45 people, and the reply had
been to do with them what God orders you to do (testimony of
Brigadier General Yaron, pp. 696 and 730). According to Brigadier
General Yaron, he understood from what he had heard that the
reference was to 45 dead terrorists. In his testimony, Brigadier
General Yaron linked this report with what he had heard in the
update briefing that evening - which will be discussed below - from
the Divisional Intelligence Officer. From Brigadier General Yaron's
remarks in his testimony it emerges that he regarded the two reports
- from Lt. Elul and from the Intelligence officer - as being one
report from two different sources. We have no doubt that in this
instance there were two different and separate reports. As noted the
report which the Intelligence Officer obtained originated in a
conversation held over the radio with Elie Hobeika. Although both
reports referred to a group of 45-50 persons, and it is, not to be
ruled out that the questions asked over the radios referred to the
same group of persons, it is clear, both from the fact that the
replies given were different in content - the reply of the liaison
officer was to do with the group of people as God commands, while
Hobeika's reply was different - that two different conversations
took place regarding the fate of the people who had fallen into the
Phalangists' hands. As noted, Brigadier General Yaron did not deny
in his testimony that Lt. Elul had translated for him and told him
what he had heard when the two of them were on the roof of the
forward command post. We have no reason to think that Lt. Elul did
not inform Brigadier General Yaron of everything he had heard. It is
noteworthy that Lt. Elul testified before us after Brigadier General
Yaron had testified and before the notices were sent in accordance
with section 15(A) of the law; and his statement to the Staff
Investigators (no. 87) was also given after Brigadier General
Yaron's testimony. Brigadier General Yaron did not testify again
after the notice in accordance with section 15(A) had been sent, nor
was there any request on his part to question Lt. Elul. We assert
that Lt. Elul informed Brigadier General Yaron of the content of the
conversation which took place with Elie Hobeika as specified above.
An additional report relating to the actions of the Phalangists
in the camps vis-a-vis the civilians there came from liaison officer
G. of the Phalangists. When he entered the dining room in the
forward command post building at approximately 8:00 p.m., that
liaison officer told various people that about 300 persons had been
killed by the Phalangists, among them also civilians. He stated this
in the presence of many I.D.F. officers who were there, including
Brigadier General Yaron. We had different versions of the exact
wording of this statement by Phalangist officer G., but from all the
testimony we have heard it is clear that he said that as a result of
the Phalangists' operations up to that time, 300 terrorists and
civilians had been killed in the camps. Shortly thereafter,
Phalangist officer G. returned to the dining room and amended his
earlier report by reducing the number of casualties from 300 to 120.
At 20:40 hours that evening an update briefing was held in the
forward command post building with the participation of various
I.D.F. officers who were in the building at that time, headed by
Brigadier General Yaron. The remarks made at that meeting were
recorded by a Major from the History Section in the Operations
Branch/ Training Section. We were given the tape recording and a
transcript thereof (exhibit 155). At the meeting Brigadier General
Yaron spoke of the I.D.F.'s progress and deployment, and about the
Phalangists' entry into the camps and the combing operations they
were carrying out. Following that briefing, the Divisional
Intelligence Officer spoke. In the course of his intelligence survey
regarding the terrorists and other armed forces in west Beirut, he
said the following (pp. 4 and 5 of the transcript, exhibit 155):
"The Phalangists went in today. I do not know what level of
combat they are showing. It is difficult to see it because it is
dark... The impression is that their fighting is not too serious.
They have casualties, as you know - two wounded, one in the leg and
one in the hand. The casualties were evacuated in one of their
ambulances. And they, it turns out, are pondering what to do with
the population they are finding inside. On the one hand, it seems,
there are no terrorists there, in the camp; Sabra camp is empty. On
the other hand, they have amassed women, children and apparently
also old people, with whom they don't exactly know what to do (Amos,
this refers back to our talk), and evidently they had some sort of
decision in principle that they would concentrate them together, and
lead them to some place outside the camps. On the other hand, I also
heard (from - the Phalangists' liaison officer G.)... that 'do what
your heart tells you, because everything comes from God. 'That is, I
do not -"
At this point Brigadier General Yaron interrupted the
Intelligence Officer and the following dialogue ensued between them:
Brigadier General Yaron: "Nothing, no, no. I went to see
him up top and they have no problems at all."
Intelligence Officer: "People remaining in the field?
Without their lives being in any danger?"
Brigadier General Yaron: "It will not, will not harm
them."
Following this exchange, the Intelligence Officer went on to
another subject. The Phalangists' actions against the people in the
camps were not mentioned again in this update briefing.
In his testimony, Brigadier General Yaron explained his remark
about his visit "with him up top and they have no problems at
all" by saying that he had spoken several times that evening
with the Phalangist officers on the roof of the forward command post
after he had heard the first report about 45 people and also after
the further report about 300 or 120 casualties; and even though he
had been skeptical about the reliability of these reports and had
not understood from them that children, women or civilians had been
murdered in massacres perpetrated by the Phalangists, he had warned
them several times not to harm civilians and had been assured that
they would issue the appropriate orders to that effect. (pp.
731-732).
Between approximately 22:00 hours and 23:00 hours the Divisional
Intelligence Officer contacted Northern Command, spoke with the
Deputy Intelligence Officer there, asked if Northern Command had
received any sort of report, was told in reply that there was no
report, and told the Deputy Intelligence officer of Northern Command
about the Phalangist officer's report concerning 300 terrorists and
civilians who had been killed, and about the amendment to that
report whereby the number of those killed was only 120. The
divisional Intelligence Officer asked the Deputy Intelligence
Officer of Northern Command to look into the matter more thoroughly.
Intelligence Officer A. was in the room while that conversation took
place, and when he heard about that report he phoned Intelligence
Branch Research at the General Staff, spoke with two Intelligence
Branch officers there and told them that Phalangist personnel had so
far liquidated 300 terrorists and civilians (testimony of
Intelligence Officer A., p. 576). He went on to add that he had a
heavy feeling about the significance of this report, that he
regarded it as an important and highly sensitive report which would
interest the senior responsible levels, and that this was the kind
of report that would prove of interest to the Director of Military
Intelligence personally. In the wake of these remarks, the personnel
in Intelligence Branch research of the General Staff Branch who had
been given the report carried out certain telephone clarifications,
and the report was conveyed to various persons. The manner in which
the report was conveyed and the way it was handled are described in
Section 6, Appendix B. Suffice it to note here that a telephone
report about this information was conveyed to Lt. Col. Hevroni,
Chief of Bureau of the director of Military Intelligence, on 17.9.82
at 5:30 a.m. The text of the report, which was distributed to
various Intelligence units and, as noted, also reached the office of
the director of Military Intelligence, appears in Appendix A of
Exhibit 29 That document contained a marking, noting that its origin
lay with the forward command post of Northern Command, that it was
received on 16.9.82 at 23:20 hours, and that the content of the
report was as follows:
"Preliminary information conveyed by the commander of the
local Phalangist force in the Shatilla refugee camp states that so
far his men have liquidated about 300 people. This number includes
terrorists and civilians."
The action taken in the wake of this report in the office of the
Director of Military Intelligence will be discussed in this report
below.
On Thursday, 16.9.82, at 19:30 hours, the Cabinet convened for a
session with the participation of - besides the Prime Minister and
the Cabinet Ministers (except for 5 Ministers who were abroad) - a
number of persons who are not Cabinet members, among them the Chief
of Staff, the head of the Mossad and the director of Military
Intelligence. The subject discussed at that meeting was the
situation in Lebanon in the wake of the assassination of Bashir
Jemayel. At the start of the session, the Prime Minister reported on
the chain of events following the report about the attempt on
Bashir's life. The Minister of Defense then gave a detailed survey.
The Chief of Staff provided details about the I.D.F.'s operation in
West Beirut and about his meetings with Phalangist personnel. He
said, inter alia, that he had informed the Phalangist
commanders that their men would have to take part in the operation
and go in where they were told, that early that evening they would
begin to fight and would enter the extremity of Sabra, that the
I.D.F. would ensure that they did not fail in their operation but
I.D.F. soldiers would not enter the camps and would not fight
together with the Phalangists, rather the Phalangists would go in
there "with their own methods" (p. 16 of the minutes of
the meeting, Exhibit 122). In his remarks the Chief of Staff
explained that the camps were surrounded "by us," that the
Phalangists would begin to operate that night in the camps, that we
could give them orders whereas it was impossible to give orders to
the Lebanese Army, and that the I.D.F. would be assisted by the
Phalangists and perhaps also the Lebanese Army in collecting
weapons. With respect to the consequences of Bashir's assassination,
the Chief of Staff said that in the situation which had been
created, two things could happen. One was that the entire power
structure of the Phalangists would collapse, though as yet this had
not occurred. Regarding the second possibility, the Chief of Staff
said as follows (pp. 21-22 of Exhibit 122):
"A second thing that will happen - and it makes no
difference whether we are there or not - is an eruption of revenge
which, I do not know, I can imagine how it will begin, but I do not
know how it will end. it will be between all of them, and neither
the Americans nor anyone else will be of any help. We can cut it
down, but today they already killed Druze there. What difference
does it make who or what? They have already killed them, and one
dead Druze is enough so that tomorrow four Christian children will
be killed; they will find them slaughtered, just like what happened
a month ago; and that is how it will begin, if we are not there - it
will be an eruption the likes of which has never been seen; I can
already see in their eyes what they are waiting for.
"Yesterday afternoon a group of Phalangist officers came,
they were stunned, still stunned, and they still cannot conceive to
themselves how their hope was destroyed in one blow, a hope for
which they built and sacrificed so much; and now they have just one
thing left to do, and that is revenge; and it will be
terrible."
At this point the Chief of Staff was asked "if there is any
chance of knowing who did it, and to direct them at whoever
perpetrated the deed," and he continued:
"There is no such thing there. Among the Arabs revenge means
that if someone kills someone from the tribe, then the whole tribe
is guilty. A hundred years will go by, and there will still be
someone killing someone else from the tribe from which someone had
killed a hundred years earlier...
"I told Draper this today, and he said there is a Lebanese
Army, and so on. I told him that it was enough that during Bashir's
funeral Amin Jemayel, the brother, said 'revenge'; that is already
enough. This is a war that no one will be able to stop. It might not
happen tomorrow, but it will happen.
"It is enough that he uttered the word 'revenge' and the
whole establishment is already sharpening knives..."
Toward the end of his remarks, the Chief of Staff referred to a
map and explained that with the exception of one section everything
was in the hands of the I.D.F., the I.D.F. was not entering the
refugee camps, "and the Phalangists are this evening beginning
to enter the area between Sabra and Fakahani" (p. 25). At that
meeting the Head of the Mossad also gave a briefing on the situation
after the assassination of Bashir, but made no reference to the
Phalangists' entry into the camps. There was considerable discussion
in that meeting about the danger of the United States at the
I.D.F.'s entry into West Beirut, the general opinion being that the
decision to go in was justified and correct. Toward the close of the
meeting there was discussion regarding the wording of a resolution,
and then Deputy Prime Minister D. Levy said that the problem was not
the formulation of a resolution, but that the I.D.F.'s continued
stay in Beirut was liable to generate an undesirable situation of
massive pressure regarding its stay there. Minister Levy stated that
he accepted the contention regarding the I.D.F.'s entry into Beirut,
and he then continued (p. 91):
"We wanted to prevent chaos at a certain moment whose
significance cannot be disregarded. When confusion exists which
someone else could also have exploited, the situation can be
explained in a convincing way. But that argument could be undercut
and we could come out with no credibility when I hear that the
Phalangists are already entering a certain neighborhood - and I know
what the meaning of revenge is for them, what kind of slaughter.
Then no one will believe we went in to create order there, and we
will bear the blame. Therefore, I think that we are liable here to
get into a situation in which we will be blamed, and our
explanations will not stand up..."
No reaction was forthcoming from those present at the meeting to
this part of Deputy Prime Minister D. Levy's remarks. Prior to the
close of the session the Prime Minister put forward a draft
resolution which, with certain changes, was accepted by all the
Ministers. That resolution opens with the words:
"In the wake of the assassination of the President-elect
Bashir Jemayel, the I.D.F. has seized positions in West Beirut in
order to forestall the danger of violence, bloodshed and chaos, as
some 2,000 terrorists, equipped with modern and heavy weapons, have
remained in Beirut, in flagrant violation of the evacuation
agreement..."
Here we must note that the Director of Military Intelligence was
present at the outset of the meeting but left, after having received
permission to do so from the Minister of Defense, not long after the
start of the session, and certainly a considerable time before
Minister D. Levy made the remarks quoted above.
Brigadier-General Yaron did not inform Major-General Drori of the
reports which had reached him on Thursday evening regarding the
actions of the Phalangists vis-a-vis non-combatants in the
camps, and reports about aberrations did not reach Major-General
Drorl until Friday, 17.9.82, in the morning hours. On Friday morning
Major-General Drori contacted Brigadier-General Yaron, received from
him a report about various matters relating to the war, and heard
from him that the Phalangists had sustained a number of casualties,
but heard nothing about casualties among the civilian population in
the camps (testimony of Major-General Drori, p. 404). That same
morning Major General Drori spoke with the Chief of Staff and heard
from him that the Chief of Staff might come to Beirut that day.
In the early hours of that morning a note lay on a table in the
Northern Command situation room in Aley. The note read as follows:
"During the night the Phalangists entered the Sabra and
Shatilla refugee camps. Even though it was agreed that they would
not harm civilians, they 'butchered.' They did not operate in
orderly fashion but dispersed. They had casualties, including two
killed. They will organize to operate in a more orderly manner - we
will see to it that they are moved into the area."
Lieutenant-Colonel Idel, of the History Section in Operations
Branch/Training Section, saw this note on the table and copied it
into a notebook in which he recorded details about certain events,
as required by his position. It has not been clarified who wrote the
note or what the origin was of the information it contained, even
though on this matter the staff investigators questioned many
persons who held various positions where the note was found. The
note itself was not found, and we know its content only because
Lieutenant-Colonel Idel recorded it in his notebook.
The G.O.C. held a staff meeting at 8:00 a.m. in which nothing was
said about the existence of reports regarding the Phalangists'
actions in the camps.
Already during the night between Thursday and Friday, the report
about excesses committed by the Phalangists in the camps circulated
among I.D.F. officers who were at the forward command post. Two
Phalangists were killed that night during their operation in the
camps. When the report about their casualties reached the
Phalangists' liaison officer, G., along with a complaint from one of
the Phalangist commanders in the field that the I.D.F. was not
supplying sufficient illumination, the liaison officer asked
Lieutenant-Colonel Treiber, one of the Operations Branch officers at
the forward command post, to increase the illumination for the
Phalangists. Lieutenant-Colonel Treiber's response was that the
Phalangists had killed 300 people and he was not willing to provide
them with illumination (testimony of Lieutenant Elul, pp.
1212-1213). Lieutenant-Colonel Treiber subsequently ordered that
limited illumination be provided for the Phalangists.
In the early hours of the morning, additional officers at the
forward command post heard from the Phalangists' liaison officer,
G., that acts of killing had been committed in the camps but had
been halted (statements 22 and 167).
At approximately 9:00 a.m. on Friday, Brigadier General Yaron met
with representatives of the Phalangists at the forward command post
and discussed with them the entry of an additional force of
Phalangists into the camps. Afterwards, according to the testimony
of Major General Drori (p. 1600), he met with Brigadier General
Yaron in the Cite of Beirut, where they discussed the activity of
the I.D.F. troops and other matters related to the war; but
Brigadier General Yaron said nothing to him at that meeting about
excesses committed by the Phalangists.
Brigadier General Yaron's testimony contains a different version
of the talk between him and Major General Drori that morning.
According to that testimony, Brigadier General Yaron received
reports that morning about a woman who claimed that she had been
struck in the face by Phalangists, [and] about a child who had been
kidnapped and whose father had complained to the Divisional
Operations Officer; and Brigadier General Yaron had seen liaison
officer G. arguing with other Phalangists. From all this Brigadier
General Yaron inferred that something was amiss, or as he put it,
"something smelled fishy to me" (p. 700). He phoned Major
General Drori and told him something did not look right to him, and
as a result of this conversation, Major General Drori arrived at the
forward command post at approximately 11:00 a.m. According to Major
General Drori, he arrived at the forward command post without having
heard any report that something was wrong in the camps, simply as
part of a routine visit to various divisions. We see no need to
decide between these two versions.
When Major General Drori arrived at the Divisional forward
command post he spoke with Colonel Duvdevani and with Brigadier
General Yaron. We also have differing versions regarding what Major
General Drori heard on that occasion. In his statement (No. 2)
Colonel Duvdevani related that he said he had a bad feeling about
what was going on in the camps. According to his statement, this
feeling was caused by the report of liaison officer G. about 100
dead and also because it was not known what the Phalangists were
doing inside the camps. Colonel Duvdevani did not recall whether
Major General Drori had asked him about the reasons for his bad
feeling. Brigadier General Yaron testified (p. 701) that he had told
Major General Drori everything he knew at that time, namely those
matters detailed above which had caused his bad feeling. According
to Major General Drori's testimony, he heard about three specific
matters on that occasion. The first was the blow to the woman's
head; the second - which was not directly related to the camps - was
that in one neighbourhood, namely San Simon, Phalangists had beaten
residents; and the third matter was that a feeling existed that the
Phalangists were carrying out "an unclean mopping-up" -
that is, their soldiers were not calling on the residents - as
I.D.F. soldiers do - to come out before opening fire on a house
which was to be "mopped up," but were "going into the
house firing" (testimony of Major General Drori, pp. 408,
1593-1594). No evidence existed that, at that meeting or earlier,
anyone had told Major General Drori about the reports of 45 people
whose fate was sealed, or about the 300 killed; nor is there any
clear evidence that he was told of a specific number of people who
had been killed. After Major General Drori heard what he heard from
Colonel Duvdevani and Brigadier General Yaron, he ordered Brigadier
General Yaron to halt the operations of the Phalangists, meaning
that the Phalangists should stop where they were in the camps and
advance no further. Brigadier General Yaron testified that he
suggested to Major General Drori to issue this order (p. 701). The
order was conveyed to the Phalangist commanders. On that same
occasion Major General Drori spoke with the Chief of Staff by phone
about several matters relating to the situation in Beirut, told him
that he thought the Phalangists had perhaps "gone too far"
and that he had ordered their operation to be halted (p. 412). A
similar version of this conversation appears in the Chief of Staff's
testimony (pp. 232-233). The Chief of Staff testified that he had
heard from Major General Drori that something was amiss in the
Phalangists' actions. The Chief of Staff asked no questions, but
told Major General Drori that he would come to Beirut that
afternoon.
As mentioned above, the cable report (appendix exhibit 29)
regarding 300 killed reached the office of the director of Military
Intelligence on 17.9.82 at 5:30 a.m. The text of this cable was
transmitted to the director of Military Intelligence at his home in
a morning report at 6:15 a.m., as part of a routine update
transmitted to the director of Military Intelligence every morning
by telephone. From the content of the cable, the director of
Military Intelligence understood that the source of the report is
Operations and not Intelligence, and that its source is the Northern
Command forward command post. According to the testimony of the
director of Military Intelligence, the details of which we shall
treat later, he did not know then that it had been decided to send
the Phalangists into the camps and that they were operating there;
therefore, when he heard the report, he asked what the Phalangists
were doing - and he was told that they had been operating in the
camps since the previous day (p. 120, 123). When the director of
Military Intelligence arrived at his office at 8:00 a.m., he asked
his bureau chief where the report had originated, and he was told
that it was an "Operations" report. He ordered that it be
immediately ascertained what was happening in the Sabra and Shatilla
camps. The clarifications continued in different ways (described in
section 6 of appendix B) during Friday morning, but no confirmation
of the report was obtained; and the intelligence personnel who dealt
with the clarifications treated it as a report which for them is
unreliable, is unconfirmed, and therefore it would not be proper to
circulate it according to the standard procedure, by which important
and urgent intelligence reports are circulated. The content of the
cable was circulated to a number of intelligence personnel (whose
positions were noted on the cable form) and was conveyed to the
Mossad and the General Security Services. Since the source of the
report seemed to those Intelligence Branch personnel who dealt with
the matter to be Operations, it was not accorded the standard
treatment given reports from Intelligence sources, but rather the
assumption was that Operations personnel were dealing with the
report in their own way. The answers received by the director of
Military Intelligence to his demand for clarification were that
there were no further details. The director of Military Intelligence
did not know that the report had been transmitted by Intelligence
Officer A. The report was transmitted verbally, incidentally, by the
assistant to the bureau chief of the director of Military
Intelligence to Lieutenant Colonel Gai of the Defense Ministry's
situation room, when the latter arrived at about 7:30 a.m. at the
office of the director of Military Intelligence. One of the disputed
questions in this inquiry is whether Lieutenant Colonel Gai
transmitted, the report to Mr. Dudai; we shall discuss this matter
separately. Suffice it to say here that we have no evidence that the
report was transmitted to the Defense Minister or came to his
knowledge in another way.
At 7:30 a.m. on Friday there was a special morning briefing at
the [office of] the assistant for research to the director of
Military Intelligence. At the meeting, in which various intelligence
personnel participated, the aforementioned report was discussed, and
it was said that it can not be verified. The assistant for research
to the director of Military Intelligence gave an order to continue
checking the report. He knew that the source of the report was
Intelligence officer A. The assistant for research to the director
of Military Intelligence also treated this report with skepticism,
both because the number of killed seemed exaggerated to him and
since there had been no additional confirmation of the report (pp.
1110-1113). The director of Military Intelligence took no action on
his part regarding the aforementioned report, except for requesting
the clarification, and did not speak about it with the Chief of
Staff or the Minister of Defense, even though he met with them that
morning.
As mentioned above, the reports of unusual things occurring in
the camps circulated among the officers at the forward command post
already during the night and in the morning hours of Friday