Excerpt
1. Stun grenades at three in the morningUNIT: PARATROOPERS
LOCATION: NABLUS DISTRICT
YEAR: 2003
We did all kinds of very sketchy work in Area A.* That could mean, for example, going into Tubas on a Friday, when the market is packed, to set up a surprise checkpoint in the middle of the village. One time, we arrived to set up a checkpoint like that on Friday morning, and we started to spread out: inspecting vehicles and every car that passed. Three hundred meters from us some kids start a small demonstration. They throw rocks at us, but they come maybe ten meters and dont hit us. They start cursing us and everything. At the same time, a crowd of people gathers. Of course, this was followed by aiming our weapons at the kids—you can call it self-defense.
What was the purpose of the checkpoint?
Just to show our presence, to get into a firefight—we didnt know whether that would happen or not. In the end we got out without a scratch, without anything happening, but the company commander lost it. He asked one of the grenade launchers to fire a riot control grenade toward the demonstrators, the children. The grenade launcher refused, and afterward he was treated terribly by the company commander. He wasnt punished, because the company commander knew hed given an illegal order, but he was treated really disgustingly by the staff. Thats what happened. Another time we went into Tubas at three in the morning in a Safari and threw stun grenades in the street. For no reason, just to wake people up.
What was the point?
To say, “Were here. The IDF is here.” In general, they told us that if some terrorist heard the IDF in the village, then maybe hed come outside to fight. No one ever came out. It seems that the goal was just to show the local population that the IDF is here, and its a common policy: “The IDF is here, in the Territories, and well make your life bitter until you decide to stop the terror.” The IDF has no problem doing it. But we didnt understand why we were throwing grenades. We threw a grenade. We heard a “boom,” and we saw people waking up. When we got back theyd say, “Great operation,” but we didnt understand why. This happened every day—a different force from the company did it each time, it was just part of the routine, part of our lives.
Copyright © 2012 by Breaking the Silence