The army has announced that it will assume responsibility for the

soldiers' actions in the framework of "evacuations and confrontations

with" Yesha residents, but it was not immediately clear whether this

included monetary damages they might be required to pay. Arutz-7's

inquiry to the IDF on this issue is under investigation by an IDF

spokesman's office representative.



One observer writes, "Soldiers are liable to find themselves facing a

U.S. court for ethnic cleansing and crimes against American citizens,

and courts there sometimes dole out very painful sums for damages.

Therefore, all soldiers and policemen face this choice: Either to

refuse orders, leading to being fired or even a few months in jail,

which some 12-year-old girls have shown is not so terrible, or to face

possibly being sued for tremendous financial damages."



An article by Arutz-7's Haggai Segal warns soldiers taking part in the

forcible expulsion of Jews of the psychological consequences of their

actions: "'You must knock on the door gently,' you were informed in

the page of instructions your officers gave you. But even if you are

very gentle, and even if you shrug your shoulders in contrition, the

family inside will never forget those knocks. The family will be

shaken by those knocks more than any other mortar shell or rocket that

has ever fallen in their yard or living room. As far as they are

concerned, you are the executor of a cruel decree that has been

decreed upon them with no justification - a decree that has not even

been decreed upon the families of terrorists; not one of them was ever

thrown out permanently, because the Supreme Court and the media didn't

let."



"'In case of refusal,' the page states, 'you will have to break down

the door.' The odds are that you will in fact have to break down the

door... If you had a hard time at the checkpoints, when you were

forced to detain Palestinian mothers and their children, it will be

much harder in Gush Katif. The crying of the expelled will ring in

your ears for many years to come... Behind the broken down door you

will find a whole family - not wanted terrorists, not escaped

criminals, but a father, a mother, five or six children of all ages,

and sometimes an elderly grandmother. They will look at you with

fear, and you'll look at them, no less scared, and neither one of you

will ever forget the other... True, the Chief of Staff recently

promised that the army would carry out this mission with 'sensitivity

and firmness,' but you will suddenly realize that it's impossible to

expel with sensitivity, just as it's impossible to be a polite rapist

or a considerate thief. With your own hands, you will have to open

closets that are not yours, to pack belongings against the will of

their owners, to uproot children from their rooms while they are

kicking and crying. This will be an impossible experience, and one

that is against the IDF's ethical code, which states, "An IDF soldier

will not use his force or weapon against a non-combatant population.'

Did they tell you of this clause in your latest training sessions?"



"And then afterwards, you'll probably be forced to drag the parents as

well, and the elderly grandmother, through the broken down door and

across the tiled path to the bus waiting outside. Hundreds of press

photographers will eternalize you as you carry out this act. In time,

you'll discover, to your horror, that you appear in almost every

documentary on the Middle East and every press article on the

disengagement... You will have been the 'agent of sin' for the

terrorists who have waited for years to expel Jewish residents from

their homes... Years later, you'll come back to apologize, to explain

that you received an order... but you'll find yourself alone, without

the Prime Minister, Knesset, Supreme Court, Chief of Staff, Chief

Education Officer - just you, yourself, alone against the judgment of

history and of your own conscience."