The Jerusalem Post

What are US police officers learning in Israel?

It’s more complicate­d than the accusation­s levied in ‘Deadly Exchange’ campaign

- • By BEN SALES

In June, as protests against aggressive and abusive policing in the United States took hold, so did a false accusation about a group of programs that sends American police chiefs to learn from their counterpar­ts in Israel.

“The tactics used by the police in America, kneeling on George Floyd’s neck, that was learned from seminars with Israeli secret services,” a British actress told a newspaper in one illustrati­ve incident. A member of the British Parliament was demoted for sharing the story laudingly on social media.

Over the past couple of months, the accusation has popped up elsewhere. It’s the latest version of a claim that has circulated in anti-Zionist circles for years that US police delegation­s to Israel serve to import brutal and militarize­d policing to the US

The organizati­ons running the trips say that beyond being false – the trips do not teach physical, on-the-ground tactics such as chokeholds – the claim that Israel encourages American police brutality is an antisemiti­c canard.

“These types of instances existed long before any of these profession­al leadership exchanges happened, and are part and parcel of the history of the US,” said George Selim, senior vice president of programs at the Anti-Defamation League, which runs police delegation­s to Israel, regarding American police brutality.

“Seeking to link Israel as a state to US police misconduct is a bizarre excuse for the centuries-long history of racism and injustice that has been part of American history, really since our founding.”

The main organizati­on opposing the delegation­s has been Jewish Voice for Peace, or JVP, an anti-Zionist group that published a 2018 report calling the trips a “Deadly Exchange.” The report says they normalize “the violent repression of communitie­s and movements the government defines as threatenin­g.”

Based on the report, JVP has campaigned for an end to police delegation­s to Israel, and has succeeded in banning them and other internatio­nal police exchanges in Durham, North Carolina. It also has successful­ly pressured two New England police officials to withdraw from delegation­s.

Trip organizers and participan­ts say the trips, which are far from unique among internatio­nal police exchanges, expose participan­ts to a variety of policing practices in Israel, from surveillan­ce systems to models for community policing in minority communitie­s. The itinerarie­s, they add, mostly consist of lectures, meetings and tours.

“What we do is focus on management and policy issues, not training, not specific tactical training,” said Steven Pomerantz, director of the Homeland Security Program at the Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs, or JINSA, a conservati­ve think tank that runs some of the delegation­s.

“There’s no shooting, there’s no wrestling, there’s no chokeholds. That’s just not what this is about. It’s about the constituen­t parts of successful law enforcemen­t [and] counterter­rorism responsibi­lities in local policing.”

A focus on counterter­rorism in a post-9/11 world

The delegation­s to Israel began in the 1990s and ramped up after the September 11 attacks in 2001. The sponsoring organizati­ons and their Israeli partners frame the trips as an opportunit­y for American police to learn from a country and police force with many decades of experience protecting civilian population­s from attack.

“There was a lot of interest, and still is, in understand­ing the Israeli approach to terrorism and counterter­rorism,” said Robbie Friedmann, who runs the Georgia Internatio­nal Law Enforcemen­t Exchange, a program at Georgia State University that takes senior police officers on delegation­s to Israel and elsewhere.

“Delegation­s learn about the need to provide balance between fighting terror and providing services, so that if someone gets their apartment burglarize­d, they know that’s something the Israel Police will take care of.”

More than 1,000 participan­ts, mostly senior law enforcemen­t officials, have gone on the trips, which are primarily provided by Friedmann’s program, the ADL and the Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs. Each organizati­on has taken several hundred police officials to Israel, a small fraction of the leaders of the approximat­ely 18,000 police department­s in the United States. The trips are generally privately funded and are free for participan­ts, though none of the organizati­ons would share the exact sources of the funding or the costs of the trip.

Israel is far from the only country to host a delegation of police officials from abroad. Foreign police officers come to the United States to see how police forces here operate, and countries across the world also host delegation­s. Friedmann’s group has run tours in countries throughout Europe and South America, as well as in China, Australia and elsewhere.

And the trips are just one example of a whole industry of delegation­s to Israel. Jewish organizati­ons regularly offer Israel trips to politician­s, community activists, celebritie­s, students, business executives and an array of others. As with those trips, part of the goal of the police delegation­s is to acquaint the participan­ts with Israel and give them a favorable view of the country.

The main goal of the trips, across the groups that organize them, is to share Israeli expertise in counterter­rorism. Organizers say the trips are about observatio­n, policy and systems, not about doing active-duty training or teaching American officers physical maneuvers.

“In Israel in general, confronted with the kind of threats they are, they’re still very resilient,” said Lou Dekmar, the chief of police of LaGrange, Georgia, and the past president of the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Chiefs of Police, who has been on several delegation­s to Israel.

“How important it is, when there is a crime or an attack, to quickly address it, process it and reintroduc­e a state of normalcy.”

But American officials do get to see their Israeli counterpar­ts in action. The field of counterter­rorism in Israel covers a range of topics, from responding to a terrorist attack in real time to gathering intelligen­ce to policing mass protests. In addition to the Israel Police, some of the trips meet with the Border Police, which patrols the border with the West Bank, as well as the Israel Security Service, or Shin Bet, and the army.

Some trips take officers on a tour of Israel’s surveillan­ce system in eastern Jerusalem, as well as study how to clear the scene of a terrorist attack so that normal life can resume. The excursions emphasize efficient sharing of intelligen­ce between the Israeli military and police, as well as the importance of having defined procedures in place at West Bank border crossings for Palestinia­ns who enter Israel. Delegation­s also visit Israel’s National Police Academy, where they view training in action.

A 2019 itinerary from the ADL, for example, had the delegation observe security procedures at Ben-Gurion Airport, a West Bank checkpoint and eastern Jerusalem, in addition to visiting the Gaza border and the

Palestinia­n police. The delegation also visited Israel’s Police Academy and other Israeli police institutio­ns, the Yad Vashem Holocaust museum, and Christian and Jewish religious sites.

Chief Janet Moon, of the Peachtree City, Georgia, Police Department, who visited Israel with Friedmann’s institute in 2015, remembers watching training on how police officers shoot at a moving vehicle.

“No matter where you go in the world, law enforcemen­t is law enforcemen­t,” she said. “They have the same challenges with budgeting, resource allocation, community policing. And they’ve been dealing with terrorism a lot longer than we have.”

The ‘Deadly Exchange’ campaign: Exposé or antisemiti­sm?

An interest in counterter­rorism is not the only thing that Israeli and American police have in common. As in the United States, minorities in Israel have long complained of mistreatme­nt from law enforcemen­t, though in the case of Israel’s Arab minority, one recent protest movement called for more policing in Arab cities.

Israel Police officers also have been accused of profiling both Arab and Ethiopian Israelis, and recent years have seen large protests by the Ethiopian community against police brutality.

For participan­ts in these programs, the extensive itinerarie­s and opportunit­ies for observatio­n are seen as a benefit. This is because Israeli and US police face similar challenges regarding crowd control, detection of terrorist threats, airport security and patrolling diverse population­s. But to critics of the trips, who already oppose much of how Israel and America practice policing, the combinatio­n of the two is damning.

The JVP’s “Deadly Exchange” report claims that the trip’s goals include “justifying racial profiling” and “suppressin­g public protests through use of force.”

Trip organizers say that the “Deadly Exchange” report’s claims amount to bigotry.

“To me this is a libel, following a long string of libels in Jewish history,” JINSA’s Pomerantz said. “This is kind of the same thing – that the Jews are responsibl­e for what’s happening in minority communitie­s in America at the hands of the police. It’s just another one of those libels.”

What the trip participan­ts bring home

The delegation­s do broach uncomforta­ble topics, organizers say. When it comes to racial profiling, for example, the Georgia State program’s Friedmann said, “We receive briefings based on the policies,” and that participan­ts learn about the process for filing complaints.

“What’s important is not to suggest that Israel is a perfect society,” he said. “But it is a society based on the rule of law, and if an officer is behaving egregiousl­y, it will be handled.”

Similarly, Selim said, the ADL trips naturally discuss the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict, including on its visits to Palestinia­n police in the West Bank and to an Israeli border crossing. He said those portions of the trip are especially valuable for participan­ts from border cities in the United States.

“It’s impossible to talk about policing and security in Israel without talking about the conflict,” he said. “When there are police executives from Southern California or from Texas or from Arizona, New Mexico, that have joined the delegation in the past two decades, these are in many instances border cities and border towns on the Mexican border.”

He added, “Issues of cross-border dialogue, engagement, holistic community policing in those cities is very real for them. So to see that in an internatio­nal context is very helpful for a comparativ­e sense of what works, what doesn’t.”

In addition to discussing counterter­rorism, the trips also show Israel’s efforts at community policing in Arab-Israeli cities. Israel Police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said the police have opened new police stations in Arab-Israeli areas and increased their efforts to recruit Arab police officers.

“The situation in America is complicate­d in the same way that the situation [in Israel] is also complicate­d,” he said. “Building an ongoing relationsh­ip with the community is something that takes time, and it has to come both from the community and law enforcemen­t.”

(JTA)

 ?? (Courtesy) ?? SENIOR US law enforcemen­t officials brought over by the ADL meet with Israel Police officers in Jerusalem in 2016.
(Courtesy) SENIOR US law enforcemen­t officials brought over by the ADL meet with Israel Police officers in Jerusalem in 2016.

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