Subscribe to Print Edition | Tue., May 05, 2009 Iyyar 11, 5769 | | Israel Time: 01:54 (EST+7)
Haaretz israel news English
web haaretz.com
Haaretz Toolbar
Diplomacy
Defense Jewish World Opinion National
Print Edition
Car Rental
Books Haaretz Magazine Business Real Estate Focus U.S.A. Travel Week's End Anglo File TLV 100
Refusing to let facts get in the way
By Aryeh Eldad
Tags: Israel News, Omer 2 

A few weeks ago a report was issued by an ethics committee of the Israel Medical Association on the safety and efficacy of anthrax vaccine experiments conducted by the Israel Defense Forces. For many months the panel met, interviewed dozens of witnesses, and pored over thousands of documents before delivering its verdict: "The experiment was characterized by serious ethical failures, most, if not all, of these failures being the result of conducting the experiment in the context of a military hierarchy. There is reason to assume that if the relevant parties in the experiment had acted under the authority of a civilian administration then the decisions that would have been made would have been completely different."

The report exceeds 90 pages, half of which are devoted to the status of human experiments in the IDF. Instead of examining whether the IDF experiment met the legal requirements that are actually on the books, the committee decided to judge the experiment based on the laws they would have liked to see on the books. In the preface to the report, well before detailing its findings, the committee already states that the military hierarchy does not allow for the freedom to choose, making the soldiers' "agreement of consent" to the experiment dubious to begin with. In addition, since experiments in the army do not require the approval of the Health Ministry (according to the law as it stands now), these experiments are said to be flawed from the outset. This brings to mind the trial scene in "Alice in Wonderland": Sentence first!

Only afterward does the panel detail its findings with regard to a specific experiment, and, lo and behold, the "findings" lead to conclusions that accord with the panel's philosophy regarding experiments in the IDF.
Advertisement
Oceans of ink have already been spilled on the issue of medical experiments in hierarchical organizations, and the matter has not been settled. The ethics panel is trying to bring about a resolution to the matter by investigating the anthrax experiment, code-named Omer 2. But what if the facts contradict its philosophy? Then there is no need to pay attention to them. And what if participation in the experiment was offered to 4,000 soldiers but just 700 agreed? The panel has ruled that the soldiers lacked "free will" to choose whether to participate, and refuses to let the facts confuse the issue. The committee decreed that human experiments in the army do not receive authorization from the Health Ministry - in other words, the civilian establishment is not supervising the IDF - and that this is the root of all that is evil in the Omer 2 experiment.

The problem is that the Health Ministry's Helsinki committee on human experiments has found that the experiment was necessary, that its scientific background was solid and that its protocol met all the standards codified by the World Medical Association's Declaration of Helsinki, thus leading the committee to approve the experiment. The Helsinki committee consisted of five medical experts, including specialists in the field of human experimentation and medical ethics. Professor Asa Kasher, the renowned philosopher, served as the committee's public representative.

The bacteria that cause the potentially fatal anthrax infection can be used as a biological weapon. Iraq had such a weapon. If it had been used against Israel, hundreds of thousands would likely have died. It would have been impossible to buy vaccines in the necessary quantity needed to defend Israel's citizens, but it was possible to develop the vaccine domestically. When these facts were presented to the prime minister at the time, Yitzhak Rabin, he gave the go-ahead for the vaccine to be developed. The decision was seconded by Shimon Peres, who was then prime minister.

Once the vaccine is developed, it cannot be authorized for use by the public unless it first undergoes a human trial. Nonetheless, the ethics committee repeatedly made comments like: "There was no scientific basis for the decision," "We were not convinced that the need for the vaccine itself was weighed and considered" and "It is not clear who the decision makers were."

Having served as the IDF's chief medical officer during the first two years of the experiment and having been party to most of the decisions that were made in connection with it, I would assume that if the members of the panel had wanted to find the real answers to their questions, they would have summoned me to testify. But they did not even bother to contact me.

As such, we now need a commission of inquiry headed by a judge to clear up all the facts. If such a committee finds that the Omer 2 experiment was justified and vital, and was conducted properly, then those who ran the experiments will have their names cleared.

The writer is a member of Knesset.
Bookmark to del.icio.us  
 
Live from AIPAC
Haaretz.com and the L.A. Jewish Journal with the latest from the 2009 conference.
Biased Israel coverage
Internet researchers say Wikipedia's coverage of Israel-related issues is 'problematic.'
 Read & React
Poll: 66 percent of Israeli Jews back attack on Iran
Responses: 222
Wikipedia editors: Coverage of Israel 'problematic'
Responses: 93
Amir Oren: If Israel acquiesces on Iran, world will follow suit
Responses: 40
Peres wants to hand over Christian sites in Israel to Vatican
Responses: 89


More Headlines
23:13 UN to press Israel to exit Lebanon border village
22:58 Peres to AIPAC: Netanyahu wants to make history by forging peace
21:31 SPECIAL FEATURE / Live blogging from AIPAC conference
00:08 Jerusalem publishes plan to boost housing for city's Arabs
22:53 Lieberman: This government will reach peace with Palestinians
22:49 Israel urges Spain to halt 'cynical' Gaza war crimes probe
17:25 Michael Oren, Ambassador, or, this is how the occupation ends
21:50 Israeli Arabs sue bus company for refusing to let them board
21:58 WATCH: Daily news round-up from Israel
21:41 Ahmadinejad cancels Latin America trip without explanation
18:51 Second IDF soldier stabbed in central Israel in two days
08:14 Wikipedia editors: Coverage of Israel 'problematic'
20:12 Peres wants to hand over Christian sites in Israel to Vatican
20:48 Gaza smugglers kill Egyptian soldier near Rafah border
19:02 Poll: 66% of Israeli Jews back attack on Iran
16:29 Livni: Iran threat opens door to peace with Arabs
19:24 Netanyahu: Lands administration reform will reduce housing prices
12:50 If Israel acquiesces on Iran, world will follow suit
Previous Editions
Special Offers
Advertisement
Spring Specials-Dan Hotels
Jerusalem from 179$. Tel-Aviv from 223$. Herzliya from 336$
The Meier on Rothschild Tower
Masterpiece Residence in the Heart of Tel Aviv
Dead Sea Skin Care
Quality cosmetics from the Dead Sea. Coupon code HAARETZ for 12% off!
Camp Kimama Israel 2009
The best place for your children this summer
Eldan Rent a Car
Israel's leading car rental company offers you a 20% discount on online reservations
Jewish Singles Personal Ads
Find the love of your life on JDate.com
Junkyard
Junk a car - get free towing nationwide and a tax-deductible receipt
Home | TV | Print Edition | Diplomacy | Opinion | Arts & Leisure | Sports | Jewish World | | Israel 2009 election results
Site rules | Makom: Engaging on Israel | Search engine marketing
Haaretz.com, the online edition of Haaretz Newspaper in Israel, offers real-time breaking news, opinions and analysis from Israel and the Middle East. Haaretz.com provides extensive and in-depth coverage of Israel, the Jewish World and the Middle East, including defense, diplomacy, the Arab-Israeli conflict, the peace process, Israeli politics, Jerusalem affairs, international relations, Iran, Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, the Palestinian Authority, the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, the Israeli business world and Jewish life in Israel and the Diaspora.
© Copyright  Haaretz. All rights reserved