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Tuesday, September 8, 2009

Oh my. You must read this right away: Marc Garlasco - Is HRW's Anti-Israel Investigator A Nazi-Obsessed Collector?

The answer is, apparently, yes. Do read the whole thing.

Now, there's nothing wrong with German WW2 memorabilia per se, nor with sporting the handle "Flak88" on various collector forums, and he doesn't appear to have hidden it at all. It's just a hobby, right? (And more than a minor hobby...dude wrote a book.)

But was Human Rights Watch aware of this when they hired him? Did they do a moment's due diligence on themselves...say, 1/100 the "investigating" they supposedly do on so many others?

And if they did know, didn't it occur to anyone at HRW that it might cause appearance problems when this guy went and started to investigate Israeli actions? (Please don't tell me, "Well how did they know he would be investigating Israelis?" Come on, HRW has a bit of an obsession in that direction.) Add in the fact that his credentials for having the position he holds are questionable in the first place, and the resulting statements and reports he's been involved in have been repeatedly discredited...and you've got a formula for disaster.

Side note: Before you get too excited in your googling, there is no evidence that Garlasco is actually a Nazi. As Omri notes in a follow-up: No, The Stormfront.org Flak88 Guy Is Not Marc Garlasco.

This is about a guy with a serious thing for Nazi stuff issuing widely read reports on the actions of Jews defending themselves. It's about judgment, propriety, qualifications...and Human Rights Watch.

Update: Breath of the Beast comments here: Who is Watching the Human Rights Watchers? Yaacov has a nice picture of Garlasco's car...note the license plate. Heh.

IsraellyCool, here: The Day In Israel: Tues Sept 8th, 2009. He says: "Omri Ceren has posted a terrific (or should that be terrifying? ) piece...'

Carl in Jerusalem: HRW's Israel investigator a Nazi-obsessed collector? He notes: "...After the Saudis and Joe Stork, is anyone really surprised by this?..."

Elder of Ziyon (who found this connection in the first place): HRW researcher's disturbing hobby "While this may not be illegal or immoral, it does raise some disturbing questions about his Israel obsession."

CAMERA: Is HRW Investigator Garlasco An Avid Collector of Nazi Paraphernalia? "Human Rights Watch investigator Marc Garlasco accuses Rick Ayers of "Hiding in Plain Sight", but it is Garlasco who is apparently hiding in plain sight."

David Bernstein: Is Human Rights Watch's Marc Garlasco A Nazi-Obsessed Collector?, "Well, yes. But if you're going to hire pro-Palestinian activists to run your Middle East division, why not throw in an avid collector of Nazi memorabilia to be your military investigator for good measure?..."

Noah Pollak: The Latest Human Rights Watch Bombshell "The more we learn about Human Rights Watch, the more the mask slips. There is Sarah Leah Whitson, the intifada-era activist for Palestine and apologist for terrorism; Joe Stork, the radical leftist and anti-Zionist; and now Garlasco, the Nazi-memorabilia collector."

NGO Monitor: HRW "Military Analyst" Garlasco's Nazi Souvenir Fetish Reinforces Lack of Credibility

Listed below are links to blogs that reference this entry: Human Rights Watch's Marc Garlasco a Nazi-Phile.

TrackBack URL for this entry: http://www.solomonia.com/cgi-bin/mt4/mt-renamedtb.cgi/16806

Human Rights Watch has been posting a response to revelations that one of their top staffers is an avid collector of Nazi memorabilia with a statement posted to a number of blogs, including this one. Click the link to read... Read More

What? You didn't know? It happened veeewy quietly... After 'Post' query, HRW says top military analyst quit A Human Rights Watch spokeswoman told The Jerusalem Post on Thursday night that its embattled senior military analyst Marc Garlasco resigned nea... Read More

2 Comments

Several blogs and others critical of Human Rights Watch have suggested that Marc Garlasco, Human Rights Watch’s longtime senior military advisor, is a Nazi sympathizer because he collects German (as well as American) military memorabilia. This accusation is demonstrably false and fits into a campaign to deflect attention from Human Rights Watch’s rigorous and detailed reporting on violations of international human rights and humanitarian law by the Israeli government. Garlasco has co-authored several of our reports on violations of the laws of war, including in Afghanistan, Georgia and Iraq, as well as by Israel, Hamas and Hezbollah.

Garlasco has never held or expressed Nazi or anti-Semitic views.

Garlasco’s grandfather was conscripted into the German armed forces during the Second World War, like virtually all young German men at the time, and served as a radar operator on an anti-aircraft battery. He never joined the Nazi Party, and later became a dedicated pacifist. Meanwhile, Garlasco’s great-uncle was an American B-17 crewman, who survived many attacks by German anti-aircraft gunners.

Garlasco own family’s experience on both sides of the Second World War has led him to collect military items related to both sides, including American 8th Air Force memorabilia and German Air Force medals and other objects (not from the Nazi Party or the SS, as falsely alleged). Many military historians, and others with an academic interest in the Second World War, including former and active-duty US service members, collect memorabilia from that era.

Garlasco is the author of a monograph on the history of German Air Force and Army anti-aircraft medals and a contributor to websites that promote serious historical research into the Second World War (and which forbid hate speech). In the foreword he writes of telling his daughters that “the war was horrible and cruel, that Germany lost and for that we should be thankful.”

To imply that Garlasco’s collection is evidence of Nazi sympathies is not only absurd but an attempt to deflect attention from his deeply felt efforts to uphold the laws of war and minimize civilian suffering in wartime. These falsehoods are an affront to Garlasco and thousands of other serious military historians.

Biography of Marc Garlasco on HRW's website doesn't mention this:
"Garlasco is the author of a monograph on the history of German Air Force and Army anti-aircraft medals and a contributor to websites that promote serious historical research into the Second World War". Why not mention this expertise, or should one say fascination ?

"Senior Military Analyst, Emergencies
..Marc GarlascoMarc Garlasco, senior military analyst at Human Rights Watch, specializes in battle damage assessment, military operations, and interrogations. Garlasco leads Human Rights Watch's work on civilian military contractors and non-lethal weapons. He has led research teams to Gaza to investigate home demolitions in Rafah, Lebanon to document the use of cluster bombs, and Afghanistan, Iraq, and Georgia to assess the conduct of the war. Garlasco is the co-author of multiple Human Rights Watch reports and has been featured in articles in major American media. Before joining Human Rights Watch, he covered Iraq as a senior intelligence analyst at the Pentagon. Garlasco has a B.A. in government from St. John's University and an M.A. in International Relations from the Elliott School of International Affairs at George Washington University."

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