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Written by Adam Horowitz & Philip Weiss Adam Horowitz & Philip Weiss
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Category: News News
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Published: 02 October 2009 02 October 2009
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Last Updated: 02 October 2009 02 October 2009
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Created: 02 October 2009 02 October 2009
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Israel vs. Human Rights
By Adam Horowitz & Philip Weiss
NOTE: Adam Horowitz is on the steering committee of the US Campaign to End the Israeli Occupation.
This article appeared in the October 19, 2009 edition of The Nation.
September 30, 2009
http://www.thenation.com/doc/20091019/horowitz_weiss
In his speech to the United Nations General Assembly, Israeli Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu vigorously took up the country's latest
strategy for responding to allegations of human rights abuses: kill the
messenger. He denounced a recent report by the UN's Human Rights
Council that had accused Israel of possible crimes against humanity
during its assault on Gaza last winter, calling it a "travesty," a
"farce" and a "perversion." The Hamas terrorists Israel was up against
had committed acts akin in history only to the Nazi blitz of British
civilians during World War II, Netanyahu asserted. Indeed, in denying a
nation's right to resist attack, the report sought to undermine
Israel's "legitimacy."
The head of the UN Fact-Finding Mission on the Gaza Conflict, Judge
Richard Goldstone, was "upset" by the speech. "It is disingenuous, to
put it lightly, what Netanyahu said," he told The Nation. "The idea
that this is aimed at delegitimating the state of Israel--that is the
last thing I would want to do." Goldstone, a Jew and a Zionist, said
that Israel's leaders were behaving contemptuously, "ignoring the
specific allegations and simply launching a broadside."
Those broadsides began not long after the ascension of the
right-wing Netanyahu government in March, when his ministers began
painting human rights and peace groups as a fifth column for
terrorists. "For the first time the Israeli government is taking an
active role in the smearing of human rights groups," says Sarah Leah
Whitson of Human Rights Watch.
Traditionally that job had gone to Israel's friends. The executive
director of AIPAC, the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, for
instance, condemned human rights groups this past spring as part of an
international "campaign" to dehumanize the Jewish state to the point
where "Israel stands alone, isolated and at risk." But as one
international report after another accused Israel of war crimes during
the Gaza assault, the Israeli government joined the fight. The
government refused to cooperate with Goldstone's investigation, forcing
him to enter Gaza from Egypt. Israeli witnesses had to be flown to
Geneva to be interviewed.
The Israeli government has also sought to quash domestic dissent.
In April it targeted the anti-militarism organization New Profile,
seizing computers and detaining activists. In July, when a group of
Israeli veterans called Breaking the Silence released dozens of
anonymous soldiers' testimonies from the Gaza assault describing
indifference to civilian targets, the Israeli government went, well,
ballistic. It threatened to cut off the financial support the group
receives from the Dutch, Spanish and British governments and warned
those governments that their support was illegal. Israel indicated that
it would look into foreign support that Israeli human rights groups
B'Tselem and Machsom Watch receive as well.
Ron Dermer, a Netanyahu adviser who was raised in Florida, struck a
fearsome tone: "We are going to dedicate time and manpower to combating
these groups. We are not going to be sitting ducks in a pond for the
human rights groups to shoot at us with impunity."
Shooting back meant calling out New York-based Human Rights Watch
for raising money in Arab countries, an anti-Arab theme that was echoed
in a September attack on Human Rights Watch published by the
Jerusalem-based advocacy group NGO Monitor. The critique listed staff
members who are allegedly "anti-Israel," with some of the charges as
flimsy as the fact that an official had been on the board of the
American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee. And as Judge Goldstone
found, the Israeli government has refused to cooperate with Human
Rights Watch investigations. "Over the last year they have not wanted
to meet with us, even when we've presented them with very, very
detailed questions about IDF conduct based on preliminary
investigations," says program director Iain Levine.
Of course, Palestinian human rights activists are familiar with
stonewalling, and much worse. A March 2006 UN report criticized the
Israel Defense Forces for the "systematic targeting of peace and human
rights activists" and noted that Israel seemed to use administrative
detention to deter human rights work. That policy was underscored in
September, when Israel arrested Mohammad Othman, a human rights
activist, after a visit to Norway, where he had pushed for boycott,
divestment and sanctions.
The impetus for the new Israeli strategy appears to be fear of
shifting international opinion. As analyst Michael Wahid Hanna of the
Century Foundation puts it, Goldstone's stunning findings may well
"take on a life of their own...and make diplomatic life much more
tricky." The Netanyahu government is counting on the United States to
block a potential UN Security Council recommendation for an
international war crimes tribunal and has warned the Obama
administration that the Goldstone report can only hinder the peace
process. Certainly human rights reports have emboldened Israel's
critics. Just two days after the release of the report, the British
Trade Union Congress, representing more than 6.5 million workers,
endorsed the boycott movement against Israel, explaining that the
decision was "the culmination of a wave of motions passed at union
conferences this year, following outrage at Israel's brutal war on
Gaza."
We are used to accounting for the costs of the Israeli occupation
in concrete terms: so many checkpoints, so many colonies, so many dead
civilians. The new Israeli effort suggests an even larger cost: that of
the very idea of human rights. The government has yet to question one
factual allegation Goldstone has made, says progressive Zionist blogger
Jerry Haber. "Israel's only recourse, after it violates the rights of
Palestinians, is to deny that such rights exist."
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About Adam Horowitz
Adam Horowitz is an editor of the website Mondoweiss, which covers the Israel-Palestine conflict.
About Philip Weiss
Philip Weiss is the author of American Taboo: A Murder in the Peace
Corps (Harper Perennial) and an editor of the website Mondoweiss, which
covers the Israel-Palestine conflict.