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National Times

Israel feels tarnished as critics apply apartheid tag

Peter Hartcher
November 17, 2009

Opinion

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Palestine seeks UN support

Palestinians seek international support for an independent state.

It might have seemed like just another United Nations report among the hundreds cranked out every year, and just another UN resolution from the international resolution factory.

But to some leading Israelis, including some in the Israeli Government, it has awakened fears of a new encirclement, a new isolation, a new kind of warfare.

The report? After enduring some 800 rocket attacks from Hamas militants in the Palestinian territory of Gaza, Israel sent its armed forces into Gaza last December to stop the firings at the source. It was named "Operation Cast Lead". The action left about 1400 Palestinians and 13 Israelis dead.

The UN appointed a South African judge, Richard Goldstone, to lead an investigation into "all violations of international human rights law" in the clash. The 575-page Goldstone report finds that serious war crimes were committed by both sides, by Israel and by the Palestinians. It finds against Israel that "statements by political and military leaders prior to and during the military operations in Gaza leave little doubt that disproportionate destruction and violence against civilians were part of a deliberate policy". Israel was guilty of the "wilful killing" of civilians.

It cites Israel's Deputy Prime Minister, Eli Yishai, saying "It [should be] possible to destroy Gaza, so they will understand not to mess with us."

On the other hand, Goldstone found that "Palestinian armed groups were present in urban areas during the military operations and launched rockets from urban areas", and that "it may be that the Palestinian combatants did not at all times adequately distinguish themselves from the civilian population".

This was the whole point of the Hamas strategy. By deliberately positioning themselves in residential areas, the Hamas fighters were goading Israel to shoot back at civilians' homes. While Hamas is a political movement, it is also, after all, an Islamic terrorist group banned by the US, the EU and Australia, among others.

The UN resolution? The countries of the UN's General Assembly voted in overwhelming numbers two weeks ago to demand that Israel and Hamas conduct independent investigations into their own conduct.

The vote was 114 countries in favour. Only 18 stood against it, including Israel, the US and Australia, while another 44, mostly Europeans, abstained.

If either side fails to carry out an independent inquiry, the UN Security Council can refer the matter to the prosecutor of the International Criminal Court.

"The Goldstone report was a huge shock," says Gerald Steinberg, a professor of political science at Bar Ilan University and the head of a think tank called NGO Watch.

"It shouldn't have been, but it was, because of the huge amount of unreasonableness" in the report, he said. "The Government was shocked, the military was most shocked of all.

"This is another kind of warfare - if you can't beat us on the battlefield, then you attack us somewhere else, and when we fight back, you attack the legitimacy of our response." Steinberg calls it "lawfare".

"It's an attempt to turn Israel into a new apartheid state, it's a major threat."

Under the racist policy of apartheid, of course, South Africa became a pariah state. It was widely regarded as an illegitimate regime. Australia's Isi Liebler, the businessman and former chairman of the World Jewish Congress who has now retired to live in Jerusalem, agrees: "Goldstone was the last straw, the straw that broke the camel's back."

But if Goldstone finds war crimes were committed by both sides, how can this be so shocking?

The Israeli objection is to the emphasis in the report. Goldstone directs the great bulk of his scrutiny and criticism to the Israeli side. He does not give weight to the fact that Israel was responding to hundreds of rocket attacks from Hamas.

This was also Australia's problem with Goldstone. As Foreign Minister Stephen Smith says: "We strongly share concerns expressed by other nations, such as Canada, New Zealand, the US and Netherlands, including on the lack of balance, scope and recommendations in the report.

"For example, an unbalanced focus on Israel, insufficient attention to Hamas' actions prior to the conflict, especially rocket attacks" and other matters.

Steinberg argues that international human rights law is a "new religion" that is being used against Israel.

And this view has support in the upper reaches of the Israeli Government. Goldstone has helped persuade Israel's leadership that it faces a gathering international effort to undermine its legitimacy.

Israel seems most unlikely to be abandoned by Australia, however.

Although the Rudd Government shifted emphasis somewhat in favour of the Palestinian cause - it doubled aid for the Palestinians and voted against Israel's position in two UN resolutions last year - Israel's Government is reassured that Canberra sided with Israel on this key vote.

Isi Leibler put it this way: "John Howard was instinctively, as a conservative, a friend of Israel. Kevin Rudd is a remarkable personality but I didn't think he would maintain the course as he has. I regard him as a Christian Zionist - he understands and has some sympathy for us. Australia gives me enormous pride."

Curiously, the head of the Palestinian delegation to Australia, Izzat Abdulhadi, is also very pleased with Australia's overall stance: "I think it's good that Australia has good relations with Israel because it gives it a unique status where it can mediate in the conflict and be even-handed."

Addendum: A number of comments attach great significance to the fact that, as I pointed out at the end of the column, I travelled to Israel as a guest of the NSW Jewish Board of Deputies. Some impute a hidden agenda. Earlier this year I wrote about the United Arab Emirates after travelling there as a guest of the Lowy Institute for International Policy. This attracted no comment. It is routine for journalists to accept paid travel. The question is not whether journalists take trips; it is whether they disclose them. Disclosure means that readers can take this into account in forming their views. This is the exact opposite of a hidden agenda.
 
Peter Hartcher is the Herald's international editor. He travelled to Israel as a guest of the NSW Jewish Board of Deputies.

133 comments

  • Whilst this report appears to deal with this case in a fair manner, one has to question the agenda behind this report given that Peter Hartcher travelled to Israel as a GUEST of the NSW Board of Deputies.

    Give me a break ....

    Commenter
    Jacob
    Location
    Sydney
    Date and time
    November 17, 2009, 7:21AM
  • Jacob. Give ME a break! While I agree that the whole article is under a cloud because of the junket, to say that it deals with the matter fairly is a joke. Only critics of Goldstone are quoted. Hartcher has not bothered to seek out any of the supporters of Goldstone, even in the Jewish community in Australia. But if he did he might just lose any opportunities for further trips courtesy of his benefactors.

    Commenter
    ozelite
    Date and time
    November 17, 2009, 8:21AM
  • 1400 Palestinians and 13 Israelis dead -and it's the report that is disproportionate?

    Commenter
    Michael
    Location
    Canberra
    Date and time
    November 17, 2009, 8:02AM
  • At least he mentions his reip and who paid for it. - very commendable.

    Commenter
    PNS
    Date and time
    November 17, 2009, 7:59AM
  • The problem with this crisis is that Israel likes to think of itself as the "good guys" whilst demonising its opponents. This is facilitated by the Zionist lobby to which politicians in both Australia and the US appear to be supplicants.

    I seem to recollect that Nazi occupied Europe the Jewish freedom fighters did actually launch attacks from within residential areas in Warsaw, because they had no choice, and to confront the Wermacht directly would have been suicidal.

    The fundamental cause of this dispute is religious extremism and racism on both sides. Whilst playing the race card for sympathy, the Zionists practice racial discrimination within their own country, and like most superior military powers regards civilian casualties as a means of achieving victory. Despite the bad press given to the Germans for their bombing of London and Coventry, the Allied air forces made an art form out of murdering civilian populations in Germany and Japan to bring an end to the war. Why therefore should we be surprised if Israel butchers 1000 or so Gazan Palestinians to the same end in the pursuit of victory.

    Each side in its pursuit of its fundamentalist principles is quite happy to murder each other, and like Northern Ireland there is little we can do about it until the both sides of the warring factions decide that the killing has to stop. This is unlikely whilst Israel has the superior military forces. The way to bring this conflict to a peaceful resolution would be to provide a significant level of armaments to the Palestinians, so that equivalent damage could be affected by both sides. Having then evened up the balance of power, a political settlement would be likely. Until this happens the butchery will continue.

    Commenter
    George Lang
    Location
    Melbourne
    Date and time
    November 17, 2009, 7:50AM
  • Hartcher has obviously not read the report.Israel was mainly condemned because of evidence not hearsay.We saw the phosphorous bombs,we saw the schools blown apart and we counted the dead.
    Now we have a continuing crippling blockade of Gaza and an apartheid and ethnic cleansing system in the West Bank.
    Israel is a nasty racist country that needs condemnation not excuses.

    Commenter
    Paul
    Date and time
    November 17, 2009, 7:59AM
  • I would like to point out in relation to this statement which could easily mislead readers,
    'For example, an unbalanced focus on Israel, insufficient attention to Hamas's actions prior to the conflict, especially rocket attacks'
    That a possible reason that rockets were being fired was because Israel had closed it's checkpoints for months before the conflict and was restricting the supply of food, water and medical supplies to Palestinians.
    I am not for violence in any shape or form, but you can hardly blame the Palestinians for trying something rather than just sitting there and slowly starving to death.

    Commenter
    natako9
    Date and time
    November 17, 2009, 8:28AM
  • People lose perspective so easily. Hamas di not accidently kick a soccer ball over the fence. Soccer balls over the fence can be annoying, especially if it occurs frequently. Bombs and rockets kill people. That is what they are designed to do. That is why people pay a lot of money for them. Hamas does not kill people by accident when there weapons cross the border. God's chosen people will defend themselves and they will have God and anyone else who calls God their Lord on their side.

    Commenter
    David Falconer
    Location
    NSW Central Coast
    Date and time
    November 17, 2009, 8:47AM
  • I fear for the state of israel once it no longer has the support of the usa.

    Commenter
    humanity4all
    Location
    montreal
    Date and time
    November 17, 2009, 8:54AM
  • All fair comments posted already, no need to repeat again. Shame Australia (in government and media) silences any opponents of Israel's apartheid and oppressive regime, with the usual labels of anti-semitism, religious extremism or whatever tag sounds good at the time. Pleads innnonce and reason with one hand, committing their own atrocities with the other.

    My favourite is this: "it may be that the Palestinian combatants did not at all times adequately distinguish themselves from the civilian population". Yes I imagine they hid their tanks and fighter jets much more effectively than Israel did. Even the children throwing rocks, blending in seamlessly with the civilian population.

    Wake up world, smell the stench of zionist roses

    Commenter
    mouse
    Date and time
    November 17, 2009, 9:16AM

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