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      Matter of Policy:  
	Gaza War and Goldstone's Moral Collapse  
	By Ramzy Baroud 
	Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, April 18, 2011 
	   Shocking is not a sufficient term to describe Justice Richard 
	Goldstone’s decision to recant parts of the 2009 report on alleged war 
	crimes in Gaza.   The document, known as the Goldstone Report, was 
	compiled after a thorough investigation led by the South African judge and 
	three other well-regarded investigators. They documented 36 incidents that 
	occurred during the Israeli Operation Cast Lead, an unprecedentedly violent 
	attack against small, impoverished and besieged Gaza. It resulted in the 
	death of over 1,400 Palestinians, and the wounding of over 5,500.   
	Goldstone is both Jewish and Zionist. His love for Israel has been widely 
	and affectionately conveyed. In this particular case, he seemed completely 
	torn between his ideological and tribal position and his commitment to 
	justice and truth, as enshrined in the mandate of the UN Human Rights 
	Council.   After 18 months of what seemed a wholly personal 
	introspection, accompanied by an endless campaign of pressure and 
	intimidation by Zionist and pro-Israel Jewish groups from all over the 
	world, the man finally surrendered.    “If I had known then what I 
	know now, the Goldstone Report would have been a different document,” he 
	wrote in the Washington Post on April 1. But what did Goldstone learn anew 
	since he issued his 575-page report in September 2009?   The supposed 
	basis of Goldstone’s rethink is a follow-up report issued by a UN committee 
	chaired by retired New York Judge Mary McGowan Davis. Her report was not a 
	reinvestigation of Israel’s —  and Hamas’ — alleged war crimes in Gaza, 
	but a follow up on the Goldstone Commission’s findings, which urged the 
	referral of the matter to the International Criminal Court. McGowan Davis 
	made this distinction clear in a recent interview with the Israeli Jerusalem 
	Post. According to the post, she said, “Our work was completely separate 
	from (Goldstone’s) work.” She further stated, “Our mandate was to take his 
	report as given and start from there.”   So how did a probe that used 
	Goldstone’s findings as a starting point go on to inspire such a major 
	refutation from one of the authors of the original report?   McGowan 
	Davis’ report merely acknowledged that Israel has carried out an 
	investigation into a possible “operational misconduct” in what is largely 
	known outside Israel as the Gaza massacre. The UN follow-up report 
	recognized the alleged 400 investigations, but didn’t bear out their 
	validity. These secret inquiries actually led to little in terms of 
	disciplinary action.   More, the UN team of experts claimed there was 
	“no indication that Israel has opened investigations into the actions of 
	those who designed, planned, ordered and oversaw Operation Cast Lead.”   
	In fact, Israel is known for investigating itself, and also for almost 
	always finding everyone but its own leadership at fault. Israeli 
	investigations are an obvious mockery of justice. Most of their findings, 
	like those that followed another investigation of the Israeli war on Lebanon 
	in 2006, merely chastised the failure to win the war and to explain Israeli 
	action to the world. They said little about looking into the death and 
	wounding of innocent civilians. Is this what Goldstone meant when he used 
	the words, “if I had known then what I know now”? And could this added 
	knowledge about Israel’s secret —  and largely farcical — 
	investigations be enough to draw such extreme conclusions such as “civilians 
	were not intentionally targeted as a matter of policy”?   This was the 
	trust of the Israeli argument, which attempted to reduce a persistent policy 
	predicated on collective punishment —  one that used controversial and 
	outright illegal weapons against civilians —  to the injudiciousness of 
	individual soldiers. Goldstone’s calculated retraction is an adoption of 
	“the Israeli position that any misdeeds during the Gaza assault were caused 
	by individual deviants, not by policies or rules of engagement ordered by 
	military leaders,” according to George Bisharat, professor at the Hastings 
	College of the Law (as reported by the San Francisco Chronicle, April 7). 
	Bisharat added, “Yet the original report never accused Israel of widespread 
	deliberate attacks on civilians, and thus Goldstone retracted a claim that 
	had never been made. Most of its essential findings remain unchallenged.” 
	  John Dugard, professor of law at the University of Pretoria and former 
	UN Special Rapporteur on Human Rights in the occupied Palestinian territory 
	agrees. “Richard Goldstone is a former judge and he knows full well that a 
	fact-finding report by four persons, of whom he was only one, like the 
	judgment of a court of law, cannot be changed by the subsequent reflections 
	of a single member of the committee.”   Dugard, well known for his 
	principled stances in the past, is also known for his moral consistency. “It 
	is sad that this champion of accountability and international criminal 
	justice should abandon the cause in such an ill-considered but nevertheless 
	extremely harmful op-ed,” he wrote in the New Statesman on April 6.   
	Unsurprisingly, Israeli leaders are gloating. “Everything we said was proved 
	true,” declared Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in response to Goldstone’s 
	moral collapse. The New York Times reported on April 5 that Goldstone agreed 
	to visit Israel in July during a telephone call with Israel’s Interior 
	Minister Eli Yishai. “I will be happy to come,” Yishai quoted Goldstone as 
	saying. “I always have love for the State of Israel.”   The fact is, 
	Goldstone’s repudiations of some of his commission’s findings clearly have 
	no legal validity. They are personally, and in fact selfishly motivated, and 
	they prove that political and ideological affiliations are of greater weight 
	for Goldstone than human suffering and international law and justice. There 
	is no doubt, however, that Goldstone’s rethink will represent the backbone 
	of Israel’s rationale in its future attacks on Gaza. Goldstone, once 
	regarded as an “evil, evil man” by a prominent Israel apologist in the US, 
	will become the selling point of Israel’s future war crimes.   If the 
	killing of over 1,400 Palestinians is not a “matter of policy”, and Hamas’ 
	killing of four Israelis is “intentional” —  as claimed by Goldstone —  
	then the sky is the limit for Israel’s war machine.   Indeed, 
	“shocking” is not the right term. “Disgraceful” may be more fitting.   
	— Ramzy Baroud (www.ramzybaroud.net) 
	is an internationally-syndicated columnist and the editor of 
	PalestineChronicle.com. His latest book is My Father Was a Freedom Fighter: 
	Gaza's Untold Story (Pluto Press, London), available on Amazon.com. 
	  
       
       
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