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On Flotillas and the Law: Civil Society Versus
Israel Lobbies in US and Europe
By
Lawrence Davidson
Redress, Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, July 11, 2011
Lawrence Davidson argues that the deadly influence of Israeli
special interests groups on Western governments, especially that of the USA,
means that advocates of justice for the Palestinians have only one recourse:
civil society actions such as the Gaza humanitarian flotillas.
”If we persist there will
come a time, as was the case with South Africa, when the power of civil
society will be such that politicians and bureaucrats will see the cost
of defying popular opinion as greater than defying Zionist lobbies.”
(Lawrence Davidson)
Civil society movements versus corrupt politics
When it comes to the struggle against Israel’s policies of oppression
there are two conflicting levels: that of government and that of civil
society. The most recent example of this duality is the half dozen or so
small ships held captive in the ports of Greece. The ships, loaded with
humanitarian supplies for the one and half million people of the Gaza Strip,
are instruments of a civil society campaign against the inhumanity of the
Israeli state. The forces that hold them back are the instruments of
governments corrupted by special interest influence and political bribery.
Most of us are unaware of the potential of organized civil society
because we have resigned the public sphere to professional politicians and
bureaucrats and retreated into a private sphere of everyday life which we
see as separate from politics. This is a serious mistake. Politics shapes
our lives whether we pay attention to it or not. By ignoring it we allow the
power of the state to respond not so much to the citizenry as to special
interests. Our indifference means that the politicians and government
bureaucrats live their professional lives within systems largely
uninterested in and sometimes incapable of acting in the public good because
they are corrupted by lobby power. The ability to render justice is also
often a casualty of the way things operate politically. The stymying of the
latest humanitarian flotilla to Gaza due to the disproportionate influence
of Zionist special interests on US and European Middle East foreign policy
is a good example of this situation.
There are small but growing
elements of society which understand this problem and have moved to remedy
it through organizing common citizens to reassert influence in the public
sphere. Their efforts constitute civil society movements. Not all of these
efforts can be deemed progressive. The "Tea Party" phenomenon in the United
States is a radical conservative movement that aims at minimizing government
to the point of self-destruction. But other movements of civil society, in
their expressions of direct action in the cause of justice, are much
healthier. The worldwide
movement for the
boycott, divestment and sanctioning (BDS) of Israel, of which the
flotilla movement is an offshoot, is one of these.
The forum of international law
“There is no international law that makes it legal for
Israel, itself acting illegally, to blockade those legally
resisting its actions.”
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The resulting struggle between the corrupt politics that keeps the West
aligned with the oppressive and racist ideology that rules Israel and the
civil society movement that seeks to liberate the victims of that ideology
goes on worldwide and in many forums. One is the forum of international law.
Presently, the debate revolves around the legality of Israel’s blockade of
Gaza and the effort of the flotilla movement to defy it. Let us take a look
at this aspect of the conflict.
1. The well known American lawyer,
Alan Dershowitz, a strong defender of Israel, has blatantly stated:
"Israel’s naval blockade of Gaza is legal under international law –
anyone who tries to break it can be arrested and prosecuted in a court
of law." Of course, Dershowitz is not an expert on international law.
Rather, he has made his reputation as a defence lawyer with a passion
for murder cases (which makes him quite suited to defend the Israeli
state). This being said, what is the basis for his assertion that the
Gaza blockade is legal?
2.The argument for the legality of the
blockade is based on the 1909 Declaration of London and the 1994 San
Remo Manual on Armed Conflict at Sea. Both are part of an international
treaty system that sets down the parameters of much international law.
According to
these documents, two states engaged in armed conflict can legally
blockade one and other for clear military reasons. However, any blockade
would cease to be legal if "damage to the civilian population is, or may
be expected to be, excessive in relation to the concrete and direct
military advantage anticipated from the blockade". Defenders of Israeli
actions, such as Dershowitz, do a very superficial reading of the
documents and reason that Israel is in an armed conflict with Hamas,
which is the ruling authority in Gaza, and so Israel can legally
blockade Gaza so as to stop the importation of weapons and "terrorist"
fighters.
3. The holes in this reasoning are big enough to sail a
flotilla of small ships through (if only they were not imprisoned in
Greek ports). Thus, Israel certainly does not consider itself engaged in
an armed conflict with another state. If you doubt this just ask any
member of the present Israeli government whether he or she would define
Palestine, including Gaza, as a state. In truth, the proper definition
of Israel’s presence in the West Bank and Gaza is that of an occupying
colonial power whose policies and actions are stark violations of the
Geneva Conventions. That is, by virtue of its colonizing actions and
treatment of residents of the occupied territories, its presence in
Palestine beyond the 1967 borders is not legal (one can also argue over
the legality of Israel within the 1967 borders). That means those they
are in armed conflict with are those resisting illegal occupation. There
is no international law that makes it legal for Israel, itself acting
illegally, to blockade those legally resisting its actions. The
arbitrary labelling of those resisting as "terrorists" does not change
this legal situation.
Israel’s “Gaza blockade was not done out of fear of
weapons smuggling or terrorist infiltration, but rather
constituted a conscious act of economic warfare against
the people of Gaza for having the audacity to be ruled
by Hamas, the winner of a 2006 free and fair election.”
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4. As noted above, "legal" blockades must have a military objective
and must not do excessive harm to the civilian population. Yet there is
evidence that Israel’s goals for the blockade are not primarily military
but are, instead, aimed at committing excessive harm to the people of
Gaza. The Gaza blockade was not done out of fear of weapons smuggling or
terrorist infiltration, but rather constituted a conscious act of
economic warfare against the people of Gaza for having the audacity to
be ruled by Hamas, the winner of a 2006 free and fair election.
There is documentary evidence for this interpretation of events. For
instance, in 2006 Dov Weisglass, an adviser to then Israeli Prime
Minister Ehud Olmert,
publically stated that the goal of Israeli policy in Gaza was to
"put the Palestinians on a diet, but not make them die of hunger". Then,
in June 2010 McClatchy Newspapers published Israeli
government documents attesting to the fact that Jerusalem primarily
saw the blockade as an act of economic warfare, and not as a security
measure. To this you can add the fact that Israeli gunboats keep
shooting at Gaza fishermen who they know are doing nothing
except fishing. What we have here is the collective punishment of 1.5
million Palestinians. As such it is not legal, it is illegal – a
violation of the Geneva Conventions. The UN secretary-general, Ban Ki-Moon,
usually so responsive to US demands, momentarily broke free and in his
2009 annual report told the Israelis they should end their unwarranted
blockade. He was ignored.
We cannot count on governments or international law
“...those who seek justice for the Palestinians must, for
the moment, not place much hope in government or
international law. They must act within the realm of civil
society, building the BDS [boycott, divestment and
sanctions] movement and its offshoots.”
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So how is it that the Israelis can get away with these crimes? It is
because, at the level of government, their lobbyists and advocates wield
enough influence to successfully warp the policy formulation of Western
governments. Against this corruptive influence, international law means very
little. Even embarrassing historical analogies mean little. Nima Shirazi,
who blogs at
Wide Asleep In America, wrote a very good piece entitled "The
deplorable acts: the ‘Quartet comments on Gaza". In this piece he points
out the relative similarity between the Gaza blockade and the blockade of
Boston set up by imperial Britain in late 1773. The Americans of that time
labelled the action, "the Intolerable Acts". Secretary of State Hilary
Clinton and her boss in the White House ought to consider this analogy, but
then there is that lobby power factor that would prevent them from ever
acknowledging it.
As a consequence, those who seek justice for the
Palestinians must, for the moment, not place much hope in government or
international law. They must act within the realm of civil society, building
the BDS movement and its offshoots. Where government moves in and attempts
to block civil society actions, these actions must be turned against
government if only by using them as campaign tools to expand the BDS
movement further. If we persist there will come a time, as was the case with
South Africa, when the power of civil society will be such that politicians
and bureaucrats will see the cost of defying popular opinion as greater than
defying Zionist lobbies.
For all intents and purposes, when it comes
to the Palestine-Israeli conflict, the United States and Israeli governments
have placed themselves above all law. That means not just international law,
but selective domestic law as well. The ubiquitous and improper use of such
categories as "terrorist" or "rendering material aid to terrorists" are the
corruptive vectors here. The only hope for justice and the integrity of law
is in the realm of civil society which might in the future redeem not only
Palestine, but the US and Israel too.
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