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EU Tells Israel:
“Do Your Worst Without Fear of Sanction by Us”
By Alan Hart
Redress, Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, July 31, 2012
Alan Hart contrasts the European Union’s brave words chastizing
Israel about its land theft and ethnic cleansing of the occupied
Palestinian territories with its deeds rewarding Israeli crimes, and he
attributes this contradiction to Western politicians’ fear of offending
Zionism and thereby guaranteeing a career-destroying false charge of
anti-Semitism.
The first question the headline begs is this:
What is, or rather what could be, Israel’s worst?
In my opinion the
short answer is this. In an effort to defuse the demographic time-bomb of
occupation and close the Palestine file forever, Israel resorts to a final
round of ethnic cleansing, to drive the Palestinians off the West Bank and
into Jordan and other neighbouring Arab states. (What about the
Palestinians of the Gaza Strip prison camp? They are left to rot and will
suffer the same fate as their West Bank brothers and sisters if they chose
to stay and dare to threaten Israel’s security.)
Understanding the
full extent of the complicity of European Union ministers and their
governments in Israel’s defiance of international law does not require a
lot of effort.
Water deprivation, house demolition and land theftOn 5
July, the charity Oxfam released its latest report, “On
the Brink: The Impact of Settlements on Palestinians in the Jordan Valley”.
Its findings included the following.
Settlements and related
Israeli policies, such as systematic demolitions and restrictions on
land and water use, are creating a wretched reality for Palestinians in
the Jordan Valley... Palestinian communities are under threat as
settlement expansion and demolitions escalate... Palestinians can use
just 6 per cent of the land in the Jordan Valley, while Israeli
settlers, who account for just 13 per cent of the valley’s people, have
control over 86 per cent of it... Settlements in the Jordan Valley,
illegal under international law, have established industrial farms that
produce high value crops for sale in markets locally and abroad, and are
supported by a range of Israeli government grants and subsidies that
facilitate their growth and sustainability... At the same time, the
poverty rate for Palestinian communities in the Jordan Valley is nearly
double that of the rest of the West Bank as many struggle to make a
living from farming and animal rearing without adequate access to land.
The Oxfam report also noted that it’s not only in the Jordan Valley that
the pace of Israeli land theft is quickening. The year 2011 saw a 20 per
cent rise in new settlement construction across the whole of the occupied
West Bank as compared to 2010. Over the same period, the number of
Palestinians displaced by demolition doubled, with 60 per cent of the
demolitions carried out in areas close to settlements.
(To add to
their assertion that God gave them the right to plunder Palestinian land,
the settlers now have the endorsement of an earthly authority – the Levy
Committee. Under the chairmanship of former Israeli Supreme Court Justice
Edmond Levy, it was set up earlier this year by Prime Minister Binyamin
Netanyahu to establish whether or not outposts constructed by settlers
without government authorization were legal. The 89-page report of the Levy
Committee ruled that they are “because Israel does not meet the criteria of
“military occupation” as defined under international law”. Jonathan Cook
described this denial of Israeli occupation as “preposterous”. I go further.
I think it is irrefutable proof of a Zionist mindset that is deluded to the
point of clinical madness.)
“World leaders have long been saying the right things but
strong words alone are not enough.”
Jeremy Hobbs, Oxfam International Executive Director,
commenting on expansion of Israeli settlements and
demolition of Palestian homes
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The Oxfam report called on the member states of the European Union,
Israel’s largest trading partner, “to take urgent action to press the
government of Israel to immediately stop building settlements and end the
demolition of Palestinian structures, including homes, animal pens, water
cisterns and solar panels”.
Oxfam’s international executive director, Jeremy Hobbs, underlined this
call for action with the statement that “World leaders have long been saying
the right things but strong words alone are not enough”. (This important
comment from Hobbs did not appear in the BBC’s take on the Oxfam report on
its website. I presumed that this omission was an instance of
self-censorship by the BBC to avoid hassle from supporters of Israel right
or wrong).
EU making the right noisesThree questions are now in
order.
The first is: What are the right things in strong words that
EU (and other) leaders have long been saying?
Here are some examples.
Statement by EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton, 8 June 2012:
“I deplore Israeli government plans to build over 800 additional settlement
housing units as well as the plan to relocate some of the settlers from
Ulpana within the occupied Palestinian territory. Settlements are illegal
under international law and threaten to make a two-state solution
impossible.”
Statement by EU foreign affairs ministers, 14 May
2012: “The EU expresses deep concern about the marked acceleration of
settlement construction following the end of the 2010 moratorium...” All 27
foreign ministers unanimously condemned Israel's demolition of Palestinian
homes, its continuing settlement expansion and the rise of settler violence
against Palestinians, which the UN said has leapt by 150 per cent in the
past year, largely due to the impunity of Israeli perpetrators. The foreign
ministers also warned that Israel policies “threaten to make a two-state
solution impossible”.
Joint statement of ambassadors from
Britain, France, Germany and Portugal, December 2011: “The Israeli
government’s decision to speed up settlement construction is a wholly
negative development. We call on the Israeli government to reverse these
steps.”
Statement by UK Foreign Secretary William Hague, November
2011: “Settlements on occupied land are illegal. We are very clear
about that and have condemned recent decisions to accelerate settlement
building, and I condemn them again today.”
US State Department,
April 2011: “…not only are continued Israeli settlements illegitimate,
Israel’s actions run counter to efforts to resume direct negotiations. The
building of housing units in East Jerusalem would be detrimental to building
good faith between Israel and the Palestinians.”
Statement by
German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle, October 2010: “The Israeli
government’s decision to build 2,600 new housing units in the settlement of
Givat Ha’matos runs against the spirit of the Middle East Quartet
declaration and Israel’s roadmap obligations.”
“The Quartet
(March 2010) urges the government of Israel to freeze all settlement
activity, including natural growth, to dismantle outposts erected since
March 2001, and to refrain from demolitions and evictions in East
Jerusalem.”
A week after Jeremy Hobbs called for “urgent action”, Jose Manuel Barroso,
President of the European Commission, made the following statement in an
interview with the Israeli newspaper Haaretz:
The settlement policy is
making it difficult to establish a democratic and sustainable
Palestinian state which will be able to live in peace with Israel.
Besides the great importance which we attach to the legal aspect and to
international law, our position is that every policy and development
that tries to create facts on the ground and is hindering the
establishment of peace is a mistaken policy. That is a clear stance
which is unequivocal. The illegal settlements must be brought to an end.
The urgent action Jeremy Hobbs had in mind to press Israel would require
the EU to reassess its relations with the Zionist (not Jewish) state and
decide that the time had come to use the leverage the EU has on account of
the fact that about 60 per cent of Israel’s trade is with Europe. The EU
message to Israel then would be something like this: “If you want to
continue enjoying the trade and other benefits of your relationship with us,
you must comply with your obligations under international law.” An
incremental process of EU pressure on Israel could (and in my view should)
start with the banning of produce and products from the illegal Jewish
settlements on the occupied West Bank.
So much for what could (and
should) have been. Now to the second question.
EU action: rewarding IsraelHow did the EU actually
respond to the call by Hobbs (and others) for urgent action to press Israel
to end the building of illegal settlements and be serious about peace?
It decided to reward not punish Israel. At the annual meeting of the
EU-Israel Association Council in Brussels on Tuesday 24 July, the EU
confirmed that it was now ready to upgrade trade and diplomatic relations
with Israel in more than 60 areas, including migration, energy and
agriculture; and that it would remove obstacles impeding Israel's access to
European government-controlled markets and enhance Israel's cooperation with
nine EU agencies, including Europol and the European Space Agency. (The
decision in principle to extend EU-Israel cooperation in 60 areas was taken
in 2005, but implementation of it was put on hold when Israel went to war
with Palestinians of the Gaza Strip at the end of 2008 and was accused of
committing war crimes.)
I agree 100 per cent with Jonathan Cook’s
overall analysis and particular comment. In his article, “Europe
and US richly reward Israel for pariah status”, he said:
The right-wing government of
Binjamin Netanyahu has serially defied and insulted foreign leaders,
including US President Barack Obama; given the settlers virtual free
rein; blocked peace talks with the Palestinians; intimidated and
marginalized human rights groups, UN agencies and even the Israeli
courts; and fuelled a popular wave of Jewish ethnic and religious
chauvinism against the country's Palestinian minority, foreign workers
and asylum seekers.
No wonder, then, that in poll after poll
Israel ranks as one of the countries with the most negative influence on
international affairs.
And yet, the lower Israel sinks in public
estimation, the more generous Western leaders are in handing out aid and
special favours to their wayward ally. The past few days [this comment
relates to the EU’s decision] have been particularly shameless.
The third question is: On the matter of Israel’s policies and actions,
what explains the refusal of EU ministers to match their words with deeds?
The bogey of “anti-Semitism"It’s not enough to say they
are hypocrites of the highest order. They are but there’s much more to it
than that. How much more was indicated by a senior EU diplomat speaking on
condition of anonymity to the Guardian newspaper the day before the
EU-Israel Association Council meeting. (In its
report of what the unnamed diplomat said, the Guardian
predicted with precision how the EU was going to reward Israel.)
The
diplomat told the Guardian that despite private complaints of the
inconsistency of chastizing Israel with one hand while rewarding it with the
other, not one minister was prepared to oppose the extension of EU-Israel
cooperation in 60 areas. He (or she?) put it this way:
I was struck by the fact
that a whole range of relations was offered to Israel – at the request
of Israel – as if nothing is happening on the ground. Most ministers are
too afraid to speak out in case they are singled out as being too
critical towards Israel, because, in the end, relations with Israel are
on the one hand relations with the Jewish community at large and on the
other hand with Washington – nobody wants to have fuss with Washington.
So ministers are fine with making political statements but they refrain
from taking concrete action.
That squares with what I have been writing and saying for some years.
Almost everybody in public life in the Western world (not just the EU), and
actually far beyond, is frightened, even terrified, of offending Zionism too
much or at all. And there’s no mystery about why.
Provoking Zionism’s
wrath invites – guarantees – a false charge of anti-Semitism, and that can
destroy careers.
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