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Why an Economic Boycott of Israel is Justified
This article appears in the January 14 issue of the Norwegian
newspaper Aftenposten.?
By Norman G. Finkelstein
01/15/06 "Aftenposten" -- -- The recent proposal that Norway
boycott Israeli goods has provoked passionate debate. In my
view, a rational examination of this issue would pose two
questions: 1) Do Israeli human rights violations warrant an
economic boycott? and 2) Can such a boycott make a meaningful
contribution toward ending these violations? I would argue that
both these questions should be answered in the affirmative.
Although the subject of many reports by human rights
organizations, Israel's real human rights record in the Occupied
Palestinian Territory is generally not well known abroad. This
is primarily due to the formidable public relations industry of
Israel's defenders as well as the effectiveness of their tactics
of intimidation, such as labeling critics of Israeli policy
anti-Semitic.
Yet, it is an incontestable fact that Israel has committed a
broad range of human rights violations, many rising to the level
of war crimes and crimes against humanity. These include:
Illegal Killings. Whereas Palestinian suicide attacks targeting
Israeli civilians have garnered much media attention, Israel's
quantitatively worse record of killing non-combatants is less
well known. According to the most recent figures of the Israeli
Information Center for Human Rights in the Occupied Territories
(B'Tselem), 3,386 Palestinians have been killed since September
2000, of whom 1,008 were identified as combatants, as opposed to
992 Israelis killed, of whom 309 were combatants. This means
that three times more Palestinians than Israelis have been
killed and up to three times more Palestinian civilians than
Israeli civilians. Israel's defenders maintain that there's a
difference between targeting civilians and inadvertently killing
them. B'Tselem disputes this: "[W]hen so many civilians have
been killed and wounded, the lack of intent makes no difference.
Israel remains responsible." Furthermore, Amnesty International
reports that "many" Palestinians have not been accidentally
killed but "deliberately targeted," while the award-winning New
York Times journalist Chris Hedges reports that Israeli soldiers
"entice children like mice into a trap and murder them for
sport."
Torture. "From 1967," Amnesty reports, "the Israeli security
services have routinely tortured Palestinian political suspects
in the Occupied Territories." B'Tselem found that eighty-five
percent of Palestinians interrogated by Israeli security
services were subjected to "methods constituting torture," while
already a decade ago Human Rights Watch estimated that "the
number of Palestinians tortured or severely ill-treated" was "in
the tens of thousands - a number that becomes especially
significant when it is remembered that the universe of adult and
adolescent male Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza is under
three-quarters of one million." In 1987 Israel became "the only
country in the world to have effectively legalized torture"
(Amnesty). Although the Israeli Supreme Court seemed to ban
torture in a 1999 decision, the Public Committee Against Torture
in Israel reported in 2003 that Israeli security forces
continued to apply torture in a "methodical and routine"
fashion. A 2001 B'Tselem study documented that Israeli security
forces often applied "severe torture" to "Palestinian minors."?
House demolitions. "Israel has implemented a policy of mass
demolition of Palestinian houses in the Occupied Territories,"
B'Tselem reports, and since September 2000 "has destroyed some
4,170 Palestinian homes." Until just recently Israel routinely
resorted to house demolitions as a form of collective
punishment. According to Middle East Watch, apart from Israel,
the only other country in the world that used such a draconian
punishment was Iraq under Saddam Hussein. In addition, Israel
has demolished thousands of "illegal" homes that Palestinians
built because of Israel's refusal to provide building permits.
The motive behind destroying these homes, according to Amnesty,
has been to maximize the area available for Jewish settlers:
"Palestinians are targeted for no other reason than they are
Palestinians." Finally, Israel has destroyed hundred of homes on
security pretexts, yet a Human Rights Watch report on Gaza found
that "the pattern of destruction?strongly suggests that Israeli
forces demolished homes wholesale, regardless of whether they
posed a specific threat." Amnesty likewise found that "Israel's
extensive destruction of homes and properties throughout the
West Bank and Gaza?is not justified by military necessity," and
that "Some of these acts of destruction amount to grave breaches
of the Fourth Geneva Convention and are war crimes."
Apart from the sheer magnitude of its human rights violations,
the uniqueness of Israeli policies merits notice. "Israel has
created in the Occupied Territories a regime of separation based
on discrimination, applying two separate systems of law in the
same area and basing the rights of individuals on their
nationality," B'Tselem has concluded. "This regime is the only
one of its kind in the world, and is reminiscent of distasteful
regimes from the past, such as the apartheid regime in South
Africa." If singling out South Africa for an international
economic boycott was defensible, it would seem equally
defensible to single out Israel's occupation, which uniquely
resembles the apartheid regime.
Although an economic boycott can be justified on moral grounds,
the question remains whether diplomacy might be more effectively
employed instead. The documentary record in this regard,
however, is not encouraging. The basic terms for resolving the
Israel-Palestine conflict are embodied in U.N. resolution 242
and subsequent U.N. resolutions, which call for a full Israeli
withdrawal from the West Bank and Gaza and the establishment of
a Palestinian state in these areas in exchange for recognition
of Israel's right to live in peace and security with its
neighbors. Each year the overwhelming majority of member States
of the United Nations vote in favor of this two-state
settlement, and each year Israel and the United States (and a
few South Pacific islands) oppose it. Similarly, in March 2002
all twenty-two member States of the Arab League proposed this
two-state settlement as well as "normal relations with Israel."
Israel ignored the proposal.?
Not only has Israel stubbornly rejected this two-state
settlement, but the policies it is currently pursuing will abort
any possibility of a viable Palestinian state. While world
attention has been riveted by Israel's redeployment from Gaza,
Sara Roy of Harvard University observes that the "Gaza
Disengagement Plan is, at heart, an instrument for Israel's
continued annexation of West Bank land and the physical
integration of that land into Israel." In particular Israel has
been constructing a wall deep inside the West Bank that will
annex the most productive land and water resources as well as
East Jerusalem, the center of Palestinian life. It will also
effectively sever the West Bank in two. Although Israel
initially claimed that it was building the wall to fight
terrorism, the consensus among human rights organizations is
that it is really a land grab to annex illegal Jewish
settlements into Israel. Recently Israel's Justice Minister
frankly acknowledged that the wall will serve as "the future
border of the state of Israel."
The current policies of the Israeli government will lead either
to endless bloodshed or the dismemberment of Palestine. "It
remains virtually impossible to conceive of a Palestinian state
without its capital in Jerusalem," the respected Crisis Group
recently concluded, and accordingly Israeli policies in the West
Bank "are at war with any viable two-state solution and will not
bolster Israel's security; in fact, they will undermine it,
weakening Palestinian pragmatists?and sowing the seeds of
growing radicalization."?
Recalling the U.N. Charter principle that it is inadmissible to
acquire territory by war, the International Court of Justice
declared in a landmark 2004 opinion that Israel's settlements in
the Occupied Palestinian Territory and the wall being built to
annex them to Israel were illegal under international law. It
called on Israel to cease construction of the wall, dismantle
those parts already completed and compensate Palestinians for
damages. Crucially, it also stressed the legal responsibilities
of the international community:
all States are under an obligation not to recognize the illegal
situation resulting from the construction of the wall in the
Occupied Palestinian Territory, including in and around East
Jerusalem. They are also under an obligation not to render aid
or assistance in maintaining the situation created by such
construction. It is also for all States, while respecting the
United Nations Charter and international law, to see to it that
any impediment, resulting from the construction of the wall, to
the exercise by the Palestinian people of its right to
self-determination is brought to an end.
A subsequent U.N. General Assembly resolution supporting the
World Court opinion passed overwhelmingly. However, the Israeli
government ignored the Court's opinion, continuing construction
at a rapid pace, while Israel's Supreme Court ruled that the
wall was legal.
Due to the obstructionist tactics of the United States, the
United Nations has not been able to effectively confront
Israel's illegal practices. Indeed, although it is true that the
U.N. keeps Israel to a double standard, it's exactly the reverse
of the one Israel's defenders allege: Israel is held not to a
higher but lower standard than other member States. A study by
Marc Weller of Cambridge University comparing Israel and the
Occupied Palestinian Territory with comparable situations in
Bosnia and Herzegovina, Kosovo, East Timor, occupied Kuwait and
Iraq, and Rwanda found that Israel has enjoyed "virtual
immunity" from enforcement measures such as an arms embargo and
economic sanctions typically adopted by the U.N. against member
States condemned for identical violations of international law.
Due in part to an aggressive campaign accusing Europe of a "new
anti-Semitism," the European Union has also failed in its legal
obligation to enforce international law in the Occupied
Palestinian Territory. Although the claim of a "new
anti-Semitism" has no basis in fact (all the evidence points to
a lessening of anti-Semitism in Europe), the EU has reacted by
appeasing Israel. It has even suppressed publication of one of
its own reports, because the authors -- like the Crisis Group
and many others -- concluded that due to Israeli policies the
"prospects for a two-state solution with east Jerusalem as the
capital of Palestine are receding."
The moral burden to avert the impending catastrophe must now be
borne by individual states that are prepared to respect their
obligations under international law and by individual men and
women of conscience. In a courageous initiative American-based
Human Rights Watch recently called on the U.S. government to
reduce significantly its financial aid to Israel until Israel
terminates its illegal policies in the West Bank. An economic
boycott would seem to be an equally judicious undertaking. A
nonviolent tactic the purpose of which is to achieve a just and
lasting settlement of the Israel-Palestine conflict cannot
legitimately be called anti-Semitic. Indeed, the real enemies of
Jews are those who cheapen the memory of Jewish suffering by
equating principled opposition to Israel's illegal and immoral
policies with anti-Semitism.?
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