It is no coincidence that the Hezbollah-dominated Lebanese government, a non-standing member of the U.N. Security Council and an Iranian subsidiary, sponsored a resolution last Friday condemning Israeli housing construction in the disputed territories. The anti-Israel-resolution activity diverted the U.N. Security Council from passing resolutions against such authoritarian regimes as Iran and Libya for shooting their citizens and suppressing pro-democracy efforts.
Arab despots — and Iran’s regime — have a tried-and-true method for deflecting attention from their profoundly anti-democratic and repressive political systems: Formulate a U.N. resolution to condemn the Jewish State and its vibrant democracy. The fact that EU countries — for example Germany, which asserts that Israel’s national security is integral to German interests — joined the diplomatic assault on Israel is nothing short of a major body blow to the Palestinian-Israeli peace process.
The resolution placed the Obama administration in a bind, especially in light of its having made the U.N. the cornerstone of its foreign policy, notwithstanding the organization’s inability to define terrorism or stop Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons, and its anti-Israel obsession. But in the end, the president knew that the resolution would be a death knell to the peace process — because instead of negotiating over what are clearly final-status issues, like settlements, the U.N. would have decided outcomes in advance — so the administration vetoed the resolution (with “regret”) over the votes of the 14 remaining council members. But the mere fact that the resolution got this far is a stark indication of the Obama administration’s foreign-policy impotence.
President Obama consumed an hour on the telephone in an attempt to convince Palestinian Authority president Mahmoud Abbas to withdraw the anti-Israel resolution, but was snubbed, in what will surely be one of the more humiliating memories he takes from office. And the Palestinian leader isn’t finished. The veto in the Security Council now opens the door for a so-called resumed emergency session of the U.N. General Assembly. That would be almost the 20th time that the “10th” emergency session has been “resumed” since 1997. In all those years, there has never been a U.N. General Assembly emergency session on any other subject, genocides and horrors around the world notwithstanding. Abbas wants another one, which he will probably get, about Israeli construction.
The explanation U.S. ambassador to the U.N. Susan Rice gave to the Security Council after casting her negative vote neatly captured the Obama administration’s Dr.-Jekyll-and-Mr.-Hyde approach to the Jewish State. Instead of taking the opportunity to mention the critical problems unfolding in the Middle East — the agenda item was called “The Situation in the Middle East, Including The Palestinian Question” — she labeled Israel’s home-building “folly and illegitimacy” and castigated our only democratic ally in the region as “devastat[ing] trust . . . and threaten[ing] the prospects for peace.” Make no mistake, Iran, Libya, Algeria, and the rest of the thugs brutalizing their populations took notice. After all, this took place in the U.N. body with ultimate responsibility for protecting international peace and security.
The U.N.’s pathological obsession with turning Israel into a diplomatic punching bag was well known before the vote. But there is no excuse for the United States, or Britain, France, and Germany, to legitimize the spectacle.
The EU’s bizarre and flawed fixation on settlement construction as the linchpin of Mideast peace turned absurd in the British, German, and French statement advocating a one-sided resolution rebuking Israel. It stated: “A way must be found through negotiations to resolve the status of Jerusalem as the future capital of both states.” In short, while paying lip service to a negotiated resolution to the conflict, the EU unilaterally purported to settle one of the core elements to be negotiated.
The German move was an extension of its intemperate legislative language toward Israel. In 2010, the Merkel administration made no effort to convince members of its coalition government in the Bundestag not to agree to a resolution blaming the Jewish state for “violating the principle of proportionality” against the occupants of the Turkish vessel Mavi Marmara. The ship contained a hardcore group of jihadists whose only aim was to diminish Israel’s right to self-defense and create an Iranian port on the Mediterranean.
Israel’s ambassador to Berlin was apparently under the mistaken impression that the Merkel administration would likely reject the Security Council resolution. But the anti-Israeli writing was plainly on the wall. As a 2009 WikiLeaks cable from U.S. diplomats in Berlin reveals, Christoph Heusgen, a senior adviser to Merkel, urged the U.S to water down its opposition to the U.N.’s anti-Israel “Goldstone Report” in order to force Israel to freeze settlement construction. The dispatch from Heusgen, Merkel’s point man on the Middle East, ought to raise giant question marks over her oft-repeated declarations to the U.S. Congress and the Israeli Knesset that the Jewish state’s security is “non-negotiable” for Germany.
A day after German foreign minister Guido Westerwelle instructed his U.N. diplomats to add Germany’s voice to the round of condemnations at the Security Council, he traveled to Tehran and met with Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. There were no statements about Israel’s security, Iranians dying in the streets, or Ahmadinejad’s grotesque denial of the Holocaust. Iranian dissidents speaking to AP called Westerwelle’s meeting “simply a disgrace.” “His meeting ignored the ruling regime’s terror, the people’s suffering,” they said.
British and French support for the resolution comes at a time when we are learning how deeply immersed both countries are with the dirty business of propping up unsavory regimes in Tunisia and Libya. WikiLeaks cables point directly to Britain’s role in releasing the Lockerbie bomber, Abdelbaset Ali al-Megrahi, in exchange for British energy giant BP’s right to access and develop Libyan oil. During the pro-democracy demonstrations in Tunisia, France’s foreign minister Michele Alliot-Marie offered a sophisticated French police-skills program to the security forces of now-deposed Tunisian despot Ben Ali.
It is long overdue for the EU and the U.S. to make good on their promise to leave the talks about all final-status issues, including settlements and territorial compromises, to the parties themselves. As of today, the EU has given the Palestinians no compelling reason to return to the bargaining table or get serious about living side-by-side with a Jewish state. Instead of obsessing over Israel, the time is now ripe to acquire a healthy obsession with democracy promotion in the Muslim and Arab worlds.
— Anne Bayefsky is a senior fellow with the Hudson Institute and directs the Touro College Institute on Human Rights and the Holocaust. Benjamin Weinthal is a fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies.
Wow. The "emergency session" thing is even worse than the authors say: Previous to the "current" 1997 session, the last was in 1982, dealing with Israel. So did three of the others, for a total of five out of ten, and all since 1981.
This is why, whenever someone starts telling me that Israel (or whoever) is violating "international law" as defined by the UN or one of its bodies, I laugh in their face. ("International law" as customary international law, or treaties, or some court cases, or the Geneva Convention, is another story.)
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseGood article, Anne
Reply to this commentLinkReport Abuse"Israel is the only democracy in the middle east"
The funny thing over the last few weeks are that many of the people who use this argument as a key reason why the US should be supporting Israel have also been arguing that the US should be supporting its long time non-democratic dictatorship 'allies' in the region e.g. Mubarak.
I think it worries many pro-Israel supporters that they will no longer be able to use the "Israel is the only democratic state in the middle east" argument if Egypt and the other falling dictatorships in the region become democracies themselves.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseIt was easy for Obama to throw Mubarak, but to talk about moral and ideology is hypocrisy at its best. Human rights in Saudi Arabia is much MUCH worse than it was in Egypt under Mubarak.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseIn Saudi Arabia they stone women, cut of arms etc. etc. But Obama bows to the Saudi King and supports his kingdom.
You should know that Westerwelle did this because he made a deal with the Iranian regime to free two German journalists held in an Iranian prison for interviewing the wife of a killed dissident (if I remember correctly).
Yes, Germany's foreign policy comes down to that: in order to never ever have to take any action and face the consequences, we simply pay the thugs in whatever currency they desire.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseIt amazes me that no analyst or interviewer from the Security Council member countries seems to have asked, what did they expect to happen if the resolution had passed. Did they really expect Israel to roll over? What in the last 63 years has made that expectation realistic?
Israel would be in breach of a Security Council Resolution. It is not difficult given the tone of the resolution and speeches by every member to bring that under Chapter VII of the UN Charter's 'threat to the peace' provisions. Chapter VI seems irrelevant as all peaceful means have failed.
Will the German, French, British, etc vote in favour of sanctions? Will they take part in sanctions? Will they vote for 'action by air, sea, or land forces as may be necessary to maintain or restore international peace and security'? Will they go to war for Palestine?
Did they even consider the day after? Surely that question is basic?
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