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By: Alan Sabrosky*
The Israeli and American responses were true to form. Israel denied culpability, inveighing against any and all who crafted or believed any criticism whatsoever of it, as indictable accessories to the architects of the Holocaust. The US expressed “concerns” about the Commission report (details apparently await Israel’s instructions) — in such cases, America’s UN Ambassador really should give her proxy to the Israeli ambassador to save time, and serve coffee to the others.
Reflections
It is worth remembering that the onslaught against Gaza was just the most recent incident in a long and ill-starred tale of Israeli brutality, against Palestinians and the Lebanon especially. In 2002, for instance, the ravaging of the West Bank refugee camps — most notably Jenin — was the Gaza City of its day, with fewer Palestinian casualties and even more destruction. Then as now, Israel refused to allow a UN investigation; and it had complete control of the borders. It was then that an Israeli cabinet minister fended off the investigation by saying “They’re out to get us!” — the perennial cry of the truly guilty throughout history.
The perpetual Israeli reliance on denial and invective, and the oft-expressed belief that everyone is prejudiced against them, is fascinating. I suppose the uncomfortable reality that Zionism (not Judaism) really is racism — the UN got that right the first time, and should not have backed off it — may account for some of it. Committed racists probably have a hard time not attributing to others what they themselves feel towards everyone else. This is compounded by an arrogance based on the prevailing Israeli belief that having bought the US Congress, dominated the US mainstream media, and cowed the US President, they may do no wrong (or at least not be accountable for it).
That blend of brutality and arrogance doesn’t sit well with people who learn about it, and it will not sit well at all with most Americans as they come to be aware of it. As one Swedish woman wrote following an outpouring of (dare one say it?) anti-Nordic bigotry by an Israeli journalist:
“We don’t hate or dislike Jews or Israel. You can be anything you want. You can be Jewish, Muslim, Christian, Buddhist, Hindu, Wiccan, or have no religion at all. All we care about is if you are good people. We do dislike bombs and white phosphorous used on innocent people, and we don’t like countries that can’t take criticism for their actions.“
Enforcing a Peace
The prevailing assumption is that either the Commission report will wither on the vine, or the US will veto any serious moves Israel dislikes. But there is no compelling reason for others to let the US stonewall the world community again. The UN General Assembly (UNGA) has a mechanism in place for dealing with obstructionism by a superpower. This is the Uniting for Peace Resolution [UNGA Resolution 377A].
The resolution was initiated by the US in the early days of the Korean War to evade Soviet vetoes on the Security Council, with then US Secretary of State Dulles stating that “We must organize dependably the collective will to resist. If the Security Council [UNSC] does not do so, then this Assembly must do what it can by invoking its residual power of recommendation….”
The essence of UNGA Resolution 377A is that where the UNSC cannot act, it is the “final responsibility” of the UNGA to act in accordance with the UN Charter, being called into an emergency special session at the request of any seven members of the UNSC or a simple majority of the members of the UNGA. Vetoes do not apply. But, it can authorize the use of force, impose sanctions, and call on member states to provide forces and humanitarian assistance as needed. And it did so, creating the first United Nations Emergency Force (UNEF-I) during the 1956 Suez War when British and French vetoes blocked the UNSC.
The mission of UNEF-I sounds precisely like what needs to be done today, making it explicitly clear that the UNGA is doing so in accordance with the principles of international law, and to alleviate the suffering of the Palestinian people wrought directly by Israel under the protection of the United States. It is important to do this, because most Americans are totally unaware of the situation in the Middle East, and it will come as a surprise to many and a shock to some to find their country cast legitimately in the role of the “bad guy.”
And there it is. The world need not wring its hands when the Security Council suffers yet another US veto on Israel’s behalf and says it can do nothing, because the UN can — the mechanism is in place to break the illegal Israeli blockade of Gaza and alleviate the “intolerable”conditions of the Palestinians there. What it takes is courage, if not from the powers of today alone, then from those in the ascendancy as well.
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