Israel's Grand Hypocrisy: Netanyahu
Slams ‘Anti-liberal' Arab Spring
28 Dec 2011
By Jonathan Cook
As protests raged again across the Middle East,
Benjamin Netanyahu, Israel's prime minister, offered
his assessment of the Arab Spring last week. It was,
he said, an "Islamic, anti-western, anti-liberal,
anti-Israeli, undemocratic wave", adding that Israel's
Arab neighbours were "moving not forwards, but
backwards".
It takes some chutzpah – or, at least, epic
self-delusion – for Israel's prime minister to be
lecturing the Arab world on liberalism and democracy
at this moment.
In recent weeks, a spate of anti-democratic measures
have won support from Netanyahu's rightwing
government, justified by a new security doctrine: see
no evil, hear no evil, and speak no evil of Israel. If
the legislative proposals pass, the Israeli courts,
Israel's human rights groups and media, and the
international community will be transformed into the
proverbial three monkeys.
Israel's vigilant human rights community has been the
chief target of this assault. Yesterday Netanyahu's
Likud faction and the Yisrael Beiteinu party of his
far-right foreign minister, Avigdor Lieberman,
proposed a new law that would snuff out much of the
human rights community in Israel.
The bill effectively divides non-governmental
organisations (NGOs) into two kinds: those defined by
the right as pro-Israel and those seen as "political",
or anti-Israel. The favoured ones, such as ambulance
services and universities, will continue to be
lavishly funded from foreign sources, chiefly wealthy
private Jewish donors from the United States and
Europe.
The "political" ones – meaning those that criticise
government policies, especially relating to the
occupation – will be banned from receiving funds from
foreign governments, their main source of income.
Donations from private sources, whether Israeli or
foreign, will be subject to a crippling 45 per cent
tax.
The grounds for being defined as a "political" NGO are
suitably vague: denying Israel's right to exist or its
Jewish and democratic character; inciting racism;
supporting violence against Israel; supporting
politicians or soldiers being put on trial in
international courts; or backing boycotts of the
state.
One human rights group warned that all groups
assisting the UN's 2009 report report by Judge Richard
Goldstone into war crimes committed during Israel's
attack on Gaza in winter 2008 would be vulnerable to
such a law. Other organisations like Breaking the
Silence, which publishes the testimonies of Israeli
soldiers who have committed or witnessed war crimes,
will be silenced themselves. And an Israeli Arab NGO
said it feared that its work demanding equality for
all Israeli citizens, including the fifth who are
Palestinian, and an end to Jewish privilege would
count as denying Israel's Jewish character.
At the same time Netanyahu wants the Israeli media
emasculated. Last week his government threw its weight
behind a new defamation law that will leave few but
milionaires in a position to criticise politicians and
officials. Mr Netanyahu observed: "It may be called
the Defamation Law, but I call it the ‘publication of
truth law'." The media and human rights groups fear
the worst.
This monkey must speak no evil.
Another bill, backed by the justice minister, Yaacov
Neeman, is designed to skew the make-up of a panel
selecting judges for Israel's supreme court. Several
judicial posts are about to fall vacant, and the
government hopes to stuff the court with apppointees
who share its ideological worldview and will not
rescind its anti-democratic legislation, including its
latest attack on the human rights community. Neeman's
favoured candidate is a settler who has a history of
ruling against human rights organisations.
Senior legislators from Mr Netanyahu's party are
pushing another bill that would make it nigh
impossible for human rights organisations to petition
the supreme court against government actions.
The judicial monkey should see no evil.
At one level, these and a host of other measures –
including increasing government intimidation of the
Israeli media and academia, a crackdown on
whistleblowers and the recently passed boycott law,
which exposes critics of the settlements to expensive
court actions for damages – are designed to strengthen
the occupation by disarming its critics inside Israel.
But there is another, even more valued goal: making
sure that in future the plentiful horror stories from
the Palestinian territories – monitored by human
rights organisations, reported by the media and heard
in the courts – never reach the ears of the
international community.
The third monkey is supposed to hear no evil.
The crackdown is justified in the Israeli right's view
on the grounds that criticism of the occupation
represents not domestic concerns but unwelcome foreign
interference in Israel's affairs. The promotion of
human rights – whether in Israel, the occupied
territories or the Arab world – is considered by
Netanyahu and his allies as inherently un-Israeli and
anti-Israeli.
The hypocrisy is hard to stomach. Israel has long
claimed special dispensation to interfere in the
affairs of both the EU and the United States. Jewish
Agency staff proselytise among European and American
Jews to persuade them to emigrate to Israel. Uniquely,
Israel's security agencies are given free rein at
airports around the world to harass and invade the
privacy of non-Jews flying to Tel Aviv. And Israel's
political proxies abroad – sophisticated lobby groups
like AIPAC in the US – act as foreign agents while not
registering as such.
Of course, Israel's qualms against foreign meddling
are selective. No restrictions are planned for
rightwing Jews from abroad, such as US casino magnate
Irving Moskowitz, who have pumped enormous sums into
propping up illegal Jewish settlements built on
Palestinian land.
There is a faulty logic too to Israel's argument. As
human rights activists point out, the areas where they
do most of their work are located not in Israel but in
the Palestinian territories, which Israel is occupying
in violation of international law.
Privately, European embassies have been trying to
drive home this point. The EU gives Israel
preferential trading status, worth billions of dollars
annually to the Israeli economy, on condition that it
respects human rights in the occupied territories.
Europe argues it is, therefore, entitled to fund the
monitoring of Israel's treatment of the Palestinians.
More's the pity that Europe fails to act on the
information it receives.
Given the right's strengthening hand, it can be
expected to devise ever more creative ways to silence
the human rights community and Israeli media and
emasculate the courts as way to end the bad press.
Israelis are obssessed with their country's image
abroad and what they regard as a "delegitimisation"
campaign that threatens not only the occupation's
continuation but also Israel's long-term survival as
an ethnic state. The leadership has been incensed by
regular surveys of global opinion showing Israel
ranked among the most unpopular countries in the
world.
The Palestinians' recent decision to turn to the
international community for recognition of statehood
has only amplified such grievances.
Israel has no intention of altering its policies, or
of pursuing peace. Rather, Netanyahu's government has
been oscillating between a desperate desire to pass
yet more anti-democratic legislation to stifle
criticism and a modicum of restraint motivated by fear
of the international backlash.
A cabinet debate last month on legislation against
human rights groups focused barely at all on the
proposal's merits. Instead the head of the National
Security Council, Yaakov Amidror, was called before
ministers to explain whether Israel stood to lose more
from passing such bills or from allowing human rights
groups to carry on monitoring the occupation.
Deluded as it may seem, Netanyahu's ultimate goal is
to turn the clock back 40 years, to a "golden age"
when foreign correspondents and western governments
could refer, without blushing, to the occupation of
the Palestinians as "benign".
Donald Neff, Jerusalem correspondent for Time magazine
in the 1970s, admitted years later that his and his
colleagues' performance was so feeble at the time in
large part because there was little critical
information available on the occupation. When he
witnessed first-hand what was taking place, his
editors in the US refused to believe him and he was
eventually moved on.
Now, however, the genie is out the bottle. The
international community understands full well – thanks
to human rights activists – both that the occupation
is brutal and that Israel has been peace-making in bad
faith.
If Israel continues on its current course, another
myth long accepted by western countries – that Israel
is "the only democracy in the Middle East" – may
finally be shattered.
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EsinIslam.Com
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