By
Alan Hart
March 30, 2012
If more proof was needed
(some of us think it isn’t) that Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu lives in a
fantasy world that exists only in his own deluded mind, his latest verbal
assault on the UN Human Rights Council for its decision to appoint and dispatch
an independent international fact-finding mission “to investigate the
implications of the (illegal) Israeli settlements on the civil, political,
economic, social and cultural rights of the Palestinian people throughout the
Occupied Palestinian Territory, including East Jerusalem” is it.
The Council, Netanyahu
said in his fury, has “an automatic majority against Israel”, is “hypocritical”
and “out of touch with reality“.
He added that “It should be ashamed of itself.”
There is, in fact, some
substance to the charge that the UN Human Rights Council is hypocritical.
There are many abuses of
human rights in many countries which it does not investigate because the
African, Asian and Latin American majority on the 47-member Council say “No”.
So there is most
certainly a case for saying that this particular UN body is hypocritical, even
out of touch with some realities and, in that context, appears to be obsessed
with Israel-Palestine.
But
does that mean the decision of the UN Human Rights Council to set up an
independent investigation of the implications of Israel’s on-going colonization
of the West Bank including East Jerusalem should be treated with contempt and
not taken seriously?
Netanyahu claims that it
does.
In my opinion that
Netanyahu claim deserves the judgment delivered about a different matter in a
recent article by economist Paul Krugman for the New York Times. He was
commenting on the claim by the Republican leadership in general and frontrunner
Mitt Romney in particular that the high and rising price of gasoline in America
is “thanks to an Obama administration plot.” Krugman wrote:
“This claim isn’t just nuts; it’s a sort of craziness triple play ~ a lie wrapped in an absurdity swaddled in paranoia.”
Netanyahu’s purpose was,
of course, to encourage other powers led by America to use their influence to
kill the UN Human Rights Council’s initiative before it takes on real life. And
the early signs are in his favour. The U.S. ambassador to the UN in Geneva,
Betty King, said the Council’s decision “harmed efforts to restart negotiations
between Israel and the Palestinians.”
That has to be a joke
given that there is no prospect of re-starting real and serious negotiations as
long as Israel continues to consolidate its occupation of the West Bank, and as
long as Netanyahu’s position is, in effect, that negotiations must end with the
Palestinians surrendering on Israel’s terms.
I think it’s reasonable
to imagine that when Ambassador King made her statement, she was aware that the
Obama administration would be required by the Zionist lobby and its stooges in
Congress to bully and intimidate the Human Rights Council into aborting its
investigation.
While Netanyahu waits to
see if the Obama administration will do his dirty work on this occasion, his
government has cut all contact with the UN Human Rights Council and announced
that it will prevent the Council’s team of independent investigators entering
Israel or the occupied West Bank from Jordan.
Whichever way you look at
it, the signs are that this particular mission of the UN Human Rights Council
will be more than D.O.A. (Dead On Arrival). It will most likely be D.B.A (Dead
Before Arrival)
In that event one of the
questions in my mind will be this.
Will any mainstream Western media institution have the balls to offend Zionism by giving space or airtime to voices expressing outrage at Israel’s continuing immunity from what honest investigation would describe as crimes against humanity?
Contrary to what
Netanyahu seems to think, the Palestinians are human and do have rights.
And they, not Jews, are
the victims in the true story of the making and sustaining of the conflict in
and over Palestine that became Israel. (As I have written previously, Israeli
and many other Jews need to feel they are the victims because victimhood is, it
seems, what gives them meaning).
As for the answer to my
headline question… Nobody is more out of touch with reality on the ground in
the occupied West Bank than Netanyahu.
Footnote
Of the 47 rotating member
states of the UN Human Rights Council, 36 voted in favour of the decision to
investigate Israel’s illegal settlement activities and 10, including the Czech
Republic, Romania, Hungary, Poland, Costa Rica, Italy and Spain abstained. The
United States was the only country to vote against it. (As golfers say, par for
the course)
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