Isn’t there something seriously wrong with our world when a
people who have been wronged for over a half-century are treated as pariahs?
Wherever the Palestinians turn, they find every door shut. Whatever they do to
obtain even a fraction of their rights, they face insurmountable obstacles.
Time and time again, they pursue international justice only to discover that it
doesn’t exist for them. Recognized legal channels lead them nowhere. Promises
made that their own state is on the horizon are consistently broken. When, in
frustration, they turn to violence, they are branded as terrorists.
Events earlier this month illustrate just how hopeless their
situation truly is. That was when their own leader Mahmoud Abbas let them down.
Under heavy pressure from the United States, the Palestinian president chose to
delay a UN Security Council vote on the Goldstone report recommending Israel’s
referral to the International Criminal Court for alleged war crimes committed
during Operation Cast Lead.
According to reports, President Abbas conceded to the weight
of Washington’s influence, without prior discussion with Prime Minister Salam
Fayyad or consultations with members of the PLO leadership, fearful of
repercussions that might endanger the peace process. The question is what peace
process?
Certainly, US President Barack Obama’s recent photo-op with
Abbas and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu does not constitute real
progress. Like many before him Obama called for an end to the cycle of violence
and for final status negotiations to begin soon. If you feel like yawning, go
ahead!
Not only has the carefully compiled report of the United
Nations Fact Finding Mission on the Gaza Conflict been shelved, last late last
month, the British Foreign Office engaged in diplomatic shenanigans so that
Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak could receive immunity from prosecution
while on a private visit to London with his wife.
British lawyers acting on behalf of 16 Palestinians had
petitioned a Magistrates Court to approve an arrest warrant for Barak in
connection with breaches of the Geneva Conventions and for possible war crimes
committed in Gaza earlier this year.
However, rather than maintain the court’s independence, the
judge in question contacted the Foreign Office for advice. Following a flurry
of communications between British and Israeli officials, it was announced that
Barak was in the UK on official business and, therefore, held diplomatic
immunity.
Indeed, a precedent had already been set in 2004 when a
British court granted immunity to Israel’s then Defense Minister Shaul Mofaz
even though existing rules protected only foreign heads of state and their
foreign ministers. Britain also has a shameful record of tipping off Israelis
who risk arrest in England or Wales whose courts accept the concept of
universal jurisdiction,” enabling them to try foreign nationals for war crimes
or crimes against humanity committed abroad. In 2007, the former head of Israel’s
domestic intelligence agency, Avi Dichter, was conveniently warned off from
traveling to London where he risked arrest for war crimes in connection with a
failed assassination attempt that robbed civilian residents of Gaza, including
children, of their lives.
Two years earlier, in 2005, senior Israeli Gen. Doron Almog
was told not to disembark from an El Al flight that had landed at London’s
Heathrow Airport because the Metropolitan Police were waiting for him with an
arrest warrant. Legally, the police were entitled to board the plane as long as
it stood on sovereign British soil, but chose not to do so as they feared armed
confrontation with air marshals or the general’s security detail.
Well, that’s their story and they’re sticking to it. They
certainly had no compunction about detaining the former Chilean dictator Gen.
Augusto Pinochet in 1998, even though he had helped Britain during the
Falklands War.
So there you have it! Heaven forbid alleged Israeli war
criminals should be held to account. Britain, which has always prided itself on
its legal system and respect for human rights, actually colludes with Israel to
ensure its officials escape prosecution. And, worse, the United Nations
cheerfully ignores Israel’s flouting of Security Council Resolutions and is
more than willing to bin its own investigations into Israel’s crimes.
Where does this sorry state of affairs leave the Palestinian
people? The answer is precisely nowhere. When they are consistently failed by
international bodies and the international legal system, is it any wonder that
they have resorted to other methods on occasions?
At the root of this mess is the protective umbrella with which
America unconditionally shields its Middle East ally. As long as the US has the
power of veto within the UN Security Council, Israel can do what it pleases
with impunity. At the same time, Britain cannot hold Israelis to account
without risking its special relationship with Washington.
Those who believed that President Obama would make a
difference are sorely disappointed. He has turned out to be a man of fine words
and little action. Indeed, like his predecessors, he is perpetuating his
country’s hated double standards. While he calls for a nuclear-free Middle East
and wags his finger at Iran for enriching uranium on the one hand, he blesses
Israel’s policy of so-called nuclear ambiguity on the other.
In the meantime, the Palestinians are no closer to having
their own state than they ever were. The illegal apartheid wall still snakes
through the West Bank. Illegal Israeli colonies are still being expanded and
Gaza is still being illegally blockaded. What’s more, the international
community’s failure to hold Israel to account for war crimes gives it virtual
carte blanche to launch more attacks.
But first things first; the Palestinians must get their own
house in order. Hamas and Fatah must resolve their differences and unite behind
a strong leader who represents the interests of all Palestinians without
pandering to Western interests. The only road to peace will appear when all
Palestinians speak with one voice and one message that is loudly echoed by
their Arab friends.
Linda
S. Heard is a British specialist writer on Middle East affairs. She welcomes
feedback and can be contacted by email at heardonthegrapevines@yahoo.co.uk.