(WMR) -- The
South Pacific�s tiny island states may not have any military strength to wield
power but they are using their diplomatic status to poke fingers in the eyes of
the big powers which they fear are trading away their interests at the
Copenhagen climate change summit to enrich the coffers of the international
banking elites.
In just a few weeks, two South Pacific countries that are
endangered from rising sea levels, Nauru and the Solomon Islands, have enraged
the United States and Israel, the two most suspect nations in their eyes.
The first major South Pacific slap at Washington and
Jerusalem occurred last month when the Solomon Islands voted in favor of the UN
General Assembly resolution upholding the findings of the Goldstone Commission
that Israel committed war crimes in its Operation Cast Lead military assault on
Gaza.
Israel�s Foreign Ministry immediately began to whine that
the decision of the Solomons was influenced by a trip Solomons� Foreign
Minister William Haomae paid to Tehran. Israel accused the Solomons of selling
its UN vote to Iran for a $200,000 Iranian grant and Leliani Firisua,
Israel�s honorary counsel in Honiara, the Solomons capital, took on the role of
a mini-AIPAC and accused most Solomon Islanders of being too uneducated to
understand the Israel-Palestinian conflict. The Solomon Islands was the only
Pacific nation to vote for the Goldstone resolution.
Israel countered the move by the Solomon Islands by inviting
the Presidents of Micronesia and the Marshall Islands -- two former US Trust
Territories whose UN votes are �owned� by Israel -- and Nauru, to pay state
visits to Israel.
However, Nauru spit in the eyes of the Obama and Netanyahu
governments by recognizing the independence of two breakaway Georgian republics
-- Abkhazia and South Ossetia. The move followed a walkout by Nauru, along with
other Pacific island states, at the Copenhagen summit after the Danish Prime
Minister�s emails were leaked. The emails revealed a secret plan by Denmark,
Britain, and the United States to push through a climate change agreement
favorable to the rich countries but ignoring the plight of the developing world
and the small island states.
Georgia, which tried to militarily invade and re-occupy
South Ossetia and Abkhazia with Israeli and American military and intelligence
support, is opposed to any nation recognizing the independence of the two small
statelets. However, in addition to Russia, Nicaragua and Venezuela have
recognized Abkhazia and South Ossetia, and Bolivia, Cuba, and Ecuador are
prepared to do so, inflaming officials in Washington and Jerusalem, as well as
Tbilisi.
Nauru�s Foreign Minister Kieren Keke told Abkhazian and
South Ossetian officials that Nauru will use its influence within the South
Pacific Forum states to urge other South Pacific states to confer diplomatic
recognition on the two countries. Given the tense relations between Israel and
the Solomon Islands, the Solomons, which ironically takes its name from the
Jewish King Solomon, may be next in line to take another
diplomatic slap at the Zionist extremist government in Jerusalem. Other
Pacific states that may follow Nauru in recognizing Abkhazia and South
Ossetia are Tonga, Tuvalu, Kiribati, and Vanuatu. The Solomon Islands, Tuvalu,
Kiribati, and Nauru have used their diplomatic clout before, for example, in
recognizing Taiwan to the anger of China.
Previously
published in the Wayne
Madsen Report.
Copyright � 2009 WayneMadenReport.com
Wayne
Madsen is a Washington, DC-based investigative journalist and
nationally-distributed columnist. He is the editor and publisher of the Wayne Madsen Report
(subscription required).