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A House of Shame: US Congress attack on International Law
November 9, 2009
The U.S. House of Representatives overwhelmingly approved a
resolution on Tuesday, November 3, 2009, attacking the
report of the United Nations Human Rights Council's
fact-finding mission on the Gaza conflict. The report was
authored by the well-respected South African jurist Richard
Goldstone and three other noted authorities on international
humanitarian law, who had been widely praised for taking
leadership in previous investigations of war crimes in Rwanda,
Darfur, the former Yugoslavia, and elsewhere. Since this report
documented apparent war crimes by a key U.S. ally, however,
Congress has taken the unprecedented action of passing a
resolution condemning it. Perhaps most ominously, the resolution
also endorses Israel's right to attack Syria and Iran on the
grounds that they are "state sponsors of terrorism."
The principal co-sponsors of the resolution
(HR 867), which passed on a 344-36 vote, included two
powerful Democrats: House Foreign Relations Committee chairman
Howard Berman (D-CA) and Middle East subcommittee chairman Gary
Ackerman (D-NY). Democratic majority leader Steny Hoyer (D-MD)
successfully pushed Democrats to support the resolution by a
more than 6:1 margin; despite the risk of alienating the party's
liberal pro-human rights base less than a year before critical
midterm elections.
The resolution opens with a series of clauses criticizing the
original mandate of the UN Human Rights Council, which called
for an investigation of possible Israeli war crimes only. This
argument is completely moot, however, since Goldstone and his
colleagues to their credit refused to accept the offer to
serve on the mission unless its mandate was changed to one that
would investigate possible war crimes by both sides in
the conflict.
As a result, the mandate of the mission was thereby
broadened. The House resolution doesn't mention this, however,
and instead implies that the original mandate remained the basis
of the report. In reality, even though the report contained over
70 pages detailing a series of violations of the laws of war by
Hamas, including rocket attacks into civilian-populated areas of
Israel, torture of Palestinian opponents, and the continued
holding of kidnapped Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit, there is no
acknowledgement in the 1,600-word resolution that the initial
mandate had been superseded or that the report criticizes the
conduct of both sides. In fact, despite the report's extensive
documentation of Hamas assaults on Israeli towns which it
determined constituted war crimes and possible "crimes against
humanity" the resolution insists that the missions study
"makes no mention of the relentless rocket and mortar attacks."
The Goldstone mission report totaling 575 pages contains
detailed accounts of deadly Israeli attacks against schools,
mosques, private homes, and businesses nowhere near legitimate
military targets, which they accurately described as "a
deliberately disproportionate attack designed to punish
humiliate and terrorize a civilian population." In particular,
the report cites 11 incidents in which Israeli armed forces
engaged in direct attacks against civilians, including cases
where people were shot "while they were trying to leave their
homes to walk to a safer place, waving white flags." The House
resolution, however, claims that such charges of deliberate
Israeli attacks against civilian areas were "sweeping and
unsubstantiated."
Both the report's conclusions and most of the particular
incidents cited have been independently documented in
detailed empirical investigations released in recent months by
Amnesty International,
Human Rights Watch, and the Israeli human rights group
B'Tselem, among others. Congressional attacks against the
integrity of the Goldstone report, therefore, constitute attacks
against the integrity of these reputable human rights groups as
well.
Equating Killing Civilians with Self-Defense
In an apparent effort to further discredit the human rights
community, the resolution goes on to claim that the report
denies Israel's right to self defense, even though there
was absolutely nothing in the report that questioned Israel's
right to use military force. It simply insists that
neither Israelis nor Palestinians have the right to attack
civilians.
The resolution resolves that the report is "irredeemably
biased" against Israel, an ironic charge given that
Justice Goldstone, the report's principal author and defender,
is Jewish, a longtime supporter of Israel, chair of Friends of
Hebrew University, president emeritus of the World ORT Jewish
school system, and the father of an Israeli citizen.
Goldstone was also a leading opponent of apartheid in his native
South Africa and served as Nelson Mandela's first appointee to
the country's post-apartheid Supreme Court. He was a principal
prosecutor in the war crimes tribunals on Rwanda and the former
Yugoslavia, took a leading role in investigations into
corruption in the UN's "Oil for Food" program in Iraq, and was
also part of investigations into Argentina's complicity in
provided sanctuary for Nazi war criminals.
Having 80% of the U.S. House of Representatives go on record
attacking the integrity of one of the world's most respected and
principled defenders of human rights is indicative of just how
far to the right the U.S. Congress has now become, even under
Democratic leadership. Indeed, if Goldstone can be criticized
for being biased, no one can escape such a charge. In doing so,
Congress has served notice to the human rights community that
they won't consider any human rights defenders credible
if they dare raise questions about the conduct of a U.S. ally.
This may actually be the underlying purpose of the resolution:
to jettison any consideration of international humanitarian law
from policy debates in Washington. The cost, however, will
likely be to further isolate the United States from the rest of
the world, just as Obama was beginning to rebuild the trust of
other nations.
Indeed, the resolution calls on the Obama administration not
only "to oppose unequivocally any endorsement" of the report,
but to even oppose unequivocally any "further consideration" of
the report in international fora. Instead of debating its
merits, therefore, Congress has decided to instead pre-judge its
contents and disregard the actual evidence put forward. (It's
doubtful that any of the supporters of the resolution even
bothered actually reading the report.)
The resolution even goes so far as to claim that Goldstone's
report is part of an effort "to delegitimize the democratic
State of Israel and deny it the right to defend its citizens and
its existence can be used to delegitimize other democracies and
deny them the same right." This is demagoguery at its most
extreme. In insisting that documenting a given country's war
crimes is tantamount to denying that country's right to exist
and its right to self defense, the resolution is clearly aimed
at silencing defenders of international humanitarian law. The
fact that the majority of Democrats voted in favor of this
resolution underscores that both parties now effectively embrace
the neoconservative agenda to delegitimize any serious
discussion of international humanitarian law, in relation to
conduct by the United States and its allies.
License for War?
Having failed in their efforts to convince Washington to
launch a war against Syria and Iran, neoconservatives and other
hawks in Washington have now successfully mobilized a large
bipartisan majority of the House of Representatives to encourage
Israel to act as a U.S. surrogate: Following earlier clauses
that define Israel's massive military assault on the civilian
infrastructure of the Gaza Strip as a legitimate defense of its
citizens and that make the exaggerated assertion that Iran and
Syria are "sponsors" of Hamas, the final clause in the
resolution puts Congress on record supporting "Israel's right to
defend its citizens from violent militant groups and their
state sponsors" (emphasis added). This broad bipartisan
congressional mandate for a unilateral Israeli attack on Syria
and Iran is extremely dangerous, and appears designed to
undercut the Obama administration's efforts to pursue a
negotiated path to settling differences with these countries.
Misleading Accusations
There are other clauses in the resolution that take quotes
out of context and engage in other misrepresentations to make
the case that Goldstone and his colleagues are "irredeemably
biased."
One clause in the resolution attacks the credibility of
mission member Christine Chinkin, an internationally respected
British scholar of international law, feminist jurisprudence,
alternative dispute resolution, and human rights. The resolution
questions her objectivity by claiming that "before joining the
mission, [she] had already declared Israel guilty of committing
atrocities in Operation Cast Lead by signing a public letter on
January 11, 2009, published in the Sunday Times, that
called Israel's actions 'war crimes.'" In reality,
the letter did not actually accuse Israel of "atrocities,"
but simply noted that Israel's attacks against the civilian
infrastructure of the Gaza Strip were "not commensurate to the
deaths caused by Hamas rocket fire." The letter also noted that
"the blockade of humanitarian relief, the destruction of
civilian infrastructure, and preventing access to basic
necessities such as food and fuel, are prima facie war
crimes." In short, it was a preliminary assessment rather
than a case of having "already declared Israel guilty," as the
resolution states.
Furthermore, at the time of the letter written a full two
weeks into the fighting there had already been a series of
preliminary reports from Amnesty International, Human Rights
Watch, and the International Committee of the Red Cross
documenting probable war crimes by Israeli armed forces, so
virtually no one knowledgeable of international humanitarian law
could have come to any other conclusion. As a result, Chinkin's
signing of the letter could hardly be considered the kind of
ideologically motivated bias that should preclude her
participation on an investigative body, particularly since that
same letter unequivocally condemned Hamas rocket attacks as
well.
The resolution also faults the report for having "repeatedly
downplayed or cast doubt upon" claims that Hamas used "human
shields" as an attempted deterrence to Israeli attacks. The
reason the report challenged those assertions, however, was that
there simply wasn't any solid evidence to support such claims.
Detailed investigations by Amnesty International and Human
Rights Watch regarding such accusations during and subsequent to
the fighting also came to same conclusion. As with these
previous investigations, the Goldstone report determined
that there were occasions when Hamas hadn't taken all necessary
precautions to avoid placing civilians in harm's way, but they
found no evidence whatsoever that Hamas had consciously
used civilians as shields at any point during the three-week
conflict.
Despite this, the House resolution makes reference to a
supposed "great body of evidence" that Hamas used human shields.
The resolution fails to provide a single example to support this
claim, however, other than a statement by one Hamas official,
which the mission investigated and eventually concluded, was
without merit. I contacted the Washington offices of more than
two dozen co-sponsors of the resolution, requesting such
evidence, and none of them were able to provide any. It appears,
then, that the sponsors of the resolution simply fabricated this
charge in order to protect Israel from any moral or legal
responsibilities for the more than 700 civilian deaths.
(Interestingly, the report did find extensive evidence as did
Amnesty International that the Israelis used Palestinians as
human shields during their offensive. Israeli soldiers
testifying at hearings held by a private group of Israeli
soldiers and veterans confirmed a number of such episodes as
well. This fact was conveniently left out of the resolution.)
In another example of misleading content, the resolution
quotes Goldstone as saying, in relation to the mission's
investigation, "If this was a court of law, there would have
been nothing proven." However, no such investigation carried out
on behalf of the UNHRC has ever claimed to have obtained
evidence beyond a reasonable doubt, the normal criterion for
proof in a court of law. This does not, however, buttress the
resolution's insistence that the report was therefore "unworthy
of further consideration or legitimacy." What the fact-finding
mission did find was probable cause for criminal investigations
into possible war crimes by both Hamas and the Israeli
government. Another spurious claim of bias is the resolution's
assertion that "the report usually considered public statements
made by Israeli officials not to be credible, while frequently
giving uncritical credence to statements taken from what it
called the `Gaza authorities', i.e. the Gaza leadership of
Hamas." In reality, the report shows that the mission did
investigate such statements and evaluated them based upon the
evidence. The resolution also fails to mention that while Hamas
officials were willing to meet with the mission, Israeli
officials refused, even denying them entrance into Israel. The
mission had to fly Israeli victims of Hamas attacks to Geneva at
UN expense to interview them. The mission found these Israelis'
testimony credible, took them quite seriously, and incorporated
them into their findings.
The resolution goes on to claim that the report's observation
that the Israeli government has "contributed significantly to a
political climate in which dissent with the government and its
actions . . . is not tolerated" was erroneous. In reality, it
has been well-documented and has been subjected to extensive
debate within Israel that the right-wing government
of Prime Minister Benyamin Netanyahu has interrogated and
harassed political activists as well as suppressed criticism and
sources of potential criticism of actions by the Israeli
military, particularly non-government organizations such as the
dissident soldiers' group
Breaking the Silence.
No Accountability
The House resolution is particularly vehement in its
opposition to the report's recommendation that, should Hamas and
Israeli authorities fail to engage in credible investigations
and bring those responsible for war crimes to justice, the
matter should be referred to the International Criminal Court
for possible prosecution. The resolution insists this is
unnecessary since Israel "has already launched numerous
investigations." However, Israeli human rights groups have
repeatedly
criticized their government's refusal to launch any
independent investigations and have
documented how the Israeli government has refused to
investigate testimonies by soldiers of war crimes. (At this
point, the only indictments for misconduct by Israeli forces
during the conflict have been against two soldiers who stole
credit cards from a Palestinian home.)
The primary motivation for the resolution appears to have
been to block any consideration of its recommendation that those
guilty of war crimes be held accountable. Since the ICC has
never indicted anyone from a country which had a fair and
comprehensive internal investigation of war crimes and
prosecuted those believed responsible, the goal of Congress
appears to be that of protecting war criminals from prosecution.
As a result, the passage of this resolution isn't simply
about the alleged clout of AIPAC or just another example of
longstanding congressional support for Israeli militarism. This
resolution constitutes nothing less than a formal bipartisan
rejection of international humanitarian law. U.S. support for
human rights and international law has always been uneven, but
never has Congress gone on record by such an overwhelming margin
to discredit these universal principles so categorically. This
is George W. Bush's foreign policy legacy, which through this
resolution the Democrats, no less than their Republican
counterparts, have now eagerly embraced.
Related: Judge Goldstone
plea letter to Congress before they voted on H. RES. 867
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