by Richard Baehr
The war of words
between the Palestinian Authority and Israel continues over a scheduled
fourth prisoner release by Israel, the Palestinians' willingness to
extend the current round of peace talks beyond April 29, and a
Palestinian commitment not to seek enhanced status at the United Nations
as a member state, while talks between Israel and the Palestinian
Authority continue.
If the discussions go
the way of prior crises in the negotiations, the prisoners will be
released, the PA will agree to continue the talks that are going nowhere
for some as yet undermined period beyond April 29, and the Palestinians
will delay what inevitably will occur at some point -- an attempt at
the United Nations to seek enhanced member status.
Membership for a state
in the United Nations requires a positive recommendation from the
Security Council followed by a two-thirds vote supporting the motion in
the General Assembly.
As the U.N.'s website explains:
"States are admitted to
membership in the United Nations by decision of the General Assembly
upon the recommendation of the Security Council. The procedure is
briefly as follows:
"1. The State submits
an application to the Secretary-General and a letter formally stating
that it accepts the obligations under the Charter.
"2. The Security
Council considers the application. Any recommendation for admission must
receive the affirmative votes of 9 of the 15 members of the Council,
provided that none of its five permanent members -- China, France, the
Russian Federation, the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern
Ireland and the United States of America -- have voted against the
application.
"3. If the Council
recommends admission, the recommendation is presented to the General
Assembly for consideration. A two-thirds majority vote is necessary in
the Assembly for admission of a new State."
If the Palestinians
decide to forgo the negotiations, and instead push their case at the
United Nations, they will then be able to join all the other "peace
loving states" who are already members:
"Membership in the
Organization, in accordance with the Charter of the United Nations, 'is
open to all peace-loving States that accept the obligations contained in
the United Nations Charter and, in the judgment of the Organization,
are able to carry out these obligations.'"
In this fantasy world,
the Palestinian Authority, a nonfunctioning, nonstate without borders,
living off international welfare, and without any authority in areas
where 40% of Palestinians live (Gaza), can apply for membership as a
peace-loving state, and be approved by an overwhelming majority of
member states, many of whom are also not peace-loving, particularly
vis-a-vis relations with the State of Israel.
The only party that
might block such an effort would be the United States vetoing the
application in the Security Council. How certain is that at this point?
We have more evidence this week of American State Department animus
towards Israel, as increasing numbers of Israelis are denied entry, this
year approximately 10% of those applying for visas to visit the United
States, including many Israelis in the defense/intelligence sector.
One leaked story suggested that those denied were a different bunch --
mainly younger Israelis in their "gap" year after military service,
seeking to sell Dead Sea products. That seemed to be a stretch.
State Department spokesperson Jen Psaki, one of the more pathetically incompetent
spokespersons in an administration full of them, explained what is
likely the real reason -- that Israel's rejection of visas for visiting
Americans of Arab descent was reason enough for keeping Israel out of
its visa waiver program. Of course, Israelis may have legitimate
national security reasons for rejecting some foreign visitors, reasons
that do not apply to American rejection of Israelis seeking to visit the
United States. In this case, major Arab lobbying groups called for the
State Department to deny Israeli participation in the visa waiver
program, and the State Department took its customary bow to their wishes.
The bigger pretense is
that the Palestinians are in any way behaving as if they seek peace and a
state through negotiations. The U.S. State Department, Secretary John
Kerry, Secretary Hillary Clinton during her tenure, and President Barack
Obama, have all decried activities by Israel that they have argued are
obstacles in the delicate path to peace between the parties. These
alleged obstacles always concern some Israeli bureaucrat approving one
stage of a multistage approval process for Israeli housing, almost
always within settlement blocs that American presidents since the start
of Oslo have accepted would remain as part of Israel, were a peace deal
reached between the parties. In other words, no new Palestinian land was
being taken for the settlements, and no Palestinians were going to be
displaced by the construction. Regardless, one would think that Israel
had launched dozens of rockets at Palestinian territory or sent suicide
bombers to blow up Palestinian buses, restaurants, and schools, given
the bellicosity of the reaction to the settlement approval process.
Palestinians, on the
other hand, are almost always given a free pass by the United States,
the Europeans, the so-called international community and the United
Nations for terrorism, anti-Semitic propaganda, and campaigns against
Israel. Presumably, none of these are obstacles to peace. The United
Nations stands out of course among the group, for its obsession with trashing Israel:
"Since then [1947], it
has maintained a central role in this region, especially by providing
support for Palestinian refugees via the United Nations Relief and Works
Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) and by providing
a platform for Palestinian political claims via the Committee on the
Exercise of the Inalienable Rights of the Palestinian People, the United
Nations Division for Palestinian Rights, the Special Committee to
Investigate Israeli Practices Affecting the Human Rights of the
Palestinian People, the United Nations Information System on the
Question of Palestine (UNISPAL) and the International Day of Solidarity
with the Palestinian People.
"In recent years, the
Middle East was the subject of 76% of country-specific General Assembly
resolutions, 100% of the Human Rights Council resolutions, 100% of the
Commission on the Status of Women resolutions, 50% of reports from the
World Food Programme, 6% of United Nations Security Council resolutions
and 6 of the 10 Emergency sessions. These decisions, adopted with the
support of the Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC) countries,
invariably criticize Israel for its treatment of Palestinians."
In fact, since the
original partition of Palestine was approved by the United Nations
General Assembly in 1947, and Israel was soon after admitted to the
U.N., the Arab and Islamic nations, and their Third World and Communist
allies, have used the U.N. as a source of a permanent campaign to
isolate and delegitimize Israel, and to smear its name among the nations
of the world. It is of course no surprise that in Palestinian schools
and media since the Oslo process brought Yassar Arafat and the Palestine
Liberation Organization back to the territories, the vicious
anti-Semitic, and-Zionist rhetoric, and celebrations of Jew-killers,
have been a constant theme. The Palestinians have never prepared their
own people for peace and reconciliation, and have never behaved in their
diplomatic relations as if Israel deserved a place among the nations.
The latest Palestinian
initiative, an astroturfed initiative if there ever was one, is the
international campaign of boycotts, divestment and sanctions directed at
cultural visits to Israel, Israeli businesses in the territories, and
Israeli universities, among other targets. This campaign now rears its
ugly face in new settings every week, particularly on college campuses,
replete with anti-Semitic rhetoric, death threats against students and
faculty, shouting down speakers who offer contrasting views, and
attempts to interfere with any activities or programs that allow Israel
or Israelis to be treated like other nations or people. In an article
this week on this topic, Caroline Glick decried
the detestable lack of response from campus administrations in dealing
with the intimidation campaign. She presents one example of the process
at work at Vassar College, as described by an anti-Zionist activist and
supporter of the intimidation, Philip Weiss:
"The spirit of that young progressive space was that Israel is a blot on civilization, and boycott is right and necessary.
"If a student had gotten up and said, I love Israel, he or she would have been mocked and scorned into silence."
Glick notes that Weiss is pleased with the air of intimidation.
"As he sees it, this is
the whole point of the so-called boycott, sanctions, and divestment
movement that calls for institutions to boycott businesses that do
business with Jews in Israel.
"As Weiss explained,
the real purpose of the BDS movement in all its component parts is to
make it impossible to voice any sentiment in relation to the Middle East
on college campuses that isn't anti-Israel."
If the Palestinians had
an iota of interest in a two-state solution, they would not celebrate
Jew-killers, they would not broadcast anti-Semitic propaganda, they
would not push for delegitimization of Israel and Zionism at the United
Nations, they would not fund and support the BDS movement abroad, and
they would actually show an interest in negotiating, which of course
involves compromise.
As has been true for
100 years, the Palestinian national movement has had as its primary
objective first the prevention of a State of Israel being established,
and later the elimination of the Jewish majority state in the region.
There are many nations in the world that sympathize with this campaign,
while paying lip service to the need for a two-state solution.
There is a point at which Israel
needs to state openly that the emperor wears no clothes. The two-state
solution is a fraud since it is completely unacceptable to one of the
parties. Israel needs to cease negotiating with itself.
Richard Baehr
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_opinion.php?id=7895
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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