Barack Obama's support of
illegality and ethno-religious supremacism in Middle East
By George Bisharat
Redress, June 23, 2008
George Bisharat argues that, by endorsing Israel’ illegal occupation of
East Jerusalem and its ethno-religious supremacism, Barack Obama has
“narrowed future policy options to those that would undermine
international law, offend core American values and diminish [US]
standing in the vital Middle East”.
On his first day as the presumptive Democratic candidate for president
earlier this month, Barack Obama committed a serious foreign policy
blunder. Reciting a litany of pro-Israeli positions at the annual
meeting of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC), he
avowed: "Jerusalem will remain the capital of Israel, and it must remain
undivided."
In promising US support of Israel's claims to all of Jerusalem, Obama
couldn't have picked a better way to offend the world's 325 million
Arabs and 1.5 billion Muslims. Israel's 41-year stewardship of the Holy
City has alarmed Muslims from Morocco to Malaysia. Upon seizing East
Jerusalem in 1967, Israel razed the ancient Muslim Maghribi quarter to
make room for Jewish worshipers at the Western Wall. Since 1991, Israel
has steadily ratcheted down Palestinians' access to Muslim and Christian
holy sites in Jerusalem. Most West Bank Palestinians can no longer
worship there.
Obama's unnecessary promise deviates from nearly six decades of US
foreign policy that held Jerusalem to be occupied territory under
international law. This long tradition was first broken in 2004 when
President Bush acknowledged Israel's demands to keep its illegal West
Bank settlements in a final peace agreement, including those around
Jerusalem. Thus Obama, a Harvard-trained lawyer, would both scorn the
international legal system's foundational principle – the
inadmissibility of territorial acquisition by war – and echo President
Bush, whose failed Middle East policies he has rightly deplored.
If Senator Obama's Philadelphia speech on race was a model of courage
and nuance, his AIPAC talk was brimming with the pro-Israel orthodoxy
that typifies this year's presidential campaign. Like presumptive
Republican nominee Senator John McCain, Obama also backed Israel's
so-called right to exist as a Jewish state.
How has it become an article of faith for US politicians to support a
state's privileging of one ethno-religious group over others? For what
Israel seeks in recognition as a Jewish state is permission to
permanently discriminate against Palestinians. Israel is, by law, a
Jewish state. Its declaration of independence and basic law declare it
to be so. But its population, excluding the West Bank and Gaza Strip, is
not exclusively Jewish: 20 per cent of Israel's citizens are native
Palestinians, and another 4 per cent are mostly immigrant non-Jews.
Moreover, Jewish demographic predominance was achieved through the
expulsion by force or fear of about 750,000 Palestinians in 1948. In
order to maintain a strong Jewish majority, Israel denies Palestinians
refugees – with their offspring, about 5.5 million persons – their
internationally recognized right to return to their homes and homeland.
According to Adalah – the
Legal Centre for Arab Minority Rights in Israel, 20 Israeli laws
explicitly favour Jews. Israel's law of return, for example, grants
rights of automatic citizenship to Jews no matter where they are from,
while Palestinian exiles still holding keys to their family homes in
Israel are denied this right. Religious parties play pivotal roles in
Israeli politics, and Orthodox Jewish rabbinical courts govern matters
of family law there.
Why should any American presidential aspirant promote ethno-religious
supremacy in Israel? Don't we see a "Christian state" or a "Muslim
state" as inherently discriminatory? Why don't we recognize the same in
Israel's quest to be ordained a "Jewish state?"
Like Israel, we are a nation that combines a sincere commitment to
democracy and a history that includes injustices. While we have never
fully atoned for our dispossession of Native Americans, in facing the
legacy of slavery, we have made an unyielding pledge to equal rights. A
truly visionary American president might respectfully press a similar
commitment on Israel, not endorse its urges for ethno-religious
privilege. The terrible suffering inflicted on European Jews in the Nazi
holocaust does not entitle Israel to subjugate Palestinians.
Barack Obama whiffed in his first major foreign policy speech as the
Democratic candidate. He may believe it necessary to pander to Israel's
US supporters in order to gain office. But he narrowed future policy
options to those that would undermine international law, offend core
American values and diminish our standing in the vital Middle East.
George Bisharat is a professor of law at Hastings
College of the Law in San Francisco, and writes frequently on law and
politics in the Middle East. This article appeared in the San Fracisco
Chronicle and the Institute for Middle
East Understanding website.
http://www.redress.cc/americas/gbisharat20080618
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