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Justice This Time Around:
Will Goldstone's Report Deliver?
By Ramzy Baroud
ccun.org, September 24, 2009
'We may be witnessing the beginning of the end of the era of
impunity,' Nadia Hijab, a senior fellow at the Washington-based Institute
for Palestine Studies, was quoted by IPS in response to the findings of a
574-page report by a four-member United Nations Fact finding mission. The
mission, led by internationally-renowned former South African supreme court
justice and chief prosecutor in the international tribunals for Rwanda and
Yugoslavia, investigated alleged war crimes committed by Israeli troops in
Gaza in a 23-day bloody, unprecedented onslaught against a largely
defenseless population. But Hijab was not the only one who
expressed optimism. Others did, encouraged perhaps, by the report’s use of
terminology unfamiliar in a conflict where empirical experience has shown
that Israeli actions, no matter how outrageously violent, will have no
meaningful legal repercussions whatsoever. Goldstone’s report,
released on September 15, made some important recommendations, following a
most thorough investigation that was carefully compiled by the mission –
which was organized by the UN Human Rights Council last April. One
is that the UN Security Council should set up a team of experts to monitor
Israel’s investigations of the war crimes committed in Gaza. If Israel fails
to do so, then the situation should be referred to the Prosecutor in the
International Criminal Court (ICC). This raises many questions,
lead amongst them is: did Israel commit war crimes in Gaza, and, second, is
Israel capable of conducting an honest investigation into those crimes,
considering the state’s bloody legacy and lack of any serious legal
accountability. Goldstone answers both questions. “The
mission concluded that actions amounting to war crimes, and possibly in some
respects crimes against humanity, were committed by the Israel Defense
Force,” Goldstone told reporters on September 16. He also said that the
Israeli government has carried out no credible investigation.
Despite his recommendations that UN experts follow the progress of the
internal investigation by Israel, and the Palestinians (since they too were
accused of violating international law by lobbing home-made rockets into
Israel, without taking into account the possible harm to civilians) it’s
puzzling why Goldstone would think that any genuine investigation is
possible in the first place. Goldstone knows, as many of us already
do, that the events in Gaza, which resulted in the deaths of 1,387 (other
estimates put the number at 1,417, mostly civilians, including over 300
children), the wounding of thousands more, the targeting of an already
dilapidating infrastructure (hospitals, police stations, factories, schools,
and even chicken farms) of a deprived and besieged society was very much a
political decision made at the highest levels by the likes of Olmert, Livni,
Barak and other serial criminals who have tormented Palestinians for too
long. Palestinians were also chastised for rockets fired from
besieged Gaza. Of course, Goldstone was not expected to justify or applaud
the homemade rockets, or even underline their lack of effectiveness, as four
Israelis were killed by rocket fire, during the period of the war. Out of
the nine Israeli soldiers killed in the fighting, four were killed in
friendly fire. While both Hamas and the PA fully cooperated with
Goldstone and his colleagues, Israel fully rejected the mission, refusing
entry into Israel or Gaza, forcing the use of alternative routes into the
besieged strip, through Egypt. Israeli officials claim that the
report was pre-written, rendering it biased from the start. They used the
same predictable pattern of smears, redundant diatribes and predictable
language. Israel’s Foreign Ministry spokesman said the report
created unjust “equivalence of a democratic state with a terror
organization,” in reference to Hamas. Following the good old
democracy reference, racism kicks in. “We have nothing to be ashamed of, and
don’t need lessons in morality from a committee established by Syria,
Pakistan, Bangladesh, Malaysia and Somalia,” Levy said. Apparently
dark-skinned people of the South are both incapable of being democratic or
moral. Only Israel and her allies are capable of those qualities.
“The Goldstone report has set a new standard for equating the behavior of
democratic nations and terrorists,” wrote Richard Sideman, President of the
New York-based American Jewish Committee in a letter published in the New
York Times on September 18. The same disingenuous sentiment
utilized by Levy and Sideman (how curious that both seemed to be using the
same script) echoed by many Israeli officials and their lobbyists abroad,
who went into crisis management mode following the release of the report.
But why should they care? Could it be because Goldstone called
on the 192-member General Assembly to establish an escrow fund so that
Israel can compensate Palestinians in Gaza? Israel would never spend its
hard-earned US tax payers money on such frivolous matters. Could it
be because the Human Rights Council is convening on September 29 in Geneva
to discuss the report, and could call for its transfer to the Security
Council, and even the ICC? Could it be because the report’s
findings might empower an already growing boycott movement world-wide?
Could it be because it’s much harder to doubt the credibility of Goldstone,
to smear him as anti-Semite or a self-hating Jew? Could it be
because all these factors are escalating Israeli fears that the “era of
impunity” is indeed over? “Perhaps next time we set out to wage
another vain and miserable war, we will take into account not only the
number of fatalities we are likely to sustain, but also the heavy political
damage such wars cause,” wrote Israeli columnist Gideon Levy. One
would have to wait for the next miserable war, the next massacre to find out
whether Israel has learned its lesson. Until then, thousands of starved,
desperate yet resilient Palestinians in Gaza continue to live in their
makeshift tents, atop the rubble, which was once called home, awaiting food,
cement and international justice. - Ramzy Baroud (www.ramzybaroud.net)
is an author of several books and editor of PalestineChronicle.com. His work
has been published in many newspapers, journals and anthologies around the
world. His latest book is, "The Second Palestinian Intifada: A Chronicle of
a People's Struggle" (Pluto Press, London), and his forthcoming book is, “My
Father Was a Freedom Fighter: Gaza’s Untold Story” (Pluto Press, London),
which is now available for pre-orders at Amazon.
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