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           |  | 
 An "Historic Partnership" with the Devil: 
	 New York City, Cornell University and Israel's 
	Technion  By
	
	Lawrence Davidson
 Redress, Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, January 18, 2012
 New York City
 Lawrence Davidson views the newly-announced partnership between 
	New York City, Cornell University and the Israel Institute of Technology, or 
	the Technion, an institution that is is knee deep in Palestinian blood and 
	“helps produce weapons and devices that both kill and maim civilians and 
	assists in ghettoizing an entire population”.
 The announcement came from the mayor’s 
	office of New York City (NYC) on 19 December 2011 in the form of an 11-page 
	declaration. It begins: "Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg, Cornell University 
	President David J. Skorton and Technion-Israel Institute of Technology 
	President Peretz Lavie today announced an historic partnership to build a 
	two-million-square-foot applied science and engineering campus on Roosevelt 
	Island in New York City." This is the result of an Applied Sciences 
	Competition that drew at least seven competitors from around the world.Cornell University
 Good news? Well, NYC officials certainly think so: "Thanks to this 
	outstanding partnership ... New York City’s goal of becoming a global leader 
	in technological innovation is now within sight." And all it will cost the 
	city is some public land on Roosevelt Island and "100 million dollars in 
	city capital to assist with site infrastructure". Oh yes, and written in 
	invisible ink, ‘the forfeiture of one municipal soul". That is the catch. 
	What we have here is a three way pact with the Devil. There is New York City 
	and Cornell University and the Israel Institute of Technology – the Technion.
 Cornell University is a 147-year-old 
	elite institution located in Ithaca New York. According to the announcement 
	cited above, it is "a global leader in the fields of applied science, 
	engineering technology and research, as well as commercialization and 
	entrepreneurship". Just what NYC was looking for.Israel’s Technion
 Cornell is led by 
	David J. Skorton, a former professor of medicine and a proven college 
	administrator. He has been the university’s president since 2006. Among 
	other things, President Skorton presents himself as an ethical leader. Back 
	in 2009 he tried to demonstrate this status when, in response to Israel’s 
	attack on Gaza, he called attention to the fact that he had led the fight to 
	have Cornell divest – from where? From Sudan because of the Darfur crisis.
 
 If you think that logic and consistency should have led Skorton to call 
	for similar action to divest from Israel due to the war crimes committed in 
	Gaza you would be disappointed. He
	claimed such 
	action would be inappropriate because the case of Darfur "has been one of 
	unilateral violence, whereas, sadly, the situation in and near Israel has 
	been characterized [by] ... violent acts by both sides".
 
 Just as 
	sadly, Skorton’s comparison was inaccurate. The Darfur tragedy is the 
	product of an on-going separatist revolt against the central government in 
	Khartoum. Sudan’s central government has reacted to this with excessive 
	force that has led to the destruction of much of the life and culture of the 
	Darfur region. The Gaza tragedy, and indeed the entire Palestinian-Israeli 
	conflict, began with Palestinian resistance to Zionist colonization and 
	subsequent oppressive Israeli policies. The Israelis have reacted to 
	on-going resistance with the excessive use of force that has destroyed much 
	of the life and culture in the Palestinian occupied territories. They are 
	not as different as Skorton made them out to be.
 
 Perhaps President 
	Skorton was unaware of these comparative facts when he took his public 
	stand. However, even if he were aware of them his behaviour would likely 
	have been the same. For Skorton is certainly pro-Israel. Only such a 
	position could have allowed him to lead his university, which he has called 
	"a 
	national leader in research ethics" into an "historic partnership" with 
	the devil.
 The devil in this case is the Israel 
	Institute of Technology, or the Technion for short. 
		
			| 
				
					| Technion is famous for 
					developing 
						WeaponsCombat & surveillance drones (used on Gaza 
						civilians)Missiles (used on Gaza civilians)Cameras perched on Israel’s illegal Apartheid WallAccelerated programme for Israeli government 
						scientists and engineers |  |  The Technion
	describes 
	itself this way: "A science and technology research university, among 
	the world’s top ten, dedicated to the creation of knowledge and the 
	development of human capital and leadership, for the advancement of the 
	state of Israel and all humanity." This would be quite impressive if weren’t 
	for the fact that the last nine words are a contradiction. The Technion is 
	knee deep in blood, mostly Palestinian. In April of 2011 a
	report 
	entitled “Technion: Structures of Oppression” was published by
	Tadamon, 
	"a Montreal based collective which works in solidarity with struggles for 
	self-determination..." What it shows is that a good part of Technion’s work 
	is linked to weapons development for the Israeli military. Technion faculty 
	and students are involved in helping develop combat and surveillance drones 
	and medium range missiles, both of which have been used against Gaza 
	civilians. Then there are the spy cameras perched on Israel’s illegal 
	Apartheid Wall. Technion had a hand in developing those too. Technion also 
	has accelerated academic programmes for Israeli government scientists and 
	engineers while discriminating against Palestinian students and applicants. 
	This then is the institution that Cornell University, a "leader in research 
	ethics" allied with in order to win the NYC contract. Is President Skorton 
	trying to be the Odysseus of modern Ithaca? Claiming righteousness for his 
	institution and himself while dealing with the devil? It won’t work. We are 
	best known by the friends we keep.Choosing not to see
 Both Technion and Israeli 
	government officials were clearly elated about their victory in the NYC 
	Applied Sciences Competition. Israel’s NYC Consul,
	Ido Aharoni said 
	that "this is of strategic importance in terms of positioning Israel not 
	only in America, but all over the world, as a bastion of creativity and 
	innovation." Technion President Peretz Lavie was just as effusive: "Together 
	we have the means, ingenuity and willpower to make our world a better place 
	by joining with Cornell University and the great people of New York City for 
	this innovative new centre of learning and enterprise." I am sure the 
	Palestinians are not impressed.
 Why did the Cornell-Technion alliance 
	get the job? Among the reasons are the following: 1. Elements within the Bloomberg administration were
	clearly impressed 
	with Technion. They see the Israeli institution as "a winner of Nobel Prizes 
	and incubator of high-tech businesses" and therefore it was "one of the few 
	overseas institutions the city explicitly invited to participate". So, city 
	leaders went out of their way to invite the Israelis into the competition.
 2. Cornell University’s successful acquisition of a
	350-million-dollar gift 
	to be dedicated to the NYC project. This came from Charles F. Feeney, a 
	billionaire philanthropist and benefactor of Cornell University who gives 
	money for, among other things, projects involving health programmes, 
	children, population issues and "human rights". His gift meant that the 
	Cornell-Technion alliance came to the table with their venture capital in 
	pocket.
 
 3. And, perhaps, the Bloomberg administration people were 
	just carried away by all the Cornell-Technion talk of making the city the 
	equivalent of high-tech nirvana. The mayor
	declared that "of 
	all the applications we received, Cornell and the Technion was far and away 
	the boldest and most ambitious... It will position the city as a leader in 
	an array of applied science fields, create the jobs of the future," and 
	generate millions of dollars the city. Deputy Mayor Robert Steel agreed. 
	This is going to result in an "economic renaissance" for New York City.
 Throughout this story certain words and phrases keep popping up: 1. President Skorton’s "ethical" standing.2. Cornell University’s 
	position as "a national leader in research ethics".
 3. Technion’s claim 
	to be working for the "advancement ... of all humanity".
 4. Charles 
	Feeney’s interest in supporting "human rights".
 5. Mayor Bloomberg’s 
	determination to "create the jobs of the future".
 All of this, of course, is based on a willful decision not to take notice 
	of what the Israel Institute of Technology does. Technion is part and parcel 
	of a racist, apartheid educational system; it helps produce weapons and 
	devices that both kill and maim civilians and assists in ghettoizing an 
	entire population. What ethical person or institution would want to partner 
	with such an organization? Only those who choose not to see. Only those who 
	"have 
	no moral compass" and are therefore, according to Mayor Bloomberg, 
	"losers".
 The three participants in this "historic partnership" can 
	carry on in this hypocritical fashion all they want. What they can’t do is 
	ask those who catch them at it to keep quiet. Hopefully, the word will 
	spread that they have sold their institutional souls for a bit of gold and 
	fame. Hopefully, soon protesters will show up, at least in New York City and 
	Ithaca, to tell the public just what sort of deal with the devil has been 
	entered into. Hopefully, these "leaders" will be made to feel as publicly 
	uncomfortable as possible.
 
 
 
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