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           |  | Lip Service to Peace:  EU as an Enabler of Netanyahu's Colonial 
	Policies  By Ramzy Baroud Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, November 19, 2012  
 Europe is different, as we are often reminded. The general 
	wisdom is unlike the United States’ unconditional support for Israel. 
	European countries tend to be more balanced in their approach to the 
	Palestinian-Israeli conflict. Their politicians are less receptive to being 
	bought and sold by pro-Israeli lobbies. Their media is far more inclusive in 
	their coverage - unlike the staunchly one-sided US mainstream media that, at 
	times, are far more pro-Israel than Israeli media itself. While one must 
	concede that no single country’s foreign policy is an exact carbon copy of 
	another, there is little evidence that set the European Union (EU) apart as 
	a platform of evenhandedness and political sensibility. Unlike the United 
	States however, European bias is far more inconspicuous, and purposely so.
 
 No other issue highlights European inconsistency, hypocrisy and even 
	self-defeating policies as that of the EU stance regarding the illegal 
	Jewish settlements in occupied East Jerusalem and the West Bank. All the 
	firm statements about the EU’s commitment to international law pertaining to 
	the illegality of the settlements, all the warnings that the 
	ever-encroaching colonial structures impede any chances – if any exist – of 
	a two-state solution, and all the rest, are no more than declared policies 
	that stand in almost complete contradiction to reality on the ground.
 
 Not only does the EU do little to show real resolve in discouraging the 
	growth of the settlements – which now occupy nearly 42 percent of the total 
	size of the West Bank and East Jerusalem and most of their natural resources 
	– but, in brazenly direct ways, it actually funds the growth of these very 
	settlements. The oddity is that the EU does so while continuing to be a 
	major funder of the Palestinian Authority (PA) and tireless advocate of the 
	two-state solution.
 
 But how can the EU advocate the very ‘solution’ 
	that is itself effectively involved in its demise? Mere hypocrisy - 
	discrepancy between rhetoric and action, or is the EU”s attitude part of a 
	decided foreign policy agenda that is much greater than the political will 
	of individual countries?
 
 Facts and numbers unmistakably demonstrate 
	EU complicity, complacency and direct investment in the Israeli colonial 
	project. In a new report entitled: “Trading Away Peace: How Europe helps 
	sustain illegal Israeli settlements”, twenty-two NGOs expose a most 
	revealing European duplicity. The NGOs included major organizations such as 
	Christian Aid and the International Federation for Human Rights.
 
 “The most recent estimate of the value of EU imports from settlements 
	provided by the Israeli government to the World Bank is $300m (€230m) a 
	year; this is approximately fifteen times the annual value of EU imports 
	from Palestinians,” the report showed. “With more than four million 
	Palestinians and over 500,000 Israeli settlers living in the occupied 
	territory, this means the EU imports over 100 times more per settler than 
	per Palestinian.”
 
 Europe is Israel’s largest trade partner, 
	followed by the United States. Without such major trade routes, the Israeli 
	economy is likely to suffer the consequences of Israeli government policies. 
	Moreover, the amount cited above is likely much larger since much of Israeli 
	products originating in the occupied territories are marketed under the 
	‘Made in Israel’ label, simply because many settlements-based companies have 
	branches in Israel. A case in point is SodaStream, which produces an at-home 
	carbonation device. The vast majority (over 70 percent) of its products are 
	sold in European countries, despite the fact that the manufacturing of the 
	product takes place in Ma’ale Adumim, a Jewish settlement built illegally 
	over Palestinian land in East Jerusalem and constantly in a state of 
	expansion. Companies based in illegal settlements receive generous tax 
	breaks and other incentives, as in using ‘Jewish-only’ roads, which 
	Palestinians are not allowed to use, although the roads are constructed on 
	their land. “Because the company also maintains a factory in Israel,” wrote 
	Eline Gordts in the Huffington Post, it can sell its products under the 
	label ‘Made in Israel’.” Such strategy can be successful in avoiding the 
	formality of branding products made in Jewish settlements as such, which is 
	applied by two European countries.
 
 The EU has little quarrel with 
	being a major market that keeps the settlements prosperous and economically 
	competitive. It is in fact doing its utmost to integrate the Israeli economy 
	into the larger European market. The latest of such efforts took place on 
	October 23 when the European Parliament ratified the EU-Israel Agreement on 
	Conformity Assessment and Acceptance (ACAA). The ratification is barely an 
	isolated gesture, for it is part of ceaseless efforts that go back to the 
	1995 Association Agreement, which supposedly meant to reward Israel for its 
	peacemaking efforts and help it break away from its regional isolation. 
	Despite Israel’s incessant efforts at colonizing much of the West Bank, 
	continued ‘legal’ and physical isolation of occupied East Jerusalem, and 
	protracted siege on Gaza, the EU has done little to underscore any objection 
	to Israel’s violation of international law. “It is worth remembering,” wrote 
	Emanuele Scimia in Asia Times, “that on July 24 the European Council, the 
	EU's decision-making body, already agreed to upgrade trade and diplomatic 
	relations with Israel in more than 60 sectors.”
 
 Rife with 
	contradictions, European countries continue to tread with the same odd logic 
	of supporting settlements and criticizing them at the same time. Three 
	European powers – Germany, Britain and France – joined forces from Berlin on 
	Nov 6 criticizing Israel over its recent decision to permit the construction 
	of over 1,200 units in the West Bank and East Jerusalem.
 
 “Our clear 
	expectation of all sides in the Middle East is that they refrain from 
	anything that will make the resumption of negotiations more difficult,” 
	German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle said. He called Israel’s 
	settlement policy “a hindrance to the peace process.” In fact, this is the 
	tip of the iceberg because according to the NGOs report “over the past two 
	years, settlement expansion has accelerated with more than 16,000 new 
	housing units announced or approved.” That policy is likely to continue with 
	unprecedented ferocity since the right-wing government of Benjamin Netanyahu 
	made it clear that settlements construction is the cornerstone of his 
	policies, especially once he receives a new mandate following the upcoming 
	elections.
 
 The growth of the settlements is accompanied by a 
	parallel destruction of “Palestinian structures - including those funded by 
	European donor support.” Neither is the EU actively defending its declared 
	policies regarding settlements, nor is it taking any meaningful legal action 
	against the systematic Israeli destruction of EU-funded projects in the 
	occupied territories. Even worse, according to the report “some 
	European-owned companies have invested in settlements and related 
	infrastructure or are providing services to them. Cases that have been 
	reported include G4S (UK/Denmark), Alstom (France), Veolia (France), and 
	Heidelberg Cement (Germany) ..”
 
 European policies may seem 
	irrational at the surface – as in, for example, Germany criticizing Israeli 
	settlements, yet permitting Heidelberg Cement to profit from the occupation. 
	But political absurdity is not exactly a trait of European politics, nor can 
	such contradictions last for so long, if political incongruity was not 
	itself the very policy that the EU wishes to pursue.
 
 Indeed, the EU 
	foreign policies regarding Palestine/Israel are different from those of the 
	United States, while the latter is openly one-sided and ‘unconditionally’ 
	so, the former is deviously complicit in ensuring the very occupation that 
	it is supposedly trying to end.
 
 – Ramzy Baroud (ramzybaroud.net) is 
	an internationally syndicated columnist and the editor of 
	PalestineChronicle.com. His latest book is My Father Was a Freedom Fighter: 
	Gaza’s Untold Story.
 
     
 
 
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