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 Growing Isolation:  Boycott of Israel Crosses to Governments' Realm
	   By Ramzy Baroud Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, September 24, 2012 
 Should Israel be worried? Very much so, for the age of total 
	impunity is coming to an end. Critical voices of the Israeli occupation and 
	mistreatment of Palestinians are rising - not only within civil society 
	circles, but among world governments as well.
 
 The picture may seem 
	grim if seen through the prisms of the recent US Republican and Democratic 
	National Conventions. But the world is not the United States’ government, 
	which is defined by self-serving politics and a quisling corporate media 
	that often places Israeli interests over those of the US itself. Now with 
	the decline of the US as an economic superpower, and as other countries and 
	regional blocs jockey for an advanced position in the new world order, 
	Israel is sure to suffer further isolation in coming years.
 
 Almost 
	daily new evidence is emerging to demonstrate this increasingly stark 
	reality. Israel’s friends are fully aware of this, as are Israeli 
	politicians. The emerging new realization is that money and power are rarely 
	enough to buy legitimacy. South Africa is expectedly leading the way towards 
	that new global paradigm shift, and others countries are following suit.
 
 Recently, South Africa’s cabinet passed a decision requiring Israel to 
	distinguish between products made in Israel and those made in illegal Jewish 
	colonies in the West Bank. The decision was both politically sound and 
	morally consistent with the country’s anti-apartheid legacy. It was also a 
	natural progression of South Africa’s policies, which have reflected 
	impatience with Israel through the years.
 
 It is clear that Israel 
	has chosen the apartheid option, not just as a de facto outcome of its 
	military policies, but through a decided legal and political pattern. South 
	Africa’s decision, however, was not just motivated by political necessity. 
	Veterans of the anti-apartheid struggle have had numerous influences on the 
	country’s civil society. Even the new generation is intoned with a freedom 
	discourse that unites most sectors of society. ‘Freedom for Palestine’ was a 
	natural fit in that powerful discourse and no amount of Israeli propaganda 
	has been enough to deter South Africans from standing in solidarity with 
	Palestinians. The feelings are, of course, mutual.
 
 The total output 
	of Israeli trade with South Africa was modest to begin with. Since 2009, 
	trade volumes dipped significantly, and political ties became colder than 
	ever. This had much to do with the Israel war on Gaza (2008-09) and what was 
	seen as an act of Israeli piracy against the Turkish ship the Mavi Marmara 
	in May 31, 2011. South Africa, along with few other countries, withdrew its 
	ambassador from Israel in protest of the deadly raid which killed nine peace 
	activists.
 
 The matter is of greater significance than dollars and 
	cents. The latter will become a major factor when a global boycott reaches a 
	critical mass. The real danger is the precedence that South Africa continues 
	to set, which will provide other countries with legal and political 
	references.
 
 Soon after South Africa’s decision – which followed 
	remarks made by various officials discouraging their nationals from visiting 
	Israel, and was followed by another major university voting for divestment 
	and boycott – pro-Israel officials have tried to mobilize. Denis McShane, 
	British MP and Policy Council member for ‘Labour Friends of Israel’, reacted 
	by making dismaying and historically inconsistent parallels between South 
	Africa and Nazi Germany. Writing in the Jewish Chronicle on September 6, 
	Moira Schneider said that MacShane “likened the boycott of Israeli products 
	to the kauf nicht bei Juden imperative of Nazi Germany.”
 
 “Criticism 
	of Israel is perfectly legitimate, but we have to be clear that the new 
	antisemitic trope is beyond the pale of legitimate criticism,” he was quoted 
	as saying. “The notion of Israel as an apartheid state is deliberately 
	promoted because an apartheid state cannot exist.”
 
 While the flawed 
	logic has been uttered numerous times in the past, MacShane’s alarm now can 
	be explained outside the political context of South Africa, but rather in 
	terms of what is happening in his own country. Indeed, there has been a 
	string of statements pointing at efforts underway in several European 
	countries to enact laws relevant to the illegality of the Jewish 
	settlements.
 
 Some recent statements include British Foreign Office 
	Minister Alistair Burt "dropp(ing) the strongest hint yet that the UK may be 
	moving towards a ban on goods from illegal Israeli settlements." (The 
	Electronic Intifada, July 5, 2012). Towards the end of last year, Ireland's 
	Minister of Foreign Affairs and Trade renewed his country's commitment to 
	the exclusion of settlement products from the EU. More recently, on 
	September 5, Israel's daily Haaretz reported on the Norwegian Foreign 
	Minister's comments regarding the import of goods produced in the 
	settlements, “which we consider illegal according to international law.”
 
 Still more, on September 7, The Jerusalem Post reported that “the 
	European Union is considering instituting a ban on imports of products made 
	in Israeli settlements, a Greek Foreign Ministry official was quoted as 
	saying to a group of Israeli and Palestinian journalists in Athens...”
 
 Such a shift in language would never have been achieved without the civil 
	society mobilization that occurred in several countries. As in South Africa, 
	governments are being held accountable by vigilant and tireless groups, 
	collectively pushing for Boycotts, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS). They will 
	not reduce their efforts until Israel changes course, respects international 
	law, and frees Palestinians from decades-long military bondage.
 
 Unable to fathom the global paradigm shift, Israeli politicians are 
	responding with an incoherent strategy. Israeli Foreign Ministry spokesman, 
	Yigal Palmor accused the government of South Africa of ‘exclusion and 
	discrimination.’ The Israeli government decried the “blatant 
	discrimination,” claiming it was “based on national and political 
	distinction”. Deputy Foreign Minister Danny Ayalon went even further, 
	accusing South Africa of exactly that which was alleged of 
	Israel.“Unfortunately it turns out that the changes that took place in South 
	Africa over the years have not brought about basic changes in the country, 
	and it remains an apartheid state,” Ayalon said (Jerusalem Post, August 23).
 
 But angry words aside, the world is changing. Israel, however, is 
	digressing into a dark corner where racism and apartheid are still applied 
	with impunity. Many Israelis are refusing to attest to their country’s fall 
	into the abyss. A wakeup call can only arrive when the world treats the 
	Israeli government in the same way that South Africa’s apartheid regime was 
	once treated.
 
 - Ramzy Baroud (www.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 (Pluto Press, London.)
 
 
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