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The UN General Assembly has delivered two major defeats to
Israel in the last two weeks. The governments of the U.S. and Israel are
furious.
On Nov. 29, UN member states voted 138-9 with 41 abstentions to advance
Palestine’s status from a non-member “observer entity” to non-member “observer
state.” Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas brought the statehood issue to the
world body arguing that a “yes” vote was the “last chance to save the two-state
solution.”
to
periodically inspect Israel’s nuclear arsenal to determine if it is in
compliance with treaty obligations. (The six “no” voters were the U.S., Israel, Canada, Marshall Islands,
Micronesia and Palau.)
Had these votes been taken in the more powerful Security Council
they would have failed due to a veto by the Obama Administration. So far
Washington has vetoed over 40 resolutions critical of Israel’s actions toward
the Palestinians and its neighbors. At other times the simple threat of an
American veto was sufficient to quash efforts to condemn Israel for what
amounted to war crimes.
In
presenting his resolution Abbas adopted a moderate tone: “We did not come here
seeking to delegitimize a state established years ago, and that is Israel.
Rather we came to affirm the legitimacy of a state that must now achieve its
independence and that is Palestine.” He also declared that “the moment has come for the world to say
clearly: enough of aggression, enough of settlements and occupation.”
The
General Assembly recognizes Palestine as a UN observer state, which is an
important accomplishment, but it is not a state in fact.
Netanyahu and his
ultra-right coalition partners are determined to torpedo the possibility of
conducting honest negotiations leading to two separate states. At the moment
there is one Jewish State (as it describes itself) with a generally unequal
minority of Palestinian citizens, and two attached Palestinian colonies or
reservations — the West Bank and Gaza.
The designation “UN non-member observer state” left Washington fuming and Tel Aviv
apoplectic and vengeful.
“Today’s unfortunate and counterproductive resolution places
further obstacles in the path for peace,” commented American Ambassador Susan
Rice. Netanyahu charged: “This is a meaningless resolution that won’t change
anything on the ground.” He then repeated the excuse that a Palestinian state
is impossible until Israel’s security is ensured — a circumstance that may
never materialize as long as the country is controlled by far right, right and
center right governments devoted to exacerbating the insecurities of the
people.
Although the matter wasn’t publicly addressed, perhaps the main U.S.-Israeli objection
to the ruling is that as an “observer state” the Palestinians will have
standing with the International Criminal Court. As such it will be possible to
launch legal proceedings against Israel for various infractions including war
crimes under international law.
As usual after any affront (such as the UN vote), the
Israeli government retaliated. Just after the observer state vote, the New York
Times reported:
“Israel is moving forward with development of Jewish
settlements in a contentious area east of Jerusalem, defying the United States
by advancing a project that has long been condemned by Washington as
effectively dooming any prospect of a two-state solution to the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict.” The action would limit access to the West Bank
cities of Ramallah and Bethlehem from Jerusalem
Secretary of State Clinton, in a Washington speech after
Israel’s settlement announcement, declared that “These activities set back the
cause of a negotiated peace.” At the same time she criticized the UN vote on
Palestine’s observer state status and said: “America has Israel’s back, and
this month we proved it again.”
The General Assembly’s chastisement of Israel’s clandestine
nuclear weapons and delivery systems came a few days later. It is an open
secret that Israel possesses about 200 such weapons, but does not admit to
having any. Backed by the U.S. it has refused to join the Nuclear
Nonproliferation Treaty (NPT), and brushed aside the UN new vote.
The nuclear resolution also included support for a
conference to ban nuclear weapons from the Middle East. According to the
Associated Press: “All the Arab nations and Iran had planned to attend the
conference in mid-December in Helsinki, Finland, but the United States
announced on Nov. 23 that it wouldn’t take place, citing political turmoil in
the region and Iran’s defiant stance on nonproliferation.
Iran and some Arab
nations countered that the real reason for the cancellation was Israel’s
refusal to attend.”
The U.S. opposes the call for a nuclear–free Middle East
because it wants Israel to continue functioning as its nuclear surrogate in the
Middle East. Possession of the ultimate weapon also makes Israel the military superpower of the
entire region, a designation at thundering odds with its continual pose as an
insecure, vulnerable state.
President Obama, backed forcefully by Netanyahu, has imposed
ever-increasing economic and trade sanctions on Iran because it allegedly seeks
to build a nuclear weapon — a charge refuted by U.S intelligence agencies which
state Iran gave up any nuclear ambitions several years ago. The Tehran
government denies it is making a bomb and there is no proof to substantiate the
U.S.-Israeli claims.
Ironically, Iran is a member of the NPT, allows periodic
inspections by the International Atomic Energy Agency, and has been calling for a ban on nuclear
weapons in the Middle East for years.
Washington could eliminate the “danger” of an Iranian weapon
by supporting a regional ban — which is backed by the entire Arab League as
well as Iran. But the real point is regime change in Iran.
The nuclear issue
provides a justification for killer sanctions and threats of war — actions
intended to create sufficient economic and social crises to topple the
government and perhaps create such havoc a pro-American or neutral regime might
take over.
All of this could end — the plight of the Palestinian
people, the harmful sanctions against Iran and its people, nuclear weapons in
the Middle East, the invasions and forced changes in regime— if the American
people finally bring to power a peace-minded and non-imperialist progressive or
left president and party.
Until then, what you see (and what is concealed or
fabricated for public consumption) is what you get.
December 10, 2012
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