Netanyahu wants
the UN out of the way to be able to achieve his objective
June 14, 2017
thenational.ae
Israeli and
US officials are in the process of jointly pre-empting Donald Trump’s supposed
"ultimate deal" to end the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. They hope to
demote the Palestinian issue to a footnote in international diplomacy.
The
conspiracy – a real one – was much in evidence last week during a visit to the
region by Nikki Haley, Washington’s envoy to the United Nations. Her escort was
Danny Danon, her Israeli counterpart and a fervent opponent of Palestinian
statehood.
Mr Danon
makes Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu look moderate. He has backed Israel
annexing the West Bank and ruling over Palestinians apatheid-style. Ms Haley
appears unperturbed. During a meeting with Mr Netanyahu, she told him that the
UN was "a bully to Israel". She has warned the powerful Security
Council to focus on Iran, Syria, Hamas and Hizbollah, instead of Israel.
To protect
its tiny ally, Washington is threatening to cut billions in US funding to the
world body, plunging it into crisis and jeopardising peacekeeping and
humanitarian operations.
On the way
to Israel, Ms Haley stopped at the UN’s Human Rights Council in Geneva,
demanding it end its "pathological" opposition to Israel’s decades of
occupation and human rights violations – or the US would pull out of the
agency.
Washington
has long pampered Israel, giving it millions of dollars each year to buy
weapons to oppress Palestinians, and using its veto to block UN resolutions
enforcing international law. Expert UN reports such as a recent one on Israel’s
apartheid rule over Palestinians have been buried. But worse is to come. Now
the framework of international laws and institutions established after the
Second World War is at risk of being dismembered.
That danger
was highlighted on Sunday, when it emerged that Mr Netanyahu had urged Ms Haley
to dismantle another UN agency much loathed by Israel. UNRWA cares for more
than five million Palestinian refugees across the region.
Since the
1948 war, Israel has refused to allow these refugees to return to their lands,
now in Israel, forcing them to live in miserable and overcrowded camps awaiting
a peace deal that never arrives. These dispossessed Palestinians still depend
on UNRWA for education, health care and social services.
UNRWA, Mr
Netanyahu says, "perpetuates" rather than solves their problems. He
prefers that they become the responsibility of the UN High Commissioner for
Refugees (UNHCR), which looks after all other refugee populations.
His demand
is a monumental U-turn, 70 years in the making. In fact, it was Israel that in
1948 insisted on a separate UN refugee agency for the Palestinians.
UNRWA was
created to prevent the Palestinians falling under the charge of UNHCR’s
forerunner, the International Refugee Organisation. Israel was afraid that the
IRO, formed in the immediate wake of the Second World War, would give
Palestinian refugees the same prominence as European Jews fleeing Nazi
atrocities.
Israel did
not want the two cases compared, especially as they were so intimately
connected. It was the rise of Nazism that bolstered the Zionist case for a
Jewish state in Palestine and Jewish refugees who were settled on lands from
which Palestinians had just been expelled by Israel.
Also, Israel
was concerned that the IRO’s commitment to the principle of repatriation might
force it to accept back the Palestinian refugees.
Israel’s
hope then was precisely that UNRWA would not solve the Palestinian refugee
problem; rather, it would resolve itself. The idea was encapsulated in a
Zionist adage: "The old will die and the young forget."
But millions
of Palestinian descendants still clamour for a right of return. If they cannot
forget, Mr Netanyahu prefers that the world forget them.
As bloody
wars grip the Middle East, the best way to achieve that aim is to submerge the
Palestinians among the world’s 65 million other refugees. Why worry about the
Palestinian case when there are millions of Syrians newly displaced by war?
But UNRWA
poses a challenge, because it is so deeply entrenched in the region and insists
on a just solution for Palestinian refugees.
UNRWA’s huge
staff includes 32,000 Palestinian administrators, teachers and doctors, many
living in camps in the West Bank – Palestinian territory Mr Netanyahu and Mr
Danon hunger for. The UN’s presence there is an impediment to annexation.
On Monday Mr
Netanyahu announced his determination to block Europe from funding Israeli
human rights organisations, the main watchdogs in the West Bank and a key data
source for UN agencies. He now refuses to meet any world leader who talks to
these rights groups.
With Mr
Trump in the White House, a crisis-plagued Europe ever-more toothless and the
Arab world in disarray, Mr Netanyahu wants to seize this chance to clear the UN
out of the way too.
Global
institutions such as the UN and the international law it upholds were created
after the Second World War to protect the weakest and prevent a recurrence of
the Holocaust’s horrors.
Today, Mr
Netanyahu is prepared to risk it all, tearing down the post-war international
order, if this act of colossal vandalism will finally rid him of the
Palestinians.
Jonathan
Cook is an independent journalist in Nazareth
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