Pompeo in Israel: Three announcements that cement 'apartheid'
In final
weeks of Trump presidency, US secretary of state issues decrees that blurred line
between Israel and the Palestinian territories, it occupies
https://www.middleeasteye.net/news/mike-pompeo-israel-bds-west-bank-apartheid
By
in
Washington
Published date: 19 November
2020
With just two months left before the Biden administration
takes office, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo made a slew of announcements on
Thursday that blurs the line between the state of Israel and the
Palestinian territories that it occupies.
After a visit to
an illegal West Bank settlement, the top US diplomat issued a directive to
identify organizations that boycott companies doing "business in Israel or
in any territory controlled by Israel".
He said the State Department
would ensure that no government funds went to such groups - a move that would
disadvantage NGOs that do not operate in the settlements, in accordance with
international law.
In a separate decree, Pompeo
said exported products from parts of the occupied West Bank must be labeled as
'Made in Israel'.
In the latest effort, critics
say, is a push to dissolve the Palestinian quest for statehood and cement the
reality of total Israeli rule over the lands and peoples between the
Mediterranean Sea and Jordan River - regardless of Israel's plans to officially
annex parts of the West Bank.
Here are three key takeaways from Pompeo's announcements:
Penalizing boycott
of settlements
The outgoing administration of President Donald Trump has long voiced
opposition to the Palestinian-led Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions (BDS)
movement and tried to conflate criticism
of Israel with antisemitism.
On Thursday, Pompeo issued an actionable order to that effect - one that
will not only punish groups that boycott Israel but also those that discourage
business with settlements.
Pompeo directed the State Department's special envoy to combat
antisemitism to identify organizations that oppose trade "with Israel or
persons doing business in Israel or in any territory controlled by
Israel".
"To ensure that Department funds are not spent in a manner that is
inconsistent with our government’s commitment to combat anti-Semitism, the
State Department will review the use of its funds to confirm that they are not
supporting the Global BDS Campaign," read a statement by the State
Department.
"Further, the State Department will conduct a review of
options consistent with applicable law to ensure that its foreign assistance
funding is not provided to foreign organizations engaged in anti-Semitic BDS
activities."
Lara Friedman, president of
the Foundation for Middle East Peace (FMEP), said the move was unprecedented in
US policy. "This is a brand new ground. There's nothing comparable to
it."
Friedman told MEE that most
organizations would not be able to certify that they don't distinguish between
settlements and Israel.
"There are global NGOs
that work around the world - and consistent with international law, with EU
policy, with the values of human rights and civil rights, they differentiate
between Israel and settlements," she said.
"If this policy is
implemented as it's articulated by the State Department, it means that those
organizations will not be able to be partners with the US anywhere in the
world."
Jonathan Kuttab, a
Palestinian-American attorney specializing in international law called the
push a "deliberate effort" to prevent non-violent opposition to the
occupation.
"They want to make the
occupation so standard, so legal, so legitimate that those who question the
legality of the settlements become themselves under attack; they become
themselves criminal; they're called antisemitic; their activity is called hate
speech," Kuttab told MEE. "It's a way of turning international
law on its head."
Made in Israel'
In keeping with the effort to obscure the distinction between Israel and
the Palestinian territories that it controls, Pompeo said the labeling of
exports from the West Bank will adhere to the US administration's
"reality-based foreign policy approach".
Not all settlement products will be made in Israel, but all exports from
the West Bank's Area C - whether made by Palestinians or Israelis
- will be branded as such.
The Oslo Accords split the West Bank into three parts, with Area C -
which makes up about 60 percent of the territory - being under almost total
Israeli control, with the promise of gradual transfer of power to the
Palestinian Authority.
But in the years since the pact was signed in 1995, Israel only
tightened its grip on the area and transferred greater numbers of its civilian
population to the occupied territory in violation of international law.
Kuttab said choosing Area C was not accidental - it is the
section with the most land and the fewest Palestinians, whereas Areas A
and B has "too many non-Jews" in them according to US and
Israeli rationale.
"Labeling the products of Area C as being part of Israel is
almost the last nail in the coffin of the opposition to annexation,"
Kuttab added.
He stressed that the
annexation efforts are a major threat to the post World War II global order,
which was founded partly on the principle that states cannot acquire others'
land by force.
"Iraq cannot annex
Kuwait; Russia cannot annex parts of Ukraine. The only exception seems to be
that Israel and the United States want to be above international law."
Friedman said Pompeo's
statement, in effect, annexes both the land and the people who live in Area C.
"This is essentially the US recognizing Israeli sovereignty and Area C -
all of it."
She added that the move
exposes the two competing positions of pro-Israel advocates in the US who don't
meaningfully oppose annexation as they hold on to the two-state solution and
vehemently push back against the idea of a single state with equal rights.
"Palestinians living in
Area C do not enjoy the same rights as Jewish Israelis in Area C - let alone
Israelis inside Israel. Full stop. They live under a different legal regime.
That is apartheid," Friedman said.
"I mean it's the
strangest thing: We actually have unprecedented clarity from the US
administration in terms of seeing the West Bank as permanently part of Israel
and saying it.
At the same time, we still have a position which says: If you are
someone who believes in one state from the river to the sea with equal rights
for Israelis and Palestinians, you're an antisemite and you're
anti-Israel."
Separating the West Bank
from Gaza
In the same statement about labeling exports from Israel-Palestine,
Pompeo ordered that Palestinian products from Areas A and B must be labeled
separately from Palestinian products from Gaza.
"Goods in areas of the West Bank where the Palestinian Authority
maintains relevant authorities shall be marked as products of 'West Bank' and
goods produced in Gaza will be marked as products of 'Gaza'," the State
Department said.
"Under the new approach, we will no longer accept 'West
Bank/Gaza' or similar markings, in recognition that Gaza and the West Bank
are politically and administratively separate and should be
treated accordingly."
Kuttab said the move aims to dismiss the idea of distinguishable
Palestinian territories in the land in order to push for "the total
erasure of the Palestinian identity".
The international law expert
faulted Palestinian leadership for reaching that point by focusing on the West
Bank and Gaza instead of a national struggle that includes Palestinian citizens
of Israel and Palestinian refugees across the world.
"And because of our
divisions, we also separated Gaza and the West Bank," he said, referring
to the feud between Hamas, which controls the Gaza Strip, and the Fatah-led
Palestinian Authority in the West Bank.
"We have participated in
this process of fragmentation and elimination of our identities."
For her part, Friedman said
the effort to treat the West Bank and Gaza as two separate entities have been
ongoing for years, noting that the right to move between the two Palestinian
areas are non-existent, even for humanitarian purposes.
"Under Oslo, Israel
agreed that the West Bank and the Gaza Strip would be considered one integral
territory," she said. "In the years since Oslo - and particularly in
the years since the Second Intifada and then the various Gaza wars - Israel has
effectively cut Gaza off completely from the West Bank."
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