The Wrong Way to Boycott
In contrast to ineffective—or even
unethical—actions targeting Russian culture and individuals, the Palestinian
BDS campaign is a model of how to use boycott and divestment
efforts strategically.
March 22, 2022
https://jewishcurrents.org/the-wrong-way-to-boycott?mc_cid=f149cef79a&mc_eid=6855176881
FOR THOSE OF the US who have
advocated for the use of boycotts, divestment, and sanctions as tools to
advance Palestinian rights only to be told that they are illegitimate, the
international response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine highlights Western
governments’ willingness to embrace these tactics when policymakers identify
with the victims of a crisis. In the three weeks since the war began, 46
countries have imposed
sanctions on Russia, and a broad range of corporate
entities have moved to divest from the country or suspend
operations there. Netflix paused its service;
Starbucks shuttered its coffee shops; American, Delta, and United Airlines
canceled their flights; energy giant Shell severed its partnership with the
Russian Gazprom; financial entities from Deutsche Bank to Goldman Sachs
announced they were “winding down” their business in the country. Meanwhile,
impromptu boycotts of Russian products, or products perceived to be Russian,
have swept Western nations: Americans have sought to show solidarity with
Ukraine by dumping
bottles of vodka and boycotting
small businesses whose Russian-speaking owners
may in fact be, say, Latvian, or Estonian, or even Ukrainian.
Some of these boycotts targeting Russia or Russians
are misplaced, sloppy, ineffective, and even downright unethical. But that
doesn’t mean that BDS tools shouldn’t be deployed in Russia, Palestine, or
elsewhere. If anything, the BDS campaign that has emerged from a call by
Palestinian civil society is a model of what it means to use boycotts,
divestment, and sanctions in a careful and purposeful way. By analyzing the
routinely maligned Palestinian call for BDS, we can derive lessons about the
right and wrong ways to employ these strategies.
The Palestinian call for boycotts, divestment, and
sanctions was launched in 2005, decades after the Nakba of 1948—in which a
significant majority of Palestine’s native inhabitants fled or were expelled
from their homes by Zionist forces—and the military occupation of 1967. During
this time, Palestinians witnessed two things: Israel’s continued campaign of
expropriation and displacement in the entirety of the land between the river
and the sea, and the complicity of the international state system in Israel’s
crimes. Not only do the United States and its allies provide economic and
military support for Israel ($4 billion in military financing annually
from Washington alone), but Western nations led by the US have also prevented
international institutions from seeking
accountability for Israeli crimes. The BDS call was a direct response to the
failure of the international system to deliver justice—a plea for solidarity
from civil society, precisely because states had shut their ears to Palestinian
cries. Organizers hoped this call and the resulting actions would begin to
reshape politics so that one-day state-level action could be possible.
Their approach speaks to a specific strategic
interplay between the “B,” the “D,” and the “S” in the BDS call. Roughly
speaking, boycotts are in the realm of individual action, divestment is in the
realm of corporations or institutions, and sanctions are the domain of
governments and policymakers. In a context where states are adversarial to
accountability for Israel’s human rights violations, it is civil society that
has the most room to create change, applying pressure using the tools of
boycott and divestment. At
the same time, the “B” and the “D” are far less likely than the “S” to impose
significant costs. It is really when states enter the ring with comprehensive
sanctions that the most meaningful pressure can be applied. That doesn’t mean
that boycott and divestment are unimportant, but rather that we should think a
bit differently about the role they play in the overall strategy.
Over years
of following boycott and divestment efforts, I have observed that their impact
far exceeds the dollars and cents they extract in lost revenue. Instead, the
greatest contribution of these initiatives is that they force a conversation
about accountability in spaces where those conversations would otherwise be
absent, moving people to take action. I often think about the many churches
that have passed divestment resolutions in some form, including the
Presbyterian Church USA, the United Church of Christ, and the United Methodist
Church. These decisions followed debates about Israel/Palestine at various
national convenings often spread over the course of many years. How many
people, places, and institutions engaged in thinking about Palestinians and
their rights throughout this process? Whether a resolution ultimately passes or
fails, the political education that takes place in the process of debating the
issue would not be happening without these efforts. The same can be said for
similar processes taking place on
campuses and in private sector
companies. Though those that call for BDS in American institutional life
still face smears and backlash, the hope is that over time, these efforts can
catalyze a broad-based shift in popular opinion that might force a conversation
about accountability among government policymakers. In other words, the “B” and
the “D” help make the “S” possible down the line.
All of this
is fundamentally different from the dynamic that characterizes boycotts,
divestment, and sanctions related to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. States
already had several economic penalties against Russia on the books dating back
to Russia’s annexation of Crimea in 2014. When this most recent invasion began,
greater sanctions were announced from all corners of the globe. Over the course
of the invasion, the White House has issued statements listing a range of steps it has taken,
along with European partners, to sanction Russia: Russian banks were cut off from the international financial system.
Russia’s ability to import and export goods were severely curtailed. Russia’s military and its military
industry were hit with sanctions, as were individual
Russian elites and their families. As a result, Russia’s currency
tanked, interest rates and consumer prices skyrocketed, financial transactions
became increasingly impossible, and many foreign goods began to disappear from
the market. The boycott and divestment efforts we are seeing toward Russia
today on the part of individuals and other non-state actors didn’t help make
these state-level actions possible but rather followed robust state action
triggered by the invasion itself. In other words, instead of being pulled by
civil society, the states are leading the way in applying pressure. That makes
much of the civil society action we are seeing in response to Russia seem
extraneous—and often misguided to boot.
A closer
look at some recent cases reveals their questionable logic. The European Film
Academy boycotted all Russian films. Universities are cutting ties with Russian centers and scholars. An Australian University, for
example, announced it was suspending all ties with Russian universities—presumably simply
because they were Russian and not due to any connection to the government or
the war. Entertainment giants have stopped movies from being released on their
platforms in Russia. Russian restaurants, some owned by Ukrainians, have
been the target of boycotts and even vandalism. Vodka boycotts and deshelving have also become common,
and have affected brands that are not even Russian. Some particularly
egregious cases take the question of who or what constitutes a target to
ridiculous places. Tchaikovsky and Dostoevsky, both dead for half a century before Putin was
born, were the targets of boycotts in England and Italy. The International Cat
Federation even banned Russian cats, perhaps because they failed to speak
out against the Russian president.
As one
headline after another streamed through my timeline over the last few weeks,
each one announcing a different boycott effort, I realized that this is what
it actually looks like when boycotts are motivated by a
haphazard, irrational animus that targets an entire people because of who they
are. Ironically, this is a charge routinely
leveled by supporters of Israeli apartheid against the Palestinian
rights movement for using BDS. The CEO of the Anti-Defamation League, Jonathan
Greenblatt, has insisted that BDS is “a continuation, a modern version
if you will, of an irrational hatred of the Jewish people.” But the contrast
between the efforts to hold Israel accountable and the gratuitous pile-on
against anything Russian, even after economically devastating sanctions have
been implemented, demonstrates just how unfounded that charge is.
The
Palestinian BDS campaign has stressed the importance of not targeting individuals
but rather focusing on institutional complicity with the State of Israel, which
is responsible for carrying out human rights abuses against Palestinians. “BDS
has consistently targeted corporations and institutions based on their
complicity, not identity,” reads a March 15th statement on the movement
website. “BDS does not target ordinary individuals, even if
affiliated to [sic]—as opposed to representing—complicit institutions.” Take,
for example, the recent boycott campaign of the 2022 Sydney Festival in
Australia. The festival took Israeli government sponsorship to fund performance by the Sydney Dance Company of an
Israeli company choreography. The call to boycott was launched in December only after
the festival refused to sever financial ties with the Israeli Embassy and
focused on the institutional connection between the festival and the government
rather than targeting individual artists. Despite the material connection
between the festival and the Israeli government, the boycott effort was predictably slammed by local Israel supporters as—in
the words of one Australian legislator—part of the “long and ugly history” of
boycotts of Jews. Links to government funding or profiteering from Israel’s
human rights abuses are often downplayed or omitted in coverage of boycotts of
Israeli artists, which Israel’s supporters hope to reduce to simple
antisemitism.
IN SOME of the boycotts of Russia, it has been difficult to connect
the target of the boycott to complicity with the actions of the Russian
government. What’s more, state-level sanctions were adopted so fast that
coordinated campaigns were scarcely necessary. There was no noticeable debate,
discussion, or education around government complicity (which existed in some
cases and not others) because no such debate was deemed necessary. If it was
Russian—or perceived to be—it wasn’t welcome.
Those behind
the Russian invasion of Ukraine, an act of aggression and a blatant violation
of international law, should be held accountable, and there is a role for
various social actors to play in doing so. But how it is done matters. The
point of BDS efforts is to try to create change, and this requires targeting
government complicity, not an entire people or a culture. BDS campaigns for
Palestinian rights work to point out how targets are complicit in violations
either by being tied to the government of Israel or by otherwise profiting from
its human rights violations. Despite this clear contrast, the use of BDS
tactics for Palestinian rights has been met with significant
repression. Smear campaigns tar students or human rights activists as
antisemites for calling out Israeli apartheid. Legislation advanced at the
state or federal level aims to restrict the First Amendment right to boycott,
or to make the IHRA definition of antisemitism—which casts some legitimate
criticism of Israel as antisemitic—legally
binding. Israel advocates wage lawfare, using legal
action or the threat of it to intimidate, silence, or tie up in legal defense
the activists and organizations working for justice. These efforts are
spearheaded by a significant, well-resourced collection of interest groups—in
many cases, directly supported by the Israeli government—working to shield
Israel from any form of accountability in the corridors of power.
There is
nothing comparable when it comes to Russia here in the West, which helps to
explain why Americans are cheering on sloppy efforts to target Russian actors
while ethical BDS efforts for Palestinian rights are being repressed. Perhaps
just as significant, the United States is itself deeply complicit in the crimes
being committed against Palestinians by Israel; it is far easier to point the finger
at others than to look in the mirror. This is an important reason why US
sanctions on Israel would be so effective, perhaps even more so than US
sanctions on Russia. Russia expects US sanctions for its behavior while Israel
has been conditioned to expect only US support. Criticism from adversaries is
much easier to dismiss than criticism from friends.
The ease
with which Americans have joined the pile-on against anything perceived to be
Russian demonstrates the difference between performative outrage and
solidarity. Solidarity requires sacrifice—never as significant as the
sacrifices of those you are in solidarity with, but sacrifice nonetheless. It
is not supposed to be easy. If it were, it wouldn’t be necessary. The
Palestinian call for international solidarity comes directly from Palestinian
civil society to international civil society, so that people and institutions
might push the international state system to provide justice for a population
living under Israeli apartheid. Who, exactly, has asked you to boycott Russian
cats—and to what end?
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario