By David May
Friday, December 07, 2018
On Thursday the United Nations had an opportunity to
speak with moral clarity and denounce the terrorist group Hamas. Instead, the
General Assembly (UNGA) rejected a U.S.-sponsored resolution that called for an
end to violence, encouraged intra-Palestinian reconciliation, and condemned
terrorism.
A disappointed Nikki Haley, U.S. ambassador to the U.N.,
lamented, “Over the years, the UN has voted to condemn Israel over 500 times .
. . and not one single resolution condemning Hamas. That, more than anything
else, is a condemnation of the United Nations itself.”
Moreover, the U.N. indicated that Jews’ praying at the
Western Wall is more worthy of condemnation than Hamas’s lobbing rockets
indiscriminately at Israeli civilians. The UNGA passed another resolution
calling for an end to “Israel’s occupation . . . including of East Jerusalem,”
the location of Judaism’s holiest shrine.
This was the seventh anti-Israel resolution in as many
days. Last week, on November 29, the U.N. celebrated its annual Day of
Solidarity with the Palestinian People with a series of anti-Israel speakers
and resolutions highly critical of the Jewish state.
Marc Lamont Hill, one of the speakers, endorsed violence
against Israelis and a boycott of the Jewish state and called for a “free
Palestine from the river to the sea.” That slogan is widely understood to be a
euphemism for destroying Israel, and it led to his termination from CNN.
Speakers at these events have called for boycotts of
Israel since at least 2002, with a particularly egregious appeal issued in 2008
by Miguel D’Escoto Brockmann, president of the UNGA.
It is somewhat odd that November 29 serves as the day on
which the U.N. directs even more scrutiny against the Jewish state. On that day
in 1947, the UNGA voted to adopt Resolution 181, which called for a partition
of the British Mandate of Palestine into two states – one for the Jews and one
for the Arabs. Had this been realized 71 years ago, the Palestinians could have
averted decades of statelessness and both parties could have prevented
thousands of unnecessary deaths. Instead, November 29 is a constant reminder of
what could have been.
At the time, the Jewish leadership, for the most part,
supported the partition plan. The Palestinians, on the other hand, roundly
condemned and rejected the move. The Grand Mufti of Jerusalem, Haj Amin
al-Husseini, a major Palestinian leader and collaborator with Hitler, later
said in an interview that he would fight against partition and “would continue
fighting until the Zionists were annihilated.”
Seemingly unaware of this history, around the 30th anniversary of Resolution 181, in 1977, the
UNGA passed Resolution 32/40 B, making November 29 Palestinian Solidarity Day.
There was no acknowledgement that Arab rejection had undermined the partition
plan. Indeed, some in the extremist Palestinian camp suggest that this date was
specifically chosen as a rejection of Israel’s right to exist, arguing that the
decision to divide the land was a calamity. It appears that the U.N. is
endorsing this view.
In the same resolution that created the day of
solidarity, the UNGA voted to create the Division for Palestinian Rights (DPR).
This body has served as a U.N.-sponsored and U.N.-funded propaganda arm,
educating people globally about Palestinian rights while simultaneously
vilifying the state of Israel.
The U.N. has subsequently used November 29 (or a nearby
date, depending on each year’s scheduling) to hold events to express solidarity
with the Palestinians. These U.N.-sponsored events often devolve into
Israel-bashing sessions, with U.N.-commissioned reports that investigate
alleged Israeli abuses of Palestinians and speakers who charge Israel with an
array of horrific allegations, including false accusations of war crimes and
apartheid.
Capping the Solidarity Day programming every year, the
UNGA passes recycled resolutions that single out and castigate Israel. Among
these resolutions is an admonishment of Israel for its treatment of Arabs in
the formerly Syrian Golan. It risibly urges Israel to return the territory to
the murderous Assad regime, while omitting any mention of Syria’s civil war or
the deaths of hundreds of thousands in that conflict. Other resolutions refer
to the Temple Mount only by its Arabic name, ignoring its Jewish ties.
The most significant U.N. vote on Palestinian Solidarity
Day took place in 2012, when the UNGA accepted the “State of Palestine” as a
non-member observer, a major milestone in the Palestine 194 campaign. The
Palestinian effort to become the 194th member of the UNGA seeks international
recognition without conducting negotiations with Israel and making the
requisite compromises to achieve peace. Palestine 194 is extremely popular
among Palestinians. But the disparity between sweeping paper gains at the U.N.
and the inevitable tangible compromises the Palestinians will have to make
hardens the Palestinian position and makes peace less likely.
By continuously condemning Israel and encouraging
Palestinian maximalist demands, the U.N. harms prospects for peace. It only
makes matters worse by giving terrorists such as Hamas a free pass. Thursday
was a major test for the United Nations in the Israeli–Palestinian peace
process and it failed miserably.
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