How ‘long-standing’ and ‘balanced’ is NZ's position?
How ‘long-standing’ and ‘balanced’ is
New Zealand’s position?
Thousands of New Zealanders have expressed their concerns to the Government regarding UN Resolution 2334, in letters, petitions, protests, and in comments on social media. Foreign Minister Murray McCully’s response in the NZ Herald today merely serves to confirm that he is out of touch with his constituency, many of whom were traditional National supporters. He has mis-read, mis-interpreted or is deliberating ignoring those concerns and has continued his diatribe that settlements are the obstacle to peace in the Middle East.
As Bill English headed off to Europe for an official visit he made the following comment: "But the position of the New Zealand Government should have been well understood ... we have got a realistic understanding of the pressures in the Middle East. That's why in our time on the Security Council we wanted to see some advancement on the Middle East peace process. And the resolution in that sense is pretty balanced."
McCully has said he thinks resolution
2334 is “balanced and fair”, that there was nothing new
in it and that sponsoring and voting for it was in line with
“longstanding policy positions”.
So, McCully and
English are standing by the oft-repeated lines that the
resolution is consistent with New Zealand policy and that
New Zealand takes a balanced position on the
Palestinian/Israeli conflict. Repeating these mantras does
not make them become any more convincing. Upon scrutiny,
they are simply not borne out by the facts. Indeed, one
must question whether anyone saying this has actually read
the resolution and understands its implications. The
resolution is patently not balanced and goes well beyond the
recent New Zealand policy of condemning settlements.
UN
Watch’s Hillel Neuer has outlined why UN resolution 2334
cannot be considered a balanced text. Here is a summary of his letter.
Resolution
2334:
• Blames Israel as a “major obstacle” to
peace, yet says nothing about the Palestinian refusal to
negotiate directly with Israel, and its rejection of
countless peace offers.
• Sends a message to the
Palestinians that they need not negotiate, but can instead
just wait for the U.N. to give them everything they
demand.
• Does not encourage direct, bilateral
negotiations between Palestinians and Israelis because there
is no need for the Palestinians to change their policy of non-engagement.
• Has
designated Jerusalem’s Temple Mount and Western Wall, the
holiest sites in Judaism, together with the Jewish Quarter
as “Occupied Palestinian Territory” without recognising
the Jewish connection.
• Implicitly encourages
campaigns seeking to boycott Israeli products, companies and
citizens by calling on UN member states to distinguish
between the territory of the State of Israel and the
territories occupied since 1967.
• Supports the
scandalous 2004 Advisory Opinion of the World Court, which
denied Israel’s right to defend itself.
• Encourages
efforts to prosecute Israeli leaders and officers before the
International Criminal Court, by effectively ruling that all
settlement activity is illegal.
• Has re-defined the
1949 Armistice Lines as final borders, while the 1967
cornerstone resolution 242 deliberately refrained from doing
so.
Further, this resolution can hardly be called
balanced when:
• Defenders of Resolution 2334 insist
that the resolution condemned Palestinian terrorism and
incitement, while in fact the actual text nowhere attributes
these crimes to Palestinians. On the contrary, every day the
U.N. itself is complicit with Palestinian incitement when
its UNRWA school teachers and principals are
posting pictures of Hitler and videos of Hamas terror attacks on their
Facebook pages.
• Israel’s leading center-left
figures and proponents of a two-state solution—including
Isaac Herzog and Tzipi Livni—have
unanimously condemned this resolution as dangerous and
harmful to peace, and when, by contrast, 2334 was cheered by not only Abbas and Fatah, but
also by Hamas and Islamic Jihad.
With
regard to the history of New Zealand’s dealings with
the Arab-Palestinian-Israeli conflict, our policy has
been to take an ‘evenhanded’ approach. This effectively
has meant not favouring one side over the other. However,
past leaders have been more willing to hold Palestinians to
account for terrorism and to support direct negotiation
between the parties. While settlement activity has in more
recent times been mentioned, it certainly didn’t attract
the unbalanced (some might say obsessive) focus that it does
today.
McCully claims that the settlement issue has become more serious, citing the Quartet report of July 2016. However, there was nothing particularly new about that report. The report also gave serious attention to the issue of Palestinian terrorism and incitement, the illicit arms build-up and militant activity and the continuing absence of Palestinian unity. These factors were hardly addressed in Resolution 2334. The Quartet report did claim that settlements were steadily eroding the viability of the two-state solution. However it has been shown that there is virtually no difference between the amount of land Israel controls today and the amount it controlled during the negotiations with the PLO in 2000. If a two-state solution was possible then, it is not significantly more difficult today.
The facts on the ground show that the halting of settlement activity or the withdrawal of settlements has made no difference to the intransigence of the Palestinians to accept peace offers. The unilateral withdrawal of Israel from Gaza is a prime example of this, as is the ten-month Israeli moratorium on settlement construction in early 2010, following which the Palestinians still refused to negotiate. Does anyone truly believe that if Israel stop building homes tomorrow peace will be achieved?
The practice of drawing moral equivalence between construction and terrorism is absurd enough, but with Resolution 2334, terrorism is passed over very lightly, with vague terminology, and treated as if both parties carry equal culpability, while settlements are treated in a detailed and comprehensive manner. This clearly is not an even-handed approach. Some would say it is morally reprehensible.
The UN’s current obsession with settlement activity, supported by New Zealand, is certainly not reflected in New Zealand’s historical record.
In 2010 in a statement to the UN General Assembly Foreign Minister Murray McCully mentioned settlements as an impediment to negotiations but stopped short of an outright condemnation - and even then he was still calling for direct negotiations, saying "We believe that direct negotiations, with both parties at the same table, are the only way to resolve the conflict. … We ask that Israel heed the international community's unanimous call to extend the moratorium on settlements and enable an atmosphere for direct negotiations to continue. We also agree with President Obama that resolution of the Middle East conflict is not just the responsibility of Israel and Palestine."
The first time McCully was reported as singling out Israel for undermining the peace process was in March last year in his speech at the Lowy Institute in Sydney where he stated that the viability of the two-state solution between Israel and Palestine was vanishing because of Israel's settlement activity.
McCully’s mantra about settlement activity being the root of the conflict has continued since then. However, it is hardly a “longstanding policy position”. The approach of calling for both sides to negotiate, without pre-conditions IS longstanding and conducive to peace as is the affirmation of Israel’s right to exist. Surely to any clear-minded person, the latter point is fundamental, and yet the Palestinians still struggle to accept that very basic point.
McCully has also failed to condemn Palestinian terrorism.
This week’s terror attack in Jerusalem serves to underline
the true nature of the conflict and our government's stance
on it. The truck ramming of Israeli soldiers which led to
four dead and 16 injured has been condemned by, among
others, Australia, UK, USA, and Canada, and the Berlin
Brandenburg Gate and Paris City Hall have been lit up with
the Israeli flag. And from New Zealand...nothing. This
shouldn't be surprising, since McCully can't even bring
himself to utter the T-word when it comes to
Israel.
Another leader who has failed to condemn the
attack, is the Palestinian Authority’s Mahmoud
Abbas.
However, it has been met with praise by Palestinian leaders. Hamas spokesman Hazaem Qassem lauded the attack on his Facebook page, saying "These operations demonstrate that all attempts to bypass the resistance or to thwart it will fail every time…. The continuous operations in the West Bank and Jerusalem prove that the Jerusalem Intifada is not an isolated event, but rather a decision by the Palestinian people to revolt until it attains its freedom and liberation from the Israeli occupation.”
The attack was presented by the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine as the Palestinians’ “legal right anchored in international law and all the resolutions of the international bodies."
In other words, it’s business as usual for the Palestinians who feel even more emboldened to attain their goals through violent means.
Perhaps the UN, the 70 countries meeting at the upcoming Paris Peace Summit, and New Zealand’s leaders should take the advice of ex-Labour MK, Dr Einat Wilf: "If New Zealand’s Foreign Minister wants to make an effective contribution, he should address the root cause of the conflict: the persistent Arab-Palestinian denial of the universal right of the Jewish people to self determination in their historic homeland. Sadly, instead, New Zealand’s Foreign Minister repeated the unfounded claim that, “the viability of the two-state solution is disappearing as a consequence of Israeli settlement activity”.
What we see is a New Zealand Government which is incrementally changing policy relating to Israel, while presenting it as long-standing and balanced. Worryingly, we are moving further away from our Western democratic allies, and closer to theocracies and dictatorships which do not espouse and practice liberal values and principles. A refusal to condemn Palestinians for terrorism or identify the real root cause of the conflict, an obsession with settlements as the major obstacle to peace, denying Jewish rights to East Jerusalem, and pre-determining the borders of a Palestinian state, are in fact major departures from New Zealand policy, and completely one-sided. Either our leaders are ill-informed, or they think those who they purport to represent are.
New Zealand’s approach to the
Arab-Palestinian-Israeli conflict - a brief
overview
In 1997 Prime Minister Jim Bolger made a statement that "This
latest act of terrorism undermines the latest attempts to
reopen negotiations between the Israelis and Palestinians."
There was no mention of settlements even though they were almost identical in land size to
today.
Similarly, Foreign Minister Don McKinnon spoke about the dangers of terrorism and the
need for negotiations in 1998. He didn’t utter a word
about Israeli buildings but appealed to both parties to
stand steady in their commitment to the peace process,
particularly in the face of a spate of terrorist attacks in
Israel.
Under Helen Clark in 2000, Foreign Minister Phil Goff spoke out
about the Palestinian attacks without mentioning settlement
activity and affirming that "The only lasting victory will
be one brought about at the negotiating table."
In 2001,
Goff told the world that “New Zealand
condemns unequivocally the use of terror…” and
reiterated that “Only a negotiated agreement between the
parties, and the coming into being of a viable Palestinian
state, can bring [a durable peace] about.” There was
mention of a “vicious cycle of brutality” and of
“the Israeli blockade” but no mention of settlement
activity.
Goff condemned Palestinian terror again in
2002 and said “The test for leadership on either side
is whether it has the strength and the courage to commit
itself to return to negotiation to find a peaceful
solution.” This time, there was mention of settlements,
with Goff stating ““Both sides would need to compromise.
Israel would have to dismantle illegal settlements on the
West Bank and Gaza. The Palestinians would have to
compromise on the right of return of refugees to
Israel.”
There was strong condemnation of terror from Goff
later in 2002 - "New Zealand utterly condemns the murder
of seven innocent Israeli civilians by two suicide
bombers.” but no mention of settlement activity once more.
In 2003, Goff was optimistic about the three-phase Roadmap for
Peace. Phase I of that plan was “Ending Terror And
Violence, Normalising Palestinian Life, and Building
Palestinian Institutions” and nowhere in the press release
was there mention specifically of Israeli settlements - only
“Permanent Status Agreement” as part of Phase
III.
There was mention of settlement activity when Goff made a statement following the 2004
Advisory Opinion of the World Court. However, the focus
of his condemnation was the security fence, not the
settlements.
The focus of Prime Minister Helen Clark’s 2006
statement was violence and there was no mention of
settlements. She said “The message to Hamas and Hezbollah
must be that confrontation and violence are destroying the
prospects for a peace settlement in the Middle East.” and
“Israel must heed the many calls to restrain itself and
allow full and immediate access to relief efforts.” at the
same time as announcing New Zealand would contribute
$500,000 to the OCHA flash appeal and lift its annual
allocation to UNRWA from $300,000 to $1 million.
There
was also no mention of settlement activity in 2008 when
Foreign Affairs Minister Winston Peters praised the
Hamas-Israel ceasefire. Peters did, however, once again mention New Zealand’s
support for “the negotiation of a just, enduring and
comprehensive peace settlement in the Middle
East”.
ends