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Israel and US walk out of UN conference on racism
By Chris Marsden
6 September 2001
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The joint US-Israeli walkout from the United Nations conference
on racism in Durban, South Africa was something of a foregone
conclusion. It was a stage-managed affair, the purpose of which
was to portray all opposition to the Zionist states persecution
of the Palestinians as inherently racist.
The original draft resolution to the UN conference stated its
deep concern at the increase of racist practices
of Zionism and anti-Semitism and spoke of the emergence
of movements based on racism and discriminatory ideas, in
particular the Zionist movement, which is based on racial superiority.
It made direct criticisms of Israeli repression against the Palestinians
on the West Bank as a new kind of apartheid, a crime against
humanity.
The US and Israel insisted on the removal of any direct reference
to Israel. Prior to the walkout, the two delegations had been
offered the prospect of a compromise resolution, drawn up by Finland
and South Africa in consultation with the Arab states. Having
toned down any specific criticisms of Israel, press reports indicated
that the new version had even been pronounced acceptable to Washington
by US Congressman Tom Lantos, who was part of the delegation.
But events proved that there was no intention to compromise by
the US and Israel.
Discrediting the Durban conference was a top priority for the
Zionist regime and its US backers because it was seen as an arena
through which the Palestinians could score a propaganda coup,
when everything else was going against them.
The Palestinians have found themselves isolated in the face
of the USs tacit support for Likud Prime Minister Ariel
Sharons military offensive against the West Bank and Gaza.
They have had no practical support from the Arab states, which
have maintained their own relations with Israel throughout the
past year of conflict, other than token amounts of money. On top
of this, the European powerswhile more eager that the US
to renew negotiations between the two sidesare unwilling
to do anything that alienates Israel. The European Union views
closer relations with Israel, which remains the Middle Easts
military powerhouse, as essential in order to offset US hegemony
in the region.
Israel has also achieved some success in winning a more friendly
response from Russia, which is again seeking to challenge US domination
of Middle Eastern affairs by offering itself as an honest broker
between Israel and the Arab regimes. During the Durban conference
Sharon visited Moscow for talks with President Putin to discuss
the common threat posed by Islamic terrorismSharon has even
indicated sympathy for Russias bloody suppression of Islamic
rebel forces in Chechnyathe possibility of a further one
million Jewish immigrants from Russia to Israel, armaments and
other trade deals.
The US and Israel considered it essential that no crack be
allowed to appear at Durban in the pro-Zionist front they were
working to enforce amongst the major powers. To justify their
walkout, therefore, Durban was portrayed by the Bush and Sharon
governments as a hotbed of anti-Semitism, comparable with a gathering
of Nazis.
Shimon Samuels, the head of the Jewish caucus in Durban, declared,
We saw an NGO document that would have made [Hitlers
Nazi Party propaganda chief] Goebbels happy. And now it is clear
that we are going to see, at the end of the government conference,
resolutions that can be called the UNs Mein Kampf.
Mordechai Yedid, Israels official spokesman at the conference,
insisted there could be no condemnation of Israel in the resolution.
He told the plenary meeting prior to the US-Israeli departure,
anti-Zionism, the denial of Jews the basic right to a home,
is nothing but anti-Semitism, pure and simple. Yedid derided
the Arab regimes proposals to criticize Israels treatment
of the Palestinians as a group of states for whom the terms
racism, discrimination, and even human
rights simply do not appear in their domestic lexicon.
The UN resolution, he continued, was the most racist declaration
in a major international organization since World War Two.
His remarks prompted a walkout by Egypts Foreign Minister
Ahmed Maher, who represents one of the most pro-US of all the
Arab states.
Announcing its withdrawal from the conference, US Secretary
of State Colin Powell denounced any attempt to single out only
one country in the world, Israel, for censure and abuse
and any suggestion that apartheid existed in Israel. For his part,
Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon Peres proclaimed, We were
portrayed in an insulting and baseless manner as a colonial nation...
The Arab League, all of it, has come out against peace.
The right-wing media in Israel marched to the same tune. An
article in the September 4 Jerusalem Post by Yossi Olmert
described the Durban conference as the mirror image of the
Nuremberg rallies, in which the Nazis propagated their anti-Jewish
messages, striving hard to delegitimise the Jews, as an inevitable
step leading to their eventual liquidation. He conceded
reluctantly that not all the participants in Durban are
Nazis, maybe not even a majority of them, but too many are, and
they clearly give this shameful gathering its true character.
The Israeli-US offensive appears likely to have succeeded in
its aim of preventing any chance of an official UN condemnation
of Israel for its treatment of the Palestinians. It was followed
by threats from Canada and the EU to walkout if the resolution
did not do the same. French Prime Minister Lionel Jospin said
on Wednesday that France and the EU would walkout, If the
final resolution continues to assimilate Zionism and racism.
As we go to press five delegates from South Africa, Belgium (on
behalf of the EU), the Arab League, Norway and Namibia are fine-tuning
a supposed compromise statement on the Middle East.
Even prior to Israels walkout, Peres could not conceal
his personal sense of achievement. He told the press, This
is the first time that the opposition to the Arab proposal includes
not only the United States but also the 15 EU nations, which adopted
a formal decision to oppose, all the Eastern European nations,
which in the past would generally vote with the Arab side; Canada,
Russia, the Latin American states...India, Japan and Singapore.
He expressed his gratitude to the 43 states that opposed the one-sided
decision of the Arab and Muslim leagues.
The claim of those governments rallying to the defence of Israel
on the grounds that they are taking a stand against anti-Semitism
is entirely spurious. There is no doubt that there were expressions
of anti-Jewish racism by some of those protesting outside the
conference, as well as in official statements by Syria and Iranthe
latter having rejected a discussion on anti-Semitism with the
claim that it was not a contemporary form of racism. But it would
have been entirely possible to have opposed anti-Semitism while
condemning Israels repression of the Palestinians and the
Zionist regimes routine discrimination against non-Jews.
Instead the US and European powers have helped prepare the way
for Sharon to step up his drive to undermine the Palestinian Authority
and bring the bulk of Occupied Territories under direct Israeli
control once again.
See Also:
US comes to the defence of Zionism at
UN conference on racism
[1 September 2001]
With murder of Palestinian
leader, Israel escalates provocations and violence
[28 August 2001]
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