Democrats Are Cowards in the Face of Israel's Brutality

Democrats have silenced dissent and offered unflinching support for Israeli 
actions, including gross violations of international law.

By Stephen Zunes

January 08, 2009 "AlterNet "January 06, 2009 The Democratic leadership's 
strident support for the ongoing Israeli assault on the Gaza Strip underscores 
how the Democrats suffer from the same illusions as the outgoing Republican 
administration: that placing an Arab territory under debilitating sanctions 
that punish the population as a whole, bombarding heavily populated civilian 
areas -- resulting in widespread casualties among innocent people -- and 
invading and occupying territories with a long history of resistance to 
outsiders will somehow lead to greater moderation from those afflicted.  
The reality is that Israel's war against Hamas and the Palestinians of the Gaza 
Strip is no more likely to result in more rational and compromising positions 
from the Palestinian side than the firing of rockets by Hamas into Israel will 
lead to more rational and compromising positions from the Israelis. 
As a result, the hard-line militaristic position of the Democratic Party does 
not bode well for a more enlightened Middle East policy after eight disastrous 
years under President George W. Bush. 
 
On Capitol Hill, resolutions are being prepared in the House and Senate to 
defend the Bush administration's policy of unconditional support for the 
Israeli assaults, which as of this writing have led to the deaths of 500 
people, at least one-quarter of whom were civilians. Unless there is widespread 
public opposition, it appears that the overwhelming majority of congressional 
Democrats will vote along with their Republican colleagues in favor of these 
resolutions, thereby giving Israel a blank check to continue the carnage and, 
as a result, give Hamas and other Palestinian militant groups the excuse to 
continue their attacks against Israeli civilians as well. 
 
Democrats Goad Israel Into War 
In June, 38 of 49 Democratic senators -- including Secretary of State-designate 
Hillary Clinton of New York -- wrote a letter (PDF) to President Bush that 
Americans for Peace Now, a moderate Zionist group, warned would build "a 
defense, in advance, for a large Israeli military offensive in Gaza." The 
letter also urged the Bush administration to block any U.N. Security Council 
resolution critical of Israel, claiming that United Nations opposition to 
Israeli attacks against crowded urban areas constituted a refusal to 
"acknowledge Israel's right to self-defense." An almost identical letter in the 
House, drafted by House Majority Leader Rep. Steny Hoyer, D-Md., received the 
signatures of 150 of the body's 230 Democrats. 
Americans for Peace Now noted that such an Israeli offensive against the Gaza 
Strip would likely result in large-scale civilian casualties. In apparent 
anticipation of the large numbers of Palestinian deaths that would result from 
such military operations in the Gaza Strip, the House passed a resolution (PDF) 
in March, during an outbreak of fighting, that claimed, "Those responsible for 
launching rocket attacks against Israel routinely embed their production 
facilities and launch sites amongst the Palestinian civilian population, 
utilizing them as human shields." The resolution goes on to specifically 
condemn "the use of innocent Palestinian civilians as human shields by those 
who carry out rocket and other attacks" and yet again makes note of 
Palestinians who "continue to be utilized as human shields by terrorist 
organizations." 
 
But according to Joe Stork of the Middle East division of Human Rights Watch, 
while Hamas failed to take all feasible precautions to protect civilians in the 
densely populated Gaza Strip, the watchdog group had found no instances of 
Hamas actually using human shields in the legally defined sense of deliberately 
using civilians as a means of deterring counterattacks. Despite my contacting 
the offices of more than a dozen Democratic members of Congress who supported 
the resolution -- all of whom are members of the so-called Progressive Caucus 
-- none of them could provide any examples of Hamas actually using human 
shields. It appears that the Democrats' goal in pushing through this resolution 
was to convince their constituents that it was the Palestinians, not the 
Israelis who were attacking them, who were responsible for civilian casualties 
and who would likewise be responsible for the far greater number of civilian 
casualties that would inevitably result
 from the Israeli bombardment and invasion which was to commence later that 
year. 
 
The resolution also gave unqualified support for the Israeli government's 
attacks against the Gaza Strip, even as Amnesty International condemned 
Israel's "reckless disregard for civilian life" in its bombing and shelling of 
civilian population centers. The AI report also noted how the attacks by 
Palestinians against civilian-populated areas in Israel, which the report also 
roundly condemned, "does not make it legitimate for the Israeli authorities to 
launch reckless air and artillery strikes which wreak such death and 
destruction among Palestinian civilians." 
 
Not a single one of the 230 Democrats in the House of Representatives voted 
against the resolution. (There were four abstentions, and 12 did not vote.) 
This sent a clear signal that there would be no opposition in Congress -- which 
provides over $4 billion annually in unconditional military and economic aid to 
the Israeli government -- for an even larger military assault against the 
Palestinian population of the enclave. 
 
Democratic support for an Israeli war against the Gaza Strip went beyond such 
nonbinding resolutions. In apparent anticipation of the long-planned Israeli 
invasion of Gaza -- which was to begin just three months later -- the 
Democratic-controlled Congress voted in September to send 1,000 of the highly 
sophisticated GBU-39 missiles to Israel, which have been used on a large scale 
in the Israeli assault. 
On Nov. 5, Israel launched a brief but significant military incursion into 
Gaza. Though the raid was a clear violation of the cease-fire that had been in 
place at the time, no criticism was heard in Washington. There had been a 
series of minor violations by both sides, but the magnitude of this raid 
appeared designed to provoke Hamas into letting the cease-fire lapse. Israel 
then tightened its siege of the Gaza Strip, prompting Human Rights Watch to 
note that "Israel's severe limitations on the movement of nonmilitary goods and 
people into and out of Gaza, including fuel and medical supplies, constitutes 
collective punishment, also in violation of the laws of war." Despite this, 
President-elect Barack Obama and Democratic congressional leaders continued to 
defend the sanctions. 
Hamas appeared willing to renew its cease-fire in return for Israel lifting the 
blockade on humanitarian and other aid and ending its periodic raids into Gaza 
and assassinations of Hamas officials. However, Israel -- again, supported by 
Obama and Democratic congressional leaders -- refused. Now, however, despite 
these leading Democrats' opposition to nonmilitary means, which could have 
salvaged the cease-fire and prevented the rocket attacks into Israel, they are 
now claiming that Israel had "no choice" but to launch its massive assault on 
Gaza Strip in retaliation. 
 
In a Dec. 28 interview, Obama's chief adviser David Axelrod appeared to align 
the president-elect with the Bush administration in its support for Israel's 
war on the Gaza Strip, citing an Obama statement from the summer, in which he 
said, "If somebody was sending rockets into my house where my two daughters 
sleep at night, I'm going to do everything in my power to stop that. I would 
expect Israelis to do the same thing." 
Axelrod ignored the fact that since Israel had launched its bombardment of the 
Gaza Strip, rocket attacks against Israeli towns had actually increased. This 
raises concerns that an Obama administration, like the Bush administration, may 
be so ideologically committed to military solutions in political conflicts that 
it too will ignore even obvious failures. 
 
Rationalizing Civilian Deaths
Amnesty International USA, in a letter to Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice 
on January 2, noted its dismay "at the lopsided response by the U.S. government 
to the recent violence and its lackadaisical efforts to ameliorate the 
humanitarian crisis in Gaza." The Nobel Peace Prize-winning organization went 
on to note, "Without diminishing the responsibility of Hamas and other 
Palestinian armed groups for indiscriminate and deliberate attacks on Israeli 
civilians, the U.S. government must not ignore Israel's disproportionate 
response and the longstanding policies which have brought the Gaza Strip to the 
brink of humanitarian disaster."
 
Leading Democrats rushed to the administration's defense, however. As reports 
of widespread civilian casualties among Palestinians in the Gaza Strip from the 
Israeli attacks continued to pour in, Speaker of the House Rep. Nancy Pelosi, 
D-Calif., insisted that "When Israel is attacked, the United States must 
continue to stand strongly with its friend and democratic ally." Senate 
Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., stated ,"I strongly support Israel's right 
to defend its citizens against rocket and mortar attacks from Hamas-controlled 
Gaza." House Majority Leader Hoyer claimed, "Israel is acting in clear 
self-defense in response to heinous rocket attacks from Hamas-controlled Gaza" 
and that Israel has "an unequivocal right" to engage in its military 
operations. Rep. Howard Berman, D-Calif., whom the Democrats recently named to 
chair the House Foreign Affairs Committee, declared "Israel has a right, indeed 
a duty, to defend itself in response to the
 hundreds of rockets and mortars fired from Gaza over the past week." Even 
prominent liberals, like Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., insisted that "This use of 
Gaza as a base from which to attack Israel left Israel with no choice except 
self defense."
 
These Democrats have been unable to explain how a number of the most deadly 
Israeli strikes, which took place nowhere near any legitimate military targets, 
constitute acts of self-defense. These have included the missile which struck a 
group of students leaving the U.N.-sponsored Gaza Training College in downtown 
Gaza, the bombing of a mosque during evening prayers, another missile attack 
centered in civilian neighborhoods in the crowded refugee camps of Jabalya and 
Rafah, as well as a series of attacks against the territory's one university. 
Scores of others who worked in government offices under the Hamas 
administration but had nothing to do with rocket attacks against Israel -- or 
any other military function of the Islamist party -- have been killed as well.
Yet some Democrats have gone as far as to simply deny that attacks against 
civilian targets are taking place at all. For example, Rep. Brad Sherman, 
D-Calif., a member of the Foreign Relations Committee and its Middle East 
subcommittee, has insisted that (PDF), contrary to reports of reputable human 
rights groups, international journalists and other eyewitnesses, "The Israeli 
response has been a series of targeted strikes against Hamas militants, aimed 
directly at those who are launching the attacks on Israeli civilian population 
centers" and that "the Israeli military is taking extreme caution to limit 
civilian casualties."
The Democratic Party has a history of denying Israeli culpability in the deaths 
of civilians during military operations in the Gaza Strip. During an Israeli 
offensive against the territory in 2006, prior to Hamas' takeover of the 
Palestinian Authority, Amnesty International declared:

"The Israeli authorities' deliberate and wanton destruction of civilian 
infrastructure and property in the Gaza Strip amounts to a war crime. The 
destruction and the disproportionate and arbitrary restrictions imposed by the 
Israeli army on the movement of people and goods into and from the Gaza Strip 
also amount to collective punishment of the entire population. This violates 
the Fourth Geneva Convention, which prohibits punishing protected persons for 
offences they have not committed."
Similarly, the International Red Cross, long recognized as the guardian of the 
Geneva Conventions, declared that Israel was violating the principle of 
proportionality, as well as the prohibition against collective punishment.
Despite this and similar reports by other reputable human rights groups, 
Democrats – with only nine dissenting votes – joined their Republican 
colleagues in passing a House resolution claiming Israel's attacks, which 
resulted in widespread civilian casualties, were "in accordance with 
international law." The resolution went on to rebuke reports by Amnesty 
International and Human Rights Watch's criticisms of Israel's failure to 
distinguish between military and civilian targets by including language that 
praised Israel's "longstanding commitment to minimizing civilian loss" and 
welcomed "Israel's continued efforts to prevent civilian casualties."
 
The resolution also insisted that Israel's attacks were in accordance with 
"Article 51 of the United Nations Charter." However, Article 33 of the Charter 
requires all parties to "first of all, seek a solution by negotiation, enquiry, 
mediation, conciliation, arbitration, judicial settlement, resort to regional 
agencies or arrangements, or other peaceful means of their own choice," which 
Israel -- with the backing of most of these same congressional Democrats -- has 
refused to do. Article 51 does allow countries the right to resist an armed 
attack, but not the right to engage in massive and disproportional attacks 
against crowded urban population centers.
 
The 2006 resolution, sponsored by the late Rep. Tom Lantos, D-Calif., then the 
ranking Democratic member of the House Foreign Relations Committee, commended 
President Bush for "fully supporting Israel" in the face of widespread 
international opposition, including by some of the United States' closest 
allies.
With only nine dissenting Democratic votes in the 435-member body, this placed 
virtually the entire Democratic Caucus on the side of Bush against a broad 
consensus of the international community, including all major human rights 
organizations.
 
Opposing Peace Negotiations
It should come as no surprise that when negotiations are ruled out, war 
results. But instead of encouraging negotiations between Hamas and Israel, the 
Democratic Party has actively discouraged it.
Even President-elect Obama, who has expressed willingness to meet with leaders 
of Iran and other hard-line regimes, spoke out in early 2008 against any 
negotiations with the Hamas government in the Gaza Strip, which received the 
majority of seats in the most recent Palestinian parliamentary elections. 
Indeed, the Democrats -- led by Vice President-elect Joe Biden -- have 
criticized the Bush administration for allowing the Palestinian Authority to go 
ahead with free elections in the first place.
 
This opposition to peace talks comes despite polls showing that a majority of 
Israelis -- including the mayors of the Israelis towns on the receiving end of 
Hamas rocket attacks -- do support negotiations with Hamas. Unlike the 
Democratic Party, the Israeli public is much more cognizant of the fact that -- 
whether it be a short-term cease-fire, a permanent peace agreement or something 
in between -- ending the violence without such negotiations will be impossible. 
Indeed, at the very time Obama was rejecting the idea of talks with Hamas, 
senior members of the Israeli security establishment were urging the Israeli 
government to engage in such talks, arguing that any agreement made without 
Hamas would fail.
 
Furthermore, for a number of years, the Israelis have been regularly 
negotiating indirectly with Hamas through Egyptian intermediaries and 
Palestinian prisoners. Back when Hamas was in charge of local governments in 
some West Bank towns several years ago, there were direct talks on a number of 
logistical issues. The Democratic Party, however, insisted that such talks not 
take place -- apparently because the prospect of negotiations would get in the 
way of Israel's massive military offensive against the Palestinians of the Gaza 
Strip.
 
The Democratic Party's leadership has long argued that no talks should take 
place until Hamas formally recognizes Israel's right to statehood, yet many of 
these same Democrats have had no problems with meeting, and even providing 
support for, Israeli parties and political groups that insist that the 
Palestinians do not have the right to statehood, such as the Likud Bloc, which 
is favored to win the upcoming Israeli elections. In addition, a sizable 
majority of Democrats in Congress have gone on record insisting that an 
explicit Hamas recognition of Israel as a Jewish state be a precondition for 
ending sanctions and inclusion in the peace process, which is not only an 
unnecessary prerequisite for negotiating a long-term cease-fire, but is 
something which even the Israeli government has not demanded.
 
Silencing Democratic Critics
Democratic Party leaders have made it clear that any dissent from within the 
party to their right-wing position rejecting any contact with Hamas will not be 
tolerated.
For example, Robert Malley, who served as a National Security Council member 
and special assistant for Arab-Israeli Affairs under the Clinton 
administration, was already under fire for having the temerity to object to the 
Bush administration's effort to organize a coup against Hamas, noting how, 
"Almost every decision the United States has made to interfere with Palestinian 
politics has boomeranged." He had been serving as an informal adviser to Obama 
during the presidential race, but was forced to sever his ties with the 
campaign when it was revealed that, as part of his efforts to promote a 
cease-fire in his role with the International Crisis Group, he had met with 
Hamas officials. For the Obama campaign, such peace-making efforts simply could 
not be tolerated.
In an even better-known example, former President Jimmy Carter was quoted last 
spring as saying, "I think there's no doubt in anyone's mind that, if Israel is 
ever going to find peace with justice concerning the relationship with their 
next-door neighbors … Hamas will have to be included in the process," adding, 
"I think someone should be meeting with Hamas to see what we can do to 
encourage them to be cooperative." He then met with Hamas leader Khaled Meshaal 
in Syria.
 
Former presidents have historically been largely exempt from criticisms by 
elected officials of their own party. When it comes to expressing the opinion 
that the United States should figure out a way to include Hamas in 
negotiations, however, such courtesy quickly evaporated. Carter, winner of the 
2002 Nobel Peace Prize, was immediately denounced by Democratic Party leaders. 
Steve Grossman, a former chairman of the Democratic National Committee claimed, 
"Carter's views are antithetical to those in the mainstream of the Democratic 
Party. He does not speak for either [Clinton or Obama] in any shape or form, 
and I think there's pretty much unanimity on that point."
 
As a result of his efforts to avoid war, Carter was denied a major platform at 
the 2008 Democratic National Convention in Denver, the first time in memory 
that a former president had been denied such an honor at his party's 
quadrennial gathering.
It's important to remember that both Malley and Carter were leaders of NGOs 
whose very mandates are to engage in conflict resolution. What these Democrats 
appear to be saying is that the Bush administration's policy of not talking 
with those deemed undesirable should not just be the policy of the U.S. 
government, but every nongovernmental organization and private citizen as well.
 
But that policy is inconsistent. Through his role at the Carter Center, for 
example, Carter met with war criminals like Liberia's Charles Taylor, Haiti's 
Raoul Cedras and Uganda's Martin Ojul, with no complaints from these same 
Democratic leaders. Their opposition to Carter's willingness to speak with 
Hamas appears not to have been because of the group's role in war crimes but 
because Carter had hoped such dialogue might pave the way for a negotiated 
settlement. Indeed, a number of those who supported Carter's exclusion from the 
Democratic National Convention had themselves met with unsavory characters as 
well, including right-wing Cuban and Nicaraguan terrorist leaders, some of the 
worst dictators on the planet, and others with even more blood on their hands 
than Meshaal.
 
What Explains the Democrats' Position?
All this inevitably raises the question as to why, in a conflict where both 
sides are clearly at fault, the Democratic Party has chosen to put 100 percent 
of the blame on the Palestinian side and has unconditionally supported the 
actions of the Israelis, who are not only the more powerful of the two, but 
whose violations of international humanitarian law are many times greater than 
those of Hamas.
 
There are those who try to defend these Democratic hawks by claiming it would 
somehow be political suicide to oppose any resolution supporting Israeli 
military actions. But a recent Rasmussen poll indicates that Americans are 
closely divided regarding the legitimacy of Israel's attacks on Gaza Strip, 
with Democratic voters opposing the offensive by a 55 percent-to-31 percent 
margin. Regarding the Israeli-Palestinian conflict overall, 7 of 10 Americans 
believe the United States should not take sides -- yet another example of how 
out of step the Democratic leadership is with the American public.
Nor does this strident support for Israeli militarism have anything to do with 
a genuine concern for Israel's legitimate security interests, given that every 
previous effort to defeat Hamas militarily has backfired. Similarly, Israel's 
2006 offensive against Lebanon's Hezbollah -- also overwhelmingly supported by 
congressional Democrats -- proved to be a disaster for Israel.
 
The primary factor for the Democratic leaderships' hawkish stance regarding the 
current conflict appears to be the relative inaction of the progressive base of 
the Democratic Party. Most rank-and-file Democrats, at least intuitively, 
recognize the fallacy of the Democratic leadership's militaristic line and are 
aware that support for the Bush administration Middle East policy has brought 
neither justice for the Palestinians nor security for Israel. At the same time, 
however, the grassroots of the party has failed to mobilize in a way that would 
let the party leadership know there is a price to pay for supporting such a 
right-wing agenda.
 
Despite their efforts to undermine international humanitarian law and 
rationalize for the killing of civilians, many of these Democratic supporters 
of Bush administration policy toward Israel and Palestine still receive the 
enthusiastic endorsements and PAC funding from MoveOn and other supposedly 
"progressive" political organizations.
The message to Democratic lawmakers, then, appears to be that the progressive 
community doesn't care about international humanitarian law, at least if the 
victims happen to be Arabs.
And, although American Israel Public Affairs Committee and allied right-wing 
groups have certainly played a role in limiting debate within the Democratic 
Party, their power is often so grossly exaggerated as to create a fatalistic 
view that it is not worth even trying to get these Democratic officials to 
support a more balanced policy on Israel and Palestine. This results in a kind 
of self-fulfilling prophecy by leading progressive activists to blithely accept 
that otherwise progressive members of Congress embrace positions essentially 
identical to that of the Bush administration. Congressional staffers -- always 
off the record -- often play into anti-Semitic stereotypes by claiming that 
their boss is but a hapless victim of rich and powerful Jews behind the scenes 
and should therefore not be held accountable for his or her actions. It is 
profoundly disappointing that so many peace and human rights activists appear 
to fall for it.
 
If there is to be peace between Israel and Palestine, we must stop giving these 
Democratic hawks the benefit of the doubt or making excuses for them. This 
means engaging in protests at their speaking events and sit-ins in their 
offices. It means withholding campaign contributions, supporting progressive 
challengers in primary races and backing Green or other third-party challengers 
in the general election.
Until they know there is a political price to pay for their anti-Palestinian -- 
and ultimately anti-Israel -- positions, they will continue to push their 
right-wing foreign policy agenda. How the progressive community addresses the 
ongoing tragedy in the Gaza Strip in the coming days and weeks may determine 
the direction for the incoming Obama administration and the 111th Congress, not 
just in terms of U.S. policy toward Israel and Palestine, but in foreign policy 
overall.
 
For ultimately, the issue is not about Hamas versus the Israeli government, or 
even Palestine versus Israel, but between supporters of international 
humanitarian law and those who believe the United States and its allies are 
somehow exempt.
 
Stephen Zunes is a professor of politics and chairman of Middle Eastern Studies 
at the University of San Francisco and serves as a senior policy analyst for 
Foreign Policy in Focus.

http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article21679.htm














      

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