March 1, 2009

Bayefsky Weighs In: The Obama Administration Double-Deals On Israel

I expressed considerable optimism at the news about America pulling out of Durban II, but did note the last word isn’t in yet, and that there would surely be some counter-measures. Here’s Anne Bayefsky’s take. Not too encouraging. (oao, don’t crow.)

The Obama Administration Double-Deals On Israel
Anne Bayefsky, 03.01.09, 01:59 PM EST
Anti-Semitism, ‘Islamophobia,’ Durban II and the U.N.

Barack Obama just added double-dealing to his foreign policy repertoire. On Friday, administration officials led many Jewish leaders to believe that it had decided to boycott the United Nation’s “anti-racism” conference known as Durban II. At the same time, however, human rights organizations were being led to believe that the administration was not pulling out and was looking for a way to “re-engage.”

Durban II, scheduled for Geneva in April, is the U.N.’s attempt at a rerun of the 2001 global anti-Semitic hate fest held in Durban, South Africa.

After sowing confusion over the phone lines, the State Department chose late Friday night to put the real deal in print. Their release reads: “the current text of the draft outcome document is not salvageable,” and “the United States will not … participate in a conference based on this text,” but we will “re-engage if a document that meets [our] criteria becomes the basis for deliberations.” A new version must be: “shorter,” “not reaffirm in toto the flawed 2001 Durban Declaration,” “not single out any one country or conflict,” and “not embrace the troubling concept of “defamation of religion.”

And by the way, it continued, the U.S. will “participate” for the first time in the U.N. Human Rights Council.

All of this leaves the American people not knowing whether they’re coming or going.

It does open a window, however, into Obama’s gerrymandering. On one phone line with Assistant Secretary of State Karen Stewart were Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, Freedom House, the American Civil Liberties Union, the U.N. Foundation, the UNA-USA Association and the Arab American Institute, among others. On the other line with National Security Council member Samantha Power were Jewish organizations. The dangerous message was that an Arab advocacy group does human rights, while Jewish organizations do Jews.

The Durban Declaration claims that Palestinians are victims of Israeli racism; with Israel the only U.N. state charged with racism. The end game, as 2001 attendee Yasser Arafat made plain, is to analogize Israel to apartheid South Africa, pile on political isolation and sanctions and defeat Israel politically, if not militarily. The purpose of Durban II, as decided in August 2007 with the consent of the European Union, is to “foster the implementation of the Durban Declaration.” In January of this year, the E.U. agreed to “reaffirm” the Durban Declaration “as it was adopted at the 2001 World Conference.” Durban II cannot be salvaged; its very raison d’être includes demonizing Israel.

Some Europeans and Australia had been teetering on the edge of following Canada and Israel in boycotting the conference. But they were waiting for Obama to walk with them. Rather than encouraging these like-minded states, America’s mixed message has sent human rights organizations and states scurrying. They are looking to inject some creative ambiguity into “not reaffirming in toto”–or as Stewart put it, “not unequivocally reaffirming”–the Durban Declaration. Instead of leadership and clarity of convictions, the U.S. has started a race to the bottom of the diplomatic barrel.

The prospect irritated Human Rights Watch, the American U.N. Association and the U.N. Foundation, which all let Stewart know they would have preferred to cut Israel loose now as a fair cost of engagement. Peggy Hicks from HRW complained that insisting on “no reference to a single country or conflict is very problematic and destructive to the Durban Review process.” Susan Myers of the U.N. Foundation worried that the move “boxed in the administration” and “undercut the ability of the U.S. to re-engage.”

In fact, Obama’s four deal-breakers do not include many other troubling provisions still on Durban II’s negotiating table. These include: questioning the veracity of the Holocaust, a variety of attacks on freedom of expression in addition to “defamation of religion,” and incendiary claims of “Islamophobia”–the general allegation of a racist Western plot to discriminate against all Muslims.

The administration’s decision to slip in the Human Rights Council as a consolation prize for Durban enthusiasts is an attempt to downplay a major move. State Department officials intimated that they intend not only to observe but to run for a seat–subject to the “likelihood of successful elections.” Council members and human rights gurus, like China, Egypt and Saudi Arabia, are sure to welcome the instant legitimacy provided by U.S. participation. The Council–controlled by the Organization of the Islamic Conference–has adopted more condemnations of Israel than all other 191 U.N. states combined, while terminating human rights investigations on the likes of Iran, Cuba and Belarus. Obama’s move denies the opportunity to leverage the prospect of American membership to insist on reform.

Whether Obama actually stays away from Durban II is most likely to depend on his cost-benefit analysis of sacrificing Israel vs. heeding the siren’s call to engage. My guess is he’ll take the loss in the engagement column on Durban and the Israel column on the Council. Who said the human rights business had anything to do with human rights?

Anne Bayefsky is a senior fellow of the Hudson Institute, director of the Touro Institute on Human Rights and the Holocaust and editor of www.EYEontheUN.org.

UPDATE: Melanie Phillips weighs in.

9 Comments »

  1. All of this does not bode well with the future of the west in general and of Jews in particular. I hate to sound paranoid, but I get a strong sense of a downward spiral towards the repetition of the 20th century horrors. And what’s worse, I feel completely powerless to do anything about it.

    Comment by sshender — March 1, 2009 @ 5:05 pm

  2. I’ve been getting nervous for several years now. It started with antisemitic comments and conspiracy theories on the ‘net back in 2004, which is when I first started paying attention to internet politics.

    It has gotten progressively worse.

    This feels like standing in front of an express train.

    What can we do?

    Comment by Sophia — March 1, 2009 @ 5:46 pm

  3. What can we do?

    Reinforce our resilience mechanisms. When and where possible, fight.

    Comment by E.G. — March 1, 2009 @ 6:44 pm

  4. Obama’s Human Rights Double Dealing…

    A must read from Anne Bayefsky shows that American dis-involvement with the Durban disaster is still far from a done-deal, and that participation with the Human Rights Council may be just beginning: The Obama Administration Double-Deals On Israel …Af…

    Trackback by Solomonia — March 1, 2009 @ 7:14 pm

  5. oao, don’t crow

    i don’t take pleasure from being right on these measures. i just want people to stop being in denial and looking for positives when none exist.

    All of this does not bode well with the future of the west in general and of Jews in particular. I hate to sound paranoid, but I get a strong sense of a downward spiral towards the repetition of the 20th century horrors. And what’s worse, I feel completely powerless to do anything about it.

    This feels like standing in front of an express
    train.

    gee, folks, you sound like poor pessimist me. what happened? can’t deny it anymore?

    it’s a tragedy for the jews, but civilizations who give up on themselves simply don’t deserve to live, and they won’t. ask greece and rome.

    Comment by oao — March 1, 2009 @ 8:06 pm

  6. here’s the future of the west in the short run:

    http://littlegreenfootballs.com/article/32945_Florida_Stealth_Creationism_Bill_Filed

    this is being pushed in many states.

    in the long run, learn arabic and memorize the quran.

    Comment by oao — March 1, 2009 @ 8:29 pm

  7. The creationism thing is frightening. We are taking leave of our senses apparently.

    I see absolutely no future in abandoning science, logic and reason.

    Also giving up on ourselves is not an option.

    People are justifiably fearful of radicals who are trying to undermine civil society and moderate civilization including our own, but abandoning our values and our quest to study the universe, to continue learning and creating, is not going to help matters.

    Comment by Sophia — March 2, 2009 @ 4:09 pm

  8. The administration is doing to Durban what it did with the Republicans - giving them every chance to reconsider. Will it work? No but it is not expected to.

    This confuses people who miss the good old days when US presidents blithely pre-announces outcome with no due diligence then act surprised when even allies distance themselves.

    Comment by Observer — March 2, 2009 @ 5:29 pm

  9. I see absolutely no future in abandoning science, logic and reason.

    but we already did. we don’t educate anymore.

    Also giving up on ourselves is not an option.

    don’t and see if it helps.

    This confuses people who miss the good old days when US presidents blithely pre-announces outcome with no due diligence then act surprised when even allies distance themselves.

    are you suggesting the alibama admin DID due diligence?
    on DURBAN? i hope not, because that would be ridiculous.

    Comment by oao — March 2, 2009 @ 10:36 pm

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