For
The Occupied And Oppressed Palestinians UN
Means Useless Nations
By Alan Hart
December 30,
2014 "ICH"
-
I must begin by
making it clear that the UN of my headline
is the Security Council not other component
parts of the world body such as the United
Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNWRA)
which provides education, health care and
social services for more than five million
Palestinian refugees in the Gaza Strip
prison camp, the occupied West Bank,
Lebanon, Jordan and Syria.
As a new year dawns I believe
that those who are entertaining hope that
the cause of justice for the Palestinians
will be advanced by another Security Council
resolution are guilty of wishful thinking.
They may also be unaware of the history of
Zionism’s success in corrupting and
subverting the decision making process of
the General Assembly as well as the Security
Council. (This history, complete and
unexpurgated, flows through the three
volumes of my book Zionism: The Real Enemy
of the Jews).
The corruption and subversion
started in the countdown to the vote on the
General Assembly’s Partition Plan resolution
of 29 November 1947. The vote was postponed
twice because Zionism calculated that there
was not a majority in favour of partition.
Then, assisted by its assets in President
Truman’s White House and 26 of its
collaborators in the Senate, Zionism bullied
and bribed a number of vulnerable nations to
change their “No” votes to “Yes” or abstain.
The result was a minimum necessary majority
in favour of partition but… When President
Truman refused to use force to impose it,
the resolution was vitiated (became
invalid); and the option Truman approved was
sending the question of what to do about
Palestine back to the General Assembly for
another debate. It was while this debate was
underway that Israel, in defiance of the
will of the organized international
community as it then was, unilaterally
declared itself to be in existence.
When Truman learned how
Zionism and its collaborators had rigged the
partition vote, he wrote the following in an
angry memorandum to Undersecretary of State
Robert Lovett. “It is perfectly clear that
pressure groups will succeed in putting the
United Nations out of business if this sort
of thing is continued.”
Many years later a long
serving, very senior and universally
respected UN official said the following to
me in his office on the 38th (top) floor of
the UN’s headquarters in New York. “Zionism
has corrupted everything it touched,
including this organization in its infancy.”
I knew, really knew, that he was reflecting
the deeply held but private view of all the
top international civil servants who were
responsible for trying to make the world
body work in accordance with the ideals and
principles enshrined in its Charter and
international law.
The Security Council’s
complete surrender to Zionism happened
during the protracted and at times angry
behind-closed-doors discussions about the
text of Resolution 242 – what it should and
should not say. (The full story of this
surrender is told in Goodbye To The Security
Council’s Integrity, Chapter 3 of Volume
Three of my book).
The Johnson administration
and all others responsible for drafting and
then finalizing the resolution’s text were
completely aware that the Six Days War of
June 1967 was a war of Israeli aggression,
not, as Zionism asserted at the time and
still asserts today, a war of self-defence.
That being so Resolution 242
of 22 November 1967 ought to have demanded
an unconditional Israeli withdrawal and
indicated that Israel would be isolated and
sanctioned if it refused to comply. And for
complete clarity of meaning a binding
resolution ought to have stated that Israel
should not seek to settle or colonise the
newly occupied territories, and that if it
did the Security Council would enforce
international law and take whatever action
was necessary to stop the illegal
developments.
But President Johnson refused
to have Israel branded as the aggressor.
(This was despite the fact
that he was privately furious with the
Israelis. He had given them the green light
to attack only Egypt and their attack on
Syria to take the Golan Heights for keeping
provoked the Soviet Union to the brink of
military confrontation with the U.S. Johnson
was also fully aware that when Israeli
Defence Minister Moshe Dayan gave the order
for his forces to attack the U.S.S. Liberty
his intention was to sink the American spy
ship and send all on board to a watery
grave. As it happened on 8 June the Israeli
attack on the Liberty with bombs, napalm,
torpedoes and machine gun fire killed 34
members of the vessel’s crew and wounded171,
75 of them seriously. The Liberty was
attacked to prevent it sending an early
warning to the Johnson administration that
elements of the IDF’s ground forces in Sinai
were being turned around to reinforce an
attack on Jordan and Syria. The full story
is told in The Liberty Affair – “Pure
Murder” on a “Great Day”, Chapter 2 of
Volume Three of my book. Who described the
attack on the Liberty as “pure murder”?
Israel’s chief of staff at the time, Yitzhak
Rabin. The “great day” comment was made by
Dayan in a note to Israeli Prime Minister
Levi Eshkol.).
Though it did pay lip service
to “the inadmissibility of the acquisition
of territory by war”, the final text of
Resolution 242 (less than 300 words in all)
gave the Israelis the scope to interpret it
as they wished. It did so by stating that
the establishment of a just and lasting
peace should include the application of two
principles
QUOTE
(i) Withdrawal of Israeli
armed forces from territories occupied in
the recent conflict.
(ii) Termination of all
claims or states of belligerency and respect
for and acknowledgement of the sovereignty,
territorial integrity and political
independence of every State in the area and
their right to live in peace within secure
and recognized boundaries free from threats
or acts of force.
UNQUOTE
This wording enabled Zionism
to assert that withdrawal was conditional on
the Arab states recognising and legitimising
Israel.
In addition Resolution 242
gave Israel the freedom to determine the
extent of any withdrawals it might make.
This freedom was secured by immense pressure
from Israel and the Zionist lobby in all its
manifestations which caused those
responsible for the final wording of the
resolution to drop the definite article
“the” in (i) above. The wording of the draft
text was (my emphasis added) “Withdrawal of
Israeli armed forces from the territories
occupied in the recent conflict.” The
meaning of that draft text was clear. Israel
had to withdraw from ALL the Arab territory
it grabbed in the Six Days War. But when
Israel’s leaders and the Zionist lobby said
that was unacceptable, those responsible for
the final version of 242 replied in effect:
“Okay. We’ll do it your way.”
So the question without an
answer in the final text of 242 was – WHICH
Israel were the Arab states required to
recognise? An Israel withdrawn to its
borders as they were on the eve of the 1967
war or a Greater Israel – an Israel in
permanent occupation of at least some Arab
territory grabbed in that war?
Incredible though it may seem
today, Resolution 242 did not mention the
Palestinians by name. It affirmed only the
necessity for “achieving a just settlement
of the refugee problem.” Mentioning the
Palestinians by name was unacceptable to
Israel’s leaders and the Zionist lobby
because it would have implied that they, the
occupied and oppressed Palestinians, were a
people with rights – rights far greater than
what might be called the begging bowl rights
normally associated in the public mind with
refugees.
But there was more to it than
that. At the time the Security Council was
agonising over the text of 242, the three
major Western powers, the U.S., Britain and
France, were united on one thing – the view
that the Palestine file was not to be
re-opened because, if it was, they might one
day have to confront Zionism.
Put another way, in November
1967 the major Western powers were hoping
that re-emerging Palestinian nationalism
could be snuffed out by a combination of
Arab-and-Israeli military action (it was the
security forces of Egypt, Jordan and Lebanon
which made the first attempt to liquidate
the authentic Palestine liberation movement
led by Arafat) and compensation for refugees
as necessary.
Security Council Resolution
242 was a disaster for all who were
seriously committed to working for a just
and lasting peace because, effectively, it
put Zionism into the diplomatic driving
seat.
Some years after 242 was
passed I had a private conversation with a
very senior British diplomat who
participated in the drafting and finalising
of it. At the end of our conversation I
summarised my understanding of what he told
me. He said my summary as follows was
correct.
Those responsible for framing
Resolution 242 were very much aware that
Israel’s hawks were going to proceed with
their colonial venture come what may -in
determined defiance of international law and
no matter what the organised international
community said or wanted. So some if not all
of those responsible for framing 242 were
resigned to the fact that, because of the
history of the Jews (persecution on and off
down the centuries) and Zionism’s use of the
Nazi holocaust as a brainwashing tool,
Israel was not and never could be a normal
state. As a consequence, there was no point
in the Security Council seeking to oblige it
to behave like a normal state - i.e. in
accordance with international law and its
obligations as a member of the UN. Like it
or not, and whatever it might mean for the
fate of mankind, the world was going to have
to live with the fact that there are two
sets of rules for the behaviour of nations –
one rule for Israel and one for all other
nations. In that light Resolution 242 was
confirmation that the Security Council had a
double standard built into it, and because
the political will to confront Zionism did
not exist, there was nothing anybody could
do to change that reality.
At the time of writing an
effort by the Palestine Authority is
underway to get a new Security Council
resolution calling on Israel to end its
occupation within two or three years. But
even if such a resolution was introduced and
passed (not vetoed by President Obama) it
would be meaningless unless it contained a
commitment to Security Council enforcement
action if Israel refused to comply.
What are the chances in the
foreseeable future of a new Security Council
resolution containing such a commitment?
In my view there is not a
snowball’s chance in hell.
What President Truman feared
could happen did happen. On dealing with the
conflict in and over Palestine that became
Israel the Security Council was put out of
business by Zionism.
Alan Hart is a former ITN and
BBC Panorama foreign correspondent. He is
author of Zionism: The Real Enemy of the
Jews. He blogs at http://www.alanhart.net
and tweets via
http://twitter.com/alanauthor