March 1993, Page 40
The Peace Process
Lessons to be Learned From 66 U.N. Resolutions
Israel Ignores
By Donald Neff
There is a disturbing lack of historical perspective to the Clinton
administration's efforts during its first days in office to shield
Israel from United Nations sanctions. Like former Secretary of State
James Baker's repeated assertion that both sides must want peace
for it to occur, the Clinton-Rabin agreement ignores the sorry record
of the 26 years since Israel's conquest of the West Bank, Gaza,
East Jerusalem, and the Golan Heights. During that period Israel
has unequivocally demonstrated that it does not want peace
in exchange for territory. Its insistence on expelling Palestinians
who oppose the occupation and on establishing Jewish settlements
in the occupied territories are only the latest manifestations of
its desire to retain them. Equally important in revealing its true
policy is Israel's successful record of resisting American and other
peace initiatives over the years.
These include defeating such imaginative initiatives and tireless
mediators as the U.N.'s Gunnar Jarring in the late 1960s, Secretary
of State William Rogers' major peace proposals of 1969, Secretary
of State Henry Kissinger's shuttle diplomacy of the mid-1970s, the
lackadaisical journeys of Secretary of State George Shultz in the
1980s, and the intense Bush and Baker efforts of 1991 and 1992.
The one success was Jimmy Carter's Camp David process.
However, the Israeli-Egyptian peace treaty was unique. It came
at the expense of the Palestinians, which was by Israeli design,
and in exchange for Sinai, to which Israel never laid claim. Moreover,
Israel received in return for signing the peace treaty with Egypt
commitments from the U. S. that have now reached a level of economic
and military aid unsurpassed in our history.
The result is that Israel has managed to retain what it has wanted
most: East Jerusalem and the West Bank. After so many diplomatic
initiatives, it seems fair to conclude Israel does not want peace
on any terms but its own.
An end to expulsions is only the latest demand of the international
community on Israel, whose defiance goes back to its very beginnings.
There remain on the books of the United Nations a collection of
resolutions criticizing Israel unmatched by the record of any other
nation.
These resolutions, which now number 66, contain the international
community's list of indictments against the Jewish state. The basic
issues were all spelled out even before the 1967 Security Council
resolution calling for a land-for-peace settlement.
Core Issues and Major Themes
The core issues, as contained in resolutions passed before 1967,
remain the Palestinian refugee problem, the status of Jerusalem,
and the location of Israel's boundaries. These are the basic issues.
They spring from 1948, not 1967.
The early U.N. resolutions call for Israel to repatriate or compensate
the original 750,000 refugees of 1948-9 and to renounce Jerusalem
as its capital and regard it as a corpus separatum, an international
city dominated by neither Arab nor Israeli. (The U. S. position
on Jerusalem is slightly different and, not surprisingly, closer
to Israel's. It says Jerusalem should not be a divided city and
its final status should be decided by the parties.) Finally, the
original U.N. partition of Palestine awarded Israel an area only
about three-quarters of its current official size. Israel's increase
was gained at the expense of the Palestinians in the earlier conquests
of 1948.
Other unreconciled issues from this earlier period include such
sticky situations as a demilitarized zone that Israel had shared
with Syria near the Sea of Galilee. Israel forcefully and unlawfully
occupied this zone in the 1950s and 1960s, in defiance of its 1949
armistice with Syria. This deception predates Syria's complaints
about Israel's occupation of the Golan Heights in 1967. The zone
is now integrated into Israel's economy and infrastructure. But
Syria retains a legitimate claim to it as disputed territory to
be decided only after negotiations.
Aside from the core issuesrefugees, Jerusalem, bordersthe
major themes reflected in the U.N. resolutions against Israel over
the years are its unlawful attacks on its neighbors; its violations
of the human rights of the Palestinians, including deportations,
demolitions of homes and other collective punishments; its confiscation
of Palestinian land; its establishment of illegal settlements; and
its refusal to abide by the U.N. Charter and the 1949 Fourth Geneva
Convention Relative to the Protection of Civilian Persons in Time
of War.
A History of U.S. Vetoes
There is another major area, largely ignored, that at some point
must be faced. It involves the serious distortion of the official
Security Council record by the profligate use by the United States
of its veto power. In 29 separate cases between 1972 and 1991, the
United States has vetoed resolutions critical of Israel. Except
for the U.S. veto, these resolutions would have passed and the total
number of resolutions against Israel would now equal 95 instead
of 66.
These resolutions would have broadened the record by affirming
the right of Palestinian self-determination, by calling on Israel
to abandon its repressive measures against the Palestinian intifada,
by sending U.N. Observers into the occupied territories to monitor
Israel's behavior and, most serious, by imposing sanctions against
Israel if it did not abide by the Council's resolutions.
Such a list of resolutions passed and resolutions vetoed is unparalleled
in United Nations history. The list in itself forms a stunning indictment
of Israel's unlawful and uncivilized actions over a period of 45
years and of America's complicity in them.
Yet references to this damning record are totally absent from the
vocabularies of American leaders as they go about saying they are
seeking peace. If they are really serious about peace, then at some
point they must act with the same firmness they displayed toward
Iraq's occupation of Kuwait. Had they approached Iraq with the same
timorous tactics they are applying to Israel, Iraqi soldiers still
would be in Kuwait.
The point is that aggressors have always answered the question
of whether they want peace by their actions. If the United States
really wants peace in the Middle East, it must insist that Israel
abide by the judgment of the world community as expressed in resolutions
by the United Nations. The U.S. can do this at any time simply by
forsaking the use of the veto and joining the world consensus. Anything
less makes a sham of the peace process, and is demeaning to leaders
of a democratic country. |