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Sanctions against the Israeli
Occupation:
It's Time
Israeli Committee Against House Demolitions
(ICAHD)
January 29, 2005
"If apartheid ended, so can the occupation. But the moral
force and international pressure will have to be just as determined.
The current divestment effort is the first, though certainly not
the only, necessary move in that direction." -- Bishop Desmond
Tutu
You can't have it both ways. You can't complain about violence on
the part of the Palestinians and yet reject effective non-violent
measures against the Occupation that support their right to self-determination,
such as economic sanctions. You can't condemn the victims of Occupation
for employing terrorism while, by opposing divestment, thereby sheltering
the Occupying Power that employs State Terror. You can't end the
isolation and suffering of people living under Occupation while
permitting the Occupying Power to carry on its life among the nations
unencumbered and normally, by withholding a boycott of its economic
and cultural products.
The Case For Sanctions
Sanctions, divestment and boycotts are absolutely legitimate means
at everyone's disposal for effectively opposing injustice. As penalties,
protest, pressure and resistance to policies that violate fundamental
human rights, international law and UN resolutions, they are directed
at ending a situation of intolerable conflict, suffering and moral
wrong-doing, not against a particular people or country. When the
injustice ends, the sanctions end.
Sanctions, divestment and boycotts represent powerful international
responses that arise not only from opposition to an intolerable
situation,but also to the complicity of every person in the international
civil society that does nothing to resolve it. Because they are
rooted in human rights, international law and the will of the international
community, and because they are supremely non-violent responses
to injustice, sanctions carry a potent moral force. A campaign of
sanctions, even if it proves impossible to actually implement them,
mobilizes what has been called "the politics of shame."
No country wants to be cast as a major violator of human rights.
Precisely because it is so difficult to enforce international humanitarian
law, holding up its oppressive policy for all to see is often the
only way of pressuring it to cease its oppressive policies. The
moral and political condemnation conveyed by a campaign for sanctions
and the international isolation it threatens sends a powerful, unmistakable
messageto the perpetrator: cease your unjust policies or suffer
the consequences.Rather than punishment, a campaign of sanctions
rests upon the notion of accountability. A country threatened by
sanctions stands in violation of the very principles underlying
the international community as articulated in human rights covenants,
international humanitarian law and UN resolutions.
If we go by Amnesty's annual report, virtually every country could
be"called on the carpet" for their human rights violations.
A campaign ofsanctions constitutes an extraordinary step, however.
It is invoked when injustice and suffering have become so routinized,
so institutionalized, so pervasive, so resistant to normal international
diplomacy or pressures, that their very continuation compromises
the very validity of the international system and the moral standing
of its members, countries, corporations and citizens alike. And
it targets the strong parties. The very basis of a call for sanctions
is that the targeted country has the ability to end the intolerable
situation. A campaign of sanctions embodies a fundamental principle
of the international system: that each country must be held accountable
for its policies and actions in light of accepted international
norms. The message to all countries must be: Participation in the
international community depends upon conformity to the "rules
of the game."
Campaigns of sanctions are in essence educative, and that is part
of their power. Since the reasons for taking such drastic action
must be explicit, weighty and compelling, it forces those calling
for sanctions to make a strong case for them. The very act of initiating
such a campaign, then, raises awareness not only of the injustice
itself, but of the principles it violates, thus strengthening the
understanding of the international system itself. And since a campaign
of sanctions must be accepted by the international community in
order to succeed, it necessitates discussion and dialogue. The considerations
behind the demand for sanctions are made transparent, and the targeted
country given an opportunity to present its case. The likelihood,
then, is that a campaign of sanctions initiated by civil society
will express broad-based international consensus if it is to take
hold. Again, at issue is a serious violation of international law
and norms. Just as in a case of an individual caught breaking the
law, what is in questionis what acts have been done, not who the
country or the individual is. To paraphrase Jefferson, who spoke
of "a government of laws, not men," here we are speaking
of "an international system of laws and not only countries
that do whatever they want." Thus, when the violations end,
the sanctions cease and the country in question rejoins the international
community.
The Case for Sanctions Against Israel
In line with the principles just discussed, economic sanctions
against Israel are not invoked against Israel per se, but against
Israel until the Occupation ends. With this proviso it is Israel's
policy of occupation that is targeted, its status as an Occupying
Power, not Israel itself. When South Africa ended its system of
apartheid, sanctions ceased and it fully rejoined the international
community. When apartheid ended, so did the boycott of its sports
teams, one of the most potent measures employed to impress on the
South African government its international isolation. The divestment
campaign currently directed against Caterpillar has gained considerable
momentum among the international public, effectively educating people
about Israel's policy of demolishing Palestinian homes. It has generated
calls for other sanctions, such as the Presbyterian Church's initiative
to divest from companies profiting from the Occupation. The European
Parliament has also called for trade sanctions on Israel given Israel's
violation of the "Association Agreements" that prohibit
the sale of settlement products under the "Made in Israel"
label. The American Congress should take similar steps, since Israel's
use of American weapons against civilian populations violates the
human rights provisions of the Arms Control Exports Act. The boycott
of California grapes in the 1960s played a key role in gaining employment
rights for migrant workers. The current boycott of settlement products
is intended to express moral opposition to the very presence of
settlements while making it economically and politically difficult
for Israel to maintain them.
Once it builds momentum, there is probably no more effective means
for civil society to effectively pursue justice than a campaign
of sanctions. Its power derives less from its economic impact -
although, with time, that too can be decisive - than from the moral
outrage that impels it. Sanctions themselves seriously affected
the South African economy. Following massive protests inside South
Africa and escalating international pressure inmid-1984, some 200
US companies and more than 60 British ones withdrew from the country
and international lenders cut off Pretoria's access to foreign capital.
US Congressional pressure played a crucial role as well, an element
totally lacking vis-à-vis the Israel-Palestine conflict,
which makes the possibility of actually imposing sanctions on Israel
that more difficult.
In 1986 Congress - with a Republican-controlled Senate - passed
the Comprehensive Anti-Apartheid Act over the Reagan's veto. The
Act banned new US investment in South Africa, sales to the police
and military and new bank loans. Although the Act was not strictly
enforced by the Reagan and Bush Administrations, although European
governments found ways of quietly doing business with Pretoria (while
Israel, by the way, was helping South African businesses by-pass
sanctions by peddling their products in the US and Europe under
a "Made in Israel" label, as well as by continued involvement
in military development in South Africa, including nuclear; Hunter
1986), it did generate a climate - moral and economic - that made
it increasingly difficult to maintain business-as-usual with the
apartheid regime. The moral dimension led to a delegitimization
of the very apartheid system that left no room for "reform."
Carried over to Israel's Occupation, the moral element in a larger
political condemnation of Israel's policies could delegitimize the
Occupation to the point where only its complete end is acceptable.
A campaign of sanctions which highlights the moral unacceptability
of Israel's Occupation could have a great impact, eventually impelling
governments to impose economic sanctions while creating a climate
difficult for businesses (beginning with Caterpillar) to continue
to function.
It is not only the political unacceptability of Israel's Occupation
which makes the call for sanction urgent and obligatory, it is the
massive violations of Palestinian human rights, of international
law and of numerous UN resolutions that the Occupation entails.
If Israel as the Occupying Power is not held accountable for the
intolerable situation within its ability, indeed, within its responsibility
to end, the entire international system of justice is rendered meaningless
and empty. And that is what makes the Occupation an international
issue. If Israel succeeds in defying the Fourth Geneva Convention
and making its Occupation permanent, if an entire population is
literally locked behind walls and its right of self-determination
trampled, then the ability of human rights to win out over an international
order founded on power politics and militarism is jeopardized. We
all have a stake in ending the Occupation; the implications of occupation
actually prevailing and a new apartheid regime emerging are chilling.
Since the Palestinians do not have the power to shake off the Occupation
on their own and the Israelis will not, only international pressure
will effectively achieve a just peace. A campaign of sanctions represents
one of the most efficacious measures.
ICAHD'S Position on Sanctions
In principle ICAHD supports the use of sanctions against countries
engaged in egregious violations of human rights and international
law, including the use of moral and economic pressures to end Israel's
Occupation. An effective approach to sanctions operates on different
levels, however, and requires a number of strategic considerations
as to its scope and focus.
First, the generic term "sanctions" actually includes
three main types of economic and moral pressure:
(1) Sanctions, defined overall as "penalties, specified or
in the form ofmoral pressure, applied against a country guilty of
egregious violations of human rights, international law and UN resolutions,
intended to bring that country back into compliance with international
norms." Since they must be imposed by governments, regional
associations (such as the EU or SEAC) or the UN, the power to actually
apply sanctions falls outside of civil society. Nevertheless, governments
can be prodded in that direction - and the "prodding"
itself constitutes an important form of conscious-raising and moral
pressure.
(2) Divestment, the withdrawal of investments in companies doing
business with the offending country or directly involved in violating
human rights and international law;
(3) Boycott, the voluntary refraining from purchasing the products
of the offending country or allowing its companies, institutions,
representatives or even professionals from participating in international
intercourse.
Now sanctions, divestment and boycott can be applied either totally
or selectively, the decision involving a strategic mix of efficacy
and moral stance. In the most successful case of sanctions, apartheid
South Africa, the call was for total sanctions, since the entire
system was considered illegitimate. In the case of Israel and the
Occupation, it is the Occupation which is considered illegitimate,
illegal and immoral, not Israel per se.
Although there are those who would argue that a Zionist Israel
whose ongoing policy is to displace Palestinians from the country
or confine them to reservations is, indeed, as illegitimate as apartheid,
this is a position from which it would be difficult to generate
mass support. Most advocates of a just peace - including the Israeli
peace movement, ICAHD included -support Israel's right as a recognized
member state in the UN to rejoin the international community when
the Occupation truly ends and a just peace is attained. Since governments
must be induced to impose sanctions, on a purely pragmatic level
it is difficult to imagine the international community, with the
US at its head, actually agreeing to blanket sanctions. More do-able
would be a campaign for selective sanctions. This could be no less
principled and focused than a call for total sanctions, but it targets
Israel's Occupation rather than Israel itself. A campaign of selective
sanctions can be effective if the choice of targets is strategic:
refusing to sell arms to Israel that would be used to perpetuate
the Occupation, especially in attacks on civilian populations, for
example, or banning Israeli sports teams from competing in international
tournaments, especially potent in the South African case. (Israel
is currently the European basketball champion and is scheduled to
play in the World Cup of football/soccer). These and other selected
measures could have a great impact upon Israel, as well as the ability
to mobilize international opposition to the Occupation. Yet, with
strong civil society advocacy, they also have a reasonable chance,
over time, of being adopted.
ICAHD, then, supports in principle a multi-tiered campaign of sanctions
against Israel until the Occupation ends. We believe that a selective
campaign is most effective and we would incorporate into that campaigns
that other organizations have already launched. At this stage, ICAHD
supports:
Sanctions: Sales or transfer of arms to Israel conditional
upon their use in ways that do not perpetuate the Occupation or
violate human rights and international humanitarian law, violations
that would end if governments enforced existing laws and regulations
regarding the use of weapons in contravention of human rights. Rather
than adopting new policies of sanctions, ICAHD calls on the governments
of North America, Europe and Asia to stop selling arms to Israel
that are used in perpetuating the Occupation in accordance with
their own laws prohibiting sales of weapons to countries engaged
in serious human rights violations. No new policy of sanctions has
to be adopted; the existing laws prohibiting such sales must simply
be enforced. In addition existing international law must be applied
against Israel for using its weapons illegally: against civilian
populations, for example, or in campaigns of extra-judicial executions,
to name but two. Sanctions that comprise implementation of international
and domestic laws should include a ban on purchasing Israeli weapons
as well. ICAHD is currently investigating Israel's involvement in
the world's arms trade, including weapons development, joint production
and coordinated sales with other countries. We believe this is a
hidden element that underlies the broad support Israeli receives
from governments, including those outwardly critical of its occupation
policies. We hope that advocates for a just peace will use our information
to expose their own country's complicity in policies that perpetuate
the Occupation.
We also call on activist groups to investigate and publicize the
forms of aid their country - and especially the US - is giving Israel.
Components of that aid that support occupation or settlement, whether
military, technological or economic, should be opposed. We also
call on Jewish communities to oppose the use of their donations
to Israel - to the Jewish National Fund, for instance, or to the
United Jewish Appeal, Israel Bonds and other channels of funding
- in the OccupiedTerritories.·
Trade sanctions on Israel due to its violation of the "Association
Agreements" it has signed with the European Union that prohibit
the sale of settlement products under the "Made in Israel"
label, as well as for violations of their human rights provisions.·
Divestment in companies that profit from involvement in
the Occupation. Here ICAHD supports the initiative of the Presbyterian
Church ofthe US to divest in "multinational corporations that
provide products or services to the Israeli police or military to
support and maintain the occupation, that have established facilities
or operations on occupied land, that provide services or products
for the establishment, expansion or maintenance of Israeli settlements,
that provide products or services to Israeli or Palestinian organizations/groups
that support or facilitate violent acts against innocent civilians,
that provide products or services that support or facilitate the
construction of the Separation Barrier.
We certainly support the campaign against Caterpillar whose bulldozers
demolish thousands of Palestinian homes.We join with the Jewish
Voice for Peace in the US whose statement in support of the Presbyterians
says in part: At JVP, we fully support selective divestment from
companies that profit from Israel's occupation of the West Bank,
Gaza, and East Jerusalem. This includes American companies like
Caterpillar who profit from the wholesale destruction of Palestinian
homes and orchards. It also includes Israeli companies who depend
on settlements for materials or labor or who produce military equipment
used to violate Palestinian human rights.
We believe that general divestment from Israel is an unwise strategy
at this time. We believe that economic measures targeted specifically
at the occupation and the Israeli military complex that sustains
it are much morel ikely to produce results. However, we absolutely
reject the accusation that general divestment or boycott campaigns
are inherently anti-Semitic. The Israeli government is a government
like any other, and condemning its abuse of state power, as many
of its own citizens do quite vigorously, is in no way the same as
attacking the Jewish people. Further, it is crucial not only to
criticize the immoral and illegal acts of the Israeli government,
but to back up that criticism with action.
We also note with satisfaction the many Jewish and Israeli organizations
who support the idea of selective sanctions on Israel: European
Jews for a JustPeace (a coalition of 16 Jewish groups from eight
European countries); Not in My Name (US); Matzpun (Israel/International);
Jews Against the Occupation (NYC Chapter); the petition of South
African government minister Ronnie Kasrils and legislator Max Ozinsky,
which has gathered more than 500 signatories from South African
Jews; Jewish Voices Against the Occupation (US); Jewish Women for
Justice in Israel and Palestine (US); Gush Shalom (Israel); Jews
for Global Justice (US); and Visions of Peace With Justice (US),
among others,
Boycott of settlement products and of companies that provide housing
to the settlements or which play a major role in perpetuating the
Occupation, a campaign initiated several years ago by Gush Shalom.
These campaigns, it seems to us, build on existing initiatives.
They are capable of garnering broad international support, are focused,
raise publi cconsciousness over the economic aspects of the Occupation
and expose the complicity of the international community in it.
They bring significant moral pressure to bear on Israel, while moving
towards effective forms of economic sanctions designed to end the
Occupation.
We believe that Israel as a powerful state occupying the territory
of another people should be held accountable for its policies and
actions. We would therefore add to the list of sanctions the following
element:
Holding individuals, be they policy-makers, military personnel
carrying out orders or others, personally accountable for human
rights violations, including trial before international courts and
bans on travel to other countries.
Since sanctions are a powerful non-violent means of resisting the
Occupation, ICAHD supports this burgeoning movement and calls on
the international community - civil society as well as governments
- to do all that is possible to bring a swift end to Israel's terrible
Occupation so that all the peoples of the region, and especially
Israelis and Palestinians, can enjoy the benefits of a just and
lasting peace for the generations to come. The time has come; sanctions
seem the next logical step in a global campaign to end the Occupation.
Israeli Committee Against House Demolitions (ICAHD)
PO Box 2030 Jerusalem, Israel
Tels: +972-(0)2-624-5560 Fax: +972-(0)2-622-153091020
E-mail: info@icahd.org
Website: www.icahd.org
See also:
Do
I Divest? - By Archbishop Desmond Tutu.
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