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Gerald M. Steinberg- Il Rapporto Goldstone 19/09/2009
Wall Street Journal, September 16, 2009
U.N. SMEARS ISRAELI SELF-DEFENSE AS "WAR CRIMES"
Gerald M. Steinberg
Wall Street Journal, September 16, 2009

Judge Richard Goldstone and the three other members of the U.N.-authorized "fact
 finding mission" on Gaza spent five months collecting testimony, interviewing witnesses
and writing a 575-page report, with 1,223 references. But they ended up where they
and the U.N. Human Rights Council began an assumption of Israeli war crimes "proved"
by a collection of NGO claims and Palestinian "testimony," both of which lack credibility.

The report ostensibly presents the results of an intensive investigation into the
Gaza conflict between Israel and Hamas from June 2008 to the end of July 2009. Yet
on every significant issue, Judge Goldstone's group simply repeated what it chose
to hear from carefully selected witnesses. (When Israeli victims of Hamas rocket
 attacks were given a few hours to tell their tales of horror, photos show Mr. Goldstone
taking a nap.) The result vindicated the Israel government's view that the books
 were cooked from the beginning, including the one-sided terms of reference and
the selection of Mr. Goldstone and of Prof. Christine Chinkin, whose anti-Israel
 prejudices were clear. There is no evidence to indicate that a fair hearing was
 possible, or that Israeli government cooperation would have made any difference.

Unusually, the tendentious and extremely biased report succeeded in angering Israelis
from across the political spectrum. President and Nobel Peace Prize laureate Shimon
Peres, who does not see eye-to-eye with Prime Minister Netanyahu on many issues,
 said the report made a mockery of history and gave legitimacy to terror. The committee
condemned every Israeli response to the 8,000 rockets fired by Hamas, but its recommendations
did not include any steps to end this aggression. And while Israel is accused of
 committing acts of terror, the report never acknowledges that Hamas committed acts
of terror, even though it is legally banned as a terrorist organization by the U.S
and the European Union, among others. This distortion undermined the facade of even-handedness,
as if balance between a terrorist group and aggressor, and a democracy meeting the
obligation to defend its citizens, had any moral foundation....

Iran, which is the main patron of Hamas and its primary source of funding, political
support, training and weapons, is only mentioned once, obliquely, in the report,
 in connection with "the 220 mm Fadjr-3 rocket ... thought to be smuggled into Gaza."
The committee, like the NGOs on which it relied, did not bother to investigate this
central issue, since it would not have contributed to the indictment of Israel.

Mr. Goldstone's professional qualifications are anchored in international law, but
if anything, this report highlights the absurdity of a vocabulary and framework
that are anachronistic. Applying classical concepts and terms to terror and asymmetric
urban warfare, in which the entire population is a massive human shield and hospitals
are used as command headquarters, as in the case of Gaza, is ridiculous. The report
fails to deal with the difficulty of defining a civilian in this context, and following
the Palestinian Center for Human Rights, the report classifies the members of the
Hamas "police" as civilians, erasing their membership in Hamas' armed forces and
 their participation in the rocket barrages targeting Israeli civilians.

On most issues, Mr. Goldstone followed the lead and biases of NGO "superpowers"
particularly Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International. Human Rights Watch's
publications on Gaza have been discredited following the exposure of the obsession
with Nazi memorabilia and false claims of its "senior military expert," Marc Garlasco.
But his allegations are adopted in this report, again without any independent investigation
and despite the testimony of military experts who exposed Mr. Garlasco's fictions.
Indeed, Mr. Goldstone's long relationship with Human Rights Watch, including his
 membership on its board, added to the credibility problems of this inquiry.

Similarly, the attempt to shove the role of Iran under the carpet follows the lead
of these NGOs, as does the decision to ignore video evidence showing the use of
civilians as cover for Hamas fighters attacking Israel (human shields), including
the launch of rockets from schools. Instead, copying the unreliable NGO claims almost
word for word, the issue is dismissed on the grounds that the committee "received
no reports of such incidents from other sources." No independent research was conducted....

One of Israel's primary and most important objectives in the war was to search for
clues to the whereabouts of Gilad Shalit, a soldier kidnapped from Israel and taken
to Gaza in a 2006 cross-border raid. Mr. Goldstone does not consider this to be
related to military necessity, and even labels the interrogation of Palestinians
 on this issue as criminal. And in rejecting Israeli statements regarding the storage
of weapons in a mosque (ignoring video evidence), the report admits: "the Mission
cannot exclude that this might have occurred in other cases." In other words, they
did not have a clue.

As is often the case, the implications of this report, including the threats of
a Security Council monitoring mechanism and possible action by the International
 Criminal Court, go far beyond Israel. If Israel is condemned for attacking "civilians"
like Nizar Rayan, the head of Hamas' military wing, American officials could find
themselves in the dock for the raid in Somalia that killed al Qaeda leader Saleh
 Ali Saleh Nabhan....

Instead of promoting legal accountability and reconciliation, Mr. Goldstone's report
will increase Israeli cynicism regarding the viability of international institutions
and guarantees of Israeli security and fair treatment. The damage wreaked by Mr.
 Goldstone's offensive will not help the efforts of President Obama's peace envoy,
George Mitchell, in efforts to gain Israeli flexibility and willingness to take
risks. Hopes for peace, already very tenuous, may be another casualty of the Goldstone
report.

( Gerald Steinberg, president of NGO Monitor, is professor of political science
at Bar Ilan University)

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