New research conducted shows that the U.N.’s focus on Israel not only undermines the
organization’s legitimacy regarding the Jewish state. It also has apparently
made the U.N. blind to the world’s many situations of occupation and
settlements.
The research shows that
the U.N. uses an entirely different rhetoric and set of legal concepts when
dealing with Israel compared with situations of occupation or settlements
world-wide. For example, Israel is referred to as the “Occupying Power” 530
times in General Assembly resolutions. Yet in seven major instances of past or
present prolonged military occupation—Indonesia in East Timor, Turkey in
northern Cyprus, Russia in areas of Georgia, Morocco in Western Sahara, Vietnam
in Cambodia, Armenia in areas of Azerbaijan, and Russia in Ukraine’s Crimea—the
number is zero. The U.N. has not called any of these countries an “Occupying
Power.” Not even once.
It gets worse. Since 1967,
General Assembly resolutions have referred to Israeli-held territories as “occupied”
2,342 times, while the territories mentioned above are referred to as
“occupied” a mere 16 times combined. The term appears in 90% of resolutions
dealing with Israel, and only in 14% of the much smaller number of resolutions
dealing with the all the other situations, a difference that vastly surpasses
the threshold of statistical significance. Similarly, Security Council
resolutions refer to the disputed territories in the Israeli-Arab conflict as
“occupied” 31 times, but only a total of five times in reference to all seven
other conflicts combined.
General Assembly
resolutions employ the term “grave” to describe Israel’s actions 513 times, as
opposed to 14 total for all the other conflicts, which involve the full gamut
of human-rights abuses, including allegations of ethnic cleansing and torture.
Verbs such as “condemn” and “deplore” are sprinkled into Israel-related
resolutions tens more times than they are in resolutions about other conflicts,
setting a unique tone of disdain.
Israel has been reminded
by resolutions against it of the country’s obligations under the Geneva
Conventions about 500 times since 1967—as opposed to two times for the other
situations.
In particular, the
resolutions refer to Article 49(6), which states that the “Occupying Power
shall not deport or transfer parts of its own civilian population into the
territory it occupies.” This is the provision that the entire legal case
against Israel settlements is based upon. Yet no U.N. body has ever invoked
Article 49(6) in relation to any of the occupations mentioned above.
This even though, as Eugene Kontorovich shows in a new research article,
“Unsettled: A Global Study of Settlements in Occupied Territories,” all these
situations have seen settlement activity, typically on a scale that eclipses
Israel’s. However, the U.N. has only used the legally loaded word “settlements”
to describe Israeli civilian communities (256 times by the GA and 17 by the
Security Council). Neither body has ever used that word in relation to any
other country with settlers in occupied territory.
The findings don’t merely
quantify the U.N.’s double standard. The evidence shows that the organization’s
claim to represent the interest of international justice is hollow, because the
U.N. has no interest in battling injustice unless Israel is the country
accused.
At a time of serious
global crises—from a disintegrating Middle East to a land war and belligerent
occupation in Europe—the leaders of the free world cannot afford to tempt the
U.N. into indulging its obsessions. Especially when the apparent consequence of
such scapegoating is that the organization ignores other situations and people
in desperate need of attention.
Eugene Kontorovich, a professor at
Northwestern University’s Pritzker School of Law, heads the international law
department at the Kohelet Policy Forum, a think tank where Ms. Grunseid is a researcher.
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