America's Shameful Lonely Vote
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MPAC DC News & Views
This week, President Barack Obama's National Security Advisor Susan Rice delivered remarks to the National Jewish Leaders Assembly in Washington, D.C., which were nothing short of a series of blindly one-sided comments.
The administration is apparently so insecure about
maintaining Israel's approval of us that Rice felt it necessary to mention
America's support for and friendship with Israel more than a dozen times. In
fact, Rice went so far as to brag about the U.S.' lonely "no" vote
against a United Nations Human Rights Council resolution to establish an
independent inquiry into allegations that Israel violated international
humanitarian and human rights laws. "We were the lone vote in the Human Rights Council," Rice
said. "It was 29-1. But the '1,' as usual, was America."
Voting "no" in the Human Rights Council is
diminishing the role of human rights on this issue. Further, our role in voting
against the resolution intimidated our closest allies into abstaining from the
vote. This is not the first time the U.S. has undermined international efforts
to deal with this conflict. In 2012, Rice, then the U.S. Ambassador to the UN
voted against granting Palestine non-member observer state status citing it
places, "further obstacles in the path of peace."
Furthermore, Rice contradicted several reports of the truth
on how this latest invasion emanated. In her remarks, Rice stated,
"President Obama has been equally clear about who has been responsible for
the violence. Hamas fired the rockets. Hamas deliberately targeted Israeli
citizens, particularly civilians. Hamas refused an early plan for a ceasefire.
So Hamas initiated this conflict. And, Hamas has dragged it on." In fact,
the Times of Israel reported that Israel broke the 2012 ceasefire with Hamas. On
June 30, Hamas fired rockets into Israel, for the first time since 2012, in
response to "an Israeli airstrike several hours earlier which killed one
person and injured three more." So, to say that Hamas started this
military offensive is erroneous.
Secretary of State John Kerry's trip to the Middle East to
push for an immediate ceasefire -- which would be in Israel's interests -- was
scorned by the Israeli press. Rice made a valiant six-sentence effort to defend
Kerry. But, in the end, facing the disapproval of these efforts, Rice was quick
to default to her talking points and reassurance of uncritical support. Her
statements and the Administration's actions have undermined our role as an
honest broker.
Rice highlighted Obama's instruction to Secretary of Defense
Chuck Hagel to inform Congress that the "U.S. supports an additional $225
million to accelerate the production of Iron Dome components in Israel this
year and maintain Israel's stockpile of interceptor missiles." Rather than
dealing with the issue of slaughtering civilians and children in Gaza, the U.S.
should be suspending military aid to Israel which is being used to kill three
civilians for every one Hamas target.
The international community admonished Israel in their
offensive against Gaza in the Human Rights Council. Rice should have focused on
the humanitarian crisis in Gaza affecting more than 1.8 million people instead
of bragging about our shameful vote. This vote is a stain on our record and a
breach of trust with the American people. In the face of more than 1,400
Palestinian deaths, which is likely to rise as dead bodies are being recovered
under the rubble, Rice should have spoken about these abysmal realities and
what we can do to reach a just and peaceful solution and to end these atrocities.
America and Americans deserve better. The world deserves better.
[Contact: Hoda Elshishtawy, National Policy Analyst,
hoda@mpac.org (202) 547-7701]
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