Monday, 17 June 2013 00:00By Stephen Zunes, Truthout | Op-Ed
The selection of Susan Rice as President Obama's new
national security adviser is highly problematic for those of us who believe
that United States foreign policy should be more attuned to international law
and human rights and that alleged threats to US national security should be
based on empirical evidence rather than unsubstantiated allegations by
warmongers.
Rice's willingness to state demonstrable falsehoods to
defend actions by the United
States and its allies that violate
international norms is very troubling. It is all too telling that the
mainstream media was so willing to focus on spurious criticisms from the right
regarding her initial responses to the killings in Benghazi while ignoring legitimate criticisms
from the left.
One example of Rice's disconnect from reality came up in the
lead-up to the war in Iraq ten years ago, as independent arms control analysts,
scholars, investigative journalists and antiwar activists were challenging the
Bush administration's lies about the supposed "Iraqi threat." In an
apparent effort to discredit these efforts by those who opposed the rush to
war, Rice rushed to the administration's defense by insisting that, "It's clear that Iraq poses a
major threat." This claim came despite the fact that Iraq had
disarmed itself of its chemical and biological weapons and eliminated its
nuclear program at least eight years earlier. Moreover, despite the success of
the UN's disarmament program, Rice asserted that Iraq 's "weapons of mass
destruction need to be dealt with forcefully, and that's the path we're
on."
In February 2003, Secretary of State Colin Powell testified
before the United Nations that Iraq
had reconstituted its biological and chemical weapons arsenal, as well as its
nuclear weapons program - and had somehow hidden all this from the hundreds of
UN inspectors then in Iraq
who were engaged in unfettered inspections. None of this was true, and Powell's
transparently false claims were immediately challenged by UN officials, arms
control specialists, and much of the press and political leadership in Europe and elsewhere. (See my article written in response
to his testimony: "Mr.
Powell, You're No Adlai Stevenson.")
Rice, however, was adamant that Powell had "proved that Iraq has these
weapons and is hiding them, and I don't think many informed people doubted
that." In light of such widespread and public skepticism from
knowledgeable sources, Rice's dismissal of all the well-founded criticism was
positively Orwellian: those who blindly accepted Powell's transparently false
claims were "well informed," while the UN officials, arms control
specialists and others knowledgeable of the reality of the situation were
presumably otherwise.
Her openness to another US war in the Middle East became
apparent when she
announced in September that "there is no daylight" between
the United States and the right-wing Israeli government of Benjamin Netanyahu -
which has been pushing for a unilateral attack on Iran - regarding Iran's
nuclear program.
Rice has also not been averse to supporting autocratic
regimes in Africa, recently suppressing a UN report criticizing the government
of Rwanda , a US ally, for supporting the M-23 rebels in
eastern Congo .
The rebels, led by a notorious warlord wanted by the International Criminal
Court, have wreaked havoc in the troubled province of North Kivu .
Rice dismissed the report, saying,
"It's eastern Congo .
If it were not the M23 killing people, it would be some other armed
groups."
Similarly, this past September Rice delivered a eulogy for
the late Meles Zenawi, the authoritarian ruler of Ethiopia , whom she referred to as
"a true friend to me," calling him "brilliant" and
"uncommonly wise, able to see the big picture and the long game."
Rice has also objected to UN initiatives challenging racism,
successfully pushing the Obama administration to boycott a five-day conference
in Geneva in 2009 that assessed international
progress in fighting racism and xenophobia since the UN's first conference in Durban , South
Africa eight years earlier. The final document of
the 2001 conference explicitly recognized "the right to security for all
States in the [Middle East], including Israel , and call[ed] upon all
States to support the peace process and bring it to an early conclusion."
It called as well for "a just, comprehensive and lasting peace in the
region in which all peoples shall co-exist and enjoy equality, justice and
internationally recognized human rights, and security." However, because
it also expressed concern regarding "the plight of the Palestinian people
under foreign occupation" and recognized their "right to
self-determination," Rice determined that it was somehow
"anti-Israel" since it "prejudges key issues that
can only be resolved in negotiations between the Israelis and
Palestinians."
Defending Israeli Colonization and Repression
Indeed, Rice has developed a reputation at the United
Nations as one of the world body's most outspoken supporters of Israel 's
rightist government and its settlements policy. Former Congressman Robert
Wexler, who now heads a right-leaning pro-Israel advocacy group in Washington , wrote in an op-ed for Politico that "Israel has no
greater champion in the current administration than Susan Rice." Failing
to distinguish between anti-Israel ideologues and legitimate criticism of the
right-wing government's violations of international law, Rice has dismissed
criticism at the UN of Israeli policies as nothing more than "anti-Israel
crap." She cast one of only nine negative votes in the 193-member
UN General Assembly to upgrade Palestine 's
status to a non-member state. In Rice's view, while Israeli statehood and
membership in the United Nations is a given, Palestinian statehood and UN recognition
should only be on terms agreed to by Israel 's hardline government.
Indeed, Rice has made clear her contempt for international
law in a series of statements regarding the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Most
of the outstanding issues between Israel
and Palestine - such as settlements and the
status of East Jerusalem - are issues of
international law, many of which have been previously addressed by the UN
Security Council and other United Nations bodies. For example, Israeli
colonization of the occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem
has continued despite these settlements constituting a clear violation of the
Fourth Geneva Convention, a landmark advisory opinion of the International
Court of Justice, and four previous UN Security Council resolutions that passed
without objection from previous administrations.
However, in justifying her veto of an otherwise unanimous
resolution in 2011 reiterating the illegality of Israeli colonization of the
occupied West Bank , Rice insisted that
it was "unwise for this Council to attempt to resolve the core issues that
divide Israelis and Palestinians."
Ironically, the resolution about which she spoke did not
"attempt to resolve" the conflict. Indeed, it explicitly called for
the resumption of negotiations. What Rice objected to was the resolution's
insistence that such negotiations be based on international law, which is
actually a very appropriate role for the UN Security Council, but one which Rice
somehow found to be intolerable.
During conflict this past November between forces of Hamas
and Israel , during which
three Israeli civilians and over 100 Palestinian civilians died, Rice correctly
noted that there was "no justification for the violence that
Hamas and other terrorist organizations are employing against the people of Israel ."
However, she offered absolutely no criticism for Israel 's
far more devastating bombardment of the heavily populated Gaza Strip, simply
saying that "Israel ,
like any nation, has the right to defend itself against such vicious
attacks." She blocked an otherwise unanimous UN Security Council statement
that called for a ceasefire, condemned all acts of terrorism and violence
directed toward civilians, and reiterated support for all states to live in
peace and security within their internationally recognized boundaries.
When a UN investigation of the 2008-2009 Gaza War raised
concerns about possible war crimes by both Israel and Hamas, Rice denounced it
because of its criticism of the actions by the US-armed Israeli Defense Forces
(IDF). "Our view is that we need to be focused on the future," she
argued. The
report's findings included the recommendation that both Hamas and the
Israeli government bring to justice those responsible for war crimes during the
three weeks of fighting and, if they failed to do so, the report urged that the
case be referred to the International Criminal Court (ICC) for possible
prosecution. Rice labeled
this call to hold those accountable for war crimes as "basically
unacceptable." Though Rice had argued just a few months earlier during a
UN debate on Darfur that war crimes charges should never be sacrificed for
political reasons, she
argued that following the report's recommendations on Israel-Palestine
could somehow interfere with the "peace process," which has been
stagnant for years.
Rice's lack of concern for international humanitarian law
has been particularly evident in her
attacks against the UN's special rapporteur for human rights, Richard
Falk - an American Jew and a highly respected international legal scholar and
professor emeritus from Princeton . When Falk
recommended that companies profiting from Israel 's illegal settlements
"be boycotted until they bring their operations into line with
international human rights and humanitarian law and standards," Rice
denounced his recommendations as "irresponsible and unacceptable."
Falk's proposals, she argued, would "do nothing to further a peaceful
settlement to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and indeed poison the
environment for peace," adding, that Falk's "continued service in the
role of a UN special rapporteur is deeply regrettable." And, despite his
outspoken criticisms of Palestinian terrorism and his
insistence that his mandate should include violations of human rights
by Palestinian governments (which led the Palestinian Authority to call for his
resignation), Rice has labeled Falk "highly biased" against Israel.
It is unfortunate that someone with such contempt for
international law as Susan Rice will now serve as the president's top foreign
policy adviser. With the primary pressure in Washington coming from those even further to
the right, it becomes all the more important that Americans who support
international law and human rights redouble our efforts in challenging the
Obama administration to adapt a more responsible foreign policy.
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