What Does the U.N. Have Against Israel?

Report Global Politics

What Does the U.N. Have Against Israel?

October 21, 1982 3 min read Download Report
Juliana Geran
Director, Center for Legal & Judicial Studies
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(Archived document, may contain errors)

 

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WHAT DOES THE U.N. HAVE AGA-INST ISRAEL?

The United Nations is waging a war against Israel and has been doing so for years. The recent anti-Israeli moves at the International Atomic Energy Agency, the International Telecommunications Union, and even the General Assembly, are only the latest instances of this. It is not necessary to condone all the policy-decisions o f the Israeli move into Lebanon to recognize that the U.N.'s treatment of the Jewish state in recent years amounts to sheer harassment. Secretary of State George Shultz's determination to leave any U.N. body that expels Israel, echoing the near-unanimous decision of Congress to thateffect on May 13, 1982, amounts to a refusal to go along with the U.N.'s double standard.

Although the U.N. maintains an eerie silence about such blatant human rights violators as the Soviet Union, Cuba, Pol Pot's Kampuchea, and Idi Amin's Uganda, Israel was condemned in lq82 as a "non-peace-loving state"--the only U.N. member so named. Since the-Charter restricts U.N. membership to "peace-loving" states, this language opens the door to Israel's expulsion from the U.N.

The U.N.' s campaign against Israel can be t raced back at least to 1967, following the Six-Day War. Since then, nearly two hundred resolu- tions hostile to Israel have been adopted in the,Security Council, the General Assembly and the Commission on Human Rig4ts. I n recent years half the time of the Security Council and half the total of its resolu- tions have condemned the Jewish state, with practically no mention of PLO and other Arab contributions to Middle East itensions and violence. The double standard is glar ing. A proposed Security Council resolution in 1975 to condemn Israeli raids on Palestinian targets in Lebanon failed to mention Arab violence against Israel.

The anti-Israel campaign pervades the entire U.N. system. In the last decade Israeli participatio n has been attac 'ked in virtually every Agency of the U.N. system except the General Assembly. Israel, for example, is no longer a member of the Commission on Human Rights though most of the Commission's members have far worse human rights records than I s rael. Israel is also the only country in the world subject to special sanctions by the U.N. Educational Scientific and Cultural Organi- zation (UNESCO). Though Israel and South Africa were condemned as "an unholy alliance" by the General Assembly in Resol ution 3151 G(XXVII) of December-14, 1973, not even South Africa is subj6.cted to such sanctions.

The watershed year at the U.N. was 1974: on November 13, the General Assembly session was addressed by PLO chief Yassir Arafat. For

 

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t he first time in its history, the U.N. extended observer status to a non-nation. In November and December of that year, UNESCO's general conference approved a series of resolutions condemning Israel on.various grounds and blocking its requested membership in-the organization' s European regional grouping. UNESCO specifically condemned Israel for allegedly endangering Moslem monuments in Jerusalem--a charge later shown to be unfounded. The organization then cut off all funds for Israeli projects.

A year later, UNESCO inserted into an official document a reference to the infamous "Zionism is racism" General Assembly resolution 3379 (XXX), a-document that infuriated even long-time supporters of the U.N.

On May 17, 1976, the World Health Organization refused to consider an expert c ommittee's report that health services in Israeli-occupied Arab territories, far from having deteriorated, had seen a "slow but steady" improvement since 1967. This conclusion-was not what the Third World majority at WHO was looking for. It was therefore rejected despite the fact that two of the three experts on the coibmittee were from coun- tries having no diplomatic relations with Israel,;

Since 1975, the U.N. majority has escalatedAts attacks on Israel. About 40 resolutions passed by the 36th General @ ssembly in 1981 dealt with the Middle East, invariably chastising Israel while not mentioning PLO attacks on Israeli civilians, including women and children.

For at least a decade and a half, Israel has been badgered by the U.N.'s new majori:ty. Ignoring, at times, both facts and legal provisions, this majority has chosen to chastise Israel whil@ worse human rights offenders go completely without reproof and Arab hostilities and terrorist acts go unmentioned.

Whatever its transgressions--and surely no sta te is devoid of sins-- Israel does not deserve to be denied participati6n in the General Assembly and membership in the U.N. agencies. If it does,, so do the great majority of U.N. members. What does the'U.N. have against Israel? It is a puzzle--despite t h e thousands of hours of rhetoric devoted to the issue. Indeed, it seems that the U.N. can make no solidi juridical or moral case against Israel. As such, the U.N. majority@-cowed by the Soviet Bloc and radical Arab states--resorts to a sordia double stand ard. Israel deserves better. So does the U.N.

Juliana Geran Pilon, Ph.D. United Nations A6sessment Project

This report is based on an internal Heritage Foundation study, part of which is to be published shortly. For further reading se e: Marjorie Ann Browne, "Credentials in the United Nations,General Assembly: Selected Precedents,"Congressional Research Service, September 30,1980. Daniel G. Partan, Documentary Study of the Politicizati6n of UNESCO, American Academy of Arts and Sciences , November 1975. Juliana' Geran Pilon, "Through the Looking Glass: The Political Culture of the U.N.," Heritage Backgrounder #206, August 30, 1982.-

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Authors

Juliana Geran

Director, Center for Legal & Judicial Studies