Israel pulls doomed UN resolution

miguel

Senior member
Nov 2, 2001
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EDIT: Here's the link to the Palestinian resolution: UN.org

Doesn't seem fair to me to pass a resolution protecting Palestinian children and not one protecting Israeli children.

Israel pulls doomed UN resolution (BBC)

Israel has withdrawn its first United Nations draft resolution in nearly 30 years in the face of strong opposition.
The Israeli draft, which called for the protection of Israeli children from terrorism, mirrored one on Palestinian children passed earlier this month.

But mostly Arab opponents of the text introduced changes Israel could not accept, ambassador Dan Gillerman said.

They removed references to "Israeli children" and replaced them with more general language about "children of the Middle East".

They also added references to Israeli "military assaults" and "excessive use of force".

"The changes proposed are not amendments, but they are shameless attempts to deny Israeli children the attention that Palestinian children have already received," Ambassador Gillerman reportedly said.
 

freegeeks

Diamond Member
May 7, 2001
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damn


I would have loved the US reaction on that resolution
if they were conseguent, they should have voted against it :D
 

Spencer278

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Oct 11, 2002
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So what is wrong with protecting children from the middle east from terrorism. The only reason Israel would not like a resolution stating that is if they intended to terrorise middle eastern childern.
 

miguel

Senior member
Nov 2, 2001
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Originally posted by: Spencer278
So what is wrong with protecting children from the middle east from terrorism. The only reason Israel would not like a resolution stating that is if they intended to terrorise middle eastern childern.

THe problem is that the UN passed a resolution specifically protecting Palestinian children.
 

Czar

Lifer
Oct 9, 1999
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both of them were total crap

the modifications suggested to the israeli ones were good though, made it neutral
 

freegeeks

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May 7, 2001
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Originally posted by: miguel
Originally posted by: Spencer278
So what is wrong with protecting children from the middle east from terrorism. The only reason Israel would not like a resolution stating that is if they intended to terrorise middle eastern childern.

THe problem is that the UN passed a resolution specifically protecting Palestinian children.

these are general assembly resolutions

they don't have any relevance - it's in the security council that the serious stuff is done

 

miguel

Senior member
Nov 2, 2001
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Originally posted by: freegeeks
Originally posted by: miguel
Originally posted by: Spencer278
So what is wrong with protecting children from the middle east from terrorism. The only reason Israel would not like a resolution stating that is if they intended to terrorise middle eastern childern.

THe problem is that the UN passed a resolution specifically protecting Palestinian children.

these are general assembly resolutions

they don't have any relevance - it's in the security council that the serious stuff is done

Wasn't the Israeli resolution proposed in the GA as well? What's your point?
 

0roo0roo

No Lifer
Sep 21, 2002
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un is biased. the resolutions are political bullsh*t. still waiting for resolutions against china for tibet amoung others. its a shame the chinese arne't jewish.
 

freegeeks

Diamond Member
May 7, 2001
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Originally posted by: miguel
Originally posted by: freegeeks
Originally posted by: miguel
Originally posted by: Spencer278
So what is wrong with protecting children from the middle east from terrorism. The only reason Israel would not like a resolution stating that is if they intended to terrorise middle eastern childern.

THe problem is that the UN passed a resolution specifically protecting Palestinian children.

these are general assembly resolutions

they don't have any relevance - it's in the security council that the serious stuff is done

Wasn't the Israeli resolution proposed in the GA as well? What's your point?

my point is that I would like to see an Israeli resolution brought before the SC
I'm very interested in the US reaction. The US has vetoed ALL Arab resolutions about Israel.
If the USA don't want to be seen as hypocrits they would have to veto the Israeli resolution too



 

miguel

Senior member
Nov 2, 2001
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Originally posted by: freegeeks

my point is that I would like to see an Israeli resolution brought before the SC
I'm very interested in the US reaction. The US has vetoed ALL Arab resolutions about Israel.
If the USA don't want to be seen as hypocrits they would have to veto the Israeli resolution too

I believe that the US votes and vetoes according to what they believe is right and wrong, not as a robot. Your definition of hypocrit is kinda weird. "You don't like to eat green beans, so you should not like to eat all vegetables either."
rolleye.gif
 

0roo0roo

No Lifer
Sep 21, 2002
64,862
84
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the us vetos the politically/hate motivated resolutions for a reason. the UN isn't some high and mighty moral leader when that is far from the truth, its a forum of nations, and thats all it is. if a bunch of nations are biased against israel, it doesn't mean much beyond that.

other groups of people with much much stronger claims to sovereignty then the palestinians such as the tibetans and armenians have gotten sh*t for resolutions. the tibetans of which have never used terrorism against civilians unlike the immoral palestinians. wonder why:p they aren't jewish.
 

Czar

Lifer
Oct 9, 1999
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Originally posted by: 0roo0roo
un is biased. the resolutions are political bullsh*t. still waiting for resolutions against china for tibet amoung others. its a shame the chinese arne't jewish.

so the world is biased, because ofcorse majority rules doesnt matter now does it?
 

miguel

Senior member
Nov 2, 2001
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Originally posted by: Czar
Originally posted by: 0roo0roo
un is biased. the resolutions are political bullsh*t. still waiting for resolutions against china for tibet amoung others. its a shame the chinese arne't jewish.

so the world is biased, because ofcorse majority rules doesnt matter now does it?

are you insane? A majority agreeing on something doesn't make it right. Now, I think 0roo0roo is pushing the jewish thing a little far, but to suggest that because the majority of people in the world don't like jews it's OK for them to get the short end of the stick is waaaay too far.
 

freegeeks

Diamond Member
May 7, 2001
5,460
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Originally posted by: miguel
Originally posted by: freegeeks

my point is that I would like to see an Israeli resolution brought before the SC
I'm very interested in the US reaction. The US has vetoed ALL Arab resolutions about Israel.
If the USA don't want to be seen as hypocrits they would have to veto the Israeli resolution too

I believe that the US votes and vetoes according to what they believe is right and wrong, not as a robot. Your definition of hypocrit is kinda weird. "You don't like to eat green beans, so you should not like to eat all vegetables either."
rolleye.gif

you better wake up from lalaland if you belief that

ALL SC members vote politically.

 

miguel

Senior member
Nov 2, 2001
621
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0
Originally posted by: freegeeks
Originally posted by: miguel
Originally posted by: freegeeks

my point is that I would like to see an Israeli resolution brought before the SC
I'm very interested in the US reaction. The US has vetoed ALL Arab resolutions about Israel.
If the USA don't want to be seen as hypocrits they would have to veto the Israeli resolution too

I believe that the US votes and vetoes according to what they believe is right and wrong, not as a robot. Your definition of hypocrit is kinda weird. "You don't like to eat green beans, so you should not like to eat all vegetables either."
rolleye.gif

you better wake up from lalaland if you belief that

ALL SC members vote politically.

Of course they do. Everything, especially in a council environment is political. So why do you think the US not vetoing the Israel resolution would make them hypocrits?
 

Czar

Lifer
Oct 9, 1999
28,510
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Originally posted by: miguel
Originally posted by: Czar
Originally posted by: 0roo0roo
un is biased. the resolutions are political bullsh*t. still waiting for resolutions against china for tibet amoung others. its a shame the chinese arne't jewish.

so the world is biased, because ofcorse majority rules doesnt matter now does it?

are you insane? A majority agreeing on something doesn't make it right. Now, I think 0roo0roo is pushing the jewish thing a little far, but to suggest that because the majority of people in the world don't like jews it's OK for them to get the short end of the stick is waaaay too far.
thats true, but oddly enough it is right in the eyes of a big majority of the world
and I realy dont think that the world dislikes jews, more that the world dislikes what Israel is doing, this isnt about jews, its about Israel
 

miguel

Senior member
Nov 2, 2001
621
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Originally posted by: Czar

thats true, but oddly enough it is right in the eyes of a big majority of the world
and I realy dont think that the world dislikes jews, more that the world dislikes what Israel is doing, this isnt about jews, its about Israel

Agreed.
 

LilBlinbBlahIce

Golden Member
Dec 31, 2001
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Originally posted by: freegeeks
Originally posted by: miguel
Originally posted by: Spencer278
So what is wrong with protecting children from the middle east from terrorism. The only reason Israel would not like a resolution stating that is if they intended to terrorise middle eastern childern.

THe problem is that the UN passed a resolution specifically protecting Palestinian children.

these are general assembly resolutions

they don't have any relevance - it's in the security council that the serious stuff is done

Exatly, and any even slightly pro-Palestinian resolution in the SC would be swiftly vetoed by us for the benefit of our beloved friend Israel.
 

LilBlinbBlahIce

Golden Member
Dec 31, 2001
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Originally posted by: miguel
Originally posted by: freegeeks

my point is that I would like to see an Israeli resolution brought before the SC
I'm very interested in the US reaction. The US has vetoed ALL Arab resolutions about Israel.
If the USA don't want to be seen as hypocrits they would have to veto the Israeli resolution too

I believe that the US votes and vetoes according to what they believe is right and wrong, not as a robot. Your definition of hypocrit is kinda weird. "You don't like to eat green beans, so you should not like to eat all vegetables either."
rolleye.gif

You're kidding right? Look at every resolution vetoed by the US to benefit Israel. How many were actually racist against Jews as BrooHoo is implying or biased against Israel? If it were any other country the US would have voted in favor of them emphatically. The fact that it is political suicide to do anything that could be possibly even perceived as being anti-Israeli in this country, ensures that no just resolutions will ever be passed in the SC. The US's policy towards Israel is the most one sided, openly biased policy in the history of the world, to even debate that is a waste of time, it is a given fact.
 

LilBlinbBlahIce

Golden Member
Dec 31, 2001
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Here are some of the ones vetoed by the US(With the US being the only country with qualms against the res):

Occupied Territories: Calls upon Israel to respect Muslim holy places. S/17769/Rev. 1

Occupied territories: Draft called on Israel to accept de jure applicability of the 4th Geneva Convention; (S/19466)

Occupied territories: Draft urged Israel to abide by the Fourth Geneva Convention, rescind the order to deport Palestinian civilians, and condemned policies and practices of Israel that violate the human rights of the Palestinian people in the occupied territories; (S/19780)

This is just a small taste. What's wrong with any of the resolutions above? Asking Israel to comply with International Law? Would the US have vetoed them if ANY other country was in question? NO. Why? Cause we are Israel's BITCH. BTW, this is from:The Jewsish Virtual Library, so don't try to pull the bias card.
 

0roo0roo

No Lifer
Sep 21, 2002
64,862
84
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Originally posted by: LilBlinbBlahIce
Originally posted by: 0roo0roo
real mature... as usual

Instead of crying, prove me wrong.

its not hard, listen to the eery silence over tibet and armenians who suffered far more, pure genocide in the case of armenians, and have more claim to sovereignty then the palestinians..

Believe it or not, Israel is the only one of the 185 member countries ineligible to serve on the United Nations Security Council, the key deliberative group of the world body. Even Iraq is eligible. So is Iran. And so, too, are Cuba, Libya, North Korea, Sudan and Syria.

Why is it that these seven nations, all cited by the U.S. State Department as sponsors of terrorism, are eligible to serve rotating terms on the Security Council, yet Israel, a democratic nation and member of the UN since May 11, 1949, is not?

To be eligible for election, a country must belong to a regional group. Every UN member state?from the smallest to the largest?is included in one of the five regional groups. By geography, Israel should be part of the Asian bloc but such countries as Iraq and Saudi Arabia have prevented its entry for decades.

As a temporary measure, Israel has sought acceptance in the West European and Others Group (WEOG), which includes not only the democracies of Western Europe but also Australia, Canada, New Zealand, Turkey and the United States.

Here, too, despite the support of several countries, including the U.S., Israel still has not been admitted.

Thus, without membership in a regional group, Israel can never be elected to serve a term on the Security Council or, for that matter, to the other most important bodies of the UN system, such as the Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC), the World Court, UNICEF and the Commission on Human Rights.

The Charter of the United Nations proclaims "the equal rights...of nations large and small." But only Israel, among all the UN members, is denied the right to belong to any regional group.
http://jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/UN/uneligible.html
 

0roo0roo

No Lifer
Sep 21, 2002
64,862
84
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The title "Anti-Semitism in the United Nations" was carefully chosen. It does not charge the UN, an indispensable world organization, with anti-Semitism. Rather, it suggests that there is a considerable anti-Semitic component behind the policies pursued there and expressed without challenge (except by the United States) in its fora.

Emergency Special Sessions of the United Nations General Assembly are rare. No such session has ever been convened with respect to the Chinese occupation of Tibet, the Indonesian occupation of East Timor, the Syrian occupation of Lebanon, the slaughters in Rwanda, the disappearances in Zaire or the horrors of Bosnia. In fact, during the last 15 years they have been called only to condemn Israel.

Whereas Arab states have traditionally used UN fora to demonize and isolate Israel (for example, they routinely attempt to deny Israel its credentials), they now believe they enjoy "Western" support which emboldens them.

The latest Emergency Special Session, called to address Israeli construction at the Har Homa site, set in motion steps to de-legitimize Israel and to bring it to its knees. During its July meeting, the Session considered a resolution that requested member states "not to allow any import of goods produced and manufactured in occupied Palestinian territories, including Jerusalem" -- a virtual boycott and collective sanctions against the state.

During its November meeting, it took a further step towards making Israel an outlaw state. In a vote of 139 to 3 with 13 abstentions, it set in motion the eventual convening of states parties to the Fourth Geneva Convention, which grew out of the Nazi occupation of Europe. Thus, that Convention will now be employed against the people who were Hitler's victims. The resolutions of the November meeting requested that the Swiss government, as the depository of this Geneva Convention, convene by February 1998 a meeting of experts to initiate the process of condemning Israel for violating the Convention. This was done despite the admonition of Switzerland's UN Observer that such action could damage the peace process and politicize international humanitarian law.

As a result of such bias, the UN has lost credibility. It is no surprise that the Oslo agreements were negotiated outside of, and contained no role for, the UN. Though Israel has been the subject of aggressive wars in 1948, 1967 and 1973 and the victim of countless terrorist attacks, the Security Council and the General Assembly have never once censured its assailants. As Thomas M. Franck, Professor of International Law at New York University, has written, "...the UN is a place of convoluted realities. The Assembly's majority has also done its best to achieve an anti-Israeli politicization of the Secretariat."

It is not just an issue of anti-Israel bias; it is difficult to ignore an anti-Jewish bent in many instances. For 50 years the UN has condemned virtually every conceivable form of racism. It has established programs to combat racism and its multiple facets -- including xenophobia -- but had consistently refused to do the same against anti-Semitism until 1993, and then, only under intense US pressure.

Instead, the General Assembly established two Special Committees and two "special units" in the Secretariat devoted exclusively to Israeli practices, costing millions of dollars yearly. These produce anti-Israeli and anti-Zionist pamphlets, booklets, papers and films, which are even distributed in the UN's six official languages to school children around the world.

The intense hostility that Israel faces in the UN and the anti-Semitic reverberations are illustrated by two events that occurred at the Commission on Human Rights in 1991 and 1997. During the 1991 session, the Syrian Ambassador repeated the Damascus Blood Libel that Jews killed Christian children to use their blood to make Matzoth. The Western democracies could not be stirred to challenge this age-old anti-Semitic libel (which the Ottoman Sultan as the ruler of Syria, denounced when it surfaced in the 1840s). It took intense US pressure to procure a challenge to this libel in the record, and then only months after the Syrian representative emphasized to the Commission, "it's true, it's true, it's true."

On 11 March 1997, the Palestinian representative charged, in a chamber packed with 500 people including the representatives of 53 states and hundreds of non-governmental organizations, that the Israeli Government had injected 300 Palestinian children with the HIV virus. Despite the repeated interventions of the Governments of Israel and the US, and UN Watch, this modern Blood Libel stands unchallenged and unrefuted on the UN record. No appropriate action by any UN body or official has been taken to date.

The Chairman of the Commission on Human Rights, a Czech, agreed to place on the record his letter to the Ambassador of Israel, sharing his "concern as to the charge made" against Israel -- "an allegation made without evidence, on the basis of a newspaper article ... proved completely false." The Chairman reneged on his agreement after he was called to task by a delegation of Arab Ambassadors and received no support from other regional groups -- including Western Europe.

Blood Libels are vicious and persistent carriers of anti-Semitism. The "Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion" were but a fiction of the Czarist police in the 1890s. Yet they are a well of anti-Semitic pollution -- published today in thousands of copies world-wide. The Damascus Blood Libel was raised 150 years later in the Commission on Human Rights. The latest PLO Blood Libel bears the imprimatur of the UN record and has yet to be removed by consolidated action of the Commission or by any UN agency or official on the public record. (Nor was there any rebuke in 1992 to a UN document circulated in the Commission by the PLO observer, which stated that Israelis "celebrating ...Yom Kippur, are never fully happy even on religious occasions unless their celebrations, as usual, are marked by Palestinian blood.")

The treatment of Israel in the UN is often dismissed as realpolitik -- the power of Arab numbers -- and recently, as a reaction to Israel's Likud government and Prime Minister Netanyahu. Yet even during the hopeful days of the Rabin/Peres peace negotiations there were the usual anti-Israel resolutions passed each year in the UN General Assembly and 5 in the Commission on Human Rights.

Since the Oslo accords, 259 Israelis have been killed and 5000 injured by Palestinian terror attacks. During the same period, 34 resolutions deploring Israel were passed at the UN, but not one against the terror attacks. The unique treatment of Israel cannot be explained on purely political grounds. Though anti-Semitic canards can go unchallenged in the UN, the mere reference in the 1997 Commission on Human Rights to an allegedly blasphemous reference to Islam, by a UN expert and from an academic source, brought a rebuff by consensus by the Chair, and the deletion of the offending sentence.

The viciousness with which Israel is attacked, and the reluctance of even democratic states to defend Israel or to accord it the same latitude for mistakes and wrongs that it freely and reciprocally accords other states, has a special quality and origin.

There is ample justification for the conclusion of Professor Anne Bayefsky of York University, Canada, writing of the UN Human Rights system: "It is the tool of those who would make Israel the archetypal human rights violator in the world today. It is a breeding ground for anti-Semitism. It is a sanctuary for moral relativists. In short, it is a scandal."

The infamous "Zionism is Racism" resolution was passed in 1975 when Yitzhak Rabin was Prime Minister. Describing the circumstances of the passage of the resolution, a representative in the chamber stated that "hatred was crawling on the floor." Although the resolution was rescinded in 1991, anti-Semitism in UN fora is still a force to be reckoned with, bearing in mind that 25 Member States voted against repealing the resolution and 13 abstained.

Anti-Semitism is not dead. Although anti-Semitic incidents have declined and a multi-cultural acceptance has produced wider tolerance in many states including the US, a 2000-year-old virus has mutated, and lives on, often in a disguised form. And the existence and achievements of the Jewish state in an area of relative backwardness stimulate anti-Semitism and furnish a respectable cover. Once anti-Semitism had a religious basis but, with the declining significance of religion in the West, anti-Semitism in church circles has relatively little standing as such.

Hitler exploited anti-Semitism with deadly consequences for Jews and the world. But racial anti-Semitism has been tabooed after the Holocaust and the Nuremberg trials. Now the existence of the state of Israel permits anti-Semitism to assume a political form, safe from challenge as intolerance or racism. How many times one hears: "I like Jews but I can't stand Zionism," or "I have nothing against Jews, but I don't like Israel." The existence and achievements of Israel offer a visible and irresistible target for dormant anti-Semitic feelings aroused by a focus on Israel's mistakes and misdeeds, which are characteristic of every state including the US.

Some Arab states appear to have now found a way to accomplish a purpose that the unrepealed PLO Charter, pledging the destruction of Israel has not achieved.

Wars with Israel have been disasters and are much too problematic to repeat. The attempt to bring Israel to its knees through sanctions and boycotts at the Security Council faces a US veto. However, these Emergency Special Sessions of the UN General Assembly, in which all but 3 states have joined in a collective denunciation, show the possibility of a slow but sure de-legitimization of Israel and the hope of some for its eventual strangulation.

Israel stands at the precipice of being treated at the UN as South Africa during apartheid. It is certainly not comparable, considering that Israeli Arabs are citizens, vote and sit in the Knesset. The challenge to Israel's right to exist as an equal state may soon move from the PLO Charter to the UN. The adjourned Emergency Special Session of the General Assembly is a harbinger of worse to be attempted.

The world faces a dilemma. The UN exists, and there is no present alternative. As Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan, former US Ambassador to the UN warned long ago, "the UN is a dangerous place."http://jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/UN/unantisem.html