As Israel gets closer to not just energy
independence but to becoming an actual energy
exporter, I’m reminded of a move the BDSers took once Israel entered the
energy game to try to generate interest in a new phrase: “Apartheid Oil.”
Might this refer to the Apartheid policies towards women, gays and
religious minorities in the Arab petro-states?
Or the cover those wealthy oil states provided countries like Sudan as
they murdered millions of black Africans?
Or the robust oil-for-gold trade between the real Apartheid South Africa
and the Gulf states?
Heavens no! For the champions of
human rights and justice have suddenly got religion on oil politics once Israel
was on the verge of having some.
Discoveries of shale and natural gas in Israel (coupled with recently
developed extraction techniques) are what has led the nation to reach beyond
energy independence over the last few years.
And while such finds present environmental concerns (not to mention the
risk of the oil curse),
these are not the issues critics of “Apartheid Oil” are really troubled about
(although they occasionally hide behind them).
No, their problem is not that oil and gas is being extracted from the
earth (with all the upside and downside that brings) but who gets to benefit
from it. When it was simply Qatar or
Iran using oil money to fund police forces dedicated to beating women for
exposing their foreheads or exporting Islamist ideology around the world (or
Saudi Arabia, before they become a less dependable BDS ally), they could live
with that. But now that it is Israel
that may finally get a piece of the action, suddenly the link between oil
wealth and human rights rockets up their priority list.
The use of the term “Apartheid Oil” is particularly rich, given that
the BDS movement itself is the inheritor of investments made in the 1970s and
‘80s by the very petroleum tyrannies who maintained massive trade with Apartheid
South Africa during all the years they were falsely claiming to partake in an
energy embargo of the country.
After all, one of the few mineral resources South Africa lacked was
oil. Yet somehow they managed to
maintain a modern, oil-driven economy during the Apartheid years. And as far as I know, Saudi Arabia is distinctly
lacking in gold mines. And yet they had
(and have) shopping malls dedicated solely to the sale of gold (including South
African gold) during the Apartheid era.
And while this oil-for-gold alchemy was going on, these same Middle
East states used their wealth and power to condemn Israel for its (far more
minimal) trade ties with South Africa, going so far as to get the United Nations to condemn Zionism as a form
of racism during debates over Apartheid.
The African nations that were asked to line up behind the Arab states
on these condemnatory UN votes were none too pleased that their own concerns
about banning trade with South Africa were being ignored, with the Kenyan Daily
news summing things up nicely when it pointed out: “Arabs are buying South
African gold like hotcakes, thus helping to sustain that country’s abominable
practice of Apartheid.”
Even now when South Africa’s Apartheid system is just a memory, with
truth and reconciliation hearings come and gone, the fact that Apartheid stayed
afloat on a sea of Middle East oil remains a topic beyond discussion within the
BDS community. And yet, this same BDS
community exists as the inheritor of the propaganda campaigns, the UN condemnations,
and the corruption of the human rights community and vocabulary bought with
blood gold traded for with genuine (not imagined) “Apartheid Oil.”
Confront a BDSer with these facts and (just as they do when confronted
with any genuine human rights issue) they will simply ignore you and move onto
their next accusation against Israel.
But the next time you see them marching in the streets comparing Israel
to South Africa, keep in mind that it is BDS, not the Jewish state, that exists
because of the legacy of Apartheid economics.