There was another attempt to link Israel to the Genocide Convention during its drafting. In an October 1948 meeting of the UN Legal Committee, which completed the draft convention for consideration by the General Assembly, Syrian delegate Salah Eddine Tarazi insisted that Article I, which defined genocide as “committed in time of peace or in time of war,” should be expanded by the phrase “or at any moment.” The reason, Tarazi said, was what he insisted was Israel’s illegal status. The UN partition resolution on its own, he said, did not create a state; it only recommended one. Thus, the Arab states’ intervention in May 1948 was “not a war” with another state, nor had it occurred “in a time of peace.” Rather it was an attempt at “restoring law and order” in Palestine. And whatever Israel was, Tarazi said, “the Jews had committed atrocities against Arab civilians during the campaign, and those crimes deserved to be punished.”But Tarazi was not finished. The Syrians also made a proposal to expand the definition of genocide under Article II to include “Imposing measures intended to oblige members of the group to abandon their homes in order to escape the threat of subsequent ill treatment.” On October 23, Tarazi asked that it be included, because, as he put it, “. . . any measures directed towards forcing members of a group to leave their homes should be regarded as constituting genocide.” This crime, he said, was “far more serious than ill treatment.”
The next time Israel was accused of "genocide" at the UN was by the Soviet Union in 1976, calling Israeli actions in the territories "racial genocide."
Here is a Soviet poster saying "Stop the genocide in Lebanon" with the word "Zionism" formed in the chains.
The next major accusation of genocide against Israel came not from nations but from NGOs. At the NGO Forum at the World Conference Against Racism in Durban in 2001, Israel is accused no less than four times of "acts of genocide" as well as apartheid, racism, ethnic cleansing and other crimes. This one sentence can be seen as the blueprint for NGO's attitudes towards Israel over the past 25 years:
Appalled by the on-going colonial military Israeli occupation of the Occupied Palestinian Territories (the West Bank including Jerusalem, and the Gaza Strip), we declare and call for an immediate end to the Israeli systematic perpetration of racist crimes including war crimes, acts of genocide and ethnic cleansing (as defined in the Statute of the International Criminal Court), including uprooting by military attack, and the imposition of any and all restrictions and measures on the population to make life so difficult that the only option is to leave the area, and state terrorism against the Palestinian people, recognizing that all of these methods are designed to ensure the continuation of an exclusively Jewish state with a Jewish majority and the expansion of its borders to gain more land, driving out the indigenous Palestinian population.
These earlier accusations didn't even pretend to define genocide - they just declared it. I'm not sure if that is better or worse than current nations and NGOs who are purposely making up new definitions of the term and pretending they are authoritative.
In all cases, the provably false accusation comes before any facts. The narrative is that Israel is unfathomably evil, so genocide is a given; there is no attempt to first look at the real definition of genocide and see if the evidence fits. Whether by Syria, the PLO, the Soviet Union or Amnesty International, the accusation comes first, and the justification is either contrived later or not at all.
But then, like now, the driving force behind the accusation was antisemitism. Today everyone can see that the Syrians in 1948 and Soviets in 1982 and even the NGOs in 2001 were obviously antisemitic even as they all strenuously denied it; today's anti-Zionism is just as clearly antisemitic as its precursors for those who are willing to look at it objectively.
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"He's an Anti-Zionist Too!" cartoon book (December 2024) PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022) |
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Elder of Ziyon









