No Partner for Peace: Our American Problem
by Jeff Halper

It was as if some official, perhaps one of President Obama's "czars," like the Czar for Demolishing American Credibility, had orchestrated a systematic campaign to isolate the US from the rest of the world, make it a political laughingstock and, finally, render it a second-rate power capable of throwing around tremendous military weight but absolutely incapable of leading us to a better future.  The Israel-Palestine conflict, while not the world's bloodiest, constitutes, for many people of the world, a unique gauge of American interests and intentions.  So consider the messages this string of actions sent out to the world:

Underlying the growing alienation between the United States and the rest of the world community, including Europe, is America's failure, even under Obama, to embrace human rights as a guide to its foreign policy.  At a time when many of the world's people suffer from impoverishment, conflict and a sense that their governments have failed them, have left them unprotected, the promise of universal human rights means a lot.  Human rights language has yet to reach the US.  When, recently, I did the rounds of Congress and the State Department promoting a just resolution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, I was told that "justice" is not an active element in American foreign policy.  I was advised by seasoned lobbyists not to even mention the term "human rights" in my meetings with senators and congress people, because it sounds anti-American, as if something trumps American law and policy (which human rights indeed does).  But remove justice and human rights from foreign policy and you are left with short-range conflict management and damage control which, in the end, offers peace and security to no one.  You certainly remove yourselves from the concerns of most people of the world.

The degree to which American policy regarding Palestinian rights diverges so sharply from even that of its European allies, not to mention from the Muslim world with which it is attempting to achieve a modicum of stability and accommodation that will allow it to remove its troops, has implications far beyond that particular conflict itself.  When the US stands, as it often does, with Israel but against the entire international community on matters of human rights (as it did in regard to apartheid South Africa and support for the contras in Nicaragua, among others), it's isolation is highlighted, rather than its leadership.  All of its other slogans, such as "spreading freedom and democracy," are rendered hollow.  Neither America nor its erstwhile ally Israel can avoid accountability for their policies and actions.  Realpolitik cannot replace a policy based on human rights.  If the US wishes to rejoin the international community and genuinely pursue its interests, there is no better place to start than carving out a foreign policy based on justice.  Until then, America remains part of the problem, not the solution.


Jeff Halper is the Director of the Israeli Committee Against House Demolitions (ICAHD).  He can be reached at <jeff@icahd.org>.  The ICAHD is based in Jerusalem and has chapters in the United Kingdom and the United States.  Please visit our websites: www.icahd.org; www.icahduk.org; www.icahdusa.org.
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