Israeli political infighting over the Goldstone report leads to a war between Israeli civil society organizations.
It all began with enough reports to fill the average Ph.D. candidate's reading list for weeks.
In the months following the Gaza war between Israel
and Hamas, governments, civil society groups and human rights
organizations issued dozens of reports, some of them well over 100
pages long, on the legality, operation and effects of the war.
Some of the reports accused Israel of war crimes,
some accused Israeli soldiers of mistreating prisoners of war, some
explored the damage caused to Gaza's infrastructure during the war.
Most, it's fair to say, were in some way or another scathing
indictments of the behavior of the Israeli army.
As the reports piled up, the Israeli government went
on offense, contacting European governments to protest their funding of
international human rights organizations critical of Israeli actions
during the Gaza war, questioning the methodology used by rights
organizations in researching the Gaza war and accusing one group of
using its criticism of Israeli conduct to solicit funding in the Arab
world. Israel threatened to ban foreign funding of Israeli
organizations involved in activity deemed political and added to the
report pile with its own 164 pager responding to the claims of various
rights groups.
But the Israeli government's efforts to stop the
tidal wave of international criticism failed, culminating in the
publication of South African Judge Richard Goldstone's 575 page whopper
on the Gaza war to the United Nations Human Rights Council, in which
Israel was officially accused of war crimes by an international legal
entity.
While the Israeli government has gone to great
lengths in the months since the publication of the Goldstone report to
respond to its content, for some in Israel the damage to the country's
image was already done.
Israeli politicians began blaming one another for
allowing such a public diplomacy train wreck to take place while others
turned to the various Israeli organizations that helped Goldstone,
accusing them of using human rights discourse to malign and weaken
their own country.
Organizations like UN Watch and NGO Monitor, which
monitors Israeli civil society organizations, entered mainstream
Israeli political discussion and their leaders began appearing
throughout Israeli media.
Israel's numerous human rights advocacy and research
groups soon hit back, accusing such groups attempting to suppress
democratic rights by equating criticism with treason.
The quarrel came to a head last week with the
publication of an advertisement in Israel's leading newspapers accusing
Israeli organizations of being the principal suppliers of the critical
testimonies contained in the Goldstone report.
"Without the New Israel Fund, there would be no
Goldstone Report, and Israel would not be facing international
accusations of war crimes," read the advertisement, making reference to
a an Israeli philanthropic organization that funds a number of Israeli
rights and progressive social change organizations.
The advertisement, put out by Im Tirzu, a right wing
student group calling for a "Second Zionist Revolution", depicted the
New Israel Fund's President Naomi Chazan, former Deputy Speaker of the
Knesset, with a horn on her head and accused the New Israel Fund of
being behind "90% of the Goldstone war crimes allegations from
non-official Israeli sources" and of giving $8 million "to 16
anti-Zionist Israeli organizations that volunteered to provide
Goldstone incriminating "information" on the [Israeli army's] "war
crimes."
"We have a big problem," Ronen Shoval, Im Tirzu's
chairman told The Media Line. "There are many anti Zionist groups that
advocate against Israel from within Israel."
"These are not human rights organizations, they are
pseudo human rights organizations using the terminology of human rights
to create a blood libel upon Israeli soldiers who are defending them,"
said Shoval, who fought for Israel in the Gaza war. "Was I sent to Gaza
in order to defend these organizations' ability to delegitimize the
State of Israel?"
"Wars in the Middle East today are not fought on the
battlefield and the question is no longer just who has the strongest
army," he said. "The battles are fought in public opinion."
"Goldstone delegitimized the right of Israel to
defend itself," Shoval continued. "In this context we started looking
into who was behind the Goldstone report. We found out that out of the
Israeli sources in the report, 92% of those who accused Israel of war
crimes were organizations that get funds from the New Israel Fund. Yet
people think they are donating to poor people in Israel. We will show
the public the real side of the New Israel Fund."
The advertisement led overseas Jewish groups to
cancel appearances by Chazan and a barrage of criticism of the New
Israel Fund and various Israeli rights organizations it supports in
Israeli media.
"Most of the groups supported by the Fund deal in
the delegitimization of Israel," wrote Ben-Dror Yemini, opinion editor
of the influential Israeli daily Ma'ariv. "There is something wrong
with those who collaborate with dark forces and try to sell the lie
that it is all about 'human rights'... These groups, including the New
Israel Fund, are the major enemy, not only of Israel but of the free
world and human rights."
The New Israel Fund has accused Im Tirzu of
disseminating lies about the organizations it funds and threatened to
sue Im Tirzu and the newspapers that published the advertisements for
libel.
“The representation of the New Israel Fund and its
director, Professor Naomi Chazan, as enemies of the state and as people
who perceive Israel Defense Forces soldiers as criminals has no factual
basis and is of unsurpassable gravity,” read a New Israel Fund letter
threatening legal action.
Mikhael Manekin, Director of Breaking the Silence,
an Israeli group of dissident army veterans, argued that the Im Tirzu
advertisement marked a new stage in the political feud over Israeli
rights groups.
"Foreign Minister [Avigdor] Lieberman's attack on
Israeli civil society organizations was a bit different than what's
happening now," he told The Media Line. "First it was coming from
government and he was attacking specific forms of foreign funding.
While I forcefully disagree with Lieberman, at least he has a coherent
case."
"Now, Im Tirzu is just angry with a long list of
organizations because of their opinions, equating any organization that
doesn't adhere to the government's cause or direction as traitorous,"
Manekin said. "That's fascism plain and simple."
"Regarding the specific accusations, Israeli
generals aren't being accused of war crimes by the United Nations
because people are talking about it or because of civil society
organizations, they are being accused of war crimes because they
allegedly committed war crimes," he said. "To place the blame for that
on the whistle blowers is very problematic."
Nirit Moscovitz, a spokesperson with The Association
for Civil Rights in Israel, one of the organizations supported by the
New Israel Fund and which contributed testimony to the Goldstone
report, argued the attacks on Israeli rights groups was part of a
larger effort to refute criticisms launched against the Israeli
government.
"Instead of responding directly to the claims of
human rights abuses, these organizations and politicians are
essentially using the defamation of human and social rights
organizations as a means of deflecting criticism of Israel in the
Goldstone report," she told The Media Line. "This is a joint attack
implemented by both senior politicians as well as fragments in civil
society such as NGO Monitor, Im Tirzu. First these organizations
publish ads full of lies about Israeli human rights organizations
funded by the New Israel Fund, then suddenly a Knesset member says they
are going to discuss it in the Knesset security committee."
Chazan's former political party Meretz described the
Im Tirzu campaign as "ugly" and "hateful" and "a further stage towards
limiting public discourse."
"It warns of the McCarthyist slope on which we find
ourselves," read a statement from the Meretz executive. "These are
civil society organizations that stand at the forefront of the struggle
for Israel's democratic image and civic character."
Even J Street,
a U.S. based left of center Israel advocacy group self described as a
lobby, described the advertisements as "an outrageous campaign"
launched "in a style reminiscent of propaganda from the darkest days of
recent Jewish experience."
"Im Tirzu’s political leanings are clear," wrote J
Street Executive Director Jeremy Ben-Ami in a statement. "This is a
pro-settler group, with $100,000 of funding from Christians United For
Israel, a conservative Christian Zionist organization run by Pastor
John Hagee, who once stated that God sent Hitler to drive Jews to
Israel. Funds collected for Im Tirzu in the United States are directed
through a New York City-based charity which funds construction over the
Green Line."
But an Israeli Foreign Ministry official,
speaking on the condition of anonymity, praised groups critical of the
Israeli organizations that contributed to the Goldstone report.
"It's important to expose these organizations'
resources and interests," he told The Media Line. "People don't know
the truth, and we are facing legal terrorism against Israel: an
orchestrated, organized campaign by Hamas, the Palestinian Authority
and organizations all over the world using the same language and
quoting each other."
While praising groups like Im Tirzu, NGO Monitor and
UN Watch, the official denied there was any formal coordination with
the government.
"They are independent and they also criticize us
sometimes, so coordination is the wrong word, but there is
communication and there is sometimes exchange of information."
Uzi Dayan, former head of Israel's National Security
Council and former deputy Chief of Staff in the Israeli army, argued
that while Israeli government bodies would like to restrict certain
Israeli organizations, they are restrained by the damage such action
would do to the country's image.
"It's much harder and complicated for the Israeli
government to launch a direct criticism of a civil society
organization," he told The Media Line. "Israel is always worried about
how these kinds of things look, so this is an initiative of young
people who don't have to be overly politically correct."
But Dr Elisha Haas, a biophysicist and the current
chairman of Professors for a Strong Israel, argued that the government
should take a more aggressive role in monitoring civil society
organizations.
"Israel is a state that is engaged in an active
existential war," he told The Media Line. "There are many fronts in
this war and one of them is public opinion. These organizations are
continuously mobilizing public opinion against Israel and are the
source of the information found in the Goldstone report, so it's very
sad that the government waited for students to expose this reality when
they have known it for months."
Dr Haas rejected the claim that attempts to curb the funding or activities of Israeli rights organizations are undemocratic.
"The problem is not human rights, there should be
human rights organizations," he said. "The problem is that human rights
language is being used as the cover for a political agenda to weaken
Israel."
"Any country that is stable can tolerate
organizations that undermine the state," said Dr Haas. "But there is
only one state in the whole world that can disappear and that is
Israel. So while it may not be convenient to recognize it, we cannot
play the same game that everyone else is playing and have to be much
more careful about allowing such organizations to undermine the
existence of Israel."
Barak Cohen, Director of Communications at The
Israel Democracy Institute, argued that well-hidden under this public
spat is a small glimpse of the vibrancy of public discourse in Israel.
"It's an interesting development," he told The Media
Line. "Clearly Israelis have not lost their passion for political
activism."
"Nonetheless there are many more constructive, less
damaging ways to mediate disagreements between family members than
airing them on the international stage," Cohen said. "Israelis –
individuals and organizations alike - care deeply for their preferred
‘national course’. Underlying this conflict are fundamentally different
visions of what the State of Israel should look like. These differences
are both a source of tension, as well as an inseparable part of the
State’s democratic fabric."
"It seems to me that this type of sparring could
take place around divisive issues in any country," he added. "At the
same time, Israelis and Jews worldwide tend towards high levels of
emotion and even feelings of personal responsibility when it comes to
the State and its policies."