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B’Tselem does the bidding of repressive regimes at UN Security Council

B’Tselem co-founder the late Amnon Kapeliouk, an Israeli journalist and author, known for his close ties to PLO head Yasser Arafat. Credit: Moshe Shai/Flash90.
B’Tselem co-founder the late Amnon Kapeliouk, an Israeli journalist and author, known for his close ties to PLO head Yasser Arafat. Credit: Moshe Shai/Flash90.

By Naftali Balanson/JNS.org

On Friday, the Israeli non-governmental organization B’Tselem appeared before a special session of the U.N. Security Council.

The executive director, Hagai Elad, demanded “decisive international action” in order to end Israel’s presence in the West Bank.

In an email sent to B’Tselem mailing lists before the appearance, the group bragged, “This is one of the most important diplomatic opportunities in B’Tselem’s history.”

This is not a particularly important diplomatic opportunity, nor is it something to brag about.

The session, called an “Arria-Formula” meeting, is not an official Security Council event. According to U.N. materials, Arria meetings are “very informal…held in a conference room, and not in the Security Council Consultation Room.” Most importantly, they “do not constitute an activity of the council and are convened at the initiative of a member or members of the council. Participation in such meetings is for individual members to decide upon, and there have been instances when some members chose not to attend.”

Convening this “Arria-Formula” meeting, under the banner of “Illegal Israeli Settlements: Obstacles to Peace and the Two-State Solution,” were Egypt, Malaysia, Venezuela, and Angola. (B’Tselem did not indicate whether it or Elad’s previous places of employment -- the Association for Civil Rights in Israel and the Jerusalem Open House -- would thrive in any of those countries.)

Clearly, universal human rights was not the impetus for the meeting. In fact, at the last Arria meeting involving an Israeli NGO (Yesh Din, a group that focuses on law enforcement and legal procedures in the West Bank), the anti-Israel vitriol inspired the Venezuelan ambassador Rafael Ramirez to make anti-Semitic remarks.

B’Tselem, however, is very clear about its desired outcome from the meeting. In the words of its email, echoed in statements made by Elad during the meeting, the group is seeking “resolute international action meant to effect real change and bring an end to the occupation. The Security Council has the power and the responsibility to act.”

There is nothing B’Tselem would like more than a binding Security Council resolution that imposes unfavorable terms on Israel, satisfying B’Tselem’s political vision. This would be far easier than real human rights work, such as convincing Israelis that its political agenda is both feasible and in Israel’s best interests.

The truth is B’Tselem’s greatest diplomatic achievement has been to convince European governments to bankroll its political campaigns. Despite the lack of Israeli reception for its message, the European Union, Denmark, the Netherlands, Norway, Sweden, and Switzerland continue to fund B’Tselem. For instance, in 2015 alone, the European Union provided B’Tselem with nearly $1.5 million. The Human Rights and International Law Secretariat (a joint funding mechanism of Sweden, Switzerland, Denmark and the Netherlands) provided approximately another $1 million.

At the end of the day, B’Tselem can self-identify as an Israeli organization; after all, it has offices in Jerusalem. But as the U.N. Security Council speech shows, with the exception of international audiences such as donors in Europe and repressive regimes at the U.N., nobody is listening to B’Tselem.

Naftali Balanson is chief of staff at the NGO Monitor.

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