Dutch Government Opposes Anti-Israeli EU Report (STONEGATE INSTITUTE) by Peter Martino 03/20/12)
Source: http://www.stonegateinstitute.org/2953/dutch-government-anti-israeli-eu-report
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One hopes the EU leaders, like Sarkozy, will soon notice that a more
realistic approach to Israel in line with that of the Dutch is in
the national security interests of Europe.
The European Union, the supranational organization of the 27 most
developed European nations, is one of the most outspoken and frequent
international critics of Israel. Its reports on the situation in the
Middle East are often so unfair and biased that not only have they
drawn the ire of Israel, they have also angered the government of one
of the EU´s six original founding states, the Netherlands, which no
longer wants to endorse the reports emanating from the EU mission in
Ramallah.
Last December, the EU heads of mission in Ramallah authored a report
on the situation in Jerusalem in which they accused Israel of trying
to destroy chances for peace with Palestinians by snatching control
of East Jerusalem through the construction of Israeli
settlements. "If current trends continue, the prospect of Jerusalem
as the future capital of two states becomes increasingly unlikely and
unworkable, undermining a two-state solution
[Israeli actions]
provide fuel to those who want to further radicalise the conflict,"
the report stated.
It noted that the 790,000 Arabs living in Jerusalem suffer from
overcrowding, dirty streets and poor sewage, that Palestinian
children in Israeli-run schools are forced to use books which
are "edited" for "sensitive" content, that ambulances with
Palestinian patients are subjected to "unnecessary and potentially
life-threatening delays" and that archeological projects
put "emphasis on biblical and Jewish-Israeli connotations of the area
while neglecting Arab/Muslim claims of historic-archeological ties."
The report advocated that the European Commission, the EU´s executive
body, propose legislation "to prevent/discourage [EU] financial
transactions in support of settlement activity," "ensure" that
Israeli vegetables from settlement farms do not get preferential
import tariffs in the EU, and that EU countries "share information on
violent settlers
to assess whether to grant entry into EU member
states."
This report came barely a week after another report which had accused
Israel of monopolizing farm land and water in the Jordan Valley in a
bid to drive out native Arabs, while another recent EU paper had
accused Israel of eroding the civil liberties of Arab-Israeli
citizens.
Last January, Israeli information minister Yuli Yoel Edelstein
questioned the accuracy of the EU reports which are drafted without
Israeli input. Edelstein said these surveys are part of a decades-
long "attempt to undermine [Israel´s] very legitimacy.
Last week it was revealed that the EU ambassadors in Ramallah had
composed yet another report. This time they accuse Israel of not
doing enough to stop aggression from Jewish settlers against
Palestinians. The report claims that the Jewish violence is rapidly
increasing, while "the Israeli state
has so far failed to protect
the Palestinian population."
According to the report, Jewish attacks vary from gunfire to throwing
stones and garbage at Arabs, including children, burning homes and
mosques, killing livestock and uprooting olive trees. The report says
that the attacks resulted in three Palestinian deaths last
year. "There has been no widespread response from the Palestinian
side," the EU report states, although it admits that Palestinians
killed eight Jews (including five members of one family). The aim of
the Jewish attacks is to "effectively force a withdrawal of the
Palestinian population,
thereby increasing the scope for settlement
expansion."
The Netherlands declined to endorse the report, forcing the non-Dutch
EU diplomats in Ramallah to add the footnote: "the NL [Netherlands]
places a general reserve on the document." A senior Israeli official
also dismissed the report. "It´s unacceptable," he said. "We had
numerous cases over the past year when Israeli citizens, including
schoolchildren, were brutally murdered by Palestinians and I think
for the Israeli public these reports would have more credibility if
they were more neutral."
The fact that the Dutch openly distanced themselves from an EU report
angered the other EU countries. "We are witnessing the toughest
position the Netherlands has ever adopted," one EU diplomat told the
Dutch newspaper NRC-Handelsblad. "Moreover, it is a position which
resembles the toughest position within Israel."
It is, however, not the first time that Dutch foreign minister Uri
Rosenthal has stood up for Israel. Last September, he managed to stop
European diplomats at the UN reaching a common position on the status
of human rights in Israel and the Palestinian territories.
The Dutch government is a minority government of Liberals and
Christian-Democrats, backed by the Freedom Party of Geert Wilders.
Both Uri Rosenthal, who is Jewish, and Geert Wilders, who is not
Jewish, are politicians who are personally acquainted with the
situation in Israel. Rosenthal´s wife is an Israeli citizen. Wilders
spent a year living in Israel, including in a Jewish settlement in
the Jordan valley.
The Dutch government is not only on a collision course with the EU
over Israel, but is also pushing for stricter immigration rules.
European immigration rules are to a large extent set by the EU and
not by the member states. While the Dutch insist on stricter
regulations, the European Commission and other EU members are so far
unwilling to address the issue.
The Netherlands is also vetoing the admission of Bulgaria and Romania
to the so-called "Schengen area," the EU´s borderless area where
people can travel freely. The Dutch insist that Bulgaria and Romania
combat corruption and organized crime more effectively: they are
worried that crime and corruption might jeopardize safety in the
Schengen area.
Some critics warn that the position of the Dutch will isolate their
country in Europe. It is, however, also possible that the Dutch are
pioneers, whose example will soon be followed by others. An
indication of this could be seen last week when French President
Nicolas Sarkozy, who is currently running for reelection, called for
a French withdrawal from Schengen, if within the next 12 months no
serious reforms are undertaken to address the problem of the EU´s
porous southern and eastern borders, which allow an inflow of
thousands of immigrants (many of them Muslims) each year.
One hope EU leaders, like Sarkozy, will soon also notice that a more
realistic approach to Israel in line with that of the Dutch is in
the national security interests of Europe.
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