The Real Purpose of Boycotts (GateStone Institute) by Michael Curtis 06/06/12)
Source: http://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/3095/boycott-purpose
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What goes unmentioned is that the boycott called for by the
Palestinian Authority is a violation of the April 29, 1994 Paris
Agreement between Israel and the PLO which expresses "respect for
each other´s economic interests," and recognizes "the need to create
a better economic environment for their peoples and individuals."
Is the purpose of the calls for boycotts against Israel and its
citizens because not a concern for the human rights or welfare of
Palestinians, or actually a call ultimately to eliminate the state of
Israel? If there were a real concern for human rights for the
Palestinians, why are there not calls for a free Palestinian press,
or for the release of journalists from Palestinian prisons, or for an
end to the corruption in the Palestinian leadership?
Instead, these calls for boycott look suspiciously like a racist
response to the existence of a Jewish state -- as if most of its
citizens were wearing a yellow Star-of-David in Nazi-like fashion,
and deserved to be punished or eliminated. Even Noam Chomsky and
Norman Finkelstein, well-known critics of Israel and pro-Palestinian
activists, have characterized the boycott, divestment, and sanctions
movement against Israel as "hypocritical," and run by individuals who
falsely claim to represent the Palestinian people.
Whether the calls for boycott are the product of leftist anti-
nationalist posturing, antisemitism, or simple ignorance, is a matter
of judgment. In their disingenuousness nature they are simplistic
responses to complex, unresolved problems that ignore the
distinctions between diverse kinds of activities and issues, such as
the different territories and populations, or how "appropriately" to
defend oneself in the face of continued aggression. If the advocates
for boycott do wish for peace, what they are proposing is actually
counterproductive: they create an atmosphere in which calls for
boycott have been, and are, an obstacle to the start of negotiations
between the parties, and in which adversarial positions only become
hardened even further as threats are seen to increase. There seems to
be a cognitive dissonance, an inability among the boycotters, to
distinguish between facts and the spun perception of them; or perhaps
there is an indifference to facts, or perhaps there is a reluctance
to place any facts at all in the context of the real, ongoing
relationship between the disputing parties.
Boycotts of Jews and Jewish interests by Arab groups go back almost a
hundred years, and have become more prominent with the declaration in
December, 1945, of the newly formed Arab League Council of 23
countries. The declaration stated that, "Jewish products and
manufactured goods shall be considered undesirable to the Arab
countries." Hypocrisy was present from the start. The Arab states
were less interested in helping Palestinian Arabs than in preventing
Jewish products from entering their own countries and competing with
them.
This boycott, administered by the Central Boycott Office in Damascus,
attempted to isolate Israel economically as well as diplomatically,
and did administer some temporary harm to the economy of Israel after
the state was established in 1948. In addition to the Arab states,
some non-Arab businesses, among them Pepsi, McDonald´s and most
Japanese car companies, abided by the boycott, but it was more
honored in the breach than in the observance.
Since the 1980s a number of Arab states, starting with Egypt, and
with the exception of Syria, have abandoned the boycott, wholly or in
part, unable to ignore the new world of globalization, international
trade, and binding international trade agreements, particularly that
of the World Trade Organization. As a result, Arab countries, both
through legal channels and clandestinely through third parties, have
been trading with Israeli companies in a considerable fashion,
including in irrigation and security systems, and high-tech
components, and have accepted Israeli investment.
The boycott is still technically in force by Arab countries, though
often bypassed, ineffective and negligible. Its impact now is less in
economic affairs than in becoming a major polemical weapon in the
hands of those non-Arabs who are critical of ,or want to condemn,
Israel -- purportedly because of their opposition of Israeli
settlements and their unwillingness to believe that, to the
adversaries of Israel, it is regarded as one big settlement.
People can understand the politically motivated logic of Arabs,
inside Israel as well as outside, calling for a ban on products made
in Israeli settlements, including Ahava Dead Sea health products,
Beigel and Beigel pretzels, Super Drink soft drinks, Oppenheimer
chocolates, fruits, vegetables, computers, and many other products.
It is an illustration of democracy in Israel --- and revealing about
those who do not wish Israel well -- that a major advocate of the
boycott is Ahmad Tibi, the Arab-Israeli deputy speaker of the Knesset.
Unmentioned is that the boycott called for by the Palestinian
Authority is a violation of the April 29, 1994 Paris Agreement
between Israel and the PLO which expresses respect of "each other´s
economic interests," and recognizes "the need to create a better
economic environment for their people´s and individuals." A further
fallacy in the Palestinian logic is not only that the boycott is a
violation of signed agreements, but also that, in a country the size
of Vancouver Island or New Jersey, it is difficult, if not
impossible, to separate the economy of the settlements from that of
Israel as a whole.
What is surprising is the acceptance of this hostile strategy by non-
Arabs, particularly citizens of Britain and other European countries.
The campaign of boycott, divestment, and sanctions (BDS) began in
July 2005 by 171 Palestinian non-governmental organizations (NGOs),
arguing that they support the Palestinian cause because Israel was
not complying with international law and universal principles of
human rights -- regardless, of course, of whether they themselves
were or not.
The campaign has led to various kinds of actions: in the academic
area, in the economy, in mainstream Churches, in the media, in
cultural activity, and by non-governmental organizations. In the full
irony of the camel never seeing his hump, and contrary to self-
proclaimed liberal ideas of free speech and opposition to censorship,
academic and cultural groups have expressed their support. The annual
Israeli Apartheid Week in the United States and Europe has led to
demonstrations on university campuses in which anti-Israeli advocates
have prevented the expression of dissent, and has also stimulated
antisemitic demonstrations.
A few examples of boycott actions suffice to illustrate the anti-
Israeli malice. The British Association of University Teachers (AUT)
Council voted in April 2005 for different reasons to boycott two
Israeli universities, Haifa and Bar-Ilan; under pressure from members
supporting academic freedom, the boycott was cancelled. However, the
British National Association of Teachers in Further and Higher
Education (NATFHE) in 2006 called for a boycott of Israeli academics
and universities; and in 2009, a new group, the British academic
union (UCU), passed a resolution to the same effect.
Moty Cristal, a well-known Israel expert on negotiation theory and
mediation was disinvited from the conference on conflict resolution
held in Britain in 2012 and arranged by the Manchester Mental Health
and Social Care Trust because of the objection by the Unison trade
union, a constant and open critic of Israel. Further, two Israeli
scholars were dismissed from editorial boards of scientific journals
published in Manchester by the Arab editor.
Economic businesses have entered the picture. In April 2012 the
British Co-operative Group, the fifth largest supermarket group in
Britain, said it would no longer do business with any supplier of
produce from Israeli settlements. It is probably the first major
supermarket group in Europe to implement such a boycott. Its
customers will miss the Arava export growers, Mehadrin, Agrexco, and
Adafresh collective exports of fruits and vegetables. Paradoxically,
these companies have employed Arab workers in the fields and packing-
houses. Moreover, Histadrut, the Israel trade union, has had good
relations with PGFTU, the Palestinian counterpart for Palestinian
workers.
Most surprising has been the activity of mainstream Churches, and by
individuals in the cultural and entertainment sections of society.
The latter are hardly likely to be sophisticated analysts of Middle
Eastern affairs, yet well known musicians, Elvis Costello, The
Pixies, Cassandra Wilson, Gil Scott Heron, performers including Emma
Thompson and Mark Rylands, and filmmakers Ken Loach and Jean-Luc
Godard have expressed support for a boycott, or refused to visit
Israel. This attitude is more likely to result from fear,
intimidation, misplaced self-righteousness or from a desire to be
seen as politically correct among their peers, than from any
political or moral conviction. A group of anti-Israeli activists in
2009 tried to stop the Toronto Film Festival from featuring Israeli
films, and the films of Steven Spielberg have been banned in 14 Arab
countries because he had made a $1 million donation to Israel in 2006.
Recent studies by psychologists and neuroscientists studying the
causes of the unwillingness of individuals to deny reality or to
question either the situation at which they are looking or their own
behavior, suggest that advocates of boycotts against Israel seem to
be prevented by their pre-existing beliefs -- whether anti-Israeli or
antisemitic attitudes -- from appreciating the the context in which
facts can be understood. If they truly wanted to help the
Palestinians, their time and energy would be better spent in
encouraging Arab states and Palestinians to demand better governance
from their leaders, and possibly even to enter into negotiations to
normalize political and trade relations with Israel. The argument
that the boycott should remain in place until the Arab-Israeli
conflict is resolved is the exact opposite of the path to either a
settlement or to peace.
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