Once again, on 9/16/09, Amy Goodman's DemocracyNow fills the breach, this time with the inimitable Norman Finkelstein -
AMY
GOODMAN: We welcome you to
Democracy Now! Now, this [Goldstone] report has just really come out hours ago.
Perhaps you’re among the few people outside those who have written the
report who have actually read the majority of its contents. Talk about
the significance of this.
NORMAN FINKELSTEIN: Well, the report
is the last in a large number of reports that have been issued on the
Gaza massacre. There were two significant reports issued by Amnesty
International, five reports issued by Human Rights Watch, and a whole
slew of Israeli-based human rights organizations have issued reports.
But this was the most awaited report of all of them. It was
commissioned by the UN Human Rights Council. And Richard Goldstone, as
you mentioned in your own introductory remarks, is a significant
international figure, legal figure.
So the report basically is
consistent with the findings of the other human rights organizations,
that Israel targeted civilians, Israel targeted civilians who were
carrying white flags, Israel systematically targeted the Palestinian
infrastructure. The findings were consistent with those of the other
human rights organizations: Israel is guilty of a very significant
number of war crimes. And also, the findings which were--other reports,
the same conclusions, that the Palestinians were not using hospitals to
hide Hamas officials. There’s no evidence that the ambulances Israel
targeted were carrying Hamas militants or ammunition. And most
significantly, in terms of the coverage during the Gaza massacre, the
report found, as did Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch,
there’s no evidence whatsoever--and I would want to underline
that--there’s no evidence whatsoever that Hamas was guilty of human
shielding. But on the other hand, there is significant evidence,
actually copious evidence, that Israel was guilty of human shielding.
AMY GOODMAN: But on other issues, of Palestinian militants committing crimes against humanity.
NORMAN
FINKELSTEIN: The report found that the Palestinians were guilty of war
crimes because of its indiscriminate and intentional firing on
civilians in Israel. I’m not trying to make any apologies, but I want
to get the facts right. The Goldstone report, like the Amnesty report
and the others, you have to look carefully at the proportions. About
nine-tenths--literally, about nine-tenths of the Goldstone report, like
the Dugard report, like the Amnesty report, about nine-tenths was
devoted to Israeli war crimes; about one-tenth was devoted to
Palestinian war crimes. And you have to understand why, because you
have to look at the comparable damage. The ratio of killings was about
a hundred to one: about--exactly thirteen on the Israeli side, about
fourteen hundred on the Palestinian side. If you look at the damage,
the damage is actually quite astonishing. Israel just systematically
blasted everything in sight and reduced it to rubble, whereas on the
Israeli side they say that several houses were damaged and one was
almost completely destroyed. So if you look at the facts, the facts on
the ground, the proportions in the reports, including the Goldstone
report, are correct. It’s about ten to one.
And that’s why
yesterday’s--or today’s headline in the New York Times is so
misleading. It’s like a Pravda headline. It says the Goldstone report
finds both sides guilty of war crimes. Well, that’s technically true,
but an accurate headline would have read, “Goldstone reports Israel
guilty of massive war crimes and also faults Hamas.” That’s what a true
headline would have read.
** The 9/16/09 Neil Conan
Ken Rudin Talk of the "NATION" (EVERYTHING on TOTN is carefully
screened) is as invalid as is Michael Oren on the Middle East. South
Carolina's James DeMint is on tape - "if we can stop him on health
care, we'll break him, this will be his Waterloo (paraphrased)"!
Closing the time frame during the President's Health Care address to
the Congress, the South Carolinian Joe Wilson (never heard from before)
shouts "You Lie". Unprecedented! And yet, Conan, Rudin, NPR's Mara
Liasson and some commentator from South Carolina, see THIS as "business
as usual", not directly connected, and not particularly notable.
Outrageous! **
AMY GOODMAN: Well, Israel refused to
cooperate with the investigation and has claimed the UN Human Rights
Council that ordered it was biased against Israel. This is some of what
the Israeli Foreign Ministry spokesperson, under the direction of the
Bar Bouncer Avigdor Lieberman, Yigal Palmor had to say about the
inquiry.
YIGAL PALMOR: This fact-finding mission was
established in sin. This is why Israel was unable to cooperate with it.
The resolution, in virtue of which the commission was established, was
so extreme in its phrasing and in its prejudging of any conclusion that
all European countries and other democratic countries did not support
it. It was adopted with the support of human rights models such as
Libya, Bangladesh, Cuba. This, of course, has no moral value
whatsoever. So we didn’t feel that this was binding in any way.
In spite of everything I’ve just said, Israel is going to study this
report and to examine it very carefully, as we have with all the
national and international human rights reports. We are taking this
seriously, and we are committed, as always, to abide by international
law.
AMY GOODMAN: Israel’s response to the Goldstone report. Your response, Norman Finkelstein?
NORMAN
FINKELSTEIN: Well, Richard Goldstone is a very respected jurist, and he
also has a long record of being very supportive of Israel. If I’m not
mistaken, he sits on the Hebrew University of Jerusalem board of
directors.
Now, when the UN Human Rights Council asked Goldstone
to chair the mission, originally his mandate was just to investigate
Israeli crimes. He himself said he couldn’t fulfill that mandate,
unless it was modified and included crimes on all sides. The Human
Rights Council said, “Fine. We’ll modify the mandate, and we’ll accept
your terms.” At that point, Richard Goldstone accepted to head the
mission.
So you have to ask yourself the question: if what the
gentleman said were true, why did Goldstone accept? If it were so
biased, he always had the option of saying no. Why would a well-known
supporter of Israel have accepted that mandate if it were biased
against Israel?
AMY GOODMAN: What do you think, Norman Finkelstein, are the limitations of the report?
**
NORMAN FINKELSTEIN: The main limitation of the report is it’s all cast
in the language of violations of the laws of war. And the fundamental
fact about what happened in Gaza is it wasn’t a war. There was no war
in Gaza. That’s the main misunderstanding about what happened there. In
fact, one of Israel’s leading strategic analysts, he said--after what
happened in Gaza, he said the one mistake Israelis are making is that
there was a war there. He said there was no war. There were no battles
in Gaza.
The picture is fairly clear. Israel flew about 3,000
sorties over Gaza. Every plane came back. None was damaged. None was
downed. There was no fighting in Gaza. If you read the reports that
were issued by the--the testimonies of the Israeli soldiers, the one
consistent theme in all of the testimonies was they never met any Hamas
militants, they never engaged in any battles. Some of the Israeli
soldiers expressed exasperation: “We came here to fight. We’re not
fighting anyone.” There was no--there were no battles. There were no
Hamas militants in the field. The basic fact was, as a couple of
Israeli soldiers said--one of them said, “This was like PlayStation, a
computer game.” Another Israeli soldier said, literally--I’m quoting
exactly, almost word for word--he said, “It was like a child with a
magnifying glass burning ants.” That’s what Gaza was like.
One
soldier after another, literally--I wish listeners would just bring up
the report. It’s called “Breaking the Silence.” And then, under--enter
under the search mechanism, just enter the word “insane.” One soldier
after another after another after another said Israel used insane
amounts of firepower. Insane amounts of firepower. There were no
soldiers, no battles, but they’re using insane amounts of firepower.
One soldier said--two soldiers, actually, talked about how the ground
was trembling because of all the bombing and all of the missiles and
all of the rockets. Another said that “We were told--even though we
were firing in the distance, we were told to evacuate the houses we
were in, because the shaking from the distance was going to cause the
house to collapse over our heads.”
It was a massacre in Gaza.
And you don’t really see that, because they’re measuring everything
against what they call the laws of war. But you’re applying laws of war
to a massacre. There was no war there. **
AMY GOODMAN: Israel
called the attack Operation Cast Lead. It’s interesting, Judge
Goldstone’s daughter was interviewed on Israeli army radio. She spoke
in Hebrew. And she responded about her father. She described him as a
Zionist who loves Israel. She said that “My father took on this job,
because he thought he’s doing the best thing for peace for everyone and
also for Israel.” The significance of this report now? The UN Human
Rights Council will meet the day after Yom Kippur--
NORMAN FINKELSTEIN: Mm-hmm.
AMY GOODMAN: --in about two weeks, to meet specifically in a special session on this report.
NORMAN FINKELSTEIN: Mm-hmm.
AMY
GOODMAN: And what does this mean for Israel? The quote of the Israeli
official to Ha’aretz, saying, “We don’t want to be put into the
International Criminal Court.”
NORMAN FINKELSTEIN: I personally don’t think that’s yet
going to go very far, because the US has effective power to block it.
What’s
significant about the report, in my opinion, and what’s significant
about what happened in Gaza, I think it marks a major turning point.
It’s like the Sharpville massacre in South Africa. Now, Sharpville is
not Soweto, but Sharpville was a turning point. Richard Goldstone is a
liberal. Richard Goldstone is very supportive of Israel. And it’s now
marking the breakup of liberal Jewish support for Israel. And as we
both know and as all of your listeners know, Jews are overwhelmingly
liberal in their sentiment. Seventy-nine percent of Jews in the last
election voted for Obama. And what you’re seeing now is the breakup of
Jewish support for Israel.
You saw during the Gaza massacre you
had some of the old-timers like Alan Dershowitz, Michael Walzer,
characters--Martin Peretz, characters like that, you know, kind of
comical figures coming out supporting Israel. But if you looked at the
younger Jewish--the younger Jewish constituency--bloggers like Matt
Yglesias, Glenn Greenwald and so forth--they all opposed the Gaza
massacre from almost like day one or day two. And then you had
significant defections, like Andrew Sullivan, who--not Jewish, but
still a significant figure, who also came out against the Gaza massacre.
So
I think now what you’re seeing, especially with the Goldstone report,
especially with his stature, especially because he’s Jewish, especially
because he’s a liberal, what it’s signaling now, is the breakup of
Jewish support and liberal support--and those are basically the same
thing--the breakup of liberal Jewish support for Israel.
AMY
GOODMAN: Norman Finkelstein, I want to thank you for being with us,
just recently back from Gaza, visited in June. Norman Finkelstein has
written a number of books--among them, Image and Reality of the
Israel-Palestine Conflict and Beyond Chutzpah. His forthcoming book
about Israel’s assault on Gaza is due out on the first anniversary of
the attack, on December 27th.