Israel, Politics

Goldstone fisks HR 867!

Thanks to the Magnes Zionist on this one, we have a copy of Judge Richard Goldstone’s letter to the US Congress fisking the inaccuracies and misrepresentations out of House Resolution 867. The resolution condemns the Goldstone report. Full fisk below the fold.
The Honorable Howard Berman
Chairman, House Committee on Foreign Affairs
The Honorable Ileana Ros-Lehtinen
Ranking Member, House Committee on Foreign Affairs
October 29, 2009
Dear Chairman Berman and Ranking Member Ros-Lehtinen,
It has come to my attention that a resolution has been introduced in the Unites States House of Representatives regarding the United Nations Fact Finding Mission on the Gaza Conflict, which I led earlier this year.
I fully respect the right of the US Congress to examine and judge my mission and the resulting report, as well as to make its recommendations to the US Executive branch of government. However, I have strong reservations about the text of the resolution in question – text that includes serious factual inaccuracies and instances where information and statements are taken grossly out of context.
I undertook this fact-finding mission in good faith, just as I undertook my responsibilities vis à vis the South African Standing Commission of Inquiry Regarding Public Violence and Intimidation, the International War Crimes Tribunal on the former Yugoslavia, the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda, the International Panel of the Commission of Enquiry into the Activities of Nazism in Argentina, the Independent International Commission on Kosovo, and the Volker Committee investigation into the UN’s Iraq oil-for-food program in 2004/5.
I hope that you, in similar good faith, will take the time to consider my comments about the resolution and, as a result of that consideration, make the necessary corrections.
Whereas clause #2: “Whereas, on January 12, 2009, the United Nations Human Rights Council passed Resolution A/HRC/S-9/L.1, which authorized a `fact-finding mission’ regarding Israel’s conduct of Operation Cast Lead against violent militants in the Gaza Strip between December 27, 2008, and January 18, 2009; ”
This whereas clause ignores the fact that I and others refused this original mandate, precisely because it only called for an investigation into violations committed by Israel. The mandate given to and accepted by me and under which we worked and reported reads as follows:
“…to investigate all violations of international human rights law and international humanitarian law that might have been committed at any time in the context of the military operations that were conducted in Gaza during the period from 27 December 2008 and 18 January 2009, whether before, during or after”.
Whereas clause #2: “Whereas the resolution prejudged the outcome of its investigation, by one- sidedly mandating the `fact-finding mission’ to `investigate all violations of international human rights law and International Humanitarian Law by … Israel, against the Palestinian people … particularly in the occupied Gaza Strip, due to the current aggression'”
This whereas clause ignores the fact that the expanded mandate that I demanded and received clearly included rocket and mortar attacks on Israel and as the report makes clear was so interpreted and implemented. It was the report carried out under this broadened mandate – not the original, rejected mandate – that was adopted by the Human Rights Council and that included the serious findings made against Hamas and other militant Palestinian groups.
Whereas clause #3: “Whereas the mandate of the `fact-finding mission’ makes no mention of the relentless rocket and mortar attacks, which numbered in the thousands and spanned a period of eight years, by Hamas and other violent militant groups in Gaza against civilian targets in Israel, that necessitated Israel’s defensive measures;”
This whereas clause is factually incorrect. As noted above, the expanded mandate clearly included the rocket and mortar attacks. Moreover, Chapter XXIV of the Report considers in detail the relentless rocket attacks from Gaza on Israel and the terror they caused to the people living within their range. The resulting finding made in the report is that these attacks constituted serious war crimes and possibly crimes against humanity.
Whereas clause #4: “Whereas the `fact-finding mission’ included a member who, before joining the mission, had already declared Israel guilty of committing atrocities in Operation Cast Lead by signing a public letter on January 11, 2009, published in the Sunday Times, that called Israel’s actions `war crimes’;”
This whereas clause is misleading. It overlooks, or neglects to mention, that the member concerned, Professor Christine Chinkin of the London School of Economics, in the same letter, together with other leading international lawyers, also condemned as war crimes the Hamas rockets fired into Israel.
Whereas clause 5: “Whereas the mission’s flawed and biased mandate gave serious concern to many United Nations Human Rights Council Member States which refused to support it, including Bosnia and Herzegovina, Cameroon, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, the Republic ofKorea, Slovakia, Slovenia, Switzerland, Ukraine, and the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland;”
This whereas clause is factually incorrect. The mandate that was given to the Mission was certainly not opposed by all or even a majority of the States to which reference is made. I am happy to provide further details if necessary.
Whereas clause #6: “Whereas the mission’s flawed and biased mandate troubled many distinguished individuals who refused invitations to head the mission;”
This whereas clause is factually incorrect. The initial mandate that was rejected by others who were invited to head the mission was the same one that I rejected. The mandate I accepted was expanded by the President of the Human Rights Council as a result of conditions I made.
Whereas clause #8: “Whereas the report repeatedly made sweeping and unsubstantiated determinations that the Israeli military had deliberately attacked civilians during Operation Cast Lead;”
This whereas clause is factually incorrect. The findings included in the report are neither “sweeping” nor “unsubstantiated” and in effect reflect 188 individual interviews, review of more than 300 reports, 30 videos and 1200 photographs. Additionally, the body of the report contains a plethora of references to the information upon which the Commission relied for our findings.
Whereas clause #9: “Whereas the authors of the report, in the body of the report itself, admit that `we did not deal with the issues … regarding the problems of conducting military operations in civilian areas and second-guessing decisions made by soldiers and their commanding officers `in the fog of war. ‘
This whereas clause is misleading. The words quoted relate to the decision we made that it would have been unfair to investigate and make finding on situations where decisions had been made by Israeli soldiers “in the fog of battle”. This was a decision made in favor of, and not against, the interests of Israel.
Whereas clause #10: ‘Whereas in the October 16th edition of the Jewish Daily Forward, Richard Goldstone, the head of the `United Nations Fact Finding Mission on the Gaza Conflict’, is quoted as saying, with respect to the mission’s evidence-collection methods, `If this was a court of law, there would have been nothing proven.'”
The remark as quoted is both inaccurate and taken completely out of context. What I had explained to The Forward was that the Report itself would not constitute evidence admissible in court of law. It is my view, as jurist, that investigators would have to investigate which allegations they considered relevant. That, too, was why we recommended domestic investigations into the allegations.
Whereas clause #11: “Whereas the report, in effect, denied the State ofIsrael the right to self- defense, and never noted the fact that Israel had the right to defend its citizens from the repeated violent attacks committed against civilian targets in southern Israel by Hamas and other Foreign Terrorist Organizations operating from Gaza;”
It is factually incorrect to state that the Report denied Israel the right of self-defense. The report examined how that right was implemented by the standards of international law. What is commonly called ius ad bellum, the right to use military force was not considered to fall within our mandate. Israel’s right to use military force was not questioned.
Whereas clause #12: “Whereas the report largely ignored the culpability of the Government of Iran and the Government ofSyria, both of whom sponsor Hamas and other Foreign Terrorist Organizations;”
This whereas clause is misleading. Nowhere that I know of has it ever been suggested that the Mission should have investigated the provenance of the rockets. Such an investigation was never on the agenda, and in any event, we would not have had the facilities or capability of investigating these allegations. If the Government of Israel has requested us to investigate that issue I have no doubt that we have done our best to do so.
Whereas clause #14: “Whereas, notwithstanding a great body of evidence that Hamas and other violent Islamist groups committed war crimes by using civilians and civilian institutions, such as mosques, schools, and hospitals, as shields, the report repeatedly downplayed or cast doubt upon that claim;”
This is a sweeping and unfair characterization of the Report. I hope that the Report will be read by those tasked with considering the resolution.
I note that the House resolution fails to mention that notwithstanding my repeated personal pleas to the Government of Israel, Israel refused all cooperation with the Mission. Among other things, I requested the views of Israel with regard to the implementation of the mandate and details of any issues that the Government of Israel might wish us to investigate.
This refusal meant that Israel did not offer any information or evidence it may have collected regarding actions by Hamas or other Palestinian groups in Gaza. Any omission of such information and evidence in the report is regrettable, but is the result of Israel’s decision not to cooperate with the Fact-Finding mission, not a decision by the mission to downplay or cast doubt on such information and evidence.
Whereas clause #15: “Whereas in one notable instance, the report stated that it did not consider the admission of a Hamas official that Hamas often `created a human shield of women, children, the elderly and the mujahideen, against [the Israeli military]’specifically to `constitute evidence that Hamas forced Palestinian civilians to shield military objectives against attack. ‘• ”
This whereas clause is misleading, since the quotation is taken out of context. The quotation is part of a section of the report dealing with the very narrow allegation that Hamas compelled civilians, against their will, to act as human shields. The statement by the Hamas official is repugnant and demonstrates an apparent disregard for the safety of civilians, but it is not evidence that Hamas forced civilians to remain in their homes in order to act as human shields. Indeed, while the Government of Israel has alleged publicly that Hamas used Palestinian civilians as human shields, it has not identified any cases where it claims that civilians were doing so under threat of force by Hamas or any other party.
Whereas clause #16: “Whereas Hamas was able to significantly shape the findings of the investigation mission’s report by selecting and prescreening some of the witnesses and intimidating others, as the report acknowledges when it notes that `those interviewed in Gaza appeared reluctant to speak about the presence of or conduct of hostilities by the Palestinian armed groups … from a fear of reprisals ‘• ”
The allegation that Hamas was able to shape the findings of my report or that it pre-screened the witnesses is devoid of truth. I challenge anyone to produce evidence in support of it.
Sincerely,
Justice Richard J. Goldstone

18 thoughts on “Goldstone fisks HR 867!

  1. Avigdor- Your link doesn’t seem to work.
    Here’s Rep. Berman’s response at the Washington Independent:
    http://washingtonindependent.com/66189/bermans-response-to-goldstone-on-house-gaza-war-crimes-resolution
    Here’s the PDF of the actual letter he sent:
    http://www.foreignpolicy.com/images/091103_Response_to_Justice_Goldstone_Dear_Colleague.pdf
    I also recommend Asa Kasher’s piece “Operation Cast Lead and the Ethics of Just War”:
    http://www.azure.co.il/article.php?id=502

  2. Much of this is beside the point — the US Congress will not vote on this because it is factually anything except in their political interest not to upset anyone over it. The political cost of NOT signing this letter is far higher than the cost of signing it. The cost of signing it is nill.
    That said, I enjoy debating these things on their merits, politics be forgotten. For the purposes of our readership, I’ve pasted Berman’s reply in entirety here:

    Dear Colleague:
    Last week, Justice Richard Goldstone sent us and other Members a memorandum outlining his “strong reservations about the text of the resolution” (H.Res.867) that will be voted upon by the House tomorrow. We have the utmost respect for Justice Goldstone, but we disagree with his criticisms of H.Res.867. Our primary concerns are as follows:
    –The mandate of the commission Justice Goldstone chaired (“The United Nations Fact-Finding Mission on the Gaza Conflict”) was one-sided and biased, and, even though Justice Goldstone made earnest efforts to alter the mandate, he did not fully succeed, as we indicate below. We intend to alter the resolution to take account of Justice Goldstone’s effort.
    –The commission’s report lacks context. It does not take account of the nature of Israel’s enemy – operating from the midst of civilian populations, committed to Israel’s destruction, and fully supported by state actors Iran and Syria. (In fact, it is rather dismissive of claims that Hamas operated from amidst civilian populations.) The report generally gives short shrift to Hamas’ relentless rocket attacks on Israeli civilians, over a period of eight years, which precipitated the war.
    –The report does not take into account the extent to which witnesses from Gaza were likely intimidated by Hamas.
    –In general, the report is credulous of Hamas claims but skeptical of Israeli claims.
    We would like to share with you, below, my point-by-point analysis of Justice Goldstone’s comments.
    Sincerely,
    HOWARD L. BERMAN, Chairman GARY L. ACKERMAN, Chairman
    Committee on Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on the Middle East
    and South Asia
    Letter and Response
    [Note: Justice Goldstone counts the descriptive paragraph as Paragraph 1. Therefore, “Paragraph 3” refers to Whereas 2 (and accordingly throughout his text).]
    [Goldstone:]
    “MEMORANDUM
    FROM: RICHARD GOLDSTONE
    TO: INTERESTED PERSONS
    RE: HR 867
    “Here are some comments on this resolution in an effort to correct factual errors:
    “1. Paragraph 3:That is why I and others refused the original mandate – it only called for an investigation into violations committed by Israel. The mandate given to and accepted by me and under which we worked and reported reads as follows:
    ‘. . .to investigate all violations of international human rights law and international humanitarian law that might have been committed at any time in the context of the military operations that were conducted in Gaza during the period from 27 December 2008 and 18 January 2009, whether before, during or after.’
    “That mandate clearly included rocket and mortar attacks on Israel and as the report makes clear was so interpreted and implemented. It was the report with that mandate that was adopted by the Human Rights Council and that included the serious findings made against Hamas and other militant Palestinian groups.”
    Response: The broadened mandate Justice Goldstone sought was discussed, but not voted on, at a UNHRC plenary session. It was then announced via a press release in an altered formulation, more restrictive than the formulation envisioned by Justice Goldstone. The UNHRC did not create a new mandate. The only relevant mandate remained the one which includes operational paragraph 14 of UNHRC resolution A/HRC/S-9/L.1, as was accepted by the Council on January 12, 2009. The January 12 mandate was also the only mandate referenced in the October 16 UNHRC resolution that adopted the Report.
    This whereas clause focuses on the mandate. Of course, the far more important issue is the Report itself, which makes only limited mention of the rocket attacks on Israel.
    [Goldstone:] “2. Paragraph 4: This is factually incorrect. Chapter XXIV of the Report considers in detail the relentless rocket attacks from Gaza on Israel and the terror it caused to the people living within their range. The finding is made that they constituted serious war crimes and possibly crimes against humanity.”
    Response: Paragraph 4 [Whereas #3] of H.Res.867 is addressing the mandate, not the Report. It reads as follows: “Whereas the mandate of the ‘‘fact-finding mission’’ makes no mention of the relentless rocket and mortar attacks, which numbered in the thousands and spanned a period of eight years, by Hamas and other violent militant groups in Gaza against civilian targets in Israel, that necessitated Israel’s defensive measures”. That statement is an accurate characterization of both the formal mandate, as passed by the UNHRC, and of the broadened mandate requested by Justice Goldstone.
    [Goldstone:] “3. Paragraph 5: The member concerned, Professor Christine Chinkin of the London School of Economics, in the same letter, together with other leading international lawyers, also condemned as war crimes the Hamas rockets fired into Israel.”
    Response: The letter Professor Chinkin signed, which was published in the British press in mid-January, did indeed accuse Hamas of war crimes. But it also accused Israel of war crimes, months before the investigation began, clearly prejudging the outcome of the investigation regarding both parties. In my view, Professor Chinkin should have been disqualified from serving on the commission, based on her having signed the letter. The UN watchdog UN Watch notes that Justice Goldstone himself admitted in an August interview that the signature “would have been grounds for disqualification” if the commission had constituted a formal judicial inquiry.
    [Goldstone:] “4. Paragraph 6: The mandate that was given to the Mission was certainly not opposed by all or even a majority of the States to which reference is made. That is factually incorrect. I am happy to provide further details if necessary.”
    Response: H.Res.867 uses the phrase “refused to support,” not “opposed by,” as Justice Goldstone suggests. The language of H.Res.867 was carefully chosen to include those nations who voted no, those who abstained, and those who chose not to vote at all, i.e., all those who “refused to support.”
    [Goldstone:] “5. Paragraph 7: This too is factually incorrect. The mandate that had been rejected was the one I rejected. Mary Robinson, for example, has written in support of the mandate given to and accepted by me.”
    Response: As indicated above, the formal mandate is that contained in the UNHRC Resolution A/HRC/S-9/L.1.
    [Goldstone:] “6. Paragraph 9: The words quoted relate to the decision we made that it would have been unfair to investigate and make finding on situations where decisions had been made by Israeli soldiers ‘in the fog of battle’. This was a decision made in favor and not against the interests of Israel.
    “I do not consider that it is fair or just to label the findings as ’sweeping and unsubstantiated determinations’.”
    Response: When summarizing the results of investigations into alleged Israeli attacks on Palestinian civilians, the Report states that “the Mission found in every case [except one] that the Israeli armed forces had carried out direct intentional strikes against civilians” and that “in none of the cases reviewed were there any grounds which could have reasonably induced the Israeli armed forces to assume that the civilians attacked were in fact taking a direct part in the hostilities…”
    The assertion regarding “intentional strikes” is particularly mystifying. The Report does not take into account that Israeli soldiers were operating under fire, in an extremely volatile and dangerous environment, in which the enemy was hiding amongst a civilian population.
    Nor does the Report generally take into account that testimony from Gazans was given under the watchful eye of Hamas officials. Moreover, the commission heard, at best, only one side of the story, since Israel, despairing of the biased mandate, chose not to participate. Whatever the wisdom of that Israeli decision – and, as indicated below, I do find it understandable – the Report at least should have acknowledged that Israeli non-participation limited the commission’s ability to reach firm conclusions.
    [Goldstone:] “7. Paragraph 11: What I had explained to The Forward was that the Report itself would not constitute evidence admissible in court of law and that investigators would have to investigate which allegations they considered relevant. That, too, was why we recommended domestic investigations into the allegations. The remark as quoted is both inaccurate and taken completely out of context.”
    Response: Here is the relevant quote, as well as the passages that directly precede and follow it, taken directly from the article in the Jewish Daily Forward:
    “Goldstone defended the report’s reliance on eyewitness accounts, noting his mission had cross-checked those accounts against each other and sought corroboration from photos, satellite photos, contemporaneous reports, forensic evidence and the mission’s own inspections of the sites in question.
    For all that gathered information, though, he said, “We had to do the best we could with the material we had. If this was a court of law, there would have been nothing proven.”
    Goldstone emphasized that his conclusion that war crimes had been committed was always intended as conditional. He still hopes that independent investigations carried out by Israel and the Palestinians will use the allegations as, he said, “a useful road map.””
    http://www.forward.com/articles/116269/
    We consider the quote in the whereas to be fully in context.
    [Goldstone:] “8. Paragraph 12: It is again factually incorrect to state that the Report denied Israel the right of self-defense. The Report examined how that right was implemented by the standards of international law. What is commonly called ius ad bellum, the right to use military force was not considered to fall within our mandate. Israel’s right to use military force was not questioned.”
    Response: We use the phrase “in effect” in our clause because the Report does not explore why Israel has the right to defend itself against terrorist aggression perpetrated by a non-state actor. Justice Goldstone says that “the right to use military force was not considered to fall within our mandate.” Yet, he went beyond his mandate in several other areas of the Report, including discussion of Israel’s policies throughout the occupied territories (including the West Bank) and recommendations that were not called for by the UNHRC resolution that established the mandate. An acknowledgement of Israel’s right of self-defense would have provided vital context to the issues raised in the Report.
    [Goldstone:] “9. Paragraph 13: This is the first suggestion that I have come across to the effect that we should have investigated the provenance of the rockets. It was simply not on the agenda, and in any event, we would not have had the facilities or capability of investigating these allegations. If the Government of Israel has requested us to investigate that issue I have no doubt that we have done our best to do so.”
    Response: As noted, Justice Goldstone’s Report went beyond its mandate in several respects; looking at the roles of Iran and Syria in assisting Hamas certainly would have provided critical context to the Report. Iran and Syria enable Hamas’ terrorism. The assistance Hamas receives from outside actors allows the Hamas terrorist organization to attack Israel incessantly, certain in the knowledge that its arsenals will be replenished.
    Hamas’ support by state actors makes it a formidable foe. The report should have considered that geopolitical context.
    [Goldstone:] “10. Paragraph 14: This is a sweeping and unfair characterization of the Report. I hope that the Report will be read by those tasked with considering the resolution.”
    Response: The Report uncritically attributes numerous statements to “Gaza Authorities” (meaning, Hamas), while often casting doubt on information derived from the international and Israeli press and from non-government-affiliated Israelis.
    For example, the Report criticizes the fact that an Israeli Government web-post cites a Newsweek article reporting on Hamas depredations against its own population and casts doubt on the accuracy of the article. According to the Report, the citing of the Newsweek article, far from being an effort to invoke a neutral source, is merely evidence that Israel itself finds the Newsweek report unconvincing, since Israel does not adduce evidence from its own internal sources (p.143 paragraphs 612-614). This is an odd criticism, since intelligence information, no matter how compelling, is only rarely disclosed to the public.
    Perhaps most tellingly, the Report appears only to cite Israeli statements when it finds such statements a useful basis for criticizing Israel. For example:
    Section 41 – “The Mission examined the mortar shelling of al-Fakhura junction in Jabaliyah next to a UNRWA school, which, at the time, was sheltering more than 1,300 people (chap. X). The Israeli armed forces launched at least four mortar shells. One landed in the courtyard of a family home, killing 11 people assembled there. Three other shells landed on al-Fakhura Street, killing at least a further 24 people and injuring as many as 40. The Mission examined in detail statements by Israeli Government representatives alleging that the attack was launched in response to a mortar attack from an armed Palestinian group. While the Mission does not exclude that this may have been the case, it considers the credibility of Israel’s position damaged by the series of inconsistencies, contradictions and factual inaccuracies in the statements justifying the attack.”
    Section 702 – “The Mission views as being unreliable the versions given by the Israeli authorities. The confusion as to what was hit, the erroneous allegations of who was specifically hit and where the armed groups were firing from, the indication that Israeli surveillance watched the scene but nonetheless could not detect where the strikes occurred, all combine to give the impression of either profound confusion or obfuscation.”
    By contrast, the Report is far more forgiving when discussing contradictions in Palestinian evidence:
    Section 1092 – “There are some minor inconsistencies, which are not, in the opinion of the Mission, sufficiently weighty to cast doubt on the general reliability of Majdi Abd Rabbo. There are also, not surprisingly, some elements of the long account which appear in some versions and not in others. The Mission finds that these inconsistencies do not undermine the credibility of Majdi Abd Rabbo’s account.”
    [Goldstone:] “11. Paragraph 16: Again, this is an unfair and selective quotation taken out of context.”
    Response: Our whereas clause reads as follows: “Whereas in one notable instance, the report stated that it did not consider the admission of a Hamas official that Hamas often ‘‘created a human shield of women, children, the elderly and the mujahideen, against [the Israeli military]’’ specifically to ‘‘constitute evidence that Hamas forced Palestinian civilians to shield military objectives against attack.’’
    This quote was not taken out of context, and it can be found in Sections 477 and 478 of the Report, as follows:
    “The Mission is also aware of the public statement by Mr. Fathi Hammad, a Hamas member of the Palestinian Legislative Council, on 29 February 2009, which is adduced as evidence of Hamas’ use of human shields. Mr. Hammad reportedly stated that:
    …the Palestinian people has developed its [methods] of death seeking. For the Palestinian people, death became an industry, at which women excel and so do all people on this land: the elderly excel, the mujahideen excel and the children excel. Accordingly, [Hamas] created a human shield of women, children, the elderly and the mujahideen, against the Zionist bombing machine.
    478. Although the Mission finds this statement morally repugnant, it does not consider it to constitute evidence that Hamas forced Palestinian civilians to shield military objectives against attack. The Government of Israel has not identified any such cases.
    The Report also displays numerous examples of credulousness regarding Hamas behavior. For example:
    p. 117: “While, in the light of the above reports, the Mission does not discount the use of booby traps by the Palestinian armed groups, it has no basis to conclude that civilian lives were put at risk, as none of the reports record the presence of civilians in or near the houses in which booby traps are alleged to have been set.”
    p. 117: “Although the Mission was not able to investigate the allegation of the use of mosques generally by Palestinian groups for storing weapons, it did investigate the incident of a missile attack by the Israeli armed forces against al-Maqadmah mosque on the outskirts of Jabaliyah camp, in which at least 15 people were killed and 40 injured on 3 January 2009 (see chap. XI). The Mission found no evidence that this mosque was used for the storage of weapons or any military activity by Palestinian armed groups. As far as this mosque is concerned, therefore, the Mission found no basis for such an allegation. However, the Mission is unable to make a determination regarding the allegation in general nor with respect to any other mosque that was attacked by the Israeli armed forces during the military operations.”
    p. 121: “On the basis of the information it gathered, the Mission finds that there are indications that Palestinian armed groups launched rockets from urban areas. The mission has not been able to obtain any direct evidence that this was done with the specific intent of shielding the rocket launchers from counterstrokes by the Israeli armed forces.”
    p. 121: “The Mission finds that the presence of Palestinian armed fighters in urban residential areas during the military operations is established. On the basis of the information it gathered, the Mission is unable to form an opinion on the exact nature or the intensity of their combat activities in urban residential areas that would have placed the civilian population and civilian objects at risk of attack. While reports reviewed by the Mission credibly indicate that members of Palestinian armed groups were not always dressed in a way that distinguished them from civilians, the Mission found no evidence that Palestinian combatants mingled with the civilian population with the intention of shielding themselves from attack.”
    [Goldstone:] “12. Paragraph 17: That Hamas was able to shape the findings or that it pre-screened the witnesses is devoid of truth and I challenge anyone to produce evidence in support of it.”
    Response: The evidence is within the Report itself. Page 111 of the Report reads as follows: “In its efforts to gather more direct information on the subject, during its investigations in Gaza and in interviews with victims and witnesses of incidents and other informed individuals, the Mission raised questions regarding the conduct of Palestinian armed groups during the hostilities in Gaza. The Mission notes that those interviewed in Gaza appeared reluctant to speak about the presence of or conduct of hostilities by the Palestinian armed groups. Whatever the reasons for their reluctance, the Mission does not discount that the interviewees’ reluctance may have stemmed from a fear of reprisals.”
    Hamas is in full control of Gaza, and this “fear of reprisals” significantly helped Hamas shape the findings. See, for example, an Amnesty International publication that reports on how Hamas murdered its rivals while operation Cast Lead was ongoing: http://www.amnesty.org/en/news-and-updates/report/hamas-waged-deadly-campaign-war-devastated-gaza-20090212.
    Furthermore, the commission conducted some of its proceedings through holding televised open hearings in Gaza. Given its total control of Gaza and its ability to intimidate, Hamas almost certainly would have been able to control the access and message of each witness attending a televised open hearing. What is beyond doubt is that witnesses were keenly aware that Hamas was monitoring the televised proceedings and likely to inflict reprisals for any unwelcome testimony.
    [Goldstone:] “Finally, I note that there is not a word to record that notwithstanding repeated pleas to the Government of Israel, it refused all cooperation with the Mission. Amongst others, I requested the views of Israel with regard to the implementation of the mandate and details of any issues that the Government of Israel might wish us to investigate.”
    Response: Justice Goldstone is correct. The Government of Israel decided not to cooperate with the Mission, based on its biased mandate, as well as the UNHRC’s long history of anti-Israel bias. I find that position, at the least, understandable.

  3. Goldstone’s been pretty clear from the start that this was more of a call to arms for an independent investigation than a factual condemnation. So I find a denunciation of his report to be pretty regressive.
    And I really resent Berman’s defense of Israel’s game of not cooperating with and then condemning the report. That’s a pretty inexcusable an completely unproductive tactic.

  4. RB, you have no basis for such statements. Factual rebuttals of the report’s findings are being made by everyone from international experts in laws of armed conflict and human rights to military professionals specializing in counterinsurgency operations to editorial columns throughout the western world and common citizens who have bothered to read of the 500+ pages of this report, to now the Congress of the United States. The notion that this report, on the basis of which war crimes trials may commence, cannot be examined and condemned for its blatant bias and woeful legal determinations is pretty regressive.
    To suggest that the report does not make deadly serious factual condemnations – when it states unequivocally, on the basis of zero evidence except the political bias and ignorance of its writers, that Israeli forced targeted Gazan civilians to kill them – shows that you haven’t actually bothered to read it.
    Israel was fully justified in not cooperating with the Goldstone mission, in protest at the horrendously biased mandate alone, as it was urged to do by some of the mostly highly respected experts in human rights and international law. Reflexive anti-Israel bias at the UN is what has become tiresome and regressive, and we as human beings shouldn’t have to stand for it in this day and age.

  5. Here’s what’s important, Avigdor: Israeli human rights organizations reported and gave evidence for a great number of the same abuses contained in the Goldstone report. They released joint statements calling for an independent investigation long before the UN issued Goldstone a mandate. Yet you’re chosing to ignore them completely. Attacking Goldstone while ignoring Israel’s home-grown defenders of democracy is indicative of those people more interested in self-victimization than any pursuit of truth.
    This trumpeting over Goldstone’s bias is a distraction from the point, which RB pointed out quite lucidly: Goldstone has called for an independent inquiry by Israel and Hamas, or else the International Criminal Court will do it for them. There is enough doubt sown by the first-hand testimonials to warrant further investigation.
    And throughout Israeli history, there have been serious investigations into Israel’s own wars — why now are we resisting the obligations of democracy and avoiding this one? I fear that Israelis and American Jews are fighting hard against such an investigation because they know with the firepower used in Operation Cast Lead, they know they will lose in the court of international opinion, if not also in the courtroom. Both Israel and Hamas being tried for war crimes disassembles the notion that one side is 100% right and the other 100% wrong. But sensible people know that the truth lies somewhere in between.
    Attacking Goldstone is also a distraction from what we know, without a doubt, to be true: human rights abuses occured in Gaza by Israeli forces. Israeli commanders are responsible. Yet only one soldier has been convicted of any wrongdoing to date — for stealing a credit card. Military historians scoff at Israel’s purported innocence and perfection, making a laughingstock of Israel’s credibility on the international stage.

  6. Well put, KFJ. Avigdor, Israel’s refusal to participate in an established system of international law, despite the shortcomings that we all acknowledge, puts it in no position to denounce that system’s recommendations. Does the UNHRC investigates Israel at a disproportionate rate? Yes. Does this invalidate every finding that has every come out of one of its investigations? No. If Israel wants to maintain respect in the international community, it can’t ignore it anymore. Either it investigates itself (which it’s done in the past) or it lets someone else.

  7. KFJ: Avigdor is breaking with Goldstone when he criticizes Goldstone – not the entire Israeli human rights community. Please recall that B’Tselem felt the need to criticize the Goldstone report as fundamentally flawed (look it up)! It is disingenuous to put words into the mouths of Goldstone’s critics. R. Eric Yoffie, like B’Tselem, is no apologist for Israeli violations, but nor does he countenance the bigotry of a UN report which claims with decisive conclusiveness that the Israelis deliberately targetted civilians, with all efforts to the contrary (SMS’s, phone calls, leaflets, etc.) being dubbed merely attempts to fool the international community (really – Goldstone actually says that, go read!).
    It’s fine – and good – to say that the above Israeli protective efforts were inadequate, that their forces were too aggressive in their tactics, and so forth. But breaching all barriers of proper epistemology and imputing murderous motives into the minds of Israeli officials post facto, absent a single scintilla of documentation, is indefensible and hateful. That’s all Berman and co. are saying, all Yoffie said at J Street and all Avigdor and other critics of the Goldstone report like myself are saying. Nothing more, nothing less.

  8. (1)
    Does the UNHRC investigates Israel at a disproportionate rate? Yes. Does this invalidate every finding that has every come out of one of its investigations? No
    True
    (2)
    If Israel wants to maintain respect in the international community, it can’t ignore it anymore. Either it investigates itself (which it’s done in the past) or it lets someone else.
    You’re pointing out some of the problems international law, rb–there is much debate about this among legal scholars.
    For instance, generally speaking, the body that we consider human rights law was written after WWI, by the victorious countries. So, when all is said and done, the countries whose military’s were more skilled (including the American government that used two nuclear weapons)codified what they considered to be human rights law. If a county doesn’t agree and refuses to participate in such a legal regime, that country is deemed a “rogue nation” or a “savage society”–ie, Israel sometimes or Iran sometimes (which is especially amazing considering the history of Persia.)
    That doesn’t mean that there isn’t necessarily a phenomenon as human rights, just that we might want to be careful about speaking of international law as a force of nature.
    [[Please note that this doesn’t mean I’m criticizing the Goldstone Report specifically. I haven’t read it. The way things are going, judah magnes is going to write that I’m implicitly accusing Goldstone of the Kennedy assasination by stating that international law is problematic.]]

  9. Please recall that B’Tselem felt the need to criticize the Goldstone report as fundamentally flawed (look it up)!

    I looked up B’Tselem’s position on the Goldstone report, and found it is not as you claimed. In short:

    B’Tselem indeed criticized some of the report’s findings. … However, B’Tselem declared that these faults do not nullify the report’s main recommendation, that Israel must investigate the suspicions that its army acted in Gaza unlawfully and immorally.

  10. Again, we all agree on this. I have no beef with Israeli defenders of human rights or with Israel holding hard-hitting investigations. The issue is whether the Goldstone report contains grave, intentional errors of omission and commission that need to be repudiated so that Israel can feel comfortable initiating said investigations without the implication that the report was correct in any of its more horrific accusations.
    Thought experiment: Imagine the UN accused the US of intentionally targeting civilians in Afghanistan, without actual evidence adduced to support this claim. Imagine they further claimed that all of Gen. McCrystal’s documented new efforts to reduce civilian casualties were a farce designed to deceive observers, again absent any actual evidence, relying solely on post facto imputations of motive to American officials. Imagine this accusatory report was authored by Iran, Libya and Syria. Do you think the US would open investigations, or would it go on the defensive lest it appear concede to such heinous insinuations?
    As The Economist wrote, an unbiased, fair-minded report on Gaza would likely have inspired genuine introspection in Israel, but what Goldstone’s fantastical vitriol actually does is shut down the conversation.
    As opposed to your link, I was thinking of what B’Tselem told JPost where they call for Israeli investigations, but also come down on Goldstone for rather impressive defects:
    “There’s no question that the HRC, which mandated the Goldstone [fact-finding mission into the Gaza fighting], has an inappropriate, disproportionate fixation with Israel,” she said, adding that the Council was “a political body made up of diplomats, not human rights experts, which means that the powerful states are never going to come under scrutiny the way the powerless will. So China, Russia and the US will never have commission of inquiry, regardless of how their crimes rank relative to Israeli crimes.”
    Furthermore, the Goldstone Report itself, which was presented in its final version to the Human Rights Council on Tuesday, is “disagreeable” and mistaken in some of its gravest accusations against Israel, she believes. These include the claim that Israel intentionally targeted the civilian population rather than Hamas, and the “weak, hesitant way that the report mentions Hamas’s strategy of using civilians [in combat].”
    (Reading this again, I realize the first half of this is strikingly similar to the recent editorial by Robert Bernstein on HRW. Telling, perhaps.)

  11. Jonathan1, I understand your point. On the other hand, those who criticize the Goldstone report don’t usually criticize the stated morals of international law, just its execution. E.g., they agree with the values of human rights, equality, etc, they just believe the UNHRC is a flawed body, and that the international law system is problematic. On this I’d agree with them. But the Goldstone shows that these things need to be investigated, and if Israel doesn’t trust the international system to do it (which they don’t), they need to do it on their own, unless they want to be seen as disagreeing with those morals, and I neither think that they disagree with them or wish to be seen as doing so. This leaves them with only one choice: conducting an investigation.

  12. Ok. Like I said, I don’t have any issue with the Goldstone Report, in and of itself (I haven’t read it or paid much attention to it, so I have no opinion.)
    I do have many issues with international law, in and of itself, and I was just trying to point out that there is a HUGE disagreement–within the legal community–as to whether there is such a thing as international law.

  13. 1) I have nothing against Israeli investigations. They were initiated by IDF military prosecutors the day after hostilities ended – before Goldstone was born, so to speak – and are ongoing. However, this is the choice of Israeli military prosecutors and, should the civilian bodies determine it necessary, the choice of the relevant civilian portfolios – Justice and AG.
    Those of us who reject Goldstone’s findings are not a distraction – his REPORT is the distraction. It has yielded nothing besides acrimonious, libelous, unsubstantiated charges, politicizing what should have been an important legal process. Goldstone has perverted the very notion of justice, and for that, his report and its findings must be, and are being roundly discredited by a growing body of legal scholars, experts, political leaders and global citizens. It is absolutely vital that the Goldstone report have zero bearings on the process of legitimate legal proceedings, lest they be tainted with the corruption his report represents.
    2) If I remember correctly, at least half of the current criminal investigations being done by Israeli military prosecutors are based on information provided by B’Tselem and other organizations. In other words, when evidence is presented about specific cases of potential malfeasance, the system deals with them, as should be expected.
    I don’t have time to find a link for this, but I was just reading it yesterday, so it’s readily available – B’Tselem’s only issue at this point is that the investigations being done are against those soldiers which may have disobeyed orders or rules of engagement. B’Tselem has not questioned, from what I’ve read, the ability or desire of military prosecutors to investigate the army’s conduct. Indeed, IDF military prosecutors have wide discretion and independence to perform their duties.
    B’Tselem wants Israel to investigate the entire conduct of the war, from choice of weapons used to to the rules of engagement given to forces to political decisions and their impact on the timeline, etc.
    That’s not a criminal investigation, it is a political commission, akin more to the 9/11 commission – examining policy – than to criminal proceedings. A political commission has nothing to do with justice; it’s an autopsy.
    Lastly, I take issue with your final remarks:
    what we know, without a doubt, to be true: human rights abuses occured in Gaza by Israeli forces. Israeli commanders are responsible.
    You are prejudicing the outcome of active or future criminal proceedings, with no legal foundation besides wild assertions and speculation. Whether human rights abuses occurred, and who has responsibility for those abuses must be determined through a court of law. Such libelous charges are precisely why Goldstone’s report must be condemned; it perverts the very notion of justice, then hijacks the gullible to endorse that outcome.
    Yet only one soldier has been convicted of any wrongdoing to date — for stealing a credit card.
    What’s your point? See, that’s what happens when you prejudge the outcome of a legal proceeding. You can’t simply condemn people to prison on the basis of emotions and speculations; facts must be presented and proven in a court of law. Simple battery cases in a civilian court, where all the evidence is available, can take months and months to resolve. Dozens of investigations are ongoing. That some cases are easier and faster to prove than others – like the theft and use of a credit card – says nothing about the legal process as a whole.
    Military historians scoff at Israel’s purported innocence and perfection, making a laughingstock of Israel’s credibility on the international stage.
    Really? This is just hyperbole. Name the military historian *scoffing* at Israel’s “purported innocence”. You are so very worried about the impact of legal proceedings, or the lack thereof, on “Israel’s credibility on the international stage”, yet you show no such compunctions towards the intolerable, libelous Goldstone report, which perverts the meaning of justice, and its bearing on the credibility of international institutions such as the UNHRC.
    It is simply unacceptable for all free thinking people, to recognize the UNHRC as a flawed, biased organization which perverts justice, yet accept its authority and fulfill its bidding. When international institutions are subverted to advance a hateful, violent agenda, it is our duty as human beings to voice our opposition and contempt for the perversion of reason and the denial of truth.

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