In this mailing:
"Don't
Buy From Jews"
Germans Boycott Israeli Products
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friends to like this.
Although
Pax Christi claims it is not seeking a blanket boycott of Israeli products, the
NGO's use of vague and sweeping language, plus the fact that there are no
special labels to distinguish products made in the so-called occupied
territories, does make it a de facto boycott of everything made in Israel.
A prominent Roman Catholic NGO in Germany has
called for a wide-ranging boycott of Israeli products.
The petition represents an expansion of the
boycott, disinvestment and sanction (BDS) movement against Israel in Germany,
where efforts by pro-Palestinian activists to delegitimize the Jewish state
continue to pick up momentum.
The German branch of
Pax Christi, which describes
itself as an "international Catholic peace movement," issued a
press
release dated May 22, in which it urged German consumers not to buy goods
from Israel as long as it remains unclear whether they are produced in the
"settlements" or in "Israel."
A two-page flyer for the campaign, which uses
the slogan "
Occupation
Tastes Bitter" (Besatzung schmeckt bitter), states: "Israeli
settlements on occupied territory violate Article 49 of the Geneva Convention.
Whoever contributes to the profitability of these settlements contributes to the
violation of human rights." The flyer also encourages German consumers to
report "questionable" Israeli products on a website called
www.lebensmittelklarheit.de .
Although Pax Christi claims it is not seeking a
blanket boycott of Israeli products, the NGO's use of vague and sweeping
language, plus the fact that there are no special labels to distinguish
products made in the so-called occupied territories, does make it a de facto
boycott of everything made in Israel.
Pax Christi's boycott campaign has received
political backing from Albrecht Schröter, the Social Democratic mayor of the
eastern German city of Jena in the state of Thuringia. A June 1 article in the
local newspaper
Thüringische
Landeszeitung quotes Schröter as saying his goal "is to demand
mandatory labeling of goods from illegal Israeli settlements that occupy
Palestinian territory."
But critics have accused Schröter (and Pax
Christi) of issuing one-sided statements against Israel, and of giving the
false impression that Israel is a country that systematically disregards
international law and human rights.
Others say the obsession with Israel while
human rights are being systematically abused in Muslim countries such as Iran,
Syria and Saudi Arabia is a reflection of anti-Semitism.
Katharina König, a Left Party state
representative in Thuringia and a Jena city councilwoman agrees. She says
Schröter's signature on the Pax Christi petition and his support for a boycott
are "
false
and inappropriate" and that the boycott "has the same meaning as
'Don't Buy from Jews.'"
In any case, the BDS movement against Israel is
growing in Germany.
For example, in an unprecedented victory for
BDS activists, Deutsche Bahn, the German railway operator, recently announced
that it would
pull
out of a project to build a high-speed rail line from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem
because the line would cut through six kilometers of disputed territory in the
West Bank. Deutsche Bahn had been in charge of electricity and communications
control on the project, but pro-Palestinian groups claimed the project violated
international law.
German Transportation Minister Peter Ramsauer
told Deutsche Bahn Director Rüdiger Grube the project was
politically
"problematic" and potentially in violation of international law.
Ramsauer offered the following reason for terminating the project:
"Palestinian Foreign Affairs Minister Riyad Al-Malki, members of the
German Parliament and media have criticized a project in which DB International
is acting as adviser to Israel's state-run railway."
German BDS activists have also repeatedly
pressed for
Israel
to be banned from participating in Berlin's annual
International Tourism Exchange (ITB),
known throughout the world as the top trade show for the global tourism
industry. And a group called
Berlin Campaign for the Academic
Boycott of Israel (BAB) has pushed for a complete academic and cultural
boycott of Israel. The group has boycotted Israeli film festivals and has
German artists and musicians to refrain from performing in Israel.
In November 2011, BDS activists launched a
nationwide protest against Israel agricultural exports; BDS protests were held
in
Berlin,
Hamburg,
Heidelberg,
Munich and
Stuttgart.
In April, the Duisburg branch of the German
Left Party (Die Linke) posted a flyer on its website with a
swastika
morphing into a Star of David, and called for a boycott of Israeli
products. The flyer, which calls Israel a "rogue state" and a
"warmonger" states: "Oppose the moral blackmail of the so-called
Holocaust! Truth makes free!" This is a pun on "Arbeit macht
Frei!," located above the entrance gate to the Auschwitz concentration
camp.
In March, a group called the "Bremer Peace
Forum" in the northern Germany city of Bremen
staged
protests in front of supermarkets urging Germans to boycott Israeli
products. The Forum protesters distributed leaflets showing pictures of bloody
oranges and held posters with the slogan: "Save the Palestinian
people."
The German Left Party, in a
Call
to Action said: "Israel has occupied the West Bank for decades,
contrary to numerous UN resolutions. More and more illegal Jewish settlements
are being built and Israel exports the fruits that are harvested from there.
This is against international law and the exports from the occupied territories
are illegal. A boycott of Israeli products will move public opinion in order to
increase international pressure on Israel, just as happened in South
Africa."
Later that month, the German Bundestag [Parliament]
held a debate over accusations of
anti-Semitism
within the Germany Left Party following the release of an in-depth study by
two German sociologists titled "
Anti-Semites
as a Coalition Partner." The report says that "anti-Zionist
anti-Semitism" has become the dominant consensus position within the Left
Party and that this trend is gaining force.
Soeren
Kern is Senior Fellow for European Politics at the Madrid-based
Grupo de Estudios Estratégicos / Strategic Studies Group. Follow him on Facebook.
If
the US Disarms, Will Its Adversaries Do the Same?
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friends to like this.
Our force
structure would be smaller than that of China, Pakistan or India, let alone
Russia. It would be the smallest of the entire nuclear age, so low that an
adversary would have as few as six targets to hit to eliminate all US weapons
available for nuclear deterrence.
Although the American public -- according to
countless polls including one earlier this year by "Let Freedom Ring"
-- overwhelmingly supports a strong US nuclear deterrent, there are pressures
from some anti-nuclear elements to eliminate 70% of our deterrent and
unilaterally reduce our nuclear forces to a level near that of the Chinese
communists.
One such group, "Global Zero,"
recommends that the US deploy no more than 450 nuclear warheads compared to the
1550 now allowed by the new START treaty, ratified between the US and Russia in
late 2010. Global Zero generously says the US can do this unilaterally.
The organization cites five reasons why nuclear
deterrence is irrelevant to today's threats facing America and its allies,
among which is incomplete view that as nuclear weapons would not have stopped
the attacks of 9/11, they now serve little useful purpose.
Global Zero also proposes that US nuclear
forces be cut to ten submarines and ten bombers (compared to 14 submarines and
60 bombers allowed under new START). In its most radical proposal, it
recommends eliminating entirely our 450 land-based intercontinental ballistic
missiles, and that all our remaining forces be put on a non-alert status --
unable to be launched for up to three days. Undoubtedly our adversaries will be
moved to cooperate, and, in a crisis, not threaten us for any of that time.
These ideas are worse than dangerous: they
would leave the US vulnerable; increase nuclear dangers by assuring any
adversary that a strike would have no immediate consequences; provide
incentives for further nuclear proliferation, and in a crisis make it more
likely that force, including nuclear weapons, would be used by a US adversary.
Russia, for example, is modernizing its entire
nuclear arsenal. Its president, Vladimir Putin, is building 400 new nuclear
armed ballistic missiles. By contrast, the US is planning to build some too,
but is not yet modernizing any of the three legs of our nuclear deterrent.
Moreover, under the new START treaty, Russia
can increase its current missiles and bombers up to the 700 level allowed by
the treaty, while the US has had to reduce its nuclear arsenal from 1100
platforms. Further unilateral US reductions would seriously upset the strategic
balance upon which a deterrence rests.
China, too, is modernizing its arsenal, and
building or testing countless new ballistic missiles. While the size of China's
nuclear warhead arsenal remains, unsurprisingly, a mystery – the People's
Republic has rebuffed all efforts to improve transparency -- China is also
building a new submarine force, and a new land-based mobile missile. According
to China expert Michael Pillsbury, the PRC military says that China is building
all the weapons needed to become a world hegemon.
The most wrong-headed Global Zero
recommendation of all, however, is to eliminate all 450 land-based ICBMs in the
US arsenal. This would leave the US on a day-to-day basis with submarines at
only two bases, in Georgia and Washington, and with 3 submarines at sea. Our
force structure would be smaller than that of China, Pakistan, and India, let
alone Russia. It would be the smallest of the entire nuclear age, so low that
an adversary would have as few as six targets to hit to eliminate all US
nuclear weapons available for deterrence.
This means an adversary such as Russia or
China, facing the US in a crisis over Syria, Iran or North Korea, could
eliminate the entire US strategic nuclear arsenal by using very few weapons of
their own, a very attractive, almost irresistible, option. Submarines at sea
and in port could even be destroyed slowly, surreptitiously, using conventional
torpedoes or missiles launched from attack submarines, without resorting to the
use of nuclear weapons, and thus significantly lowering the threshold over
which a crisis might become an open conflict.
In a crisis, therefore, or in a run-up to a
crisis, the incentives by our adversaries to use force or threaten the
first-use of force, including nuclear weapons, would also rise precipitously.
Our enemies would no longer need to fear our land-based retaliatory capability
from our Minuteman missiles: they would no longer be available. As a result, an
adversary would have every incentive to "get our submarines," a
probability the report even acknowledges, but only in a footnote. The report
then concludes by stating that a technological breakthrough could, in fact,
make our entire nuclear submarine fleet vulnerable and thus
"dramatically" change the recommendations of the report – a
conclusion particularly worrisome in light of the proposals to reduce our
submarine fleet to only ten submarines.
The report also makes the astounding argument
that as all 450 US deployed warheads would be available to deter Russia, we
would thus have nothing to worry about. But this would be true only if the US
launched a nuclear strike first. Historically, however, our deterrent
needs have always been calculated based on what would be needed for
retaliation, or what is known as an "assured second strike". Under
the Global Zero force structure, an adversary might well conclude that only a
very limited number of US nuclear forces would survive an initial attack or
series of surreptitious attacks. The temptation to "go for it" in a
crisis might look too good to pass up – creating the most highly unstable
deterrent policy one could possibly propose.
Every administration in the nuclear age, over
some 60 years, has built, maintained, modernized and supported what is known as
a strategic triad of nuclear forces—submarines, bombers and land-based
missiles. The idea has been to prevent any enemy from being able to take a
cheap, sudden shot at the US and eliminate our nuclear capability. This new
report has hung a sign on the US on which is written: "Come Get Me."
Deterrent stability, however, is not the only
casualty of the zero-nuclear campaign. Equally foolish is its quaint parallel
notion that persuading other nations to cut their nuclear arsenals requires the
US to first – dramatically, even unilaterally – to cuts its nuclear arsenals.
We are led to believe that the nuclear arsenals of China and North Korea, for
instance, have been built and expanded because the US does not have the moral
authority to seek non-proliferation as long as we maintain our own nuclear
arsenal.
If this is true, the argument goes, then we can
only be a paragon of virtue in the eyes of these nuclear powers once we have
eliminated all our nuclear forces. But we already have gone the extra
arms control mile. Starting with the Reagan and Bush eras' INF, START and
Moscow treaties, our nuclear weapons have been cut from 12,000 deployed weapons
to the fewer than 2000 deployed today.
What did we get in return? North Korea went
nuclear. Pakistan and India both tested more nuclear weapons and built up their
arsenals. China is modernizing its nuclear arsenal in dramatic fashion, as is
Russia. And both Russia and China have repeatedly threatened the use of nuclear
weapons. In short, there is little evidence that nuclear arms control by the
United States has engendered similar efforts by other nuclear or
aspiring-to-be-nuclear powers.
As our nuclear "umbrella" protects
over 30 countries, they have been able to forgo nuclear weapons -- ironically,
one of the great non-proliferation success stories.
Have other countries given up their nuclear
arsenal or advanced nuclear programs? Yes Iraq in 1991, Libya in 2005 and South
Africa in 1988.
Also, when Desert Storm ousted Saddam from
Kuwait, that act eventually led to the discovery of an Iraqi nuclear program
and its dismantlement.
Operation Iraqi Freedom led to regime-change in
Iraq in 2003, the capture of Libyan-bound nuclear centrifuges, and the
subsequent capture of Saddam Hussein. The late Libyan leader Muammar Qaddafi
saw the hand-writing on the wall and gave up Libya's nuclear program
And the approaching end of apartheid in South
Africa led to that government voluntarily giving up its nuclear weapons. All
successes were initiated by and led by the United States, two by the US
military.
Unfortunately, this important history is
ignored.
The Global Zero report substitutes fairy tales
for sound thinking, wishes for realities, and would leave us in a world of
heightened nuclear dangers. It is advice heard before but which successive
American administrations have rejected for over half a century and which the American
people still oppose. Let us keep it that way.
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