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Take #2 on Goldstone’s Report

Apr5

by: on April 5th, 2011 | 3 Comments »

Judge Richard Goldstone

What are we to make of Richard Goldstone’s partial retraction of the UN report on the Gaza war of 2008-09? There are some very thoughtful reactions that preclude any need for me to comment in my own words. This first one is by Bernard Avishai (the Canadian-American-Israeli political economist, author and blogger–see Tikkun Daily’s Blogroll). Avishai is both insightful and pithy:

Goldstone’s Reconsideration

Bernard Avishai (photo by Amy Thompson)

Richard Goldstone is a good man in need of a good editor. His report would never have attracted so much lightning had it not started off the way it did, trying to chronicle the terrible events of the Gaza operation, along with all the preliminary allegations of war crimes, before getting to context, testimony, caveats, and definitions (see especially pp. 10-26). By the time you got through the first section, you either had to be furious with Israel or with him.

Now Goldstone says in the lead of his Washington Post op-ed piece what everybody will remember, but which he does not really go on to prove, that to have known then what is known now would have meant a materially different report, hence, a different reaction to the Gaza operation.

In effect, he is apologizing for reporting that Israeli soldiers intentionally harmed civilians. …

Hamas missiles, he adds, were of course war crimes. Hamas has not investigated its own actions at all. As to Israel, “our fact-finding mission had no evidence on which to draw any other reasonable conclusion.” You get the idea that Israel was wronged.

… Sadly, what Goldstone does not regret is a report that distracted from the wrongness of Cast Lead in the first place.

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Greeting the IDF, Mt. Herzl, and Bedouin hospitality on the Birthright Tour

Mar19

by: on March 19th, 2010 | 1 Comment »

Mike Godbe, a young American on a free Birthright tour of Israel, continues his diary and photos of the tour, reporting his experiences and the ways the tour staff present the history and politics of the country. Earlier posts from Jerusalem, a kibbutz, and Caesaria can be accessed by clicking the corresponding links.

Sunday, March 14th, 2010
Today we met the six IDF soldiers that will be joining our group for the remaining five days of the program. All of them are between the ages of 19 and 21, half women, half men. When birthright was started around 2000, participants in the program were not allowed to walk through many parts of Jerusalem or go out at night, like we now are, because of the high level of danger during the second intifada. We are told that the IDF “encounters” program was incorporated into birthright to allow participants to meet and interact with Israeli citizens . . . The implication being that the soldiers were here to provide that connection between participants and Israelis, not participants and the Israeli military.

We played some name games and ice breakers in the morning, the soldiers still in full military garb (no guns). We then got ready for a somber day at Yad Vashem and Mt. Herzl Cemetery, the Holocaust museum / memorial and the burying place of nearly every prominent Israeli statesmen and soldier – among many others of lesser fame.

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