US President Joe Biden’s first week in the Oval Office delivered a stunning rebuke to the cruel and heinous policies of the Trump administration reaffirming his campaign pledge to advance democracy and global human rights – with one notable exception: Israel.
Sure Biden’s immediate focus is combatting the Covid-19 pandemic which is killing thousands of Americans every day. He has also found time to reverse a number of former President Donald Trump’s harmful policies
Yet save for the decision to restore aid to the Palestinians some of the policies that continue to negatively affect the Palestinian people have remained intact.
While Biden has put human rights at the forefront of his stated intent to “reassess” US ties with Saudi Arabia a similar consideration has not been telegraphed for Israel despite its denial of basic human rights to Palestinians including freedom of movement healthcare housing education and equality under the law.
Palestinian refugees
Biden has reversed the Trump administration’s Muslim travel ban calling it a “moral blight” that “separated loved ones inflicting pain that will ripple for years to come”.
But when it comes to travel bans Palestinians – particularly the two million who remain permanently caged in Gaza’s open-air prison and millions more scattered across refugee camps in Jordan Lebanon and Syria – know better than anyone the cruelty of being separated from loved ones and unable to return home. Their Israeli-enforced travel ban has spanned seven decades.
The Biden administration has also promised to end US support for the Saudi-led war in Yemen saying it has contributed to “the worst humanitarian situation anywhere in the world” – and yet nothing on the unlivable conditions that Israel’s illegal blockade has forced upon Gaza where two-thirds of young adults are now unemployed and 97 percent of the water supply is undrinkable.
In China the Biden administration has described the state’s persecution of Uighur Muslims as a “genocide” arguing: “Forcing men women and children into concentration camps trying to in effect re-educate them to be adherents to the Chinese Communist Party – all of that speaks to an effort to commit genocide.”
Palestinians have also been subjected to decades of state terrorism theft dispossession and ethnic cleansing. Surely their right to life liberty and the pursuit of happiness is equal to that of Uighurs Yemenis and Muslim migrants?
Aid to Israel
Moreover it’s patently hypocritical to condition military assistance to Saudi Arabia on human rights concerns but not the billions of dollars the US government gives to Israel each year. Either this administration doesn’t see the Palestinian people as worthy victims of oppression or it just doesn’t care.
Last May Tony Blinken who is now the secretary of state assured a pro-Israel group that a Biden administration would “not tie military assistance to Israel to any political decisions that it makes. Period. Full stop.” The term “political decisions” is a veiled reference to Israel’s human rights and international law violations which have sparked global outrage.
As former President Barack Obama’s presidency drew to a close in 2016 Blinken who served as deputy national security adviser in the Obama administration bragged on Twitter about having “done more for Israel’s security than any [administration] before”. When grilled by Republicans during his recent Senate confirmation he replied “yes and yes” when asked whether he agreed that Jerusalem was the capital of Israel and whether he would commit to keeping the US embassy there.
Astonishingly Blinken even lauded the Trump administration for coercing Arab and African countries into signing bogus “peace deals” with Israel despite the fact that none of the UAE Bahrain Morocco or Sudan was in a state of war against Israel.
Normalizing occupation
These normalization deals serve only to normalize Israel’s occupation colonialism and system of apartheid in the Palestinian territories while delivering billions of dollars’ worth of weapons to Arab and African dictators and despots.
Yet Blinken said this about them during his confirmation hearing: “I think there are a number of things from where I sat that the Trump administration did beyond our borders that I would applaud … The work that was done to push forward on normalization with Israel I applaud. It makes Israel safer it makes the region safer it’s a good thing. I would hope we can build on that.”
Blinken said nothing of illegal Israeli settlements only offering boilerplate statements about resuming the “peace process” and working towards a “so-called two-state solution” which he described as a “challenging” process. He added: “I think realistically it’s hard to see near-term prospects for moving forward on that.” He left out the part in which hundreds of thousands of illegal Jewish settlers remain the central obstacle to an independent Palestinian state.
More telling is the fact that both Blinken and Biden have expressed opposition to the boycott divestment and sanctions (BDS) movement which aims to hold Israel in compliance with international and human rights laws through non-violent protest mirroring the political means and methods that decades ago brought an end to racial segregation in the United States and later in South Africa.
Progressive voices
Equally troubling are comments made by Biden’s envoy to the United Nations Linda Thomas-Greenfield who has asserted that the Palestinian-led BDS movement “verges on antisemitism” and has vowed to “stand with Israel” at the UN.
What’s clear is that if change towards resolving Palestinian human rights is to come during the Biden presidency it won’t come from the White House but rather from the growing progressive caucus in Congress where an increasing number of younger voices are demanding an end to the world’s most enduring illegal occupation.
– CJ Werleman is the author of Crucifying America God Hates You. Hate Him Back Koran Curious and is the host of Foreign Object. His article appeared in the Middle East Eye.