10 Questions for Bill English on NZ’s ‘longstanding policy’
10 Questions for Bill English on NZ’s ‘longstanding policy’
After months of evasion, the New Zealand Prime Minister has finally admitted, in response to another question from Winston Peters about UN Security Council Resolution 2334 in Parliament earlier this week, that the resolution was not put to cabinet for approval. It did not need to be, English said, because it was in line with “longstanding policy”, a refrain we have now heard repeatedly from the Government.
However, Shalom.Kiwi has already shown how the resolution was not in line with longstanding policy. The “longstanding policy” mantra does not become more convincing by repetition. Here are 10 questions that reveal how dramatic a departure from previous policy McCully’s resolution was:
When did the NZ government…
1) …declare that East
Jerusalem (including the Temple Mount, Western Wall,
Hadassah hospital, and the Hebrew University of Jerusalem)
is “occupied Palestinian
territory”?
Resolution 2334 potentially
criminalises Jews living in the ancient Jewish Quarter,
rebuilt after the destruction during the years of Jordanian
occupation (1948-67) and makes it illegal for Jews to pray at the
Western Wall, the surviving structure of the Second
Temple – Judaism’s most holy site. The resolution is
in-keeping with a Palestinian strategy of using
international organisations to deny any Jewish connection to the Holy
Land but it is not NZ foreign policy. In fact, it is ahistorical.
2) …start
supporting BDS?
When asked about the anti-Israel Boycotts, Divestments, and
Sanctions movement (BDS), Murray McCully said “I think the move
to try and exclude Israel from business activity and the
move to try and exclude Israel from engagement in
international institutions and normal diplomatic activity is
hugely counterproductive.” However, Resolution 2334 –
specifically provision 5 – advances BDS by urging countries to
“distinguish, in their relevant dealings, between the
territory of the State of Israel and the territories
occupied since 1967”. While sanctions on Israel may be called for by terror-sympathising
academics, it is not sound government policy and is out of step with previous New Zealand
policy.
3) …decide that Israel should be
confined to the 1949 armistice lines?
UN resolution 242, passed in the wake of the
1967 war, was specifically worded so as not to
perpetuate the 1949 Armistice Lines as the final borders, in
order to encourage negotiations. It is also widely
acknowledged that existing settlement blocs on the outskirts
of Jerusalem would stay with Israel as part of land swaps in any permanent
deal. Without those, Israel would be just 15 km wide at
its narrowest point, and its major cities within easy reach
of missiles fired from the West Bank, a likely scenario
given Israel’s experience following its unilateral withdrawal from Gaza in 2005.
Resolution 2334 makes all those “swappable settlements”
illegal, endorses an ethnic cleansing of Judea and
Samaria, and challenges the intent of 242 – something
no previous NZ government has done.
4) …stop
condemning Palestinian terrorism?
Shalom.Kiwi
has previously reported that Murray McCully has failed to
condemn Palestinian terrorism (here, here, here, and here). However, previous foreign ministers have been
clear in their condemnation of Palestinian terrorism.
Resolution 2334 does condemn acts of terror but is not
specific, leaving the Palestinians to claim that it only
applies to “State terrorism” of Israel. No previous New Zealand government has
refrained from condemning Palestinian terrorism or calling
it what it is.
5) …conclude that taking away any
incentive for the Palestinians to negotiate and rewarding
them for terrorism, intransigence and rejectionism would
encourage them to the negotiating
table?
Resolution 2334 makes no specific demand
of the Palestinians, perhaps because they drafted much of the text, and tells
them that all the land beyond the 1949 Armistice Lines
belongs to them. As mentioned above, Resolution 2334 removes
the need or incentive to negotiate on settlements that could
have been part of land swaps and the Palestinians have
interpreted the general condemnation of violence as
referring only to Israel. When resolutions like this are
passed, there is no need for Palestinian leaders to change
their stance of refusing to enter negotiations or their
incitement to violence. Indeed, Resolution 2334 has emboldened radicals
– this is surely not a NZ foreign policy.
6)
…label settlements a “flagrant violation under
international law” and a major obstacle to the two-state
solution?
Shalom.Kiwi has reported that previous statements from the New Zealand
government have seldom mentioned Israeli settlements,
let alone blamed them for a lack of peace. In fact, there
are strong arguments for most settlements being
legal.
7) …begin aligning its foreign policy
with Senegal, Malaysia, and Venezuela; rather than with US,
UK, and Australia?
The US abstained from the
vote because it was biased against Israel and they didn’t
agree with the wording and the House of Representatives voted
overwhelmingly for it to be “repealed or fundamentally
altered”. While the UK voted for the resolution, its Prime
Minister, Theresa May, spoke out against it.
Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull spoke
out even though Australia does not not sit on the
Security Council. New Zealand has chosen to stick by the
decision to co-sponsor the resolution with Senegal,
Malaysia, and Venezuela, signalling a clear shift in
diplomatic alliances.
8) …start taking a more
anti-Israel stance than Egypt, who withdrew from sponsoring
the resolution?
Egypt tabled a moderated version of the
Palestinian text but withdrew from taking it to a vote
at the 11th hour. New Zealand and the other co-sponsors stepped in to make sure the
text was voted on, choosing to follow seldom-used procedures
of the UNSC. While Egypt has a peace treaty with Israel,
there is anti-Israel propaganda from government,
education, and media. Such anti-Israel sentiment has never
been part of official NZ policy.
9) …believe
that betraying the Middle East’s one true democracy, the
only Middle Eastern state that shares NZ’s liberal values,
is an act of friendship?
New Zealand’s
Permanent Representative to the United Nations, Ambassador
Gerard van Bohemen, admitted that he clearly understood that the
resolution was an insult to Israel. Such a betrayal of a diverse and democratic
society in the Middle East is not the act of a friend. It is
also not an act of friendship to state that you want a good relationship
and also say that the one you betrayed should make the first
move towards reconciliation.
10) …disregard
the Jewish connection to, and legal rights to settle in, the
West Bank, as enshrined in still valid legal instruments?
By labelling the West Bank as occupied
Palestinian territory, and settlements as illegal,
Resolution 2334 denies Jewish historical connection and legal rights to settle in the West Bank
and is inconsistent with the 1922 Mandate for Palestine and
the UN Charter that adopted the Mandate, as well as the Oslo
Accords. The government has never before delegitimised a
Jewish presence in the Holy Land.
The resolution was not in line with longstanding policy. This means that the Prime Minister’s justification for it not being put to cabinet holds no weight and it was a gross breach of procedure. If Mr English was so sure it was longstanding policy and that it did not need to be put to cabinet, why has he and his government evaded the question for months, until he had no option but to respond to a direct question in Parliament? And why was the resolution not put to cabinet by Minister McCully?
Thousands of New Zealanders have expressed their concerns to the Government regarding UN Resolution 2334, in letters, newspaper advertisements, petitions,protests, articles, and in comments on social media. And it is still news, and questions are still being asked in parliament, three months after it passed. The New Zealand public deserves the truth, and it deserves better.