With Israel under attack, Biden must fight UN anti-Semitism
New York Post
August 7, 2022
Rockets are launched from Gaza towards Israel, over Gaza City on Aug. 7, 2022
As the Iran-backed Palestinian Islamic Jihad lobbed hundreds of rockets at Israel this weekend, a UN Human Rights Council official took to Twitter to denounce the Jewish state, labeling Israeli acts of self-defense against known terrorists “illegal,” “immoral” and “irresponsible.” These comments come as the council faces a full-blown anti-Semitism crisis over a commission assembled to delegitimize Israel.
Now is the time for the Biden administration to shut down that commission for good — and force countries to go on record on UN anti-Semitism.
In May 2021, after Hamas launched a war against Israel, the UN Human Rights Council established a three-member Commission of Inquiry to investigate baseless allegations of Israeli war crimes. No surprise there: The usual UN response to a terrorist group starting a war and targeting Israeli civilians is to investigate Israel.
But the council put a new twist on the latest commission’s warrant. In addition to examining last year’s conflict, the commission has a permanent mandate to criticize Israel’s existence. With a first-year budget of $4 million and 18 staff, the commission issued a preliminary report in June recycling decades-old anti-Israel rhetoric and promising a follow-on report in months.
Systematically targeting the world’s only Jewish state is nothing new for the United Nations. But usually, it is done genteelly, posing as a curiously selective concern for human rights. Until now.
In an interview published in late July, Miloon Kothari, one of the commission’s three members, expressed his resentment of “the social media that is controlled largely by — whether it is the Jewish lobby or specific NGOs” and the money they throw around. That followed a second commission member, Chris Sidoti, complaining that Jews and Israel toss out accusations of anti-Semitism “like rice at a wedding.”
Remember that expert who blasted Israel for defending itself this weekend? Just a few days ago, she expressed solidarity with the commission and called allegations of anti-Semitism “preposterous” and a “smear campaign” to distract from its mission. Commission chair Navi Pillay was also outraged. Not by the commissioners’ inappropriate comments, but by the way Israel and “others” took their words “out of context.”
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