As part of the annual three-month “Israel bashing” festival at the
United Nations General Assembly, an automatic majority of 146 states
adopted, on Dec. 7, one of its annual resolutions calling upon Israel to
renounce possession of nuclear weapons and to place its nuclear
facilities under international supervision. Only six states voted
against the resolution—Canada, the United States, Palau, Micronesia,
Liberia and Israel.
Anyone familiar with the UNGA should not be
surprised or even bothered by the automatic repetition of archaic
resolutions, year after year, singling out Israel for all the various ills of the world.
Apart from elements within Israeli media seeking to sensationalize and
dramatize such resolutions, as well as some politicians and officials
unfamiliar with the machinations of the United Nations, no one gets
excited or bothered by them.
Even within the United Nations itself, the annual anti-Israel
festival in the General Assembly, based on an automatic, politically
driven majority, has become a routine and unavoidable irritant for all
except the Arab and African states that sponsor them. Such resolutions
certainly do not and are not intended to advance the cause of Middle
East peace. Nor do they achieve anything other than stain the reputation
of the organization.
They are endured by most states that, out of
political correctness and fear of Muslim backlash, simply go along and
even support them, knowing that they are meaningless.
Substantively
and legally speaking, such resolutions, like all General Assembly
resolutions, have no binding legal authority and represent nothing more
than the collective, partisan political viewpoint of the automatic
majority of states that regularly vote against Israel, no matter what
the subject.
This particular resolution seems to have attracted both the Israeli and, curiously, Iranian media.
The
resolution was sponsored by the Palestinians together with 20 Arab and
African countries, including Israel’s allies in the Middle East such as
Egypt, Jordan, Bahrain, Morocco, Sudan and the United Arab Emirates.
Titled,
“The risk of nuclear proliferation in the Middle East,” the resolution
stresses the fact that “Israel remains the only State in the Middle East
that has not yet become a party to the Treaty [on the Non-Proliferation
of Nuclear Weapons].” It goes on to express concern regarding the
threats posed by the proliferation of nuclear weapons to the security
and stability of the Middle East region.
The resolution “reaffirms the importance of Israel’s accession to the
Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons and placement of all
its nuclear facilities under comprehensive International Atomic Energy
Agency safeguards, in realizing the goal of universal adherence to the
Treaty in the Middle East.” It calls upon Israel “to accede to the
Treaty without further delay, not to develop, produce, test or otherwise
acquire nuclear weapons, to renounce possession of nuclear weapons and
to place all its unsafeguarded nuclear facilities under full scope
Agency safeguards as an important confidence-building measure among all
States of the region and as a step towards enhancing peace and
security.”
Despite attempts by Israeli and some Arab and Iranian
media outlets to dramatize and present this resolution as a novel and
newsworthy item and as a cause for concern, especially to the Israeli
political establishment and public, in fact it merely copies the eight
previous identical resolutions that have been adopted every year since
2015 when the item was first placed on the agenda of the General
Assembly.
The Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) of 1968
The
NPT was drafted in 1968 as the main, universal engine within the
international community to prevent the spread of nuclear weapons and
weapons technology, promote cooperation in the peaceful uses of nuclear
energy and further the goal of achieving nuclear and general
disarmament.
The treaty instituted and maintains a safeguards
system under the responsibility of the International Atomic Energy
Agency (IAEA) whose task is to verify compliance through inspections.
The treaty promotes cooperation in the field of peaceful nuclear
technology and equal access to this technology for all state parties,
while safeguards prevent the diversion of fissile material for weapons
use.
All states of the Middle East region, including some of the most
extreme and fanatical states such as Iran and Syria, are parties to the
NPT and as such are obliged legally to accept comprehensive
International Atomic Energy Agency safeguards and place themselves under
supervision.
Israel’s position
However, clearly,
the extent to which such states openly violate their NPT obligations,
and persistently threaten Israel, is indicative of the inherent weakness
and lack of reliability of the supervision system.
Hence,
Israel’s hesitation with regard to acceding to the NPT stems from its
insistence on the prior establishment and maintenance of stable regional
security conditions as part of a framework involving regional security
and arms control dialogue.
Israel has consistently claimed that
such a stable regional security framework could only be attainable in
the context of a multilateral peace process. Without such a regional
framework, Israel is not prepared to commit itself to the obligations of
the NPT while other regional powers maintain a state of war with Israel
and constantly threaten Israel’s very existence, even while being
parties to the NPT.
Israel’s detailed and principled position was
presented to the Director General of the IAEA in an official
communication from Israel’s permanent representative to the IAEA on
Sept. 7, 2004.
Despite Israel’s principled position and its policy of “nuclear
ambiguity,” whereby it has never admitted to developing, producing,
acquiring, or possessing nuclear weapons, Israel nevertheless adheres
fully to the most stringent nuclear safety and security guidelines at
its nuclear facilities.
However, the unending preoccupation of the
international community with Israel’s refusal to accede to the NPT has
become a constant catalyst for politicization and baseless allegations
and suppositions with regard to Israel’s supposed nuclear capabilities,
generating repeated calls for Israel to renounce possession of nuclear
weapons. Hence the present resolution during the ongoing 77th session of
the UNGA.
Clearly, no non-binding, politically generated
resolution of the General Assembly, even if adopted year after year for
eight consecutive years by a large majority of states, can oblige Israel
to act against its national security interests by binding itself to a
framework of regional and international obligations vis-à-vis those
regional states that openly display hostility and threaten Israel’s
annihilation.
In decrying the actions of the Arab states in
repeatedly raising the issue, at the 65th regular session of the IAEA
General Conference, on Sept. 23, 2021, Israel’s representatives said:
“The
issue was completely unrelated to the agenda of the General Conference
and beyond the scope of the Agency’s mandate. It politicized the Agency
to a significant extent, undermined its professional integrity and
diverted attention from the real problems and challenges faced by the
Agency and the non-proliferation regime. Israel’s representatives to the
various meetings of the IAEA and the U.N. General Assembly have
repeatedly stressed the double standard inherent in the constant
criticism of Israel, while at the same time appeasing the
ever-challenging Iranian nuclear program, which continues to evolve both
publicly and covertly.
“The Agency’s numerous regular and special
reports reflected the fact that Iran remained in serious non-compliance
with its safeguards obligations. Its constant failure to provide
credible explanations for traces of uranium found at undeclared,
massively sanitized sites was a grave concern. The existence of
undeclared nuclear material and activities and of a fully documented
nuclear weapons program left no doubt that Iran was working towards a
military nuclear program.
“The international community should not
ignore the facts and evidence on the ground in favor of appeasing Iran, a
tactical manoeuvre that had never yet prevented its malicious,
obstructive and destabilizing actions at the regional level or in the
nuclear realm and never would. Such manoeuvres would not sway Iran’s
clear ill intention to pursue a nuclear weapon program.
“Syria,
Iran’s fellow violator, had been in non-compliance with its safeguards
obligations for more than a decade, during which time it had
consistently failed to cooperate with the Agency’s investigation to
clarify the origin of a significant number of uranium particles. Syria’s
lack of compliance and cooperation set a dangerous precedent for
current and future cases, including the DPRK and Iran — two great allies
of the Syrian regime.
“The continuous abuse and politicization of
the General Conference by some Member States was regrettable. The
annual agenda item on Israeli nuclear capabilities, for instance, was
politically driven and contradicted the spirit of the Agency. The
repeated explicit threats made by Iran and its proxies to attack
Israel’s nuclear facilities must not be ignored.
“The path to
safety and security could not be paved with continuous resolutions and
active denouncements of Israel. Israel calls upon the Arab Group to
honor the will of Member States, cease its obstructive behavior and
refrain from the item’s inclusion at future sessions of the General
Conference.”
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