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Palestine and the Fate of the United Nations By Lawrence Davidson Redress, Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, November 15, 2010
Fall of League of Nations The League of Nations was certainly not a perfect organization, infected as it was with the colonialist notions of its European founders. We can see that aspect of the organization in its mandate system which served as a cover for imperialism.
But ultimately the mandate system is not what brought the League low. The fatal flaw was its inability to achieve its primary goal of preventing war by transcending the power of nationalism and compelling all states to end their quarrels through negotiation or arbitration. What success
the League did have in this effort was restricted to a category of
relatively weak states. For instance, it successfully brought an end to
disputes between Columbia and Peru, Greece and Yugoslavia, Finland and
Sweden, and even, in 1921, Poland and a very weak Germany. (Still)birth of United Nations As the League was founded in response to World War I, so the United Nations was founded as a response to World War II. Where once there was the horror of the trenches, now there was the horror of the Holocaust. Where once there was mustard gas, now there was something much worse, nuclear weaponry. Thus the prevention of war still formed the central and urgent mission of the United Nations.
This time around it should have been easier
for the new world body. Where World War I spurred on imperialism, carving up
the Ottoman Empire and introducing the facade of mandates, World War II saw
the dismantlement of empires and, finally, the fulfillment of Woodrow
Wilson’s promise of self-determination for most of the non-European world.
1. Throughout his tenure the government of Israel
has been consistently uncooperative, even to the point of refusing him
entrance into Israel and the occupied territories. Flying with Mussolini’s eagles Dr Saeb Erekat, chief negotiator for the Palestine Liberation Organization, also spoke about this dilemma in his remarks on the UN’s 65th birthday. He observed that "Israel has undermined the efficacy of and derogated the UN system, the very authority through which it was created". He then went on to list some of the sources of international law in which Palestinian rights are grounded. These include UN General Assembly resolutions, UN Security Council resolutions and the Fourth Geneva Convention, all of which Israel has been allowed to violate. Both Erekat and Falk know that there is virtually no chance that the United Nations can or will even try to force Israel to abide by international law. Whatever its Charter might say, its decision-making structure is designed to prevent any challenge to the great powers that have permanent seats on the Security Council. The United States is the great power patron of Israel and has, and will continue, to block efforts to sanction its ally. Thus, like the League of Nations, the UN can deal only with sparrows and but not eagles. It can go after the leaders of Sudan, Serbia and Rwanda, but not those of the United States for its crimes in Iraq, not China for its crimes in Tibet, not Russia for its crimes in Chechnya, and not Israel for its crimes against the Palestinians or its near-fatal corruption of an ancient world religion. It would seem that Israel flies with Mussolini’s eagles. Cover for great power hypocrisy It is unlikely that the UN will end its days abruptly as did the League of Nations. While Israel does encourage war and mayhem in the Middle East, liking nothing better than to push the United States into a war with Iran, it is unlikely to spark World War III. Thus, it is probable that the United Nations’ fate is to go out with a whimper and not a bang. It will linger on for many decades to come, a tool of the great powers to be used to shoot at sparrows when appropriate. Ironically, this means the final legacy of the United Nations will be the opposite of its original ideal. Ideally meant to keep the peace and hold all nations to the rule of law, it will stand emasculated as a symbol of the ultimate supremacy of power in the world.
Power has been supreme for a very long time. In
the fifth century BC the city state of Athens (alleged birthplace of Western
democracy) was fighting the Peloponnesian War. Its naval forces came to the
neutral city of Melos and demanded its surrender. The historian Thucydides
recounts the ensuing debate in which the
Athenians told the Melosians
"...we both alike know that in the discussion of human affairs the question
of justice only enters where there is equal power to enforce it, and that
the powerful exact what they can, and the weak grant what they must".
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