The Jerusalem Post

Europe’s occupation hypocrisy

- • By MICHAEL FREUND

After Monday’s passage of the law aimed at regulating certain land issues in Judea and Samaria, Israel’s ostensible friends in Europe wasted little time before lambasting the Jewish state in remarkably harsh terms. Mustering all the vitriol at their disposal, which appears to be boundless when the subject is Israel, the leaders of the Continent went on a rhetorical rampage that was as obscene as it was offensive.

As usual, it was the European Union’s High Representa­tive for Foreign Affairs, Federica Mogherini, who scaled the heights of hyperbole when she called the law “new and dangerous,” as though resolving land disputes through compensati­on was an entirely unheard-of concept in modern law. But then Mogherini went further, declaring that “the Israeli parliament has legislated on the legal status of land within occupied territory which is an issue that remains beyond its jurisdicti­on.”

The irony of her own statement was apparently lost on her. After all, what “jurisdicti­on” does Mogherini have to interfere in Israel’s internal affairs, berate its democratic­ally-elected parliament or interpret the legislatio­n it chooses to pass?

Other leaders, such as French President Francois Hollande, denounced the legislatio­n, saying it would “open the way to the annexation of the occupied territorie­s,” while the UN Special Coordinato­r for the Middle East Peace Process Nikolai Mladenov said that by legislatin­g “in the occupied Palestinia­n lands,” Israel had crossed “a very thick red line.”

Well if European and internatio­nal statesmen really want to have a debate about “occupied territorie­s,” I say: bring it on.

A good place to start would be with some of Europe’s own colonial relics, which it greedily clings to, like a hung-over hobo grasping a bottle with a few remaining drops of vodka.

Take, for example, the island of Corsica, whose beautiful beaches, tranquil bays and dense forests conceal an ugly historical act: France’s 1768-69 invasion and annexation of the nascent republic. Despite the passage of nearly 250 years, many Corsicans continue to yearn for greater autonomy or even independen­ce. In December 2015, the nationalis­t Pè a Corsica Party dramatical­ly won the island’s regional elections, coming within just two seats of an outright majority. And opinion polls show that two-thirds of Corsicans want to hold a referendum on independen­ce from France.

Independen­ce-minded Corsicans say that Paris has been deliberate­ly trying to “Frenchify” the island, subduing its culture and language.

But when was the last time you heard European leaders, or anyone else for that matter, denouncing France for its “occupied territorie­s”?

And then, of course, there is Catalonia, where the regional government plans to hold a referendum on independen­ce in September of this year despite opposition from Spanish authoritie­s. Curiously, however, the Catalonian­s’ longing for independen­ce doesn’t seem to elicit as much interest in Europe’s capitals as that of the Palestinia­ns, even though the former have a much better case for a state of their own.

To begin with, there actually was a Catalonian state, albeit briefly, in the 17th century, whereas there has never been an independen­t Palestine in all of history. And even if one believes the Palestinia­ns have been occupied since 1967, Spain has been occupying Catalonia for more than three centuries. That makes it a longer-running dispute, and justice delayed is justice denied. Moreover, Catalans can legitimate­ly claim to be a nation with its own distinct language; the Palestinia­n Arabs cannot.

The list of course goes on, and includes places such as the Falklands. It was 35 years ago this April that Britain dispatched a naval task force of more than 100 ships to take the islands back from Argentina, thereby reassertin­g their century-old colonial occupation.

More recently, in one of the biggest land-grabs in modern history, Norway cemented its hold on more than 2.7 million square kilometers of Antarctica when it unilateral­ly declared in June 2015 that its territory in the eastern part of the region extended all the way down to the South Pole. A white paper issued by the Norwegian Foreign Ministry stated openly that “the purpose of annexation was to subdue the land that now lies unclaimed,” and Norway asserts that the land belongs to it because it was there first.

Oddly, they don’t seem to apply the same logic to Judea and Samaria, where the Jewish presence predates the founding of Islam by over 1,500 years.

Clearly, when one puts things in historical perspectiv­e, Europe’s bellowing about Israel’s “occupied territorie­s” is nothing more than diplomatic duplicity. This is especially true in light of the fact that Judea and Samaria are the ancient heartland of the Jewish people and the cradle of our civilizati­on.

Unlike many of Europe’s own occupied territorie­s, Israel has every right – morally, historical­ly, theologica­lly and militarily – to be in Judea and Samaria, and so we shall remain.

So next time the EU decides to holler about the need for “ending the occupation,” Israel should announce that it is sending human rights monitors to Corsica, Catalonia and other such areas, to ensure that the European occupying powers are not trampling on the rights of the indigenous residents.

And the Jewish state should also start working on some draft UN resolution­s denouncing the ongoing European occupation of various parts of land around the world.

It might sound silly, but instead of constantly being on the defensive, perhaps it is at last time for Israel to give Europe a taste of its own medicine.

 ?? (Reuters) ?? THE GULF OF PORTO in the French island of Corsica. The beautiful beaches, tranquil bays and dense forests conceal an otherwise ugly historical act: France’s 1768-69 invasion and annexation of the island, which was at the time a nascent republic.
(Reuters) THE GULF OF PORTO in the French island of Corsica. The beautiful beaches, tranquil bays and dense forests conceal an otherwise ugly historical act: France’s 1768-69 invasion and annexation of the island, which was at the time a nascent republic.
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