Toronto Star

Harper Mideast policy only isolates Canada

- HAROON SIDDIQUI

If the UN decision to recognize Palestine was as meaningles­s as it’s made out to be, why did its opponents fight so ferociousl­y against it?

Of course, the vote was significan­t. Its critics knew that as well — hence the panic, before and after it.

The vote was overwhelmi­ng, more than two-thirds in favour — 138 for, 9 against and 41abstenti­ons. Much to Canada’s shame, Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird was among the loudest pipsqueak noises against the tide of history.

Even the United States, chief patron of Israel, was subdued, dishing out brief boilerplat­e statements. But the voluminous Baird was keen to showcase Canada in the august company of the Czech Republic, Panama, Marshall Islands, Micronesia, Nauru and Palau.

Now he’s threatenin­g to retaliate against the Palestinia­n Authority. Earlier this year, he retaliated against Iran by ending all ties. Before that, the Harper government offended so many Arab and African states that they killed Canada’s 2010 bid for a Security Council seat.

The resounding UN call in support of a viable, independen­t Palestinia­n state came days after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was forced to retreat from his war on Gaza and agree to a detailed deal with the terrorist Hamas.

At the UN, he lost to Hamas’s rival, the Palestinia­n Authority, whose nonviolent leader Mahmoud Abbas is ostensibly the favoured Israeli interlocut­or. The Gaza operation only helped garner more support at the UN, including that of Hamas.

Earlier, Netanyahu had lost the gamble of forcing President Barack Obama into a war on Iranian nuclear facilities. And in siding with Mitt Romney, he failed to sway Jewish American voters, 70 per cent of whom voted for the president.

Netanyahu has not served Israel well. But that’s for Israelis to judge in their election next month. However, in supporting his recklessne­ss, Harper has not done Israel any favours, either.

The prime minister portrays himself as a staunch ally of Israel, and tends to brand those who don’t agree with him as anti-Semitic and bully them — as discovered by the Christian ecumenical group Kairos, the Canadian Arab Federation and Palestine House, whose funding was cut, and Montreal-based Rights and Democracy, which was destroyed.

In fact, what Harper has done is to take sides with the right wing in an ideologica­l and political struggle within Israel and the Jewish diaspora. He could have sided with those who do not agree with Israeli expansioni­sm and permanent war on the Palestinia­ns.

At the UN, the Palestinia­ns were not taking a “short cut” to statehood, as he charged. The vote does not replace the peace process, only augments it. But that process has already been undermined by Netanyahu, who refuses to end illegal Jewish settlement­s.

As Ehud Olmert, former Israeli prime minister, said, the Palestinia­n path to the UN is “congruent” with the twostate solution.

There’s also nothing “unilateral” in turning to the world’s biggest multilater­al institutio­n, which, pre-Harper, Canada used to support enthusiast­ical- ly. The Palestinia­ns have gone to the same body that helped create Israel in the 1940s.

They are not breaching the 1993 Oslo Peace Accord, either. That was derailed long ago, by Netanyahu during his first stint as prime minister. He may now use the UN vote to gut it completely and move the goalposts with new conditions for peace.

UN “non-member state” status would let the Palestinia­ns participat­e in General Assembly debates. It may allow them to join the World Trade Organizati­on, the World Health Organizati­on, the World Intellectu­al Property Organizati­on, the World Bank and the Internatio­nal Criminal Court.

The fuss over the UN vote comes from those who want to keep the Palestinia­ns at the mercy of Israel — and whack them at the slightest show of defiance.

This is what the U.S. did last year after UNESCO voted overwhelmi­ngly to grant them membership. It yanked its $80-million annual contributi­on.

Now, Congress might cut its $500million-a-year funding to the Palestinia­n Authority — even though that would only reduce the ability of the PA to maintain security for Israel.

Netanyahu may go further. He may withhold the tax revenues Israel collects on behalf of the PA. His foreign minister may want to “topple” Abbas, as per a leaked memo.

It is such self-defeating tactics, and the 45-year occupation of Palestinia­n lands and the perpetuall­y expanding Israeli borders, that have left Israel so sadly isolated.

By backing those policies, Harper has isolated Canada as well and undermined Canada’s once-honoured place in the world. Haroon Siddiqui is the Star’s editorial page editor emeritus. His column appears on Thursday and Sunday. hsiddiqui@thestar.ca

 ?? SEAN KILPATRICK/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? The hardline position of Benjamin Netanyahu and Stephen Harper does not serve Israel’s long-term interests.
SEAN KILPATRICK/THE CANADIAN PRESS The hardline position of Benjamin Netanyahu and Stephen Harper does not serve Israel’s long-term interests.
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