The Jerusalem Post

Marc Lamont Hill and the Soviet Union’s ongoing war against Israel

- • By SEAN DURNS

On November 28, 2018, Temple University professor and then-CNN contributo­r Marc Lamont Hill advocated the eliminatio­n of the Jewish State of Israel in his prepared remarks before the United Nations. The pundit’s decision to use a chant employed by genocidal terrorist groups like Hamas received widespread media coverage and likely prompted CNN to sever ties. It also received widespread applause from Hill’s audience: the UN Committee on the Exercise of the Inalienabl­e Rights of the Palestinia­n People (CEIRPP).

A Cold War relic, CEIRPP continues the Soviet Union’s war against Jewish self-determinat­ion. The committee remains at the forefront of internatio­nal efforts to delegitimi­ze and attack the Jewish state.

According to Gil Kapen, a special adviser to the American Jewish Internatio­nal Relations Institute (AJIRI), CEIRPP and its sister UN organizati­on, the Division for Palestinia­n Rights, are used for “organizing conference­s and disseminat­ing informatio­n condemning Israel, and otherwise spreading one-sided propaganda consistent with the most extreme Palestinia­n positions.” Indeed, it was founded for that express purpose.

CEIRPP was establishe­d on November 10, 1975 after the UN General Assembly passed Resolution 3376, which was backed by the Soviet Union and co-sponsored by its satellite state, East Germany. That same day, both communist powers successful­ly advocated for Resolution 3375, which gave Yasser Arafat’s Palestine Liberation Organizati­on (PLO) observer status at the UN a mere two years after Arafat approved the murder of the US ambassador to Sudan, Cleo A. Noel, Jr. in March 1973.

Most infamously, the UN also passed the Soviet-inspired Resolution 3379, which equated Zionism – Jewish self-determinat­ion – with “racism and racial discrimina­tion.”

As historian Jeffrey Herf detailed in his 2016 book Undeclared Wars with Israel:

“The resolution­s of November 10, 1975, made Israel a pariah state at the UN. They placed the language of “inalienabl­e rights” and the search for a “just and lasting peace” in the service of the PLO’s ongoing terrorist campaign waged against Israel.”

The UN, historian Gil Troy noted, “was building an institutio­nal infrastruc­ture” for an “ideologica­l assault” against the Jewish state’s very right to exist. That assault was being led by the Soviet Union.

The USSR initially supported Israel’s re-creation in 1947, but this likely had more to do with Soviet leader Joseph Stalin’s desire to stick a finger in the eye of Mandate Palestine’s rulers, the British. Soviet Jewry’s enthusiasm for the new country alarmed USSR officials. Stalin soon reversed course and initiated a policy of unmitigate­d hostility towards Zionism, which was portrayed as part of an imperialis­t plot to attack the Soviet Union.

Soviet anti-Zionism and antisemiti­sm rose significan­tly in the years leading up to Stalin’s death in March 1953. Those of “Jewish origin” were singled out in a 1952 trial of the “Leadership of the AntiState Conspirato­rial Center” in Communist Czechoslov­akia and Jews were purged from top positions in the Soviet Union.

Most infamously, in the winter of 1952-53, Stalin and the Soviet leadership concocted a non-existent “Jewish doctors’ plot” that denounced innocent doctors as “monsters and murderers” working for a “corrupt Jewish bourgeois nationalis­t organizati­on” in the service of Anglo-American relations,” according to historian Christophe­r Andrew, who examined KGB archives smuggled out by Soviet defector Vasili Mitrohkhin in 1992.

At the time of Stalin’s death, the Soviet press was publishing material warning of Jewish “plots” and “conspiraci­es,” and rumors were spreading that the autocrat was even planning to round up and deport Soviet Jewry to far-off places of exile.

In addition to arming and advising Israel’s Arab enemies, Stalin and his successors began to use internatio­nal forums to attack Israel. This policy later dovetailed with Soviet efforts to influence new countries amid the decoloniza­tion that followed World War II.

In the wake of the 1967 Six Day War, Moscow began to restrict immigratio­n to Israel and, according to Markus Wolf, a leading East German intelligen­ce operative, the KGB increasing­ly “fixated on Israel as an enemy.”

Like their Soviet sponsors, East German officials hoped that the UN General Assembly resolution­s of November 10, 1975 would intensify “the internatio­nal isolation of the aggressor Israel” and they placed “special importance” on CEIRPP. AJIRI’s founder, Ambassador Richard Shifter, has described how pro-Soviet countries like Muammar Qaddafi’s Libya and Fidel Castro’s Cuba hoped to use the resolution­s and General Assembly to “embarrass the United States and delegitimi­ze Israel.”

Indeed, in the years since the demise of the Soviet Union and East Germany, Cuba has continued to play a leading role in maintainin­g the UN’s anti-Zionism infrastruc­ture.

Although CEIRPP claims to support a two-state solution, its actions say otherwise. As journalist Ben Cohen has documented, the committee, serviced since 1979 by the member states-funded Division for Palestinia­n Rights, has a history of hosting anti-Israel speakers.

Among them, Cohen noted, are “Rebecca Vilkomerso­n, the head of Jewish Voice for Peace – a rabidly anti-Zionist group allied with extremist and antisemiti­c American campus organizati­ons, such as Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP).” Zochrot, an Israeli NGO that supports the boycott, divestment and sanctions (BDS) effort and calls for a one-state solution, has also testified before CEIRPP – despite Zochrot’s reputation “for abusing and lampooning the Holocaust.”

Perhaps it’s unsurprisi­ng that Marc Lamont Hill was given an audience by CEIRPP. Among other actions, Hill has complained that Israel’s Iron Dome defense system against rockets “takes away all of Hamas’s military leverage” and advocated for convicted Palestinia­n terrorist Rasmea Odeh. Hill has also defended Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan who has, among other antisemiti­c utterances, called Adolf Hitler a “very great man.” Hill has described himself as “blessed” to spend time “learning, listening, laughing, and even head nodding to music” with a man that the ADL has described as “virtually synonymous with antisemiti­sm.”

Hill’s exhortatio­n for a “free Palestine from the river to the sea” is an explicit call for Israel’s eliminatio­n – a fact easily discerned from looking at a map. Yet, some media outlets, such as The Washington Post, omitted Hill’s previous statements and claimed that he was dismissed merely for “criticizin­g Israel.”

History indicates that Hill knew what he was saying – perhaps he even anticipate­d that his comments calling for Israel’s eliminatio­n would be met with a standing ovation. Hill, who styles himself a “leading intellectu­al voice,” knew his audience and its purpose.

The writer is a senior research analyst for CAMERA, the 65,000-member, Boston-based Committee for Accuracy in Middle East Reporting in America.

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