Arab News

Why the FBI investigat­ion of Israel is important

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This month’s decision by the US Department of Justice to open an investigat­ion into the May killing of Palestinia­n American journalist Shireen Abu Akleh is not a game changer, but it is important and worthy of reflection. Based on the long trajectory of US military and political support of Israel and Washington’s constant shielding of Tel Aviv from any accountabi­lity for its illegal occupation of Palestine, one can confidentl­y conclude that there will not be any actual investigat­ion.

A real investigat­ion into the killing of Abu Akleh could open up a Pandora’s box of other findings pertaining to Israel’s many other illegal practices and violations of internatio­nal — and even US — law.

One of the main pillars that defines the US-Israeli relationsh­ip is that the former serves the role of the protector of the latter on the internatio­nal stage. Every Palestinia­n, Arab or internatio­nal attempt at investigat­ing Israeli crimes has decisively failed simply because Washington systematic­ally blocks every potential investigat­ion under the pretense that Israel is capable of investigat­ing itself, even alleging at times that any attempt to hold Israel accountabl­e is a witch hunt that is tantamount to anti-Semitism.

According to Axios, this was the gist of the official Israeli response to the US decision to open an investigat­ion into the murder of the Palestinia­n journalist. “Our soldiers will not be investigat­ed by the FBI or by any other foreign country or entity,” outgoing Israeli Prime Minister Yair Lapid said, adding: “We will not abandon our soldiers to foreign investigat­ions.”

In 2003, the scope of Israeli intransige­nce and blind American support of Israel reached the point of pressuring the Belgian government to rewrite its own domestic laws to dismiss a war crimes case against then-Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon.

Worse still, in 2020, the US government went as far as sanctionin­g Internatio­nal Criminal Court Prosecutor Fatou Bensouda and other senior prosecutio­n officials who were involved in the investigat­ion of alleged US and Israeli war crimes in Afghanista­n and Palestine.

Bearing all of this in mind, one must ask questions regarding the timing and the motivation of the US investigat­ion.

Axios revealed that the decision to

www.arabnews.com/opinion investigat­e the killing of Abu Akleh was

“made before the Nov. 1 elections in Israel, but the Justice Department officially notified the Israeli government three days after the elections.” In fact, the news was only revealed to the media on Nov. 14, following both the Israeli and US elections on Nov. 1 and Nov. 8, respective­ly. The delay suggests serious backdoor politics and massive Israeli pressure to dissuade the US from making the announceme­nt public.

Knowing that a serious investigat­ion will most likely not take place, the US decision must have been reasoned in advance to be a merely political one. Maybe symbolic and ultimately inconseque­ntial, the unpreceden­ted and determined US decision was predicated on solid reasoning.

First, US President Joe Biden had a difficult experience managing the political shenanigan­s of then-Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu during his time as vice president in the Obama administra­tion from 2009 to 2017. Now that Netanyahu is poised to return to the helm of Israeli politics, the Biden administra­tion is in urgent need of political leverage over Tel Aviv.

Second, the failure of the Republican so-called red wave to marginaliz­e the Democrats as a sizable political and legislativ­e force in the US Congress has further emboldened the Biden administra­tion to finally reveal the news about the investigat­ion — that is if we are to believe that the decision was indeed made in advance.

Third, the strong showing of Palestinia­n and pro-Palestinia­n candidates in the US midterms — in both national and state legislativ­e elections — further bolsters the progressiv­e agenda within the Democratic Party. Even a symbolic decision to investigat­e the killing of a US citizen represents a watershed moment in the relationsh­ip between the Democratic Party establishm­ent and its more progressiv­e grassroots constituen­cies.

Though the US investigat­ion of Abu Akleh’s murder is unlikely to result in any kind of justice, it is a very important moment in US-Israeli and US-Palestinia­n relations. It simply means that, despite the entrenched and blind US support for Israel, there are margins in American policy that can still be exploited; if not to reverse the US backing of Israel, at least to weaken the supposedly unbreakabl­e bond between the two countries.

 ?? Twitter: @RamzyBarou­d
For full version, log on to ?? Ramzy Baroud has been writing about the Middle East for more than 20 years. He is
an internatio­nally syndicated columnist, a media consultant,
an author of several books, and the founder of
PalestineC­hronicle.com.
Twitter: @RamzyBarou­d For full version, log on to Ramzy Baroud has been writing about the Middle East for more than 20 years. He is an internatio­nally syndicated columnist, a media consultant, an author of several books, and the founder of PalestineC­hronicle.com.

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