US leads international pushback as Al Jazeera blackmails US Jewish groups over BDS. Disruptions of campus continue as ACLU joins BDS opposing state laws

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Disparate BDS events in February suggest that the movement is reorienting to changing political circumstances thanks to unprecedented pushback. This included US pressure that was key to the decision by the Irish parliament to postpone a vote on BDS legislation, and to the UN ‘Human Rights Council’s’ decision to release only partial information regarding a blacklist of companies working in the ‘West Bank.’ Without effective political leadership, including legislation, and with rapidly deteriorating behavioral norms regarding harassment and intimidation, BDS degenerates rapidly into overt antisemitism.

Analysis

Some of the most important BDS developments in February took place in the international sphere. Reports indicated that pressure from the US State Department had been key to changing the position of the Irish government from its previous support for BDS legislation that would have criminalized economic relations with Israeli ‘settlements.’ The bill reflected longstanding Irish antipathy towards Israel and would have put Ireland at odds with US and European anti-boycott statutes.

In another case, US and Israeli pressure appears to have caused the ‘United Nations Human Rights Council’ (UNHCR) to postpone release of a full blacklist of international and Israeli firms with ties to the ‘West Bank.’ UNHCR stated that it had not yet contacted all 206 firms, most of which are Israeli, on the blacklist.

The blackmail implicit in the constructing and publicizing of the blacklist is palpable, and reflects the organization’s obsession with Israel. The situation is so extreme a US Congressional resolution has been introduced to reduce funding or cut ties altogether with UNHCR.

In strong contrast, the recent apology by the US Department of Justice regarding the improper refusal of tax-exempt status by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) given to the pro-Israel organization Z Street explicitly acknowledged the Obama Administration targeted the organization because of its politics. A number of other pro-Israel and conservative organizations received similar treatment from the IRS. The case demonstrated that pro-Israel politics and BDS are shaped at the highest political levels in the US and implemented by the administrative state.

One strange and still emerging BDS related story is the apparent effort by the al Jazeera network, owned by the government of Qatar, to blackmail American Jewish groups over support for Israel. Reports in 2017 indicated that a number of US and UK based pro-Israel organizations had been infiltrated as part of an exposé on the “Israel lobby.” Reports now indicate that Qatari representatives have contacted some of those organizations asking for an explanation regarding their activities.

The apparent blackmail effort comes at the same time Qatar has been engaged in a high profile effort to reach out to prominent American Jews and organizations, either in the belief that Jews exercise disproportionate influence or an effort to widen splits within the American Jewish community. The effort has once again exposed al Jazeera as an unregistered foreign agent engaged in state sponsored espionage. Congressional efforts to force the network to register under the Foreign Agents Registration Act have begun.

The position of the BDS movement as a global left wing fixation was signaled by its nomination for the Nobel Peace Prize. Bjornar Moxnes, leader of the Red Party in the Norwegian Parliament, announced that he had nominated the movement, saying “Awarding a Nobel Peace Prize to the BDS movement would be a powerful sign demonstrating that the international community is committed to supporting a just peace in the Middle East and using peaceful means to end military rule and broader violations of international law.”

Reacting to criticism, Moxnes claimed that the BDS movement is “not against the people of Israel. It’s not against the Jewish people; it’s against the policies of a state, which (are) without doubt against international law.” Israeli commentators reacted scornfully, while representatives of ‘Jewish Voice for Peace’ expressed their approval. Nominations for the prize are a reliable indicator of European elite opinion, which uniformly tracks left. Announcement of the nomination, however, violates Nobel Foundation regulations.

Another manifestation of the official European fixation was an invitation extended by a Portuguese lawmaker for BDS leader Omar Barghouti to speak at the European Parliament. Portuguese and Belgian Jewish groups protested the invitation, which  “directly undermines its [the EU’s] own policy stance on anti-Semitism.” An even more egregious example was speaking invitation extended to convicted terrorist Rasmea Odeh, recently expelled from the US, by two organizations in the Netherlands.

On campus there were several BDS related incidents. Most notable was the passage of a BDS resolution by the student government at City University in London. The event was marked by overt harassment and intimidation directed against Jewish students who spoke out during the debate. Students reported being poked and jabbed and being told to “shut the fuck up” during the proceedings.

In contrast, the student government at Northeastern University voted down a BDS resolution that associated university investments with in the “Israeli occupation of Palestine” and “the mass deportation of immigrants from the US by Immigration and Customs Enforcement.” A similar resolution will shortly come under consideration at the University of Illinois. BDS supporters at Tufts University made another ‘intersectional’ allegation, that Israel is responsible for police violence in the US, and who complained about the participation of campus police in an Israeli law enforcement exchange.

There were also several instances where BDS efforts to manipulate academic administrations backfired. At Fresno State University a 2017 search for the ‘Edward Said Professorship of Middle East Studies’ collapsed after procedural abnormalities by the search committee. This failure, however, was quickly attributed by local BDS supporters and ‘Jewish Voice for Peace’ to sabotage by pro-Israel groups. One faculty member and BDS supporter stated there had been “documented campaign of harassment and intimidation of search committee members by Israel advocacy groups to influence and derail the outcome of the search,” a claim repeated an amplified by many groups including local Islamic organizations and the Middle East Studies Association.

There was, however, no evidence that anyone outside the university, let alone in the Jewish community, had even heard of the proposed position. Analysis of the university’s files, obtained through a freedom of information request, also showed there was no outside involvement, but rather repeated failures by the search organizers. Their readiness, however, to allege Jewish conspiracies is characteristic of the paranoid and antisemitic mindset of the BDS movement and a subset of faculty members.

Another unfounded accusation against Jewish and Israeli organizations was resolved at the University of California at Irvine. A pro-Israel group, whose event had been disrupted by the local Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP), was subsequently accused of harassment and other misconduct by the same SJP branch. After a lengthy ‘investigation’ the university cleared the pro-Israel group and extended the SJP chapter’s suspension into 2019. The incident is another where a BDS group has leveled false charge in order to use university disciplinary procedures against pro-Israel groups and speakers.

But these and other recent failures must be viewed through several lenses. First, accusations by BDS supporters successfully poison the campus atmosphere further against Israel and its supporters. Second, because the BDS movement has a quasi-religious mentality convinced of its own righteousness, failure and rebuke are interpreted as evidence of institutional corruption and corruption, which energizes the hard core base. Third, the resort to antisemitic allegations of conspiracy is intensifying and will continue to do so as BDS-related antisemitism poisons more aspects of campus life and as university demographics continue to change.

There were several incidents of harassment directed at Israeli speakers and events at the University of Chicago and the University of Virginia. At King’s College London former Israeli Minister Dan Meridor’s talk was disrupted by screaming protestors. The academic administration had previously promised that protestors would not be admitted. The King’s College Israel Society is now threatening legal action against the student government over its support for BDS.

Finally, at the University of Lille, an Israeli festival was disrupted by protests. After the protests and complaints from two faculty members to the administration, the festival was canceled. One of the festival’s organizers stated, “The protesters told us that they were coming to demonstrate at all our activities. So we decided to stop. We do not want to create more controversy on this.”

The British BDS vote and protests come amidst public cautions that ‘Israel Apartheid Week’ rhetoric that characterizes Israel as ‘racist’ risks contravening accepted guidelines from the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA) working definition of anti-Semitism. Other reports, however, suggest that ‘apartheid week’ is waning on British campuses. This must be weighed against continuing harassment and intimidation of Jewish students and pro-Israel events, and the growing atmosphere of Labour Party antisemitism that is helping fuel an unprecedented number of attacks on British Jews.

In the US political sphere, a bill expressing opposition to BDS is set to pass in the Ohio legislature. In Kansas, however, a court ruled that the state’s recently passed legislation making it illegal for state entities to do business with companies boycotting Israel violated constitutional free speech protections. A similar challenge is underway in Arizona. Both legal challenges are being spearheaded by local branches of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), in association with Palestine Legal, the lawfare arm of the BDS movement.

The unwillingness of local ACLU branches to distinguish between unrestricted free speech in a private capacity and restricted commercial behavior conducted by a state representative or employee, and their role as an adjunct to the BDS movement, represents a disturbing intensification of the organized left’s movement away from free speech.

US leads international pushback as Al Jazeera blackmails US Jewish groups over BDS. Disruptions of campus continue as ACLU joins BDS opposing state laws

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AUTHOR

Alex Joffe

Editor SPME / BDS Monitor

Alexander H. Joffe is an archaeologist and historian specializing in the Middle East and contemporary international affairs. He received a B.A. in History from Cornell University in 1981 and Ph.D. in Near Eastern Studies from the University of Arizona in 1991. From 1980 to 2003 he participated in and directed archaeological research in Israel, Jordan, Greece and the United States. Joffe taught at the Pennsylvania State University and Purchase College, and has been Director of Research for Global Policy Exchange, Ltd., and The David Project, Center for Jewish Leadership.

Joffe's work is uniquely broad. Since 1991 he has published dozens of studies on the archaeology of the Eastern Mediterranean and is a leading figure in contentious debates over the relationship between archaeology and politics in the Middle East. He has also authored numerous works on contemporary issues, including Middle Eastern environmental security threats from pollution and weapons of mass destruction. His work on the problem of dismantling intelligence agencies is widely cited by experts and democratic reformers alike.

In the past decade Joffe has written and spoken on topics as varied as the future of American Jews, the Palestinian refugee problem, and nationalism. During that time as well he has been deeply involved with combating the problems of campus antisemitism, the ‘boycott, divestment and sanctions' movement against Israel, and in educating Jews and others about threats to Israel and the West. His current projects include a biography of a British World War II general and several novels. He and his family reside near New York City.


Read all stories by Alex Joffe