Rep. Keith Ellison is urging members of Congress not to scrap the Goldstone report (pdf) on war crimes allegedly committed during the conflict culminating in December 2008 and January 2009 between Hamas and Israel. A resolution in Congress, backed by Republicans, would condemn the report, written by UN investigator Richard Goldstone, as unfriendly to Israel. Ellison penned a column in Politico on Tuesday saying the Goldstone report is as fair as can be expected considering the difficult circumstances in the region.
The report states that both sides — Hamas and Israel — should be investigated for war crimes in the conflict when Hamas launched missiles into Israel and Israel implemented a crippling blockade on the people in the Gaza strip.
In defending the report, Ellison recalled the situation he saw when he visited the region last winter.
I visited Sderot in southern Israel and saw the havoc and trauma created by Hamas rocket fire. Israelis there live with fear. I have condemned these attacks as war crimes and will continue to do so.
I also visited Gaza and witnessed the devastation wreaked by the recent war. I toured an American school and medical clinics devastated by Operation Cast Lead. A blockade keeps out items such as paper for textbooks and nutritious food. Gazans live in poverty, and most cannot drink their own water. These are cruel violations against the people of Gaza, 56 percent of whom are children.
Ellison says that Goldstone is a staunch supporter of human rights, and it’s dishonest to claim that Goldstone has a bias against Israel — he’s a self-proclaimed Zionist.
In a letter to the House Committee on Foreign Affairs, on which Ellison sits, the American Israel Public Affairs Committee urged the committee to reject the Goldstone report.
“The notoriously anti-Israel U.N. Human Rights Council commissioned and subsequently adopted this report which, according to the administration, had a mandate that was ‘unbalanced, one-sided and basically unacceptable,’” the letter stated. “This report falsely charges that Israel committed war crimes and purposely targeted civilians.”
But, Goldstone and human rights groups say that’s not what the facts say. Human Rights Watch says that the resolution contains false information. Specifically, members of Congress claim that the report does not mention possible war crimes committed by Hamas. Goldstone points out that his report clearly does.
Sarah Leah Whitson, Middle East and North Africa director at Human Rights Watch urged Congress to support the Goldstone report. “Instead of denouncing the report, the US Congress should urge Israel and Hamas to break the cycle of abuse and impunity, which for too long has fueled hatred and hindered efforts at peace.”
Ellison echoed a similar sentiment. “The Goldstone report does not assign blame. It lays out the facts, as best as Goldstone could ascertain them, and offers recommendations for the future,” wrote Ellison. “Congress should use this report as a resource to understand a critical part of the world and to grasp fully the devastating human costs of the status quo.”
He continued, “Instead, Congress is poised to oppose the Goldstone report without holding a single hearing on a document that few members of Congress, if any, have read.”














4 Comments »
Comment posted November 3, 2009 @ 8:11 pm
Finally! After almost three years in office, Ellison has taken a principled position that involves some backbone.
Comment posted November 4, 2009 @ 11:15 pm
If Rep. Ellison had any backbone, he’d start condemning Hamas for their use of civilian as human shields.
Condemning Israel and the Jews is an easier mark. At least the Jews won’t issue a fatwa.
Comment posted November 4, 2009 @ 11:23 pm
I also note the obvious appeal to emotion by Birkey with the photo. Any quotes from the Hamas covenant or pictures of Arab missile crews targeting Jewish civilian areas? Any mention of the disproportionate emphasis on Israel’s actions in the Goldstone report, commissioned by an already anti_israel United Nations?
Birkey’s reporting is just more intellectually dishonest bilge.
Start the pumps. There’s alot to…purge.
Comment posted November 6, 2009 @ 11:42 pm
Incredible how all sense of decency just vanishes out the window when this conflict is discussed. Of course BOTH sides should be held to account for their behavior, and suspected war crimes should be investigated REGARDLESS of who perpetrated them. That includes Hamas, and (sorry, Congress) it also includes Israel.
What’s so abhorrent about treating all people of different origins, colors and creeds as equals before law, asking for the verdict to be based on their actions and their actions alone?
And yes, I also feel that if the US is suspected of war crimes, these should be duly investigated and any perpetrators punished – for example in the Abu Ghraib torture case. Rule of law is not just who we are, it’s what we’re fighting for.
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