Thursday, April 21, 2011

The Unforgivable Maliciousness of Goldstone

Yaacov Lozowick
Yaacov Lozowick's Ruminations
20 April '11

http://yaacovlozowick.blogspot.com/2011/04/unforgivable-maliciousness-of-goldstone.html

The New York Times tries to figure out what made him change his mind.(If you've run out of free access to the New York Times for the month, Haaretz summarizes the article here). The thesis seems to be that he thought that by castigating both sides, he'd promote a process of mutual reflection and eventual reconciliation; this bizarre idea stemming from a similar experience he had in South Africa as Apartheid waned.

Yet another example of how different Apartheid always was from the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

Mostly, however, it's a demonstration of how weirdly ignorant Goldstone may have been (and still is) about the conflict here.

He noted in Sacramento, for example, as in his later essay, that the deaths of about 29 members of one Gazan family grouped together by Israeli soldiers in a building that was subsequently bombed probably resulted from a misreading of a drone photograph. Men carrying firewood might have looked as if they were holding rocket launchers.At a debate last month at Stanford Law School, he did not excuse that Israeli killing but said that originally, “in the absence of any evidence at all, the only conclusion we could come to was that it was intentional.” Now it appeared to have been negligence due to lack of communication and verification, he said. [My emphasis].

Translation to English: we didn't know what we were talking about, since we lacked most of the relevant data, so we had no choice but to assume the worst about Israel and broadcast this assumption to the world as proven fact.

Only after the enemies of the Jews greeted this malicious accusation with the greatest of glee did it occur to the judge that he had been willingly manipulated. In my understanding of repentance, he hasn't even started the process. What he needs to do now is systematically tear down the entire edifice he built; if it take the rest of his life, so be it.

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1 comment:

  1. Not sure I agree. An eminent international jurist such as he must have known that the situations in the ME were totally different from in apartheid S Africa and that therefore the fixes would have to be different too.

    No, I believe that Goldstone allowed his overinflated ego to rule his commonsense. Had that not been the case, then he would have been quick to withdraw the report in its entirety - if the premise upon which it was set up was a wrong one, then it follows that what ensued from the investigation is at least misguided if not malicious. That Goldstone has not withdrawn the report and asked the UN to discard it, that he subsequently back-tracked and dithered about what his "retraction" actually meant, showed him to be acting in bad faith.

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