By Eric Vandenbroeck and co-workers
America’s Hypocrisy On Gaza
The military campaign
that Israel launched in response to Hamas’s brutal October 7 attacks has killed
more than 27,000 people in the Gaza Strip and injured more than 60,000 others,
according to the Gaza Health Ministry. About 75 percent of Gaza’s population of
2.3 million has been displaced. Some 400,000 people are enduring famine due to
the blockade Israel has imposed on Gaza and severe restrictions on
humanitarian aid that have deprived civilians of what they need to survive.
This number could grow if international funding for aid falters.
These figures are
staggering, and it is impossible to contemplate them without considering
whether Israel has violated international humanitarian law during its campaign.
And, in fact, a good deal of publicly available information suggests that
Israel has done so. Human rights organizations and news outlets have
reported on the unlawful collective punishment of the Palestinian population,
the use of starvation as a weapon of war, and air and artillery strikes and
building demolitions that involved no discernable military targets but yielded
significant civilian casualties and destroyed property. Investigations by Human
Rights Watch found repeated unlawful strikes on hospitals in Gaza including the
Indonesian Hospital, the al-Ahli Hospital, the International Eye Care Center,
the Turkish-Palestinian Friendship Hospital, and the al-Quds Hospital in Gaza.
Amnesty International found that homes full of civilians in Gaza were hit
with U.S.-made Joint Direct Attack Munitions, killing 43 civilians, including
19 children.
Israel’s repeated use
of heavy weapons in populated areas has heightened concerns that it might be
carrying out unlawfully indiscriminate attacks. When it comes to the question
of whether Israel is violating in law in Gaza, there is enough smoke to suspect
a fire. This has put U.S. officials in a bind. The United States is Israel’s
most important ally and greatest source of military aid and hardware. Since its
founding 1948, it has cumulatively received more U.S. foreign aid than any
other single country during that time period: $300 billion, adjusted for
inflation, with another $10 billion potentially on the way. But U.S.
law requires the State Department to ensure that U.S. security assistance
does not go to security forces that consistently commit gross violations of
human rights. And current U.S. policy also requires the department to assess
whether a recipient of U.S. military aid is “more likely than not” to use
American weapons to violate international law—and to prohibit transfers to any
country that meets that criteria.
So far, however, it
is unclear whether the State Department has made these assessments. Senior U.S.
officials have publicly and privately pushed the Israeli government to minimize
civilian harm and allow for the delivery of more humanitarian aid to Gaza. As
early as last November, Secretary of State Antony Blinken declared that “far
too many Palestinians have been killed” by Israeli forces and said it was
“imperative” that Israel have a “clear plan in place that puts a premium on
protecting civilians.” (At the World Economic Forum meeting in Davos last
month, he echoed that remark: the civilian death toll, he said, was “far too
high.”) Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin delivered a similar message to
Israeli authorities early in the war and sent U.S. advisers to Israel to advise
the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) on restraint in a challenging environment.
And yet, aside from
President Joe Biden’s seemingly off-the-cuff warning last December about the
reputational risk Israel ran by carrying out “indiscriminate bombing,"
U.S. officials have avoided clearly stating that any particular Israeli actions
in Gaza were unacceptable. (Administration spokespeople spent days walking back
Biden’s comment.) When journalists have asked U.S. officials direct questions
about Israel’s conduct in Gaza, they have equivocated. “We’re not going to
adjudicate each and every tactical event,” said John Kirby, a White House
spokesperson, in December, when asked by a reporter to describe how the United
States would look for evidence of Israeli violations. “I'm not going to speak
about Israel's operations,” replied Patrick Ryder, the Pentagon press
secretary, when a reporter asked him at a press conference in early November
whether Israel’s response had been proportionate. “The U.S. military [is] not
participating in IDF target development [or] helping them run their campaign,”
he said in a separate exchange during the same press conference. “You know,
just to be crystal clear, that it is their operation, they're running their
operation.”
Notably lacking from
these official statements and many others like them was any affirmative
declaration that Israel was in fact abiding by international law. If U.S.
officials believed that Israel was doing so—or at least taking every possible
measure to avoid harming civilians under difficult circumstances—they would
eagerly say as much. They have not, even though the Biden administration hasn’t
been shy about criticizing the conduct of other warring parties in other
conflicts.
The reason is that
drawing more attention to what is happening in Gaza would almost surely force a
policy change that Biden does not want to make. It would confront his
administration with a series of difficult choices that it would rather avoid.
And it would further complicate the already complex dynamics of the
U.S.-Israeli relationship—and possibly create a political vulnerability for
Biden in an election year.
But as long as the
administration sidesteps the reality of Israeli abuses in Gaza and applies the
rules of military assistance selectively, the moral authority claimed by the
United States will slip further away. Throughout its history, the United States
has promoted respect for the laws of war: doing so, American leaders have long
maintained, is one of the things that distinguishes the country from its
adversaries. The Biden administration has decried the atrocities committed by
the governments of countries such as Russia and Syria but has then pretended
that is does not adjudicate—and bankroll—those committed by the government of
Israel. The short-term gains of such an approach are far outweighed by the
long-term damage it is doing to American credibility and interests. U.S.
officials should say out loud what they and every impartial observer knows
about Israel’s conduct in Gaza: it is unacceptable, and if it does not change,
U.S. policy toward military assistance to Israel will. The price of such honesty
will be high. But the price of hypocrisy is even higher.
Lay Down The Law
Not all wartime
deaths or injuries to civilians are violations of the laws of war. So long as
armed forces attack a legitimate military objective, the weapon used or the
method of attack can discriminate between combatants and civilians, and the
expected civilian loss from the attack is not excessive compared to the
anticipated military gain, an attack is likely lawful. Sometimes it is
relatively easy to show that an attack harming civilians was a violation of the
law—such as when there is no evident military target. In other circumstances,
particularly if an attack may have caused disproportionate civilian harm, it
can be very difficult to assess the legality of a particular attack. That is
why it is crucial to collect as much information as possible in such
circumstances—not only about the civilian losses but about whether enemy forces
were involved.
The IDF is operating
in one of the most densely populated areas on Earth, and Hamas and other
Palestinian fighters can disappear into the population and underground. This is
a challenging environment in which to make complex targeting decisions. Hamas
and Palestinian armed groups also have obligations under the laws of war. They
must take all feasible precautions to minimize harm to civilians under their
control and not use civilians as “human shields.” But violations on their part
do not reduce Israel’s obligations.
U.S. law requires
officials to assess what a recipient of American military aid does with the
weapons provided. Such assessments would seem especially important when it
comes to the war in Gaza, given the sheer scale of Israel’s bombardment and the
reported levels of civilian loss of life. But it’s not at all clear that they
are happening. Section 502B of the Foreign Assistance Act requires the State
Department to ensure that U.S. security assistance does not abet gross
violations of human rights. And the so-called Leahy Laws enacted decades ago by
Congress prohibit US military aid going to specific units committing gross
violations of human rights and have prevented military assistance from going to
abusive security forces in Honduras, Nepal, and Nigeria.
But according to Josh
Paul, who served in the State Department’s Bureau of Politico-Military Affairs
for more than 11 years until resigning in protest over the war in Gaza last
fall, the Leahy system is “broken” when it comes to Israel. Although bureau staffers
identified “many” violations on Israel’s part, Paul asserted in an interview
on PBSNewsHour last fall that they are unable to obtain “senior
level sign-off” on those determinations. A working group formed at the State
Department and dubbed the “Israel Leahy Vetting Forum” is looking into
allegations of violations by the IDF, but as an informal staff grouping, its
findings are not binding on the department.
State Department
lawyers and atrocity crime experts in the department’s Office of Global
Criminal Justice (GCJ) are often called on to assess violations of
international law in conflicts. Under Blinken, that office and the department’s
legal team have reviewed evidence and made official proclamations about
violations of international law by the governments of China, Ethiopia, Myanmar,
and Sudan. But there is no publicly available evidence that the GCJ or any
other office has been tasked to make determinations about Israel’s
campaign in Gaza.
The Biden
administration’s apparent unwillingness to apply a legal lens to available
information is compounded by its seeming failure to even adhere to policies it
has itself put in place as an expression of Biden’s putative commitment to
human rights. Last year, the State Department adopted what it calls the
Conventional Arms Transfer (CAT) policy, which requires officials to assess
whether a security partner is “more likely than not” to use U.S. weapons to
violate international law. If the answer is “yes,” the U.S. government is
prohibited from making transfers to that country.
The White House
introduced the policy in February 2023, recognizing that “when not employed
responsibly, defense materiel can be used to violate human rights and
international humanitarian law, increase the risk of civilian harm, and
otherwise damage United States interests.” But U.S. support to Israel since the
hostilities in Gaza began likely means that the administration violated its own
policy almost immediately after it was put in place. In meetings with
representatives from nongovernmental organizations, State Department officials
have said they are assessing Israel's conduct under the CAT policy but declined
to reveal any findings they have made or provide a timeline for doing so.
Last August, the
Biden administration also issued new rules, dubbed the Civilian Harm
Investigations and Response Guidance (CHIRG), to compel the State Department to
investigate allegations of U.S. weapons being used to harm civilians. According
to State Department officials, some of the first investigations launched under
the CHIRG have looked into Israel’s conduct in Gaza. But the result of CHIRG
investigations are not required to be made public, and U.S. officials are not
bound to act on the basis of whatever the investigations reveal.
As the Biden
administration buries its head in the sand, Congress seems similarly reluctant
to seriously examine the situation. In December, Senator Bernie Sanders, an
Independent from Vermont, put forward a resolution in the Senate that
would have required the State Department to report on Israel’s adherence to
international law: a reasonable, straightforward request to ensure Israel is
abiding by Congress’s own legislation on arms transfers. The resolution would
not have cut off aid to Israel, but it nevertheless failed, as too many
senators either believe there is no reason to question Israel’s conduct—or
don’t want to look too closely at the facts.
The reason behind
this Congressional timidity—and the reason why the Biden administration seems
not to have used any of the tools at its disposal to assess Israeli conduct—is
hardly a mystery: publicly acknowledging any Israeli violation of international
or U.S. law would mean having to answer uncomfortable follow-up questions and
make difficult decisions about how to change or condition future military aid
to Israel. (There is also the question of whether individual officials might
face legal jeopardy for complicity in grave abuses if Israeli misconduct were
officially acknowledged: in recent years, U.S. officials cut back on military
support to Saudi Arabia’s indiscriminate strikes in Yemen, which killed
thousands of civilians—apparently at least in part out of fear that continuing
to do so might make them legally complicit in war crimes.)
A Dangerous Double Standard
The worst result of
the administration’s refusal to comply with the letter and spirit of U.S. law is
that Washington might be making possible the massive and potentially criminal
loss of civilian life in Gaza. But another victim of this approach is U.S.
credibility, which has been damaged by what is at best inconsistency and at
worst hypocrisy. Consider, for example, how in 2016, President Barack Obama
condemned Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s denial of food and water to
civilians in Aleppo. Israel has arguably done the same thing to Gaza’s civilian
population for over three months without facing any criticism for this tactic
from the Biden administration. (Biden has pushed Netanyahu to open access to
Gaza for more aid but has not directly criticized the blockade.)
Russia’s
indiscriminate airstrikes on hospitals and schools in Ukraine have rightly
drawn condemnation from Biden and other administration officials. But Israel
has also carried out attacks striking hospitals and schools without eliciting
much protest from the White House. “We do not want to see innocent patients who
are sick or wounded be injured or killed in the crossfire,” National Security
Adviser Jake Sullivan said on CNN in November. But, Sullivan added, the IDF had
assured Washington “that they are looking for ways to be able to ensure the
safety and security of individual patients in those hospitals.” The Russian and
Syrian governments did not face a situation comparable to what Israel faced
after the Hamas-led attacks on October 7. But once a country decides to use
military force, it must fully adhere to the laws that govern conduct in war,
which apply to all countries, as well as nonstate armed groups.
Some might argue that
the United States can afford a little hypocrisy in order to support its
longtime ally, Israel. But playing a part in the erosion of
international law will have harmful consequences for the U.S. far beyond Gaza.
Future declarations by the State Department concerning atrocities will ring
hollow, making it harder to hold perpetrators accountable and deter future
international crimes. Pressure on warring parties to abide by the laws of war
in other places—for example, Azerbaijan or Sudan—will carry less
weight. In the eyes of the world, it will become harder to distinguish the
United States from countries that outright dismiss international law and
intentionally undermine the rules-based international order through their
actions.
To start reining in
Israel and to stop the hemorrhaging of American credibility, the Biden
administration needs to task its lawyers to assess all available
information—classified and unclassified—on Israel’s military campaign in Gaza
and determine when and where Israeli forces have violated the laws of war, and
whether the IDF held those responsible to account. Their findings should be
made public, and the evidence presented to Congress. While those assessments
are happening, Israel should be put on notice that U.S. military aid is at
risk.
The political costs
of looking squarely at the evidence and course-correcting U.S. policy as
necessary won’t be comfortable for a president and legislators on the campaign
trail. But those costs are lower than the cost of U.S. authorities acting as if
the acute suffering of the Palestinian people in Gaza does not deserve the same
scrutiny as the suffering of civilians in other conflicts, a stance that gives
ammunition to those who claim that, when it comes to applying core American
principles and protecting basic human rights, Washington applies an obvious—and
obviously hypocritical—double standard.
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