One Industry That Will Never Boycott Israel
The more wholeheartedly one particular industry operates in Israel, and the more profitably, the better the boycott movement thrives. What possible business could promote and facilitate Israel, boycotting on the one hand while flouting the boycott on the other?
The human rights business could. Just look at the sustainability factors in favor of the NGO players: mountains of cheap capital on demand, global reach, well-connected stakeholders, media channels beating a path to their door, and a traded commodity for which the world has a gluttonous hunger.
A big-five club tops the NGO industry pyramid. The names are household words: Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, Christian Aid, Oxfam, Save the Children Fund. Nominally, they, along with second-tier NGO entities, are autonomous, not-for-profit, and apolitical. In real life, they are none of those things. There are not hundreds but thousands of second-tier entities, medium to small -- a bewildering number of them operating in tiny Israel and the West Bank. They compete fiercely to supply human rights product -- sometimes to the big five, sometimes to an international clearing house, or direct to end users. They also compete for publicity and investor funding.
The base of the pyramid is made up of sources that put up money to keep it all together. They are billionaire private investors, Eurozone countries that practically fling money at NGOs, ecumenical coffers, flush Arab potentates, and the proverbial Joe public.
Even so, the structure would topple but for an independent clearing house -- the Human Rights Council of the United Nations. Much like a farm co-operative, it acts as buyer of last resort, but even more as marketing agent for the commodity. And upon this clearing house, and the industry in total, jobs depend, for tens of thousands.
Turning to the stock in trade, like any commodity, there are different grades fetching different market prices. The premium human rights grade, more in demand than any other, has become a brand on its own: Israeli violations. Industry funders cough up readily and generously to organizations that trade this brand -- and NGO operatives know it. They scour the West Bank and Gaza from end to end, sourcing stock of the brand. And when they find Israeli violations difficult to come by, operatives are adept at creating their own. B'Tselem, a flush home-grown body, gives away digital cameras to help agents poke, prod, and pry violations out of the holy land. The New Israel Fund has another business model. Salesmen tout Israeli violations on the international circuit.
Trade is brisk, the money big, and the players earnest. The Ford Foundation is one of the bigger private investors, with an annual grant budget exceeding $500 million. Christian Aid, with branches in 50 countries, brings in €100 million and more a year, while Human Rights Watch received $100 million for 10 years from billionaire George Soros, who simultaneously pledged $750,000 to an anti-Israel body called J Street. Oxfam is bigger than them all. With affiliates it attracts €900 million annually, a third of that from Eurozone tax money.
Exactly how popular is the Israeli brand of human right violations? One of the Big Five, Human Rights Watch, devotes three times more resources to Israel than to Iran, Saudi Arabia, and the Palestinian Authority, and six times more resources than to Syria and Libya. Amnesty International has produced 255 reports per million Israeli people compared to 60 reports on Syria, 23 on Iraq and Iran, and a mere 9 on Saudi Arabia. In a year when the Syrian regime slaughtered 260,000 of its own people, Oxfam International released a trifling three statements and petitions condemning Syria. At the same time, Oxfam condemned Israel, more stable and prosperous by far than most U.N. members, nine times.
What is it about Israeli violations that NGO bodies like so much? In part, the answer to that involves another question. What is it about violations in Muslim countries that NGOs have an aversion to? After all, that is where people are beheaded; where choosing the wrong religion is a death sentence; where women are beaten, raped, and enslaved; where gays are strung up on lamp poles. NGOs keep away from that violation-rich environment and favor Israel for some very good reasons.
Among them, risk to life and limb would be paramount. The last thing autocratic rulers want is to have foreigners -- infidels -- poking and prodding around for human rights abuse. Israel, on the other hand, allows operatives to poke, prod, and pry to their hearts' content. Israel is an NGO paradise; the Muslim world an NGO hell.
Then there is the risk-reward trade-off. Who would put up money for an NGO to dig up abuse in Gaza, or Iran? Name a European government or another George Soros who coughs up for a commodity in such abundant supply. But Israel, the stand-alone democracy in the region, dangles a low-risk-for-high-reward carrot. And who could resist? The New Israel Fund gave $200 million to 800 NGOs operating in tiny Israel and the West Bank.
NGOs are driven by a particular business model. They have a vested interest in human right abuses, real or not. Israeli misdeeds are their stock-in-trade, assets that convert to cash. And poor Palestinians on the ground can be allured by handouts in return for valuable "testimony."
Then there is downright honest-to-goodness hatred. If there is so much anguish for Palestinian well-being, why have NGO bodies neglected even atrocities outside of Israel?
At this very time, Palestinian rights are being violated across the Arab world. Lebanon deprives 400,000 Palestinians of basic human rights, including property rights, employment, and free movement. There were no reports or condemnatory statements when Arab rulers slaughtered Palestinians on a grand scale. King Hussein of Jordan killed more in a single month than Israel killed in decades. Yet no NGO held that against the king, who continued to be regarded as a man of peace.
The answer is plain. The Palestinians act as a lightning rod against Israel, where the Jews live. For millennia Jews have been demonized for one thing or another. Yesterday it was for the bubonic plague. Today it's for crimes against the Palestinian people.