The Truth about the Boycott, Divestment
and Sanctions (BDS) Movement
Does it stand for Middle East peace or does
it seek Israel’s destruction?
Leaders of the effort to boycott,
divest from and apply sanctions against Israel — the so-called BDS
movement — say they stand for an “end to the occupation of
the Palestinian territories,” “justice in Palestine”
and “freedom for the Palestinian people.” But what are the
real motives of BDS leaders — do they really want peace between
Israel and the Palestinian people?
What are the facts?
While the BDS movement uses highly emotive language in their
appeals for support—such as “ending repression” and
“Israeli war crimes”—a closer look at the real motives
of the movement reveals a more sinister goal.
First, note that the BDS movement focuses only on alleged
war crimes and repression by Israel—and ignores real war crimes
and tyrannical repression by other Middle Eastern nations and terrorist
organizations. When Hamas and Hizbollah target thousands of rockets at
Israeli civilian populations in violation of international law, BDS utters
not a word of criticism, let alone a call for boycotts or sanctions. When
Iran’s government violently crushes peaceful protests and Egypt
stifles its press and political opposition with a dictatorial hand, BDS
is likewise silent. Why?
By singling out Israel for criticism and economic
pressure, BDS employs a double standard—a hypocritical
and dishonest tactic frequently used by anti-Israel and anti-Semitic hate
groups.
The reason, as we’ll see, is that the BDS movement
is not really interested in alleged war crimes or repression. Rather its
purpose is to delegitimize and then destroy Israel.
The second critical fact about the BDS movement is that
while it masquerades behind words like “freedom” and “occupation,”
one need only listen closely to its rhetoric to realize that these are
code words for the elimination of Israel.
BDS leaders oppose a two-state solution—why?
While the United States, Western European powers, Israel and the U.N.
Security Council have embraced a “two-state solution” as the
basis for peace in the Middle East, BDS leaders, such as Ali Abunimah
and Omar Barghouti, are clear: They openly and outspokenly oppose a two-state
solution. Why?
Because when BDS supporters talk about “the occupation
of Palestine,” they refer not to disputed West Bank territories,
but to all the land between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean Sea—including
all of Israel. When they talk about “freedom,” they don’t
mean freedom from security roadblocks, they mean freedom from Jews in
their midst. When they talk about “occupation,” they mean
not just Israeli security forces in the West Bank, they also mean Israelis
“occupying” the state of Israel.
The third telling fact about the BDS movement is that it
consistently and vehemently opposes any efforts to bring Israelis and
Palestinians together to work in peace and on peace. For example, BDS
leaders advocate boycotting cultural exchanges between Israelis and Palestinian
artists. They condemn educational cooperation between Israeli and Palestinian
universities. Most revealingly, they oppose peace talks between Israel
and the Palestinian leadership, calling them “collaborationist.”
BDS is not about “occupation.”
In short, BDS is not about peaceful coexistence or ending the “occupation”
of the West Bank. Indeed, Omar Barghouti, a graduate student at Tel Aviv
University and BDS founder, admits, “If the occupation ends . .
. would that end support for BDS? No it wouldn’t—no.”
Not only do BDS leaders admit this, but they implacably
support the “return” of nearly five million descendants of
Arab refugees who left during Israel’s war of independence in 1947.
In fact, most of these Palestinians are not truly refugees—fully
95 percent of them have never set foot in Israel.
Most importantly, the immigration of millions of Arab refugees’
descendants to Israel would make Jews a minority in their own state. As
President Obama has correctly noted, “The ‘right of return’
would extinguish Israel as a Jewish state, and that’s not an option.”
Yet destroying Israel by flooding it with millions of Palestinians is
precisely what BDS leader Barghouti insists upon: “This (the right
of return) is something we cannot compromise on.”
BDS’s goal: “Extinguish Israel as a
Jewish state.” BDS unequivocally rejects Israel’s
many peace offers—including numerous land-for-peace proposals supported
by the United States—and rejects Israel’s willingness to sit
down to direct peace talks without preconditions.
Thus, the facts make BDS’s intentions clear: Rather
than being a movement that seeks peace and freedom, it is a movement motivated
by an obsessive hate of Zionism and Jews and opposition to the Jewish
state—one bent on fomenting strife, conflict and enmity until Israel
is utterly defeated.
If you support peace between Israel and the Palestinians,
if you support two states for two peoples—living side by side in
cultural, social and economic harmony—please oppose the ill-intentioned
BDS movement in your community. Speak out against hateful, one-sided campaigns
to boycott Israeli goods, to divest from companies that do business with
Israel and to enact sanctions against the state of Israel. This is not
the path to peace!
This ad has been published and paid
for by
Facts and Logic About the Middle East
P.O. Box 590359
San Francisco, CA 94159
Gerardo Joffe, President
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