Will
US give veto over the wall?
Dr.
Liaquat Ali Khan
A threat
to the rule of law is in the making. Before long, the United Nations
Security Council would be moved to force Israel to dismantle the wall.
Hoisting its veto, the United States would block the move. And the world
would conclude -- once again and rightly so -- that the US cares little
about international law and the World Court.
In an unprecedented
ruling, the World Court has declared that the separation wall Israel
is building in occupied Palestine is contrary to international law,
and must be dismantled. The Court further demanded that Israel make
reparation to all persons whose homes, businesses, and farms were destroyed
and confiscated for building the wall. Most importantly, the Court asked
the Security Council "to take action to bring to an end the illegal
situation resulting from the construction of the wall."
This explicit entrustment
to the Security Council to enforce the ruling of the World Court raises
high stakes for the international legal system. For if the Council fails
to take action, the Court will lose credibility, even the rationale
for its existence. True, the Court's decisions have been ignored before.
But before, it was the loser state, and not a UN organ, that refused
to comply with the judgment. And most often, the non-compliant state
held a veto in the Security Council. The world tolerated this anomaly
of non-compliance as a special privilege of permanent members of the
Security Council.
This time, far from
having a veto, the loser state (Israel) is not even a member of the
Security Council. Furthermore, the Court's call for compliance is made
directly to the Security Council, the UN organ specially empowered to
"give effect to the judgment." And the call is clear. It mandates
that the wall be dismantled and victims be compensated. Rarely is such
a perfect textbook case deferred to the Security Council, leaving for
it no other option but to enforce the Court's judgment.
To pave the way
for a US veto, however, the pro-Israel lobby has begun to undermine
the Court's credibility. One well-known law academic has called the
World Court a 'Kangaroo' and 'bigoted' court, advising Israel to defy
its judgment and finish building the wall. Others are trashing the United
Nations for referring this case to the Court. Prime Minister Sharon,
the unyielding architect of the wall, remains determined, undeterred
by the Court's ruling, to fulfill his dream of expanding Israel beyond
its lawful borders.
Despite attacks
on the Court's authority, the truth remains that its judgment against
the wall is founded on a remarkable degree of judicial consensus. Fourteen
judges of diverse cultures and nationalities, including the ones from
China, Russia, France, and the United Kingdom--the four veto-holding
members of the Security Council -- favoured the Court's decision on
demolishing the wall. The sole dissenter on key issues, including the
one calling the Security Council to enforce the judgment, was the American
judge, whose dissent contradicts the very basics of international law
that he, as a law professor, has ably taught to generations of law students
in the United States.
The dissent will
carry little weight in Security Council deliberations. China, France,
and Russia, along with most non-permanent members, would support a resolution
for enforcement of the judgment. Even the United Kingdom, whose government
has ceased to think independently and routinely follows the White House,
might not betray the verdict of its own judge on the Court who voted
in favor of every issue, with no exception.
Should the US refrain
from using its veto, a unanimous Security Council is available to pass
a resolution giving effect to the Court's judgment.
But surely, the
US would unlikely favour a resolution that compels Israel to comply
with the Court's judgment -- not in the election year when both presidential
candidates are boogie dancing to please millions of pro-Israel voters.
Campaigning on the same side of the wall, both candidates would argue
that the Court has decided a "political case" and not a legal
case, and that the Court's decision, if implemented, would interfere
with the Peace Process that the Security Council had previously endorsed.
Few voters would know that the World Court has specifically addressed
these arguments, and rejected them all. To win pro-Israel voters, the
Bush Administration would veto the resolution, and John Kerry would
seal his lips to save any unintended slips of the tongue.
Come what may, international
effects of the US veto will be grave. When the wall is completed, Israel
would have grabbed more than 16% of West Bank; around 500,000 Palestinians
would have lost their homes, businesses, and agricultural holdings;
and more than 300,000 Israeli settlers would have dug deeper in the
Palestinian territory. With all this, the Muslim world would find more
reasons to hate America, and terrorists more reasons to kill. Even many
Israelis would detest the perpetuation of injustice, as would the fourteen
judges of the World Court . And the peoples of the world would say that
the US commitment to international law and human rights is empty.
Dr. Khan is Professor
of Law at Washburn University in Kansas.