Me#1You#10 Site Admin
Joined: 06 May 2004 Posts: 6503
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Posted: Tue Aug 08, 2006 4:06 pm Post subject: "Human Rights Watch" anti-Israel bias exposed |
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Powerline informs of an ongoing "war of words" that has been occuring on both the editorial and op-ed pages of the NY Sun inre the profound anti-Israel bias of "Human Rights Watch" (HRW) and makes note of the coverage by NGO Monitor here.
Today's NY Sun editorial puts the proverbial nail in HRW's "unbiased" coffin. Bravo to the NY Sun for its coverage and its analysis. (highlight mine)
Quote: | Roth's False God
New York Sun Staff Editorial
August 8, 2006
After The New York Sun ran an editorial and two op-ed pieces taking Human Rights Watch to task for anti-Israel bias, the organization's executive director, Kenneth Roth, has finally found it in himself to denounce Hezbollah for placing troops and weapons near Lebanese civilians. And to acknowledge, for the first time, that the use of ambulances by Palestinian groups to transport weapons or suicide bombers is "a clear humanitarian violation." We're tempted to congratulate Mr. Roth. Too bad it had to be wrung out of him.
Call us optimists, but we still hold out hope that Mr. Roth will abandon his view, expressed in a letter to the editor printed in the adjacent column, that the Israeli government defending itself from Islamist terrorist aggression is engaged in "extremist interpretations of religious doctrine" like the terrorists themselves. Maybe in his next letter to us he'll finally concede, too, that, as widely reported, the Iranian military is in Lebanon. Maybe he'll concede that the fact that Hezbollah was not "in sight" is no evidence they were not there. Until then, Mr. Roth and his donors, staff, and board of directors should be aware that the American Jewish community recognizes with full clarity what Mr. Roth and Human Rights Watch are up to. It is unmistakable.
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Mr. Roth sneers at "religious doctrine" and "Biblical injunctions" from the Torah. In an earlier letter to this page, he referred to them as the "morality of some more primitive moment." He belittles any distinction between a terrorist group whose goal is to kill Jews, eradicate Israel, and impose Islamist law worldwide, and a pluralist sovereign state, like Israel, that apologizes and investigates when it kills civilians in the course of trying to protect its civilians and borders from the terrorist group. Human Rights Watch recently called on America to cease immediately arms transfers to Israel. If Mr. Roth's Yale Law School degree and international law dictate cutting off Israel's arms as it is under assault by a terrorist group out to destroy it and deliberately kill its civilians, we'll take the Bible any day. One doesn't need a Yale Law School degree or expertise in international law to know Israel is different from the terrorists, just a basic moral compass.
Mr. Roth's own moral compass seems to go haywire whenever Israel is involved. More reputable scholars of international law, like Orde Kittrie writing in Saturday's Wall Street Journal, disagree with Human Rights Watch's conclusions. So do President Bush and a consensus in Congress and among the American public, which have supported Israel's right to defend itself. Siding with Human Rights Watch in criticizing Israel have been the governments of Iran and Communist China, two of the worst human rights abusers of them all.
Mr. Roth may send us another letter, conceding another point or two along the way. Or not. But this is about more than Mr. Roth and his organization. The moral equivalence that has infected him and his organization has, sadly, spread far on much of the left, from the United Nations to the International Red Cross and Amnesty International and the editorialists of the New York Times, who yesterday, stunningly, said any ceasefire they would favor must allow Hezbollah "to claim some sort of victory." That such confusion has not gained traction among American Jews or, for that matter, on the Christian right in this country is testament to the bond of shared values between America and Israel. Those values have a base in something higher than the false god of international law before whom Kenneth Roth has brought a once-idealistic institution so low.
NY Sun |
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