|  Corporate 
              America and Israeli Occupation By Sam Bahour
 Foreign Policy in Focus
 May 23, 2002
 
    In light of the deteriorating situation in the Middle East, the 
              time has come for corporate boardrooms of companies involved in 
              that region to reassess their role, even if that role has been to 
              remain silent for all these years. The corporate world must channel 
              its influence to end the Israeli occupation. The Israeli-Palestinian 
              conflict has reached a dangerous point that has the potential to 
              disrupt business activity, especially U.S. business interests throughout 
              the Middle East. Long-term U.S. national strategic interests in 
              the region are also at risk--namely the cost of and uninterrupted 
              flow of oil. Millions of U.S. corporate and citizen tax dollars 
              spent on building the Palestinian economy were lost in this latest 
              Israeli offensive against the Palestinian civil and national infrastructure. There exist a number of laws that U.S. corporations are legally 
              bound by, such as the U.S. Foreign Assistance and Arms Export Control 
              Acts. United States law stipulates, inter alia, that any defense 
              articles and defense services to any country shall be furnished 
              "solely for internal security, [or] for legitimate self-defense" 
              (22U.S.C. 2302 and 2754). Israel's excessive and disproportionate 
              use of force to suppress the Palestinian people and its recent offensive 
              against Palestinian cities with U.S.-supplied weaponry clearly exceeds 
              the bounds of what could be considered legitimate self-defense and 
              therefore is in violation of U.S. law. Corporations would be ill-advised 
              to continue ignoring this fact in the hope that those persons who 
              are being damaged by their business decisions will not take legal 
              action in the future. Legal ghosts have haunted many firms, especially 
              in Europe, many years after their neglect of humanitarian law. Furthermore, according to U.S. law, "no security assistance 
              may be provided to any country the government of which engages in 
              a consistent pattern of gross violations of internationally recognized 
              human rights" (22U.S.C. 2304). The U.S. State Department has 
              repeatedly documented in its annual reports that Israel engages 
              in "torture or cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment of punishment, 
              prolonged detention without charges and trial, causing the disappearance 
              of persons by the abduction and clandestine detention of those persons, 
              and other flagrant denials of the right to life, liberty, or the 
              security of people." U.S. military-related corporations support Israeli occupation by 
              way of an institutionalized mechanism provided for by Congress. 
              Congress has stipulated that 75% of U.S. foreign military aid to 
              Israel, which amounts to over $2 billion annually, must be spent 
              buying U.S. products and services. Firms like Lockheed, Boeing, 
              United Technologies, Raytheon, ExxonMobil, Northrop, Pgsus, General 
              Dynamics, and Oshkosh, among others, are directly contributing to 
              the tools that Israel uses to violate international and humanitarian 
              law. The following are some specific cases: 
              U.S. weapons manufacturer Lockheed Martin Aeronautics Company, 
                which provides the fighter jets that have been used by Israel 
                to bomb Palestinian cities that have been under military closure 
                for 18 months, proudly announced on September 5, 2001 from Fort 
                Worth, Texas that Israel had decided to purchase 52 more Lockheed 
                Martin F-16 fighter jets. The contract value was reported as approximately 
                $1.3 billion for only the aircraft. 
              Sikorsky Aircraft Corporation, a subsidiary of United Technologies 
                Corporation, sells Israel U.S. armaments used to destroy Palestinian 
                cities and perform political assassinations of Palestinian civilians 
                from the sky. "Our company's relationship of more than 40 
                years with Israel is a source of pride," said Sikorsky President 
                Dean Borgman in a February 1, 2001 press release, while announcing 
                his firm was awarded a $211.8 million contract for 24 additional 
                Black Hawk helicopters to serve the Israeli Air Force.  
              Other less visible military suppliers are those like Federal 
                Laboratories in Saltsburg, Pennsylvania, which provides CS tear 
                gas to the Israeli military. During the first Palestinian Intifada 
                (uprising) in 1988, Federal Laboratories witnessed civil disobedience 
                actions at their plant gate in Saltsburg and a lawsuit in U.S. 
                courts after Israel misused their lethal tear gas by firing it 
                into closed areas, resulting in the killing of many Palestinians. 
                Federal Laboratories stopped exporting the gas for six months 
                in 1988 and sent a fact-finding team to Israel before resuming 
                sales. Corporate America's support of the Israeli occupation is not confined 
              to military equipment suppliers. In fall 1999, Burger King opened 
              a franchise restaurant in an illegal Israeli settlement in the West 
              Bank, only to be forced by its customers to close down the store 
              to avoid a worldwide boycott. In April alone three U.S. firms have been lured into collaboration 
              with Israel's illegal occupation. Fifth Third Bank in Northeastern 
              Ohio purchased $500,000 worth of bonds from Israel. Robert King, 
              president and chief executive of the Cleveland affiliate of Fifth 
              Third Bancorp in Cincinnati proudly stated in a press release that, 
              "This year is the state of Israel's 50th anniversary, and now 
              more than ever, it is poised to continue its growth as an industrial 
              world leader." No mention was made by Mr. King that such growth 
              comes at the cost of systematic, gross violations of human rights 
              by Israel. Microsoft Israel put company executives in Redmond, Seattle in 
              an awkward position when they sponsored two large billboards on 
              a main Israeli highway saluting Israel's armed forces at the same 
              time the Israeli military was indiscriminately bombing the Jenin 
              refugee camp. Only days after a grassroots letter writing campaign, 
              partly led by the Israeli peace group Gush-Shalom, Microsoft executives 
              announced that Microsoft Israel had acted alone and was instructed 
              to take down the billboards, which they promptly did. Israel is 
              the largest research and development site for Microsoft outside 
              America. Bill Gates would serve world peace well by continuing his 
              involvement and requesting that Israel end the occupation in order 
              to qualify for continued commercial opportunities. The same can 
              be said for Intel Corporation, which has the largest production 
              facilities outside of the U.S. located in Israel. Divesting in countries that are in blatant violation of international 
              and humanitarian law is not new. The divestment campaign that targeted 
              apartheid in South Africa is a case in point. When South African 
              business leaders saw that apartheid was jeopardizing their own business 
              interests they played an important role in convincing their government 
              to fall in line with international law, which led to the ending 
              of apartheid. One might argue that no grassroots commercial divestment 
              in Israel can be large enough to convince the Israeli government 
              to change paths. This is debatable. However, it is clear that such 
              a campaign would send the right signals that the time has come for 
              Israel to join the world community by ending its oppression of Palestinians. 
              (It is interesting to note that Israel was one of the closet allies 
              to the South African apartheid government.) Palestinians have failed so far to translate their struggle into 
              a sustainable grassroots strategy that seriously engages the millions 
              around the world who are in support of their cause. Grassroots activism 
              played a significant role in the success of the South African movement 
              against apartheid and creating such a comprehensive grassroots campaign 
              will remain a burden that the Palestinian leadership must carry. 
              It is not enough to have a just cause; you must also have a realistic 
              strategy and campaigns that serve that strategy. Given the unrelenting 
              Israeli campaign against Palestinians, we cannot let a lack of such 
              a strategy be an excuse for U.S. companies to continue breaking 
              U.S. law or for international venues to be intimidated into delaying 
              overdue justice. Corporate boardrooms in America and around the world are positioned 
              to contribute to ending Israel's occupation. Not only is it part 
              of their moral and legal obligation to do so, in the end it will 
              make good business sense. (Sam Bahour is a Palestinian-American businessman living in 
              the besieged Palestinian City of Al-Bireh/Ramallah in the West Bank 
              and can be reached at <sbahour@palnet.com>.)   |