NEW YORK (Dispatches) -- The U.S. and some of its European allies are facing accusations of double standards for supporting sanctions and international war crimes investigations against Russia for its military operation in Ukraine while blocking them over Israeli military actions in the occupied Palestinian territories.
Last month, Amnesty International called for the UN to impose targeted sanctions against the occupying regime of Israel after joining other human rights groups in accusing it of breaching international law by practicing a form of apartheid and committing a crime against humanity in its “domination” of the Palestinians.
Palestinian officials and UN special rapporteurs on the occupied territories have also pressed for sanctions over Israeli land seizures in the West Bank, the blockade of Gaza and the large scale killing of Palestinian civilians.
While pressing for action against Russia, however, the U.S. and other governments have resisted similar measures against the Zionist regime of Israel.
On Tuesday, the U.S. secretary of state, Antony Blinken, told the UN human rights council that it must send a “resolute message” to Vladimir Putin.
“These are the human rights abuses this council was created to stop. If we cannot come together now, when will we come together?” he said.
In the same speech, Blinken made point of calling ongoing UN human rights council investigations into Israeli actions in the occupied territories “a stain on the council’s credibility” and called for them to be halted. The investigations have found the occupying regime of Israel responsible for persistent “violations of the right to life” and other crimes.
Sarah Leah Whitson, the former director of Human Rights Watch’s Middle East division, said there are clear parallels with Israeli violations of international law, including the committing of war crimes.
“We see that not just the U.S. government but U.S. companies are falling over themselves to sanction and boycott anything that has an association with the Russian government,” she said. “Contrast that with the exact opposite when it comes to sanctioning Israel for its violations of international law to the point where American states are passing laws to punish Americans unless they promise never to boycott Israel. It’s very clear that the grounds for resisting sanctions on Israel, or even compliance with international law, is purely political.”
Lara Friedman, president of the Foundation for Middle East Peace, contrasted American support for sanctions against Russia with attempts in Congress to outlaw boycotts in the U.S. of the Zionist regime or its settlements in the Palestinian territories.
James Zogby, president of the Arab American Institute in Washington, compared the portrayal of Ukrainians throwing petrol bombs as heroic defenders of their territory to Palestinians characterized as terrorists or militants for resisting occupation and land seizures by Israel.
The U.S. is not alone in facing accusations of hypocrisy. The UK and Canada led calls for the international criminal court to investigate Russian war crimes in Ukraine. Last year, the two countries said the ICC should drop an investigation of Israel in part on the grounds that Palestine is not a sovereign country, although it is recognized as a state by the UN.
In Britain, the Labour MP Julie Elliott told parliament that there was a double standard when it comes to standing up for Palestinians.
“The Palestinians are looking to us to speak and act in the same terms. We sanctioned Russia over Crimea, and we are now likely to impose more sanctions, with which I wholeheartedly agree, yet Palestinians ask why we do nothing to end Israel’s occupation,” she said.
Critics have also accused international footballing bodies of contradictory policies.
UEFA fined the Scottish Premier League team Celtic after its fans flew Palestinian flags at international games, saying that they were political symbols. Ukrainian flags have been widely flown at recent matches with the approval of footballing authorities.