It was definitely coincidental — but harbouring many unclear scenarios — that Richard Goldstone’s infamous volte face came on April Fool’s day as when it appeared on the website of the Washington Post.

In his wishy-washy column, published in that paper two days later, the esteemed South African judge backtracked on some of his original sharp findings which appeared in an earlier UN Human Rights Council (HRC) report about the 2008-09 Israeli invasion of the Gaza Strip.

Then, around 1,400 Palestinians, mostly civilians, and 11 Israeli soldiers lost their lives during the three-week invasion.
Goldstone’s justification: “If I had known then what I know now, the Goldstone Report [named in his honour] would have been a different document.”

Goldstone had originally said that his committee had “found evidence of potential war crimes and possibly crimes against humanity” committed during that war by both Israel and Hamas, that still controls the Gaza Strip, home to about 1.5 million Palestinians.

A final report to HRC by another UN committee, run by a former New York judge, argued that in that war “civilians were not intentionally targeted [by Israel] as a matter of policy”, basing its conclusions in part on “investigations published by the Israeli military.”

Hamas, in turn, had failed to conduct its investigation into the brutal clashes between the two sides — a decision that harmed the group’s standing.
Although a Jew and a Zionist — (one wonders how he was tasked with this mission) — Goldstone was severely denounced by Israel and its supporters. But this time around, his backtracking encouraged Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to call for “the shelving of [Goldstone’s] report once and for all”.

But the South African judge had refrained from echoing Netanyahu’s call in his column, contributing to the mystery of his back-pedalling and raising concerns that he may do so in the .

Two versions

To his credit, however, Goldstone documented unchallenged numerous examples of mistreatment of Palestinian civilians by Israeli soldiers. He highlighted an Israeli air strike on a house in the Gaza Strip, one of 4,000 homes demolished, which killed 29 members of the Samouni family.
But what is shocking is the fact that there were two “significantly different” versions of the Goldstone column. One was sent much earlier to the New York Times. When it was not published, a second version appeared in the Washington Post several days later.

The first version, according to an unidentified source, did not include the “crucial repudiation of the [Goldstone] report’s central thrust,” namely the allegations of war crimes and the intentional targeting of civilian non-combatants.

Kenneth Roth, executive director of Human Rights Watch, believes that the significance of Goldstone’s column “is being overblown”.

Challenging Goldstone’s claim that new information discounts claims that Israel was targeting civilians, Roth writes: “Human Rights Watch’s investigation in Gaza found some cases of apparently deliberate killing of civilians by Israeli soldiers, such as the killing of 11 civilians holding white flags, but no evidence that these resulted from a policy to target civilians.”

After noting that only four Israel soldiers had been indicted and only one had served jail time (seven-and-a-half months), Israel, Roth concluded, “has yet to investigate the policies behind the indiscriminate attacks that caused so much civilian harm”.

Richard Cohen, a Washington Post columnist, believes that Goldstone’s harassment “was a symptom of something larger”. In other words, he continued, the fact that Goldstone’s report “was accepted in much of the world testified to how much Israel’s moral standing has plummeted”.

Moreover, a member of the four-member panel that authored the Goldstone Report, Desmond Travers, a former officer in the Irish Armed forces and an expert on international criminal investigations, was reported as saying that “the tenor of the report in its entirety, in my opinion, stands”.

It was interesting that this brouhaha over the Goldstone Report coincided with the visit of Israeli President Shimon Peres to the White House last Tuesday and came as a State Department statement chastised Israel for plans to add about a thousand houses in Occupied East Jerusalem.

President Barack Obama hit the nail on the head when he told an Israeli rally marking the assassination of Israeli Prime Yitzhak Rabin more than a year ago that “Israelis will not find true security while the Palestinians are gripped by hopelessness and despair.”

Whether the climate will be better when Netanyahu visits the US in May remains to be seen.

George S. Hishmeh is a Washington-based columnist. He can be contacted at ghishmeh@gulfnews.com.