1. Current Status of Corporate Engagement
Since the 216th General Assembly (2004), the committee on
Mission Responsibility Through Investment (MRTI) has implemented a
process of principled corporate engagement with Caterpillar, Inc.,
Motorola, Inc., and several other corporations that are profiting from
Israel’s military occupation of the West Bank, Gaza, and East Jerusalem
and contributing to the escalating humanitarian crisis among
Palestinians. This process of corporate engagement has thus far failed
to produce any changes in the military-related activities of these
corporations in the Occupied Territories.
2. Resolutions On Divestment: 2004, 2006
The 216th General Assembly (2004) approved an alternate
resolution to an overture on the Geneva Accords involving Israel and
Palestine (Minutes, 2004, Part I, pp. 64-66),
and urged both parties to revive negotiations toward a just and
peaceful resolution of the dispute that would result in two states: an
Israel within safe and secure borders, and an economically and
geographically viable Palestine within safe and secure borders. The
assembly also directed MRTI to initiate a process of phased, selective
divestment of companies doing business in Israel that contribute to
violence and/or profit from the occupation of territory in the West
Bank. The MRTI developed a set of six criteria focused on General
Assembly concerns about violence against Palestinians and Israelis
alike, the occupation, Israeli settlements in the occupied territories,
and the Separation Barrier. Five companies were identified for
engagement according to the criteria: Caterpillar, Citigroup, ITT
Industries, Motorola, and United Technologies.
The 217th General Assembly (2006) said that investments in
companies doing business in Israel, Gaza, East Jerusalem and the West
Bank, should be only in companies engaged in peaceful pursuits. The
General Assembly also said that the customary MRTI process of corporate
engagement is the proper vehicle for determining whether or not a
company is involved in peaceful pursuits (Minutes, 2006, Part I, pp. 944-45). —MRTI, Priority Issues Work Plan, 2006-2007
Corporate engagement is the process whereby the church
researches the companies, determines their compliance with its
standards, and then pressures them to change. Divestment refers to the
ultimate termination of investments from the targeted corporations, and
is the next step in the process of morally responsible investment to be
implemented when and if engagement fails to produce positive change.
3. Past Resolutions on Israel and Palestine
Presbyterian General Assemblies have repeatedly addressed
issues involving Israel and Palestine, in 1948, 1967, 1974, 1977, 1978,
1979, 1982, 1983, 1984, 1985, 1987, 1988, 1990, 1992, 1995, 1997, 1998,
2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, and 2006.
“The consistent Presbyterian position has been to affirm the
right of Israel to exist as a sovereign state within secure,
internationally recognized borders and the right of the Palestinians to
self-determination, including the right to the establishment of a
neighboring independent, sovereign state, toward the end of
establishing a just and durable peace.”—A Brief Summary of General Assembly Statements, February 2005
“In statements of successive assemblies since 1967, the
General Assembly has decried the cycle of escalating violence—carried
out both by Palestinians and Israelis—which is rooted in Israel’s
continued occupation of Palestinian territories. Presbyterians have
continued to be concerned about the loss of so many innocent lives of
Israelis and Palestinians as evidenced by the Resolution on the Middle East, approved in 1997, and the Resolution on Israel and Palestine: End the Occupation Now, approved in 2003.”—The Social Justice Actions of the 216th General Assembly 2004.
4. MRTI Mission Guidelines/Divestment Criteria
“The Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) believes that church
investment is more than a practical question. It is also ‘an instrument
of mission and includes theological, social and economic
considerations.’ This belief flows from our understanding of the
stewardship of God’s resources entrusted to the church. Thus, ‘we
confess that the Lord is really the acknowledged Master of our entire
life—moral, physical and material.’”—MRTI, A Christian Call to Faith-Based Investing
“The General Assembly of the PC(USA) urges divestment and/or
proscription of some corporations due to their involvement in
military-related production, tobacco, or human rights violations. This
policy is an outgrowth of the General Assembly’s adoption of Peacemaking: A Believer’s Calling, which asked the entire church to review its witness and seek additional ways to promote peacemaking.”—mrti, 2007 G.A. Divestment List
“As a result of this policy, investments would be used to
promote the church’s mission goals in society, as well as to bring
integrity to the church’s ethical and moral values as they were applied
to the policies and values of the private sector.”—William
Somplansky-Jarman, The Presbyterian Church As Investor
5. The Israeli Occupation and Related Human Rights Violations
Israel routinely engages in gross patterns of human rights
violations in its military occupation of the Palestinian West Bank,
East Jerusalem, and the Gaza Strip. The killing and injuring of
civilians, torture, extrajudicial assassinations, the deliberate
destruction of civilian infrastructure, acts of collective punishment,
and economic warfare are but a few examples of Israel’s human rights
violations. Below are some of the elements of the “matrix of control”
(ICAHD) that Israel uses to dominate, humiliate, impoverish, and
transfer Palestinians.
The Security/Separation/Apartheid/Annexation Wall/Fence/Barrier: Although
the officiallystated purpose for the wall is security for Israel, only
11 percent of the structure is actually located on the pre-1967 border
or “Green Line,” the internationally recognized boundary between Israel
and the West Bank. The other 89 percent cuts deep into the West Bank,
effectively annexing some of the most fertile and productive
Palestinian land. Fourteen percent of West Bank lies between the border
and the wall, land that is currently home for more than 274,000
Palestinians living in closed enclaves surrounded by the wall. Another
400,000 Palestinians live on one side of the wall while their farms,
jobs, and services are on the other side. The effect is to cripple the
Palestinian economy, prevent economic development and foreign
investment, and hobble the ability of the Palestinians to maintain
security or govern their territories. The International Court of
Justice declared the wall illegal in July 2004, and the PC(USA) has
joined the overwhelming international community calling for the
immediate removal of the barrier from Palestinian land.
Checkpoints: According to the United Nations Office
for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, 528 checkpoints and
roadblocks have been recorded in the West Bank, choking its roads every
few miles. Israel’s daily Haaretz newspaper puts the figure
even higher: 75 permanently manned checkpoints, some 150 mobile
checkpoints, and more than 400 places where roads have been blocked by
obstacles.
“As a result, moving goods and people from one place to the
next in the West Bank has become a nightmare of logistics and costly
delays. At the checkpoints, food spoils, patients die, and children are
prevented from reaching their schools. The World Bank blames the
checkpoints and roadblocks for strangling the Palestinian
economy.”—Jonathan Cook, “Daily Indignities and Humiliations: Watching the Checkpoints,” Counterpunch, Feb. 22, 2007.
One of the main purposes of the policy to
restrict Palestinian movement is to protect Israeli settlers. Given
that the settlements are illegal, the policy only aggravates the
situation: it comprehensively and disproportionately impedes the
freedom of movement of an entire population in order to perpetuate an
illegal policy. If the restrictions were intended to prevent attacks
inside Israel, and not in the settlements, the policy would still be
illegal because it is sweeping and disproportionate, giving it a
semblance of collective punishment which is forbidden.
Furthermore, Israel’s policy is based on the
assumption that every single Palestinian is a security threat, thereby
justifying restrictions on his or her freedom of movement. This
assumption is racist and leads to the sweeping violation of the human
rights of an entire population on the basis of national origin. As
such, the policy flagrantly violates international law. —B’Tselem, The
Israeli Information Center for Human Rights in the Occupied Territories
“Checkpoints serve to humiliate Palestinians and create
feelings of deep hostility towards Israel ... In this respect they
resemble the ‘pass laws’ of apartheid South Africa, which required
black South Africans to demonstrate permission to travel or reside
anywhere in South Africa.”—John Dugard, United Nations, Report of the Special Rapporteur on the Situation of Human Rights in the Palestinian Territories Occupied Since 1967
Israeli settlements: Under Article 49 of
the 4th Geneva Convention, Israel is prohibited from establishing
settlements: “The Occupying Power shall not transfer parts of its own
civilian population into territories it occupies.”
During the Oslo negotiations, when the status of the occupied
territories was supposedly being negotiated, Israel expropriated 200
square kilometers of farm and pasture land for its own exclusive
settlements and infrastructure. Since 1967, Israel has declared 73
percent of the West Bank “state lands,” thus annulling Palestinian
deeds going back generations. This unilateral and non-negotiated policy
set the stage for massive expropriations for settlements, military
facilities, highways and bypass roads, industrial areas, closed
military areas, and nature reserves.
Since 1967, Israel has established at least 214 settlements in
the West Bank, and another 18 in the Gaza Strip. During the Oslo
negotiations, the settler population doubled. Thirty new settlements
were established, including entire cities such as Kiryat Sefer and Tel
Zion. As of May 2002, more than 400,000 Israelis lived beyond the
“Green Line”: 200,000 in the West Bank, and another 200,000 in East
Jerusalem. Israel has approved almost 20,000 new homes in
illegal Jewish settlements in the West Bank during the past seven
years. In defiance of the current “Roadmap Towards Peace,” plans have
resumed for further settlement expansion in East Jerusalem and
elsewhere in the West Bank. —Israeli Committee Against House Demolitions
House demolitions: Since 1967, 18,000
Palestinian homes have been demolished in the occupied territories,
including East Jerusalem. The majority of house demolitions are
conducted for “administrative” reasons and are generally because the
house was built without a permit. However, permits are almost
impossible to obtain by Palestinians living under occupation. Israel
has denied 94 percent of Palestinian building permit requests over the
last seven years, granting only ninety-one requests.
More than 628 Palestinian homes have been demolished during
the second Intifada as collective punishment and “deterrence” affecting
families of people known or suspected of involvement in attacks on
Israeli civilians. On average, twelve innocent people lose their home
for every person “punished” for a security offense—and in half of the
cases the occupants had nothing whatsoever to do with the acts in
question. The Israeli government insists its aim is to “deter”
potential terrorists, although 79 percent of the suspected offenders
were either dead or in detention at the time of the demolition.
Under the Fourth Geneva Convention, Occupying Powers are
prohibited from destroying property or employing collective punishment.
Article 53 reads: “Any destruction by the Occupying Power of real or
personal property belonging individually or collectively to private
persons… is prohibited.” Under this provision the practice of
demolishing Palestinian houses is banned, as is the wholesale
destruction of the Palestinian infrastructure.—Israeli Committee
Against House Demolitions
Land and Water expropriation: Israeli settlers and
the State of Israel have taken the richest Palestinian agricultural
land. Even the Jordan River Valley, well within the West Bank, is used
primarily for Israeli farming enterprises. Israelis control all the
aquifers that supply water to Palestinian lands. Palestinians are
charged four times more for potable water than Israeli settlers.
Destruction of fruit orchards and olive groves: The
olive tree is a primary source of food and income for Palestinian
farmers. Since 1967, more than one million Palestinian olive trees have
been uprooted or cut down by the Israeli military and settlers.
Ethnic cleansing: As a direct result of the
occupation, the livelihood of many Palestinians has been destroyed and
they are thus expelled from their historic homelands. As documented by
the highly respected Israeli human rights organization, B’Tselem, in a
case study of the city of Hebron, “Israel has brought about over the
years the expulsion of thousands of Palestinians residents and
merchants from the center of the city. The ‘separation policy,’
constitutes, therefore, a policy of expulsion of Palestinians. The army
acts according to similar principles throughout the West Bank.”
The “two-state solution” advocated repeatedly by past General
Assembly resolutions is most seriously threatened by the ongoing
construction of Israeli settlements and bypass roads: without a halt to
such construction, a two-state solution may be impossible to implement. Indeed, a growing number of academics
and intellectuals throughout the world argue that Israel will never
allow the Palestinians to have a viable state and Palestinians should
instead focus their efforts on obtaining equal rights as Israeli
citizens.
6. Corporate Complicity
Caterpillar: The company that best exemplifies the
interest of U.S. corporations in the occupation and the complete
refusal to address human rights concerns in the region is Caterpillar.
The most destructive weapon of the occupation may not be an F-16 or
helicopter gunship, but rather an armor-plated D-9 or D-11 bulldozer.
In 2001, Israeli Defense Minister Shaul Mofaz declared, “The D-9 is a strategic weapon here.”
The Israeli military adds its own armaments, including machine-gun
mounts, grenade launchers, and bulletproof windows, bringing the
machine’s weight up to approximately 60 tons.
These are the machines that have demolished thousands of
homes, uprooted countless olive trees, and carved gaping holes in
roads, making them impassable. Even when used in the construction of
settlement housing or bypass roads, CAT equipment is being used daily
in violations of international law, playing a central role in clearing
Palestinian agricultural land for the 450-mile-long Separation Barrier.
Article 147 of the Fourth Geneva Convention deems the
“extensive destruction and appropriation of property carried out
unlawfully and wantonly” to be a war crime. The sale of Caterpillar
bulldozers to the Israeli military is subject to the U.S. Arms Export
Control Act, which prohibits the use of U.S. made machinery or weapons
against a civilian population.
Despite years of corporate engagement by investors,
Caterpillar is expanding its role in the occupation by its joint
venture with InRob Tech. Ltd. to develop unmanned remote-controlled
bulldozers for Israel.—US Campaign to End the Occupation
Motorola: Motorola Israel—a fully owned subsidiary of
Motorola Incorporated—produces the 980 Low Altitude Proximity Fuse for
the MK-80 series of high explosive bombs. On July 30, 2006, during its
war on Lebanon, the Israeli Air Force dropped an MK-84 high-explosive
bomb on an apartment building in Qana, Lebanon, killing at least
twenty-eight civilians, many of whom were children.
The $100 million contract used to develop and supply the
“Mountain Rose” secure cell phone communication system to the Israeli
military directly enhances the coordination and monitoring capabilities
of the occupying forces in their illegal military operations in the
Palestinian territories.
Motorola Israel supplies Israel with the Wide Area
Surveillance System (WAAS) to monitor and maintain the illegal
wall/fence barrier it has constructed in violation of the July 2004
International Court of Justice (ICJ) advisory opinion.
Motorola Incorporated set up advanced radar detection devices
and thermal cameras in forty-seven Israeli settlements. According to
the Fourth Geneva Convention, Article 49, it is considered a war crime
for an occupying power to transfer its civilian population into an
occupied territory. The Motorola WASS equipment helps entrench Israeli
settlers on expropriated Palestinian territory, in direct violation of
international law.—US Campaign to End the Occupation
7. PC(USA) Relations with the Jewish Community
Since the overwhelming approval of the 2004
“Divestment Resolution,” the PC(USA) has experienced a significant
backlash in the form of pressure and public criticism from certain
pro-Israel organizations, such as the Anti-Defamation League, the
American Jewish Council, and others, with accusations of anti-Semitism
and unfair bias against Israel. We join with Israelis and Palestinians
and most of the world in condemnation of targeting of civilian
populations.
However, many pro-peace Jewish and
interfaith groups, including Jewish Voice for Peace, the American
Friends Service Committee, Tikkun, the U.S. Campaign to End the Israeli
Occupation, and the Israel/Palestine Mission Network of the
Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) have actively supported the church’s
position. The New York City-based Jews Against the Occupation wrote in
a letter to the PC(USA) that divestment was “an important step forward
for peace and justice in Israel and Palestine.”
“Economic sanctions against Israel are not invoked against
Israel per se, but against Israel until the occupation ends. With this
proviso it is Israel’s policy of occupation that is targeted, its
status as an occupying power, not Israel itself.”—Dr. Jeff Halper, an
American-Israeli Jew and director, Israeli Committee Against House
Demolitions (ICAHD)
8. Precedent for Disvestment: South Africa
No less an authority on human rights than Anglican Archbishop Desmond Tutu
has said that he believes the Israeli government is in some respects
worse than the South African apartheid government. At an October 2007
conference in Boston, the South African Nobel Peace Prize laureate
cited what he described as the Israeli government’s use of “collective
punishment” of Palestinians, and criticized the Israeli government for
brutality and what he described as “gross violations of human rights.”
Tutu, who has condemned suicide terrorism against Israel and
recognized the Jewish state’s right to secure boundaries, and was even
honored in 2003 by Yeshiva University’s law school with an award for
promoting world peace, also wrote an op-ed in the Boston Globe in which he stated:
What do I see and hear in the Holy Land? Some
people cannot move freely from one place to another. A wall separates
them from their families and from their incomes. They cannot tend to
their gardens at home or to their lessons at school. They are
arbitrarily demeaned at checkpoints and unnecessarily beleaguered by
capricious applications of bureaucratic red tape. I grieve for the
damage being done daily to people’s souls and bodies. I have to tell
the truth: I am reminded of the yoke of oppression that was once our
burden in South Africa.
While his comments attracted substantial criticism from some within the Jewish community, Abraham
Foxman, national director of the Anti-Defamation League, had the
following reaction: “Tutu has certainly been an outspoken, sometimes
very harsh critic of Israel and Israeli policies, but certainly is not
an anti-Semite and should not be so characterized.”
Within this context, it is important to remember the history
of past General Assembly actions: in 1985, MRTI proposed a policy of
phased, selective divestment from corporations doing business in South
Africa. The purpose of this approach was to keep the focus on the
corporations involved, to permit other shareholder strategies to bear
fruit if possible, and to make more feasible a “sustained and widening
strategy of interpretation and education of church members and the
general public.” The policy also acknowledged that total divestment
might be impossible for large portfolios, and that the fiduciary
responsibility of trustees might limit such actions as well. Clearly,
some divestment was feasible, and MRTI felt that a phased, selective
approach would permit the church to test whatever limits might exist
while proceeding with an approach that promised more public and
corporate impact.
“The policy named four companies that year as the first to be
divested, and in subsequent years through 1991, twelve others were
added to the divestment list. As companies pulled out of South Africa
they were removed from the list, and finally, after apartheid was ended
in 1993, the policy was rescinded and all remaining companies were
removed from the divestment list.”—William Somplansky-Jarman, The Presbyterian Church as Investor
Archbishop Tutu concludes: “If Apartheid ended,
so can the Occupation. But the moral force and international pressure
will have to be just as determined. The current divestment effort is
the first, though certainly not the only, necessary move in that
direction.”
9. Peacemaking: A Believer’s Calling
We live in a time of kairos
when humanity stands on the border of a promised time,
when God’s people are summoned to obedience and faithfulness
to preserve God’s creation,
to stand with the poor and oppressed everywhere, and
to stand together as the people of the earth;
when with confession and with humility we repent of
our blindness to the division and war in our own hearts
and in our own land,
our obsession with money and our pursuit of power,
our irrational belief in security through weaponry, and
our worship of secular gods.
We are called
to be obedient to Jesus Christ, the Prince of Peace,
who loves the whole world and
who invites us to be stewards of the earth and servants of his people,
to be co-workers in the new Creation.
Let us be peacemakers.
Let us be called the children of God,
speaking boldly with moral conviction to the nation and to the world,
building, with God’s grace, a new moral order in the world community; and
acting now for world peace, an enterprise of justice, an outcome of love.
10. Conclusion
“Enough is enough. No more words without deeds. It is time for
action.” This was the message that Christians in Palestine and Israel
delivered to the WCC International Peace Conference “Churches Together
for Peace and Justice in the Middle East” held in Amman, Jordan, in
June 2007. “Risk the curses and abuse that will be aimed at you and
stand in solidarity with us and with our Palestinian brothers and
sisters of all faiths….”
Our church provided great hope to many Christians, Jews, and
Muslims in the Middle East when we began a process of corporate
engagement with American companies profiting from the occupation. After
four years, corporate engagement with Caterpillar and Motorola has
produced no results. If we fail to take the next step of actual
divestment, we lose credibility and dash the hopes of those who
languish under Israel’s oppressive military occupation. Now is the time
to divest from these two companies.