Israel
FM Livni: UN Must Defend Democracy Against Terrorism

By Israel
News Agency Staff
Jerusalem ---- October 5, 2007...... The following was communicated
by the Israel Foreign Ministry and the Israel Government Press
Office to the Israel News Agency.
The
following speech was made by Israel Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni
to the UN General Assembly in New York on 1 October 2007.
Today,
from this podium, I call on the international community to adopt
at the global level what democracies apply at the national one
- a universal set of standards for participation in genuine
democratic elections.
Three
thousand years ago, the people of Israel journeyed from slavery
in Egypt to independence in the land of Israel. The Bible tells
us that on their voyage to liberty they made a crucial stop:
the giving of the Ten Commandments at Mount Sinai. As the General
Assembly gathers this year, the Jewish people recall that historic
journey by marking the festival of Sukkot. And every year, at
this time, our people remember that the long march to freedom
requires the acceptance of humanitys basic values.
For
sixty years, since the rebirth of our state in our ancient homeland,
with Jerusalem at its heart, Israel has not lost sight of this
principle. The core values of tolerance, co-existence and peace
that lie at the heart of every democracy must be protected within
societies and promoted between them. This is the calling of
our generation.
The
conflict in our region is driven by those who reject these core
values - those who seek power without responsibility; those
whose aim is not to realize their own rights, but to deny those
rights for others. At its heart, this is a conflict not about
territory, but about values.
There
is, of course, a territorial dimension to our dispute. Israel
knows this and, as we have proven in the past, we are prepared
for the territorial compromise that lasting peace entails. But
we also know - especially after withdrawing from Lebanon and
Gaza - that territorial withdrawal by itself will not bring
peace unless we address the core clash of values that lies beneath
the conflict.
Israel
may be on the front lines of this battle, but it is not our
fight alone. This is a global battle. The notion that this battle
was a local one - limited to isolated regions - collapsed in
this city with the Twin Towers on a September morning six years
ago.
Today
it is clear that the extremists are engaged in a bloody war
against civilians and communities, against hearts and minds,
in every corner of the world. And it is clear too, that the
Middle East conflict is not a cause of this global extremist
agenda, but a consequence of it.
Yes,
it is up to the parties in the Middle East to settle their political
conflict - and Israel, for its part, desires to do so. But for
success to be genuine and lasting, you - the nations of the
world - need to be partners in a shared global struggle against
the extremism and terror that feed conflict, for your sake,
not just for ours.
It is in this spirit, that I would like to speak today about
resolving our particular conflict, but also about the wider
battle being waged today - the battle that affects us all.
This
battle is global not just because it targets civilians everywhere,
but also because the extremists have taken aim at the fundamental
pillars of every modern society: democracy, tolerance and education.
These are the new battlefields of the 21st century, and it is
in these arenas, more than any other, that the future of our
world will be decided.
I
believe in democracy. I believe in its extraordinary power to
produce free and peaceful societies founded on the respect for
human rights. Democracy is a profound ideal, but it is also
a vulnerable one.
Today,
in different parts of the world, terrorists - opposed to the
very ideals of democracy - are entering the democratic process
not to abandon their violent agenda but to advance it. As a
spokesman for Al Qaeda recently declared, We will use
your democracy to destroy your democracy.
This
should be a wake up-call for all of us. It is time to reclaim
democracy, and this begins by rejecting those who abuse it.
Genuine
democracy is about values before it is about voting. No true
democracy on earth allows armed militia, or groups with racist
or violent agendas, to participate in elections. But some demonstrate
a troubling double standard. There are some who insist on high
standards in their own country, but forget them when they look
abroad. Violent extremists who could never run for office at
home, are treated as legitimate politicians when elected elsewhere.
As a result, we empower those who use democratic means to advance
anti-democratic ends. And we strengthen the forces of those
who not only undermine their societies but threaten our own.
Today,
from this podium, I call on the international community to adopt
at the global level what democracies apply at the national one
- a universal set of standards for participation in genuine
democratic elections. We need a universal democratic code that
requires that all those seeking the legitimacy of the democratic
process, earn it by respecting such principles as state monopoly
over the lawful use of force, the rejection of racism and violence,
and the protection of the rights of others.
The
goal of such a universal code is not to dictate our values or
to stifle legitimate voices with which we may disagree. Its
goal is to protect core democratic values from those determined
to use the democratic system against itself; and to make clear
that participation in the democratic process is not just a right
- it is also a responsibility.
I
know that the temptation to engage with extremists can be strong.
It may seem to promise stability and quiet. We may hope that
by feeding the beast we can gradually tame it. As free societies,
we pride ourselves - rightly - on our respect for difference
and diversity. But we do a disservice to diversity when, in
its name, we tolerate the intolerant.
Bitter
experience has shown that buying off terrorists is a short-term
fix - for which we will pay dearly in the long run. Instead,
groups such as Hamas and Hizbullah must be presented with a
clear choice - between the path of violence and the path of
legitimacy. They cannot have both.
And
it is this same stark choice that must be presented to the radical
regime in Iran. No responsible state disagrees that Iran is
the most prominent sponsor of terrorism. It is a major source
of instability and conflict in Iraq, Lebanon, Palestine and
across the entire Middle East, and it is the enemy of Arab-Israeli
co-existence.
None
disagrees that Iran denies the Holocaust and speaks openly of
its desire to wipe a member state - Israel - off the map. And
none disagrees that, in violation of Security Council resolutions,
it is actively pursuing the means to achieve this end.
But
there are still those who, in the name of consensus and engagement,
continue to obstruct the urgent steps which are needed to bring
Iran's sinister ambitions to a halt. Too many see the danger
but walk idly by - hoping that someone else will take care of
it. What is the value, we have to ask, of an organization which
is unable to take effective action in the face of a direct assault
on the very principles it was founded to protect?
It
is time for the United Nations, and the states of the world,
to live up to their promise of never again. To say enough is
enough, to act now and to defend their basic values.
It
is also time, Mr. President, to see this same kind of moral
conviction in the Human Rights Council - so that it can become
a shield for the victims of human rights, not a weapon for its
abusers.
Israel
has never tried to avoid genuine discussion of its human rights
record. But so long as the Council maintains its wildly disproportionate
focus on Israel, it weakens the UNs moral voice, and the
price of this blindness is paid by the victims of human rights
atrocities in Darfur, in Myanmar and throughout the world.
There
is no more accurate forecast for the future of a society than
the lessons it teaches its children. Unfortunately, in our region,
we see children's television programs in which a Mickey Mouse
puppet teaches the glory of being a suicide bomber and a seven
year old girl sings of her dreams of blood and battle.
Religion,
rather than being a source of hope and spiritual healing, is
abused as a call to arms, as God is dragged once again onto
the field of battle. It is time to reclaim religion from those
who have made it a weapon rather than a shelter. It is time
to reclaim education from those who use it as a tool of hate,
rather than of opportunity.
As
always, the most powerful form of education - and the hardest
- is to teach by example. We cannot expect our younger generation
to value what we are not prepared ourselves to protect and pay
a price for. And there is a price to pay. From the leader who
has to withstand public pressures. From the businessman who
has to forgo economic opportunity. From the teacher and spiritual
guide who must find the inner strength to teach truth and tolerance
in a climate of extremism and hostility.
At
all levels of society, there is a price to be paid. But if we
do not pay it today, we, and those who follow us, will face
a far greater bill tomorrow.
These thoughts are in my mind as we seek today to advance the
cause of Israeli-Palestinian reconciliation. Reconciliation
is not about deciding who was right or wrong in the past - it
is about sharing a common vision and a common responsibility
for the future.
In the last months, Israel Prime Minister Olmert and Palestinian
President Abbas have been engaged in a sincere and genuine effort
to reach the widest possible common ground on political understandings.
There is no substitute for the bilateral process. Failure is
not an option - but it is for the parties themselves to define
success.
The
foundation for true peace lies in the vision of two states,
Israel and Palestine, living side by side in peace and security.
The world shares this vision, but it is also important that
it clearly embraces the two core principles that emerge from
it.
The
first - two states, two homelands: just as Israel is homeland
to the Jewish people, so Palestine will be established as the
homeland and the national answer for the Palestinian people,
including the refugees.
The
second - living side by side in peace and security: just as
a viable and prosperous Palestine in the West Bank and Gaza
is an Israeli interest, so a secure Israel must be a Palestinian
interest. The world cannot afford another terror state.
Guided
by these principles, the parties can define a common border
and turn the two-state vision from a dream into a reality.
To
succeed, we must set our sights on a brighter future, while
responding to the challenges of the present and learning the
lessons of the past. As we make progress on concrete political
understandings, it is just as important to change reality on
the ground - to show Palestinians and Israelis that the promise
of peace exists in practice, not just on paper.
In
recent months, Israel has taken tangible measures to create
a better environment, and we are ready to do more. We know that
Palestinian life is full of day to day hardship. We know also
- only too well - of the burden of terror Israelis bear, and
of our primary obligation to their security. Together, we can
change this reality - we do not need to submit to it.
Israel
is not naive. We can see the difficulties ahead and the enemies
of peace that stand in our way. But practical progress is possible
in those areas where there is an effective Palestinian government
that accepts the Quartet principles and implements, alongside
Israel, existing Road Map obligations.
As
the parties take the risks for peace, we look to the international
community and the Arab and Muslim world, to offer support, not
to stipulate conditions.
This
support comes in many forms. It comes through economic and political
assistance to the new Palestinian government, committed to co-existence
and seeking to build the foundations of a peaceful and prosperous
state. It comes through clear endorsement of any political understandings
reached between the parties. It comes through enhancing and
deepening regional ties and cooperation between the Arab world
and Israel, while in parallel we make advancement towards Israeli-Palestinian
peace. And, finally, it comes by confronting those determined
to prevent us from succeeding.
We
must stand up to those who have no respect for human life or
human liberty - those who hold the captive soldiers Gilad Shalit,
Udi Goldwasser and Eldad Regev - whose families are with us
here today, and whose pain remains always in our hearts.
We
must stand up to those who, after we withdrew from Gaza to give
a chance for peace, chose not to build but to destroy, and choose
- on a daily basis - to target Israeli homes and kindergartens
with their missiles.
And
we must stand up to those who see democracy as a tool to advance
hate, who see tolerance as a one-way street, and who see education
as a means to poison the minds of the next generation.
Ladies
and Gentleman, I believe that, despite all the obstacles, there
is a new moment of opportunity, and an alliance of interest
that favors peace. Time is of the essence. We owe it to ourselves
and to our children to find both the courage and the wisdom
to make the right choices in the right way.
On
this festival of Sukkot, Jews commemorate the journey from slavery
to freedom by leaving their homes to live in fragile huts, like
the shelters our ancestors lived in on their way to the Promised
Land. For three thousand years these temporary huts - open to
the elements - have been a reminder that stability and security
are ensured not only by the structures that we build but also
by the values that we share.
Perhaps
it is for this reason that the sukkah, this fragile shelter,
has become the Jewish symbol of peace.
As
we turn to Jerusalem and say in our prayers every day:
Spread
over us the tabernacle of your peace.
May it be in our days, and for all nations. Amen.
Since 1995, the Israel News Agency has been vigilant on behalf
of Israel, 365 days a years, 24 hours a day.
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