Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Distinguished members of the House of Commons, ladies and gentlemen, I'm honoured to be before you today to discuss a particular aspect of human rights in Iran that affects the entire Middle East, if not the world.
I am here to speak about Iran's state-sponsored incitement to genocide; in particular, the apocalyptic urgings of Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad directed at the State of Israel. As you know, Ahmadinejad has called for Israel to be wiped off the map. He has referred to Israeli Jews as animals and other terrible things, and he has asked that they be removed from the Middle East.
I come here today with a certain sense of moral outrage. Since when is it acceptable for a world leader to advocate the destruction of another country? And in that context, is it not problematic for that same leader to dehumanize the people of that country? How is it that we can abide this leader calling for deportation of an entire people from its own country? Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has been doing this in relation to the state and people of Israel since 2005.
I am here today to tell you that I believe something must be done about it. Many solutions could be proposed--UN resolutions, economic sanctions, even military responses. But today I would ask that you consider dealing with Ahmadinejad in a manner some might consider novel or even impossible: taking legal action. I think this is possible because Ahmadinejad has committed two kinds of actionable international crimes; incitement to genocide and crimes against humanity.
Let me begin with genocide, and let me emphasize that genocide does not happen overnight. It is a long, meticulous process that requires persistent thought conditioning, and again, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has been engaged in that process since he became President of Iran in 2005. His infamous October 2005 exhortation that Israel should be wiped off the face of the map may have garnered the most press coverage, but his inflammatory statements since then have been equally effective at persuading Iranians and the rest of the world to visualize a Middle East cleared of Israeli Jews. Not only has Ahmadinejad regularly continued to urge and prophesy their elimination, but he has variously referred to Israeli Jews as animals, barbarians, and mass murderers.
Many think that incitement consists only of direct and explicit requests for mass murder. I submit that when it is anchored to direct calls, there are other types of incitement. In the case of Ahmadinejad, we can see seven different categories: first, calling for Israel's destruction; second, predicting Israel's destruction; third, dehumanizing Israeli Jews; fourth, accusing Israel of perpetrating mass murder and seeking world domination; fifth, condoning past violence against Israelis and issuing threats against those who would protect Israel; sixth, advocating expulsion of Israeli Jews from the Middle East; and seventh, denying the Holocaust.
Let me give you some examples of each of these.
As far as calls for destruction are concerned, Ahmadinejad has publicly called for the annihilation of the State of Israel on several occasions. In addition to his October 2005 wipe-off-the-map speech, he has stated that “the Zionist regime...cannot survive” and “...can...not continue its existence”.
During the Israel-Hezbollah military conflict, he stated that the “real cure for the [Lebanon] conflict is elimination of the Zionist regime”. Last year he focused his eliminationist invectives specifically on Israeli Jews when he told the French newspaper Le Monde that “these false people, these fabricated people”--the Israeli people--“cannot continue to exist”.
He has also predicted Israel's destruction, and I submit that this is a form of incitement as well. He has done this on numerous occasions. He has stated that Israel is heading toward annihilation and elimination and that it soon will be wiped out. He publicly warned Israeli Jews that their country will one day vanish, will be gone definitely, and that they are nearing the last days of their lives. Furthermore, as Israel defended itself against Hezbollah attacks in the summer of 2006, Ahmadinejad said the Jewish state had “pushed the button of its own destruction”. Last May, as Israel celebrated the sixth decade of its existence, Ahmadinejad told an audience that Israel was “dying” and its 60th anniversary festivities were an attempt to prevent its “annihilation”.
In an address to the UN General Assembly on September 23, 2008, Ahmadinejad stated that “Israel was on the path to collapse”, and more recently he told the Los Angeles Times that Israel “resembles an airplane that has lost its engine and is kind of going down”. He added, “This will benefit everyone.” He has also on repeated occasions dehumanized Israeli Jews. He has called their country a blot and a stain. He has described Israel as a “rotten, dried tree” that will be eliminated by one “storm”. He asked an audience if Israeli Jews were human beings and answered his own question in the negative. I quote: “They are like cattle, nay, more misguided. A bunch of bloodthirsty barbarians. Next to them, all the criminals of the world seem righteous”.
In October 2007 he told a large gathering of Iranians that Israel's continued existence was “an insult to human dignity”, and in January 2008 he referred to the Jewish state as filthy. In the following month he variously described Israel to supporters at a rally as “filthy bacteria”, “a wild beast”, and a “scarecrow”. He told the UN General Assembly last September that Israelis are “criminals and murderers”, and that they are “acquisitive” and “deceitful” and dominate global finance despite their “minuscule” number.
He's also accused Israelis of mass murder and world domination. He has told audiences, for instance, that Israeli Jews have allowed themselves “to kill the Palestinian people...who are burning in the crimes of Zionists”. He referred to residents of the Jewish state as having “no boundaries, limits or taboos when it comes to killing human beings”. He said at another public gathering that Israeli Jews are “fighting a war against humanity”. In October 2007 he accused Israel of committing genocide against the Palestinians, and in September 2008 he told the UN General Assembly that the “underhanded actions” of Israel were among the causes of violence in the former Soviet Republic of Georgia.
At a Holocaust conference at Sharif University of Technology in Tehran on January 27, 2009, Ahmadinejad stated:
Today the Zionists dominate many of the world's centers of power, wealth, and media. Unfortunately, they have ensnared many politicians and parties, and they are plundering the wealth and assets of nations in this way, depriving peoples of their freedoms and destroying their cultures and human values by spreading their nexus of corruption.
He has also condoned violence against Israelis and threatened anyone who would support Israel. For example, in his October 25, 2005, speech, he commented approvingly regarding Palestinian terrorist attacks against Israel: “There is no doubt that the new wave of attacks in Palestine will erase this stain [Israel] from the face of Islam”. And in the same speech he issued threats against those who would come to Israel's aid, declaring that “Anybody who recognizes Israel will burn in the fire of the Islamic nation's fury”.
Ahmadinejad has also publicly advocated for the expulsion of Israeli Jews from the Middle East. He once exclaimed that Jews had “no roots in Palestine”, and he urged their removal to Germany or Austria. On another occasion, he asked that Israeli Jews be removed to Europe, the continental United States, Canada, or Alaska.
I think, perhaps most importantly, Ahmadinejad has consistently denied the existence of the Holocaust in public. In December 2005 he said, “They have created a myth that Jews were massacred and place this above God, religions and the prophets.” At Ahmadinejad's urging, the Institute for Political and International Studies, an arm of the Iranian foreign ministry, held a two-day conference in December 2006, entitled “Review of the Holocaust: Global Vision”. Ahmadinejad addressed the conference, as did other holocaust deniers, including former Ku Klux Klan leader David Duke and Nazi sympathizers such as French professor Robert Faurisson.
At a Holocaust conference at Sharif University of Technology in Tehran, on January 27, 2009, Ahmadinejad stated:
For 60 years they allowed no one to question and cast doubt on the logic of the Holocaust and its very essence - because if the truth were to be exposed, nothing would remain of their logic of liberal democracy. It is the very advocates of liberal democracy who defend the Holocaust, who have sanctified it to the point where none may enter. Breaking the padlock of the Holocaust and re-examining it will be tantamount to cutting the vital arteries of the Zionist regime. It will destroy the philosophical foundation and raison d'être of this regime.
I invite the dear researchers, intellectuals, young people and students, who are the trailblazers, to re-examine not only the Holocaust, but also its consequences and aftermath and inform others of their studies and research. Let us not forget that more than ever before, the Zionist network, which came up with the issue of the Holocaust, must be exposed, and be presented to the peoples as it really is.
So by this last category, Ahmadinejad has been trying to chip away methodically at perhaps the most imposing moral and ethical bulwark against the launch of another Jewish genocide, the existence of the Holocaust.
Were Ahmadinejad's words the sole problem? Perhaps we could simply try to plug our ears and tune out his genocidal rhetoric, but those words have been uttered within the context of Iran's long-standing eliminationist policy toward Israel. Ahmadinejad's murderous exhortations have been accompanied by his financing, training, and working with radical Islamist terrorist groups bent on destroying Israel--Hezbollah, Hamas, and Islamic Jihad.
In fact, Ahmadinejad's rhetoric can be tied to his support of the terrorists. As Hezbollah was firing thousands of rockets on innocent Israeli civilians at the height at the Israeli-Hezbollah war, Ahmadinejad stated that the real cure to the Lebanon conflict is the elimination of the Zionist regime.
Then there are Iran's nuclear ambitions. The Islamic republic has passed one of the most significant hurdles to developing a nuclear weapons capacity by converting yellowcake into uranium hexafluoride gas. It is now making strides at the next advanced stage of development, spinning the gas through thousands of centrifuges it has installed in an underground enrichment plant it built secretly in Natanz, south of Tehran. As a result, certain experts now believe that Iran may be capable of building an atomic bomb within the next couple of years.
As a result of that, on July 31, 2006, as you know, the UN Security Council, including Russia and China, ordered Iran to stop its enrichment program. Iran thumbed its nose at the Security Council, which followed up with three resolutions in December 2006, March 2007, and March 2008, repeating its demands and applying sanctions. The European Union has imposed its own sanctions, targeting loans to companies trading with Iran and allowing for tougher cargo inspections of Iranian imports and exports.
Although a November 2007 U.S. national intelligence estimate stated that Iran technically halted its nuclear weapons program in 2003, the country has apparently only suspended attempts to construct a warhead. This is seemingly the easiest and quickest step in creating nuclear weapons. According to various experts, though, this may be less important than Tehran's accelerated production of fissile material and success at increasing the range of its missiles, much more difficult hurdles to overcome in the nuclear weapon production process.
Iran's vast oil reserves, its defiant, long-standing, clandestine nuclear activity, and its parading of Shahab-3 missiles capable of hitting Tel Aviv and festooned with words such as “death to Israel” suggest less than peaceful motives. Consistent with this, last year the UN's nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency, released a report calling weaponization the one major unsolved issue relevant to the nature of Iran's nuclear program.
Given the totality of circumstances, legal precedents from the Rwandan genocide prosecutions teach that Ahmadinejad's urging to liquidate Israel could be charged as a direct and public incitement to genocide and crimes against humanity. From those cases, we can cull the essential elements of incitement. To determine if an utterance constitutes incitement, the finder of fact must consider where the utterance was issued. In other words, is it sufficiently public? Second, what is the interpretation by the audience? In other words, is it sufficiently direct? Third is its content. Is it permissible free speech or criminal incitement? Fourth is the state of mind or, as we say in the law, the mens rea of the person uttering the words. In other words, is there sufficient intent?
The other key question is whether in transmitting the content of the message at issue, as I just mentioned a moment ago, the defendant has engaged in the permissible exercise of free speech or non-protected hate advocacy. These cases I just mentioned identify four criteria through which speech content regarding race or ethnicity should be analyzed as either legitimate expression or criminal advocacy: first, the purpose of the speech; second, the text itself; third, the context; and finally, the relationship between the speaker and the subject. Time does not permit me to parse each of these elements today. In a recent article I published in the Northwestern University Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology, however, I demonstrate how the entire body of Ahmadinejad's vicious words satisfy these criteria.
Based on the Rwandan cases, we also know that for Ahmadinejad's rants against Israel to constitute crimes against humanity, his advocacy would have to be part of a widespread or systematic attack directed against any civilian population with knowledge of the attack. Given the absence of direct Iranian attacks on Israeli civilians, this could be proved by tying Ahmadinejad's calls for Israel's destruction to attacks on Israeli civilians by Iran's clients: Hezbollah, Hamas, and Islamic Jihad.
Moreover, to convict an accused of crimes against humanity, it must be proved that the crimes were related to the attack on a civilian population. I believe the available evidence suggests that Ahmadinejad's “eliminate Israel” advocacy would be related to the attacks on Israeli civilians, seemingly sponsored by Ahmadinejad and perpetrated by Hezbollah and Islamic Jihad. As I mentioned a few minutes ago, Ahmadinejad advocated Israel's destruction as Hezbollah with Iran's sponsorship and support attacked Israeli civilians.
With respect to jurisdiction, although Iran is not a member of the International Criminal Court, the case could be heard by the ICC upon referral from the Security Council. This would be akin to the ICC's current Darfur case, and that case provides precedent for the ICC indicting a sitting head of state, in this case Omar al-Bashir. Unfortunately, incitement charges have never been filed in the absence of subsequent mass atrocity, and so it is unlikely they would be filed here. Certainly one of the lessons we should draw from this is that incitement law should turn its current focus from post-atrocity prosecution and punishment to pre-atrocity deterrence. That is the true purpose of the incitement crime. It is not enough to punish it after the mass graves have been filled.
Assuming Security Council referral to the ICC is not politically realistic--and I think that's a good assumption--Canada or other nations with proper laws on their books could alternatively prosecute Ahmadinejad in their own courts under the principle of universal jurisdiction. Pursuant to its Crimes Against Humanity and War Crimes Act, Canada can prosecute both genocide and crimes against humanity perpetrated outside of Canada by persons who are not Canadian citizens. These are jus cogens crimes, and when they are committed, all nations have a duty to prosecute them. By doing so, Canada would be vindicating the interests of the global citizenry.
Even if such a criminal prosecution is not possible in the current climate, it would be possible to bring a civil action against Iran in the International Court of Justice, pursuant to article 9 of the genocide convention. The Australian government has spoken seriously about doing this but has not yet taken action. I would urge the Canadian government to do so. Both Iran and Canada are signatories to the genocide convention. At the very least, a resolution directed against Iran from the UN Security Council or General Assembly or even another organ such as the Human Rights Council would send the message that such calls for violence will not be tolerated. I urge all governments, including Canada's, to push for such a resolution.
Perhaps such a course of action does not seem terribly urgent at this time. After all, our 24-hour news cycle culture feeds itself on sensational sound bites that saturate the air waves and are quickly replaced by new tabloid outbursts. Right now we are in a lull between Ahmadinejad's extreme genocidal utterances, and this is precisely when we should be considering the bigger picture regarding Ahmadinejad. His verbal assaults are meant to work by accretion. Little by little, they persuade his fellow countrymen that Israel must be eliminated.
Should we tune out the Iranian President between sound bites and simply wait until his country has operable weapons of mass destruction? Let us remember our history books and not fall prey to such complacency.
Professor Gregory Stanton of Genocide Watch, who unfortunately wasn't able to be with us today, has written about the eight stages of genocide. The first is classification. The second is symbolization. The third is dehumanization. The fourth is organization. The fifth is polarization. The sixth is preparation. The seventh is extermination. The eighth is denial.
In the case of Iran and Israel, perhaps we have already gotten to the sixth stage, preparation. Perhaps that's what Iran's development of nuclear capacity is all about.
How costly would it be to wait and find out if that's what's really going on? We have heard the warning signs. We have seen the red flags. What is the world waiting for? The Armenians of Turkey, the Jews of Nazi Germany, the Tutsis of Rwanda, the Muslims of Bosnia, and most recently, the victims in Darfur were slaughtered after being dehumanized and targeted through a steady stream of verbal attacks, and the world stood by.
Why don't we try a different approach this time? We could consider economic sanctions, but they have often proved porous and ineffectual. Given that Iran has sequestered much of its nuclear program and compartmentalized underground installations, it seems highly unlikely that surgical strikes alone could derail its nuclear ambitions. A full-blown military attack, on the other hand, would spark a regional conflagration and possibly a new world war.
There is another way. Prosecuting Ahmadinejad for incitement to commit genocide and crimes against humanity would avoid bloodshed, enforce the rule of law, help erode the culture of impunity, and allow the inchoate crime of incitement to fulfill its most important objective: deterrence.
In the alternative, suing Iran at the International Court of Justice could go a long way toward convincing the Iranians and the rest of the world that Iran's present course of action is illegal and must be stopped. At the very least, a UN resolution from either the Security Council or the General Assembly, or one of the other organs, would serve notice that Ahmadinejad's incitement is actionable and unacceptable
It is not too late. We are being given yet another chance to prevent genocide. Let us not fail this time.
Thank you.