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The ‘Iranian Lobby’ and the Rights Watch Uncomfortable Middle Eastern questions for two American NGOs. [Omar Shakir / Trita Parsi]
WSJ ^ | 2.5.2026 | Editorial Board

Posted on 02/12/2026 6:08:47 AM PST by Words Matter

Two stories about NGOs—the nongovernmental organizations that news reporters love to quote to smuggle their own views as someone else’s analysis—caught our eye this week. And not only for reasons of schadenfreude. The first concerns Trita Parsi, executive vice president of the Quincy Institute, which supports an isolationist U.S. foreign policy. Mr. Parsi previously founded and led the National Iranian American Council, or NIAC, which advocates friendlier U.S. policy toward the Tehran regime. ... The second story concerns Human Rights Watch, the watchdog captured long ago by anti-Israel obsessives. On Tuesday its “Israel/Palestine director” resigned, denouncing Human Rights Watch for not being anti-Israel enough. Omar Shakir says the top brass blocked his team’s report accusing Israel of a “crime against humanity[sic]” for not accepting a Palestinian “right of return.” The latter is the idea, required nowhere else, that Israel must accept the millions of descendants of the Palestinians Arabs displaced in the 1948 war they started until there’s no longer a Jewish state...

(Excerpt) Read more at wsj.com ...


TOPICS: Politics
KEYWORDS: ahmadshukeiri; apartheidslur; coverup; hrw; iran; islamofascism; ngos; niac; omarshakir; quincyinstitute; randpaul; thomasmassie; tritaparsi

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Both are lobbyists for garbage. TRITA PARSI for his Islamic fascist Republic Nullahcracy and ex HRW's racist-Arab-Islamic OMAR SHAKIR = BDSr.
1 posted on 02/12/2026 6:08:47 AM PST by Words Matter
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To: Words Matter

Human Rights Watch’s Frankenstein moment.

The watchdog I once worked for rewarded divisive, aggressive tactics — especially when aimed at Israel. Now the forces it nurtured have turned on it.

Danielle Haas. Feb 10, 2026.

There’s a moment in Frankenstein when Victor, the young scientist who creates the novel’s monster, finally understands what he has done — the creature he assembled and failed to restrain is no longer wandering the world. It is coming for him.

Human Rights Watch is living through its own version of that reckoning — and it has only itself to blame.

In an extraordinary rupture last week, Omar Shakir — a former BDS activist who became HRW’s Israel-Palestine director — broke with the organization after a decade at the center of its most sweeping legal accusations against Israel.

Shakir was a driving force in HRW’s role as the first major US organization to brand Israel an apartheid state in 2021, and to accuse it of genocide four years later. His latest push was to have the organization declare that by denying Palestinian refugees and their descendants a “right of return,” Israel is committing “crimes against humanity.” A draft report was underway.

When HRW paused the document “pending further analysis and research,” Shakir went scorched earth. He resigned, along with an assistant researcher, in a made-for-media exit. Accusing his former employer of placing fear of political backlash above a commitment to international law, he declared he had “lost my faith” in the integrity of HRW’s work and in its “commitment to principled reporting on the facts and application of the law.”

He even took a swipe at Ken Roth, HRW’s former leader and his one-time mentor, after Roth publicly branded the report “utterly unpublishable” and said its novel legal theory lacked sufficient support in law.

Some 200 current and former human rights researchers reportedly signed a letter criticizing HRW’s leadership over its handling of the shelved report and Shakir’s resignation.

Dramatic, for sure. Predictable, entirely.

Shakir’s tactics were not deviations. They were the logical outcome of habits the institution had long tolerated — even rewarded — when they advanced approved narratives. Over time, small permissions sent a clear signal: toxic behavior was acceptable, limits were flexible, standards negotiable.

I saw those habits take hold firsthand.

In 2019 and 2021, I raised concerns with multiple senior staff members about what I saw as a growing “lack of proportionality, context, and balance” in work. I warned that internal discourse was drifting away from HRW’s stated values and that published work “in structure, content, and tone does not meet basic standards of balance and professionalism.” There was no meaningful response.

By 2022, resistance to internal scrutiny was more explicit. The Israel-Palestine chapter of the World Report — HRW’s global review of abuses that I oversaw — became a battleground.

One exchange involved the trial of Mohammed al-Halabi, a World Vision employee. The draft described the proceedings as a “mockery of due process.” But it did not mention the charges against him — that he was accused of funneling money to Hamas. When I asked Shakir to note the charges, as per normal standards of balance, he declined, saying, “The charges are wild.”

In emails sent over my head, Shakir said my review “smacked of being selective.”

A manager reminded him that I reviewed all chapters, including his, and backed my position: “We should never mention a case without mentioning what the charges are. If we think the charges are not credible, we should explain why.” It was a relief — but rare.

For the most part, managers placated, ignored, and excused. “This has been mostly instructive as to how things appear to work with Omar and who calls the shots,” I wrote to a manager after several bruising rounds with Shakir. “Three of us raised issues, including yourself, and in a call to me, you said various elements that remain are not acceptable. And yet you totally back down.”

Accommodation often reflected ideological alignment. But it also sometimes reflected quiet capitulation by an older guard increasingly overwhelmed by strident activist tactics. Watching them try to restrain the shift was like watching Canute try to hold back the tide. “I’m torn between saying the future is clear and I’m not part of it — and taking a stand,” one told me. “It depends how much energy I have on any given day.”

Whatever energy did exist proved insufficient; an increasingly divisive, outraged, aggressive way of doing business continued to gain ground. Foreshadowing last week’s petition signed by 200 staff, Shakir played a key role in rallying some 120 employees after October 7 to pressure senior managers to include references to Israeli “apartheid” in a press release about hostages.

“Argumentation” and “balance” were giving way to “messaging” and “narrative” — increasingly amplified by a new, under-the-radar partner: celebrities.

In the days after October 7, staff referenced talks with “Disney,” “top-tier celebrities,” and the “Hadid sisters” — American-Palestinian influencers Gigi and Bella Hadid, whose rhetoric since has included very familiar language: Israeli “apartheid,” colonialism, and ethnic cleansing.

Human Rights Watch’s own methodology holds that while individuals commit abuses, responsibility ultimately rests with the institutions that enable, direct, or fail to restrain them.

Its public fallout with Shakir is a lesson for institutions that believe they can harness ideology and activism — even when doing so strains their own standards — without those same forces eventually turning inward and coming for them too.

https://blogs.timesofisrael.com/human-rights-watchs-frankenstein-moment/


2 posted on 02/12/2026 6:11:27 AM PST by Words Matter
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To: Words Matter

When you read NGO, you should think corruption. NGOs are financed with a mixture of government grants and private money. But they do what they want. They give them selves nice names like. Stop Hatred or Save Women, or Give Peace a chance, or The coalition To Save The Planet. But they actually buy and sell politicians and pay their top executives millions of dollars. NGOs do what is illegal for governments to do. And sometimes they just take money and give it to criminals. NGOs are very very bad. They should be illegal.


3 posted on 02/12/2026 6:18:11 AM PST by poinq
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To: Words Matter

Israel was called an Apartheid state back in the 1980s when South Africa was an Apartheid state. HRW was nowhere close to the first to point that out. But I would look at the people of South Africa then and now. Be careful what you wish for. Most people in South Africa don’t think its a better place now that its not segregated. And in fact it is still segregated. Its just that the lines are drawn differently.


4 posted on 02/12/2026 6:26:59 AM PST by poinq
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To: poinq

Actually it was Hitler’s helper Ahmad Shukeiri who came up with the apartheid slur in 1961, a year before he promoted [11.30.62] the tacuara neo nazis who guarded Mengele and Elchmann in Argentina. He is infamous for his 1967 “none of them will survive” genocidal addmision.
In his 1969 book he wrote that they all , Arab fakestinians, cheered and prayed for Hitler.
In 1946, with Jamal Husseini he rationalized the Holocaust.

___

“‎Behind the British Conspiracy”. B’nai B’rith Messenger. July 12, 1946.
‘...I met Achmed Shukeiri, chief of the Arab office, who restituted in his conversation the words of Goebbels, justified the murder of six million Jews of Europe, because Hitler could not have been all wrong . ...where the hearings of the Anglo-American Inquiry committee were being held at the time, I met Jamal el Husseini, he issued the same warning as Shukeiri.. and reiterated his justification of the mass murder of six million Jews for Hitler couldnt be all wrong . . . you have got to see both sides of a question , my man , both sides of a question . . Jamel Husseini saw both sides so well that he joined in igniting, at a time most critical for the Allies, the Iraq coup d’etat in an effort to gauleiter the Middle East into Hitler’s Welt-Raum scheme...’
https://www.nli.org.il/en/newspapers/bbh/1946/07/12/01/article/47

Elie Kedourie (Professor of Politics Emeritus). (1974). Arabic Political Memoirs and Other Studies. Psychology Press, p. 189.
“Our sympathies were with the Axis powers being led by Hitler...our prayers...”
https://books.google.com/books?id=pJkH06fTLD8C&pg=PA189

“Antiwar Group Warns Public of PLO Leader Shukairy.” The Detroit Jewish News, February 3, 1967
...pro-Hitler activities...
https://digital.bentley.umich.edu/djnews/djn.1967.02.03.001/9.

“Fundamentally Freund: Recalling the menace of May 1967.” Jerusalem Post. May 17, 2017 — ... Shukairy glibly stated on June 1 that, “Those who survive will remain in Palestine. I estimate that none of them will survive.”
https://www.jpost.com/opinion/fundamentally-freund-recalling-the-menace-of-may-1967-492042

1961: Genocidal pro-Nazi Arab leader: Ahmad Shukairy, ‘father’ of ‘Apartheid’ slander
https://www.danielpipes.org/comments/186160


5 posted on 02/12/2026 8:32:21 AM PST by Words Matter
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To: Words Matter

When people are trying to justify what is not justifiable, they will say anything. That is called rationalizing. Rationalizing is not proof of anything. Like when you put a gun to someones head, they will not tell you the truth. They will tell you what they think you want to hear.


6 posted on 02/12/2026 8:51:38 AM PST by poinq
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