The UN Human Rights Council inquiry into last year’s Gaza war followed an  all-too predictable course.
The  report of the two-member probe, headed by  former New York Supreme  Court judge Mary McGowan Davis, said “substantial  information” pointed  to “serious violations of international humanitarian law  and  international human rights law by Israel and by Palestinian armed groups   which may amount to war crimes.”
Hamas greeted this conclusion  with  delight. As a lawless terrorist group, it doubtless laughed at a  report merely  pointing to possible war crimes it just might have  committed, having fired  hundreds of rockets and tunneled into Israel  with the express purpose of killing  civilians.  
 The prize, which Davis duly delivered as expected, was falsely  to smear Hamas’s victim Israel for possible war crimes.
The report was,  of course, a travesty.
With  the original inquiry head William Schabas  forced to stand down after  it was revealed he had previously worked for the  terrorist PLO, Davis  merely plowed on with the same kangaroo court: verdict  first, evidence  to follow.
That evidence was partial and skewed: at best,  inconclusive and at worst, willfully, venomously wrong.
For  statistics of  fatalities during the war, Davis used the “UN protection  cluster” numbers drawn  from Israeli and Palestinian organizations,  including Palestinian armed  groups.
But drawing on this range of  sources, including terrorists and  their sympathizers, meant she had no  reliable basis on which to draw any  conclusions.
The only trustworthy figures have come from Israel’s Foreign  Ministry.
After  exhaustively tracking and identifying the dead  Palestinians, this  confirmed that almost half were armed militants belonging to  Hamas or  other terrorist groups.
This ratio of combatant to civilian   casualties was far lower than any other army has ever achieved in the  history of  modern warfare. In most other wars, three times as many  civilians have been  killed. Yet Davis says the IDF should have changed  the way it conducted the war  after understanding the level of civilian  casualties that were  occurring.
Whatever can she mean? The  lengths to which the IDF went to  avoid such casualties – through  leaflets, phone calls, texts and the harmless  explosive warning “knock  on the roof” – are unprecedented, and even cost Israeli  lives.
This  has been attested by numerous experts. The High Level  International  Military Group, whose 11 members included the former NATO Military   Committee chairman Gen.
(ret.) Klaus Naumann of Germany, the  former US  State Department ambassador at large for war crimes issues  Pierre-Richard  Prosper and the former commander of British Forces in  Afghanistan, Col. (ret.)  Richard Kemp, observed: “Israel not only met a  reasonable international standard  of observance of the laws of armed  conflict, but in many cases significantly  exceeded that standard. A  measure of the seriousness with which Israel took its  moral duties and  its responsibilities under the laws of armed conflict is that,  in some  cases, Israel’s scrupulous adherence to the laws of war cost Israeli   soldiers’ and civilians’ lives.”
Indeed, Israel has set this  moral bar so  high that other countries are unlikely to reach it. Willy  Stern, an American law  professor, has quoted Wolff Heintschel von  Heinegg, a German expert on military  law, who said the IDF takes “many  more precautions than are required... [it] is  setting an unreasonable  precedent for other democratic countries of the world  who may also be  fighting in asymmetric wars against brutal non-state actors who  abuse  these laws.”
Davis simply brushed all this aside to arrive at an   immoral equivalence between Hamas terrorists and those defending  innocent  victims against such attacks.
Her report is riddled  with breathtaking  distortions and omissions. For example, she confuses  terrorism with  humanitarianism by pretending that threats by Hamas to  target Israeli targets  such as Ben-Gurion Airport were in fact warnings  to evacuate, similar to those  delivered by Israel to Gazan civilians.  Or she scolds Israel for the blockade of  Gaza even though Egypt had  imposed a more draconian blockade on its own  border.
Davis  relied in the main on accounts provided by NGOs such as  Amnesty  International, Human Rights Watch, B’Tselem or Breaking the Silence   which have no objective fact-finding apparatus and whose purpose is  merely to  attack, demonize and delegitimize Israel.
Davis even  admits that she  can’t establish with certainty what happened in  specific incidents, and that  because Israel had not released sufficient  information about its decision-  making process no independent body  could properly assess whether the IDF had met  the standards set by  international law.
None of that, though, prevented  her and her  colleague from producing these ludicrous conclusions. They are not  just  morally and intellectually bankrupt. If taken seriously, they would  prevent  Israel from defending itself by any military means at all.
Such a report  brings the UNHRC, and the UN itself, further into disrepute.
But  that’s  surely the real point here. For we know all this by now, don’t  we. We know the  UNHRC is a sick joke, with its membership including  murderous regimes which deny  human rights to their own people.
We  know that the UN, with its great  bloc of despotisms and terrorist  states, is institutionally programmed to attack  Israel – the sole  country in the Middle East which safeguards human rights and  where  Muslims are safe, and the one country in the world which Islamic  tyrannies  and their global supporters are sworn to isolate and destroy.
We  know  that the NGOs are the instruments of the Soviet-inspired  psychological warfare  campaign to bend the collective Western mind with  systematic falsehoods and  blood libels about Israel.
What we  haven’t done is hold to account those  who have enabled these  institutions and groups to do these wicked things, and  who have given  them traction.
Israel and its defenders should be publicly   calling out those Western governments which fund these NGOs, and  demanding that  they stop funding such demonization and incitement to  Israel’s  destruction.
Most of these Israeli NGOs are part of the  New Israel Fund’s  network. The NIF should be ostracized. If an  organism has ingested poison it  must expel it or else it may die.
UN  Watch points out that since its  establishment the UNHRC has condemned  Israel more than the rest of the world  combined. Why are the UK and US  still members of this travesty of a human rights  arbiter? As long as  they participate in it, they validate and legitimize it. As  long as  Israel’s allies keep silent in the face of the libels against Israel   pouring out of the NGOs, UN and other international bodies and their own  media  and universities, those governmental allies are themselves  implicitly conniving  at this delegitimization campaign. As long as they  continue to fund these NGOs,  they too have blood on their hands.
The  Davis report is just the latest  manifestation of the surreal nightmare  through which we are living, in which  much of the world has been  turned into one giant pogrom, both physical and  intellectual, against  the Jewish state. To fight it, we must not only  delegitimize the  delegitimizers but hold their enablers’ feet to the fire,  too.
Melanie Phillips is a columnist for The Times (UK).