Palestine

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blindpig
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Re: Palestine

Post by blindpig » Mon May 06, 2024 5:53 pm

Another Zionist Crime - The Psychopathic Destruction Of Rafah

This morning the Israeli army ordered hundred thousands of refugees to move from the eastern part of Rafah to the already destroyed and likewise overcrowded area around Khan Younis. Hours later it started to bomb and destroy the place.

Image

The eastern part of Rafah includes the Rafah crossing to Egypt through which food an other necessities enter Gaza. It also includes the largest still existing healthcare facility.

As the Zionist entity will likely continue in its usual pattern the eastern part of Rafah will be completely destroyed. After that it will do the same with its western part.

There will not be one building left in Gaza that is inhabitable.

I mostly refrain from writing about the crimes of the colonial settler regime. It is simply beyond my emotional capabilities.

This poem, by Caitlin Johnstone, is probably the best way to express my feelings:

I Oppose Israel’s Atrocities In Gaza Because I’m Not A Psychopath

I don’t oppose the butchery in Gaza because I love Hamas or hate Jews or love Islam or hate America. I don’t oppose the butchery in Gaza because I’m a lefty or a commie or an anarchist or an anti-imperialist. I oppose the butchery in Gaza because I’m not a fucking psychopath.


Every one who openly or silently supports the Zionist in this should be in jail.

Posted by b at 14:25 UTC | Comments (60)

https://www.moonofalabama.org/2024/05/t ... l#comments

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Over 10,000 People Remain Buried Under Rubble in Gaza, Would Take Years to Retrieve Bodies
MAY 5, 2024

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Palestinians search for survivors and victims under the rubble of buildings destroyed in the Israeli bombing of Bureij refugee camp in central Gaza Strip, November 2, 2023. Photo: AFP.

The Palestinian Health Ministry in Gaza said that over 10,000 people remain buried under the rubble in the Strip, seven months into the ongoing genocidal war launched by the Israeli occupation last October.

The UN Aid Coordination Office (OCHA) stated that “with the current primitive tools available, it might require up to three years to recover the bodies,” warning that rising temperatures are expected to accelerate the decomposition of bodies, heightening the risk of disease transmission and increasing concerns about public health.

Entire residential neighborhoods and areas have been completely destroyed by “Israel” since October, the UN aid office said, noting that Gaza was bombed “from the air, land, and sea.”

The Palestinian Civil Defense said that many people are trapped under rubble and on roads inaccessible to ambulances and civil defense crews due to lack of means and equipment, in addition to the occupation preventing rescue teams from reaching victims’ positions.

The Civil Defense urged in a statement earlier this week that UN agencies and all relevant stakeholders urgently intervene to allow the entry of needed equipment, including bulldozers and excavators, to avert a public health catastrophe, facilitate dignified burials, and save the lives of injured people.

At least 5% of Gazan population killed or injured
The Health Ministry of Gaza revealed in its latest report on Friday, May 3, that the number of Palestinians killed in the ongoing Israeli genocide in the Strip since October 7, 2023 has now reached 34,622, with 77,867 injured.

A report by the United Nations Development Program (UNDP) on the socioeconomic situation in the Gaza Strip showed that due to the ongoing Israeli genocidal war, at least 5% of the population has either been killed or injured as of mid-April.



UNDP Administrator Achim Steiner underscored that “unprecedented levels of human losses, capital destruction, and the steep rise in poverty in such a short period of time will precipitate a serious development crisis that jeopardizes the future of generations to come.”

Gaza’s health system has collapsed
Palestinian health authorities said last month that they no longer have the capacity to count all the dead bodies in Gaza, especially with hospitals, emergency services, and communications barely functioning.

Given the difficulty in gathering data, the numbers of the dead are becoming less accurate, with numbers almost always underreported, as thousands remain unaccounted for.

Medhat Abbas, a spokesperson for the Health Ministry in Gaza, said, “At the beginning we had systems, we had hospitals. The Civil Defense teams were able to get people who were stuck under the rubble. Then the whole system collapsed.”

The ministry is now depending on other sources of information, such as testimonies from martyrs’ relatives, video of the aftermath of strikes, and reports by media organizations, Abbas stated.

The true picture of the human casualties due to Israel’s ongoing genocide, accompanied by the total collapse of hospitals and rescue services, will take a long time to emerge.

https://orinocotribune.com/over-10000-p ... ve-bodies/

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Netanyahu's handling of Gaza reflects stance of 'large majority of Israelis': Blinken

Israeli media says the premier is 'convinced' he can win a snap election if growing political pressure leads to the dissolution of his government

News Desk

MAY 4, 2024

Image
(Photo Credit: US State Department)

US State Secretary Anthony Blinken said on 4 May that the genocidal actions undertaken by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Gaza are "a reflection of where a large majority of Israelis are in this moment.”

“This is a complicated government. It’s a balancing act when you have a coalition. And if you’re just looking at the politics of it, that’s something that he has to factor in,” Blinken said at an event in Arizona.

"What’s important to understand is that much of what [Netanyahu is] doing is not simply a reflection of his politics or his policies; it’s actually a reflection of where a large majority of Israelis are in this moment,” the top US diplomat said.

Last month, a survey conducted by the Israel Democracy Institute revealed that three-quarters of Jewish Israelis support Netanyahu's much-anticipated ground invasion of Gaza’s southernmost city, Rafah, where about 1.3 million Palestinians are sheltering after being violently displaced from their homes.

Surveys conducted over recent months have shown a similar trend despite growing pressure to see Netanyahu removed from office.

In January, opinion polls showed that Israelis overwhelmingly agreed that “the best way” to obtain the release of captives held inside Gaza was “military pressure” against Hamas, falling in line with the same rhetoric Netanyahu and his war chief have been repeating daily since 7 October.

Polls have also shown a stern objection to delivering humanitarian aid to Gaza, even if the UN Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) is “replaced.”

As Netanyahu continues to dig his heels in over the “need” to invade Rafah, on Friday, the Times of Israel reported that the premier “is convinced that he will win an election.”

“Netanyahu’s working assumption is that [an eventual Knesset vote for a prisoner-exchange deal] will lead to ultranationalist National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir and his Otzma Yehudit party resigning from government, followed soon after by Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich and the Religious Zionism party,” the Israeli daily writes.

The two Jewish-supremacists officials have repeatedly threatened to abandon the coalition government over various reasons, including a controversial judicial overhaul law, providing concessions to Palestinians in the occupied West Bank, and the continuation of the genocidal war in Gaza, including the ground invasion of Rafah.

Once the government collapses, “elections will be inevitable,” the Time of Israel adds, claiming that Netanyahu “is confident he can beat any other candidate in the country.”

“None of the other potential prime ministerial candidates can hold a candle to him,” a source in the prime minister’s office is quoted as saying.

https://thecradle.co/articles/netanyahu ... is-blinken

Hamas warns of 'dangerous escalation' as Israel orders Rafah evacuation

Hamas demands a permanent end to the war in exchange for releasing Israeli captives, as Israel readies Rafah invasion

News Desk

MAY 6, 2024

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Hamas spokesman Abdul-Latif Al-Qanou (photo credit: AbedQanoo/Facebook)

Hamas warned on 6 May that Israel’s order for civilians to evacuate Rafah ahead of a looming ground invasion of the Gaza border city constitutes a “dangerous escalation” that will bear “consequences.”

In response to the evacuation order, Hamas official Sami Abu Zuhuri told Reuters, “This is a dangerous escalation that will have consequences. The US administration, alongside the occupation, bears responsibility for this terrorism.”

A Hamas official told the Associated Press that Israel is trying to pressure the group into making concessions in a ceasefire deal but that the resistance group will not abandon its demands.

“We will continue the negotiations positively and with an open heart,” Hamas spokesman Abdul Latif al-Qanou told AFP.

He reiterated that any agreement must provide for “a permanent ceasefire and the fulfillment of the demands of our people.”

“The movement’s leadership is in a state of internal and factional consultation after the last round of negotiations in Cairo,” Qanou said.

Hamas seeks a complete end to the war, the withdrawal of Israeli troops from Gaza, the release of Palestinians held in Israeli prisons, and the reconstruction of the strip in exchange for the Israeli captives Hamas is holding in Gaza.

Israel insists on only a temporary ceasefire in exchange for the release of Israeli captives.

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said a ground assault on Rafah would “put the final nail in the coffin” for humanitarian aid operations in the Gaza Strip. On Monday, a World Food Programme official stated parts of Gaza were in “full-blown famine.”

Foreign leaders warned against Israel’s looming Rafah invasion amid the evacuation orders, Reuters reported.

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen has said it would be “completely unacceptable” for Israel to attack Rafah.

The foreign ministers of 26 member states of the EU asked Netanyahu not to launch an invasion, saying it would “worsen an already catastrophic humanitarian situation.”

Egyptian officials said that an Israeli military seizure of the Gaza–Egypt border or any move to force Palestinians into Egypt would threaten the peace treaty Egypt signed with Israel in 1979.

Palestinians in Rafah, in turn, express their fears of what is to come.

Nidal Alzaanin, who works for an international aid group and was displaced to Rafah from Beit Hanoun in the north at the start of the war, told the Associated Press that people are scared to leave Rafah because Israeli troops and sniper drones shot and killed many Palestinian civilians as they moved during previous evacuation orders.

Alzaanin said he had prepared his documents and packed a few belongings but would wait 24 hours to see what others did before leaving. He said he has a friend in Khan Yunis whom he hopes can pitch a tent for his family.

Sahar Abu Nahel, who was displaced to Rafah with 20 of her family, asked, “Where am I going to go? I have no money or anything. I am seriously tired as are [my] children. Maybe its more honorable for us to die. We are being humiliated,” she said crying. Her husband has been abducted by Israel, and her son is missing.

https://thecradle.co/articles/hamas-war ... evacuation
"There is great chaos under heaven; the situation is excellent."

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blindpig
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Re: Palestine

Post by blindpig » Tue May 07, 2024 11:19 am

Israel’s Genocidal Assault on Rafah Begins While the International Community Does Nothing
Posted by INTERNATIONALIST 360° on MAY 6, 2024



Palestinian families have begun leaving eastern Rafah after the Israeli military ordered its evacuation, saying it will use ‘extreme force’ there. World leaders have repeatedly warned against a military offensive where more than 1.5 million displaced people are sheltering.



Samah Hadid, spokeswoman for the Norwegian Refugee Council, says Israel’s evacuation order is “completely problematic, inhumane and unsafe”.

“The al-Mawasi where people are being ordered to evacuate to is not equipped to accommodate” more internally displaced people as it already hosts hundreds of thousands of Palestinians, Hadid told Al Jazeera.
“It does not have enough humanitarian assistance and services to support additional displaced population,” she said.

Hadid called the evacuation order “the start of a nightmare scenario for the people of Rafah who have been terrified for months now over what it is to come”.

She said aid agencies “are also terrified” because a Rafah offensive would lead to the collapse of the aid response.

“It’s really reliant on the Rafah hub to distribute aid to organise aid throughout that area,” Hadid added.

Spokesman of the UN agency for Palestinian refugees (UNRWA), Jonathan Fowler, on Monday spoke to Al Jazeera from occupied East Jerusalem on Israel’s evacuation order in Rafah ahead of the planned ground offensive:
“We are in a situation where any large-scale advances from Israeli forces in Rafah are going to mean more suffering and death.

“The consequence would be devastating for the population of Rafah that’s six times the pre-war population – half of the 1.4 million people are children. Most of these people have been displaced many times already. The challenge is insurmountable at this stage.

“Unexploded ordinances have to be cleared before people return to an area and live in safety. Otherwise, you are pushing people to an area where their lives are at risk.

“Nowhere is safe in the Gaza Strip, people have been constantly displaced over and over again. Even contingency plans offer little solace. The fallout from such an offensive would be simply catastrophic.”



James Elder, a UNICEF spokesperson, expressed grave concerns about a potential military offensive on Rafah, describing it as “horrific” and predicting “catastrophe upon catastrophe.” He emphasized the necessity of safe zones providing access to water, sanitation, and food. Elder highlighted the devastating impact witnessed in Khan Younis and anticipated similar destruction in Rafah, with significant loss of life, disease outbreaks, and widespread destruction.



Hamas warns of ‘dangerous escalation’ as Israel orders Rafah evacuation

The Cradle

Hamas demands a permanent end to the war in exchange for releasing Israeli captives, as Israel readies Rafah invasion

Hamas warned on 6 May that Israel’s order for civilians to evacuate Rafah ahead of a looming ground invasion of the Gaza border city constitutes a “dangerous escalation” that will bear “consequences.”

In response to the evacuation order, Hamas official Sami Abu Zuhuri told Reuters, “This is a dangerous escalation that will have consequences. The US administration, alongside the occupation, bears responsibility for this terrorism.”

A Hamas official told the Associated Press that Israel is trying to pressure the group into making concessions in a ceasefire deal but that the resistance group will not abandon its demands.

“We will continue the negotiations positively and with an open heart,” Hamas spokesman Abdul Latif al-Qanou told AFP.

He reiterated that any agreement must provide for “a permanent ceasefire and the fulfillment of the demands of our people.”

“The movement’s leadership is in a state of internal and factional consultation after the last round of negotiations in Cairo,” Qanou said.

Hamas seeks a complete end to the war, the withdrawal of Israeli troops from Gaza, the release of Palestinians held in Israeli prisons, and the reconstruction of the strip in exchange for the Israeli captives Hamas is holding in Gaza.

Israel insists on only a temporary ceasefire in exchange for the release of Israeli captives.

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said a ground assault on Rafah would “put the final nail in the coffin” for humanitarian aid operations in the Gaza Strip. On Monday, a World Food Programme official stated parts of Gaza were in “full-blown famine.”

Foreign leaders warned against Israel’s looming Rafah invasion amid the evacuation orders, Reuters reported.

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen has said it would be “completely unacceptable” for Israel to attack Rafah.

The foreign ministers of 26 member states of the EU asked Netanyahu not to launch an invasion, saying it would “worsen an already catastrophic humanitarian situation.”

Egyptian officials said that an Israeli military seizure of the Gaza–Egypt border or any move to force Palestinians into Egypt would threaten the peace treaty Egypt signed with Israel in 1979.

Palestinians in Rafah, in turn, express their fears of what is to come.

Nidal Alzaanin, who works for an international aid group and was displaced to Rafah from Beit Hanoun in the north at the start of the war, told the Associated Press that people are scared to leave Rafah because Israeli troops and sniper drones shot and killed many Palestinian civilians as they moved during previous evacuation orders.

Alzaanin said he had prepared his documents and packed a few belongings but would wait 24 hours to see what others did before leaving. He said he has a friend in Khan Yunis whom he hopes can pitch a tent for his family.

Sahar Abu Nahel, who was displaced to Rafah with 20 of her family, asked, “Where am I going to go? I have no money or anything. I am seriously tired as are [my] children. Maybe its more honorable for us to die. We are being humiliated,” she said crying. Her husband has been abducted by Israel, and her son is missing.

Israel orders forced displacement of eastern Rafah, amounting to war crime

Peoples Dispatch

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Israeli forces dropped leaflets ordering the evacuation of eastern Rafah (Photo via Muhammad Smiry)

Israel orders the forced evacuation of Palestinians sheltering in Rafah ahead of a planned ground invasion.

On Monday, May 6, Israel issued evacuation orders for eastern Rafah ahead of a planned ground invasion. The evacuation orders the forcible displacement of at least 100,000 people, amounting to a war crime under international law. Because of the ongoing genocide against the Palestinians in Gaza, over 1.2 million people are currently seeking refuge in Rafah—a ground invasion puts them all in jeopardy.

Hamas issued a call to “the international community to urgently act to stop this crime, which threatens the lives of hundreds of thousands of defenseless civilians, including children, women, and the elderly.”


“We also urge humanitarian organizations and agencies, especially UNRWA, to remain in their positions in Rafah and not to leave or submit to the will of the fascist occupation, continuing their role in providing aid to the defenseless civilian displaced persons, who are subject to the most heinous crimes by the zionist killing machine, supported limitlessly by the complicit American administration in the genocide,” the resistance organization stated.

The White House has urged against a ground invasion of Rafah, although continues to send massive amounts of aid and weapons to Israel unconditionally. The entire international community has also urged against such an invasion, including the global movement in solidarity with Palestine.

May 6 also marks Holocaust Remembrance Day. Many have denounced the escalation of the genocide against Palestinians on a day to remember one of the worst genocides in human history.


https://libya360.wordpress.com/2024/05/ ... s-nothing/

PFLP: Rafah Will Be a Graveyard for the Zionist Invaders
Posted by INTERNATIONALIST 360° on MAY 6, 2024

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The ongoing brutal bombardment of the city is a failed attempt to pressure the resistance and bring our people to their knees.

The Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) affirmed that the announcement by the defeated and cowardly enemy army to start an evacuation of the population east of Rafah, coinciding with continuous brutal shelling that targeted a large number of houses crowded with displaced people, is part of the ongoing genocidal war against our people in Gaza, a desperate retaliatory attempt to humiliate our people and break their will, and a failed means to pressure the resistance to make more concessions.

The Front stressed that the failed Zionist enemy will not be able to achieve any achievements on the ground except more killings, massacres, systematic destruction of infrastructure, and expanding the catastrophic humanitarian crisis that the city suffers from to harsher levels, especially since the area of operations will include the Rafah and Kerem Shalom crossings.

The Front held the US administration and the international community fully responsible for the coming Zionist crimes against civilians and displaced persons, especially since the US administration is aware of the occupation’s plans for Rafah, and there is coordination at the highest levels between the two sides in managing this operation.

The Front called on the supporters of the Palestinian people everywhere and the solidarity movements all over the world to a comprehensive global intifada that is not limited to universities, but includes all unions, institutions, Arab, Palestinian and Islamic communities, and BDS movements, and to take to the squares and streets and besiege international institutions and embassies to send strong messages denouncing the continuation of the holocaust and pressing for an end to the aggression, especially now directed against unarmed civilians in Rafah.

The heroic operation in which the resistance targeted a military site that houses the operations command that directs the aggression on Rafah yesterday is a clear message from the resistance to this enemy and its cowardly leaders that many surprises await you, and that any foolishness in Rafah will only bring you more disappointment, utter failure, defeat, and the collapse of your deterrence.

Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine

Central Media Department

6-5-2024

https://libya360.wordpress.com/2024/05/ ... -invaders/

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Inside Story of Mass Graves at Al-Shifa and Al-Nasser Hospitals in Gaza
MAY 6, 2024

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By Robert Inlakesh – May 3, 2024

“Everywhere you walk there are graves, decomposing bodies or potentially people buried under the rubble”, a resident of northern Gaza’s al-Rimal neighborhood told the Press TV website, describing mass graves at two of the largest medical complexes in the besieged coastal territory.

The discovery of hundreds of mass graves at the Nasser and al-Shifa hospital complexes, where United Nations (UN) officials reported that bodies were “buried deep in the ground and covered with waste”, has led its officials to call for an international probe into the horrors being uncovered.

So far, some 400 bodies have been recovered at the Nasser Hospital in the city of Khan Younis in southern Gaza, while around 300 bodies have been discovered at al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza City.

Video shows medical teams unearthing a mass grave containing the bodies of 50 Palestinians who were executed by Israeli forces in the courtyards of Naser Hospital in Khan Younis, southern Gaza Strip. #GazaGenocide pic.twitter.com/QhEVzHlXJm

— Palestine Highlights (@PalHighlight) April 21, 2024

The deceased include “older people, women and wounded, while others were found tied with their hands…tied and stripped of their clothes,” said the spokesperson for the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Ravina Shamdasani.

While the Israeli military downplayed reports about mass graves as “baseless and unfounded”, it made the mistake of admitting to having dug up bodies that had been previously buried, in the process of trying to explain away the irrefutable evidence documented.

The Euro-Med Human Rights Monitor reported that “the presence of urinary catheters or splints, which were found to be still attached to some of the dead patients’ bodies during the exhumation process, as well as medical files that were buried with them in Al-Shifa Medical Complex, confirm the execution of ill and injured people.”

The Switzerland-based rights group also reported that some of the “victims’ decomposing bodies were found in several places, with some having been run over by Israeli bulldozers which left their bodies torn into pieces” and that Israeli forces had been using Palestinian civilians at al-Shifa Hospital as human shields.

Gaza’s civil defense also called for help in forensic examination to find out more about 20 bodies that they believe were buried alive.

First-person account of Al-Shifa horror
Palestinian journalist, Motasem A Dalloul, who is based in northern Gaza, was one of the first on the scene to witness the aftermath of al-Shifa Hospital and had to reach the area on bicycle as the roads were too severely damaged for vehicles.

Press TV website spoke to him around an hour after he finished documenting the horrifying scenes in and around the coastal territory’s largest hospital complex.

Describing the scene upon his arrival at the scene of the hospital, he said that “the Israeli invasion resulted in the destruction of an area of 1000 meters around al-Shifa Hospital.”

Desperate Palestinians are compelled to dig a mass grave at Nasser Hospital, with Israeli military tanks nearby, making it impossible for civilians to enter or leave.#GazaGenocide pic.twitter.com/uydGl3Fjmq

— Palestine Highlights (@PalHighlight) January 22, 2024

“Homes, schools, mosques, in addition to the actual hospital were all destroyed. I saw everything, I saw unprecedented destruction and as I arrived there, I went to the main gate of al-Shifa Hospital and as I walked forward I saw that it was blocked with the burned remains of two destroyed ambulances and so I entered through a hole in the wall beside it,” he told the Press TV website.

Dalloul then described the scenes of destruction upon entering the hospital’s grounds:

“I found all the buildings were affected. The main building, which included the reception and the surgery department, was completely destroyed. The special surgery building, which included the ICU and the operation rooms and the patient beds, was completely destroyed,” he narrated.

“It had not collapsed but was destroyed from the inside and completely burned. I then went through the other buildings, walking through the maternity ward and the cancer treatment facility which were, in addition to the administrative building, everything was either partially or completely destroyed, or burned out.”

The Palestinian journalist based in Gaza painted a graphic picture of mass graves that were discovered at the prominent hospital that is now lying in ruins due to Israeli bombings.

“If you enter the medical complex from the East to the West, on your right-hand side there is a mass grave. I saw parts of bodies on the surface of the soil. I saw decomposing hands and parts of heads. When I counted the number of bodies that were visible, I counted that around 15 people were visible in this mass grave,” he explained with unutterable grief and sorrow.

“I saw bodies of people who were either killed or executed inside the buildings and around the yards of the hospital.”

‘Hospital is gone forever’
Dalloul said that when he spoke to Dr. Marwan Abu Saada, the director of al-Shifa Hospital’s ICU department, he was told that it would take 10 years to rebuild such a facility and that the “hospital is gone forever”.

He added that Dr. Saada was in tears while he was explaining the extent of the unprecedented damage at the hospital that remained in the news for several weeks due to the military siege.

179 rotting bodies buried in mass grave at Shifa Hospital amid shoot-to-kill policy of Israeli troops#GazaGenocide pic.twitter.com/n3XCUCdslo

— Palestine Highlights (@PalHighlight) November 15, 2023

Since then, the ICU department director has publicly appealed to the international community to launch a probe into the Israeli military siege, death and destruction at the al-Shifa Hospital.

Press TV website was also told about the horrifying cases of children searching for the remains of their grandparents, parents and siblings – an unimaginable situation for anyone to go through.

Press TV website contacted Motassem again, around a week later, to update us on the work done by professional teams sent to exhume bodies that were lying in mass graves at al-Shifa Hospital.

He told us that there was an urgent need for supplies at the time in order to help identify the bodies.

On the day the Israeli military withdrew from al-Shifa after weeks of siege, there were bodies of children, women and men that were left in the streets, many of which were already decomposed or badly mutilated by tanks and bulldozers, so the only way to identify the dead was from their clothing.



A harrowing case reported by Mondoweiss, during the aftermath of the Al-Nasser Hospital invasion, confirmed that the process of identifying the bodies in mass graves was similar to what occurred at al-Shifa.

A 51-year-old man named Ayman, who visited the hospital with his wife and one of his sons, was left searching through “a pit of bodies buried, cut up” that were in pieces and left scattered amongst bags of garbage, stating that his son “was wearing the blue wool sweater.”

“I bought it for him. I know everything he wears and can identify him by his clothes,” he said.

A Palestinian man, pleading anonymous, who was seeking shelter at the Al-Nasser Hospital complex, but left before Israeli forces stormed and occupied it, said he wasn’t at all surprised.

“They used drones to shoot at us if we moved, many were killed like this every day and when the tanks came we chose to leave because it was not safe. Everyone knew that the Israelis would kill many, including many of the medical staff and they still stayed to perform their jobs,” he told the Press TV website.

“We remember the bravery of the doctors and medical staff, they were heroes and the Israelis don’t care for human lives. Look what they did at every hospital, at schools, at our homes. They killed people holding up white flags, the mass graves are not just at the hospitals, they are everywhere and the death toll is so much higher than we are told I am sure.”

13,000 still missing, likely buried
Important to note is that although two of the largest mass graves that have been discovered to date are those outlined here, yet there are around 13,000 Palestinians still missing and buried in the rubble throughout the Gaza Strip.

In January, 50 bodies were discovered at the Khalifa Bin Zayed elementary school in northern Gaza’s Beit Lahia, a school being used for shelter by displaced refugees, while another 30 bodies were discovered dumped in black bags amongst garbage at the Hamad School; the bodies were decomposing but showed signs of torture and many were found with their hands and feet bound.

Israel is also known for holding the dead bodies of slain Palestinians, with various reports stating that when they were returned to their families, their organs were missing.

Video shows medical teams unearthing a mass grave containing the bodies of 50 Palestinians who were executed by Israeli forces in the courtyards of Naser Hospital in Khan Younis, southern Gaza Strip. #GazaGenocide pic.twitter.com/QhEVzHlXJm

— Palestine Highlights (@PalHighlight) April 21, 2024

This even prompted the Euro-Med Human Rights Monitor to call for an international inquiry into the seizure of bodies and possible organ trafficking.

Amongst the abuses that have occurred at the Nasser Hospital and al-Shifa Hospital are the deprivation of food, water and medical care to the sick and injured; in addition to various forms of torture, arbitrary executions and even sexual violence.

The United Nations recorded at least two cases of Israeli soldiers raping Palestinians in February, yet, after countless allegations of rape and other forms of sexual violence, again, there has been no international probe into these credible reports.

With the discovery of the mass graves at the al-Shifa and Nasser medical complexes, there is an urgent need for international, independent probes into the conduct of the Israeli regime’s ground forces, believe human rights experts.

The mass graves are only part of the gruesome series of massacres but should be a turning point due to the sheer scale of murdered and mutilated bodies found, they state.

https://orinocotribune.com/inside-story ... s-in-gaza/

(Videos at link, but do you really need pictures?)

******

Qassam rockets kill Israeli soldiers prepping Rafah attack

Four soldiers at a military site near Kerem Shalom crossing were killed as they guarded tanks destined for an upcoming Israeli operation in Rafah

News Desk

MAY 6, 2024

Image
(Photo credit: AFP via Getty Images)

The Israeli soldiers killed by Qassam Brigades rockets at a military site near the Gaza border on 5 May were guarding tanks destined for an upcoming operation in the city of Rafah.

The Israeli army released an updated death toll on 6 May, revealing Sgt Michael Rozel as the fourth Israeli soldier killed in Sunday’s attack.

He was “killed by the heavy barrage fired from Rafah towards forces that were securing the tanks that were destined to enter the city in the southern Gaza Strip,” Hebrew news site Ynet reported on Monday.

Another 12 soldiers were injured in the attack, including three in serious condition.

The soldiers “were stationed there in order to guard equipment and tanks of battalions preparing to enter Rafah – which is beyond the fence,” Ynet said, adding that “in recent weeks many dozens of tanks and APCs have been deployed in the area as part of the preparations for the ground operation.”

The army had previously warned that the area was “exposed” and made extra fortifications and reduced troops at the site.

Tel Aviv is investigating why the Iron Dome missile defense system did not intercept the Qassam Brigades’ barrage.


“The Qassam Brigades bombarded concentrations of enemy forces at the Kerem Shalom site and its surroundings with the 114 mm short-range Rajoum rocket system,” the resistance group said in a statement via its Telegram page.


They announced several other attacks on Israeli forces across Gaza that day, including an attack on the Netzarim corridor used by troops to split Gaza and prevent the return of displaced to the north.

A source within the resistance told Al Mayadeen that the Kerem Shalom operation “relayed several political messages, most notably the resistance's readiness to defend the people of Palestine against reckless Israeli aggression [on Rafah], as well as military messages affirming the resistance's capabilities and steadiness despite the successes the Israeli occupation claims it is achieving.”

The missile strikes on Kerem Shalom came a day after an Israeli official told AP that Tel Aviv “remains “committed” to an operation in Rafah and “will not agree in any circumstance to end the war as part of a deal to release hostages.” A Hamas official confirmed to Al Jazeera earlier on Saturday that Israel’s position in the talks has hindered chances of reaching a ceasefire and prisoner exchange agreement.

https://thecradle.co/articles/qassam-ro ... fah-attack

The PIJ's defiance amid diplomacy: 'Gaza will not be allowed to fall'

With a reputation as the most 'Resistance Axis' aligned armed faction in Gaza, the PIJ's perspectives on the war and ongoing ceasefire negotiations are highlighted in this exclusive interview with a key figure from the movement.


Ibrahim Chamas

MAY 6, 2024

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(Photo Credit: The Cradle)

In an exclusive interview with The Cradle, Abu Imad al-Rifai, a Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ) official based in Beirut, sheds light on Israel’s ongoing war on Gaza, the intricacies of West Asian geopolitics, and the state of the ceasefire negotiations that have gripped global attention.

The aftermath of last year's 7 October Operation Al-Aqsa Flood marked a significant turn in the region’s dynamics, most notably with the direct introduction of Iranian drones and missiles into the fray with Operation True Promise.

This interview provides a deep dive into the current scenario, the objectives of the Palestinian resistance – which includes PIJ’s armed wing, the Quds Brigades, and allied factions – and the broader implications for West Asia and beyond.

As the brutal Israeli military assault on Gaza nears its eighth month, indirect negotiations between Hamas and Israel continue as Tel Aviv announces preparation for an invasion of Rafah, the last refuge for over one million Palestinian civilians.

In this context, Rifai promises the continuation of regional resistance, which at the local level, remains intense, with the Quds Brigades among the factions most dedicated to the Palestinian liberation cause:

The Cradle: Why did Turkiye step into the role of mediator for Hamas just as Qatar seemed to pull back?

Rifai: Turkiye has regional and internal considerations and has strong relations with Hamas. This raises the fear of some countries that Ankara will take over the Palestinian file.

As for Qatar, Israel is trying to pressure and blackmail it on charges of funding Hamas, but Doha has evidence that its transfers of money to Gaza were under Israeli–American approval.

The Cradle: What do the Palestinians and Israelis want from the negotiations?

Rifai: Israel is in a state of confusion and contradiction. What it wants is not to end the war on Gaza without achieving what Netanyahu desires and aspirations. In the negotiations, there is a lack of seriousness on the part of Netanyahu in reaching an agreement, and he insists on maintaining its control over the Netzarim area and Salah al-Din Street (inside the Gaza Strip). Gaza). The resistance is serious about reaching an agreement, but with two basic points that cannot be undone: withdrawal from the Gaza Strip and a ceasefire.

The Cradle: Isn't it in the interest of the resistance to conclude an agreement now?

Rifai: The resistance is keen to reach an agreement to stop the brutal war on our people, but without achieving complete withdrawal and stopping the permanent aggression, no Israeli prisoner will be released, and the resistance will not stop. Surrender to the Israelis is not in the vocabulary of our people.

The Cradle: Hamas official Khalil al-Hayya recently announced that they are ready to accept a two-state solution and abandon military action. Is this a maneuver or a new strategy for Hamas? What is the position of PIJ if Hamas takes this path?

Rifai: There is no need to make unrealistic and impossible assumptions. Brother Khalil al-Hayya explained this in an interview with Al Jazeera in which he said: “In press interviews, they always change and alter the statements.”

The Cradle: Israel believes that by invading Rafah, it may take an achievement and perhaps find the Qassam [armed wing of Hamas] leaders and prisoners there.

Rifai: Invading Rafah is not easy for the Israelis. They invaded the north and center of the strip and achieved nothing. Rockets are still being fired from the north, and the resistance is still fighting there. Are the Israelis sure that there are no prisoners in the north? If Israel did not resolve the battle in the north, would it be able to do so anywhere else?

The internal Israeli situation must also be taken into consideration. There are 400 families of Israeli soldiers who refuse to let their children go to service. Will this constitute a case of rebellion within the military institution and open fire on [Prime Minister Benjamin] Netanyahu? These families will ask him: ‘Do you want to take our children to death so that you do not go to court?’

Israel is hesitant to enter Rafah not only because of Washington's refusal but also because of an internal discrepancy. The military and security establishment also have an opinion on Netanyahu’s ability to achieve the war’s goals.

The Cradle: If the resistance is cornered in Rafah, would this trigger a broader regional conflict?

Rifai: The Lebanese resistance [Hezbollah] will not allow the fall of Gaza.

The Cradle: Could Netanyahu’s government collapse under the current pressures?

Rifai: The situation of Netanyahu and his government is unstable. He was unable to achieve any of the goals he announced at the beginning of the aggression on Gaza. Neither the Israeli prisoners were released, nor Hamas was eliminated, and we do not know where things are headed in light of the pressure from the Israeli street, in addition to the Israeli opposition’s position on the war, in addition to the American position, which has become somewhat concerned about Netanyahu’s positions. All of this may lead to its downfall.

The Cradle: With significant PIJ leaders assassinated before 7 October, how has this impacted the organization?

Rifai: The death of leaders has a moral impact, not a logistical or military one. Martyrdom increases the resolve of the resistance fighters to follow the path, not the other way around.

The Cradle: How do you interpret Iran’s military response to the bombing of their consulate in Damascus?

Rifai: What Iran has done is a strategic shift and drew a clear line in the equation of the conflict with Israel. For the first time, Israel has been targeted with this number of drones and missiles, and the world is mobilizing to protect it from an Islamic country thousands of miles away. This is a major and very important shift in managing the conflict with Israel. The conflict between the Zionist entity and the popular resistance was also transformed into a conflict between the entity and a state, and this has implications for the nature of the next stage.

The Cradle: What are the long-term implications of the ongoing support for Gaza from entities like Yemen’s Ansarallah and the Iraqi factions?

Rifai: The American presence in the region has become costly to Washington, and the deployment of battleships and fleets does not mean the ability to continue domination, as all of this American military presence in the region can be exited. Especially since Israel will constitute a large additional burden on the American administration in the next stage, after what we have witnessed of the fragility of the entity on 7 October and how the world crawled to save it from falling. We must also look at the American internal situation.

The Cradle: Looking ahead, what do you foresee for post-war Gaza?

Rifai: Of course, there is a moral demand for people to return to their homes and work quickly to shelter them and accelerate reconstruction, rebuilding homes, hospitals, schools, and universities, but there is a fear of procrastination in reconstruction. In addition, the resistance factions in Gaza, namely Hamas and the PIJ, will assess the current war to build strategies to overcome the challenges resulting from the aggression on Gaza.

The Cradle: The Lebanese newspaper Al-Akhbar recently reported that the UN, at Netanyahu's request, sent a mediator to meet with PIJ leadership in Lebanon, and he expressed Israel’s willingness to negotiate with you?

Rifai: The Deputy Coordinator of the Middle East Peace Process came with another man. They said they were carrying a message to negotiate with PIJ. The movement's position was clear that the resistance factions authorized the brothers in Hamas to negotiate through Egypt and Qatar.

The Cradle: Who will run the Gaza Strip after the war?

Rifai: Gaza is run by its people. It is unacceptable that the Gaza administration is not in harmony with the resistance.

The Cradle: How long do you estimate the war will last?

Rifai: No one is able to predict when the war will end. If there is no change in the Israeli position on the demands of the resistance, then “the war is long.” Netanyahu is betting on a mirage and is afraid of the day after the war. The question is, can Israeli society endure all this time of war?

https://thecradle.co/articles/the-pijs- ... ed-to-fall

EU naval mission falls apart against Yemen

The commander of Operation Aspides has warned that the EU mission does not have enough ships to confront Sanaa’s maritime operations

News Desk

MAY 6, 2024

Image
(Photo credit: Indian Navy via AP)

The commander of the EU military mission in the Red Sea has warned that it does not have enough ships to confront the Yemeni Armed Forces' ongoing maritime operations.

Rear Admiral Vasileios Gryparis, the Greek commander of EU mission Operation Aspides – launched in February this year – warned at a confidential meeting in Brussels last week he will only have three warships at his disposal after the withdrawal of the German frigate Hessen last month, according to German news outlet Spiegel.

“This means he can no longer fulfill the mission of protecting ships from attacks by the Houthis. With this small fleet he could escort a maximum of four merchant ships per day through the Bab al-Mandab Strait off the Yemeni coast. For his mission, however, he needs at least ten warships, and air support from a drone or a maritime patrol aircraft is also necessary,” Spiegel wrote.

In an exclusive interview with Al Arabiya in late April, Gryparis said, “The area has seen multiple attacks in the past months, from one-way drones, saturation attempts, complex attacks including shore, air, and sea-based assets, drones, and ballistic missiles,” adding that since “the launch of the Operation Aspides on February 19, 2024 until now, the threat level remains the same.”

The German frigate Hessen ended its combat mission in late April and withdrew back to Germany. In February, the Hessen accidentally fired at a US reaper drone after identifying it as a hostile target. The two missiles accidentally fired at the US drone missed their target and fell in the sea.

While the Hamburg frigate will serve as the Hessen’s eventual replacement, the German warship will not arrive to join the EU mission until early August. Despite an urgent appeal by the commander of Operation Aspides, only Belgium and the Netherlands have signaled that they could potentially contribute frigates to the mission.

The month of April also saw France withdraw its FREMM Alsace frigate from the area due to the unexpected threat level it faced.

“We didn’t necessarily expect this level of threat. There was an uninhibited violence that was quite surprising and very significant. [The Yemenis] do not hesitate to use drones that fly at water level, to explode them on commercial ships, and to fire ballistic missiles,” the frigate’s commander Jerome Henry told French news outlet Le Figaro in an exclusive interview published on 11 April.

The commander of the Alsace also revealed that, after a 71-day deployment, all combat equipment was depleted.

Washington also withdrew its warship, the USS Eisenhower, in April, and Belgium announced postponing the deployment of its Louise-Marie frigate for “an indefinite” period after the ship failed a series of technical tests.

The Greek commander’s warning signifies the failure of US and European efforts to stifle Sanaa’s pro-Palestine blockade on Israeli shipping in the Red Sea, Arab Sea, Gulf of Aden, and Indian Ocean – which was recently expanded to include the Mediterranean Sea.

Upon the launch of Operation Aspides, a Yemeni official warned the EU to “not play with fire.”

In December, the US announced Operation Prosperity Guardian, intended to confront attacks by the Yemeni armed forces against Israeli-linked ships. Yet the operation gained little traction, with very few nations offering to contribute warships and others only deploying a mere handful of staff officers.

In mid-January, the US and UK began a violent bombing campaign against Yemen, which has also failed to deter Sanaa’s maritime operations.

https://thecradle.co/articles/eu-naval- ... inst-yemen

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U.S. boots on the Arab ground

Strategic Infographics

May 6, 2024

America’s military presence in the Middle East remains significant even as its focus shifts to Asia-Pacific, specifically to containing China. Around 50,000 U.S. troops are stationed in the Arab countries of the Middle East, including 900 troops illegally occupying the oil-rich areas of Syria. Major U.S. troop developments (estimated numbers).

Image

https://strategic-culture.su/news/2024/ ... ab-ground/
"There is great chaos under heaven; the situation is excellent."

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Re: Palestine

Post by blindpig » Wed May 08, 2024 11:32 am

Israel orders forced displacement of eastern Rafah, amounting to war crime

Israel orders the forced evacuation of Palestinians sheltering in Rafah ahead of a planned ground invasion

May 06, 2024 by Peoples Dispatch

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Israeli forces dropped leaflets ordering the evacuation of eastern Rafah (Photo via Muhammad Smiry)

On Monday, May 6, Israel issued evacuation orders for eastern Rafah ahead of a planned ground invasion. The evacuation orders the forcible displacement of at least 100,000 people, amounting to a war crime under international law. Because of the ongoing genocide against the Palestinians in Gaza, over 1.2 million people are currently seeking refuge in Rafah—a ground invasion puts them all in jeopardy.

Hamas issued a call to “the international community to urgently act to stop this crime, which threatens the lives of hundreds of thousands of defenseless civilians, including children, women, and the elderly.”


“We also urge humanitarian organizations and agencies, especially UNRWA, to remain in their positions in Rafah and not to leave or submit to the will of the fascist occupation, continuing their role in providing aid to the defenseless civilian displaced persons, who are subject to the most heinous crimes by the zionist killing machine, supported limitlessly by the complicit American administration in the genocide,” the resistance organization stated.

The White House has urged against a ground invasion of Rafah, although continues to send massive amounts of aid and weapons to Israel unconditionally. The entire international community has also urged against such an invasion, including the global movement in solidarity with Palestine.

May 6 also marks Holocaust Remembrance Day. Many have denounced the escalation of the genocide against Palestinians on a day to remember one of the worst genocides in human history.

https://peoplesdispatch.org/2024/05/06/ ... war-crime/

Is Biden really against Israel’s invasion of Rafah?

Biden claims to urge Netanyahu against Rafah invasion, but unconditional support for Israel continues

May 06, 2024 by Peoples Dispatch

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Joe Biden embracing Israeli President Isaac Herzog and Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu in October 2023. Photo: Israeli government press office/ Wikimedia Commons

Israel’s looming invasion of Rafah has been condemned across the globe. Belgium has announced more sanctions against the Zionist state, while France has labeled the forced displacement of civilians from Rafah a war crime. EU foreign affairs chief Josep Borrell urged Israel to call off the invasion, stating that “Israel’s evacuation orders to civilians in Rafah portend the worst: more war and famine. It is unacceptable.” South Africa’s foreign ministry has stated it was “horrified” by Israel’s order to evacuate eastern Rafah.

Meanwhile, US President Biden has made a show of urging Netanyahu against invading Rafah, or expressing token concern, but the reality is that the US government continues its unconditional support of Israel every step of the way.

Since Israel announced its forcible displacement of Eastern Rafah early on May 6, Biden’s response has followed the classic formula: circulating stories about his disapproval of Netanyahu’s actions, but making no indication that official policy on Israel would change. Early on, the US expressed its supposed concern regarding the looming invasion of the last refuge for displaced Palestinians. However, privately, US officials told Politico under conditions of anonymity that there would be no US response or change in policy approach if Israel were to invade Rafah.

Israel previously set a pre-Ramadan deadline for the ground invasion, in which it threatened to launch ground attacks if hostages were not released by the beginning of the holiday. This threat was not fulfilled, but the zionist war makers never took the invasion off the table completely.

On April 23, Biden signed a bill into law which would send USD 26 billion to Israel as it continues to commit the crime of genocide in Gaza. Since October 7, the US has quietly flooded millions of dollars of arms into Israel despite mounting pressure from some US officials and the global Palestine solidarity movement.

The US government has also made moves throughout the past six months to silence all criticism of Israel, both inside and outside the country.

Amid reports that the International Criminal Court could issue arrests for top Israeli officials, a group of conservative US Senators have issued a bizarre warning to the court’s chief prosecutor, Karim Khan.

“Target Israel and we will target you,” the senators threaten, warning that they will “sanction your employees and associates, and bar you and your families from the United States.”

Last week, the House of Representatives passed a bill defining criticism of Israel as antisemitism. US police forces across the country continue to brutalize university students staging encampments or other forms of protest in solidarity with Gaza, deploying mace, flashbang grenades, rubber bullets, and lethal bullets.

Hamas accepts ceasefire deal
On May 6, Hamas accepted an Egyptian-Qatari ceasefire proposal. In response, Netanyahu has said the deal does not meet Israel’s demands, but has agreed to send a delegation to Cairo to negotiate. According to a Reuters report, an unnamed Israeli official has said that the ceasefire proposal is not acceptable to Israel.

According to Hamas, the deal they agreed to includes a permanent ceasefire, reconstruction, and prisoner exchange between Hamas-held Israeli hostages and Palestinian prisoners detained by Israel.

Al Jazeera reported that only hours earlier, Yoav Gallant told the families of hostages that Hamas had rejected proposals that would lead to the release of captives, and therefore invading Rafah was a necessity.

Families of Israeli hostages have reportedly blocked off major streets in Israel, demanding that their government accept the ceasefire deal.



Israel’s far-right national security minister, Itamar Ben-Gvir, has indicated his rejection of the ceasefire. “Hamas’ exercises and games have only one answer: an immediate order to occupy Rafah! Increasing military pressure, and continuing the complete defeat of Hamas, until its complete defeat,” Ben-Gvir wrote on X.

This puts the ball squarely in Israel’s court in terms of freeing Israeli hostages held in Gaza and ending aggression on the Strip.

https://peoplesdispatch.org/2024/05/06/ ... -of-rafah/

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Israeli negotiators scramble after Hamas accepts ceasefire proposal

The negotiations are continuing as Israel begins its long-threatened invasion of Rafah

News Desk

MAY 7, 2024

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A handout picture released by the Egyptian Presidency shows Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sissi (R) meeting with CIA director William Burns (C-L) at Ittihadiya Palace in Cairo, on February 13, 2024. (Photo credit: AFP)

A team of mid-ranking Israeli officials will travel to Cairo in the coming hours to see if Hamas will agree to changes in the latest ceasefire offer, Reuters reported on 7 May, while confirming that Israel would not accept the current proposal.

“This delegation is made up of mid-level envoys. Were there a credible deal in the offing, the principals would be heading the delegation,” a senior Israeli official told Reuters, referring to the senior Mossad and Shin Bet officials leading the negotiations for Israel.

Late on Monday, Hamas announced it had accepted a ceasefire proposal delivered to them by Egyptian and Qatari mediators, causing the Israeli side to scramble to respond.

The Israeli delegation’s visit to Egypt comes hours after Israel began its long-awaited assault on Rafah, the city on the Gaza–Egypt border where more than one million displaced people have been sheltering from Israeli bombing elsewhere.

Israeli tanks took over the Rafah crossing between Gaza and Egypt early Tuesday while Israeli warplanes continued the bombing of the city that has been ongoing for weeks.

The Israeli official speaking with Reuters acknowledged that the invasion of Rafah was being used to pressure Hamas to accept a deal on Israel’s terms.

Reuters wrote that the official claimed Israel’s assault on Rafah had “pushed Hamas into hastily setting out its latest proposal.”

But the agreement accepted by Hamas was first proposed by Egyptian and Qatari mediators. It involved a halt to the fighting and exchange of some 130 Israeli captives in Gaza for hundreds of Palestinians held in Israeli prisons.

The Israeli official speaking with Reuters claimed Israel would not accept the proposal because Hamas had stretched it to “unacceptable extremes.”

However, another official said Hamas had only made minor changes that did not affect the main parts of the proposal.

On 29 April, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said the proposal was “extraordinarily generous on the part of Israel.”

“They have to decide, and they have to decide quickly … I’m hopeful that they will make the right decision, and we can have a fundamental change in the dynamic,” Blinken said at the time.

Hamas has long stated they want a permanent ceasefire that would end the war. In contrast, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has repeatedly said he wishes to destroy Hamas before the war can end.

Ministers in Netanyahu’s governing coalition have stated they wish to continue the war to annex Gaza, ethnically cleanse its population through “voluntary emigration,” and build Jewish settlements on the ruins of Gaza’s destroyed cities.

https://thecradle.co/articles/israeli-n ... e-proposal

Dialing down expectations on a US–Saudi security pact

Expect a ‘less-for-less’ outcome from any forthcoming US–Saudi security pact. Israel’s war on Gaza has hampered Washington’s plans to push normalization with Tel Aviv and pull Riyadh away from the Russia–China sphere of influence.


MK Bhadrakumar

MAY 7, 2024

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(Photo Credit: The Cradle)

A historic security pact may be in the making between the United States and Saudi Arabia that could open a pathway to the kingdom’s normalization with Israel. Both sides are eager to close a deal that will replace their famous ‘oil-for-security’ bargain struck in 1945.

A caveat must be added, though. That 80-year-old agreement between president Franklin Roosevelt and King Abdulaziz Al-Saud has been tested in recent years as the global balance of power shifted and eroded some of their mutual trust.

With last decade’s Arab Uprisings, the once-reliable lines of communication between Riyadh and Washington became strained, and back channels diminished. Issues of reliability, due to trust deficit and waning US influence, began weighing down the once solid alliance. Three particular developments underscored that the pillars of the US–Saudi relationship had become shaky:

First, the creation of OPEC+, the brainwave of Russian President Vladimir Putin and Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman (MbS), which launched an era of more independent production policy; second, Riyadh’s decision to join the multipolar BRICS and Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO); and third, the Saudi decision to normalize relations with Iran, a commitment formalized in a Chinese-brokered peace deal in March 2023.

The raison d'être of a renewed US–Saudi partnership is not in doubt. The dramatic events of 7 October 2023 in the Gaza envelope shattered the Biden administration’s notion that the Palestinian problem was “resolving itself” and that all that was needed was a neat Saudi–Israeli normalization.

Instead, the issue of Palestine roared back to the center stage of West Asian security, and there is no leeway left to hoodwink the region, dissimulate empathy for the Palestinian cause, or strut around as a Good Samaritan on the Arab street.

Equally, Iran played its cards efficiently to bring the Axis of Resistance to the forecourt, something that rattled the Gulf Arab regimes, which, in turn, also provided a window of opportunity for the Biden Administration to re-engage their old allies.

The linkage between regional ceasefire demands, the humanitarian crisis in Gaza, and calls for the release of Israeli captives held by Hamas has enabled Washington to regain its footing as the key interlocutor on the diplomatic track.

Nonetheless, it remains a slippery slope for the US to reinsert itself as the main influencer in the region. Too much has changed in West Asia and the world in the interim.

The broad strategy pursued by the Biden team is to nurture the new ecosystem around the Abraham Accords that Donald Trump patented by envisaging an Israeli–Saudi deal as the linchpin of a broader political agreement. The White House imagines this would pave the way for Gaza’s reconstruction and the establishment of a Palestinian state that would go a long way to integrate Israel into its Arab neighborhood while allowing Washington to turn its attention to the Asia–Pacific and Eurasia to impede China’s rise and erode Moscow’s capacity to provide strategic space for China on the global stage.

Rather than a robust strategy, the above is a breathtakingly ambitious pipe dream given Washington’s growing list of existential challenges: an economy under the weight of the unprecedented debt burden; counterstrategies by the Russia–Iran–China axis; the threat of “de-dollarization” gaining traction in the world economy as more and more countries in the Global South are experimenting with alternative currencies in their international settlement.

Conceivably, one of the prime considerations in the feverish American mind is to get Saudi Arabia and the UAE to disassociate from a coordinated assault on the petrodollar at the forthcoming summit meeting of the BRICS in Kazan, Russia, on 22–24 October – a meeting expected to be a game changer in the “de-dollarization” process.

The forthcoming summit in Beijing this month between President Xi Jinping and Russian President Vladimir Putin is set to prioritize the restructuring of the international financial order. The latest data released by the US Treasury on 17 April showed that China’s holdings of US Treasury bonds fell to $775 billion in February, a drop of $22.7 billion from just a month earlier. The Global Times argued that “the downsizing marks a structural adjustment of China’s foreign exchange reserves, impacted by factors including the country’s balance of external payments and the profits on US Treasury bonds.” It also concluded the following:

As the global trend toward de-dollarization has begun, many countries have accelerated diversifying their reserves by increasing holdings of gold and using local currencies for international payment. China’s gold reserves at the end of March reached 72.74 million ounces, a monthly increase of 160,000 ounces, marking the 17th consecutive month for the country to increase holdings of this asset.

The figures speak for themselves. As one insightful recent US media commentary points out:

No concrete plans were committed to or laid out [by BRICS], but merely verbalizing the idea on the world stage shifts the Overton window of what’s acceptable to discuss publicly when it comes to countering the dominance of the US dollar in trade. While no BRICS currency is imminent, the idea is out there and it’s no longer a harebrained and fringe concept.

Suffice to say, the US–Saudi negotiations for a security pact are today either poised for a thrilling finish on Riyadh’s terms – or may meander, unanchored, at least until after the US November elections (33 Senate seats and all 435 House seats are also up for election on 5 November).

A top Saudi commentator noted that “the entire region is on the verge of applying ‘final touches’ against the backdrop of the war in Gaza. This could either lead to an agreement that leaves some either falling off their high horse or running to the edge of the abyss. In both cases, they will pay a difficult price.”

An insightful report in the Guardian this week disclosed that although the US–Saudi draft agreements on security and technology-sharing are ready, uncertainty lies ahead as these agreements were intended to be linked to a broader West Asia settlement involving Israel and the Palestinians. Put differently, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has to be brought on board on difficult topics such as a permanent ceasefire in Gaza and the creation of a Palestinian state. And all bets are off if he launches an offensive on Rafah.

So it is entirely unsurprising that the Saudis are now “pushing for a more modest plan B, which excludes the Israelis,” writes the Guardian. From a geopolitical perspective, a watered-down plan B might still be found attractive by Biden’s diplomats as it “would cement a strategic partnership with Saudi Arabia that would keep encroaching Chinese and Russian influence at bay. [But] It is far from clear whether the administration – let alone Congress – would accept such a less-for-less outcome.”

Netanyahu is all but certain to regard a normalization deal with the Saudis at this point in time as “a minefield that cannot be crossed due to the political cost involved.”

There is a famous line from a satirical song written in 1931 by the Soviet songwriter Vasily Lebedev-Kumach, which roughly translates as “The paper is the most important thing in life / Keep it safe as long as you’re alive / As without a proper paper, you’re a mere bug.”

The late Mikhail Gorbachev lived to rue that he didn’t demand a “proper paper” on NATO expansion. Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman should take Gorbachev’s regret as a cautionary tale.

https://thecradle.co/articles/dialing-d ... urity-pact

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Israel’s Brutality Against Palestinians Draws on British Rule
Posted by INTERNATIONALIST 360° on MAY 7, 2024
A Bustos

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British soldiers in Palestine during the Arab revolt, 1936. (Photo: SZ via Alamy)

Britain’s “mandate” over Palestine from 1920-48 left an apparatus of repression which Israel inherited and still uses today in its ferocious war on Palestinians.

Israel’s present use of collective punishment against Palestinians owes much of its origins to British rule in Palestine.

So too do the aerial bombardments, military raids, use of Palestinian civilians as human shields and the infrastructure of military law deployed against an occupied, overwhelmingly civilian population.

Britain ruled Palestine during its “mandate” between 1920-48, and its repressive infrastructure came into full force during the 1936-39 Great Arab Revolt.

In 1936, Palestine erupted into a national uprising following two decades of peaceful resistance against British rule and several failed uprisings over the 1920s, as the political and economic situation became dire for the Arab majority.

The uprising called for an end to British support for Zionist colonisation and a guarantee of Palestinian self-determination. Britain, however, saw it as a threat to its rule and responded with brutal repression.

By the end of the revolt, 10 percent of the adult male Arab population were either killed, wounded, imprisoned or exiled by the British.

This brought the revolt to an end but also devastated Palestinian society and left it defenceless against Zionist militia groups during the 1948 Nakba (catastrophe). Then, over two-thirds of the Palestinian people were ethnically cleansed from their country to establish the State of Israel.

Palestinian historian Rashid Khalidi has argued that the armed suppression of Arab resistance during the revolt was among the most valuable services Britain provided to the Zionist movement.

Martial law

To crush the revolt, Britain brought Palestine under martial law, building on counterinsurgency tactics it had refined in other colonies like Ireland and India.

As historian Matthew Hughes explains, in response to the 1936 uprising British authorities renewed local laws enacted during the 1920s, referring to them as “emergency laws”, to impose collective punishment against Palestinians.

“Britain enforced collective punishment against the entire population”

This allowed the mandate government to impose curfews, censor written materials, occupy buildings, as well as arrest, imprison and deport individuals without trial while suspending the right to counsel, policies Israel still enforces against Palestinians today.

Far from distinguishing between armed rebels and civilians, Britain enforced collective punishment against the entire population. Mining the declassified files, David Cronin describes how “Britain’s elite decided early on that Palestinians should be targeted en masse”.

By 1937, Palestine was under effective military rule. During the mandate period, Britain had put in place a legal system which was designed to prevent Palestinian political organising while also giving itself broad powers.

Camps and prisons

British military rule turned large parts of the country into prisons. Military law made it possible to hand out swift sentences, meaning large-scale detentions of peasants and urban workers.

Detainees were held, often without trial, in extremely overcrowded camps with inadequate sanitation. In May 1939, answering a parliamentary question, colonial secretary Malcolm MacDonald confirmed that there were 13 detention camps in Palestine housing 4,816 people.

This included several concentration camps (as Britain itself referred to them) like Sarafand al-Amar, located at the largest military base in Palestine, which held thousands of prisoners.

Other camps included Nur Shams, near Tulkarem, and Acre prison on the Mediterranean coast which also hosted Palestine’s largest prison.

At one point the overcrowding was so bad it became necessary to release veteran detainees whenever new ones were arrested. In 1939 the number of detainees rose to over 9,000, ten times the figure of two years previously.

According to Palestinian prisoner rights group, Addameer, at least six of the major Israeli prison and detention centres today were built during the mandate era. These include Kishon, Damon, Ramleh, Ashkelon, Megiddo and Al-Moscobiyeh (the Russian Compound) which are still used by Israel to imprison Palestinians.

Administrative detention

In November 2023, following a four-day humanitarian “pause” between Israel and Hamas, the Israeli government released hundreds of Palestinian prisoners. This shone a spotlight for western audiences on the fact that thousands of Palestinians are regularly imprisoned today in Israeli jails.

What drew most attention was that so many of them, including children, were held under the policy of administrative detention, an unlawful process that allows Israel to hold detainees without charge or trial.

However, Israel appears to have inherited the practice from the British, who regularly detained thousands of Palestinians without trial. Following its establishment in 1948, Israel has practised detention without trial as a staple of military rule.

After the end of the revolt in 1939, Britain strengthened the powers of the mandate administration and in 1945 introduced the Defence (Emergency) Regulations. Ironically, this was in response to violence carried out by Zionist paramilitary groups at that time.

Israel incorporated these regulations and most other British mandate laws into the Israeli Law and Administration Ordinance of 1948. It used them against Palestinians inside Israel between 1948-66 and then extended them to Palestinians in the occupied territories of the West Bank and Gaza in 1967.

These laws would be used repeatedly in response to popular uprisings thereafter, this time against Israeli rule.

A 1989 report by Palestinian human rights organisation Al-Haq describes how Israeli commanders issued a proclamation in 1967 affirming that the Defence (Emergency) Regulations were to remain in force.

Even though they had been terminated by Britain at the end of its mandate, Israeli leaders kept and continued to use them against Palestinians.

In 2019, Human Rights Watch highlighted eight cases where Israeli authorities used military orders to “prosecute Palestinians in military courts for their peaceful expression or involvement in non-violent groups or demonstrations” using, among other measures, the Defence (Emergency) Regulations of 1945 inherited from Britain.

Charles Tegart’s fence

To fight the 1930s revolt, Britain sent Sir Charles Tegart, who had previously headed the police force in colonial India, to Palestine where he built much of the infrastructure used to intern suspects. Tegart built so-called Arab Investigation Centres which were used as torture chambers.

He established a special centre in Jerusalem to train interrogators in torture where suspects underwent brutal questioning, involving humiliation, beatings, and physical mistreatment.

Colonial administrator Edward Keith-Roach recounted in his memoirs that the purpose of these centres was to train police officers “in the gentle art of ‘third degree’” for use on Arabs until they “spilled the beans”.

Israeli historian Tom Segev describes how Tegart “built dozens of police fortresses around the country and put up concrete guard posts, which the British called pillboxes, along the roads”.

Tegart’s best-known recommendation was that a huge fence be erected along Palestine’s northern border, which came to be known as “Tegart’s fence”.

To construct it, he enlisted the help of the Jewish Agency, the main organisation encouraging Jewish settlement to Palestine. The contract to build it was awarded to construction company Solel Boneh which was a project of the Histadrut, the leading Zionist trade union in Palestine and Israel’s national trade union today.

Solel Boneh also built the new police buildings, popularly known as the “Tegart Fortresses”. A 2012 BBC profile on Tegart describes how many of them are still used today.

Located mainly in the north of the country they are now situated near the Israeli border with Lebanon but instead of British troops, they are manned by Israeli soldiers.

Military tactics

Britain used both ground troops and air power through the Royal Air Force against Palestinian rebels during 1936-39. Following the termination of the Munich Agreement made by Britain with Nazi Germany in 1938, Britain sent over 100,000 troops to Palestine, flooding the country with soldiers.

On 7 May 1936, the high commissioner for Palestine, Arthur Wauchope, sought “general covering approval” from the Colonial Office to impose collective punishment on cities and towns where acts of disobedience occurred.

He promptly received the go-ahead and chose Nazareth, Safed and Bisan to be penalised.

In June 1936, British forces destroyed large parts of the Old City of Jaffa. The army blew up between 220 and 240 multi-occupancy buildings, rendering up to 6,000 Palestinians homeless.

While the level of destruction then seems small in comparison to the massive Israeli bombardment in Gaza today, the use of disproportionate force and collective punishment during a military operation felt mainly by civilians is not new to Palestine.

After crushing the general strike that had been declared by the newly formed Arab Higher Committee, with many of the key figures involved imprisoned or exiled, the second phase of the revolt from 1937 saw a large armed uprising sweep through most of the country, reaching its peak in 1938.

To combat this, British forces would take their repression to Palestine’s rural countryside where most of the armed groups were.

Village raids

To hunt down and eliminate those involved in the uprising, the British regularly cordoned off entire villages, followed by deadly raids. British troops would ransack homes, often destroying property, in search of rebel fighters or weapons.

Palestinian men found with weapons or even bullets were shot dead. Many were killed without any evidence of involvement in military activities.

During raids, British soldiers would often round up the inhabitants and imprison them in open-air pens with barbed wire. Villages would be collectively fined for attacks against British soldiers if the attacker was believed to hail from, or live near, the village in question.

In addition, the homes of suspected attackers and their relatives were demolished, a policy which Israel uses against convicted, or suspected, Palestinian militants today.

Two villages subjected to abuses were al-Bassa and Halhul, which both became the subject of a 2022 BBC report, following a petition from survivors calling for official recognition and an apology from the British government.

This report found that “the historical evidence involved includes details of arbitrary killings, torture, the use of human shields and the introduction of home demolitions as collective punishment.”

It added: “Much of it was conducted within formal policy guidelines for UK forces at the time or with the consent of senior officers.”

Israeli military raids into Palestinians villages in the West Bank are a daily part of life and have escalated since 7 October 2023.

Human shields

Another tactic Britain used was to force Palestinian civilians to accompany them on patrols. They were made to sit, unprotected, at the front of military convoys while driving through areas with high rebel activity and even to drive over mines to blow them up before British troops proceeded.

This tactic had come from British rule in India and was known as “minesweeping”. Many Palestinians were killed or seriously injured this way.

Britain effectively used Palestinian civilians as human shields, which Israeli forces have been filmed doing repeatedly in both the West Bank and in Gaza for years.

“Britain effectively used Palestinian civilians as human shields”

In December 2023, two Palestinians, a 15-year-old boy and a 30-year-old man in Gaza, claim they were used as human shields by Israeli soldiers, the boy saying they strapped him with bombs before forcing him into a tunnel. In Israel’s 2014 assault against Gaza, similar allegations were made.

In the West Bank there have been numerous videos showing Israeli soldiers taking Palestinian civilians and forcing them to sit or stand blindfolded in front of Israeli vehicles as they conduct operations.

In some cases, they have even placed civilians onto the front of those vehicles to deter other Palestinians from throwing rocks at invading Israeli forces, just like Britain did during the revolt.

This historical context is especially important to understand now, as Israel has for years accused Palestinian groups like Hamas of using civilians as human shields.

Despite there being little evidence to support this claim (and that the available evidence actually shows Israeli forces doing it themselves) the key historical context is that British troops used it against Palestinian civilians during the Great Revolt.

Orde Wingate and the Special Night Squads

The most explicit case of British-Zionist collaboration in repressing the revolt came with the entry into Palestine of the British general Orde Charles Wingate and his creation of the Special Night Squads (SNS).

Wingate, an intelligence officer and committed Christian Zionist, was tasked by the British Army with training Jewish fighters to patrol the Iraq Petroleum Company’s pipeline.

With the SNS, he created his own private militia drawn from recruits within the Haganah, the Zionist military organisation, training them in ambush and assassination tactics.

Describing himself as a firm believer in Zionism, Wingate reportedly told his men that “the Arabs think the night is theirs. The British lock themselves up in their barracks at night. But we, the Jews, will teach them to fear the night more than the day”.

Together with Yitzhak Sadeh, commander of the Palmach, the main strike force of the Haganah, and future founder of the Israeli Defense Force (IDF), Wingate took the SNS on nightly raids against Palestinian villages.

“Two of Israel’s leading future commanders both served under Wingate in the SNS”

After attacks against the pipeline occurred, his Night Squads would invade nearby villages at dawn, rounding up all the male inhabitants. Forcing them to stand against the wall, the squads then whipped the men’s bare backs.

At times, Wingate would humiliate the villagers, other times he shot them dead. According to Segev, the men under his command said behind his back they thought he was mad.

Israeli military historian Ze’ev Schiff argued that Wingate “left his mark as the single most important influence on the military thinking of the Haganah”.

A lexicon issued by the Israeli Ministry of Defense many years after his death states: “The teaching of Orde Charles Wingate, his character and leadership were a cornerstone for many of the Haganah’s commanders, and his influence can be seen in the Israel Defense Force’s combat doctrine.”

Two of Israel’s leading future commanders both served under Wingate in the SNS: Moshe Dayan, who became the IDF’s chief of staff and Yigal Allon, a future IDF general and foreign minister.

Dayan said Wingate “taught us everything we know” and that “even when nothing happened, we learned much from Wingate’s instruction”.

Allon described how “by attaching Jewish fighters to his units, he [Wingate] also helped to provide facilities for practical training… He regarded himself, in practice, as a member of the Haganah and that was how we all saw him – as the comrade and, as we called him, ‘the Friend’.”

Major General Bernard Montgomery

After Wingate, the most notorious British military figure in Palestine during the revolt was Bernard Montgomery. “Monty”, as he was known, was a short-tempered, old-fashioned soldier who rejected any suggestion that the revolt was a national uprising, instead describing the rebels as “bandits”.

He introduced the Bren gun to Palestine, replacing the old Lewis submachine gun the British had been using and gave his men simple instructions on how to deal with the rebels: kill them.

Having previously served in Ireland, launching operations against Irish rebels in 1921, he often made comparisons between the two colonies.

Montgomery was preoccupied with how Britain had lost control of most of Ireland. He thought too many concessions had been made to Sinn Fein. Therefore, his conclusions for Palestine were that Britain should suppress any expression of national identity.

He ordered any Arab caught wearing the chequered headscarf (the Keffiyeh) to be “caged”. He also floated the idea of chaining people’s legs as punishment.

Since Israel’s own military occupation of 1967 began, authorities there have repeatedly waged campaigns against Palestinian national symbols. The Palestinian flag has been targeted across the West Bank, Jerusalem and inside Israel itself and is regularly removed from public view and confiscated.

Much like the British during the revolt, Israeli authorities see Palestinian national identity as a threat and work to stamp it out.

https://libya360.wordpress.com/2024/05/ ... tish-rule/

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‘Israel’ Makes Move on Rafah, Forced Displacement Commences
MAY 7, 2024

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Palestinian civilians, already displaced from northern Gaza, flee from Rafah before Israeli invasion begins. Photo: CNN.

Israeli occupation forces have started to forcefully displace Palestinians formerly displaced to Rafah amid the increased likelihood of the start of the imminent invasion.

The Israeli occupation forces officially began, on Monday, May 6, the forceful displacement of the already-displaced Palestinian people currently seeking shelter in Rafah, which had been designated by the Israelis as an alleged “safe zone” early in the war.

With flyers dropping from the skies, SMS, and social media broadcasts, the Israeli occupation’s action on Rafah is set to be yet another episode of this live-streamed genocide.
[/img]
According to Israeli spokesperson Avichay Adraee, the IOF has allegedly expanded the alleged “humanitarian zone” in the Mawasi area and is forcing Palestinians out of eastern Rafah, which was allegedly the initial “safe zone.”


The action being taken by the Israeli occupation would forcefully displace at least 100,000 of the 1.4 million Palestinians currently displaced in Rafah. It would also threaten to hold all remaining Palestinians in Gaza hostage, as the Rafah border crossing will likely be targeted through bombardments.

After 7 months of the televised genocide, the number of Palestinian martyrs, wounded, and missing has exceeded 100,000.


Three IOF soldiers killed, 12 wounded in Karem Abu Salem shelling
The Israeli military admitted to the deaths of three of its soldiers and the wounding of 12 others as a result of the Palestinian Resistance’s shelling of an Israeli military outpost located near the Karem Abu Salem crossing.

Two of the killed soldiers fought with the Shaked battalion under the Givati Brigade, while the third fought with the 931 battalion under the Nahal Brigade.

Twelve soldiers were also wounded in the shelling, including two of the 931 battalion, and one of the Shaked battalion, who was reportedly in critical condition.

According to the Al-Qassam Brigades, Resistance fighters targeted the location using a 114 mm short-range Rajum missile system.

The targeted gathering was responsible for the aggression against cities in Rafah and included Israeli military and Shin Bet officers, according to a source in the Resistance.

The sources said the Resistance’s preparation for the operation, its setup, and intelligence capabilities, affirmed its capabilities to accurately and directly engage its targets.

It was simultaneously emphasized that the operation relayed several political messages, most notably the Resistance’s readiness to defend the people of Palestine against reckless Israeli aggression, as well as a military message affirming the Resistance’s capabilities and steadiness, despite the “successes” the Israeli occupation claims it is achieving.

Israeli air defenses have since stepped up their bombing of Rafah as a response to the Karem Abu Salem operation.



Rafah invasion will happen with or without exchange deal: Netanyahu
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said earlier on April 30, that an invasion of the densely-populated Rafah city will take place regardless of whether an exchange deal with the Palestinian Resistance was reached or not.

“The idea that we will stop the war before all its goals have been achieved is irrelevant. We will enter Rafah and destroy Hamas battalions there, with or without an agreement [on hostages], to achieve absolute victory,” he told families of the captives held in the Strip.


For many weeks now, Israelis have been flooding the streets of Tel Aviv and several other areas, demanding that Netanyahu resign over his performance in the war on Gaza, including his continued dismissal of an exchange deal.

(Al Mayadeen)

https://orinocotribune.com/israel-makes ... commences/
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Post by blindpig » Thu May 09, 2024 10:58 am

A Diary of a Palestinian Living in Israel
Posted by INTERNATIONALIST 360° on MAY 7, 2024
Diana Butto

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Palestinian citizens of Israel march with anti-war banners and Palestinian flags during a rally calling for a ceasefire in Gaza and marking the 48th anniversary of Land Day in the town of Deir Hanna, Israel, on March 30, 2024.Palestinian citizens of Israel march with anti-war banners and Palestinian flags during a rally calling for a ceasefire in Gaza and marking the 48th anniversary of Land Day in the town of Deir Hanna, Israel, on March 30, 2024. Photo by Marcus Yam for the LA Times via Getty Images

From top-charting songs to dating apps, genocide fever has taken over Israel.


“I’m sure you heard the news,” read the WhatsApp message. “They have taken Nadera,” it said, referring to Israel’s arrest of Palestinian professor Nadera Shalhoub-Kevorkian. Nadera was arrested for “incitement” after she (correctly) labeled Israel’s actions in Gaza as genocide. I had, of course, heard the news because I, like millions of other Palestinians, have been glued to my phone for the past seven months, seeing image after image, video after video, of Israel’s genocidal war against Palestinians in Gaza and its unrelenting attacks on Palestinians in the West Bank.

Nadera is a well-known professor at Hebrew University in Jerusalem. But despite being a professor, she is, in the eyes of Israel, a threat – not for anything that she has done, but simply for being. Nadera, like me, is one of the 2 million Palestinians who hold Israeli citizenship – non-Jews who live in the apartheid state of Israel (Nadera is also a U.S. citizen, in case Joe Biden cares).

People often ask what it is like to be a Palestinian living in Israel. Here’s what it’s like: We are the remnants and reminders of the 1948 Nakba, people whose nation was destroyed, communities razed, and whose families remain scattered around the world to make way for Jewish immigrants to take over our country and homes. We are the “enemy from within” for whom laws are enacted to enshrine our subservient status while at the same time being told we should be grateful for being “allowed” to live in our homeland.

As Palestinians in Israel, we must maneuver a system of Jewish supremacy and open racism every day, while living with the very people who perpetrated the Nakba or support it. Israeli politicians have made it clear that we are only here because David Ben-Gurion, Israel’s first prime minister and who spearheaded the Nakba, did not, they say, “finish the job” in 1948, referring to the ethnic cleansing of Palestine.

I’ve lived in Haifa since 2010 after spending my childhood in Canada and later living in Gaza City and Nazareth, as well as Ramallah, where I served as a legal adviser to the Palestinian negotiating team in the early 2000s. Though I have lived here for many years, not a day goes by when I do not hear anti-Palestinian racist statements from Israeli politicians and ordinary citizens. My well-intending Jewish Israeli friends urge me to brush it off – “You know how Israelis are,” they say, apparently in an attempt to convince themselves these comments are aberrations and not what Palestinians live through daily in Israeli society. But they are not aberrations; racism and threats are commonplace, pervasive, and longstanding.

Genocide Fever

Since Oct. 7, genocide fever has been in full swing. For seven months, Israeli politicians and pundits have spewed genocidal statements on Israeli television and social media on a daily basis. Israel’s far-right heritage minister, a man who early in the war called nuking Gaza an option, recently said that Israel “must find ways [to deal with] Gazans that are more painful than death.” But these are not just statements. They are matched by deeds.

Israel’s violence has become so commonplace that Israeli soldiers openly brag about killing, wounding, maiming, and torturing Palestinians on social media. Israeli soldiers, who have learned there are no repercussions for their actions, film themselves dedicating the blowing up of Gaza buildings to their children, proposing marriage against the backdrop of Palestinian homes and buildings reduced to rubble, writing “save the date” notices on bombed houses, and gleefully playing with the lingerie of Palestinian women. Killing Palestinians earns Israelis bragging rights, and dating apps are filled with pictures of men brandishing weapons and showing themselves in combat in Gaza.

But it’s not just Israeli politicians and soldiers. Some of the top-charting songs in Israel (a few even with over 20 million views on YouTube) call for Gaza to be erased and for Palestine’s celebrity supporters, such as Bella Hadid and Dua Lipa, to be killed. Israeli comedian Hen Mizrahi made a comedy routine about Palestinians being killed by food airdrops in Gaza. These airdrops are only necessary because Israel is deliberately starving Palestinians in the besieged enclave. Mizrahi later doubled down on his comments on national TV, repeating the same line uttered by former Israeli President Chaim Herzog: “There are no innocents in Gaza.”

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A post shared by @dianabuttu

It doesn’t stop there. At every turn, a sign can be found promoting Israel’s attacks. Signs in English quoting Nikki Haley’s call for Netanyahu to “finish them” are plastered on storefronts and displayed in apartment windows. Images morphing Adolf Hitler with Hamas leaders can be found on highway overhangs.

But the most popular slogan these days, “Together We Will Win,” is everywhere – on billboards, commercial websites, and business cards. It was even stamped on eggs – yes, eggs – alongside the expiration date, of course.

Image
A post shared by @partnersintorah

“Your Neighbor Will Just Report You to the Police”

My Israeli neighbor has a “Together We Will Win” bumper sticker on her car.

“What does ‘win’ mean?” I recently asked her.

“You don’t know what win means?” She replied.

“Not really. I am asking what ‘win’ looks like. So far, more than 35,000 Palestinians killed, including 15,000 kids….”

She shrugged and unabashedly answered, “This is the price.”

Her response is typical: A recent opinion poll shows that the vast majority of Jewish Israelis – 94% – believe the Israeli military has used “adequate or too little force” in Gaza. About 88% of Jewish Israelis believe the number of Palestinians killed or wounded in Gaza is justified. These are astonishing figures given the apocalyptic scale of death and destruction that Israel has meted out on Gaza and its people.

A friend warned me not to say anything to my neighbor. “Don’t express dissent,” she told me. “Your neighbor will just report you to the police.” My friend is right to worry. Alongside the genocidal frenzy, Israel has taken measures to crush any domestic dissent, including banning protests, passing a law to shut down Al Jazeera, and going after those who dare speak out against genocide, including professor Shalhoub-Kevorkian.

Since Oct. 7, hundreds of Palestinian citizens of Israel have been arrested for “incitement” and “supporting terrorism” as expressions of solidarity with Gaza are characterized, speaking out against Israeli state crimes, and, in some cases, for writing Quranic verses. Students – ratted out by fellow classmates – have been disciplined by their colleges or universities for “liking” social media posts, while those who openly advocate genocide remain free to do so. Armed militia groups patrol Israel’s streets and social media posts and report Palestinians, including doctors and professors, to police.

Palestinian neuroscientist and folk singer Dalal Abu Amneh received death threats for posting “There is no victor but God” with a Palestinian flag emoji on social media after Oct. 7. After reporting the threats to the police, she was arrested – not those who threatened her. Following Abu Amneh’s release, her neighbors staged a months-long protest outside her home, with some calling for her expulsion and threatening her with death and rape. The mayor of her town ran his re-election campaign by showing up to the protests, threatening to expel her, and even changing the name of her street to “Israel Defense Forces Street.” That, of course, is permissible, but denouncing genocide is not.

The reason for the crackdown on Palestinians in Israel is clear: Keep us afraid so we do not dare to speak out. And while the carnage continues in the occupied territories and our families, friends, and nation are battered, we are expected to stay quiet, even as our Israeli neighbors and colleagues treat genocide as entertainment.

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https://libya360.wordpress.com/2024/05/ ... in-israel/

Israel’s War on Gaza Could Spark Protests that Shape Entire Region
Posted on May 8, 2024 by Yves Smith

Yves here. Confirming the thesis of this post, a new Garland Nixon interview with Laith Marouf of Free Palestine Video starts out (at 2:20) with a discussion of an armed Resistance in Bahrain, which has risen despite the size of its large US Navy base and airbase, and a large US army base nearby in Saudi Arabia. It raises the specter that supposedly safe US military installations my not be so.

Twitter is taking notice too:


🚨🇧🇭 BREAKING

The Islamic Resistance in Bahrain has declared war on Israel, and they have now joined Hamas’ Operation “Al Aqsa Flood”

They posted this video of them targeting the Israeli transport company “Track Net” in Eilat


What do you think ↙️

pic.twitter.com/uA2GCiAZuX

— Alex Barnicoat (@mrbarnicoat) May 2, 2024


By Paul Rogers, Emeritus Professor of Peace Studies in the Department of Peace Studies and International Relations at Bradford University, and an Honorary Fellow at the Joint Service Command and Staff College. He is openDemocracy’s international security correspondent. He is on Twitter at: @ProfPRogers. Originally published at openDemocracy

Though many analysts feared an uncontrolled military escalation between Israel and Iran last month, this seems to have been avoided for now at least. Many states across the world are, however, witnessing a political escalation – not least those in North Africa and West Asia, which are often overlooked in conversations about protest.

The United States is the most obvious example of state-level controversy. Pro-Palestine protests and occupations are taking place at university campuses across the country – many of which have been met by violent police-led actions – as people take issue with Joe Biden’s enabling Israel
in its horrific seven-month assault on Gaza.

If unresolved by late summer, the likely beneficiary of these anti-Israel, anti-Biden protests will be Donald Trump. Should he be elected as president, Trump would rely on the support of Israel-supporting evangelical Christians and Christian Zionists – which could lead him to embolden the current or future Israeli government to take far greater control of Gaza and possibly also the occupied West Bank.

Widespread anger over the government’s support for Israel appears to also be having a political impact in the UK. There have been several pro-Palestine protests of well over a hundred thousand people over the past seven months, exacerbated by British arms sales and other military links to Israel, and this discontent appears to have reared its head at the ballot box during the local elections in England and Wales last week.

Rishi Sunak’s Conservative Party had an awful night, losing 474 councillors. But Keir Starmer’s Labour Party failed to win the majority of these, gaining only 186. The rest were scooped up by the Liberal Democrats, the Greens and Independents – including many left-wingers who distanced themselves from Labour in part due to Starmer’s failure to meaningfully criticise Israel or call for an end to the war on Gaza.

It seems Labour’s massive lead in the opinion polls is a reflection of the Conservatives’ problems, rather than the party’s popularity. The voting pattern seen last week will certainly extend in some manner to the General Election later this year, which will offer little voting choice and much dissatisfaction for millions of progressive voters.

But while much media attention has been given to the protests and voting habits on either side of the Atlantic, what is happening across the Arab world has been largely overlooked.

Israel has for decades played a thoroughly useful role for autocratic regimes seeking to maintain control. Arab leaders have been able to encourage the public to direct their anger at the Zionist treatment of the Palestinians, thereby reducing the risk of protests directed at themselves.

That broke down with the 2011 Arab Spring, when a region-wide movement of people turned out to protest against their leaders. Some regimes, including Egypt and especially Syria, attempted to maintain control through brute force, while others used a mixture of limited concession and repression. Others, such as Jordan and Morocco, were rather more concessionary at least in the short term, and one, Tunisia, saw a change of power with the end of the Ben Ali autocracy after its 23 years of control.

After the violence of the Hamas attack on 7 October last year, public reaction across Arab states was muted, but that changed rapidly as the sheer ferocity of the Israeli assault on Gaza and the Palestinians emerged.

This was a tricky time for autocratic leaders. It was impossible to control public anger given the intensity of the killing of thousands of Palestinians and the destruction of homes and public buildings in Gaza. Demonstrations were allowed, including some organised by the regimes themselves in the early weeks.

That period is now long gone, but the hour-by-hour media coverage of the war’s impact on Palestinians means public anger cannot be assuaged. Many regimes across the region are now taking a tougher line as they fear risks to their own survival.

In Egypt and Morocco – where protesters have been critical of their countries’ increasingly close relations with Israel in recent years – authorities have clamped down on demonstrations and made arrests. In Jordan, meanwhile, 1,500 protesters have been arrested at protests outside the Israeli embassy since 7 October, according to Amnesty International.

Some regimes are conscious of the long-term link between the plight of Palestinians and the lack of rights in their own countries. As a report in The New York Times put it:

“For decades, Arab activists have linked the struggle for justice for the Palestinians — a cause that unites Arabs of different political persuasions from Marrakesh to Baghdad — to the struggle for greater rights and freedoms at home. For them, Israel was an avatar of the authoritarian and colonialist forces that had thwarted their own societies’ growth.”

For now, Arab regimes are retaining control – but this could change quickly. Israel this week launched an assault on Rafah, a city in southern Gaza that is sheltering 1.4 million Palestinians. And the bombardment of Rafah – which Israel said would be a ‘safe zone’ when it ordered evacuations from northern Gaza last year – came as Israeli prime minister Binyamin Netanyahu rejected Hamas’s offer of a ceasefire.

There is another factor often overlooked in the West. Israel’s assault on Gaza followed a series of grievous failures by the Israeli Defence Force, border police and intelligence agencies on 7 October – which showed beyond doubt that Israel’s much-vaunted regional security supremacy is simply not what it seems. This feeling is only increasing as it is proving impossible for Israel to destroy Hamas. Many Arab activists are now thinking that if Israel can fail, why shouldn’t their own elites?

https://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2024/05 ... egion.html

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US-Israeli Espionage Cell Dismantled in Yemen MAY 7, 2024

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A banner on Yemen’s Saba News Agency published on May 6, 2024 announces it is going to release a video of confessions of arrested members of a spy ring operating in favor of the US and Israel. Photo: PressTV.

Yemen’s security forces have dismantled a major espionage network operating for the US and Israeli intelligence services amid a campaign by the Arab country to defend the people of Palestine in their struggle against the Israeli aggression on Gaza.

Yemen’s Saba News Agency said in a Monday report that the security services in the country, in cooperation with its defense ministry, had carried out an operation to arrest members of the spy ring known as Force 400.

It said Force 400 had been led by Ammar Affash, a man who has long been on Yemen’s wanted list because of his efforts to recruit people to carry out sabotage operations for the US and the Israeli regime.

The group was mainly operating in areas in western coasts of Yemen where the country has based missile and drone capacities that have been used to attack shipping activities linked to the US, Britain and Israel.

A video of confessions of 18 members of the spy ring were released showing that they had been supplying information about Yemen’s missile, drone, and ship launch sites to the US and Israeli intelligence services. The information has enabled attacks by US and British warplanes on Yemen, said the report by Saba.



The spies also relayed information about the increase in the number of fighters recruited by Yemen’s ruling Ansarullah movement in recent months.

One of the spies said that he had sold the intelligence for only 300 Saudi Riyals ($80 USD).

Yemen started launching attacks on Israeli-linked ships in the Red Sea and in the Arabian Sea in November, more than a month after Israel invaded Gaza.

The Yemeni attacks later expanded to cover US and British ships after the two countries launched airstrikes on Yemen to force it to stop its pro-Palestine campaign.

https://orinocotribune.com/us-israeli-e ... -in-yemen/

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Communist Party of Israel-Hadash: Netanyahu’s fascist government on verge of causing humanitarian disaster in RafahOriginally published: In Defense of Communism on May 7, 2024 by In Defense of Communism Staff (more by In Defense of Communism) | (Posted May 08, 2024)

“Israel’s fascist government is on the verge of bringing about a humanitarian disaster in Rafah,” Hadash and Communist Party of Israel (CPI) says in a common statement on Monday, May 6.

Protesting far-right Israeli government plans to “bomb and invade the Rafah area on the Egyptian border, which houses hundreds of thousands of displaced people,” Hadash and the CPI warns of “the mass slaughter and humanitarian disaster involved in the bombing of a very small area containing more than a million displaced people.”

Launching such an operation would entail “sacrificing the kidnapped and hostages on the altar of the survival of the bloody and murderous government,” it continues, calling on the international community to intervene in order to bring about a ceasefire and an end to hostilities.

According Hadash MK Ofer Cassif,

;i]Mere days after his government has agreed in principle to the Egyptian framework of a ceasefire in Gaza in exchange for the release of Israeli hostages, Netanyahu hurried to change his mind when it became apparent that Hamas accepted the conditions. There is no explanation for this senseless U-turn other than as a continuation of the surrender to the wicked Kahanists on whose support his government depends.[/i]

“For these criminals, ‘total victory’ is nothing less than the total annihilation of Gaza and its citizens, in the very same period that we observe Holocaust Memorial Day. For them, the lives of the dying hostages, who have been tortured by Hamas criminals for over seven months, are worthless—a sacrifice worth making on the altar of the government of atrocities and the bloody messiah. Not only is this position morally repugnant and vile, but it is also against the real interests of the citizens of Israel, which are being repeatedly sacrificed in favor of a handful of hate-filled, revenge-obsessed lunatics. I call upon all of the public to take all available nonviolent means to avoid doom for Gaza, the hostages, and all of us. Stop the war! All for all, now!”, he said.

Israel launched an offensive on Rafah on Monday after Netanyahu refused a ceasefire and said he wanted to continue the war. After dropping leaflets asking the Palestinians deported to Rafah to leave the “safe” city, the Israeli air force bombed eastern Rafah. The panicked population no longer knows where to go.

The civilians were being called to move to an expanded humanitarian zone in the al-Mawasi and Khan Younis areas of southern Gaza. The Israeli occupation forces ordered the residents of nine blocks in eastern Rafah to “temporarily move” to a so-called “expanded humanitarian area” in Al Mawassi. The area slated for evacuation is about 31 square kilometers and includes Al Shokat municipality area, As Salam neighborhood, Al Juneineh, Tal Azar’a and Al Bayuk. This area was home to some 64,000 Palestinians prior to 7 October and currently encompasses nine sites hosting internally displaced persons, three clinics, and six warehouses. With today’s evacuation orders, 277 square kilometers or about 76 per cent of the Gaza Strip have been placed under evacuation orders; this includes all areas north of Wadi Gaza, whose residents were ordered to evacuate in late October, as well as specific areas south of Wadi Gaza slated for evacuation by the Israeli military since 1 December.

The occupation army estimates there are about 100,000 residents in the southern Gaza neighborhoods ordered to evacuate and Gaza medical sources say 26 civilians killed in Rafah as Israel begins forced evacuation ahead of ground operation. Between the afternoons of May 3 and May 6, according to the Ministry of Health (MoH) in Gaza, 113 Palestinians were killed and 241 injured, including 52 killed and 90 injured in the last 24 hours. Between October 7, 2023 and May 6, 2024, at least 34,735 Palestinians were killed in Gaza and 78,108 Palestinians were injured, according to MoH in Gaza.

On Monday evening, Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh tells Qatar’s Prime Minister Mohammad bin Abdulrahman Al Thani and Egyptian intelligence chief Abbas Kamel that the Palestinian group accepts their terms for a ceasefire with Israel, according to an official announcement from Hamas. A senior Hamas official tells Al Jazeera the same.

Israel has repeatedly said it will not accept a deal, as repeatedly demanded by Hamas, that conditions the release of hostages on the end of the war. On Saturday, furthermore, an official source, widely believed to be Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, stated that Israel had not empowered the mediators to issue guarantees of an end to the war, either.

U.S., Egyptian, and Qatari mediators have been negotiating with Hamas in recent days over a three-phase proposal, green-lit by Israel. The proposal has not been published, but reportedly provides, in the first phase, for 33 living hostages–women, children, the elderly and the sick–to be freed during a 40-day truce, in return for hundreds of Palestinian security prisoners.

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Dor Pazuelo/Flash90

As per the reported text of the offer, indirect negotiations between Israel and Hamas would begin anew on the 16th day of the truce, to set out an arrangement to restore sustainable calm to Gaza over the second and third stages of the deal. In the second phase, all remaining living prisoners would be released during a further 42-day truce, in return for hundreds more security prisoners, and the Israeli occupation army would withdraw from Gaza. The third and final stage of the deal would again last 42 days and Hamas would reportedly be required to hand over the bodies of those who were killed on October 7 or died in captivity, in exchange for bodies of Palestinian prisoners who died in Israeli custody.

The rehabilitation of the Gaza Strip would begin during the first phase of the deal, starting with the restoration of Gaza’s roads, electricity, water, sanitation, and communication infrastructure. Preparations for a five-year reconstruction plan for Gaza’s homes and civilian infrastructure would be completed during the second phase of the deal, and construction would begin in the third stage.

Racist National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir rejects Hamas’s acceptance of a ceasefire as “a trick.”

There is only one response to Hamas’s tricks and games–an immediate order to conquer Rafah, increase military pressure, and continue to crush Hamas until it is utterly defeated.

On Monday night, hostage family members blocked parts of Begin Road, near the army headquarters, and Ayalon Highway, calling for a ceasefire and the return of the hostages. The demonstrations came shortly after Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh had informed Qatar’s prime minister and Egypt’s intelligence chief that it had accepted their ceasefire proposal. Other demonstrations against the offensive launched in Rafah and the war in Gaza were held in Central Tel-Aviv, Jerusalem, Haifa and Beersheva.

https://mronline.org/2024/05/08/communi ... el-hadash/

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Israeli army shoots down 40 percent of its own drones: US

Israel has faced an increased threat from drone warfare used by the Axis of Resistance

News Desk

MAY 7, 2024

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(Photo credit: Getty Images)

Israel has been shooting down a significant number of its own drones, a US military official said on 2 April.

“Something interesting that comes from Israel, 40 percent” of the drones “knocked out” by the Israeli army are shot down in cases of “friendly fire,” Marine Lt Col Michael Pruden told The War Zone and other attendees of the yearly Modern Day Marine exposition in Washington DC.

“As Israel’s engaging in Gaza, and they’re on their front line, they see a small UAS, what are they going to do if it’s not identified immediately? They’re going to shoot it down,” Pruden added.

Pruden referred to this as the “default course of action” since the time between a drone’s detection and when it could execute an attack is usually a matter of “seconds.”

According to the US Marine, this number was derived from recent Israeli army operations in the Gaza Strip.

He makes clear that having to rapidly distinguish between hostile and friendly drones is a major issue for the Israeli army and is also something the US military will increasingly have to deal with.

Another major challenge is that the uncrewed aerial systems (UAS) and loitering munitions deployed by the US and Israel are launched in an uncoordinated and decentralized manner, often by smaller units, increasing the chance of friendly fire.

The Israeli army has faced an increased threat from drones in the recent months of the ongoing war in Gaza, which has seen several other fronts open up against Israel.

Two Israeli soldiers were killed in a drone attack by Hezbollah on 6 May, coming as the Lebanese resistance group has stepped up its use of UAVs against Israeli sites in recent days. The Iraqi resistance has also been using drones to target sites in Israel.

Last month, Iran launched hundreds of drones and missiles at Israel in response to the Israeli attack on its consulate in Damascus in early April.

https://thecradle.co/articles/israeli-a ... -drones-us

Washington delays report on Israel war crimes in last minute move

The US has consistently restocked the Israeli arsenal since the start of the Gaza genocide, including internationally-banned white phosphorus munitions

News Desk

MAY 8, 2024

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(Photo Credit: Anadolu Agency)

The White House has delayed the release of a State Department report on whether Israel has violated US and international humanitarian law during its genocidal war on Gaza, according to government officials who spoke with POLITICO.

“In an email, the Biden administration notified the Hill that it will miss the date – without providing a clear reason why,” the DC-based publication reported on 7 May.

Earlier on Tuesday, State Department spokesperson Matthew Miller told reporters that the report was not yet finished, adding: “We are trying very hard to meet that deadline … It’s possible it slips just a little bit, but we are trying to get it done by tomorrow.”

Speaking anonymously, a senior White House official told POLITICO that the report will “be delayed by less than a week.”

The unexpected delay comes as Israel indiscriminately bombs Gaza’s southernmost city of Rafah with internationally-banned munitions. More than 1.4 million Palestinians remain in the border city after being violently displaced from their homes across the strip.

The State Department began drafting the report several months ago and was expected to deliver it on Wednesday. If the report agrees with the overwhelming amount of evidence showing the Israeli army has committed countless war crimes, US military aid for Tel Aviv could be at risk of drying up.

Washington has recently signaled a strained willingness to delay arms shipments to Israel, as the Wall Street Journal (WSJ) reported on Wednesday that the Pentagon delayed the sales of “thousands of precision weapons,” including MK-82 bombs, fuses, and JDAM guidance kits to make munitions more precise.

A shipment of 1,800–2,000-pound bombs and 1,700 500-pound bombs that were set to be shipped to the Israeli army last week was put on hold over “concerns” about the potential use of larger explosives in Rafah’s extremely overpopulated conditions, US officials told AP.

Nevertheless, on Wednesday, Israeli army spokesman Daniel Hagari downplayed the US moves, saying the allies resolve any disagreements “behind closed doors” and that collaboration with the US has reached “a scope without precedent, I think, in history.”

Since 7 October, Washington has quietly sent well over 100 arms shipments to Israel used to ravage Gaza, killing tens of thousands – including about 15,000 children. The US is also behind the shipments of white phosphorus munitions dropped in Gaza and Lebanon, which human rights groups say “turn victims to ash."

https://thecradle.co/articles/washingto ... inute-move

Israeli plan for Rafah pushing displaced 'past the limits'

UN agencies raised alarms about the catastrophic outcomes of blocking aid into Gaza as famine rapidly spreads across the strip

News Desk

MAY 7, 2024

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(Photo Credit: AFP)

UN officials expressed concerns on 7 May over the uncertainty of a ceasefire deal and the immanent Israeli operations in Rafah.

As the two main entry points into the besieged enclave remain closed, and Israel repeatedly threatens Rafah and has called for a mass evacuation, the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said that such an order on that mass scale is “impossible to carry out safely.”

“There are nine sites sheltering displaced people in the area. It is also home to three clinics and six warehouses,” OCHA said in its latest update on Gaza, noting that over 75 percent of the Gaza Strip is under evacuation orders.

The rights organization added that “any escalation of hostilities resulting from a full-scale incursion into Rafah will push residents and displaced people currently living there past their breaking point.”

Jens Laerke, an OCHA spokesperson, told journalists in Geneva that the Israeli authorities had not given the UN body permission to reach the Rafah crossing.

“We currently do not have any physical presence at the Rafah crossing as our access to go to that area for coordination purposes has been denied by [Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories],” Laerke said. “So, that means that currently, the two main arteries for getting aid into Gaza have been choked off.”

Laerke continued to say that “if no fuel comes in for a prolonged period of time, it would be a very effective way of putting the humanitarian operation in its grave … [Rafah] is in crosshairs”.

The spokesperson noted that the Israeli army is ignoring all warnings about what a Rafah invasion could mean for humanitarian operations spanning the Gaza Strip.


UNICEF's spokesperson, James Elder , spoke about the psychological status of Palestinians in the strip, stressing that families are hanging on by a thread.

“It is hard to see if [Rafah] closes for an extended period how aid agencies avert famine across the Gaza Strip … families' coping capacity has been smashed,” Elder said. “Families are hanging on psychologically and physically by a thread.”

New data was released to show the war’s effects on Palestinian women and girls sheltering in Rafah.

“Women and girls in Rafah, as in the rest of Gaza, are in a state of constant despair and fear already,” UN Women said.

The group noted that more than 10,000 women were killed as a result of Israel’s attacks, including 6,000 mothers. Roughly 19,000 children have been orphaned per the UN agency.

Hamas had accepted a Gaza ceasefire proposal brought forward by Qatar and Egypt. Israel, however, has decided to continue its war.

“The War Cabinet unanimously decided this evening Israel will continue its operation in Rafah in order to apply military pressure on Hamas,” the Israeli Prime Minister's Office stated. “While the Hamas proposal is far from meeting Israel's core demands, Israel will dispatch a ranking delegation to Egypt in an effort to maximize the possibility of reaching an agreement on terms acceptable to Israel."

https://thecradle.co/articles/israeli-p ... the-limits
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Re: Palestine

Post by blindpig » Fri May 10, 2024 11:45 am

Rafah: ‘The Scenes of the Nakba are Repeating’
Posted by INTERNATIONALIST 360° on MAY 8, 2024
Ruwaida Kamal Amer and Mahmoud Mushtaha

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Smoke rises after an Israeli air strike in Rafah, in the southern Gaza Strip, May 7, 2024. (Abed Rahim Khatib/Flash90)Smoke rises after an Israeli air strike in Rafah, in the southern Gaza Strip, May 7, 2024. (Abed Rahim Khatib/Flash90)

With Israeli forces entering Gaza’s southernmost city, Palestinians describe their hardships and fears in the Strip’s last vanishing refuge.[/i]

Israel’s long-threatened invasion of Rafah has begun. Under cover of intense aerial bombardment Tuesday morning, Israeli forces moved into Gaza’s southernmost city, which has become a shelter for 1.5 million Palestinians with nowhere else to go. This is the moment they most feared, carrying the potential for a catastrophe greater than anything we’ve seen so far. Gazans counted on the world to stop this invasion, and the world let them down.

Residents of Rafah have long been in a state of panic in anticipation of this eventuality. That panic intensified Monday morning, when the Israeli army dropped leaflets from the sky ordering those living in Rafah’s eastern districts to immediately flee to the ill-equipped coastal area of Al-Mawasi.

Within hours, tens of thousands packed up what remains of their lives — many of them for the third, fourth, or fifth time since October — and headed northwest to what Israel is calling an “expanded safe zone.” But if Palestinians have learned anything from the past seven months, it is that nowhere in Gaza is ever safe from Israel’s onslaught.

“Since the first day of displacement, I have been living in fear,” 48-year-old Reem Al-Barbari told +972. “I was displaced from Gaza City five months ago and took refuge in Rafah straight away, as the army told us it was a ‘safe area.’ But on Monday morning, leaflets fell instructing us to evacuate, and there was intense bombing throughout the night into Tuesday.

“The sky turned red from the intensity of the explosions,” Al-Barbari continued. “We were unable to sleep at all as we waited for the morning hours to uproot our lives again. The streets were very crowded with citizens — everyone was fleeing.”

Al-Barbari had hoped that when the time finally came to leave Rafah, it would be to return to her home in the Zaytoun neighborhood of Gaza City. “I left crying,” she said. “We went to look for somewhere to stay around Al-Mawasi, where I have no relatives or friends. We were hosted temporarily by other families displaced from Gaza City until we found a tent for ourselves.

“The situation is very painful,” Al-Barbari added. “Our feelings cannot be expressed in words. We are living through a cruel injustice, and the war is only intensifying. We, the citizens, are its victims.”

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Palestinians leave their homes in Rafah, in the southern Gaza Strip, May 8, 2024. (Abed Rahim Khatib/Flash90)
‘It felt like I was leaving this house forever’

Despite warnings from humanitarian organizations, U.S. President Joe Biden’s claim that a Rafah invasion would be a “red line,” and Hamas’ acceptance of the latest Egyptian-Qatari ceasefire proposal — triggering fleeting celebrations among Palestinians across Gaza — the Israeli army pressed ahead with its incursion amid a blaze of fire near the Egyptian border. Since then, artillery and bombings have continued relentlessly.

For now, the operation is focused on the city’s eastern area and the Rafah Crossing between the Gaza Strip and Egypt — the only route to the outside world for the severely wounded, the extremely sick, and those lucky enough to be able to pay for their escape. The nearby Karem Abu Salem/Kerem Shalom Crossing was also closed for several days, sealing off access to essential humanitarian aid for the residents of the south; on Wednesday morning, Israel reportedly reopened it.

Maryam Al-Sufi, 40, is from Al-Shoka, one of Rafah’s eastern neighborhoods, from which Israel ordered residents to flee. “I was on my way to buy some vegetables from the market, and I heard many people saying that the army dropped leaflets on Al-Shoka and its surrounding areas,” she told +972. “I ran home to confirm the news, and found neighbors out in the street talking about this.

“I was very confused and did not know how to make the decision to leave my home,” Al-Sufi continued. “My husband and his brothers decided it was necessary for the safety of our children; there were scenes of children being bombed in their homes. But I loved all the things in my house. I started collecting the items we would need and a lot of my children’s clothes. It felt like I was leaving this house forever.”

Al-Sufi and her family packed up their belongings and went to stay with relatives who own a cafe on the coast. “The street was crowded with cars and trucks transporting displaced people,” she recalled. “As we fled, we saw bombs falling in the eastern areas of the city.

“We are forced to cry,” she continued. “No one can protect us from the bombing. We used to say that Rafah is safe — we took in our friends and relatives [who fled from other parts of Gaza]. But the army attacked all areas and did not spare anyone.

“We are displaced out of fear for our children,” Al-Sufi added. “We saw what happened in Gaza City and Khan Younis. We hope that Rafah will not be destroyed and that we will not lose anyone.”

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The Israeli army drops leaflets on the east of the city of Rafah and orders them to evacuate and move towards the west of Rafah and Khan Younis, Gaza Strip, May 6, 2024. (Abed Rahim Khatib/Flash90)
‘We are ensnared in an unending nightmare’

Approximately 100,000 Palestinians were living in the area that Israel ordered to evacuate on Monday. But many more have fled the city since then, fearing that Israel’s invasion will quickly expand beyond its current boundaries and endanger the lives of the entire population.

“We live in a state of acute anxiety,” Ahmed Masoud, a human rights activist at Gaza’s Social Development Forum, explained, warning of the catastrophe that a large-scale incursion would entail. “Most of the displaced people in tents are children, women, and the elderly,” he said, adding that the population has already been weakened by months of exhaustion, hunger, disease, and exposure to the winter cold then summer heat.

Reda Auf, a 35-year-old vendor, told +972 that an atmosphere of panic has taken hold throughout the city since Monday. “People here are afraid,” he said. “They are walking with their bags on their shoulders and their children beside them. Women are crying from the oppression of displacement. They have no confidence in [the mercy of] the army because it does not spare anyone. Dozens of massacres have occurred over the past two days through continuous bombing — not only in the areas that were evacuated to the east of the city, but also in the center and west.

“People are moving their belongings and looking for somewhere to take refuge, but there is no safe place,” Auf continued. “All openings to the outside world have been closed in our faces and no one feels our plight. I will also be looking for a tent for myself around Al-Mawasi, because the army will extend [its invasion] to the west of the city if it does not find anyone to stop this bloody operation.”

“The prospect of evacuation from Rafah fills me with dread,” Abd al-Rahman Abu Marq, who has endured displacement three times since October, shared. “My heart quivers at the sight of leaflets being dropped. I don’t know where we would go or how we would get there. I have a mother who cannot walk long distances, and I am responsible for my sisters.

“I’m trying to formulate contingency plans in case evacuation becomes necessary, but the thought of it fills me with terror,” he went on. “For me, sudden death seems preferable to the agonizing anticipation of what lies ahead.”

“We find ourselves ensnared in an unending nightmare as they breach our borders, seemingly sanctioned by the green light from America,” Abu Salem, a 55-year-old living in a tent in the Tal el-Sultan neighborhood, told +972. “Across all regions of Gaza, the cycle of ground invasions persists, accompanied by atrocities against civilians. Yet the world remains eerily silent, as if oblivious to our plight.”

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Palestinians at the site of a destroyed building from an Israeli air strike in Rafah, in the southern Gaza Strip, May 5, 2024. (Abed Rahim Khatib/Flash90)

‘Tents have become a luxury’

The shutting of the border crossings, as well as the forced closure of Rafah’s main medical facility, Al-Najjar Hospital, promises to exacerbate an already dire humanitarian situation for those who remain in the city. Hundreds of thousands are living in makeshift tents that are often unable to fulfill the most basic functions of a shelter, and are ill-equipped to house people for months on end. The quest for basic food supplies long ago became a daily struggle, and the spread of disease is increasingly rampant.

Severe overcrowding and a scarcity of goods have made it virtually impossible for the limited number of vendors and distributors to meet the tremendous needs of the population. Residents are forced to queue in front of stores, often reserving their places before sunrise to ensure they can access the available goods before they run out.

Among those struggling is Hisham Yousef Abu Ghaniama, a displaced father of six, who is staying in the southern district of Tel al-Sultan. With no other means of transportation available, Abu Ghaniama is forced to walk to Rafah’s city center every day — a journey of an hour and a half each way. “We are living in an endless tragedy,” he said. “I am 34 years old, and my hair has become gray from the worries and pains that we face.”

The Abu Ghaniama family, originally from Shuja’iya, east of Gaza City, has endured a harrowing journey since the beginning of the war. Forced to flee their home, they initially sought shelter in UN Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) schools in the north before being displaced once again to Khan Younis. Their plight took another devastating turn when they were suddenly attacked by the Israeli army in Khan Younis and forced to flee, leaving behind their clothes and personal belongings.

“I don’t understand what is happening to us. The situation has exceeded the limits of logic and reason,” Abu Ghaniama said. “Before the war, I used to ask my children what they liked to eat, but now we are searching for any available food to stay alive. You want to bury yourself when your daughter cries and asks you for candy. How can I make her understand the situation we are living in? For seven months we have been killed and our bodies have shrunk to half their size. After how long will this lead to our death?”

Describing the unforgiving conditions, he speaks of mornings engulfed in suffocating heat and evenings shrouded in bone-chilling cold. “Living in a tent in Tel al-Sultan means suffocating,” he said, with “no clean air available” due to the acrid scent of smoke and the stench of garbage. “Even the most simple things are complicated: taking a nap, sitting quietly with your mother, taking a shower, feeling safe, and not suffering from back pain or exhaustion due to sleeping on the floor.”

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Displaced Palestinians pitch tents next to the Egyptian border with the city of Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip, March 8, 2024. (Abed Rahim Khatib/Flash90)

According to Ahmed Mamoun, who was displaced from Al-Bureij refugee camp in central Gaza when it came under Israeli bombardment, perhaps the most disturbing thing is the increasing normalization of suffering, as desperation drives people to vie for what now count as personal triumphs. “Tents have become a luxury,” Mamoun said. “If there’s a meter between you and your neighbor, people envy you and say you have a ventilation shaft.”

Yet the prospect of securing a more durable shelter is vanishingly small due to the compounding challenges of the war. Mamoun was forced to make a small tent for his family of seven out of wood and plastic — which cost around $570 to buy. “The price of the equipment I purchased is many times its original price before the Israeli war, due to the scarcity of raw materials at the moment,” he explained.

‘The camp is a breeding ground for sickness’

Food and adequate shelter are not the only necessities in short supply in Rafah; so too are medical facilities, and all the more so in the wake of Israel’s intensified assault. Over the past three weeks, Mahmoud Gohar Al-Balaawi, 62, has traversed the distance from Tel al-Sultan camp to the nearest clinic — a three-hour journey he must make by foot — in order to secure vital medications for managing his high blood pressure and diabetes.

“I am an elderly man; I find myself drained of energy, unsure whether to prioritize my own health, concern for my sons who are besieged in the north, or navigating our displacement in Rafah,” he lamented. “Here, everyone seems preoccupied with their own survival. It’s an endless cycle of anguish. I’m depleted in mind and body.”

Disease is also on the rise — a product of severe overcrowding and the lack of hygiene, running water, and adequate healthcare. Two of the most prevalent diseases are cholera and hepatitis, both of which are spread through contaminated water.

“For us, life here lacks even the most basic necessities,” Fatima Ashour, a mother of three, told +972. “There are no clean bathrooms and no sanitation. Garbage piles up on the ground, and children play in it, unaware of the danger. Every day, I comb through my daughter’s hair, battling the relentless onslaught of lice. You can’t take a single step without brushing up on someone else. We’re packed in like sardines, with no respite in sight.”

Two weeks ago, Ashour’s 6-year-old son Zaid began looking emaciated, and his eyes became yellow with jaundice — an indication of his ailing liver and a telltale sign of hepatitis. He is now largely immobile, and he lay listless in his mother’s arms, his eyes dulled by the weight of illness.

Booking an appointment at one of the city’s few overcrowded hospitals is extremely difficult, and even once an appointment is secured, there may not be the necessary medication or even any doctors available. In the meantime, with no space for isolation, caring for Zaid risks the health of his entire family. “The camp is a breeding ground for sickness,” Ashour said, her voice heavy. “With no access to clean water or proper sanitation, we’re all at risk.”

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Palestinians collect drinking water in the city of Rafah, in the southern Gaza Strip, April 4, 2024. (Abed Rahim Khatib/Flash90)
‘The same killers and the same slain’

The living conditions are such that some of the displaced wonder if they should have fled their homes at all. “I would have preferred to face the peril of Israeli tanks in the north than endure the relentless torment of this mental anguish,” 26-year-old Ahmed Hany Dremly told +972.

Indeed, the sight of massive new refugee camps all over southern Gaza evokes poignant memories for Palestinians, harking back to the experiences of their ancestors during the Nakba.

“We are living in a new catastrophe, a new displacement, where the details almost mirror those of 76 years ago,” said 72-year-old Umm Ali Handouqa, whose family was expelled from Majdal (what is now the Israeli city of Ashkelon) to the Gaza Strip in 1948.

Handouqa recalled her childhood memories of Al-Shati refugee camp, reminiscing about the hardships and tough conditions they endured. The tents gradually transformed into small concrete houses as the temporary became a more permanent reality — and Handouqa fears a similar fate could befall Gaza’s new camps.

“The echoes of the stories my mother told me about the Nakba resonate in my ears,” Handouqa reflected. “The same scenes and details are repeating themselves, the same oppressor and the same victims, the same killers and the same slain.

“We fled from the north out of fear of Israeli forces entering our homes, killing our children before our eyes, and the fear of women being raped,” she said. “It’s the same reason my father fled from Majdal to Gaza.”

https://libya360.wordpress.com/2024/05/ ... repeating/

Automated Apartheid: Walking Through Hebron Smart City
Posted by INTERNATIONALIST 360° on MAY 8, 2024
Mnar Adley



A silent sentinel watches over every corner in the bustling streets of Hebron, the largest city in the West Bank, where the ancient echoes of history collide with the modern hum of daily life. This sentinel is not a person but a network of surveillance technology known ominously as the “Hebron Smart City.” Designed by Israeli authorities, this system blankets the city in a web of cameras, sensors and even automated weapons, tracking every movement of its Palestinian residents.

“Palestinians in Hebron are the most surveilled people on the planet,” explains journalist and activist Mnar Adley, highlighting the omnipresence of cameras and face-scanning technology. Adley says that the area, also known as al-Khalil to Palestinians, has become a testing ground for Israel’s surveillance apparatus, with advanced technologies like the “Wolf Pack” surveillance system in operation. This system collects vast amounts of data on Palestinians, including their personal details and movements, creating an atmosphere of constant surveillance.

Izzat Karake, a member of Youth Against Settlements, echoes this sentiment, noting the discomfort caused by constant surveillance. “Wherever I go as a Palestinian, I can see cameras,” he told MintPress while pointing out dozens of Israeli military cameras lining the streets. “We are constantly under surveillance.”

The Hebron Smart City, Adley explains, is more than just a collection of cameras and sensors; it is a symbol of Israel’s relentless efforts to control every aspect of Palestinian life. Face-scanning cameras, known as Red Wolf, line every street, their unblinking gaze capturing the faces of every passerby without their consent. These images are then fed into Israel’s Wolf Pack Database, a vast repository of information on Palestinians, all accessible through a mobile app, allowing them to track and monitor individuals with ease.

Amnesty International has condemned this mass surveillance project, denouncing it as “Automated Apartheid” in a scathing report. The system, they argue, reinforces existing practices of discrimination and segregation, further eroding the rights of Palestinians in Hebron at the hands of Israeli authorities, which the human rights group says has “a record of discriminatory and inhuman acts that maintain a system of apartheid. “The Israeli authorities are able to use facial recognition software – in particular at checkpoints – to consolidate existing practices of discriminatory policing, segregation, and curbing freedom of movement, violating Palestinians’ basic rights,” the report concludes.

This invasive surveillance technology that targets and monitors Palestinians compounds an already existing segregated system of apartheid in Hebron, where the city has been split into two zones, H1 and H2. These two segments of Hebron are separated by a militarized checkpoint that allows for the maintenance and expansion of an illegal Israeli settlement right in the middle of the Tel Rumeida neighborhood that overlooks the Palestinian city’s marketplace.

This is where Youth Against Settlements was born after a Palestinian building that was initially occupied first by the Israeli military and later by Israeli settlers was reclaimed for Palestinian use through a nonviolent direct action and legal campaign. Once a bustling Palestinian neighborhood, Tel Rumeida now hosts over 700 illegal Israeli settlers, heavily armed and protected by the military. The main thoroughfare, formerly known as Shuhada Street, has been renamed “Chicago Street” by Israeli authorities in an attempt to erase Palestinian heritage.

Each year, Izzat and his colleagues with Youth Against Settlements hold an annual march called Open Shuhada Street campaign that draws international attention to the illegal siege of the city. Not only has Israel occupied and fragmented this neighborhood to make room for the Israeli settlers, but it’s altering this area to Judaize the quarter – meaning planning to expand its colonization of the area to ethnically cleanse and displace Palestinians out of here, so Israeli settlers can take over. This military strategy is used to protect, expand and connect other Jewish settlements nearby in Israel’s quest to ensure an ethno-Jewish state.

Hebron has seen some of the most violent settler assaults against Palestinians, especially after Hamas’ surprise attack and Israel’s subsequent assault on Gaza. In many cases, the armed settlers are escorted and protected by Israeli soldiers. Barbed wire covers Palestinian homes that are fenced in to protect them from Israeli settler attacks and harassment. But the intimidation doesn’t end there.

An AI smartshooter sits atop a checkpoint on Shuhada Street, pointing directly at Hebron’s marketplace, where thousands of Palestinians pass by each day. Israel installed the remote-controlled automatic turret gun in 2022. According to Israel’s Army spokesperson, the AI smart shooter “is used as a dispersal measure “as part of the Army’s improved preparations for confronting people disrupting order. However, the introduction of AI technology, such as the smartshooter, has only heightened tensions in the city. Residents walk through their own neighborhoods with a sense of unease, knowing that they are always under watchful eyes.

Just as Gaza has become a laboratory and showroom for Israel’s “battle-tested” weapons, the success of the Hebron Smart City facial recognition technology and database through Wolf Pack to track Palestinians will be used for Israel to continue to profit off of its illegal military occupation of Palestine and surveillance of Palestinian civilians.

This “Automated Apartheid” only further establishes segregation of Palestinians and expands Israel’s apartheid system and ethnic cleansing of Palestinians.

https://libya360.wordpress.com/2024/05/ ... mart-city/

Every Ceasefire Deal and Prisoner Exchange Hamas Has Offered and Israel Rejected Since October 7th
Posted by INTERNATIONALIST 360° on MAY 8, 2024



Here’s Every Ceasefire Deal and Prisoner Exchange Hamas Has Offered Israel Since October 7th…

https://libya360.wordpress.com/2024/05/ ... tober-7th/

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US pleaded with Iran to 'go easy' on Israel: FM

Western nations also asked Iran to retaliate through its allies instead of using its own weapons against Israel

News Desk

MAY 8, 2024

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(Photo Credit: EPA)

Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian said on 8 May that Western forces had asked Tehran to show restraint in their retaliatory attack on Israel.
The Iranian retaliation had come in response to Israel's attack on the Iranian consulate in Damascus, Syria, in April.

“Two days before Operation True Promise, we announced to the American side and the countries where America had bases that our target is not America's neighbors and bases, but the Israeli regime,” the Iranian foreign minister said.

He added that if the US soldiers stationed in the region take actions against Iran’s interests, the Islamic Republic’s response will be “immediate and decisive … if America makes mistakes, we will target American bases.” He later noted that neighboring countries announced they would not allow anyone to attack Iran from their soil

"When it was decided to carry out the Operation True Promise,” the Westerners and especially the American allies in Europe had intensive contacts with us,” Amir-Abdollahian said. “Their first request was [to] exercise restraint and not to respond to the criminal action of the Zionist regime in attacking the Iranian consulate in Syria. We said that Israel will definitely be answered to.”

He added that Iran decided when and how to conduct the operation, stating, “We did not allow any decisions to be made under pressure from others, but we told the Western and American side that the root [cause] is in the Gaza crisis that should be resolved and they should focus on that issue.”

In an interview with The Cradle, Iranian Member of Parliament Mahmoud Nabavian said, “Two hours after the attack on the consulate in Damascus, the Iranian National Security Council convened and affirmed the inevitability of a response and gave a 10-day deadline to take the necessary diplomatic measures and for the armed forces to prepare their plan to respond.”

Nabavian said that after making the case for Iran’s right to self-defense which was then backed by Russia, China, and Algeria, Israel felt the pressure of the moment and claimed that those attacked in Syria were not diplomats.

The Iranian official stated that when the US realized the urgency of the situation, it threatened that “if the response was launched from Iranian territory, it might attack Iran. Our response was … if it decides to involve itself in defense of Israel, we will respond by targeting it as well … there are many American bases around us.”

Other Western powers urged Iran to attack through its ally Hezbollah, the official stated that this would have been justification in international eyes for Israel to be able to unleash itself on the people of Lebanon under the guise of targeting Iranian proxies.

Following coordination with all levels of Iran’s government, including Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, the response would be, “First, we would definitely strike Israel; second, that the attack would be direct from Iranian territory; and third, that the National Security Council decided that the response would be a deterrent.”

Following Iran’s retaliation, the US also called on Tehran to allow Israel to conduct "a symbolic strike to save face.”

An anonymous source speaking with The Cradle said, “Iran has received messages from mediators to let the regime do a symbolic strike to save face and asked Iran not to retaliate.”

On 13 April, Iran launched a massive strike on Israel in response to the bombing of Iran’s consulate in Syria, which led to the death of Mohammad Reza Zahedi, a senior commander in Iran's Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC).

https://thecradle.co/articles/us-pleade ... -israel-fm

Netanyahu ditches captives to 'hunt down' Hamas leaders: Report

As part of the scheme, Tel Aviv is preparing to establish a 'long-term' military presence in Gaza with 'partial approval' from the US

News Desk

MAY 8, 2024

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(Photo Credit: Ali Jadallah/Anadolu Agency via AFP)

The Israeli government has “abandoned its goals” of recovering dozens of captives who remain inside Gaza to instead “pursue top Palestinian leaders,” Israeli military officials revealed to Middle East Eye (MEE).

“Netanyahu's operations in Gaza are fundamentally aimed at ... hunting down Yahya Sinwar,” one of the Israeli officers, who is serving in Gaza, told the UK-based outlet, stressing that the war is “personal” for the premier.

“A few hostages might be exchanged. However, hostages are no longer of concern to anyone,” the sources said.

Officials in Tel Aviv are reportedly “obsessed” with capturing Sinwar and other top officials within the Qassam Brigades – the armed wing of Hamas.

Another Israeli officer who spoke with MEE said a “new phase” of the genocidal war involving “long-term military presence” is being planned, alleging that this has been “partially approved” by Washington.

“This plan has been partially approved by the US … It's all part of a plan agreed upon by the two countries for a Hamas-free Gaza,” the officer is quoted as saying.

According to the officer, the Israeli long-term presence in Gaza includes the ground invasion of Rafah, which Tel Aviv launched earlier this week by taking control of a key border crossing.

Israeli estimates claim 128 of around 250 captives taken by the Palestinian resistance on 7 October remain inside Gaza, including 35 who the military says are dead. According to Hamas officials, at least 70 captives have been killed by Israeli attacks in the strip.

The new stance by the Israeli government comes despite large protests that have been raging for weeks by citizens demanding the captives be returned.

“We heard from sources involved in the negotiations that … the one thing separating us from the return of our loved ones was and remains an Israeli guarantee of an end to this war. To Netanyahu and the government of Israel, we clearly say from this stage, if the only way to get the hostages back is by providing an Israeli guarantee to end this war, then end this war," Shahar Mor Zahiro, a family member of one of the captives, said during a rally earlier this week.

Hamas has insisted that any truce deal must permanently end the war, while Israeli leaders repeatedly demand any ceasefire be only temporary, as they wish to continue the genocidal war – a position that reflects the wishes of a majority of the Israeli population.

The move by Tel Aviv also reflects a long-standing policy of assassinating rivals, which has seldom succeeded in deterring the Resistance Axis.

“Decades of targeted political killings have resulted in the unprecedented, resistance-led, Operation Al-Aqsa Flood of 7 October,” The Cradle columnist Khalil Harb wrote in January, stressing that “despite years of ‘mowing the Palestinian grass,’ a strategy that spares no distinction between politicians, diplomats, fighters, or intellectuals, Tel Aviv has failed to break the will of the Palestinian resistance.”

Harb highlights that the decades-long policy has only yielded “deeply counterproductive results” for Israel.

“The 1992 extrajudicial murder of Hezbollah's former Secretary-General Abbas al-Musawi increased the Lebanese resistance group's popularity and hardened its resolve to overthrow the Israeli occupation … Similarly, the 1995 assassination of Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ) Founder Fathi al-Shaqaqi on the island of Malta strengthened the movement, transforming it into one of the most formidable and committed resistance factions in Palestinian history.”

According to a Hamas official who spoke to Arabic media last month, Yahya Sinwar is “not always staying in tunnels, as claimed by Israel, but also performing his duties in the field.”

https://thecradle.co/articles/netanyahu ... ers-report

Israeli troops amass near Rafah as officials tell Biden 'we cannot be subdued'

Tel Aviv has remained steadfast with its plan to raid the city of Rafah, where over one million Palestinians remain trapped

News Desk

MAY 9, 2024

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(Photo Credit: AHMAD GHARABLI/AFP)

Israeli tanks and troops amassed on the outskirts of Gaza's southernmost city of Rafah on 9 May, opening fire on the severely overcrowded city mere hours after US President Joe Biden declared he would not provide weapons for the planned Israeli ground invasion.

Rafah residents reported that Israeli tank fire killed three and wounded others near a mosque in the eastern neighborhood of Barazil on Thursday. Similarly, on the east edge of the city, residents said a helicopter opened fire near residential areas.

Hundreds of Palestinians have been killed in Rafah over recent weeks, as Israeli jets have continuously bombed the city, including illegal deployments of white phosphorus munitions on civilian areas.

As the army continued to gather outside Rafah, top Israeli officials fired back against Biden's announcement.

“I say from here to Israel’s enemies and its best friends: The State of Israel cannot be subdued – not the IDF, not the Defense Ministry, not the defense establishment, not the State of Israel. We will stand, we will achieve our goals, we will hit Hamas, we will destroy Hezbollah, and we will bring security,” Defense Minister Yoav Gallant said during a ceremony ahead of Israel’s Memorial Day.

“Whatever the cost, we will ensure the existence of the State of Israel,” Gallant added.

For his part, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu took to social media to post an excerpt from a speech he gave earlier this week in occupied Jerusalem when he insisted “Israel will stand alone.”

“Today, we again confront enemies bent on our destruction … I say to the leaders of the world – no amount of pressure, no decision from any international forum, will stop Israel from defending itself," the premier says in the video, stressing: “If Israel is forced to stand alone, Israel will stand alone.”


Earlier in the day, Biden told CNN that his government would not support or provide weapons for an expanded Israeli assault on Rafah.

“I’ve made it clear to Bibi and the war cabinet: They’re not going to get our support if they go [into] these population centers,” Biden told the US news outlet, adding: “I made it clear that if they go into Rafah… I’m not supplying the weapons that have been used historically to deal with Rafah, to deal with the cities, to deal with that problem.”

Nevertheless, the US leader stressed his government is “not walking away from Israel’s security. We’re walking away from Israel’s ability to wage war in [populated] areas.”

Biden also claimed that Israel has “not yet” crossed the “red line” of conduct in Gaza despite killing nearly 40,000 people – over a third of whom were children.

https://thecradle.co/articles/israeli-t ... be-subdued

Over 100,000 Gazans flee Rafah as UN warns 'no aid in sight'

Israel's National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir plans to request the cancellation of all aid into Gaza at an upcoming security cabinet session

News Desk

MAY 10, 2024

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(Photo credit: X)

UNRWA announced in a statement on 10 May that over 100,000 Palestinians have been forcibly displaced from Gaza’s southernmost city of Rafah due to intense Israeli bombardment.


“As Israeli Forces bombardment intensifies in Rafah, forced displacement continues. UNRWA estimates around 110,000 people have now fled Rafah looking for safety. But nowhere is safe in the Gaza Strip and living conditions are atrocious. The only hope is an immediate ceasefire,” the UNRWA statement read.

Israel forces seized the Rafah border crossing on the morning of 7 May. Since then, overpopulated Rafah – which has been under bombardment for weeks – has witnessed a significant intensification of Israeli airstrikes.

“Israeli helicopters and military vehicles opened fire at the central and eastern areas of Rafah concurrently with artillery shelling” on Friday, Palestinian news agency WAFA reported. On Thursday evening, several bodies were taken out of the rubble of a civilian home bombarded by Israeli artillery that day.

Scores of people have attempted to flee the city since Israel’s operation began. The US State Department confirmed recently that it did not receive any detailed Israeli plan to safely evacuate Rafah’s population.

US President Joe Biden warned this week that the flow of US weapons to Israel could be interrupted if Tel Aviv chooses to expand the Rafah operation into a full-blown assault, doubling down on repeated US warnings in recent months.

Despite the fact that a full-scale operation has yet to be launched, dozens of civilians, including children, have been killed in Rafah as a result of the increased bombardment. Israel has vowed to continue with the Rafah operation, hindering efforts for a truce and prisoner exchange agreement with Hamas.

The resistance group recently accepted an updated Egyptian proposal, which Israel finds unacceptable given its calls for a cessation of hostilities and withdrawal of troops from the strip, the main terms which Hamas has refused to back down from.

The UN warned of a severe lack of humanitarian aid coming into Gaza on Wednesday due to ongoing operations at the Rafah crossing.

“We’re not receiving any aid, the [Rafah] crossing area has ongoing military operations and is an active war zone,” Scott Anderson from UNRWA said.

Anderson’s statement came despite Israel’s announcement that it reopened the Kerem Shalom crossing into Gaza. According to the UN, it has been too dangerous for aid workers to cross to the other side of the Kerem Shalom crossing to process the deliveries.

Israeli settlers have also blocked roads near Kerem Shalom in order to hinder aid efforts, a practice that has been ongoing since the start of the war.

Israel’s National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir was quoted by Hebrew media on Friday as saying that he will request a vote at an upcoming security cabinet meeting to completely cancel the entry of aid to Palestinians through all of Gaza’s border crossings.
https://thecradle.co/articles/over-1000 ... d-in-sight

https://thecradle.co/articles/over-1000 ... d-in-sight

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Protest And Dissent Can Absolutely Push The Empire To Retreat On Gaza
The imperial murder machine has many strengths, but it also has weaknesses.

Caitlin Johnstone
May 10, 2024

It is entirely possible for the surging anti-genocide protest movement and its accompanying zeitgeist in the general public to push the empire to retreat on Gaza. The imperial murder machine has many strengths, but it also has weaknesses.

The globe-spanning power structure that is loosely centralized around Washington has invested in perception management more heavily than any other empire in history — that’s what you’re seeing with all the mass media propaganda, Silicon Valley algorithm manipulation, oligarch-funded think tanks, and mainstream culture manufacturing in New York and Hollywood. By using mass-scale psychological manipulation via the most sophisticated perception management system that has ever existed, the US-centralized empire is able to manufacture support for its agendas at home and abroad while dissuading the public from protest and revolution.

This is an immense strength, but it’s also a weakness. Its so-called “soft power” narrative manipulation systems allow for an immense amount of control while still creating the illusion of freedom and democracy, thereby suppressing public desire to overthrow what would otherwise be perceived as a murderous and exploitative oppressor, but its heavy reliance on perception management means it can’t afford to be seen in too negative a light without causing widespread distrust in its propaganda machine.

If too many people realize that their government is psychopathic and their news media and other indoctrination systems have been lying to them about it all their lives, the empire will lose the ability to propagandize them, because propaganda only works if you don’t know it’s happening to you. If too many people wake up from the propaganda matrix it won’t have any effect any longer, and without their propaganda our rulers cannot rule, because that’s the entire control system upon which their rule is premised.

The empire therefore needs to tread very carefully when public opinion starts to turn against it, and retreat whenever public trust in imperial institutions would be compromised too severely for the empire to continue on a given path. It simply cannot afford to wake the public up from the propaganda-induced coma it has spent generations lulling them into.

What this means is that the empire can be pressured into retreat simply by spreading enough awareness and sowing enough opposition to its depraved actions. If enough eyes open to the truth of what’s happening in Gaza, there’s no amount of geostrategic middle east agendas or Israel lobby funding that can outweigh the empire’s existential need to prevent a mass-scale awakening from the mainstream imperial worldview and a transition into widespread revolutionary consciousness. The empire would necessarily need to step back before things reached that point, because its very existence depends on it.

The empire has been walking that line this entire time. Whenever you see it doing things like stepping back from regime change invasions of Cuba or Syria or refraining from going as authoritarian as it could go on a given issue, it isn’t because the empire suddenly evolved a conscience. It’s because it hasn’t yet succeeded in manufacturing public consent for such agendas, and imposing them before the public has been manipulated into accepting them would snap them out of the matrix of psychological control. They work so hard to manufacture public consent because they absolutely need it.


So the empire can be pressured on Gaza and on every other issue if enough people put enough energy into spreading awareness of the truth. That’s why the empire managers are freaking out about this new protest movement right now; they understand the absolutely fundamental role that narrative control plays in the existence of imperial power structures, and how much they stand to lose if it is taken away.

And hopefully it will be. Hopefully one day, maybe even soon, we will see people begin unplugging their brains from the matrix of imperial mind control at so widespread a scale that no amount of retreating and backpedaling can save the empire from the people collectively deciding they’ll have none of its murderous tyranny anymore. From there it will lose its allies and assets abroad, it will succumb to revolutionary sentiments at home, and the people can start working toward building a healthy world together.

https://caitlinjohnstone.com.au/2024/05 ... t-on-gaza/
"There is great chaos under heaven; the situation is excellent."

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Re: Palestine

Post by blindpig » Sat May 11, 2024 11:28 am

[General Assembly Endorses Pathway for Full Palestinian Statehood
Posted by INTERNATIONALIST 360° on MAY 10, 2024

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Palestinian envoy to the United Nations, Riyad Mansour speaks at UN General Assembly emergency session in New York, USA on October 26, 2023 [Selçuk Acar/Anadolu Agency]

The United Nations General Assembly, on Friday, backed a Palestinian bid to become a full UN member by recognising it as qualified to join and recommending the UN Security Council “reconsider the matter favourably”, Reuters reports.

The vote by the 193-member General Assembly was a global survey of support for the Palestinian bid to become a full UN member – a move that would effectively recognise a Palestinian State – after the United States vetoed it in the UN Security Council last month.

The assembly adopted a resolution on Friday, with 143 votes in favour and nine against – including the US and Israel – while 25 countries abstained. It does not give the Palestinians full UN membership, but simply recognises them as qualified to join.

The General Assembly resolution “determines that the State of Palestine … should therefore be admitted to membership” and it “recommends that the Security Council reconsider the matter favourably.”

The Palestinian push for full UN membership comes seven months into a war between Israel and Palestinian Hamas in the Gaza Strip, and as Israel is expanding settlements in the Occupied West Bank, which the UN considers to be illegal.

“We want peace, we want freedom,” Palestinian UN Ambassador, Riyad Mansour, told the General Assembly before the vote. “A yes vote is a vote for Palestinian existence; it is not against any state. … It is an investment in peace.”

“Voting yes is the right thing to do,” he said in remarks that drew applause.

Under the founding UN Charter, membership is open to “peace-loving states” that accept the obligations in that document and are able and willing to carry them out.

“As long as so many of you are ‘Jew-hating,’ you don’t really care that the Palestinians are not ‘peace-loving,’” said UN Ambassador, Gilad Erdan, who spoke after Mansour. He accused the Assembly of shredding the UN Charter – as he used a small shredder to destroy a copy of the Charter while at the lectern.

“Shame on you,” Erdan said.

The ambassador said on Monday that, if the measure was approved, he expected the US to cut funding to the United Nations and its institutions, in accordance with American law.

An application to become a full UN member first needs to be approved by the 15-member Security Council and then the General Assembly. If the measure is again voted on by the Council it is likely to face the same fate: a US veto.”The Council must respond to the will of the international community,” United Arab Emirates UN Ambassador, Mohamed Abushahab, told the assembly before the vote.

The General Assembly resolution adopted on Friday does give the Palestinians some additional rights and privileges from September 2024 – like a seat among the UN members in the assembly hall – but they will not be granted a vote in the body.

The Palestinians are currently a non-member observer state, a de facto recognition of statehood that was granted by the UN General Assembly in 2012.



US funding

The Palestinian UN mission in New York said on Thursday – in a letter to UN member states – that adoption of the resolution backing full UN membership would be an investment in preserving the long-sought-for two-state solution.

It said it would “constitute a clear reaffirmation of support at this very critical moment for the right of the Palestinian people to self-determination, including the right to their independent State.”

The mission is run by the Palestinian Authority, which exercises limited self-rule in the West Bank. Hamas ousted the Palestinian Authority from power in Gaza in 2007. Hamas launched the 7 October attack on Israel that triggered Israel’s assault on Gaza.

The United Nations has long endorsed a vision of two states living side by side within secure and recognised borders. Palestinians want a State in the West Bank, east Jerusalem and Gaza Strip, all territory captured by Israel in the 1967 war with neighbouring Arab states.

The US mission to the United Nations said earlier this week: “It remains the US view that the path toward statehood for the Palestinian people is through direct negotiations.”

Under US law, Washington cannot fund any UN organisation that grants full membership to any group that does not have the “internationally recognised attributes” of statehood. The United States cut funding in 2011 for the UN cultural agency, UNESCO, after the Palestinians joined as a full member.

On Thursday, 25 US Republican senators – more than half of the party’s members in the chamber – introduced a bill to tighten those restrictions and cut off funding to any entity giving rights and privileges to the Palestinians. The bill is unlikely to pass the Senate, which is controlled by President Joe Biden’s Democrats.

What does this mean in practice?

The new draft resolution determines that the State of Palestine is “qualified for membership in the United Nations” and should therefore be admitted to membership.

The resolution is being viewed as a way to circumvent the United Nations Security Council in taking a first step towards full membership.

Most remarkably the resolution looks to adopt new rights and privileges for Palestine in procedural matters at the UN, despite the state’s continuing “observer status”, and requests the UN secretary general to implement these privileges.

New privileges also include the right to make statements on behalf of a group, to submit proposals and amendments and introduce them orally, the right of reply, as well as co-sponsor proposals and amendments and to raise procedural motions, among others.

It also grants members of the Palestinian delegation to be elected as officers in the plenary and main committees of the General Assembly.

It does not grant Palestine the right to vote in the GA, propose resolutions or put forward its candidature to UN organs.

It also gives the right to “full and effective participation in United Nations conferences and international conferences and meetings convened under the auspices of the General Assembly”.

The state of Palestine would also be able to be seated among member states in alphabetical order and have the right to be listed as speakers on agenda items other than the Middle East or Palestine.

After the UN General Assembly vote, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas said that Palestine would “continue its endeavour” to obtain full UN membership status and is looking for another vote at the UNSC.

{youtube]http://youtu.be/xPixVlc2EEs[/youtube]

https://libya360.wordpress.com/2024/05/ ... statehood/

Rafah Invasion and Gaza 2035: Netanyahu’s Dystopian Vision for Gaza’s Future
Posted by INTERNATIONALIST 360° on MAY 10, 2024
Vanessa Beeley

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“From crisis to prosperity – transformation of Gaza from an Iranian shrine to a moderate axis” – this is the tagline of a recent Ynet article in Hebrew that reports on the Netanyahu administration examination of a dystopian vision of Gaza’s future as a hideous Dubai/Singapore style outpost of Zionist and US/UK military and economic hegemony in West Asia.

Previously Ron Ben Yishai had written for Ynet:

It is hard to imagine the Gaza Strip becoming the tiny and glittering country in East Asia, but it is the vision that Netanyahu is trying to advance behind the scenes. The idea: complete detachment from Israel and connection to the world through a maritime corridor to Cyprus and a land crossing to Egypt, tens of billions of dollars to be spent on the restoration of destruction and tourism and high-tech ventures, and civilian rule based on international bodies. The buds can be seen on the beach where a pier for humanitarian aid was erected. But it will take a lot of persuasion and execution efforts to make the dream a reality

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Yes, it is hard to imagine the burial of hundreds of thousands of Palestinian lives, bodies, dreams, hopes and memories under the rubble from which will spring these futuristic, soulless buildings that are designed to erase Arab culture, heritage and history. Palestine will cease to exist in Gaza if this scheme is successful.

The suspicion that the so called Gaza “humanitarian” port that the US was so eager to construct, using building materials impregnated with Palestinian blood and remains – will be nothing more than an element of the US military and economic expansion into West Asia.

Gaza will become “a thriving green country with towers and business centres, not a terrorist incubator” says Ynet. Gaza could have been a thriving, green country with its independent resource mining providing wealth and growth for the Palestinians had Israel not prevented gas exploration and besieged the enclave, ensuring its descent into a dusty, overcrowded, energy deprived extermination camp.

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India’s state owned defense company “MIL” has been granted permission to sell & ship its munitions to israel amid the Gaza genocide right now. Press TV.

The threat of Iranian expansionism has been the long-rolled-out pretext for US, UK and Zionist preemptive violence and destablisation in the region. Protectionism for the India-Middle East-Europe-Economic Corridor (IMEC) is paramount as it counters the various China/Iran/Russian-led initiatives in the region including China’s Belt and Road Initiative.

Gaza must be captured as the central junction between the ancient trade routes Egypt-Gaza-Babylon and India-Yemen-Saudi Arabia-Europe. For this reason alone, the control of this tiny strip of seaside territory is essential for the future survival of Israel and the alliance of Gulf States, Egypt and Jordan – Turkey may also be included – although Erdogan’s recent rhetoric may suggest the opposite, it is not to be trusted.

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Gaza now after the Zionist genocidal campaign supported and enabled by the West.

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Gaza 2035 – the Zionist vision for the Palestinian enclave.

The plan was first presented to senior officials of the Netanyahu administration in December.

Phase One – The priority is to cleanse northern Gaza of Hamas, a plan which is until now unsuccessful. In the future Saudi Arabia, UAE, Egypt, Bahrain, Jordan and Morocco will be given control of humanitarian aid entering the Gaza strip but only to “safe” areas. Selected Palestinians from Gaza will be given control of the concentration camp with the supervision of the normalised “Abraham Accord” nations.

Phase Two – Israel to maintain overall security responsibility which means military rule, oppression, apartheid and mass imprisonment, torture and ritual abuse of Palestinians. Arab states will create a “multilateral body to oversee, guide and fund the Gaza Rehabilitation Authority” aka the reprogramming indoctrination committee.

Palestinians from Gaza will form the “Rehabilitation Authority” which will manage the “safe areas” and ensure they are free of “radical resistance ideology”. Comparisons to the Marshall Plan are to be ridiculed when taken in the context of the protection and renaissance of Nazism under US/UK protection in the West since the end of WW2.

Final Phase – the selected Palestinians will govern areas of the Gaza enclave and will join the Abraham Accords. It is expected that the “Nazi elements” in Netanyahu’s coalition regime will not support these plans preferring the re-establishment of Zionist settlements and exclusive Zionist control – Smotrich and Bin Gvir will be the first to oppose any Palestinian rule in Gaza.

This plan secures the vision that was laid out in the Netanyahu-commissioned Clean Break Doctrine established in 1997 – Israel’s long term security, integration in the region, economic expansion, normalisation with Saudi Arabia and other gulf states.

The US will sell itself as the harbinger of stability in the region. It will garner military dominance and the establishment of a trade corridor (IMEC) that will bypass the Resistance Axis plans for trade dominance and the liberation of the “Global South” from neocolonialist resource-theft agendas.

Biden is desperate to find a way out of his criminal role in the mass slaughter of Palestinians in Gaza and the West Bank – as improbable as this plan is to succeed, many Americans might be fooled by the media spin on what is effectively building an empire on genocide – again.

The UAE and Bahrain might perceive the plan as an opportunity to expand their influence in the region and to foster a defence alliance with the US and Saudi Arabia and will gain access to the Mediterranean.

Egypt and Jordan will welcome the concept of de-radicalisation of a sector of the Resistance Axis – Egypt has long used the threat of Hamas to seal the borders with Gaza and to double down on the barbaric siege of 1.5 million Palestinians, the majority children inside the battered prison camp.

Of course Israel and the US-led cartel will also be slavering over this project as a potential “intervention plan” in other countries within the Resistance Axis – Syria, Yemen, Lebanon. Their intention is to win over the countries resistant to Western imperialism with the poisoned chalice of controlled “development” post Western-proxy and direct destabilisation and devastation of these countries – projects which have left people food insecure, impoverished and without access to essential resources.

It should come as no surprise that the eradication of the regional history and culture and the reprogramming of entire peoples will be in their playbook.

Tantalising incentives will be dangled in front of people who have been starved, bombed, deprived and terrified on a 24/7 basis. Free trade zones in Gaza-Al Arish/Sinai, trade with Europe, the US and Gulf States. Rail-links, energy and regional infrastructure development. However will the Palestinians be allowed to leave their safe areas? Or will they continue to live in militarised and segregated ghettos?

The development of the Gaza gas reservoirs will finally happen but will be of no benefit to Palestinians of course. Solar fields in the Sinai will provide energy for regional desalination facilities. After years of Israel bombing and destroying Gaza’s desalination capabilities and depriving Gaza of the energy to run the plants.

Electric vehicles “can be manufactured in the northern Gaza strip”. Factories will be established in these areas and in the occupied territories neighbouring Gaza. Raw materials will come from Saudi Arabia and the Emirates. Cars coming off the production line will be shipped to Europe from the port at Al Arish.

The rebuilding of Gaza will require raw materials and services from the Gulf states – which will create for them demand and opportunities for foreign investment.

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Taken from the PPt presentation of the Zionist proposal (translated to English from Hebrew)

Is this the Saudi idea of a “Palestinian state”? Probably. According to the New York Times on the 6th of May:

Emirati and Saudi officials and analysts said the new proposal would not secure the involvement of Arab states like Saudi Arabia and the U.A.E., particularly because it stopped short of guaranteeing Palestinian sovereignty and would permit continued Israeli military operations inside Gaza. The Saudi government has said it will not normalize ties with Israel unless Israeli leaders take irrevocable steps toward creating a Palestinian state.

However NYT goes on to say:

Still, the proposal is the most detailed plan for postwar Gaza that Israeli officials are known to have discussed, and parts of it align with ideas articulated by Arab leaders both in public and in private.

Regional businessmen are promoting the idea according to NYT, briefing officials from Arab and Western regimes, including US, Egypt, KSA and UAE. It has also been shown to none other than war criminal Tony Blair who works in an advisory capacity for the Saudi regime on “modernisation” projects. Allegedly a Palestinian businessman is also promoting the idea to American officials.

There are a lot of denials being given to the NYT in response to questions as to their awareness and approval of the Zionist/US plans but I would take these with a very large pinch of political salt – the UAE is pushing a “two state solution” which has never been anything but a ‘conflict’ resolution mirage and which is now impossible to achieve with the increase of settlements in the Occupied Territories and the genocidal campaign in Gaza.

What is certain is that this plan has been in the Zionist/US pipeline for perhaps decades and is only now being put into effect with the exploitation of events of October 7th by Israel to secure the Nakba II in Gaza and to increase the Zionist footprint in what remains of Palestine in the occupied territories.

Will it succeed against the rise of the East and the increased unity of the Resistance Axis impervious to Western/Zionist sectarian-divide-and-rule machinations? It will be a war to secure the regional heritage and cultural identity against a dystopian future of invisibility and eradication of all that is precious to the people of the region. I believe it will be won by an increasingly powerful and united Resistance Axis and non-aligned alliance but not without cost and sacrifice.

Please watch this video by Maher Musalli – “our faith is stronger than your bombs”:



As the Venezuelan Ambassador, HE Jose Biomorgi, said at the “Future of the region” conference in Damascus on the 9th April – we (the Resistance Axis) must never underestimate the neocolonialist bloc, their cohesion and their tremendous resources. (Paraphrase).

At the same conference, Iconic Syrian Catholic Priest, Pere Elias Zahlaoui (a profoundly spiritual and humble man) told me that the terrible sacrifice made by the Palestinian people will awaken the world and bring about huge transformation for Humanity – we are at a crossroads and the West is fighting for survival. This is when it is at its most dangerous and Machiavellian.

https://libya360.wordpress.com/2024/05/ ... as-future/

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Shocking abuse of Gazans inside Israeli detention camp: Whistleblowers

Whistleblowers working at the desert detention camp said Palestinian captives were strapped down, blindfolded, held in diapers, and some had limbs amputated

News Desk

MAY 10, 2024

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A leaked photograph of the detention facility shows a blindfolded man with his arms above his head. (Photo credit: Obtained by CNN)

Israel is torturing Palestinian captives at a detention facility in the Negev desert, a new investigation published by CNN on 10 May revealed, including by strapping injured captives to beds in diapers, feeding them through tubes, and amputating limbs after constant handcuffing.

CNN spoke to three Israeli whistleblowers who worked at the Sde Teiman desert camp, which holds Palestinians abducted in Gaza by the Israeli army during military operations.

CNN writes, “They paint a picture of a facility where doctors sometimes amputated prisoners’ limbs due to injuries sustained from constant handcuffing; of medical procedures sometimes performed by underqualified medics earning it a reputation for being ‘a paradise for interns’; and where the air is filled with the smell of neglected wounds left to rot.”

One of the whistleblowers provided a photo showing rows of blindfolded men in gray tracksuits sitting on paper-thin mattresses behind a fence and barbed wire.

The military base turned detention facility has two parts. One holds 70 Palestinian detainees from Gaza under “extreme physical restraint,” while injured captives are held in a field hospital where they “are strapped to their beds, wearing diapers and fed through straws,” CNN writes.

“They stripped them down of anything that resembles human beings,” said one whistleblower who worked as a medic at the field hospital.

“[The beatings] were not done to gather intelligence. They were done out of revenge,” said another whistleblower. “It was punishment for what they [the Palestinians] did on October 7 and punishment for behavior in the camp.”

One whistleblower who worked as a guard said he saw a man who was beaten until he had both broken teeth and bones.

The detention camp is one of three holding an unknown number of Palestinians from Gaza, who are often swept up randomly en masse and accused of fighting with the Palestinian resistance movement, Hamas.

Under Israel’s recently passed Unlawful Combatant Law, the abducted Palestinians can be held for 45 days before they are either released or transferred to the formal Israeli prison system.

Eighteen Palestinians, including leading Gaza surgeon Dr Adnan al-Bursh, have died in Israeli detention camps and prisons since the war began on 7 October.

Dr Mohammed al-Ran, who headed the surgical unit at northern Gaza’s Indonesian hospital, was held in a detention camp for 44 days.

He told CNN, “When they removed my blindfold, I could see the extent of the humiliation and abasement … I could see the extent to which they saw us not as human beings but as animals.”

Both Ran and a whistleblower said the guards unleashed dogs on sleeping prisoners at night. “While we were cabled, they unleashed the dogs that would move between us and trample over us,” said Ran. “You’d be lying on your belly, your face pressed against the ground. You can’t move, and they’re moving above you.”

Another whistleblower said, “I was asked to learn how to do things on the patients, performing minor medical procedures that are totally outside my expertise,” he said, including without anesthesia.

“If they complained about pain, they would be given paracetamol,” he said, using another name for acetaminophen.

“Just being there felt like being complicit in abuse.”

The same whistleblower also said he witnessed an amputation performed on a man whose blood was cut off from the constant zip-tying of his wrists.

CNN added that Sde Teiman and other military detention camps have been “shrouded in secrecy since their inception. Israel has repeatedly refused requests to disclose the number of detainees held at the facilities or to reveal the whereabouts of Gazan prisoners.”

https://thecradle.co/articles/shocking- ... tleblowers

The Gaza 'aid pier': a US geopolitical ploy?

While presented to the world as a humanitarian effort, the US-led 'Maritime Corridor' in Gaza is a strategic maneuver aimed at consolidating US and Israeli control over land and sea.


Suat Delgen

MAY 10, 2024

Image
(Photo Credit: The Cradle)

Israel’s brutal military assault on Gaza, which has killed over 35,000 civilians, predominantly women and children, has been executed alongside the denial of humanitarian aid since the war’s onset last October.

With cases of famine already in evidence, Tel Aviv’s utter disregard of the recent International Court of Justice (ICJ) ruling demanding immediate access to aid, and Washington’s veto of UN Security Council resolutions advocating for a Gaza ceasefire, both Israel and the US have come under significant global fire.

This backlash is notably strong on the campuses of major US universities, a growing student movement that has arguably breathed new life into the Palestinian solidarity movement. Concerns about the Gaza genocide’s potential damage to the global image of the US have belatedly reached the White House, with US President Joe Biden only now threatening – in advance of the November elections – to curtail the transfer of large offensive munitions to Israel.

A Maritime Corridor for Gaza

Curiously, despite his robust support of Israel’s Gaza assault until recent days, Biden appeared to take an atypical stance during his 7 March State of the Union address:

Tonight, I’m directing the US military to lead an emergency mission to establish a temporary pier on the Gaza coast in the Mediterranean. This pier will facilitate the arrival of large ships loaded with food, water, medicine, and temporary shelters.

That atypical initiative, during a period when hundreds of tons of US weapons were being airlifted to Israel daily, raises many questions about whether the establishment of a temporary pier in Gaza – under the guise of ‘humanitarian’ concern – is purely aimed at mitigating international criticism, or if it also serves Washington’s broader geopolitical objectives in the region.

If the US was indeed concerned about rushing aid to Gaza on an urgent basis, it could simply have done so via the Strip’s many land border crossings with Israel and the Egyptian one with Rafah, where hundreds of aid trucks have been lined up for months to deliver emergency food and medicine.

So why delay land aid for months to build a sea pier, one that potentially violates international maritime law? And is “humanitarian aid” just a ruse to occupy the seacoast of Gaza illegally?

According to Washington’s narrative, the maritime corridor is intended to facilitate the delivery of humanitarian aid from Cyprus to Gaza via a new pier. The corridor plans to start with 90 trucks rolling off to Gaza, and then scale up to 150 trucks. However, this volume is still far below the hundreds of trucks needed daily.

There are several hurdles and concerns associated with the maritime corridor. The operations will include Israeli inspections in Cyprus, which could lead to delays and complications. The sensitivity around inspections and security, especially concerning items deemed as “dual-use” goods (usable for both civilian and military purposes) – which in the past, per Israeli diktats, have included biscuits, chickens, and toys, and today includes maternity kits, sleeping bags, and dates – could impede the smooth processing of aid.

In its provisional measures decision, the ICJ emphasized that humanitarian aid to Gaza must not be obstructed. Therefore, Israel’s blockade has become void under normal circumstances.

In maritime operations, if a blockade is applied, no ships should be able to enter the area. Now, since the US has established a humanitarian corridor, this effectively nullifies the blockade and helps Tel Aviv pretend there isn’t one. Consequently, the US is practically invalidating the blockade decision recorded in the provisional measures decision by the ICJ, which was not supposed to be implemented – a legal loophole to provide succor to Israel’s massive international law violations.

Humanitarian aid or geopolitical strategy?

There’s significant political tension surrounding the corridor, with plenty of suspicions that it might slow down land routes or be associated with a siege strategy. The involvement of military entities and international politics adds layers of complexity and potential for delays or the politicization of aid.

Another aspect that casts doubt on the efficacy of the humanitarian aid corridor is its reliance on the Netzarim Corridor, also known as Route 749, imposed by the occupation army during the carnage. This east–west passage divides the northern and southern regions of the Gaza Strip and is a fortified road constructed by the Israeli army primarily for military access.

The route’s strategic placement and military significance complicate the entry and distribution of aid throughout Gaza. For the aid arriving through the maritime corridor, once the goods are offloaded at the pier, they still need to be transported across Gaza to reach the populations in need.

The Netzarim Corridor’s checkpoints could become bottlenecks for these deliveries. It is uncertain whether these checkpoints will allow seamless transportation of goods from the maritime corridor to the northern parts of Gaza, where famine has struck badly.

Consolidating control

Critics argue that the corridor could serve as a smokescreen for political maneuvers, posing a major threat not only to Gaza but to Egypt too, which stands to “lose its strategic advantage” over the Palestine file.

The suspicion is that the project, while ostensibly “facilitating” aid delivery, might also allow for increased control over the entirety of Gaza under the guise of humanitarian assistance. This control could potentially streamline Israel’s military operations and fortify its strategic positions within Gaza, ultimately influencing the broader geopolitical dynamics of the conflict.

Furthermore, the positioning of the pier may strategically protect Gaza’s nearby offshore gas fields, aligning with Israeli and US interests in stealing Palestinians’ energy resources.

The positioning of the aid entry points away from the northern parts of Gaza, where famine is most acute, to areas controlled by the Israeli army suggests a strategic alignment with Israel’s military objectives to remain physically in Gaza despite ceasefire negotiations that demand their complete exit from the Strip.

Concerns have also been raised about the potential for the US to take over control of the Egyptian border, effectively aiding in a permanent blockade of Gaza from Egypt, which could sever Gazans from access to any non-Israeli access to goods – forever.

In essence, while the maritime corridor could indeed alleviate a tiny portion of Gaza's immediate humanitarian needs, its broader implications suggest a tangled web of geopolitical strategies.

Instead of establishing a floating pier for humanitarian aid, one of the most practical solutions is to send aid directly to Israel’s Ashdod Port, and from there to Gaza under UN supervision. However, in line with Israel’s military strategy, sending the aid through the Netzarim Corridor under Israeli military control to the assembly areas in the south of Gaza and directing the Palestinians to these aid points has facilitated the assault on Rafah.

Historical and strategic significance

To understand Washington’s geopolitical calculations, it’s worth examining Biden’s statements to Congress on 20 October 2023, in which he requested assistance for Israel’s security.

“This is a prudent investment. It will benefit American security for generations to come,” “We will make Israel stronger than ever,” and “We will build a good future in the Middle East.”

Palestine, situated at the crossroads between Asia and Africa and on the border of the Indian Ocean and the Mediterranean Sea, has been a source of contention since the earliest known great powers of history.

Historically, for powers in Africa or those controlling Egypt, Palestine has been key to securing the strategic Suez point for military strategy. Similarly, for powers in Asia or those emerging from the continent, controlling Palestine was crucial for accessing the Suez.

Today, the US faces the potential loss of access to the Bab el-Mandeb passage due to Yemen’s maritime operations in and around the Red Sea, which are now expanding to the Mediterranean. Such a loss would likely shift the balance of power in the Red Sea strategic area and further across West Asia.

When considering historical and current rivalries, it is evident that a significant benefit for Washington, as noted by Biden, is to control the Suez Canal through Tel Aviv.

It is plausible that Israel’s dominion over the Gaza Strip and the US control of the offshore waters of Gaza under the guise of humanitarian aid could facilitate US control over the exits of the Suez Canal, as well as the routes from Iran and Russia to the Eastern Mediterranean through Lebanon and Syria. The alignment of Israel’s objectives in Gaza with Washington’s strategic goals explains the continued US support of Israel – in spite of intensifying global outrage over its enabling of ethnic cleansing and land grabbing.

https://thecradle.co/articles/the-gaza- ... tical-ploy

UNRWA shutters Jerusalem HQ after Israeli terror attack

The attacks by settler mobs come months into a smear campaign launched by Tel Aviv to dismantle the primary humanitarian agency for Palestinian refugees

News Desk

MAY 10, 2024

Image
(Photo Credit: X)

The UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA) announced on 9 May that it is shutting down its headquarters in Jerusalem after Israeli settlers carried out an arson attack on its building in the occupied city.
This was the second settler attack on the UNRWA building in less than a week, according to the agency’s general commissioner, Phillipe Lazzarini.
“Our director, with the help of other staff, had to put out the fire themselves as it took the Israeli fire extinguishers and police a while before they turned up. This is an outrageous development. Once again, the lives of UN staff were at serious risk. In light of this second appalling incident in less than a week, I have taken the decision to close down our compound until proper security is restored,” Lazzarini said.
Video footage on social media showed the UNRWA building in flames as settlers were heard cheering in the background. There were no injuries, but the fires caused significant damage to property, according to WAFA news agency.


Just two days earlier, settlers attacked the same headquarters, throwing stones at UN staff members “under the watch of the Israeli police,” Lazzarini added.
“The perpetrators of these attacks must be investigated, and those responsible must be held accountable. Anything less will set a new dangerous standard,” he said, adding that settlers have continuously attacked and harassed UNRWA staff for months. “On several occasions, Israeli extremists threatened our staff with guns.”
Settlers have been staging violent and provocative protests outside UNRWA headquarters for the past two months.
The UN agency has been operating in support of Palestinian refugees and internally displaced Palestinians since 1950. The organization provides education, health care, and other services. In recent years, it has suffered a severe lack of funding for its global operations.
After Operation Al-Aqsa Flood in October, Israel accused UNRWA staff members of taking part in the attack.

Tel Aviv has yet to provide any evidence of its claims, which were reportedly obtained through torture. Nevertheless, the Israeli government has been pushing forward with a smear campaign that seeks to dismantle the organization.
In late March, Israel put forth a proposal to the UN for the dismantlement of UNRWA in exchange for allowing more humanitarian aid in the Gaza Strip. UN officials said the plan was not feasible and would hinder aid operations across Gaza.
The Cradle columnist William Van Wagenen noted in February that Israel’s current campaign against UNRWA is part of a years-long Israeli campaign to undermine the organization and stifle its upholding of the Palestinian right of return.
“This concerted effort to undermine UNRWA is nothing short of a calculated strategy to exert control over the narrative surrounding Palestinian refugees and to once again reshape the demographics in Palestine.”
Over 180 UNRWA staff members have been killed by Israel in the Gaza Strip since the start of the war in October.

https://thecradle.co/articles/unrwa-shu ... ror-attack

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Israel’s war has always been against civilians

Lucas Leiroz

May 11, 2024

Destroying Hamas was never in the plans of the Zionist state, which is aware of its military weakness, with the sole objective of provoking the massacre of innocents in Palestine.

Israel is entering Rafah. After Hamas announced its willingness to negotiate a ceasefire agreement brokered by Qatar and Egypt, Zionist forces invaded Rafah, where more than 1.5 million Palestinian civilians seek shelter after having their homes destroyed during the brutal bombings by Tel Aviv. Israeli tanks advance in the region, in parallel with strong air attacks, generating terror and panic among local residents.

The operation in Rafah was already expected by many experts. Strategically, it does not seem interesting or profitable for Israel to launch this type of mobilization, considering that many civilian casualties will occur in the hostilities, and, in this way, the international image of the Zionist regime will be further damaged. The U.S., which is Israel’s biggest ally, has already made it clear that it does not support Netanyahu’s measure, which shows how the regime is isolated internationally, acting without diplomatic support from its own partners.

However, it is not rationality that is behind Israeli actions, but ethnic hatred against Palestinians and the objective of expanding the occupation to all Arab territories. The Zionist project of “Greater Israel”, endorsed by most Israeli decision-makers, has messianic and religious extremist roots, which explains the fanaticism behind the brutal actions of the occupation troops. In other words, the Israeli government does not make decisions based on what is most strategic and rational, but based on what is believed to be “necessary” according to fanatical and extremist beliefs.

The inertia of neighboring Arab countries has also contributed significantly to the progress of Israeli plans. Considering the geographical factor, Egypt is the country that could most help the Palestinians directly to avoid a humanitarian catastrophe in Rafah. However, Egypt has been a country absolutely incapable of acting against Israel for decades, given the “peace agreement” maintained with the Zionist regime. In the same sense, Jordan is, in practice, an Israeli proxy state, always acting to harm the Palestinians and favor the occupation – even though the majority of the local population is Palestinian.

It must be emphasized that this operation, despite its drastic humanitarian effects, will not provide Israel with any military victory – and, obviously, Israeli decision-makers are aware of this. There is no strategic interest in attacking Rafah, where the targets of the attacks are simply civilians. The Israeli objective is only to increase the massacre against ordinary Palestinian people. “Defeating Hamas” is not a real goal – perhaps it never was.

It is impossible for Israel to defeat Hamas. An insurrectionary war cannot be ended until the last guerrilla is eliminated. And, in a situation of ethnic insurrection against an occupying force, as long as there are people alive, there will always be guerrillas willing to fight. Furthermore, Hamas and allied Palestinian militias have understood an important factor in guerrilla warfare, which is the use of the tunnel system. There is nothing in the military literature that indicates the possibility of winning a war against groups that use underground tunnels as military bases. Israel simply does not know how to make efforts to defeat Hamas and is no longer trying to do so.

As several experts have said, killing Palestinians is more important for the Zionists than defeating Hamas. By eliminating children and women, Israel seeks to prevent the next Palestinian generation from joining the Resistance. This is why attacks target civilians and massively annihilate women and children. This is basically the only Israeli intention behind the criminal attack in Rafah, where refugees from all other areas of the Gaza Strip are located. This is further evidence that the Zionist war was never against armed militias, but against innocent civilians.

However, the strategic checkmate against Israel continues. If it continues to kill civilians, Tel Aviv will become increasingly hated internationally, becoming a diplomatic pariah. In parallel, the forces resisting the occupation will continue to fight, making it impossible for Israel to return to normality – creating a permanent war. In practice, no matter how much it continues to attack civilians and promote all kinds of massacres, Israel is more and more approaching the absolute unviability of its existence as a state.

https://strategic-culture.su/news/2024/ ... civilians/

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When Opposing Genocide Is Seen As Radical, Radicalism Becomes A Moral Imperative

This new protest movement is driving empire managers out of their goddamn minds, which means it’s working and must continue. When opposing genocide is seen as radical, radicalism becomes a moral imperative.

Caitlin Johnstone
May 10, 2024



The dumbest thing we’re asked to believe about Biden is that a politician who’s been an enthusiastic Zionist and virulent warmonger throughout his entire way-too-long political career privately has deep moral qualms about the genocide he’s been unconditionally supporting in Gaza.



Every time I listen to the song Hind’s Hall I get more disdainful of all the worthless, vapid celebrity artists who are refusing to step up and do something real for once in their pathetic lives.



Israel supporters are such psychopathic war sluts that they’re currently shrieking their lungs out at Biden for making a purely symbolic face-saving statement that he won’t give Israel the weapons to annihilate Rafah, despite the fact that he has already given Israel all the weapons it would need to annihilate Rafah.

The Washington Post reported the other day that “the Israeli military has enough weapons supplied by the U.S. and other partners to conduct the Rafah operation if it chooses to cast aside U.S. objections,” citing an anonymous senior official from the Biden administration. This has since been confirmed by the Israeli military, who says it has enough weapons to proceed with its planned Rafah invasion and that those plans will move forward.



A new poll from Data for Progress and Zeteo has found that a majority of Democrats believe Israel is committing genocide in Gaza and that the police crackdown against anti-genocide protesters is wrong, which kind of makes you wonder why they’re still identifying as Democrats. If Biden supporters believe Biden is guilty of genocide, what does that say about Biden supporters?



The New York Times has been given a Pulitzer for its scandalously discredited, notoriously biased and widely–mocked Gaza coverage. The Pulitzer Prize Awards Ceremony is literally just a bunch of propagandists giving each other trophies for being good at propaganda. Receiving one should be taken as an insult by anyone with a conscience.



House Democrats rescued Republican House Speaker Mike Johnson on Wednesday from Republican Marjorie Taylor Greene’s initiative to oust him over his support for the massive World War 3 spending bill. This was the first time in US history that a minority from either party has ever intervened to stop the majority party from removing their own speaker, because Democrats just love war that much.



And Republicans are even crazier, with GOP lawmakers promoting a bill to send college protesters to Gaza in the House and another separate bill in the Senate to have them put on a no-fly list as “terrorists”.

This new protest movement is driving empire managers out of their goddamn minds, which means it’s working and must continue. When opposing genocide is seen as radical, radicalism becomes a moral imperative.



To top it all off we’re still not out of the nuclear brinkmanship woods with Ukraine, and in fact it’s getting more dangerous.

Because of reckless comments from London approving the use of British weapons to attack Russian territory, Moscow has formally warned that if this happens it could directly attack British military installations in Ukraine.

Russia has also announced that it will be holding drills to simulate the use of tactical nukes in response to repeated assertions from French president Emmanuel Macron that sending NATO troops into Ukraine to fight Russia directly is an option that’s still on the table. Belarus, where nuclear weapons were recently deployed by Moscow, has announced that it will also be conducting drills to test its readiness for nuclear warfare.

Obviously direct hot warfare between NATO and Russia is an absolute nightmare scenario that must be avoided at all cost for the sake of every organism on this planet, and we are already way too close to it.

We’ve got to turn things around and stop this maniacal empire before it gets us all killed.

https://caitlinjohnstone.com.au/2024/05 ... mperative/
"There is great chaos under heaven; the situation is excellent."

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Re: Palestine

Post by blindpig » Sun May 12, 2024 11:33 am

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Gaza ceasefire proposal–Full Text
Originally published: Defend Democracy Press on May 6, 2024 by Al-Jazeera Arabic (more by Defend Democracy Press) | (Posted May 11, 2024)

Below is the full proposal for Gaza ceasefire and prisoners exchange, which was accepted by Hamas on Monday.

The text below is a draft translation of the Arabic text, which was published by Al-Jazeera Arabic website.

Proposed Agreement

Basic principles for an agreement between the Israeli side and the Palestinian side in Gaza on the exchange of detainees and prisoners between the two sides and the return of sustainable calm.

The framework agreement aims to release all Israeli detainees in the Gaza Strip, civilians, and soldiers, whether alive or otherwise, from all periods and times in exchange for an agreed number of prisoners in Israeli prisons, and a return to sustainable calm in order to achieve a permanent ceasefire, the withdrawal of Israeli forces from the Gaza Strip, reconstruction and the lifting of the siege.

The framework agreement consists of 3 interconnected phases, as follows:

First Stage (42 days)
The temporary cessation of mutual military operations between the parties, and the withdrawal of Israeli forces east and away from densely populated areas to an region along the border in all areas of the Gaza Strip (including Wadi Gaza, Netzarim axis and Kuwait roundabout) as indicated below:

Suspend flights (military and reconnaissance) in the Gaza Strip for 10 hours a day, and for 12 hours on the days of release of detainees and prisoners.

Return of IDPs to their areas of residence, withdrawal from Wadi Gaza (Netzarim axis and Kuwait roundabout).

On the third day (after the release of 3 detainees), the Israeli forces completely withdraw from Al-Rasheed Street in the east to Salah Al-Din Street, completely dismantle the military sites and installations in this area, start the return of the displaced to their areas of residence (without carrying weapons during their return), the free movement of residents in all areas of the Gaza Strip, and the entry of humanitarian aid from Al-Rashid Street from the first day without hindrance.

On the 22nd day (after the release of half of the living civilian detainees, including female soldiers), Israeli forces withdraw from the central Gaza Strip (especially the Netzarim Shuhada axis and the Kuwait roundabout axis) east of Salah al-Din Road to a nearby area along the border, the complete dismantling of military sites and installations, the continued return of displaced persons to their places of residence in the northern Gaza Strip, and the freedom of movement of residents in all areas of the Gaza Strip.

From the first day, the entry of intensive and sufficient quantities of humanitarian aid, relief materials and fuel (600 trucks per day, to include 50 fuel trucks, of which 300 to the north), including fuel for the operation of the power plant, trade and equipment necessary to remove rubble, and the rehabilitation and operation of hospitals, health centers and bakeries in all areas of the Gaza Strip, and to continue this throughout all stages of the agreement

Exchange of Detainees and Prisoners between the Two Sides:

During the first phase, Hamas released 33 Israeli detainees (alive or dead), including women (civilians and soldiers), children (under 19 non-soldiers), the elderly (over the age of 50) and the sick, in exchange for a number of prisoners in Israeli prisons and detention centers, according to the following:

Hamas releases all living Israeli detainees, both civilian women and children (under the age of 19 who are not soldiers), while Israel releases 30 children and women for every Israeli detainee released, based on lists provided by Hamas according to the oldest detainee.

Hamas releases all living Israeli detainees, the elderly (over the age of 50), the sick, and wounded civilians, while Israel releases 30 elderly (over 50) and sick prisoners for each Israeli detainee, based on lists provided by Hamas according to the oldest detainee.

Hamas releases all living Israeli soldiers, while Israel releases 50 prisoners from its prisons for every Israeli soldier released (30 life sentences and 20 sentences) based on lists provided by Hamas.

Scheduling the Exchange of Detainees and Prisoners between the Two Parties in the First Stage:

Hamas releases 3 Israeli detainees on the third day of the agreement, after which Hamas releases 3 more detainees every seven days, starting with women as much as possible (civilians and soldiers), and in the sixth week Hamas releases all the remaining civilian detainees included in this stage, in return Israel releases the agreed number of Palestinian prisoners in Israeli prisons, according to the lists to be provided by Hamas.

By the seventh day (if possible) Hamas will provide information on Israeli detainees to be released at this stage.

On the 22nd day, the Israeli side releases all the prisoners of the Shalit deal who have been re-arrested.

If the number of Israeli living detainees does not reach 33, the number of bodies of the same categories will be completed for this stage, in return Israel will release all women and children (under the age of 19) who were arrested from the Gaza Strip after October 7, 2023, provided that this will take place in the fifth week of this stage.

The exchange process depends on compliance with the terms of the agreement, including the cessation of mutual military operations, the withdrawal of Israeli forces, the return of displaced persons and the entry of humanitarian aid.

Complete the necessary legal procedures to ensure that freed Palestinian prisoners are not arrested on the same charges on which they were previously detained.

The keys to the first stage described above do not form the basis for negotiating the keys to the second stage.

Lift the measures and penalties taken against prisoners and detainees in Israeli prisons and detention camps after October 7, 2023, and improve their conditions, including those arrested after this date.

No later than the 16th day of the first phase, indirect talks will begin between the two parties on agreeing on the details of the second phase of this agreement, regarding the keys to the exchange of prisoners and detainees from both sides (soldiers and the remaining men), provided that they are completed and agreed upon before the end of the fifth week of this phase.

The United Nations and its relevant agencies, including UNRWA and other international organizations, should carry out their work in providing humanitarian services in all areas of the Gaza Strip, and continue to do so throughout the agreement.

Start the rehabilitation of infrastructure (electricity, water, sewage, communications and roads) in all areas of the Gaza Strip, and introduce the necessary equipment for civil defense, and to remove rubble and rubble, and continue to do so at all stages of the agreement.

Facilitate the entry of supplies and requirements to accommodate and shelter displaced people who lost their homes during the war (at least 60,000 temporary houses—caravans—and 200,000 tents).

Starting from the first day of this phase, an agreed number (not less than 50) wounded military personnel will be allowed to travel through the Rafah crossing to receive medical treatment, the number of passengers, sick and wounded will increase through the Rafah crossing, and the restrictions on passengers will be lifted, and the movement of goods and trade will resume without restrictions.

Initiate the necessary arrangements and plans for the comprehensive reconstruction of civilian homes and facilities and civilian infrastructure destroyed by the war and compensate those affected under the supervision of a number of countries and organizations, including Egypt, Qatar and the United Nations.

All measures at this stage, including the temporary cessation of mutual military operations, relief and shelter, withdrawal of forces, etc., will continue in the second phase until a sustainable calm (cessation of military and hostilities) is declared.

Second Stage (42 days):
Announcing the return of sustainable calm (permanent cessation of military and hostilities) and its entry into force before the start of the exchange of detainees and prisoners between the two parties.

All the remaining surviving Israeli men (civilians and soldiers)—in exchange for an agreed number of prisoners in Israeli prisons and detainees in Israeli detention camps, and a complete withdrawal of Israeli forces out of the Gaza Strip.

Third Stage (42 days):
Exchange of bodies and remains of the dead on both sides after reaching them and identifying them.

Start implementing the reconstruction plan for the Gaza Strip for a period of 3 to 5 years, including homes, civilian facilities, and infrastructure, and compensate all those affected under the supervision of a number of countries and organizations, including: Egypt, Qatar and the United Nations.

Completely end the blockade on the Gaza Strip.

Guarantors of the Agreement:
Qatar, Egypt, the United States, and the United Nations.

https://mronline.org/2024/05/11/gaza-ce ... full-text/

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‘Unhinged’ Israeli Ambassador Literally Shreds UN Charter Ahead of Successful Vote Urging Security Council to Reconsider Palestine Membership
Posted on May 11, 2024 by Yves Smith

Yves here. If you think “unhinged” is an overstatement, here is a longer version of what the Israel ambassador said regarding the General Assembly vote to find that Palestine qualified for membership, which passed by a large majority:



As Lambert put it, “Israeli ambassador completely loses his shit, [family blogging] childish and cringe.”

This gives me an excuse to use one of my favorite lines from film. In the must-see The Lives of Others, the lead character Georg Dreymann replies to a particularly offensive and proof-of-power-abusing remark by a former senior official in the GDR: “To think that men like you once ran a country.”

Sadly, that remark applies to most Western leaders, absent the use of past tense.

By Jake Johnson, staff writer at Common Dreams. Originally published at Common Dreams

“Shame on you,” said Israeli Ambassador Gilad Erdan shortly before the U.N. General Assembly passed a resolution supporting full membership for Palestine.

Shortly before the United Nations General Assembly approved a resolution Friday supporting full U.N. membership for Palestine, Israel’s ambassador took to the podium and put a prop copy of the U.N.’s founding document through a handheld paper shredder.

In a speech that one journalist described as “unhinged,” Israeli Ambassador to the U.N. Gilad Erdan described Palestinians as “modern-day Nazis” and condemned the U.N. General Assembly for choosing to “reward” them with “rights and privileges.”

“You are shredding the U.N. Charter with your own hands,” Erdan said as he fed a small copy of the document through a miniature paper shredder. “Shame on you.”

Watch: https://twitter.com/i/status/1788952088724062258

Erdan’s bizarre performance came just before the U.N. General Assembly voted overwhelmingly in favor of a resolution urging the Security Council to reconsider Palestine’s request to become a full U.N. member following a U.S. veto last month. Palestine is currently a nonmember observer state of the U.N.

The General Assembly voted by a margin of 143 to 9—with 25 abstentions—in support of the resolution. The nine countries that voted no were the United States, Israel, Argentina, Czechia, Hungary, Micronesia, Nauru, Palau, and Papua New Guinea.

In addition to backing its bid for full U.N. membership, the resolution gives Palestine “the right to introduce and co-sponsor proposals as well as amendments within the assembly,” The Guardianreported.

Riyad Mansour, Palestine’s permanent observer at the U.N., said ahead of Friday’s vote that support for the resolution “is a vote for Palestinian existence.”

“I stand before you as lives continue falling apart in the Gaza Strip,” said Mansour, noting that “more than 35,000 Palestinians have been killed, 80,000 have been maimed, 2 million have been displaced, and everything has been destroyed” by Israeli forces over the past seven months.

“No words can capture what such loss and trauma signifies for Palestinians,” Mansour added.

“The U.S. and Israel are isolated and the world is on the side of Palestine.”

Trita Parsi, executive vice president of the Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft, called the U.N. General Assembly’s passage of the resolution “an unprecedented move that shows once again how unbelievably isolated [U.S. President Joe] Biden has made the U.S.”

In anticipation of Friday’s vote, a group of Republican U.S. senators led by Sen. Mitt Romney (R-Utah) introduced legislation that would halt U.S. funding for any entity—including the U.N.—that gives Palestine “any status, rights, or privileges beyond observer status.”

Current law requires the U.S. to “cut off funding to U.N. agencies that give full membership to a Palestinian state—which could mean a cutoff in dues and voluntary contributions to the U.N. from its largest contributor,” The Associated Pressreported Friday.

Craig Mokhiber, a former U.N. official who resigned in October over the body’s failure to act in the face of Israel’s genocidal assault on Gaza, wrote that Friday’s vote further shows that “the U.S. and Israel are isolated and the world is on the side of Palestine."

https://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2024/05 ... rship.html

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Israel likely violated intl law in Gaza, 'no evidence' to stop arms transfers: White House
In a highly contradictory report, Washington stopped short of making an assessment that could threaten the delivery of weapons fueling the genocide of Palestinians in Gaza

News Desk

MAY 11, 2024

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(Photo Credit: US Marine Corps/Lance Cpl. Emma Gray)

The White House on 10 May issued a highly anticipated report on Israel's conduct during its genocidal war in Gaza, saying it is “reasonable to assess” Tel Aviv used US-provided weapons in ways that are “inconsistent” with international law but stopping short of identifying violations that would put an end to the ongoing military aid.

“It is reasonable to assess that defense articles covered under [national security memorandum] NSM-20 have been used by Israeli security forces since October 7 in instances inconsistent with its IHL [international humanitarian law] obligations or with established best practices for mitigating civilian harm,” the report, drafted by the State Department, says.

The White House issued NSM-20 in February, calling on Israel and other countries receiving military aid to provide written assurances that all US-supplied weapons were used “in a manner consistent with international law.”

The report also stipulates that Washington found “credible and reliable” Israeli assurances that the country will use US weapons in accordance with international humanitarian law.

"[Israel has] the knowledge, experience, and tools to implement best practices for mitigating civilian harm in its military operations," the report says, noting, however, that results in the field, “including high levels of civilian casualties, raise substantial questions.”

The highly contradictory report also points to “limitations” regarding US access to evidence from Israel, saying officials provided some information "on request" about specific incidents but stressing that “more details are needed.”

"Although we have gained insight into Israel’s procedures and rules, we do not have complete information on how these processes are implemented," the report said. “Israel has not shared complete information to verify [IHL violations].”

Washington's subdued assessment of Israel's campaign of genocide comes as the death in Gaza has surpassed 35,000 – more than two-thirds of whom are women and children – with over 10,000 Palestinians still missing across the strip and hundreds still being found inside mass graves.

Furthermore, it follows a new Israeli blockade on humanitarian aid deliveries, as the head of the World Food Programme (WFP) has declared a “full-blown famine” in the northern part of the narrow enclave.

Moreover, western media reports have shed light on the “shocking abuse” suffered by Gazans held in Israeli detention camps, with abuse that ranges from severe torture to routine amputations of limbs due to constant handcuffing.

https://thecradle.co/articles/israel-li ... hite-house

US-built Gaza pier on shaky legs as operational concerns grow

US officials also fear they could be subject to resistance attacks, as the staging ground for the pier project has recently been hit with mortars and rockets

News Desk

MAY 10, 2024

Image
(Photo credit: Reuters)
A US ship carrying aid for the Gaza Strip has left Cyprus, but Washington’s “floating pier” is not yet ready to unload the supplies, the Pentagon said on 9 May.

Pentagon spokesman Major General Patrick Ryder said on Thursday afternoon that while the pier’s construction has nearly been completed, weather conditions make unloading the aid “unsafe.”

The aid on the US Sagamore vessel will eventually be loaded onto another US ship docked at Israel’s Ashdod port, which will then transport it to the pier system – known as Joint Logistics Over the Shore (JLOTS) – as soon as it has been fully installed and the conditions are right, Ryder said.

“While I’m not going to provide a specific date, we expect these temporary piers to be put into position in the very near future, pending suitable security and weather conditions,” he added.

According to CNN, the pier’s effectiveness may continue to be hindered by weather and sea conditions even once fully operational.

“JLOTS operations, which must take both safety and throughput requirements into account, must often wait for favorable weather and sea state conditions,” Israel’s Marine Data Center reported. The pier can only be safely operated with maximum 3-foot waves and winds less than 15 miles per hour.

A US defense official told CNN that such limitations of the pier system are “accurate.”

“The bottom line – heavy seas do have an effect on the ability to execute the JLOTS mission … If winds or waves are stronger, loading and unloading using the JLOTS pier becomes dangerous,” the official said.

US officials also expressed security concerns over the timing of the pier operation, which coincides with Israel’s operation in Rafah and relentless, indiscriminate bombardment of the city. The planned staging ground for the pier operation has been hit by the resistance’s mortars and rockets a number of times in past weeks, and a potential Israeli expansion of its operation in Rafah could make tensions worse.

https://thecradle.co/articles/us-built- ... cerns-grow

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Whistleblowers Further Expose Israel’s Torture of Detainees
May 10, 2024

The details provided to CNN are consistent with those that a doctor at the field hospital of the Sde Teiman prison camp included in a recent letter to top Israeli officials.

Image
(Josh Hallett, Flickr, CC BY 2.0)

By Jake Johnson
Common Dreams

Three Israeli whistleblowers who worked at the notorious Sde Teiman prison camp in the Negev desert offered horrifying accounts of the treatment of Palestinians held there, telling CNN that the facility’s doctors have amputated limbs due to handcuffing injuries, allowed detainees’ wounds to rot, and carried out vicious beatings.

A medic who worked at Sde Teiman’s field hospital said that Palestinian detainees there are stripped “of anything that resembles human beings” and that the harassment and torture are done not to “gather intelligence” but “out of revenge” for the Oct. 7 attacks.

Israel has detained thousands of Gaza residents since October, with many of them held under a recently amended law that empowers Israeli authorities to imprison people indefinitely without charge or due process.

Human rights organizations have documented Israeli forces’ brutal and degrading treatment of Palestinian detainees, including women and children.

At the field hospital, CNN reported, “wounded detainees are strapped to their beds, wearing diapers and fed through straws.”

One Israeli whistleblower took a photograph of a room at the facility, which the person said was filled with a “putrid stench” and the sound of “men’s murmurs” as they were “forbidden from speaking to each other.”

“We were told they were not allowed to move,” the whistleblower said. “They should sit upright. They’re not allowed to talk. Not allowed to peek under their blindfold.”


The whistleblower accounts, according to CNN,

“paint a picture of a facility where doctors sometimes amputated prisoners’ limbs due to injuries sustained from constant handcuffing; of medical procedures sometimes performed by underqualified medics earning it a reputation for being ‘a paradise for interns’; and where the air is filled with the smell of neglected wounds left to rot.”

The testimony provided to CNN is consistent with details that a doctor at the camp’s field hospital included in a recent letter to top Israeli officials. The doctor described unlawful and inhumane conditions; in a single week, the person said, “two prisoners had their legs amputated due to handcuff injuries, which unfortunately is a routine event.”

A report published last month by Al Mezan, a Palestinian human rights organization, also documented “harrowing accounts of torture and inhumane treatment” of people detained by the Israeli military.

“A 19-year-old detainee told an Al Mezan lawyer that he was tortured from the moment he was arrested,” the group said.

He described how three of his fingernails were removed with pliers during interrogation. He also stated that investigators unleashed a dog on him and subjected him to shabeh — a form of torture which involves detainees being handcuffed and bound in stress positions for long periods — three times over three days of interrogation. He was then placed in a cell for 70 days, where he experienced starvation and extreme fatigue.”

Mohammed Al-Ran, a Palestinian doctor who was arrested by Israeli forces in December, told CNN that he was

“stripped down to his underwear, blindfolded and his wrists tied, then dumped in the back of a truck where … the near-naked detainees were piled on top of one another as they were shuttled to a detention camp in the middle of the desert.”

Al-Ran was held by Israeli forces for 44 days. Just before his release, he told CNN, “a fellow prisoner had called out to him, his voice barely rising above a whisper.”

According to CNN: “He asked the doctor to find his wife and kids in Gaza. ‘He asked me to tell them that it is better for them to be martyrs,’ said al-Ran. ‘It is better for them to die than to be captured and held here.'”

Omar Shakir, Israel and Palestine director of Human Rights Watch, said in response to the new reporting that “what we know about Gaza is only tip of the atrocity iceberg."

https://consortiumnews.com/2024/05/10/w ... detainees/

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Israel is losing
Seven months into Israel’s genocide, the US has been forced to shift its position on unconditional support to Israel

May 10, 2024 by Layan Fuleihan, L. Mohammed

Image
Protest against the attacks on Rafah in New York City. Photo: Wyatt Souers / ANSWER Coalition

Israel is intensifying its assault on Rafah, assassinating civilians, initiating gun violence on the ground, and raining bombs down on the city from the sky. Despite the fact that Hamas agreed to the latest version of the ceasefire proposal—approved by all other parties in the negotiating discussions—Israel has insisted on moving forward with its genocide, setting its sights on the last place of refuge in Gaza and sending out evacuation notices. Israel has refused to accept the ceasefire agreement and is instead continuing its genocidal assault on the Palestinian people.

This turn of events is very clarifying for anyone who may have still had any doubts about the negotiation process thus far. Over the past months, Tel Aviv and Washington DC have insisted on the same narrative–the Palestinians are blocking the negotiations. This is an entirely false narrative, both now and historically. Now the world can see that there’s an actual ceasefire deal that all parties, including the mediation, has approved, and it is Israel who has refused—not the other way around. What this elucidates is that Israel and the United States have never approached the negotiating table in good faith. Many of those who have been part of the student encampments in the past couple of weeks have now had a firsthand experience with negotiations, what it really looks like to “negotiate” with an enemy that has no intention of making any real concessions, and the kind of treacherous proposals that the enemy puts forward. These insulting proposals hardly represent any flexibility towards the demands of the other parties.

This is what has been happening in the negotiations between the Palestinian resistance and Israel. Israel, until now fully backed by the United States, has categorically refused any proposal that would respond to the bare minimum of Hamas’ demands.

This moment has also clarified the role the United States have been playing over the past couple of months, and has demonstrated the instability and contradictory character of the current moment.

The United States has recently taken the position that they oppose the invasion of Rafah and are pushing for a ceasefire agreement. Although this ostensibly is a new position, in practice, it is not necessarily that different from before. In simple terms, if the US actually opposed the invasion of Rafah, Biden could easily and quickly make a phone call– first to the Pentagon, then to Tel Aviv–to end it, employing political, economic, and military force to cut all aid to Israel, stop the invasion, and end the current phase of the war. This would mean a complete reversal of US foreign policy towards Israel until now, and of course, remains an unlikely reality. For example, though the White House has recently paused a shipment of some 3,500 munitions, causing some dismay among the would-be recipients, they continue to provide security assistance. This announcement does not affect the 26 billion dollar aid package signed last month, and the pause is couched with the reassurances that their overall support remains firm. But Biden is signaling, insisting that the US government does not support the operation in Rafah, and that they want a ceasefire to go through. Many of the European Union countries and the international community, both at the geopolitical and the mass movement level, are all against the occupation and invasion of Rafah. And yet, Israel proceeds with its genocide.

Israel is not without its own contradictions–so many, in fact, that it would take many more pages to detail. Some of its own political leaders and members of the ruling class have called for a ceasefire, while others insist on the invasion. Netanyahu clings to extending the war as his only hope to avoid imprisonment. Earlier this week, the families of the Israeli hostages held in Gaza released a statement demanding that Netanyahu accept the ceasefire agreement in order for their family members to be released, and threatened to burn the country down if it didn’t happen. Despite internal political division, Israel has still backtracked on the negotiations and proceeded with attacking Rafah, risking the stability it enjoyed in its relationship with the United States and claiming they are ready to fight alone.

Israel’s defeat
To fully understand what is happening right now, it is important to contextualize these recent developments and examine how events have unfolded until this moment. The negotiations and the escalation of attacks on Rafah are occuring in a context where Israel is facing very concrete conditions of defeat. This has been true for some time now, but it has never been clearer than this week. And by defeat, we mean very concrete things.

Primarily, they have not achieved their main objective of destroying the military capacity of the Palestinian resistance. The Palestinian resistance continues to both defend and respond to the occupation’s genocidal violence.

The US and Israel have also not managed to contain or dominate the regional resistance against their aggression. In fact, Yemen, Lebanon, Syria, Iraq, and the many different actors across the region have only intensified their attacks against the occupation. Some weeks ago, Iran successfully launched a historic attack against Israel in response to Israel’s strike on the Iranian embassy in Syria. This targeted attack on Israeli military infrastructure turned the table, making it so that Israeli and US military bases in the region are no longer effective as a force of deterrence, but rather now represent vulnerabilities for imperialism, US empire, and Zionism.

Another very important sign of Israel’s defeat and one that is not often discussed, is that the Israeli genocide and occupation has failed to destroy Palestinian social organizing and the social fabric of Palestinian society in Gaza. Emergency committees are still functioning and are being formed throughout Gaza to make sure that the very little aid that is able to enter can be distributed in an efficient and adequate manner. This is very important—an organized people are much harder to defeat. The Palestinian people, facing the most extreme conditions of famine, genocide, massacre, and complete destruction of their homes, are not only organizing these emergency committees to distribute aid, but are also preparing the evacuated cities, such as Khan Younis and other parts of the North, for the return of their people. This achievement is so incredible that the occupation has started assassinating the organizers of the emergency committees. The Palestinian people’s ability to organize to survive is a threat to the occupation, and proves to be another indicator of Israel’s defeat.

Finally, the social base for Zionism, internally and externally, is almost completely destroyed. Their internal crisis has grown to a magnitude of historic proportions. But the social base for Zionism is not just located in Israel: a lot of the social support for the Zionist project also relies on communities and institutions across the United States, as US imperialism has its own interests in the region. However, the US ruling class is losing control of its own institutions, as seen through the encampments at Columbia University and the uprising of the student movement across the country. Facing a grave crisis of legitimacy, the social base for Zionism, including the bodies that normally fund, promote, and politically support a Zionist narrative, are no longer able to maintain control over that narrative or their own people. As this genocide is not only funded by the United States, but also in many ways engineered and politically backed by the United States, the trajectory of this latest war on the Palestinian people has concrete implications for the US. When Israel faces defeat, so does the United States.

The movement for Palestine has backed Biden into a corner
The United States is wrestling with its own losses in the arena of public opinion, domestically and geopolitically, which should be credited to the mass movement for Palestine that has been not only mobilizing and rejecting the genocide, but building power in the streets every day. Over the past few months, the movement has made it impossible for Biden to get away with giving lip service by simply saying he wants a ceasefire, and waiting for everyone to applaud him. The actions sweeping the US by storm have consistently called for much more concrete demands, demanding all that is possible. It is possible to end the genocide. It is possible to stop the invasion of Rafah. It just takes a decision from the White House to do that.

No one expects the ruling class to be moved by a sense of morality, but they can be moved by political pressure. The continuous mobilizations across the US that have not decreased for over seven months demonstrate to the world how the ruling class has been defeated on the home front. And because they know their public is watching, ready, and mobilized, they are forced to seriously consider the consequences for their foreign policy maneuvers and decisions.

Once again faced with conditions of defeat, the United States wants this phase of the war to end. It is clear that Biden is drawing the line at the invasion of Rafah, not because of a sudden change of heart towards Palestinian lives, but because the White House has lost confidence in Israel’s ability to defeat Hamas by military means. In order to preserve some possibility of achieving their military and economic objectives in the region, they are desperately attempting to stay afloat on the sinking ship that is the Israeli war machine, without abandoning the ship altogether.

The US is also losing favor with its own public at an unprecedented level, and their own interests are faltering as Israel exposes the hypocrisy of US-backed institutions, from corporate media to universities. Biden is hoping to find an exit strategy that can allow him to salvage any semblance of a reputation. The public pressure that the mass movement for Palestine has imposed upon the warmongers in the White House is still growing seven months in. Just last week, tens of thousands of people, students and workers took to the streets on a Wednesday afternoon for May Day, at a time when Biden hoped that people would simply give up and lose steam. The May Day mobilization in New York City, repeated in cities and locales across the world, was indicative of the fact that the struggle for Palestine has sparked a new wave of international solidarity, a global movement that has been raising the class consciousness of people.

A victory for Palestine is a victory for the people of the world
Hundreds of thousands of people across the country, millions across the world, have continued to take to the streets week in and week out. The Palestine movement will continue to do so as it makes demands that stretch far beyond a ceasefire, calling for an end to the occupation and the total liberation of Palestine. In the streets, the working class carries the banner of Palestine, and Palestine carries the banner of the working class. We know that it’s our duty to imagine a better future, and that is something that we must do together.

Just like an Israeli defeat is a US defeat, we know that a Palestinian victory is our victory, it’s the people’s victory. And we also know that this movement did not just appear out of thin air. Over the past seven months, thousands of people have been building their organizations and honing their skills. More and more people are undertaking organizational tasks for the first time, demonstrating the power of an organized movement: they are leading chants with a megaphone, flyering in the subways, organizing protests in their neighborhoods, learning from one another and bringing it back to their communities. People have realized the power they hold and have affirmed day after day that the government does not have their consent to carry on supporting the genocide. The people refuse to be complicit in genocide—the genocide of any oppressed peoples around the world.

This past week, heavy rains poured over Rafah, breaking a persistent heat wave. From our comrades in Rafah, we heard reflections that this fierce oscillation between winter and summer weather conditions was reminiscent of the same whiplash we might all feel from the constant back and forth between the threats of invasion (and increased airstrikes) on Rafah, and the hopes of an adequate ceasefire deal being reached–one that is actually representative of the will of the people.

But in the midst of all of this volatility, there is an unbreakable hope that the end of this war is near, and that the end of this war will bring about a way for the Palestinian people to realize their goals for liberation, for dignity and for true independence. There is immense hope that the end of this war will only further carve a path to total liberation from here on out.

The movement for Palestinian liberation has already accomplished so much. It has made its demands unavoidable. It has made Palestine unavoidable. It has made the situation in the US untenable for the ruling class. And it will continue to do that because the movement has not abandoned its demands for the past seven months, and it has not abandoned them for the past 76 years either.

This week, we commemorate 76 years since the start of the ongoing Nakba, “the catastrophe,” which was the mass dispossession and theft of Palestinian land in 1948. We will commemorate it together with the unwavering commitment that has only been further fortified over the past seven months, we will commemorate it in our speeches, in our protests, in our fundraisers, in our workplaces and institutions. We have not forgotten the Nakba, we will never forget the 40,000 martyrs we have gained over the past seven months, and it is our duty to ensure that the culprits of this genocide cannot forget either.

https://peoplesdispatch.org/2024/05/10/ ... is-losing/
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Re: Palestine

Post by blindpig » Mon May 13, 2024 11:19 am

UK Has Flown 200 Spy Missions Over Gaza, Complicit in Israeli War Crimes: Report
MAY 11, 2024

Image
This file photo shows a British Shadow R1 spy plane in flight. Photo: Royal Air Force.

A report has revealed that the UK military has flown 200 spy missions over Gaza in support of Israel, adding that the International Criminal Court (ICC) could investigate British officials over complicity in war crimes.

“The Royal Air Force (RAF) has flown 200 surveillance flights over Gaza since December, it can be revealed,” Declassified UK, an investigative journalism organization, said in a report on Wednesday.

Noting that the flights have taken off from the UK’s sprawling air base on Cyprus, RAF Akrotiri, and have been in the air for about six hours, the organization said the RAF has likely “gathered around 1,000 hours” of footage over Gaza.

One of the flights was in the air on April 1 when Israel killed seven aid workers working for the World Central Kitchen, including three Britons, in airstrike on central Gaza, the report said.

On that day, “a UK spy plane departed Akrotiri at 5 pm local time and arrived back at the base at 10:49 pm. The Israeli airstrikes are believed to have taken place soon after 10.30 pm.”

The new information comes as the International Criminal Court (ICC) is considering issuing arrest warrants for Israel’s prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his ministers in the wake of their months-long genocidal war against Palestinians in the besieged Gaza Strip.

“British officials could also face prosecution for complicity in war crimes, including defense secretary Grant Shapps,” Declassified said.

The UK Ministry of Defense announced on December 2 that it would begin spy flights over Gaza to locate captives held by the Palestinian resistance movement Hamas in Gaza.

“But the extraordinary number of flights, and the fact that they started nearly two months after the hostages were taken, raises suspicions that the UK is not collecting intelligence solely for this purpose.”

The organization noted that Shadow R1, a UK spy plane, also landed in Israel on February 13 before flying back to the UK base in Cyprus, saying “The purpose of the visit is unclear.”

“Israeli forces are also on the ground in Gaza, and notoriously have wide-ranging surveillance capabilities in the territory. It is unclear what Britain’s R1s can add to the hostage rescue mission.”


Israel launched the devastating war on Gaza on October 7 after the Palestinian resistance movement Hamas waged the surprise Operation Al-Aqsa Storm against the occupying entity in response to the Israeli regime’s decades-long campaign of bloodletting and devastation against Palestinians.

Since the start of the offensive, the Israeli attacks have killed at least 34,904 Palestinians and injured 78,514 others, as an estimated 10,000 Palestinians are believed to be buried under the rubble of buildings flattened by the regime’s bombs.

https://orinocotribune.com/uk-flown-200 ... es-report/

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Yemeni People Demonstrate Support for Palestinians in the Streets

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March in Yemen, May 10, 2024 | Photo: X/ @TopGResistance

Published 10 May 2024

During the march, Yemenis rallied under the slogan "Escalating, with Gaza until victory".


Many Yemenis demonstrated this Friday in Sana'a, the capital of Yemen, and in other governorates of the nation to support the Palestinian people and demand an end to Israel’s genocide against the Gaza Strip.

During the march, Yemenis rallied under the slogan "Escalating, with Gaza until victory," to send a warning to Israel to stop the escalation of the conflict against the Palestinian people in the Gaza Strip.

The demonstrators carried a giant Palestinian flag and inscriptions expressing, "God is greater, Death to the United States, Death to Israel," at the same time calling for an immediate cessation of the Israeli genocidal war in the Gaza Strip.

The Yemeni Ansarola Resistance movement carries out the fourth phase of military operations against the Israeli regime and its interests in the Red Sea, in response to the ground invasion by the occupying Israeli army in the east of the city of Rafah in southern Gaza.


The leader of Ansarola, Seyed Abdulmalik Badreddin al-Houthi, said that the fourth phase of actions involves aggressions against any vessel related to the Zionist regime without taking into account its destiny.

Yemen is increasing its attacks, which primarily targeted only Israeli and regime-affiliated ships bound for the occupied Palestinian territories in solidarity with Palestine.

They have also added to their actions, the objectives of the United States and the United Kingdom, after the attacks of these two countries that violate Yemen’s sovereignty in support of Israel.

https://www.telesurenglish.net/news/Yem ... -0023.html

Another 80 Bodies Found in Three Mass Graves in Gaza

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Mass grave found outside the Al-Shifa Hospital after the Israeli attacks. | Photo: X/ @Armanali225

Published 11 May 2024

In recent weeks, the Ghassathi Government claims to have found more than 520 bodies in seven mass graves in hospitals.


Civil Defence authorities and the Gaza Strip Ministry of Health today announced the discovery of 80 bodies in three mass graves discovered around the Shifa hospital in Gaza City, where the Israeli Army conducted a military operation of more than a week in April.

"A virtual examination of the bodies exhumed from the mass graves showed that most of them belonged to patients deprived of health care," the Civil Defense said, who also claimed that there are bodies destroyed as a result of having been run over by military vehicles, as well as heads without bodies in the mass graves of the courtyards of the Shifa complex.


In recent weeks, the Ghassathi Government claims to have found more than 520 bodies in seven mass graves in hospitals that were attacked by Israeli forces, such as the Shifa, the Naser in Khan Younis and the Kamal Adwan in Beit Lahia.

The Israeli army raided these hospitals on several occasions, with particular harshness last April, on the unproven grounds that they were used by Hamas as a hideout and base for regrouping.

The Israeli Army continues its offensive in Rafah, where today it ordered the evacuation of more neighborhoods in the east and center of the city; in addition to resuming its military activity in Jabalia, in the north.

Since 7 October, 34,971 Gazans have been killed in the Israeli offensive and 78,641 have been injured, in addition to 10,000 bodies missing under the rubble, according to the Gaza Strip Ministry of Health.



https://www.telesurenglish.net/news/Ano ... -0004.html

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Israel carpet bombs Gaza with no goal in sight

The Palestinian resistance is confronting the Israeli army on several fronts across the strip

News Desk

MAY 12, 2024

Image
(Photo credit: Reuters)

Dozens of Palestinian civilians have been killed and injured over the past 24 hours by intense Israeli bombardment across the Gaza Strip.

Israeli airstrikes have continued to relentlessly bomb northern, central, and southern Gaza.

“18 martyrs and six wounded were admitted to the Kuwait Hospital” in the southern city of Rafah, medical sources told WAFA news agency on 12 May. Children were among those killed by Israeli strikes on Rafah.

“Israeli tanks opened fire on civilian homes in the eastern areas of Deir al-Balah and Maghazi,” WAFA added.

Israeli artillery shelling pounded Gaza City’s Al-Zaytoun neighborhood, in the north. Over a dozen civilians remain trapped under the rubble there, according to WAFA. Several civilians were also killed in bombing of northern Gaza’s Jabalia.


An Israeli quadcopter opened fire at UNRWA clinic in the Jabalia refugee camp.

"Our emergency crews are receiving many calls for help,” said civil defense spokesman, Mahmoud Basal, adding that it is “gravely difficult and dangerous for the civil defense crews to aid civilians because they themselves have no immunity and are targeted by Israeli occupation forces.”

The intensified bombardment comes as Israeli troops are engaged in fierce clashes with the Palestinian resistance in northern Gaza.

Hamas’ Qassam Brigades struck Israeli forces with heavy-caliber mortar shells in Al-Zaytoun neighborhood on 12 May, the group said in a statement.

On 11 May, intense clashes reignited in Al-Zaytoun, months after Tel Aviv claimed Hamas had been defeated in the north of the enclave. The Israeli army has also deployed to the city of Jabalia north of Gaza City, where it now says fighters from Hamas' armed wing have regrouped.

The Qassam Brigades have also continued to fiercely confront Israeli forces operating in the southern city of Rafah, where the army launched a recent operation to seize the border crossing with Egypt. Tel Aviv had been claiming for months that Rafah is Hamas’ final stronghold, despite its continued presence, along with other factions, across the strip.

Rocket barrages have been flying out of Rafah toward the positions of Tel Aviv's forces and nearby settlements over the past two days.


"Hamas has military capability and it will remain, and we will not end it if we continue fighting," former head of Israel’s National Security Council, Giora Eiland, said on Saturday.

https://thecradle.co/articles/israel-ca ... l-in-sight

Hamas 'reorganizes' in Gaza's north, battles invading army in Rafah

Israeli forces have been redeployed from Rafah to the north of Gaza as hundreds of thousands of civilians have been ordered to flee

News Desk

MAY 11, 2024

Image
(Photo Credit: AFP/Getty Images)

Intense battles reignited in Gaza City's Al-Zaytoun neighborhood on 11 May between the Palestinian resistance and Israeli troops, months after Tel Aviv claimed Hamas had been defeated in the north of the enclave.

The Israeli army has also deployed to the city of Jabalia north of Gaza City, where it claims fighters from Hamas' armed wing have “reorganized.”

A field commander from the Palestinian resistance told Al-Mayadeen that, in Al-Zaytoun, the invading tanks were forced to withdraw from the vicinity of the neighborhood's clinic.

“The resistance targeted in the past two days the forces that were positioned in the area with mortar shells and anti-tank rockets … Artillery and aerial bombardment is still ongoing on several axes in Al-Zaytoun,” the Palestinian commander said.

The Israeli army on Saturday confirmed to Hebrew media that troops initially prepared to operate in Rafah are preparing to enter Jabalia.

Israel's latest wave of aggression in northern Gaza has killed dozens of civilians, including eight children in the center of the enclave and a journalist and his family in Jabalia.

Battles are also ongoing in southern Gaza's Rafah, where Israeli authorities have said for months that Hamas' “last two battalions” are positioned.

Fighters from Hamas' Qassam Brigades, the Palestinian Islamic Jihad's (PIJ) Quds Brigades, and other resistance factions have been fiercely confronting the invading army as tens of thousands of civilians desperately flee the overcrowded city.


⚡️🔻🔥The fighting returned; First video from Al Qassam operations defending #Rafah got released :

Scenes from Al-Qassam Mujahideen targeting enemy forces penetrating the Al-Taqadum axis, east of the city of #Rafah, south of the #Gaza Strip. pic.twitter.com/9KmMjCtoRz

— Middle East Observer (@ME_Observer_) May 10, 2024
Rocket barrages have also been flying out of Rafah toward the positions of Tel Aviv's forces and nearby settlements.

As global outrage grows over the expansion of Israel's genocidal war, authorities said on Saturday that the operation is taking place in parallel with “efforts” to reach a ceasefire deal less than a week after Tel Aviv refused a proposal for a lasting truce.

"Israel's rejection of the mediators' proposal through the amendments it made returned things to the first square," Hamas said in a statement on Friday.

“In the light of (Israel Prime Minister Benjamin) Netanyahu's behavior and rejection of the mediators' document and the attack on Rafah and the occupation of the crossing, the leadership of the movement will hold consultations with the brotherly leaders of the Palestinian factions to review our negotiation strategy.”

Looking on from Washington, US officials say the situation in Rafah does not “connote” a major ground operation.

“I wouldn’t go so far as to say that what we’ve seen here in the last 24 hours connotes or indicates a broad, large-scale invasion or major ground operation. It appears to be localized near the crossing largely with the forces that they had put in there at the beginning,” White House National Security Council spokesperson John Kirby said.

Kirby's comments came on the heels of a White House report that determined Israel used US-provided weapons in ways “inconsistent” with international law but stopped short of identifying violations that would put an end to the ongoing military aid.

https://thecradle.co/articles/hamas-reo ... y-in-rafah

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“Living in Netanyahu’s America” – In More Ways Than One
Posted on May 12, 2024 by Conor Gallagher

As the university encampments and other protests against support for Israel continue, and the crackdown intensifies, is it becoming apparent that US policy towards its own citizens is much more like Israeli treatment of Palestinians than is often admitted?

As Max Blumenthal said recently on Judge Napolitano’s show, we are “kind of living in Netanyahu’s America.” He was talking more about Israel interference in US politics and the crackdown on the First Amendment in order to silence criticism of Israel.

Much of this discussion revolves around the massive amounts of money that groups like the American Israel Public Affairs Committee throw around and whatever other leverage Israel uses over the US politicians.

But is there more to it than that? Is there ideological overlap that also helps explain why the US uniparty backs Israel so strongly?

The economic components that have served as the dehumanizing foundation to Israel’s current “plausible” genocide share many similarities with poor Americans and migrant laborers who are treated as disposable in the US. Before we get to the US, the following are three brief points about Israel-Palestine power dynamics beyond religion or ethnicity. That’s not to say those factors don’t play a role, but for this exercise we’ll set them aside and focus on economic components.

The occupation of Palestine is an exploitative endeavor. That plan was summarized by Moshe Dayan, Israel’s defense minister during the June 1967 war, which resulted in the occupation of the West Bank and Gaza Strip, describing the territories as:
“…a supplementary market for Israeli goods and services on the one hand, and a source of factors of production, especially unskilled labor, for the Israeli economy on the other.”

There are more than 200,000 Palestinian laborers, including those without permits, who work inside Israel and the occupied West Bank. Netanyahu’s government has resolved to replace them with other laborers who can be exploited – a massive proposed influx from countries like India and Sri Lanka.

There was a dispute about this plan within the Israeli government with those opposed arguing that leaving so many Palestinians unemployed would only worsen Israel’s security, and experts say that the turn to migrant laborers is unlikely to last given the benefits Israel derives from a disenfranchised Palestinian workforce. As Jewish Currents point out, “the economic advantages of exploiting Palestinians have usually pushed Israel” to keep using their labor.

According to Dr. Ofer Cassif, a member of the Knesset from the Hadash Party, which supports Jewish-Arab cooperation and workers’ rights, this is at the heart of the problem and replacing the exploitation of Palestinians with the exploitation of other laborers brought from places more afar will not solve the issue. Cassif draws on Lenin’s idea that Israel’s “plausible” genocide is a product of late-stage capitalism:

Here, it is a class issue. It is between the oppressed and the oppressor, between the exploiter and the exploited. This distinction is much more important. We in Hadash, for instance, Palestinians and Jews together and some others, we see ourselves as part of those who oppose the oppression. It doesn’t matter to us if we are Jews or Palestinians or Argentinean Christians, just hypothetically. For us, it’s important to refer to the situation as one that distinguishes not between the peoples, but between the exploited and the exploited, the oppressor and the oppressed…

National hostility serves the economic and political interests of the ruling classes because that way they can divert the rage, the frustration, the alienation from a class-based one to a national-based one. This is exactly what I think we should pay attention to. Those who actually benefit from the ongoing occupation on top of using cheap labor, Palestinian cheap labor, or in the north of Qatar, for instance, there are apparently some resources like gas, etc., beyond that, the hostility serves them because as long as the occupation goes on, the Palestinian proletarian, and even peasants will see the Israelis, generally speaking, of course, I have to simplify the picture; obviously it’s much more complicated. For our conversation, for analytical purposes, if I may say so, the ruled classes, Palestinian-ruled classes, are going to see not their own Palestinian exploiters as the so-called rival or enemy but the Israelis and vice versa. They are exploited within Israel. The exploited Israelis, especially the proletarians, will not see their own employers as their exploiters and class enemies but as the Palestinians. Who benefits from that? Who’s going to benefit from that? The exploiters. So, ending the occupation, besides being an end in itself because it involves direct oppression and exploitation, will also reduce, using the language of Lenin, the hostility between the peoples. In that sense, it will not only give us a better future to live as good neighbors but will also allow us to make it easier for us to divert our rage against our so-called domestic exploiters.

There’s also the possibility that the ever-increasing racial and religious supremacy in Israel over the years has arisen from this plunder. Cassif paraphrases French philosopher, Albert Memmi:

In one of his famous books, he said, in other words, that the occupier doesn’t like to see a monster when he looks in the mirror. In order to justify the crimes that an occupier does, occupiers always, eventually, deteriorate into crimes because, eventually, occupation leads to resistance. In order to refrain from seeing yourself or recognizing yourself as a monster, you have to justify the crimes that you do. You do that by demonizing the occupied. It’s the same everywhere. It’s not something that was born under the Israeli occupation. The slave orders in the United States of America did so. The Germans did so, too, with the Jews. The Apartheid regime in South Africa did that with the non-whites, especially with the blacks; of course, there was a hierarchy of different so-called races. It is the same here, a language of occupation.

Along with exploiting Palestinian labor, Israel tests out surveillance, population control, and military technology on the captive population. It has been reported that the Israeli Defense Forces’ use of artificial intelligence has aided in the current brutal war against Palestinians. Israel testing out new technologies to surveil and kill Palestinians is unfortunately nothing new, as described by Antony Loewenstein in his book, “The Palestine Laboratory: How Israel Exports the Technology of Occupation Around the World.”
“The Palestine Laboratory,” which was published in May 2023, details how Israel sells its technology and weapons all over the world (about 130 countries in 2021) in order to support its economy and curry favor from other nations that will help it continue to deflect criticism from its treatment of Palestinians. Israel benefits from having a captive population on whom to constantly test its weapons and surveillance technology.

There are economic goals to Israel’s current policy in Gaza. If we’re talking about plunder, we cannot forget that there’s a modern colonial twist of beachfront condos to consider.
An Israeli real estate company stirred up controversy at the end of last year when it released ads for “presale” lots in Gaza. The post featured building plans for villas drawn onto a picture of the destruction in Gaza, with text reading “A home on the beach is no dream!”Zeev Epshtein, the company’s CEO, said the posts were meant to be “a joke.” Haha.

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The idea certainly isn’t a joke for some. As the BBC reports:

Who wouldn’t want a house on the beach? For some on Israel’s far-right, desirable beachfront now includes the sands of Gaza. Just ask Daniella Weiss, 78, the grandmother of Israel’s settler movement, who says she already has a list of 500 families ready to move to Gaza immediately.

“I have friends in Tel Aviv,” she says, “so they say, ‘Don’t forget to keep for me a plot near the coast in Gaza,’ because it’s a beautiful, beautiful coast, beautiful golden sand”.

She tells them the plots on the coast are already booked. Mrs Weiss heads a radical settler organisation called Nachala, or homeland. For decades, she has been kickstarting Jewish settlements in the Israeli-occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem, on Palestinian land captured by Israel in the 1967 Middle East war.

Donald Trump’s son-in-law and former senior foreign policy adviser and property dealer, Jared Kushner, couldn’t help himself from salivating over the potential for Gaza’s waterfront land – so long as it’s “cleaned up” by Israel.

“I’m sitting in Miami Beach right now,” Kushner said. “And I’m looking at the situation and I’m thinking: what would I do if I was there?”

For Kushner, the solution is simple: “I would do my best to move the people out and then clean it up.”

These economic components are central to the colonialist endeavor in Palestine – and were possibly a necessary precursor to the current “plausible” genocide – as well as its support outside of Israel-Palestine.

***

According to Netanyahu, the future belongs to authoritarian capitalism. Call it that or apartheid or colonialism, or neoliberal fascism; either way, it is alive and well at the heart of empire: in the US. And the repressive tactics to silence any criticism of Western support for Israel (or neo Nazis in Ukraine) is helping to drive that point home.

This isn’t meant to diminish what Palestinians are going through, but to ask if the permanent underclass here in the US that is constantly exploited and considered disposable is part of the same struggle. What do we see in rust belt towns, West Virginia sacrifice zones, in the agriculture fields where migrant workers toil as our elites pass laws banning mandatory water breaks, or one of California’s hundreds of Hoovervilles, or a plasma harvesting center or Cancer Alley along the lower Mississippi and countless others?

These are all places where people are used and abused, imprisoned by economic precarity, frequently literally imprisoned where they are exploited as a form of cheap (or free) labor for some of the country’s largest corporations, and often legally robbed by the state police forces through civil forfeiture. Americans are increasingly surveilled using the very same technologies that Israel uses on Palestinians as Silicon Valley tech billionaires dream of a world where democracy is stamped out.

Americans can also be killed with impunity as long as the killer is from the right caste. Heck, the Sacklers can off a few thousand and write it off as the cost of doing business. Reading Matt Bivens recent piece on the opioid crisis at Racket News left me wondering if the difference is that while Israel resorts to killing with bombs, the US sticks with neoliberal despair :

At the turn of the century, about 20,000 people each year would take an opioid — as a pill, or as a snorted or injected powder — and then stop breathing and die. Those of us working on ambulances or in emergency departments could not save them.

But for every death, there are about 20 non-fatal overdoses. So, with bag mask ventilation and opioid reversal agents, we have dragged millions of people back to life. How many suffered anoxic brain injuries, and today are mentally a half-step slower? Unknown.

Overdoses at this scale were a new development, and they were occurring hand-in-hand with the aggressive new marketing and prescribing of opioids. This is the era chronicled so well by popular miniseries — “Dopesick” on Hulu, “Painkiller” on Netflix. In the midst of it, the Sackler family-owned Purdue Pharma pled guilty to a deception campaign meticulously designed to bring about recklessly liberal opioid prescribing. As punishment, the company had to shell out $600 million, and three top executives got multi-million-dollar fines and 400 hours of community service.

That should have been peak “Opioid Crisis.” But it was only 2007. Heck, George W. Bush was still president. The Sacklers were never contrite. They’d been raking in about $1 billion a year for more than a decade. The $600 million fine sounded impressive — but the Sacklers shrugged, cut the government in to the tune of less than 5% of the cash rolling in, and got right back to slinging opioids. And in the 17 years since, everything has gotten terribly worse.

Did it feel like a catastrophe back in 2007, when 20,000 people a year would die, and people were enraged at Purdue?Or a decade later, in 2017, when President Donald Trump declared it a national emergency, and 50,000 people a year would die? That’s nothing. For the past three years, we’ve reliably seen 80,000 people each year take an opioid, stop breathing and die.

***

The university encampments and ensuing crackdown on them has been instructive in many ways.

The police, as always, are used as a force on behalf of the powerful to quell dissent. But we also have counter protestors working almost in tandem with the state to beat up protestors:


The fact this latter incident occurred at UCLA was fitting, as it was reminiscent of another chapter in US history when the state and its oligarchic owners used right wing paramilitary allies to crack down on protest. Back in the 1920s, Southern California police frequently teamed with the KKK to fight the waterfront union, and the Wobblies were jailed and beaten into submission.

We can see who that the supporters of the counter protestors are supporters of plunder at home and abroad:


It’s also come to light that Jessica Seinfeld, cookbook author and wife to comedian Jerry Seinfeld, helped fund the pro-Israel counterprotest at UCLA. Billionaire hedge-funder Bill Ackman is also helping to bankroll at least one other counterprotest.

There’s been a lot of media talk about who is funding the original anti-genocide protests, but so far this seems to be a classic case of projection in which those motivated solely by profit are incapable of understanding that others might oppose US-supported “plausible” genocide simply because they think it is morally wrong. A POLITICO story attempting to connect the protests to George Soros and Bill Gates, for example, begins to fall apart upon closer examination.

The encampments are also helping to reveal just how strong the embrace is between the neoliberal universities and the national security state.

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What are these institutions other than valuable real estate holdings and investment vehicles that hold some classes? Well, maybe there are other purposes:


The response to the campus encampments are a fine example of how the exploitation supported by the US abroad goes hand in hand with exploitation at home. Is it any surprise that the corporatization of higher education has led to the current militarization of campuses and suppression of speech?

US militarism abroad is done in defense of American capital. Let’s not forget Washington’s support of a neo nazi regime in Kiev in the failed effort to break up and plunder Russia.

We see these efforts to spread this American brand of freedom for capital being pushed back abroad by Russia, Iran, and the Houthis who have helped exposed the paper tiger.

What about at home? Can the protestors make strong connections between the US support of “plausible” genocide in Gaza and Israel’s colonial system with the US system of plunder at home?

Even if students and faculty are not explicitly drawing this line, the protests still represent opposition to the merging of neoliberalism and militarism and higher education’s role in that system.

Can these protests continue and/or morph into something more? Can they extract concessions, forge alliances and gain consensus among a wider swath of the population? Or will they simply end if a ceasefire deal is reached and/or the universities promise to consider divestment?

As for support, recent polling shows that on the issue of “college campuses limiting students’ rights and abilities to protest Israel’s military operations” 40 percent approve while 46 percent disapprove. Interesting that, while the poll doesn’t break down results by class if you use college as a marker, there is actually more support for campus protests among those that didn’t attend college. Those without a college degree were less likely to support (37 percent) the crackdown on students compared to respondents with a college degree where 43 percent backed silencing the protests.

Those without a college degree were also less likely to support spending more money to send weapons to Israel and less likely to support fighting alongside Israel against Iran. It doesn’t appear to just be a fiscally conservative issue, either, as those without a college degree were more likely to support sending humanitarian aid to Gaza (56 percent to 49 percent).

Overall, the survey revealed that 70 percent of voters support a permanent ceasefire and de-escalation of violence in Gaza.That’s really quite incredible considering how much propaganda the media has been churning out – from the New York Times Pulitzer-winning coverage of Gaza that includes bogus weaponized sexual violence propaganda to the recent coverage of campus encampments that take ridiculous police allegations as fact with no pushback.

It will be worth watching what happens this coming week with the union of 48,000 academic workers in the University of California system who are holding a strike authorization vote May 13-15 in response to violence against protestors by Zionist groups and the police and the universities refusal to hear the demands of protestors.

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UAW workers have already established a “union village” as part of the encampment at UC Berkeley. From the Daily Cal:

While union members have been at the encampment for the last few weeks in an individual capacity, UAW 4811 did not have an explicit presence until Tuesday, according to UC Berkeley ASE Unit Chair Iris Rosenblum-Sellers.

UC Berkeley’s is the first “Union Village” to be established at any UC encampment, Rosenblum-Sellers added. As of Tuesday afternoon, there were around half a dozen tents in the “Union Village,” but both Chowdhury and Rosenblum-Sellers said union members anticipate filling the remaining space soon.

“It’s peaceful here and I hope it stays that way, but we also want to see progress on our demands,” Chowdhury said.

In the hour before the village was established, speakers and participants at the rally chanted “World leaders, grow a spine; Rafah is our red line” and “Free free free Palestine,” among other phrases. Community members and protesters also gave speeches throughout the event to loud cheers and drums from the crowd.

Both speakers and protesters acknowledged the solidarity between students and workers in the Free Palestine movement. Many raised signs and banners with phrases such as “Students & Workers of the World: United for Palestine” and “UAW Student Workers for a Free Palestine.”

Could this be the start of something? If it is, the rank and file will likely need to overcome the opposition of union leadership.Payday Report has been all over this, and here’s the most recent:

On Tuesday, Payday broke the story of how UAW President Shawn Fain vetoed attempts within the UAW to divest from Israel. UAW represents over 100,000 academic workers and many, who have been involved in campus occupations, were upset by Fain’s veto of the union’s divestment from Israel. (See our story here)

While the UAW along with other unions endorsed a ceasefire in December, the union has been loath to take more aggressive action to protest Israel’s attack on Gaza.

When several UAW members attempted to protest the UAW’s endorsement of Biden at its convention in January, they were literally dragged from the convention by UAW staff as union members began chanting “U-S-A. U-S-A” to drown out their anti-war chants. (Check out Prem Thakker’s story at the Intercept from January)

Maybe Fain doesn’t want to distract from unionization efforts or lose focus on the goal of a mass strike scheduled for May Day 2028, detailed by Fain here at In These Times – a worthwhile goal, but 2028 is a long ways away.

https://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2024/05 ... n-one.html
"There is great chaos under heaven; the situation is excellent."

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Re: Palestine

Post by blindpig » Tue May 14, 2024 10:30 am

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‘Found dead in Gaza’? No, murdered by Israel
Originally published: Declassified UK on May 10, 2024 by Des Freedman (more by Declassified UK) | (Posted May 13, 2024)

When students at Columbia University in New York occupied Hamilton Hall on 29 April as part of their pro-Palestine encampment, they renamed the building ‘Hind’s Hall’.

This was in memory of six-year-old Hind Rajab who was killed in Gaza exactly three months earlier, along with six other family members, when the Israeli army attacked the car she was travelling in.

Investigations, including those carried out by Al Jazeera and the Washington Post have established IDF involvement despite their denial.

When their bodies were eventually discovered on 10 February, after the IDF pulled out of Gaza City, along with the corpses of the two Palestinian Red Crescent medics sent to help her, Hind’s murder was headline news around the world.

However, as is the case so often with UK mainstream media coverage of Israel’s assault on Gaza, many outlets were reluctant to attribute responsibility to Israeli forces and reported Palestinian deaths using the passive voice.

The BBC scandalously reported the story as “Hind Rajab, 6, found dead in Gaza” while both the Observer and Sunday Times carried similar headlines, that she had somehow just “died”.

That a young child and her family could have been targeted and killed while trying to escape danger is precisely the kind of “human interest” story that you might have thought mainstream news organisations would focus on to illustrate what they often describe as the “tragedy” of events in Gaza.

Interest evaporated
It’s true that there were hundreds of stories in the UK media that weekend but their interest in these events immediately evaporated.

Out of the 282 stories across all platforms, many of which were accounted for by the same piece running across different BBC regional bulletins, there were only 24 stories on Hind from the following weekend up until the Columbia students’ actions.

Most of these references were in readers’ letters, parliamentary transcripts, comment pieces and the London-based Arab press.

The BBC’s promise in a story on 5 February to extract the truth about Hind’s whereabouts from the Israeli army and the Guardian’s attempt to contact the IDF following the announcement of her death appear never to have been followed up.

The last reference to Hind in the Guardian (until the end of April) was in its “First Dog on the Moon” cartoon strip on 12 February while the BBC’s sole mention after the initial flurry was on 27 February when it rejected a complaint from readers about its coverage.

The internal adjudication insisted that the BBC was right not to attribute blame given what it knew at the time and stated that it had asked the IDF several times for details on its operations on 29 January.

Remaining silent
The lack of interest by leading UK news outlets in following up the story and holding the IDF to account is all the more disturbing given that other actors were much busier.

So, for example, the BBC (and other mainstream news media) failed to report on major developments in the case. These included initial findings on 12 February from a leading European human rights organisation that Israel was responsible for the family’s murder.

Also important were distressing new audio in relation to her death that was widely circulated around the world on 19 February, a comprehensive Al Jazeera investigation of events broadcast on 22 February and even Israel’s denial of involvement that was published on 26 February.

Despite their earlier promises, organisations like the Guardian and the BBC remained silent.

This is all the more shocking when you see that the Washington Post, hardly a bastion of pro-Palestine sentiment, published an extensive and forensic investigation into the events of 29 January in a piece published on 16 April.

Using satellite images, open-source maps and eyewitness interviews, it found that despite repeated IDF denials, the army had indeed been in the area that day.

Did the Guardian and the BBC, or any other UK news organisations, rush to report this and to revise their refusal to attribute blame in the light of new evidence? They did not.

Investigation
Instead it was left to the Jerusalem Post to call on the Israeli army to carry out a full investigation, albeit of course simply as a way of “maintaining legitimacy and allied support” for its genocidal actions.

Reuters, meanwhile, reported that, following the Washington Post story, the State Department was planning to add its weight for a full investigation (though not surprisingly, nothing has been forthcoming).

This was the state of play until the Columbia students took their solidarity action and renamed their occupied building in memory of Hind. This led to a further flurry of references to the events of 29 January but, for the most part—and despite the updated evidence—few lessons had been learnt.

The BBC’s U.S. coverage on 30 April of the Columbia occupation referred to Hind as a “six-year-old found dead in Gaza earlier this year”.

The Guardian described her as having been “killed by gunfire in January” and, in a separate story, as having been “found dead inside a car surrounded by her relatives”.

Dehumanization
Israeli responsibility, where it was mentioned, was always alleged, as in the claim by The Times (1 May) that Hind was a “six-year-old girl whose family say she was killed by the Israeli army”.

There were some limited exceptions. On 1 May, the Independent stated that Hind was “killed by Israeli military” while the Guardian, for the very first time, acknowledged that she was “killed by Israeli forces earlier this year” (although this was one isolated phrase in a much longer story about the campus protests).

The tone of the coverage and the lack of interest in pursuing the perpetrators is hardly exclusive to the murder of Hind Rajab. It’s resonant of the wider dehumanisation and misrepresentation of Palestinian lives that we have seen in mainstream reporting of the assault on Gaza.

But the silences are revealing of a further problem—of a kind of historical amnesia in which “uncomfortable” elements of the past are airbrushed out.

Things like occupation and ethnic cleansing are largely absent from a journalism which has a different chronology and a specific politics: one in which the “war” started on 7 October and in which the demand for Palestinian sovereignty is marginalised or simply forgotten.

However, while individuals suffer from amnesia as a result of trauma, the media’s forgetting is self-induced: a deliberate act designed to insulate them from having to report or to follow up stories—for example on military links with Israel, genocide or the murder of innocent six-year-old girls—that might upset governments in London, Washington and Jerusalem.

And when mainstream news outlets do even partially acknowledge an outrage, the reaction, as evidenced by the coverage of the murder of Hind Rajab, appears to be one of “move on—nothing to see here”.

We cannot afford to move on nor to look away and a journalism that does this is part of the problem.

https://mronline.org/2024/05/13/found-dead-in-gaza/

******

US offers Israel intel on Hamas leaders in exchange for limited Rafah op

US National Security Council spokesman John Kirby said on Thursday that intelligence to locate Hamas leaders was already being given to Israel

News Desk

MAY 12, 2024

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(Photo credit: John Minchillo/AP)

The US has offered Israel “sensitive intel” on the whereabouts of Hamas leaders in the Gaza Strip if it agrees not to launch a full-scale assault on the southernmost city of Rafah, according to an 11 May Washington Post report.

Four sources are quoted by the outlet as saying that Washington “is offering Israel valuable assistance if it holds back, including sensitive intelligence to help the Israeli military pinpoint the location of Hamas leaders and find the group’s hidden tunnels.”

Washington Post also said the US offered to erect large encampments for Palestinians who have already fled the besieged southern city, as well as help build infrastructure for providing aid to Gaza.

Another official said Israel has given assurances to the US that its army will not fully invade Rafah until around 800,000 of the over one million stranded civilians trapped in the city are evacuated.

On Thursday, US National Security Council spokesman John Kirby said intelligence to locate Hamas leaders was already being given to Israel.

“We could also, in fact, help them target the leaders, including [Hamas leader Yahya] Sinwar, which we are, frankly, doing with the Israelis on an ongoing basis,” Kirby said.

The Israeli army stormed and seized the Rafah border crossing with Egypt last week in an operation reportedly aimed at pressuring Hamas in ongoing truce negotiations. It has since been indiscriminately bombarding the city, killing dozens of civilians, including children, and forcibly displacing tens of thousands. Israeli troops are now penetrating into eastern Rafah.

Israel has been claiming for months that Rafah is Hamas’ final stronghold, and has long been promising an invasion there, despite the fact that the group’s armed wing and other factions remain entrenched across the strip. It has also previously said that Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar is hiding in Rafah.

Sources told Israeli media on 11 May that Sinwar is not in Rafah, but is instead hiding in tunnels in the city of Khan Yunis. On 24 April, a Hamas source told The New Arab that Sinwar is “leading the movement on the ground,” is not hiding in tunnels, and has met with fighters “above ground.”

Since the operation in Rafah began, Hamas’ armed wing, the Qassam Brigades, has been fiercely confronting Israeli troops there, as well as in northern Gaza – where Israel says Hamas has regrouped months after claiming it was defeated in the north.

Hamas’ Qassam Brigades struck Israeli forces with heavy-caliber mortar shells in Al-Zaytoun neighborhood on 12 May, the group said in a statement. It also targeted Israeli forces near Jabalia refugee camp in the north.

The Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ) movement’s Quds Brigades targeted Israeli army concentrations in eastern Rafah with rockets on Sunday.

The night before, the Qassam Brigades launched mortars at Israeli vehicles and troop gatherings east of the Rafah border crossing.

https://thecradle.co/articles/us-offers ... d-rafah-op

(As though they hadn't all along. More phony 'pressure' on the Zionists to take the pressure off Biden. If he had cut off arms and financial support six months ago that would have been something. Bibi could give a fuck now, couple hundred shipment in his pocket and he's got enough to 'finish the job'. What they show us today is nothing but election season desperation.)

No 'safe zone' in Gaza: UNRWA

UNRWA chief Lazzarini noted that evacuation directives passed down to Palestinians in Rafah by the Israeli army often don't have any designated destinations

News Desk

MAY 13, 2024

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(Photo Credit: AFP)

Philippe Lazzarini, chief of the UN Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA), rejected Israeli claims about “safe zones” for Palestinians in the Gaza Strip, saying they are “false and misleading” in a social media post on 12 May.


The UNRWA chief further stressed that there is “no place is safe in Gaza.” He added that the evacuation directives passed down to Palestinians in Rafah by the Israeli army often don't offer any designated destinations, nor are there any safe options.

Lazzarini also emphasized that Palestinians displaced in Gaza have no choice but to hide in UNRWA shelters, which have been directly targeted by the Israeli military.

In a similar vein, UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Turk stated on Sunday that the recent directives “affect close to a million people in Rafah. So where should they go now? There is no safe place in Gaza!”

Israel has killed at least 176 UNRWA staff since the start of its genocidal campaign in Gaza. The UN agency has previously said that Israeli bombings have also impacted 130 of its facilities, including schools, across the strip.

Israel claims Rafah is Hamas’ final stronghold and has promised an invasion of the city for months.

On 5 May, Israeli authorities reinstated a mandatory evacuation order for eastern Rafah, forcing 300,000 Palestinians to vacate the region.

By 13 May, the number of Palestinians displaced from Rafah rose to 360,000, according to UNRWA.

Israel advanced on Rafah on 6 May after announcing taking control of the southernmost city’s border crossing with Egypt. The storming of Rafah came a day after Hamas informed Qatari and Egyptian mediators that it had accepted an updated proposal for a truce and prisoner exchange agreement.

An Israeli official told the Associated Press on 4 May that Israel remains committed to attacking Rafah and will not accept a deal that includes an end to the war.

On 8 May, US President Joe Biden said that his administration would not support or provide weapons to Israel if it carried out its planned assault on Rafah. Nonetheless, the Israeli cabinet has vowed to continue with or without US support and proceeded to carpet bomb several areas in the critically overcrowded city, killing displaced Palestinians by the dozens.

https://thecradle.co/articles/no-safe-z ... gaza-unrwa

Israeli settler mobs attack Gaza aid trucks as millions face famine

The UN warned on Sunday that aid flow into Gaza has nearly dried out completely

News Desk

MAY 13, 2024

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(Photo credit: X)

Mobs of Israeli settlers attacked Jordanian aid trucks en route to Gaza on 13 May, which were carrying desperately-needed humanitarian assistance in the famine-stricken strip.


The aid was on the way to Gaza when it was attacked by settlers between the Tuqumiya and Kiryat Arba checkpoints near the occupied West Bank city of Hebron.

Footage shows settlers carrying Israeli flags and climbing up onto one of the trucks, throwing the aid boxes onto the road.

Settlers have regularly launched similar attacks in recent months to prevent aid from reaching Gaza.

This was the second settler attack on Jordanian aid trucks since last week.

“Two Jordanian aid convoys carrying food, flour, and other humanitarian aid to the Gaza Strip were attacked by settlers,” the Jordanian Foreign Ministry said on Wednesday. It was the first major aid shipment Jordan was meant to bring into Gaza via the Erez crossing, which was recently reopened for the first time since 7 October.

Monday’s settler attack came a day after Israel announced opening a new crossing “as part of the effort to increase aid routes to the Gaza Strip, and to the northern Gaza Strip in particular.”

The army said that day that dozens of trucks were allowed into Gaza after “undergoing security checks.”

The Rafah crossing – a major lifeline for Gaza – has been shuttered since last week. Israeli forces seized the crossing on Tuesday and are now pushing into eastern Rafah. The military operation in Rafah has further hindered aid efforts.

No aid whatsoever has entered through the Rafah crossing since 5 May. The UN warned over the weekend that the flow of aid into Gaza has almost entirely dried up.

The Health Ministry in Gaza said on 13 May that the health system across all of Gaza could totally collapse in “a few hours” if fuel is not provided to hospitals.

The World Food Program (WFP) said last week that north Gaza has been plunged into “full blown famine.”

Despite the evidently dire situation, Israel claims several crossings are open and are actively being used for aid deliveries.

https://thecradle.co/articles/israeli-s ... ace-famine

(These settlers and their squats should be targeted.)

Gaza resistance fiercely holds back Israeli army in Jabalia camp

Intense clashes have flared up across Gaza months after Israeli officials claimed to have defeated the resistance in the north of the strip

News Desk

MAY 13, 2024

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(Photo Credit: AFP via Getty Images)

Intense clashes raged for a third straight day on 13 May between Palestinian resistance fighters and the Israeli army in northern Gaza's Jabalia refugee camp.

Local reports say Israeli tanks and troops have been attempting to push deeper into the eastern and central parts of the camp but face intense resistance by fighters from Hamas' Qassam Brigades and the Palestinian Islamic Jihad's (PIJ) Quds Brigades.


As the ground battles rage, Israeli jets have been dropping bombs on crowded residential areas within the refugee camp as troops have reportedly opened fire on ambulances trying to reach the wounded.

The army is also trying to invade schools sheltering displaced Palestinians, forcing hundreds to flee for their lives.


“Israeli occupation forces have stormed shelters for the displaced in Jabalia refugee camp, which is currently hosting thousands of displaced residents … They entered the school by bulldozing the walls and forcing their way in,” Palestinian journalist Hossam Shabat reports from Jabalia.


Tel Aviv has also intensified attacks on Gaza City, killing at least three Palestinians in the Sabra neighborhood and another in the Shujayea neighborhood on Monday. At the same time, the Israeli army is expanding its siege of southern Gaza's Rafah, intensifying airstrikes and ordering the immediate evacuation of Kuwaiti Hospital, raising concerns the troops are about to lay siege to yet another Palestinian medical center.

As clashes flare up across the besieged enclave, on Sunday, US State Secretary Anthony Blinken said he was “concerned” about Israel’s failure to “lay down a template for the governance of Gaza,” adding that any alleged victory will not be “sustainable.”

When asked about Washington withholding a shipment of bombs for Israel, Blinken said: “We believe two things. One, you have to have a clear, credible plan to protect civilians, which we haven't seen. Second, we also need to see a plan for what happens after this conflict in Gaza is over. And we still haven't seen that because what are we seeing right now? We're seeing parts of Gaza that Israel has cleared of Hamas, where Hamas is coming back, including in the north, including in Khan Yunis.”

Months after claiming military control of northern Gaza and repeatedly alleging that Hamas' “last two battalions” were hiding in Rafah, the Palestinian resistance has stepped up its operations across the strip.

Furthermore, US intelligence claims that Tel Aviv's most wanted Palestinian official – Hamas military chief Yahya Sinwar – is not in Rafah.

“US officials say Israeli intelligence agencies agree with the American assessment. The two countries’ spy agencies believe that Mr Sinwar most likely never left the tunnel network under Khan Yunis,” the New York Times (NYT) reported on Monday.

https://thecradle.co/articles/gaza-resi ... balia-camp

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Israel invades Rafah and the genocide will be completed with U.S. complicity

Steven Sahiounie

May 12, 2024

When Israel can kill an American citizen, who was among the highest profile journalists in the Arab world, on camera and get away with it, that sends a very clear message about Israeli impunity, and Biden’s complicity.

Dozens of Palestinians were killed across Gaza as Israeli warplanes and artillery attacked overnight, following Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s order to seize the Rafah border crossing in Gaza.

Israeli warplanes dropped leaflets in eastern Rafah telling people to flee and move to what Israel called a humanitarian zone to the north, as the Israeli military bombarded the area.

Israel has told Gazans to move to a coastal section of Gaza for months. But the UN has said it is neither safe nor equipped to receive them.

Rafah, a city of around 170,000 before the war, has swollen to more than one million as Gazans driven from their homes in other parts of the enclave have taken shelter there. Conditions there are catastrophic, with inadequate shelter, sanitation, medical care, food and fuel.

A hospital in Deir Al Balah in central Gaza said it received 24 bodies, and reports of the heaviest assault are in the central and eastern areas of the southern Gaza city of Rafah, with air strikes in the south and the vicinity of the Rafah crossing.

Netanyahu said the Israeli military would proceed with an assault on Rafah, where it believes Hamas fighters are dug in. Tanks have sealed off eastern Rafah from the south this week, capturing and shutting the only crossing between Gaza and Egypt, a vital route for supplies.

At least seven people were killed in Israeli air strikes on dozens of houses in Jabalia in the northern Gaza Strip. Israel also bombed the north of the Nuseirat camp and the town of Al Zawaida in the central Gaza Strip.

Biden pauses arms to Israel and orders a report

This week, U.S. President Joe Biden announced that his administration has “held up” at least one shipment of weapons to Israel, saying the U.S. wouldn’t transfer certain weapons to Israel if it proceeded with an assault on the city of Rafah’s densely populated areas.

Immediately stopping all transfers of arms and military support would be consistent with the U.S.’s international and domestic legal obligations.

Since November, Human Rights Watch has called for the suspension of arms transfers to Israel given the real risk that weapons would be used to commit grave abuses. Providing weapons that knowingly and significantly would contribute to unlawful attacks make those providing them complicit in war crimes.

Several of the U.S.’s Western allies have already revised their policies of supplying weapons to Israel. In March, Canada announced it would cease future arms exports to Israel, while Italy and Spain also stopped.

Israel’s plan for an all-out assault on Rafah has ignited one of the biggest rifts with America.

Biden ordered a report from the State Department and the Department of Defense concerning weapons to Israel.

The State Department report avoids a direct accusation, but raises the prospect that Israel may have violated humanitarian laws by failing to protect civilians in Gaza.

The findings further angered Democrats in Congress who have grown increasingly critical of Israel’s conduct in Gaza. They argue that Israel has indiscriminately killed civilians with American arms and intentionally hindered U.S. supplied humanitarian aid.

The U.S. provides Israel with $3.8 billion in annual military aid, and Congress last month approved an additional $14 billion in emergency funding.

Hillary Clinton ridicules university students

Despite the fact that Hillary Clinton is a professor of international and public affairs at Colombia University, the former Secretary of State, Vice President, and presidential candidate, denounced her own students, as well as students across the U.S.

In a recent interview on MSNBC, she suggested that young Americans are largely ignorant. In a display of arrogant distain, she painted all the campus protesters as idiots.

“They don’t know very much at all about the history of the Middle East, or, frankly about history in many areas of the world, including in our own country,” Hillary Clinton said the MSNBC interview.

Clinton supports the genocide in Gaza, because she is a Zionist and denies the freedom of Palestine, even though freedom is a core American value. But, perhaps she has never studied what are the American core values?

Colombia University has seen some of the most impassioned and protracted protests against Israel’s genocide committed on the Gaza’s civilian population.

In February, Clinton was shouted down by protestors during a lecture.

“Hillary Diane Rodham Clinton, you are a war criminal!” an angry protestor yelled as she walked onto a stage to address the students.

“The people of Libya, the people of Iraq, the people of Syria, the people of Palestine as well as the people of America will never forgive you.”

Apparently, at least one American college student does understand the modern history of the Middle East, contrary to Clinton’s accusation.

Humanitarian crisis

For five days, no fuel and virtually no humanitarian aid has entered the Gaza Strip. Soon, the lack of fuel will stop humanitarian operations. Food in the south will run out in the coming days. The last functioning bakery in the south is about to run out of fuel, while people are being forced to move again, lifesaving supplies that sustain and support them have been entirely cut off.

On Friday, UNICEF’s senior emergency coordinator in the Gaza Strip, Hamish Young, said from Rafah that in his 30 years working on large-scale humanitarian emergencies “I’ve never been involved in a situation as devastating, complex or erratic as this.”

He said. “Families lack proper sanitation facilities, drinking water and shelter.”

The flow of aid, the vast majority of which goes through two border crossings in southern Gaza, has come to a stop this week, and aid like food and medicines has not been allowed through the crossing since last Sunday, according to Scott Anderson, a senior official at UNRWA, the main UN agency that aids Gaza.

More than 34,000 people have died in Gaza. Cindy McCain, the director of the World Food Program has said that parts of the Gaza Strip are experiencing a “full-blown famine.” As of mid-April, Gazan health officials said that at least 28 children younger than 12 had died from malnutrition in hospitals and perhaps dozens more outside medical centers.

The Rafah crossing remains closed, and had been an important gate for injured and sick people to leave the enclave to receive medical treatment abroad. The Gazan Health Ministry has said that dozens of people with illnesses such as breast cancer and lymphoma have been unable to leave Gaza since Sunday.

After Israel’s incursion into Rafah this week, the Israeli military shut down the Kerem Shalom crossing and seized the Gaza side of the Rafah crossing, stopping the flow of desperately needed food, fuel and medical supplies. Since Sunday, no aid trucks have entered Gaza from either entry point, even after Israel said that it had reopened the Kerem Shalom crossing on Wednesday, according to Scott Anderson, a senior official at UNRWA.

The entry of aid into Gaza has been heavily restricted by Israel since the war started, creating what aid experts say is a human-made hunger crisis.

An American ship carrying aid intended for Gaza has departed from Cyprus, the Pentagon said, but a temporary floating pier constructed by the U.S. military is not in place to unload the food and supplies.

UNRWA said that it had temporarily closed its headquarters in East Jerusalem for the safety of its staff after parts of the compound were set on fire by Jewish settlers who cheered while watching the humanitarian office ablaze.

Palestine and the UN

The UN General Assembly approved a resolution for a Palestinian membership bid by a vote of 143 to 9 with 25 nations abstaining. The Assembly can only grant full membership with the approval of the Security Council.

A ‘yes’ vote is a vote for Palestinian existence. It is not against Israel, but it is against the attempts to deprive Palestinians of a state, and reflects growing global solidarity with Palestinians who yearn to be free of a brutal military occupation.

But, the resolution does not mean a Palestinian state will be recognized and admitted to the United Nations as a full member anytime soon, because the United States would almost inevitably wield its veto power to kill the bid, and to deprive Palestinians their freedom.

The resolution declares that “the State of Palestine is qualified for membership in the United Nations” under its charter rules and recommends that the Security Council reconsider the matter with a favorable outcome.

The United States voted no, along with Hungary, Argentina, Papua New Guinea, Micronesia and Nauru. Experts point out that a vote against Palestinian statehood was a vote against the two-state solution.

France, a close U.S. ally and one of the five permanent members of the Security Council, has supported the Palestinian bid for statehood breaking away from the U.S. stance at the UN both at the Council and the Assembly vote.

South Africa again reporting Israel to the ICJ

On Friday, South Africa sought new emergency measures by the International Court of Justice (ICJ) against Israel over its latest offensive against Rafah, and asked the ICJ to issue constraints on Israel, saying “the very survival” of Palestinians in Gaza was under threat.

Israel has condemned South Africa’s previous allegations at the ICJ that it has launched a genocide in Gaza..

In filings disclosed by the ICJ on Friday, South Africa asked the court to order Israel to immediately withdraw from Rafah, and to “cease its military offensive” and allow “unimpeded access” to international officials, investigators and journalists.

“Rafah is the last population center in Gaza that has not been substantially destroyed by Israel and as such the last refuge for Palestinians in Gaza,” South Africa stated.

Gaza ceasefire talks

“The only hope is an immediate ceasefire,” UNRWA said.

Hamas says negotiations with Israel for a permanent cease-fire have fallen through after Israel rejected its proposals, including demands for a permanent cease-fire, complete withdrawal of Gaza Israel’s forces from Gaza, the return of displaced people and a prisoner exchange.

Oct. 7 attacks led by Hamas and other armed groups killed more than 1,200 Israelis and led to the capture of about 250 others.

Talks on a ceasefire and a release of hostages held by Hamas ended in Cairo on Thursday without agreement after Israel rejected a proposal by Qatari and Egyptian mediators.

Hamas had said it agreed at the start of the week to a proposal by Qatari and Egyptian mediators that had previously been accepted by Israel, but later Israel rejected it.

Israeli protesters carried signs saying “Cease-Fire, Hostage Deal, Now!” and “Stop the War, Hostage Deal Now!”

Families and supporters of the hostages marched Wednesday in Tel Aviv, calling on Netanyahu’s government to make a deal to free their loved ones. Netanyahu has said Israel cannot end the war as long as Hamas’s rule in Gaza remains intact

Palestinian armed groups still hold approximately 132 hostages in Gaza, but Israel says it has determined that at least 36 of them are dead.

Killing journalists

Today marks the second anniversary of the death of Al-Jazeera’s veteran TV journalist Shireen Abu Akleh after she was shot by Israeli forces while reporting in the occupied West Bank on May 11, 2022.

Press advocates push for accountability in Abu Akleh’s killing, who was an American citizen, but the lack of justice reflects a pattern of impunity in Israel’s attacks on press.

In 214 days, Israel has killed 142 journalists in Gaza, approximately one every 36 hours. The staggering death toll makes the war the deadliest conflict for journalists in modern history.

When Israel can kill an American citizen, who was among the highest profile journalists in the Arab world, on camera and get away with it, that sends a very clear message about Israeli impunity, and Biden’s complicity.

https://strategic-culture.su/news/2024/ ... omplicity/
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Re: Palestine

Post by blindpig » Wed May 15, 2024 11:39 am

UNRWA says nearly half a million forced out of Rafah by Israel

Displaced Palestinians have been forced back into uninhabitable cities previously besieged by Israel

News Desk

MAY 14, 2024

Image
(Photo Credit: @UNRWA on X)

The UN Palestine refugee agency (UNRWA) said on 14 May that nearly 450,000 Palestinians have been forcibly displaced from Rafah over the past week.

“Empty streets in Rafah as families continue to flee in search of safety,” UNRWA said via a social media post. “People face constant exhaustion, hunger, and fear. Nowhere is safe. An immediate ceasefire is the only hope.”


The UN agency added that Palestinians leaving Gaza's southernmost city of Rafah have gone back to Khan Yunis and other destroyed areas “that are in no way fit for them to live in.”

“The infrastructure [in Khan Younis] is completely destroyed. There are no water, electricity, nor sewage services,” one displaced Palestinian told UNRWA.

Louise Wateridge, a UNRWA spokesperson in Rafah, said in a social media post that “families have moved as far west as possible, now reaching the shore and along the beach.”

“Inland in Rafah is now a ghost town. It’s hard to believe there were over 1 million people sheltering here just a week ago,” she added

This comes as the Israeli military is making a deeper push into the southern Gaza Strip as the eight-month mark of the war on the besieged enclave has passed.

The Israeli army has increased its air raids into Rafah; this includes the targeting of a UN Department of Safety and Security (DSS) vehicle, which led to the death of one staff member and the injury of another.

“With the conflict in Gaza continuing to take a heavy toll – not only on civilians but also on humanitarian workers – the [UN] Secretary-General reiterates his urgent appeal for an immediate humanitarian ceasefire and for the release of all hostages,” Farhan Haq, Deputy Spokesman for the UN Secretary-General said in a statement on Monday.

Another Israeli air strike on the displaced Palestinians in Rafah on Sunday led to the death of 18 civilians, many of whom were children.

This follows the evacuation order sent by Israel on Saturday, urging those already internally displaced to “flee anywhere.”

UNRWA has stated the importance of a ceasefire, emphasizing that “there is nowhere safe to go” in Gaza due to the Israeli attacks.

The humanitarian situation in Gaza has increasingly worsened, and the delays aid convoys face on their way into Gaza have only made the situation more dire.

“Restricted humanitarian access is a matter of life or death for people in the Gaza Strip, who are already suffering amid relentless bombardments and food insecurity,” UNRWA said in a social media post. “We immediately and urgently need safe passage for humanitarian aid and workers.”

Israeli settlers have also been blocking and attacking humanitarian aid convoys en route to the besieged Gaza Strip.

“Blocking the trucks is a noble and understandable act for anyone with a sound mind,” one settler said in a statement.

https://thecradle.co/articles/unrwa-say ... -by-israel

‘No return to north til Gaza war ends,’ Hezbollah chief reminds Israeli settlers

Israeli settlers from the Galilee are showing serious frustration with their government's inability to return them to their homes

News Desk

MAY 14, 2024

Image
(Photo credit: EPA)

Hezbollah Secretary-General Hassan Nasrallah confirmed in a speech on 13 May that the Lebanese resistance group will continue targeting Israeli forces until the war in Gaza is brought to an end.

“The Lebanon front’s first and foremost goal is to contribute to pressuring Israel to stop the war in Gaza,” Nasrallah said, adding that “the Americans and French have acknowledged this fact.” Proposals for de-escalation brought forth by Washington and Paris have continued to fail in pressuring Hezbollah to stop its operations.

During the speech, Nasrallah addressed the settlers of Israel’s north – tens of thousands of whom have fled from their homes in the settlements near the border.

“We say to the settlers in the north, if you want a solution, go to your government and tell them to stop the war on Gaza,” the resistance leader added.

Tens of thousands of Israeli settlers residing in the north have been evacuated as a result of Hezbollah’s operations and are dispersed across hotels and apartments in occupied Jerusalem, Tel Aviv, and elsewhere.

The settlers of the north have complained that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his government have done little to accommodate them and have shown significant frustration over the Israeli army’s failure to push Hezbollah away from the border and allow them to return to their homes.

Settlers from the Galilee, including the heads of local councils, held demonstrations on 14 May to protest their situation.


A Hebrew media report released last week said that the heads of settler communities in the north plan to announce a secession from the State of Israel in protest against the Israeli government’s inaction.

The announcement for an independent State of Galilee is scheduled for 15 May.

Nasrallah added during the speech that “no matter the sacrifices,” the ongoing battle against Israel is a “historic achievement” that will “continue quantitatively and qualitatively.”

“We estimate that the enemy has two options: returning to the mediators’ proposal, which means its defeat, or to remain in a [continuous war of attrition] that will be prolonged for them. In both cases, the resistance will be victorious,” Nasrallah said.

One day after Hamas accepted a truce proposal on 6 May, Israeli forces launched a military operation in the besieged and overpopulated city of Rafah. The Israeli army is facing fierce resistance in Rafah and elsewhere across the strip, particularly north Gaza’s Jabalia.

Hezbollah’s operations continue in southern Lebanon. The group carried out attacks on several Israeli sites on 13 May, including the destruction of a Merkava tank near the Yiftah barracks in the Galilee.

https://thecradle.co/articles/no-return ... i-settlers

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South Africa Seeks Urgent ICJ Order for Additional Provisional Measures & Modifications to Previous Measures
Posted by INTERNATIONALIST 360° on MAY 11, 2024

Image

The Republic of South Africa yesterday, 10 May 2024, returned to the International Court of Justice to seek an urgent order from the court for the protection of the Palestinian people in Gaza from grave and irreparable violations of their rights under the Genocide Convention, as a result of Israel’s ongoing military assault on Rafah.

The urgent application follows the escalation of Israel’s assault on Rafah, which poses extreme risk to humanitarian supplies, basic services into Gaza, the survival of the Palestinian medical system, and the very survival of Palestinians in Gaza as a group.

South Africa contends that the attack on Rafah further worsens the prevailing situation and causes irreparable harm to the rights of Palestinians in Gaza and that the situation has changed significantly since the Court’s Order of 28 March 2024.

Rafah is home to 1.5 million Palestinians. It is the last refuge in Gaza for those displaced by Israeli action, and the last viable centre for public administration and the provision of basic public services, including medical care.

Since the start of the military action in Rafah, Israel has seized control of both the Rafah and the Kerem Shalom (Karem Abu Salem) crossings, effectively controlling all movement in and out of Gaza and cutting off all critical humanitarian and medical supplies, goods and fuel.

Israel has further prevented medical evacuations and has treated evacuation zones as extermination zones as evidenced with the destruction of hospitals in Gaza and discovery of mass graves in other major health care facilities in the Strip.

Therefore, South Africa is calling for urgent interventions and investigations of all actions that continue to cause irreparable prejudice to the rights of Palestinians, including the use of Artificial Intelligence (‘AI’) for targeted killings.

South Africa has therefore requested that the Court indicate the following provisional measures:

The State of Israel shall immediately withdraw and cease its military offensive in the Rafah Governorate.
The State of Israel shall immediately take all effective measures to ensure and facilitate the unimpeded access to Gaza of United Nations and other officials engaged in the provision of humanitarian aid and assistance to the population of Gaza, as well as fact-finding missions, internationally mandated bodies or officials, investigators, and journalists, in order to assess and record conditions on the ground in Gaza and enable the effective preservation and retention of evidence, and shall ensure that its military does not act to prevent such access, provision, preservation or retention.
The State of Israel shall submit an open report to the Court: (a) on all measures taken to give effect to these provisional measures within one week as from the date of this Order; and (b) on all measures taken to give effect to all previous provisional measures indicated by the Court within one month as from the date of this Order.
South Africa further requested that the Court reaffirm and seek urgent compliance by Israel with the provisional measures ordered by the Court on 26 January and 28 March 2024. In particular, South Africa petitioned the Court to urgently reaffirm the application to the Rafah and Kerem Shalom (Karem Abu Salem) crossings of provisional measure 4 of its 26 January 2024 Order and provisional measures 2(a) and (b) of its 28 March 2024 Order.

These measures will require the immediate withdrawal of the Israeli forces from the two crossings to allow for the unimpeded movement of medical personnel, including the United Nations and other humanitarian personnel and medical evacuees, as well goods and services that are vital to addressing the adverse conditions of life faced by Palestinians in Gaza.

South Africa remains firmly of the view that the necessary condition for the effective implementation of the Court’s provisional measures is a permanent ceasefire in Gaza.

“We call on the international community, including the allies of the State of Israel, not to turn a blind eye to the ongoing genocide in Gaza. The gross human rights violations perpetuated by Israel have scaled to incomprehensible levels of cruelty, hate and extreme violent oppression. The world must do more to end the persecution of Palestinians, including that of many innocent women and children.

In this regard, South Africa is deeply heartened by the protest actions of university students in the United States and other parts of the world. We are also greatly encouraged by the adoption of the United Nations General Assembly draft resolution that recommends to the Security Council to reconsider favourably the application by the State of Palestine for full membership of the United Nations.

The support to this resolution shown by 143 countries is a further demonstration that the world is listening to the cries of the Palestinians,” says President Cyril Ramaphosa

For media enquiries:

Vincent Magwenya
Spokesperson to the President
E-mail: Media@presidency.gov.za

Issued by The Presidency

Application of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide in the Gaza Strip (South Africa v. Israel) – South Africa submits an urgent request for the indication of additional provisional measures and the modification of previous provisional measures

APPLICATION
ICJ PRESS RELEASE
South African Statement on the situation in Rafah
6 May 2024

The Government of South Africa is deeply disturbed about the unfolding developments in Gaza and is horrified by the Israeli military’s announcement that Rafah should be evacuated immediately as it will be operating in the area with “extreme force”.

This intended action amounts to forced displacement of Palestinians in Gaza that is unlawful under international law and cannot be justified by any military imperative.

The imminent military offensive in Rafah will erase the last refuge for surviving people in Gaza. Rafah has become a temporary shelter for Palestinians who have been forced to relocate there, with already limited access to food, medical care and other services after months of bombardment by Israel of their homes in the rest of the Gaza Strip.

United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres recently stated in the UN Security Council that in Gaza, “Israeli military operations have created a humanitarian hellscape. An Israeli operation in Rafah would compound this humanitarian catastrophe.”

On 26 January 2024, the International Court of Justice (ICJ) delivered an order on South Africa’s request for provisional measures determining that Israel’s actions in Gaza are plausibly genocidal. These provisional measures are directly binding on Israel, which is required pursuant to the Court’s order and to the Genocide Convention itself, to stop all acts by it that are plausibly genocidal. In response to the deteriorating situation in Gaza including in Rafah specifically, the ICJ issued additional provisional measures on 28 March 2024, to prevent Israel from causing irreparable harm to the rights invoked by South Africa under the 1948 Genocide Convention in respect of the ongoing siege of Gaza.

Unfortunately, since the Court’s orders on provisional measures, we have seen the Israeli Government continue its illegal actions in violation of the Court order and international humanitarian law.

The continued illegal military action in Gaza and the announcement of its action in Rafah are indications that the Israeli Government is not only ignoring the Court’s order, but that it also intends to increase its genocidal actions in Gaza.

The international community cannot ignore the grave violations of international law and the UN Charter by the State of Israel. Inaction in the face of these violations and public threats of more violations amounts to ignoring our collective responsibility to protect innocent civilians, including children.

South Africa reiterates that there must be an immediate ceasefire and negotiations to this end must continue. Hamas must release all hostages. Israel must release all political prisoners and urgent full, safe and unhindered humanitarian access must be provided for aid to reach the people of Gaza.

ISSUED BY THE DEPARTMENT OF INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS AND COOPERATION
OR Tambo Building
460 Suspenser Road
Rationale
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https://libya360.wordpress.com/2024/05/ ... -measures/

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The US, Israel, and the ‘Anti-Semitism’ Fraud
Posted on May 14, 2024 by Yves Smith

Yves here. It may seem that some independent sites and anti-Israel-genocide pundits are going on overmuch about the heavy-handed campaign to smear throughly warranted criticism of Israel as anti-Semitic. Yours truly has to disagree. As long as the slaughter in Gaza and the ethnic cleansing in the West Bank continue, opponents need to keep up all their many forms of protest. And that necessitates forcefully (and it appears repeatedly) rejecting the anti-Semitism canard.

The Rob Urie post below has some acid phrase-making, as well as an interesting consideration of what makes for a religious state.

By Robert Urie, author of Zen Economics, artist, and musician who publishes The Journal of Belligerent Pontification on Substack

With Israel launching genocide 2.0 in Rafah (Gaza) as this is being written, the implied purpose of the violent police repression of protesters on college campuses last week, in conjunction with the media effort to label anyone who objects to the events unfolding as ‘anti-Semitic,’ is to provide political breathing room for the assault of Rafah. It won’t work. The implied logic is clear— the protesters must be cleared before the images of more murdered Palestinians light the world on fire. Missing from ‘the conversation’ is the self-reflection needed to understand that it is the genocide that is politically incendiary, not objections to it.

The same (state) media outlets in the US, including many of the same media personalities who promoted the Iraq WMD and Russiagate frauds, have been telling their rapidly dwindling audiences that it is hatred of Jewish people, rather than abhorrence of Israeli atrocities against Palestinians in Gaza, that is motivating student protests in the US. Surely, the media based this charge on extensive interviews with the protesters to uncover their true motives, right? Well, no. In fact, the media’s failure to engage with the protesters is evidence that these outlets don’t want to know what the protesters’ true motives are.

Bizarrely, thousands, likely tens of thousands, of the protesting students have made clear through their protests what their goals are. The practice of the propagandist class of calling every person and institution that opposes American imperial slaughters abroad, including those by proxy in Ukraine and Gaza, pro ‘the enemy’ may work in the tit for tat idiocy in the DC bubble where bought and paid for official blather is a currency of sorts. But it is stunningly socially destructive. It’s almost as if the goal of officialdom is to keep us at each other’s throats to take the focus off of their own failures.

The Russiagate and Iraq WMD frauds are cited here for a reason. They were both politically motivated, state-sponsored, psyops. Their implied goals were to defraud the American public into supporting the foreign policy goals of the CIA. And the way in which they were advanced was to silence critics with fabulated, demagogic, drivel regarding fake threats to the nation. And no one from the FBI or CIA has been arrested or charged for the Russiagate fraud.

Since the end of WWII at least, America has acted as a Wizard of Oz fronting for the Einsatzgruppen. There used to be clever and sincere operators working within the bowels of major state institutions. But the official line over recent decades has always, always, always, been fabulist bullshit put forward to kill, torture, starve, and maim, large numbers of people so that a few rich folks could pay for their 37th dream kitchen. And thoughtful and sincere opposition to these never-ending American slaughters has always been portrayed as support for whatever enemy-of-the-week the good Wizard has conjured.

In terms of political logic, the loaded charge of ‘anti-Semitism’ currently being applied to those who criticize the state policies of Israel reflects a category error that has been used by demagogues in the US and Israel for political benefit for several decades now. Some fair bit of the criticism of Israel’s state policies coming from American Jews is that the Israeli-right is overplaying its hand in slaughtering Palestinians, to the long-term detriment of Israel. While this view is critical of Israel’s state policies, the motive is to the ultimate benefit of Israel and Israelis. That the exterminationists in Israel lack the imagination to move their political vision forward without committing genocide makes them fascists.

A similar principle was at work in the US when the George W. Bush administration, acting in league with Congress, launched its misbegotten war against Iraq in 2003. While Mr. Bush and his minions were quick to claim that opposition to their war was ‘pro-terrorist,’ many of us who opposed it had concluded that gratuitously slaughtering a million Iraqis while lighting the rest of the Middle East on fire would diminish the US national interest, not improve it. In retrospect, Mr. Bush’s war was the beginning of the end of the US.

Within the terms of Mr. Bush’s political logic, the American slaughter in Iraq was a demonstration of America’s military might. Missing from this logic was that there were few in world at the outset of the war who doubted American military might. And few would have noticed if the US had ‘prevailed’ in Iraq. But it didn’t, demonstrating to the world that while the US is capable of killing a lot of people and destroying nations, it is incapable of the imperial management needed to sustain the empire.

Recall: while Mr. Bush knew that it was his father’s (and his own) business partners who attacked the US on 9/11, he lied to the American people and blamed the act on Iraq. To be clear, he didn’t just lie about Iraqi WMDs, he lied about who it was that perpetrated the 9/11 attacks for his own, and his family’s, benefit. This isn’t to suggest that Bush & Co. planned or participated in the attacks. In his letter to America, Osama bin Laden takes implicit credit for them. Nevertheless, missing from American discussion of 9/11 has been a single iota of truth regarding US military actions abroad, as well as al Qaeda’s true motives (bin Laden letter) for attacking the US.

Mr. Bush’s ‘they hate us for our freedoms’ was the ‘anti-Semitism’ (or ‘disinformation’) of its day, self-serving bullshit that flatters the malinformed public into psychologically reaffirming American empire. However, most Americans aren’t ‘privileged.’ Read Mr. bin Laden’s ‘letter’ (link above) to understand how insidious this unfounded belief in American ‘privilege’ really is. Living in a state that has a billionaire or two doesn’t make us all billionaires. And voting in a rigged system (the parties control ballot access) doesn’t mean that ‘we,’ the great unwashed, choose who governs us, or their policies.

With respect to Joe Biden, the Democrats have perfected their ‘powerless’ schtick in order to carry out heinous acts without angering their constituents. Despite Democrats holding the White House and both houses of Congress in 2021, Joe Biden was ‘powerless’ to enact his stated agenda. The Congressional bottle-washer (clerk) had the ultimate say, claimed Biden. Like Barack Obama before him, Biden has enacted one of the most audacious agendas of all time. He launched a pointless and gratuitous war against nuclear armed Russia in Ukraine for the benefit of ExxonMobil and Goldman Sachs as he is sponsoring a full-blown WWII-style genocide in Gaza.

While it’s difficult to avoid blaming the Israelis when watching images of the carnage unfolding in Gaza, it is the Americans who are funding Israel, supplying it with weapons and materiel, giving Israeli bombers air and logistical support— including assistance in targeting Palestinians for death, and holding competing regional interests at bay. Here(starts 2:48) is US Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin stating that Israel’s attack on Palestine would end immediately if the US stopped supplying Israel with weapons. What will be revealed in coming months or years is that the Israeli genocide is a result of the long-term strategic ‘vision’ of the US. And all of the world except the American people knows it.

What makes Biden’s actual agenda so audacious is that it’s all Wizard of Oz-style bullshit. Of course, the killing is real. However, having participated in gutting the American manufacturing base (but not the military budget) as a neoliberal, neocon Senator, Biden is starting wars that the US can’t finish. Biden’s chosen targets, Russia and China, both have manufacturing bases with which to manufacture weapons and materiel. The US not only exported its industry starting half-a-century ago, it sent its engineers (knowledge base) to flip burgers at Mickie Dees until they died of old age.

While the impact of various state policies is always open to debate, the insistence that one side in the debate gets to claim the national interest for itself— in either Israel or the US, is the realm of demagogues, not legitimate political difference. This is why the US and Israeli governments are working so hard to delegitimate assessments of their policies that differ from their own. If legitimate differences with state policies are admitted, then the ability of particular state actors to define them unilaterally is diminished. Question: without ‘anti-Semitism’ to fall back on, what possible explanation could Israel give for its behavior in Gaza that would be deemed legitimate by outsiders?

Moreover, nation-states are political entities so organized to be able to conduct affairs of state with other nations. Given that all of the major religions have footprints that lie outside of any single national boundary, nations that claim state religions (e.g. Israel, Iran) don’t represent those religions politically outside of their national borders. In this way, criticism of Israel over its treatment of Palestinians in Gaza has no bearing on Jews living in Canada or Brazil. This, despite Israel calling itself a ‘Jewish state.’ No one holds Canadian or Brazilian Jews responsible for Israel’s state actions.

By analogy, the political right in the US has long claimed that the US is ‘a Christian nation.’ In terms of religious self-identification, this is most certainly true. Most Americans who are religious identify as Christian. Yet in all of my years of publicly opposing US foreign policy (1969 – 2024), I don’t recall being accused of being anti-Christian for doing so. A large contingent of the American anti-war movement during the Vietnam war was church-based, with prominent church leaders putting their lives and freedom on the line to end the slaughter.

The point here is that the political leadership in the US could have slandered American anti-war protesters of the era as ‘anti-Christian’ because the US , according to them, ‘is a Christian nation.’ But lots of Christians had already concluded that the war was an abomination. Israel is in a similar position today, with Zionists running the Israeli government. Many of the anti-genocide protesters in the US are Jewish. And for those who aren’t, there are multiple legitimate criticisms of Israeli and US state actions that bear no relation to the claimed religious status of Israel.

This latter point is crucial to the conception of how nation-states operate. When Venezuela negotiates legal arrangements with China, it is the nation-states that act as signatories. Religious communities within these nations may have input into the negotiations, but they aren’t the legal entities that act as signatories, and they aren’t the legal entities charged with enforcement. So, while history and religious passion may guide the tenor of state-to-state negotiations, every nation has internal interests acting behind the scenes.

Conversely, if some nations are religious-states, in the sense of being so governed, why aren’t religious entities (church, synagogue, mosque, etc.) the signatories to international agreements? For instance, since the Revolution in 1979, (the Islamic Republic of) Iran has had a hybrid secular – religious system of governance. While powerful religious figures (Ayatollahs) have significant say in the affairs of state, it is the nation-state of Iran with which international agreements are inked.

Within the Jewish community in Israel, half of Israeli Jews describe themselves as ‘secular,’ versus a combined maximum of around 25% who describe themselves as ‘orthodox’ or ‘ultra-orthodox.’ Secular Jews by definition aren’t interpreting scripture to determine state policies. This doesn’t mean that they are any less sincere in their religious beliefs than orthodox Jews. What it means is that the religious beliefs differ. They may all fall within the broad category of Judaism. But differences within the broad category make assertions that Israel’s state polices are ‘Jewish’ simplistic to the point of being misleading.

Again, by analogy, evangelical Christians in the US provide support for the political right to an extent that activist and political commenter Chris Hedges crafted the term ‘Christian fascists,’ to describe their politics. Conversely, variations on Liberation Theology inform the Christian ‘left,’ if such a descriptor can be claimed. Support by American liberals and the evangelical right for Israeli state policies with respect to the Palestinians is antithetical to the ‘secular’ Christian view that genocide is morally and politically repugnant. It was morally and politically repugnant to Israelis until the American MIC took over the West.

The commonly held view that evangelical Christians and orthodox Jews are ‘more’ Christian or Jewish, respectively, than other denominations is a denominational quibble, not religious doctrine. As the Spanish Inquisition and Irish orphanages illuminated, individual and institutional assertions of superior righteousness are often used to place evil people in charge of Christian institutions. This occasional rule by demagogues renders visible the political natures of both church and state. Religionists who act politically are politicians acting within the realm of state power.

Following each of the World Wars, maps of the world were redrawn by the victors with little concern for political, economic, cultural, and religious differences. Since WWII ended, part of the rationale for the US crushing movements for democracy around the globe has been the desire to ‘manage’ the resulting tensions through political repression. For instance, before he was ‘the new Hitler,’ Saddam Hussein (Iraq) was the CIA asset in Iraq put forward to quash ethnic tensions resulting from these externally drawn maps.

List: remarkably, five of the ten countries with the largest oil reserves have been governed by ‘the new Hitler’ in the last twenty years. Imagine, one Hitler in all of the twentieth century, but five in the last twenty years. In contrast to this Hitler-heavy concentration, four of the remaining countries, Saudi Arabia, UAE, Kuwait, and the US, are liberal democracies (not). Readers are encouraged to read Osama bin Laden’s letter to America (link above) to understand how insidious fake liberal democracy (US) can be for we little people. Source: oilprice.com.

With respect to the timing of police violence against protesters coincident with the state media putting on its crazy pants to point and shout ‘anti-Semite,’ the likely reason is the resumption of the US / Israeli genocide Rafah. While the official lie coming from US / Israeli sources is that Hamas is ‘dug in’ in Rafah, the politicians of the Israeli right have spent recent months openly describing their genocidal aims. Their goal is to ‘clear’ Palestine of Palestinians. The nations surrounding Israel have stated publicly that they have no intention of absorbing Palestinians fleeing Israel.

While clever and knowledgeable people are (correctly) claiming that the police violence used against protesters was both unnecessary and excessive, the question back is: where in the hell have you been living? At the OWS (Occupy Wall Street) encampment at Zuccotti Park, the NYPD drove over protesters with their motorcycles. The NYPD soaked peaceful and compliant OWS protesters with pepper spray. In my first march against the Vietnam War at the tender age of twelve, boiling water was poured out of open windows onto us. I was threatened with being murdered twice by people with guns for my political views before my sixteenth birthday.

At Columbia University, an adjunct professor named Rebecca Weiner— who also works for the NYPD ‘anti-terrorism’ unit, coordinated the clearing of the encampment. In interviews after the campus was cleared, Ms. Weiner spoke in the conceptually-muddled techno-drivel of the ‘anti-terrorism’ industry. Ms. Weiner circuitously clamed that 1) free-speech wasn’t being suppressed because 2) it was a ‘change in tactics’ 3) with respect to the language, 4) used by the anti-genocide protesters, 5) that was shut down by the NYPD.

That Ms. Weiner’s political logic isn’t being reported as fallacious nonsense is likely a fashion issue particular to the industry that she works in. Briefly, a change in linguistic ‘tactics’ still leaves the actions of the students at the level of Constitutionally protected speech. If it hadn’t, legally actionable consequences unrelated to student speech would have ensued. But Ms. Weiner made no assertion that this was the case. What she did assert is that it was the change in tactics that rendered the protesters subject to legal sanction, not that illegal acts followed from doing so.

For example, my use of the term ‘industry’ to describe the ‘anti-terrorism’ industry is a tactic to place its motives in the commercial framework of political economy. In fact, the modern ‘anti-terrorism’ industry was created when George W. Bush put thousands of people to the task of ‘finding’ a very, very, small number of actual terrorists. The result: the FBI now exists to fabricate fake terrorist plots. What makes police entrapment a legitimate defense in criminal cases isn’t that the FBI thought about, or discussed (both are linguistic ‘tactics’), entrapping people, but that it actually entrapped them.

The problem that Ms. Weiner— as well as the Biden administration, the NYPD, and the exterminationist-right in Israel, are trying to overcome is that the protesting students have heard their explanations of the events in Gaza and come to different conclusions. Rather than trying to convince the students otherwise, the official response in the US has been slander, propaganda, censorship, and police violence. This is fundamentally different from making one’s views known as citizens regarding the affairs of state by protesting. Shutting down ‘free-speech’ isn’t its opposite. Coerced speech is. Shutting down ‘free-speech’ is political repression.

One illuminating / particularly troubling aspect of this police repression is that billionaires hired private militias to attack the protesters. The protesters didn’t attack these private militias, they were attacked by them (link above). At UCLA in particular, a private militia allegedly funded by Jessica Seinfeld (link above), wife of ‘comedian’ Jerry Seinfeld (listen to his stand-up and decide for yourself), had the look and presence of the Gestapo. Wearing masks to hide their identities, the ‘counter-protesters’ softened up the UCLA protesters for the violent police assault that followed.

To be clear, the ‘counter-protesters’ weren’t protesting anything. They are modern-day Pinkertons hired by Wall Streeters and ‘celebrities’ (links above) to commit violence against actual protesters. One of the defining characteristics of the rise of Nazism in Germany in the 1930s was violence committed by private militias. This makes the claim that the counter-protesters are ‘fighting anti-Semitism’ morbidly ironic. The comment by Chanamel Dorfman, aid to Israeli Security Chief Ben Givr, that the problem with the Nazis was that ‘they killed the wrong people,’ suggests that he (Dorfman) knows who ‘the right people’ are.

Finally, Donald Trump’s value to the American people in 2016 was in bringing to light that political and economic power in the US is dug in like ticks, or possibly tapeworms. Now that he has officially joined the uniparty by telling House Speaker Mike Johnson to fund the campaign war chests of Joe Biden and Benjamin Netanyahu with $91 billion in arms ‘purchases,’ he has gone full AOC as a fake renegade sheep-dogging for empire. Cobbled to his Reaganesque Republican policies, this makes him, like Joe Biden, the wrong person for the age.

This written, it is the US war against Russia in Ukraine that is more ominous for the world, and in need of being taken out of American officialdom’s hands very quickly. For details of the nuclear back-and-forth, here is Scott Ritter. Most frightening from Ritter is the abject stupidity of the American political ‘leadership.’ George H. W. Bush was the last American political leader trained in statecraft (his father was ‘banker to the Fuehrer’ during WWII, Prescott Bush). Following H. W. Bush, the requirement that American President’s be able to speak at least one language (George W. Bush didn’t, Joe Biden is a toss-up) was apparently deemed too onerous.

With Biden’s recent ‘major speech’ on the ‘dramatic rise in anti-Semitism in the US,’ the calcification and irrelevance of American ‘leaders’ on the world stage is sealed. What Biden and his minions conspicuously cannot comprehend is that we dogs are no longer eating the dogfood. This isn’t ‘revolutionary’ in any political sense. The powers that be can either stop lying or come up with better lies. But having the same people from the same three-letter agencies promoting the same lies eventually loses its potency as social engineering.

Listen to the Scott Ritter interview (link above) as you channel Jennifer Lawrence’s character in Don’t Look Up shouting ‘we’re all going to $#!?& die.’ Allowing one, two, or three morons in the basement (or Oval Office) of the White House to decide the fate of humanity is not reasonable. To Democrats— get a handle on your boy. You inflicted this genocidal jackass on the rest of us. To Republicans— get a handle on your boy. You inflicted this uniparty jackass on us. Then consider: with no political bench to draw from, possibly the problems are systemic.

https://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2024/05 ... fraud.html

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Strategic Setbacks for US, Israel as the Resistance Axis Gains Ground in Syria
Posted by INTERNATIONALIST 360° on MAY 14, 2024
Khalil Nasrallah

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Recent resistance operations in eastern Syria have established new rules of engagement that constrain both Washington and Tel Aviv’s once-untethered freedom to operate in this strategic theater.

For several years, the presence of the region’s Axis of Resistance forces in Syria has remained vulnerable to US and Israeli attacks across the country, from east to west. The US has persistently attempted to disrupt the communication routes along the Tehran–Beirut axis, through which Damascus plays an important link.

Starting in 2017, after eliminating ISIS from this key border crossing, Axis forces have safeguarded passage of vehicles through the vital Al-Qaim–Al-Bukamal road and effectively established rules of engagement in eastern Syria, gradually limiting Washington’s tactical flexibility and dominance. This was a strategically important development – maintaining a foothold west of the Euphrates River to the far southeast of Syria continues to be essential for both state and non-state actors in the resistance.

A shift in tactical approach

Since the Palestinian resistance’s Operation Al-Aqsa Flood last October, many new shifts have emerged on the ground in eastern Syria. With an uptick in Iraqi resistance activities targeting US bases in both Syria and Iraq, a sort of tentative peace emerged in early February, coinciding with Kataib Hezbollah’s temporary suspension of operations.

During this period, the resistance forces secured new advancements that solidified their position, primarily because Washington had to grudgingly acknowledge the new ground realities – a fait accompli, if you will.

Although the US continued to carry out “retaliatory” strikes targeting the Iraqi resistance, which, to many, seemed to restore some level of peace, this came with significant compromises.

According to information obtained by The Cradle, the resistance groups have not only established a more pronounced military and political stance during this period of relative calm but have also forced the US to accept crucial losses in the field.

In short, not only has Washington retreated from its provocative operations against regional resistance forces, but Tel Aviv has likewise shown reluctance to launch further raids – so far – in eastern Syria to assassinate fighters affiliated with Lebanon’s Hezbollah.

The Israeli retreat is not a unilateral decision but a result of US recalibration of these risks. The occupation army cannot launch operations without the American green light and intelligence data, and Washington is currently reluctant to cover Israeli actions that will draw the US deeper into the morass in Syria and Iraq. It also seeks to avoid further resistance attacks on US bases and occupied Syrian oil fields, especially now that it has experienced direct blows from targeted munitions.

It is also not insignificant that the Iraqi resistance has directly targeted key Israeli ports. Tel Aviv cannot afford opening up further military fronts eight months into a conflict in which it is incapable of winning on a single front, in Gaza.

Rules of engagement in Eastern Syria

The rules of engagement in eastern Syria are distinct from those governing interactions in the western and central regions of the country, which primarily involve the Israeli entity and Resistance Axis forces alongside Damascus.

In the east, the main opposition to the resistance forces is the illegal US military occupation and its Kurdish allies.

This region, stretching across the Euphrates River to Albu Kamal, which abuts Iraq’s Al-Qaim crossing, represents a strategic foothold for the Resistance Axis established in 2017. This was achieved during the “Great Dawn” operations, a series of offensives in three stages led by resistance forces, the Syrian army, and their Russian allies.

These operations enabled the Syrian and Iraqi resistance forces to reach and secure the Al-Qaim crossing, effectively reconnecting the two countries for the first time since 2011, which offered the Axis a world of new tactical advantages.

The establishment of this route, known as the Tehran–Beirut road, was perceived by the US and Israelis as a strategic geopolitical setback to their goal of severing relations and routes between Iran and the Mediterranean. In response, Washington intensified its efforts to destabilize this area through raids and pressures and by supporting attacks by ISIS cells and other militant groups, aiming to prevent the resistance forces from cementing their positions and achieving stability.

These tensions would escalate significantly towards the end of 2019 and into early 2020, following US claims that its forces in Kirkuk were targeted in a rocket attack attributed to the Iraqi resistance.

Washington responded provocatively by launching heavy strikes against an Iraqi resistance faction in Al-Qaim, killing at least fifty fighters in an operation closely followed by the targeted assassinations of Iranian Quds Force Commander General Qassem Soleimani and Iraq’s Popular Mobilization Units (PMU) Deputy Head Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis.

One key goal of this unprovoked US escalation was to prevent the resistance connectivity project, specifically cutting off the roads of communication between Tehran–Baghdad–Damascus–Beirut, which is seen as threatening both the US presence and Israel’s security.

Following the strike on the Ain al-Assad airbase earlier this year, resistance forces moved to intensify their targeting of US military bases using missiles and drones, conducted multiple operations in the Syrian Desert to safeguard transit routes against Washington-backed terror groups, and established protective measures around the US occupation base in Al-Tanf, located near the Syrian–Jordanian–Iraqi border intersection.

Through these coordinated efforts, the Axis of Resistance imposed new rules of engagement, effectively balancing the scales by linking their actions at Albu Kamal and Al-Qaim with significant retaliatory strikes against US bases.

This approach led to a noticeable reduction in direct US military engagements – which, interestingly and unsurprisingly, coincided with a spike in ISIS cells attempting infiltrations in both Syria and Iraq.

This state of affairs persisted until the Iraqi resistance increased its operations against US troops in both Syria and Iraq, partly in solidarity with the Palestinian resistance in the Gaza Strip.

West Asia’s new reality

Between the rules of engagement that preceded the events of 7 October and those that followed the targeting of US bases, significant changes have occurred, especially after Iraqi resistance operations showcased the vulnerabilities of the American deterrence strategy.

The illegal US bases have been exposed as unsafe, not only in Syria and Iraq but also extending to Jordan. The results of the resistance operations can be summarized as follows:

The Axis has successfully established and strengthened its ground presence in areas Washington once viewed as its own stomping ground and has achieved a de facto truce that benefits long-term resistance goals across military, economic, and political domains.

Consequently, resistance troops are now more effectively pursuing the remnants of US-backed ISIS cells within the depths of the Syrian Desert. These terror cells, though engaged in continuous disruptive operations, are no longer seen as posing a strategic threat.

The Axis’ efforts can also now more effectively concentrate on the main front, against Israel, in support of the Palestinian resistance there. The rules of engagement with the US have been reinforced and are poised for further development in future stages, with plans to pose a more formidable challenge to the US presence across West Asia.

https://libya360.wordpress.com/2024/05/ ... -in-syria/

Sayyed Nasrallah: “Israel Faces Two Options – Defeat or the Abyss”
Posted by INTERNATIONALIST 360° on MAY 14, 2024
Al Manar

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“These theatrics that we are witnessing nowadays should not deceive anyone, as Washington stands with Israel [no matter what],”

Hezbollah Secretary General Sayyed Hasan Nasrallah on Monday stressed that the Israeli enemy is facing a historical dilemma in Gaza– if it halts the war, it will be a major defeat, and it will move into an abyss if it continues the military battle.

Addressing Hezbollah’s memorial ceremony marking the eighth martyrdom anniversary of military commander Martyr Sayyed Mustafa Badreddine, Sayyed Nasrallah concentrated on the challenge of goals between the Palestinian Resistance and the Zionist enemy.

Sayyed Nasrallah maintained that the Palestinian resistance wanted Al-Aqsa Flood Operation to be a chance to revitalize the Palestinian cause and remind the whole world with the Palestine and Palestinian rights thrown in the oblivion.

On the other hand, some Arab regimes promoted ‘Israel’ as a normal entity that preserves democracy, according to Hezbollah leader, who added that the steadfastness of women, children and resistance fighters in Gaza has changed this situation.

Nowadays, Palestinian and the Palestinian rights are being highlighted all over the world, Sayyed Nasrallah said, adding that over 140 states voted for granting Palestine a full UN membership.

Sayyed Nasrallah affirmed that the Israeli envoy’s act of shredding a copy of UN Charter over a vote in favor of Palestinian rights displays the Zionist arrogance and carelessness about the international resolutions.

The most important political media scene that reflects the victory of the Palestinian resistance is the moment the Israeli UN envoy raised the picture of Hamas military commander Yahya Al-Sinwar.

Sayyed Nasrallah underlined the pro-Palestine protests held by the university students in the United States, Australia France, Britain, Germany and several European countries, adding that those rallies outraged the Israeli and US officials.

The steadfastness of the Palestinian people since October 7 has obliged the whole world to accept the notion of establishing a Palestinian state, even the hypocritical US administration is now considering a Palestinian state, Sayyed Nasrallah said.

Al-Aqsa Flood Operation and the multi-front war between the resistance movements and the Zionist enemy have exposed the criminal and barbaric essence of the Zionist enemy, according to Hezbollah Chief.

Hezbollah Secretary General called for concentrating on the remarks of the Israeli presidents, ministers, generals and various officials, away from all what the pro-Zionist Arabs say.

Sayyed Nasrallah emphasized that none in the Zionist entity is capable of claiming victory in Gaza eight months since the start of the war, adding that the Israelis mock Netanyahu when he says the occupation army is about to achieve victory in the Strip.

Sayyed Nasrallah mentioned that the Israelis tell the Zionist officials that three main targets of the war–eradicating Hamas, liberating the captives, and protecting the settlements from Gaza missiles– have not been achieved yet.

Hezbollah leader said that Hamas continues fighting the Zionist occupation forces across Gaza, holding most of the Israeli captives, and firing missiles at the Zionist settlements in the south of occupied Palestine.

Sayyed Nasrallah added that the Israelis also failed to achieve the implicit targets, including displacing Gaza locals, noting that the Gazans showed a great steadfastness against this scheme.

“‘Israel’ presents itself as the most powerful ‘state’ in the region, claims to have the most powerful army in the region, and obtains the support of the most powerful country in the world, the United States of America which provides it with hundreds of war jets, dozens of warships, military bridge, expertise, technology, satellites, and intelligence agencies.”

The United States of America even interferes to defend ‘Israel’ against the Yemenis in the Red Sea and in face of the Iranian missiles as well as drones, Sayyed Nasrallah noted.

“Imagine how ‘Israel’ with such capabilities and US support fails to achieve any of its targets in Gaza over 8 months.”

“Gaza, an area of around 270 square kilometers, has been besieged since 20 years, with modest military capabilities.”

Sayyed Nasrallah asserted that this reflects inability, not just failure, and leads the Zionists to lose confidence in this entity with its political, security and military command.

Sayyed Nasrallah cited the Israeli polls which indicated that 30% of the Israelis consider that the entity is unsuitable for a decent life and 70% of them demand the resignation of the commander-in-chief.

Sayyed Nasrallah noted that ‘Israel’ has also failed to reconstruct the deterrence image in face of the entire resistance axis in Gaza, Lebanon, Syria, Iran, Iraq and Yemen.

According to Sayyed Nasrallah, ‘Israel’ does not even have any minimal assumption about the political era in Gaza after the war, which leads the army into successive daunting battles.

Sayyed Nasrallah indicated that the pro-Zionist Arabs utilize the numbers of martyrs in Gaza to promote surrender instead of denouncing the Israeli criminality in an act treachery.

Hezbollah chief dismissed the US ploy of blocking military shipment to the Zionist entity, warning against the American deception.

Sayyed Nasrallah underlined that Hamas approval of the Egyptian ceasefire proposal shocked Netanyahu and made the US officials swallow their tongues and abstain from denouncing the Zionist obstruction of the solution process.

“The US administration also vetoes any vote for Palestine’s membership,threatens to sanction any state that voices intention to recognize a Palestinian state and the ICC judges if they issue an arrest warrant against Netanyahu, and persecutes the students protesting in favor of Gaza despite all the freedom and human rights slogans.”

Sayyed Nasrallah reiterated that Hezbollah will continue its border battle against the Israeli enemy in support of Gaza and impose more rules of engagement, adding that the Resistance command may escalate the front.

Sayyed Nasrallah called on the Israeli settlers displaced from Northern Palestine to demand their government to stop its war on Gaza in order to return to “their houses” before September 1.

Displaced Syrians

Hezbollah Secretary General pointed out that all the Lebanese parties, except for some beneficiaries, agree that the displaced Syrians file is now problematic and must be addressed.

Sayyed Nasrallah stressed that the USA and Europe are responsible for preventing the displaced Syrians in Lebanon from returning to Syria, calling on the Lebanese authorities to challenge the foreign will by letting the displaced Syrians move into Europe by sea.

This issue can be easily addressed whenever bravery and political will are presented in face of the foreign pressures, threats, and interventions, Sayyed Nasrallah said.

Sayyed Nasrallah indicated that the Lebanese authorities must communicate with the Syrian government in order to facilitate the return of the displaced, underlining the importance of demanding the revocation of Caesar Act overburdening Syria economically.

Martyr Badreddine

Sayyed Nasrallah recalled the real badges gained by the Islamic Resistance Commander Sayyed Mustaf Badreddine, mentioning martyr Sayyed Zulfiqar’s Medals of the Combatant Man, the Wounded, the Detainee, the Commander, the Achievements’ Maker, and the martyr.

Sayyed Nasrallah reiterated condolences and felicitations to the noble family of martyr Badreddine, adding that the Resistance might on the borders recalls the martyred commanders, including Hajj Imad Mughniyeh, Sayyed Mustafa Badreddine, Hajj Qassem Suleimani, Hajj Mohammad Rida Zahedi, and Radhi Al-Mousawi.

Sayyed Nasrallah said that Hezbollah combat drones striking the Israeli enemy nowadays recall the martyred commander Hassan Al-Lakkis.

Sayyed Nasrallah summarized the achievements of Sayyed Badreddine in face of the Zionist enemy and during the negotiations aimed at concluding prisoner swap deals, concentrating on his feat of fighting the terrorist groups in Syria.

Sayyed Nasrallah indicated that the foreign plots wanted Syria to move into the US influence circle, adding that, however, the sacrifices of Sayyed Zulfikar and the rest of the martyrs preserved the pro-resistance stance of Syria.

https://libya360.wordpress.com/2024/05/ ... the-abyss/
"There is great chaos under heaven; the situation is excellent."

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