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Re: Palestine

Post by blindpig » Fri Feb 09, 2024 12:38 pm

Netanyahu’s War on Truth
Posted by INTERNATIONALIST 360° on FEBRUARY 8, 2024
Jeremy Scahill

Image
Israeli soldiers detain blindfolded Palestinian men in a military truck in the southern Gaza Strip on Nov. 19, 2023. Photo: Mahmud Hams/AFP via Getty Images

Two weeks before Hamas commandos led a series of raids into Israel on October 7, Benjamin Netanyahu stood before an empty chamberOpens in a new tab at the United Nations headquarters in New York City. The Israeli prime minister brandished a map of what he promised could be the “New Middle East.” It depicted a state of Israel that stretched continuously from the Jordan River to the Mediterranean Sea. On this map, Gaza and the West Bank were erased. Palestinians did not exist.

“What a historic change for my country! You see, the land of Israel is situated on the crossroads between Africa, Asia, and Europe,” Netanyahu bellowed at a handful of spectators in the large hall, nearly all of whom were his loyalists or underlings. “For centuries, my country was repeatedly invaded by empires passing through it in their campaigns of plunder and conquest elsewhere. But today, as we tear down walls of enmity, Israel can become a bridge of peace and prosperity between these continents.”

During that speech, Netanyahu portrayed the full normalizing of relations with Saudi Arabia, an initiative spearheaded under the Trump administration and embraced by the Biden White House, as the linchpin of his vision for this “new” reality, one which would open the door to a “visionary corridor that will stretch across the Arabian Peninsula and Israel. It will connect India to Europe with maritime links, rail links, energy pipelines, fiber-optic cables.”

He was speaking on the grand stage of the U.N. General Assembly, but no world leaders bothered to attend. Outside, some 2,000 people, a mixture of American Jews and Israeli citizens, protested his attacks on the independence of the Israeli judiciary system. The scene served as a reminder of how deeply unpopular his far-right governing coalition, not to mention Netanyahu himself, had become in Israel. At that moment, it seemed that Netanyahu was pushed against the ropes, in a losing battle to continue his political reign.

Just days later, as Hamas commandos penetrated the barriers encircling Gaza and embarked on their deadly raids targeting several military installations as well as kibbutzim, everything changed in an instant. Everything, that is, except the primary agenda that has been at the center of Netanyahu’s long political career: the absolute destruction of Palestine and its people.

Just as the Bush administration exploited the 9/11 attacks to justify a sweeping war in which it declared the world a battlefield, Netanyahu is using the horrors of October 7 to wage the crusade he’s been preparing for his entire political career. With his grip on power fading last fall, the October 7 attacks provided him with just the opportunity he needed, and he hitched his political survival to the war on Gaza and what could be his last chance to eliminate Israel’s Palestinian problem once for all.

In that sense, Bibi was saved by Hamas.

Intelligence Failures

Four months in, Netanyahu’s war of annihilation against Gaza has become a guerrilla war of attrition. Not a single Israeli hostage has been freed through military force, and Hamas has shown an enduring resilience and ability to pick off Israel Defense Forces soldiers. The Israeli public, outside of the ideological true believers intent on occupying and settling Gaza, is showing signs of fatigue and desperation. Many family members of captives are growing louder in their demands for an immediate deal with Hamas that centers the lives of their loved ones over the political agenda laid out by Netanyahu and his clique. Some have demanded new elections or Netanyahu’s resignation. Protests against the war, though small, are beginning to grow inside Israel, with some demonstrations echoing global calls demanding a humanitarian ceasefire and an end to Israeli occupation of Palestinian territory.

As the death toll in Gaza surpasses a conservative estimate of 27,000 lives, many of the core narratives deployed by the Israeli and U.S. governments to justify the slaughter are coming under increased scrutiny; some have been definitively debunked. In Israel, this is a delicate line of inquiry. That Hamas killed large numbers of Israelis is not in doubt. But how they managed to do so while living under the lauded and vigilant eyes of the Mossad, Shin Bet, the Israeli Security Agency, and the IDF is the subject of mounting public attention.

There have been several credible reports that Israeli intelligence analysts warned that Hamas operatives appeared to be training for raids into Israel. The New York Times and other outlets have reported on the existence of a 40-page internal Hamas document code-named “Jericho Wall.” Purportedly obtained by Israeli intelligence, it is said to lay out detailed plans by Hamas to conduct precisely the type of assault against Israeli military installations and villages that occurred on October 7.

While warnings from Israeli analysts who reviewed the document were reportedly brushed aside by senior officials, last July a signals intelligence officer urged the chain of command to take it seriously. Noting a recent daylong training exercise by Hamas in Gaza, the analyst asserted that the training precisely mirrored the operations laid out in the document. “It is a plan designed to start a war,” she pleaded. “It’s not just a raid on a village.”

The night before Hamas’s raid, intelligence analysts began reporting significant evidence suggesting that Hamas might be preparing for an attack inside Israel. The head of Shin Bet traveled to the south and orders were issued to deploy a special counterterror force to confront any potential incursions, according to an investigative report in the Israeli publication Yedioth Ahronoth.

Shortly after 3 a.m. on October 7, a senior intelligence official concluded the activity in Gaza was likely another Hamas training exercise, saying, “We still believe that [Hamas leader Yahya] Sinwar is not pivoting towards an escalation.”

A few hours later, as Israeli officials gathered in a command center chaotically scrambling to deploy forces to respond to the multipronged attacks led by Hamas, a senior officer silenced the room: “The Gaza Division was overpowered.”

Early on in the war against Gaza, Netanyahu sought to deflect blameOpens in a new tab for failing to foresee Hamas’s attacks onto his intelligence services. “Contrary to the false claims: Under no circumstances and at no stage was Prime Minister Netanyahu warned of Hamas’s war intentions,” read a tweet posted on Netanyahu’s official Twitter account. “On the contrary, all the security officials, including the head of military intelligence and the head of the Shin Bet, assessed that Hamas had been deterred and was looking for a settlement. This assessment was submitted again and again to the prime minister and the cabinet by all the security forces and intelligence community, up until the outbreak of the war.”

But serious questions lingered over how Hamas was able to lay siege to large sections of what Israel calls the “Gaza envelope” and whether Netanyahu had knowledge that an attack of this very nature was being planned in full view of Israel’s extensive surveillance systems and spy networks. There is also a mounting body of evidence to indicate that Israeli forces were given orders on October 7 to stop Hamas’s attacks at all costs, including the killing of Israeli civilians taken captive by Palestinian fighters. The Israeli military has indicated that it plans to conduct an “uncompromising” investigation into the intelligence failures, drawing the ire of some far-right members of Netanyahu’s government.

Under fire from his own ministers and supporters for impugning Israeli military and intelligence agencies, Netanyahu apologized for his comments, deleted the tweet, and then shifted to the stance he now repeats: There will be a time for such inquiries — but only after Israel achieves total victory in Gaza and eliminates Hamas. “The only thing that I intend to have resign is Hamas,” he said tab in November. “We’re going to resign them to the dustbin of history.”

Information Warfare

The violent ethnonationalist ideology at the center of Netanyahu’s reign was born before his tenure and will endure when he’s gone. But his rule has embodied the most extremist and destructive version of the Israeli state project.

Netanyahu understands the power of defining and dominating the narrative, particularly when targeting it to U.S. audiences. For decades, he has advanced the Israeli propaganda doctrine of hasbara — the notion that Israelis must be aggressive about “explaining” and justifying their actions to the West — to manipulate his adversaries and allies, domestic and international, into serving his objectives.

Netanyahu’s “vision of himself as the chief defender of the Jewish people against calamity allowed him to justify almost anything that would keep him in power,” observedOpens in a new tab former President Barack Obama in his 2020 memoir.

In the aftermath of October 7, Netanyahu cast Israel’s siege of a tiny strip of land the size of Philadelphia as a war of the worlds in which the very fate of humanity was at stake. “It’s not only our war. It’s your war too,” Netanyahu said in his first interview on CNN after the October 7 attacks. “It’s the battle of civilization against barbarism. And if we don’t win here, this scourge will pass. The Middle East will pass to other places. The Middle East will fall. Europe is next. You will be next.”

The Israeli government rapidly deployed a multipronged propaganda strategy to win unprecedented support from the U.S. and other Western governments for a sweeping war against the entire population of Gaza. To oppose Israel’s war is antisemitic; to question its assertions about the events of October 7 is akin to Holocaust denial; to protest the mass killing of Palestinian civilians is to do the bidding of Hamas.

At the center of Israel’s information warfare campaign is a tactical mission to dehumanize Palestinians and to flood the public discourse with a stream of false, unsubstantiated, and unverifiable allegations.

“We were struck Saturday by an attack whose savagery I can say we have not seen since the Holocaust,” Netanyahu told President Joe Biden in a phone callOpens in a new tab on October 11. “They took dozens of children, bound them up, burned them and executed them.” He added: “We have never seen such savagery in the history of the state. They’re even worse than ISIS and we need to treat them as such.”

“We are fighting human animals and we are acting accordingly,” said Israel’s Defense Minister Yoav Gallant on October 9.

The message of these statements and others like them was clear: Israel is confronting monsters, and no one has any business telling the Jewish state, established in the aftermath of World War II under the mantra of “Never again,” how to respond to an attempted genocide. Israeli officials routinely invoke the Holocaust, compare Hamas to the Nazis or to ISIS, and portray the events of October 7 as evidence of an organized effort to commit genocide against the Jewish people.

On October 10, three days after the attacks, the Israeli military organized a tour for international journalists to view the scene at Kfar Aza Kibbutz. As they guided reporters and camera crews through the community, IDF officials spread rumors that as many as 40 babies had been murdered by Hamas, some of them beheaded. “It’s something I never saw in my life. It’s something I used to imagine of my grandmother and my grandfather in Europe and other places,” an Israeli general toldOpens in a new tab reporters. “We got very, very disturbing reports that came from the ground that there were babies that had been beheaded,” said IDF spokesperson Jonathan Conricus in a briefing for international journalists. “I admit it took us some time to really understand and to verify that report. It was hard to believe that even Hamas could perform such a barbaric act.”

Lt. Col. Guy Basson, deputy commander of the Israeli army’s Kfir Brigade, claimed that he saw the aftermath of eight babies who were executed in a nursery at Kibbutz Be’eri. Among the victims, Basson asserted, was also a survivor of the Auschwitz death camp. “I see the number engraved on her arm, and you say to yourself, she went through the Holocaust in Auschwitz and ended up dying on Kibbutz Be’eri.” Another Israeli soldier toldOpens in a new tab a journalist that “babies and children were hung on a clothes line in a row.”

Three weeks after the October 7 attacks, Eli Beer, the head of a volunteer EMS squad in Israel, traveled to the U.S. and addressed a gathering at the convention of the Republican Jewish Coalition in Las Vegas. “I saw in my own eyes a woman who was pregnant, four months pregnant,” he said. “They came into her house, in front of her kids, they opened up her stomach took out the baby, and stabbed the little, tiny baby in front of her and then shot her in front of her family and then they killed the rest of the kids.”

Beer offered graphic descriptions of other horrors he claimed to have witnessed. “These bastards put these babies in an oven and put on the oven. We found the kid a few hours later,” he told the U.S. audience on October 28. “I saw little kids who were beheaded. We didn’t know which head belonged to which kid.” Beer, whose stories were widely reported in the international media, also met with Biden and Secretary of State Antony Blinken in Israel soon after the attack.

But there is a problem with the gut-wrenching narratives that have bolstered the underlying justification for the slaughter of Gaza: They are either complete fabrications or have not been substantiated with a shred of evidence. Many have been thoroughly disproven by major Israeli media outlets.

In the immediate aftermath of the attacks, Netanyahu and other Israeli officials presentedOpens in a new tab U.S. and international leaders with a range of graphic images and videos along with unverified narrative explanations for what they allegedly depicted. “It’s simply depravity in the worst imaginable way,” Blinken said after first viewing the photos. “Images are worth a thousand words. These images may be worth a million.”

In a coup for Netanyahu’s hasbara campaign, Biden and other leaders have laundered many of Israel’s obscene lies. Beginning just days after October 7, Biden repeatedly claimed that he personally saw photographs of beheaded babies and more atrocities. Even after the White House admittedOpens in a new tab Biden had seen no such photos, he continued to make the allegation, including after visiting Netanyahu and other Israeli officials in Tel Aviv. “I saw some of the photographs when I was there — tying a mother and her daughter together on a rope and then pouring kerosene on them and then burning them, beheading infants, doing things that are just inhuman — totally, completely inhuman,” Biden said at a campaign in event in December.

Blinken told the U.S. Senate another harrowing story about how Hamas terrorists had tortured a family in their living room while intermittently taking breaks to eat a meal their victims had placed on the dining table before the horrors began that morning. “A young boy and girl, 6 and 8 years old, and their parents around the breakfast table. The father’s eye gouged out in front of his kids. The mother’s breast cut off, the girl’s foot amputated, the boy’s fingers cut off before they were executed,” Blinken said. “And then their executioners sat down and had a meal. That is what this society is dealing with.”

The story Blinken told about terrorists eating a meal while torturing an Israeli family, as well as some of the assertions about decapitated babies, was based on the speculative fiction invented by Yossi Landau, an official from the scandal-plagued private Israeli rescue organization Zaka, who has repeatedly spread wildly false stories.

There was no Holocaust survivor killed at Kibbutz Be’eri that day. There were no mass beheadings of babies, no group executions in a nursery, no children hung from clotheslines, and no infants placed in ovens. No pregnant woman had her stomach cut open and the fetus knifed in front of her and her other children. These stories are entirely fictional, a set of audacious lies weaponized to generate the type of collective rage used to justify the unjustifiable.

According to major Israeli media outlets that have worked diligently to identify all the victims of the October 7 attacks, there was one infant killed that day: a 9-month-old named Mila CohenOpens in a new tab who was shot dead at Kibbutz Be’eri as her mother held her in her arms. Cohen’s mother, who was wounded by gunfire, survived. Among the other civilians killed on October 7, seven of them were between the ages of 2 and 9 years, and 28 were between the ages of 10 and 19. Fourteen of these children died in Hamas rocket attacks, not at the hands of the armed commandos who stormed the kibbutzes.

There is no doubt that widespread atrocities and war crimes were committed during the Hamas-led attacks of October 7. It is also true that Israeli military, government, and rescue officials have engaged in a deliberate misinformation campaign about the nature of many deaths that occurred that day.

Israeli officials have toured the world with a film produced at the direction of the IDF. The 47-minute “Bearing Witness to the October 7 Massacre” features video allegedly seized from Palestinian attackers equipped with GoPro cameras and cellphones, according to Israeli officials. The movie has not been released to the public and has only been available via special invitation from the Israeli government. Its audiences have included Hollywood celebrities, dozens of U.S. lawmakers and government officials, journalists, and global luminaries; it has screened at various international venues, including museums established in memory of the Holocaust. While hours of footage of the attacks and their aftermath are available online, including video shot by Palestinians who participated in the raids, the Israeli government has said the footage is too sensitive to be publicly released.

An IDF official, in uniform, personally delivers the professionally produced Digital Cinema Package for the screenings, and viewers are required to sign nondisclosure agreements affirming they will not record or distribute the footage. “It will change the way you view the Middle East and the way you view the war in Gaza,” said Gilad Erdan, Israel’s ambassador to the United Nations, at the Los Angeles premiere of the footage last November. The film was characterized in media accounts as depicting “murder, beheadings, rapes and other atrocities against Jewish adults and children.”

The event, at the Museum of Tolerance, was organized by Israeli actor Gal Gadot, star of the “Wonder Woman” movies, for film executives and other members of the Hollywood industry. “Hamas must be eradicated. This is the only way to prevent another massacre,” Erdan added. “If Israel doesn’t eradicate this evil, mark my words: The West is next.”

While Israel has emphasized how incendiary the footage is, British journalist Owen Jones, who attended an IDF screening in the U.K., said a “significant amount” of the video is already in the public domain. He said that while there was footage of one IDF soldier who had apparently been decapitated, as well as the already public footage of an unsuccessful attempt to behead a migrant Thai worker with a garden tool, there was no footage substantiating allegations of torture, sexual violence, and mass beheadings, including of babies or other children. “Clearly this footage hasn’t been selected at random. You would expect it to be the worst material that they have,” Jones said. “This isn’t to say none of this happened, it’s just not in the footage, which has been provided by the Israeli authorities.”

Israel’s hasbara campaign is reminiscent of the Bush administration’s monthslong carnival of lies, sanitized and promoted by major media outlets, about alleged weapons of mass destruction in Iraq. And Biden directly participated in President George W. Bush’s campaign as well. In his October 2002 Senate floor speech endorsing war against Iraq, Biden declared that Saddam Hussein “possesses chemical and biological weapons and is seeking nuclear weapons.”

Allegations of Systematic Rape

The Israeli propaganda machine is well oiled. Anyone can look back at Israel’s four-month war against Gaza and trace a pattern: Israel chooses an issue and demands global attention to its agenda at the expense of any other matter.

When news organizations began reporting on the civilian toll of Israel’s initial airstrikes against Gaza, the government accused photographers for major news organizations of being Hamas members or sympathizers who had foreknowledge of the October 7 attacks. Netanyahu said the journalists were “accomplices in crimes against humanity.” Israel then portrayed Gaza’s hospitals as secret Hamas command centers, an allegation that the Biden administration bolstered as the IDF prepared to lay siege to Al-Shifa Hospital last November.

Throughout the war, Israel has sought to direct media and global attention to various new smoking-gun narratives. And in nearly every case, it succeeds in getting the U.S. on board to launder and promote the talking points.

In late November, as the civilian death toll in Gaza climbed, Israel was struggling to retain its dominance of the narrative. Global demands for a ceasefire were mounting, and even some of Israel’s allies were expressing horrorOpens in a new tab at the indiscriminate killing of women and children and the worsening humanitarian catastrophe.

A weeklong truce, during which captives were exchanged, raised hopes that a more enduring peace deal could be on the horizon, despite Israeli insistence that that was out of the question. “A prolonged ceasefire that allows more hostages to be released, and that evolves towards a permanent ceasefire linked to a political process, is something we have consensus on,” saidOpens in a new tab the EU’s top foreign policy official Josep Borrell.

Days earlier, the prime ministers of Spain and Belgium traveled to the Rafah border to push for such a deal and drew the fury of the Israeli government when they publicly condemned the indiscriminate killing of Palestinian civilians. Eli Cohen, then the Israeli foreign minister, accused the leaders of offering “support [for] terrorism,” while Netanyahu released a statement condemning them because they “did not place total responsibility on Hamas for the crimes against humanity it perpetrated.”

It was at this moment that the Israeli government decided it needed to remind the world of Israel’s victimhood and launched a new phase of the hasbara campaign. It began accusing the international community of standing silent in the face of what Israeli officials described as a widespread campaign of rape and sexual violence aimed at Jewish women and orchestrated by Hamas on October 7. By early December, the issue had become a major focus of conservative media and Israel’s allies.

“I say to the women’s rights organizations, to the human rights organizations, you’ve heard of the rape of Israeli women, horrible atrocities, sexual mutilation? Where the hell are you?” Netanyahu said in a December 5 speech in Tel Aviv.

That day, on the other side of the globe, Biden was at a campaign fundraising event in Boston. “Over the past few weeks, survivors and witnesses of the attacks have shared the horrific accounts of unimaginable cruelty: reports of women raped — repeatedly raped and their bodies being mutilated while still alive, of women corpses being desecrated, and Hamas terrorists inflicting as much pain and suffering as — on women and girls as possible and then murdering them. And it’s appalling,” Biden said. “The world can’t just look away — what’s going on. It’s on all of us — the government, international organizations, civil society, individual citizens — to forcefully condemn the sexual violence of Hamas terrorists without equivocation — without equivocation, without exception.”

From the earliest moments following the October 7 attacks, Israel charged that women had been raped by Hamas fighters, though it was often an allegation made in sequence alongside other alleged atrocities. But in mid-November, those assertions began evolving into a sustained public blitz, accusing Hamas of instituting a plan to “systematically rape women.” Israel government spokesperson Eylon Levy spokeOpens in a new tab of a “Hamas rapist machine.”

“Hamas used rape and sexual violence as weapons of war,” chargedOpens in a new tab Erdan, the U.N. ambassador. “These were not spur-of-the-moment decisions to defile and mutilate girls and parade them while onlookers cheered; rather, this was premeditated.”

To date, there has been no credible evidence presented publicly that such a campaign took place, and Hamas has vehemently denied that its fighters committed any acts of rape or sexual assault. The fact that Israel has not produced forensic evidence for individual rapes does not prove that no such deeds took place. Rape investigations are often complex, particularly when the crime occurs amid a chaotic scene of mass violence. Sexual violence is common in warfare, and it often takes years for the full story of such crimes to emerge.

But there is a difference between making specific allegations of rape or sexual assault and charging that organized mass rape was a central component of an operation meticulously planned over the course of years. Israel’s evidence of the latter comes nowhere near to measuring up to its claims.

Israeli rescue workers as well as civilian and military medical officials have described evidence of dead women who were naked or had clothing removed, as well as women who were subjected to genital mutilation, though they have not released documentary or forensic evidence.

But many of the most graphic allegations of mass rapes have been offered by Israeli military or rescue officials who acknowledge they have no training or expertise in forensics. Some of them, whose claims have been featured in many media accounts, also spread false stories about other alleged atrocities.

Shari Mendes, an architect serving in the IDF reserves in a rabbinical unit, was deployed to a morgue to prepare bodies for burial after the attacks. An American originally from New Jersey, Mendes did multiple TV and print interviews about her experiences. “We have seen women who have been raped, from the age of children through to the elderly,” she told reporters, emphasizing, “This is not just something we saw on the internet, we saw these bodies with our own eyes.”

For months, Mendes has served as one of the most visible witnesses bolstering Israel’s allegations of systematic rape. But few media outlets featuring her claims have mentioned the valid concerns about her credibility and her history of promoting a false story. She told the Daily Mail last October, “A baby was cut out of a pregnant woman and beheaded and then the mother was beheaded.”

On December 5, as Israel engaged in a global media push around its allegations that Hamas had committed mass rapes, Mendes was a featured speaker at an event in New York organized by Israel’s mission to the U.N. on sexual violence and the October 7 attacks. The Times of Israel reported that Mendes “is not legally qualified to determine rape.”

The observations of first responders or members of religious burial units, particularly those without relevant scientific credentials, are not a replacement for forensic documentation of an uncontaminated crime scene. Israeli authorities have said evidence that would typically be taken in cases of suspected sexual assault was not recovered in the aftermath of the attacks, attributing this failure to a combination of the magnitude of the deaths, the charred nature of some bodies, and to Jewish burial practices.

Some of the evidence publicly cited by Israeli officials is testimony provided by Zaka, the private Israeli rescue organization whose members have been widely documented to have spread false allegations. Haaretz published an exposéOpens in a new tab documenting Zaka’s role in the rampant mishandling of forensic evidence that day and its subsequent campaign of misinformation.

The Israeli government has maintained that it possesses evidence that has not been made public and has enlisted international teams of forensic and other crime scene experts. Israel’s Ministry of Welfare and Social Affairs told the New York Times there are “at least three women and one man who were sexually assaulted and survived.”

But other Israeli officials have stated that there are no known living victims of rape that day, while some have described the challenge of identifying potential victims.

On December 28, the New York Times published what instantly became the most widely circulated news story purporting to document a widespread campaign of sexual violence orchestrated by Hamas. That story has come under intense scrutiny, including within the Times newsroom.

The family of Gal Abdush, whose alleged rape was at the center of the Times article, disputed the article’s assertion she was raped. One relative also suggested the family was pressured, under false pretenses, to speak with the reporters. Abdush’s sister wrote on Instagram that the Times reporters “mentioned they want to write a report in memory of Gal, and that’s it. If we knew that the title would be about rape and butchery, we’d never accept that.” A woman who filmed Abdush on October 7 told YNet that Israeli journalists working for the Times had pressured her into giving the paper access to her photos and videos. “They called me again and again and explained how important it is to Israeli hasbara,” she recalled.

Critics of the Times story also pointed to the inconsistencies of the accounts of some of the alleged witnesses featured, as well as to its use of information provided by members of Zaka.

Several Israelis who survived the October 7 attacks have publicly claimed that they witnessed rapes by Palestinian assailants, but Israeli investigators have said they are still searching for supporting evidence. Authorities also say they must match alleged victims with specific eyewitness testimony in order to bring potential charges.

What often goes unmentioned in Israel’s sweeping allegations is an important fact: Hamas was not the only Palestinian group to attack Israelis on October 7. Many individuals who had no knowledge of Hamas’s plans poured across the border and committed acts of violence in what has been referred to as an unplanned “second wave.” Some of these non-HamasOpens in a new tab Palestinians also took Israeli hostages back to Gaza.

One survivor of the Nova music festival massacre, a veteran of Israel’s special forces, has given multiple interviews to major media outlets, including the New York Times, about a rape he claims to have witnessed. During an appearance on CNN, Raz Cohen described the assailants as “Five guys — five civilians from Gaza, normal guys, not soldiers, not Nukhba,” referring to Hamas’s elite commando force. “It was regular people from Gaza with normal clothes.” Cohen, it must be noted, has told varying, sometimes contradictory, versions of what he witnessed.

Israel has painted all actions on October 7 as being committed by Hamas and its fighters. That storyline obviously serves Israel’s military and political objectives, but the truth is more complicated.

In light of Israel’s well-documented campaign of lies and misinformation about other events on October 7, incendiary allegations, such as claims that Hamas engaged in a deliberate campaign of systematic rape, should be viewed with extreme skepticism.

Friendly Fire

As many U.S. media outlets and politicians have promoted and laundered Israel’s claims, spreading them far and wide, there have been strong voices among the Israeli public and media that have exhibited skepticism. This is especially true regarding the actions taken by Israeli forces as they responded to the October 7 attacks. Calls are growing inside Israel, led by survivors and victims’ families, for the Israeli government to provide a factual explanation of precisely how their loved ones died: Were they killed by Palestinian militants or by the Israeli military?

Israeli media outlets have aired interviews with survivors and IDF personnel describing what they refer to as “friendly fire” incidents, including the shelling of a house where Hamas commandos were holding Israeli civilians hostage. Families of some Israelis killed at Kibbutz Be’eri have citedOpens in a new tab witnesses who said that an Israeli tank fired on a house filled with Israeli civilians held hostage on October 7. A dozen hostages, including 12-year-old twins, died inside the house after Israeli forces began shelling it.

“According to the evidence, the shooting of the tank was fatal and killed many hostages in addition to the terrorists,” the families wrote in a January 4 letter to the IDF’s chief of staff. Given the “seriousness of the incident, we do not think it is right to wait with the investigation until after the end of the war.” They demanded a “comprehensive and transparent investigation into the decisions and actions that led to this tragic outcome.” Israeli military Brig. Gen. Barak Hiram has since admitted he ordered the shelling that day. “The negotiations are over,” he recalled saying. “Break in, even at the cost of civilian casualties.”

Yasmin Porat, who had escaped the horrors at the Nova music festival and sought refuge in a home at Be’eri, offered extensive details on this incident. In a series of interviews on Israeli media, Porat described how Palestinian commandos entered the home and told the Israeli civilians they intended to take them hostage and, after moving them to a location with other hostages at the kibbutz, ultimately used their Israeli captives to contact the police to negotiate. “Their objective was to kidnap us to Gaza. Not to murder us,” she told Israeli network Kan News. “And after we were there for two hours with the abductors, the police arrive. A gun battle takes place that our police started.”

Porat, who said her captors “treated us very humanely,” described how she managed to escape the house by convincing one of the gunmen to exit with her. After using her as a “human shield” to exit the house, the Palestinian was taken into custody, and Porat remained on the scene as Israeli forces laid siege to the house. “They eliminated everyone, including the hostages. There was very, very heavy crossfire,” she said. “Everyone was killed there. Just horrible.”

Other witnesses at Be’eri have described how Israeli forces were able to retake the kibbutz from Palestinian fighters only after the IDF shelled houses where hostages were being held.

There is also evidence indicating that Israeli forces responding to the attacks at the Nova music festival, where 364 people died, may have killed Israeli civilians as they attacked Palestinian militants, including with munitions fired from Apache helicopters. Yedioth Ahronoth and other major Israeli media outlets have published reports detailing the massive fire from combat helicopters and drones unleashed against the gunmen who violently stormed the festival. Military sources described the difficulty in distinguishing civilians from attackers, particularly in the early phases of the Israeli counterstrike.

In the most sweeping journalistic account to date of the events surrounding the Israeli military’s operations on October 7, Ronen Bergman and Yoav Zitun — two well-connected and prominent Israeli journalists —wrote about the state of chaos and panic within the security establishment. They described “a command chain that failed almost entirely and was entirely blindsided; orders to open fire on terrorist vehicles speeding towards Gaza even as there was a concern that they contained captives — some sort of renewed version of the Hannibal Directive.”

The Hannibal Directive, which dates back to 1986 and has been the subject of great controversy in Israel, authorized military forces to stop the kidnapping of Israeli soldiers at all costs, even if it meant shooting or injuring the captives. In a 2003 investigation, the Israeli newspaper Haaretz reported the broadly held understanding of the directive: “From the point of view of the army, a dead soldier is better than a captive soldier who himself suffers and forces the state to release thousands of captives in order to obtain his release.”

The Hannibal Directive was allegedly rescinded in 2016. But Bergman and Zitun report that by midday on October 7, the IDF issued a similar order, instructing all units to stop Hamas from bringing hostages back to Gaza and to do so “at any cost.” They describe Israeli helicopter gunships, drones, and tanks firing on any and all cars en route to Gaza, burning them and in some cases killing everyone inside the vehicles. Haaretz reported on an IDF commander, locked in a subterranean bunker, calling in a strike against his own bases “in order to repulse the terrorists.”

The truth is that we do not know how many of their own people Israeli forces killed during the counteroffensive on October 7. Nor do we know what happened in the firefights when armed Israelis, including kibbutz private security and military personnel, sought to defend their settlements.

Beyond the deadly shelling of the house at Be’eri, the public has been given very few details of what exactly transpired when official Israeli military forces deployed to confront the commandos from Gaza. Israeli military and police forces engaged in prolonged standoffs and shootouts with Palestinian gunmen holed up in houses, police stations, military installations, and other buildings, often holding hostages. In some cases, these battles went on for days.

In November, Netanyahu senior adviser Mark Regev was asked by MSNBC host Mehdi Hasan about some of the lies told by Israeli officials and soldiers about the events of October 7. Regev remarked that when a claim has been proven false, Israel retracts or clarifies it. “We originally said, in the atrocious Hamas attack upon our people on October 7, we had the number at 1,400 casualties and now we’ve revised that down to 1,200 because we understood that we’d overestimated, we made a mistake,” Regev saidOpens in a new tab. He then added: “There were actually bodies that were so badly burnt we thought they were ours; in the end, apparently they were Hamas terrorists.”

Israel’s social security agency has stated that the death toll from October 7 is 1,139 people. It has identified 695 Israeli civilians killed that day, along with 71 foreigners, most of whom were migrant laborers. Some 373 members of Israeli military and security forces were reported dead.

Israel has estimated that between 1,000 and 1,500 Palestinian fighters were killed that day, many of them during assaults launched with advanced weapons fired from tanks, helicopters, and drones. How many Israelis — soldiers and civilians — were killed in the chaos and had their deaths recorded as killed or sadistically burned alive by Hamas? How many Israeli lives were sacrificed under Hannibal-style orders to prevent them from being taken hostage at all costs?

The answers to these questions will bring no absolution to those who initiated the carnage on October 7. No civilians would have died in those Israeli communities had Hamas not launched its operations. It is also true that if Israel had not engaged in a 75-year campaign of ethnic cleansing and apartheid, there would not have been an October 7. The illusion promoted by the Israeli state that its people could live a bucolic life in the “Gaza envelope” while their government enforced the caging and repression of 2.3 million Palestinians next door was shattered.

The families of the dead deserve to have answers. The specifics of what happened that day also matter because of how these events have shaped the public attitude toward Israel’s war, with its horrifying death toll, particularly among Palestinian children.

Faulty Justifications

Cynical manipulation of the truth has been a hallmark of Netanyahu’s career. He has long advocated for Hamas to achieve and maintain power in Gaza precisely because he believed it was the single best path to achieving his own colonial agenda.

“Anyone who wants to thwart the establishment of a Palestinian state has to support bolstering Hamas and transferring money to Hamas,” Netanyahu told his Likud confederates in 2019. The logic was clear: The world will never give the Palestinians a state while Hamas remains in power. That’s why, since at least 2012, Netanyahu has facilitated the continued flow of money to Hamas.

By January 18, with the horrors in Gaza intensifying, U.S. and European diplomats were telling anyone who would listen that they were deep into planning for a “day after” scenario that would pave the way for a two-state solution. Netanyahu responded to this chatter by giving a televised speech in Hebrew. “I clarify that in any arrangement in the foreseeable future, with an accord or without an accord, Israel must have security control over the entire territory west of the Jordan River,” Netanyahu said. “That’s a necessary condition. It clashes with the principle of sovereignty but what can you do?”

While it was reported as a defiant rebuke of his U.S. and European allies, there was nothing new in Netanyahu’s position. It has been the Likud party’s official stance since its 1977 charter. “Between the Sea and the Jordan there will only be Israeli sovereignty,” the document reads. “A plan which relinquishes parts of western Eretz Israel, undermines our right to the country, unavoidably leads to the establishment of a ‘Palestinian State,’ jeopardizes the security of the Jewish population, endangers the existence of the State of Israel, and frustrates any prospect of peace.”

The lies that were spread in the immediate aftermath of the October 7 attacks did not end there. Nearly every week, sometimes every day, the Israeli government and military have unloaded a fresh barrage of allegations intended to justify the ongoing slaughter. The hospitals are Hamas, the U.N. is Hamas, journalists are Hamas, European allies are Hamas, the International Court of Justice is antisemitic. The tactic is effective, particularly because the U.S. and other major allies have consistently laundered Israel’s unverified allegations as evidence of the righteousness of the cause.

The latest example is Israel’s campaign to destroy UNRWA, the single most important humanitarian organization in Gaza, which was established in 1949 specifically to protect Palestinians violently expelled from their homes and land by the creation of the Israeli state. Almost immediately after the ICJ ruled against Israel in the genocide case brought by South Africa in The Hague, Israel accused 12 of the organization’s 30,000 employees of participating in the October 7 attacks.

Israel then presented the U.S. and other governments with “intelligence” it claimed to have obtained from the interrogations of Palestinian captives, documents recovered from the bodies of dead Palestinians, seized cellphones, and signals intercepts. Israel charged that 10 percent of UNRWA’s 12,000-person local staff in Gaza had some form of “links” to Hamas. “The institution as a whole is a haven for Hamas’ radical ideology,” an anonymous senior Israeli official told the Wall Street Journal in a widely cited article penned by a former IDFb soldier.

The innuendo-laced allegation of UNRWA staff having undefined “links” to Hamas and Islamic Jihad, or “close relatives” who belong to the groups is a risible charge given that Hamas is not just an armed militia, but also the governing civil authority in Gaza.

The U.S. responded to Israel’s allegations by immediately announcing it was suspending all funding to UNRWA. “We haven’t had the ability to investigate [the allegations] ourselves,” Blinken admitted on January 30. Nonetheless, he declared: “They are highly, highly credible.”

But journalists from Sky News reviewed the so-called dossier and reported, “The Israeli intelligence documents make several claims that Sky News has not seen proof of and many of the claims, even if true, do not directly implicate UNRWA.” Britain’s Channel 4 also obtained the document and determined it “provides no evidence to support its explosive new claim that UNRWA staff were involved with terror attacks on Israel.” The Financial Times, which also reviewed the materials, reported there were specific allegations of direct participation in the October 7 attacks against four Palestinians employed by UNRWA, not 12 as originally asserted.

This was a transparent attempt by Israel to distract from the rulings in the ICJ genocide case and to obliterate a U.N. agency that Israel has long viewedOpens in a new tab as an impediment to its goal of denying Palestinians the right to return to the homes and territory from which Israel expelled them. It was also an action that explicitly violated the orders issued by the world court, which directed Israel to “take immediate and effective measures to enable the provision of urgently needed basic services and humanitarian assistance.” Based on Israel’s sweeping and unverified allegations alone, the U.S. led scores of Western nations to denounce the U.N. agency and pull their funding at the moment it is needed most.

From weapons and intelligence to political, diplomatic, and legal support, Israel has wanted for nothing from the Biden administration. The mounting pile of Palestinian civilian corpses and their surviving family members, meanwhile, are relegated to the workshopped afterthoughts uttered by Western politicians who have been told they should occasionally squeeze a line or two into their speeches about death and suffering in Gaza.

Propaganda and weaponized lies can only obscure the dead bodies, the forced starvation, the mass killing of children, and the utter destruction of an entire society for so long. Over time, it becomes increasingly difficult to conceal the nexus between the actions taken by Israel after October 7, the mendacious narratives it deployed, and Netanyahu’s desperate struggle to retain political power and his personal liberty. The 1,200 Israeli and international victims of October 7, and the more than 27,000 Palestinians whose deaths were justified in their names, deserve an unvarnished rendering of the truth.

https://libya360.wordpress.com/2024/02/ ... -on-truth/

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U.S. Escalates War - Strikes Group Which Had Followed Orders To Stand Down

Updated below (9:00 UTC):

On January 28 a drone strike killed U.S. soldiers near an (illegal) U.S. base on the Syrian/Iraqi/Jordan border triangle. The attack followed after open U.S. support for the Israeli attempt to genocide Gaza.

Yesterday a U.S. 'retaliation' strike on leaders of an Iraqi militia under the command of the Iraqi Ministry of Interior killed two top officers of Kataib Hezbullah. (The Iraqi militia Kataib Hezbollah is not related to Hezbullah in Lebanon):

U.S. Strike in Baghdad Kills Iranian-Backed Militia Commander (archived) - New York Times, Feb 7 2024

Videos from the scene showed the charred wreckage of a vehicle in a neighborhood of eastern Baghdad, and a nearby fire.
A senior Kata’ib Hezbollah official and Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Corps both said that two commanders had been killed in the strike. Witnesses said identification cards found nearby identified them as Arkan al-Elayawi and Abu Bakir al-Saadi.

In response, crowds gathered at the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad, chanting “America is the devil.”

Wednesday’s strike came after three quieter days in the Mideast, following American salvos on Friday and Saturday, the first in what Mr. Biden and his aides have said will be a sustained campaign of retaliation.


The U.S. strike came days after Kataib Hezbullah had promised to follow orders from the Iraqi government to stand down and to cease all hostile activities.

As Reuters reported last week:

Iraq's Kataib Hezbollah says it suspends attacks on US forces - Reuters, Jan 30 2024

Iran-aligned Iraqi armed group Kataib Hezbollah announced on Tuesday the suspension of all its military operations against U.S. troops in the region, in a decision aimed at preventing "embarrassment" of the Iraqi government, the group said.
"As we announce the suspension of military and security operations against the occupation forces - in order to prevent embarrassment of the Iraqi government - we will continue to defend our people in Gaza in other ways," Kataib Hezbollah Secretary-General Abu Hussein al-Hamidawi said in a statement.

Three U.S. troops were killed in a drone attack near the Jordan-Syria border on Sunday that the Pentagon said bore the "footprints" of Kataib Hezbollah, though a final assessment had not yet been made.

A Pentagon spokesperson declined to comment on the group's statement, adding: "Actions speak louder than words."


The order to stand down had come from the Prime Minister of Iraq but was also supported by the government of Iran which has some ideological influence on Kataib Hizbullah:

Kataib Hezbollah's decision followed days of intensive efforts by Iraq's prime minister to prevent a new escalation after the Jordan attack, his foreign affairs adviser Farhad Alaadin said.
"Prime Minister Mohammed Shia Al-Sudani has been hard at work in the past few days, engaging with all relevant parties inside and outside Iraq," Alaadin said in an interview.

"All sides need to support the efforts of the Prime Minister to prevent any possible escalation," he added.

In its statement, Kataib Hezbollah also said there were disagreements with allies over its attacks, singling out Iran.

It said counterparts in the Axis of Resistance "often object to the pressure and escalation against the American occupation forces in Iraq and Syria," the statement said.


But a week after Kataib Hezbullah, under order of the Iraqi Prime Minister, announced its stand down, the U.S. escalated the situation by killing two Kataib leaders, Abu Baqir al-Saadi and Hajj Arkan al-Alaywi, with a drone strike in the mid of Baghdad.

Kataib Hezbollah is a member of the Popular Mobilization Forces of Iraq which are an official part of the security services of Iraq. An attack on it is an attack on the State of Iraq.

This to me seems to be an intentional escalation by the U.S. designed to deepen the conflicts in the Middle East.

Already the first U.S. 'retaliation strike' after the January 28 attack which hit some 85 alleged targets was quite exaggerated.

Several other 'retaliation strike' against Houthi positions in the center of Yemen also seemed to be far more devastating than Houthi action against seaborne assets, related to Israel and the U.S/UK, would allow for.

It looks like the Biden administration is intentionally hitting back much harder than would be appropriate.

It may well hope that such exaggerated 'revenge' strikes will create some 'deterrence'.

But any such believe is false.

When Kataib Hezbullah leaders are killed, after they had followed orders to stand down, than other Kataib members will ignore all future stand down orders and restart their own attacks on U.S. positions in Iraq and elsewhere.

The U.S. wants a larger war in the Middle East?

The way it behaves it is likely to get one.

Update (9:00 UTC):

The Office of the Prime Minister of Iraq has responded to the U.S. attack:

المكتب الإعلامي لرئيس الوزراء 🇮🇶 @IraqiPMO - 8:09 UTC · Feb 8, 2024
American forces has repeated irresponsibly all the actions that would undermine the established understandings and hinder the initiation of bilateral dialogue. It conducted a blatant assassination through an airstrike in the heart of a residential neighborhood in the capital, Baghdad, showing no regard for civilian lives or international laws.

By this act, the American forces jeopardize civil peace, violate Iraqi sovereignty, and disregard the safety and lives of our citizens. Even more concerning is that the coalition consistently deviates from the reasons and objectives for its presence on our territory.

This trajectory compels the Iraqi government more than ever to terminate the mission of this coalition, which has become a factor for instability and threatens to entangle Iraq in the cycle of conflict, and our armed forces cannot neglect their constitutional duties and responsibilities, which demand safeguarding the security of Iraqis and the land of Iraq from all threats.

God's mercy and honor to the martyrs of this attack and to all martyrs of Iraq.

Major General Special Forces

Yehia Rasool

The Spokesperson for the Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces


Also this from another PMF militia:

Marwa Osman || مروة عثمان @Marwa__Osman - 5:43 UTC · Feb 8, 2024
Statement Issued by the Iraqi Islamic Resistance Al-Nujabaa Movement after the US assassinated Hezbollah Brigade leader in Baghdad:

"In the name of Allah, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful. "O you who have believed, fight those adjacent to you of the disbelievers and let them find in you harshness. And know that Allah is with the righteous." [Quran 9:123]

O valiant resistors, you who fight the oppressive occupier, now is your time, this is your battle. By Allah, it is nothing but a single death, so let it be with honor and dignity. Let our revenge for the blood of the martyrs be to hold America, its allies, partners, and interests accountable. Let this be our first and foremost cause from now on.

Today, in the heart of the Iraqi capital Baghdad, the treacherous American aircraft targets the revered commander in the Popular Mobilization Forces and the Hezbollah Brigades, the martyr Abu Baqir Al-Saadi. The commander Al-Saadi was affiliated with an official Iraqi institution linked to the General Commander of the Armed Forces, leading to his martyrdom.

Where is sovereignty and the sanctity of blood and land? Iraqi people, let this disregard for Iraqi blood be a constant reminder. By Allah, this will not be limited to the sons of the Popular Mobilization Forces or the men of the resistance alone. The hand of treachery will extend to anyone who stands against this oppressive occupier, even those who think they are safe from the flames of occupation. If there is not a firm and decisive official stance from the Iraqi government, our response will be resolute, with the permission of Allah. These crimes will not go unpunished, and you will know then that our patience has run out.

Await our response, as we will choose the appropriate time and place, and the outcome is for the righteous.

The Islamic Resistance Movement of Al-Nujaba
Thursday, 8th of February, 2024
Corresponding to 27th of Rajab, 1445 Hijriyah."


Posted by b on February 8, 2024 at 8:26 UTC | Permalink

https://www.moonofalabama.org/2024/02/u ... .html#more

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Besieged Gazans brace themselves for Israeli assault on Rafah
Israel prime minister has rejected a new truce proposal and ordered troops to prepare for an attack on the overcrowded city

News Desk

FEB 8, 2024

Image
(Photo credit: Abed Rahim Khatib/DPA)

Nearly two million Palestinians stranded in Gaza's southern city of Rafah have been struck with panic, in anticipation of an onslaught hours after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu rejected a new truce proposal and ordered the army to prepare an attack on the city.

“Panic is growing in Rafah” after the prime minister’s statement, Al-Jazeera reported on 8 February.

As the army prepares to move into southernmost Rafah, where displaced Palestinians from across the strip are taking shelter, Israeli jets are stepping up air raids on the crowded city.

Since Wednesday evening, 14 people – including five children – were killed in Israeli strikes on Rafah.

Al-Jazeera’s Hani Mahmoud reported from Rafah on Thursday that “what people are experiencing in the southern part of the Gaza Strip is a surge in attacks from air, land and sea.”

“The children are scared all the time, and if we want to leave Rafah, we don’t know where to go. What will be our destiny and that of our children?” Sara Maarouf, a woman displaced from the north of Gaza, told Al-Jazeera.

In the first months of the war, hundreds of thousands of residents in north and central Gaza were forced to flee to Rafah – where Tel Aviv repeatedly said civilians would be safe from harm. Israeli warplanes nonetheless continued to bombard Rafah.

As the army began pushing into the southern city of Khan Yunis in early December, hundreds of thousands more were forced deeper south into Rafah. Palestinians are trapped in the city as fighting rages across the entirety of the strip, where homes and infrastructure have been wiped out.

A military operation in Rafah would have catastrophic effects on the civilian population. In mid-December, the UN said that nearly half of Gaza’s entire population is now in Rafah.

On Wednesday evening, Netanyahu publicly rejected the latest truce proposal being mediated by the US, Qatar, and Egypt. The prime minister declared that the Israeli army has been ordered to prepare for the assault on Rafah.

"Giving in to the bizarre demands of Hamas that we have just heard will ... only invite another massacre," Netanyahu said in reference to Hamas’ response to the proposal, which makes many demands, the main ones being an end to the war and a withdrawal of Israeli troops from Gaza. The Hamas response also calls for a prisoner exchange, an end to the blockade of Gaza, and a reconstruction of the war-ravaged enclave.

“Victory is within reach,” the prime minister added, vowing to continue the war until Israel’s stated goal of eradicating Hamas is completed.

He added the army had been ordered to “prepare to operate” in Rafah and that the coming months would bring “total victory.”

As Israel rejected the proposal, US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken said that Hamas’ response included “some clear non-starters,” but has the potential to “create space for agreement to be reached.”

https://thecradle.co/articles/besieged- ... t-on-rafah
"There is great chaos under heaven; the situation is excellent."

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Re: Palestine

Post by blindpig » Sat Feb 10, 2024 1:32 am

The U.S. Failed ‘Shock and Awe’ Aggression in Iraq and Syria – with Seyed Mohammad Marandi
Posted by INTERNATIONALIST 360° on FEBRUARY 8, 2024
Vanessa Beeley

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From Tehran – Seyed Mohammad Marandi discusses the imminent decline of U.S. allied hegemony and the global humiliation of Israel

The Syrian Ministry of Defence issued the following statement (translated from Arabic) on the U.S. attacks carried out at dawn on the 3rd February:

Today at dawn, the American occupation forces launched a blatant air attack on a number of sites and towns in the eastern region of Syria, near the Syrian-Iraqi border, which led to the death of a number of civilians and soldiers, the injury of others, and the infliction of significant damage to public and private property.

The area targeted by the American attacks in eastern Syria is the same area where the Syrian Arab Army is fighting the remnants of the terrorist organization ISIS. This confirms that the United States and its military forces are involved and allied with this organization, and are working to revive it as a field arm for it, both in Syria and Iraq, by all dirty means.

The aggression of the American occupation forces at dawn today has no justification other than an attempt to weaken the ability of the Syrian Arab Army and its allies in the field of fighting terrorism, but the army that was able to defeat various terrorist organizations over the past years will continue with its steadfastness and its principle of defending Syria’s land and people and striking all organizations no matter how hard they try. Its sponsors and supporters hinder this goal.

The occupation of parts of Syrian territory by American forces cannot continue, and the General Command of the Army and Armed Forces affirms its continuation of its war against terrorism until its elimination and its determination to liberate the entire Syrian territory from all terrorism and occupation.

While the U.S. claimed it was targeting Iranian Revolutionary Guard (IRGC) positions, the reality is that the casualties were civilians, Syrian Arab Army (SAA) forces and PMU (Iraqi Resistance factions). In other words, the targets were the enemies of U.S. proxy terrorist group, ISIS in Iraq and Syria.


As promised, here is the conversation with Tehran Professor and geopolitical analyst Seyed Mohammad Marandi.

We discuss everything from the failure of the U.S. shock and awe bombing campaign that has only strengthened the Resistance resolve in Iraq and Syria to expel illegal U.S. military from both nations.

Marandi argues that Israel has been humiliated globally due to its genocidal campaign against Palestinians and that it cannot survive without the support of the West, also in sharp decline.

We talk about Iranian relations with Iraq and Pakistan, recently affected by Iranian strikes on Mossad and terrorist bases in both countries. We cover the potential for a suicidal Zionist invasion of southern Lebanon and the preparation by Hezbollah for just such a scenario.

And much more…



https://libya360.wordpress.com/2024/02/ ... d-marandi/

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Ceasefire or truce? Any Gaza deal could break Netanyahu’s coalition

The fate of Israel’s coalition government now hangs on a Gaza agreement. A short truce will continue the war and Tel Aviv’s global censure. A full ceasefire will deliver a Hamas victory.


Khalil Harb

FEB 8, 2024

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Photo Credit: The Cradle
There are two words that sum up all the noise around the Paris negotiations over a Gaza war settlement today: "temporary" and "sustainable."

The truce envisaged by the parties present in Paris – Qatar, Egypt, Israel, the US, and France – is a "framework agreement." The Israeli occupation authorities want any deal to deliver only a "temporary cessation of military operations," which augurs an eventual resumption of its massacre in Gaza. Hamas and other Palestinian resistance factions, meanwhile, are proposing, through various amendments, a complete cessation of military operations as a prelude to a "sustainable calm."

It is not yet clear why the US administration of Joe Biden, the official sponsor of Israel’s four-month-long massacre, insists on dealing with the "Gaza war" file as if its core issue is the release of Israeli prisoners held in Gaza – rather than the resolution of a decades-long occupation of Palestinian lands and people that led to the state of affairs today.

Any treatment or settlement of this war must start with the occupation and its vast repercussions – the very essence of the conflict. Instead, the White House’s stance reflects an American view that Washington does not bear sole responsibility for now, and raises questions about the nature and effectiveness of the role of the Qatari and Egyptian "mediators."

The latter two Arab states were part of the Paris discussions to draft the agreement over a week ago, with US–Israeli intelligence agencies represented by CIA Chief William Burns, Mossad Chief David Barnea, and the head of the Israeli Shin Bet Ronen Barr.

Hours after Hamas announced the submission of its "framework agreement" response to the Qatari and Egyptian mediators, statements issued by the Israelis and Americans revealed their intent to sabotage a genuine peace or a halt to military conflict.

US President Biden commented prematurely by saying that Hamas' remarks were "exaggerated," while Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant – fresh out of talks with US Secretary of State Antony Blinken – said the response presented by Hamas was "negative," and was intentionally drafted to be rejected by Israel.

From his perspective, Gallant isn’t exactly wrong. What Israel seeks from the agreement is a US–Arab mandate to restart its war once Israeli prisoners have been released by Gaza's resistance.

Israel's commitment to genocide

The bottom line is fairly unambiguous: Israel wants a continuous war. Gallant concedes publicly that "the war is far from over." Netanyahu, after meeting Blinken, said, "We have to end the war with a landslide victory, and it is a matter of time. Our army is advancing systematically, and we have ordered the army to work in Rafah," where the occupation army has for days been threatening a major offensive along the border with Egypt. This will mean the re-displacement of hundreds of thousands of Palestinians already displaced to the border area over the past weeks.

A leading source in the Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ), which participated in preparing the resistance’s response to the Paris document, tells The Cradle that the paper presented to the Palestinian factions "did not include any agreement to end the war.” As matters currently stand, he says:

There is no such thing. There is a truce and a prisoner exchange, and then the issue of stopping the war will be discussed in later stages.

The PIJ official reveals that the document presented to Hamas was "booby-trapped and full of mines and tricks," and says Qatar and Egypt are essentially telling Hamas to submit to a three-month ceasefire, and trust that the Israeli army will do nothing after that.

This Qatari–Egyptian encouragement seems aspirational at best, perhaps betting on the possibility that upcoming US presidential elections heat up – just as the proposed truce ends – and will prevent Netanyahu from resuming his bloody attack on Gaza. The Palestinian source, however, says that the resistance has no such fantasies and addressed the agreement document accordingly, as it guarantees nothing – neither the withdrawal of tanks nor the prevention of war and targeted assassinations.

Demands of the Palestinian resistance

According to available information, internal discussions within and between Hamas and the other resistance factions took place after receiving the Paris document from an Egyptian mediator. The Palestinian source says that while a large part of the Hamas decision lies with the group’s leader in Gaza, Yahya Sinwar, Hamas’ political bureau (based in Qatar), represented by Ismail Haniyeh, Khaled Meshaal, and Musa Abu Marzouk, also met and offered their opinions to the decisionmakers in Gaza.

The holdup over a final agreement depends almost entirely on the dispute between those who seek a "temporary" solution to the war, and others who demand a "sustainable" one.

Entitled "General Framework for a Comprehensive Agreement between the Parties," the document breaks down the proposed truce into three phases:

The first, lasting 45 days, includes a clause about "a temporary cessation of military operations, the cessation of aerial reconnaissance, and the repositioning of Israeli forces away outside densely populated areas throughout the Gaza Strip, in order to enable the parties to complete the exchange of detainees and prisoners." In subsequent phases, the document refers to "initiating [indirect] discussions on the requirements for restoring calm," the entry of and Palestinian access to aid and fuel, and the reconstruction of hospitals and introduction of tents and other temporary housing units.

There were few details on how any of this would be done, and within what timelines, once the prisoner exchange was complete. Hamas’ amendments sought to rectify that, clarifying the length of these phases and establishing clear deliverables.

As the agreement stands – per Israeli wishes – it does not include any reference to the cessation of military aggression on Gaza. The Palestinian Ministry of Health confirms that the Israeli aggression has so far – since 7 October – led to the death of around 28,000 Palestinians and the injury of 70,000 others, while Israeli air raids, artillery shelling, and ground operations have damaged over 60 percent of housing units – completely destroying 53,000 of them.

In the four-month absence of effective Arab and international protection of Palestinian civilian life, it was left to Sinwar and his Gazan colleagues to address the paper with tangible, urgent requirements of Palestinians. In Hamas’ "Initial Response" amendments submitted to the Paris group, it introduces its response as thus:

This agreement aims to stop mutual military operations between the parties, reach complete and sustainable calm, exchange prisoners between the two parties, end the siege on Gaza, [allow for its] reconstruction, return residents and displaced persons to their homes, and provide shelter requirements and relief for all residents in all areas of the Gaza Strip.

In its response, Hamas added an "annex to the framework agreement," noting that this annex is an integral part of the deal and specifying that the guarantors of the agreement are Egypt, Qatar, Turkey, Russia, and the United Nations. Other than requiring a “complete and sustainable” ceasefire, Hamas demanded some key deliverables that would help maintain the peace, including ending the current occupation of Gaza, launching a large-scale relief program for hundreds of thousands of displaced people, and sheltering them, before launching a comprehensive reconstruction phase.

This is anathema for the Israelis, who want to avoid ‘the devil in the details’ as much as possible. Tel Aviv just needs a prisoner exchange to re-arrange its domestic political scene – whether public dissent or power struggles within its coalition – before unleashing the worst of its military firepower on Gaza.

Even after receiving Hamas’ response, Israel’s security services are still betting that an assassination of Sinwar will deliver it a victory – as though more resistance won’t rise in his place. During Blinken’s visit, Netanyahu crowed about permanently eliminating Hamas leaders in Gaza and vowed to invade Rafah – ignoring the concerns of the Egyptian mediators.

Publicly, the Israelis pushed a narrative that Hamas was scuttling the agreement. Privately, Tel Aviv was rushing to ascertain whether the Hamas response – which Qatar delivered to the Mossad – represented a final position or was open to further negotiation.

As one Israeli analyst noted in Haaretz, Netanyahu is in the toughest of positions given the positive Hamas response. If the deal goes through, the Israeli prime minister will be forced to choose one of the two sides in his coalition government: either the extremist wing consisting of right-wing settlers like National Defense Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir and Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich, or the more US-friendly wing led by Minister Gadi Eisenkot and war council member Benny Gantz. In short, either Gantz and Eisenkot will dissolve the emergency Israeli government, or Ben Gvir and Smotrich will.

All of this revolves around whether there is a "truce" or not, about its duration or permanence, and the details of which Palestinian detainees in occupation jails will be included in a prisoner exchange. Not to mention the possibility of myriad flare-ups in the interim: the recognition of Palestinian statehood by some western allies, the perceived Palestinian victory in Gaza if the war ends, the advancement of a genuine ‘two-state solution,’ and continued escalations on Israel’s northern border and in the Red Sea.

The extremists in Israel’s government cannot abide a cessation of its Gaza genocide, let alone the thought that its US ally is warming up to the idea of a Palestinian state.

In the final analysis, Hamas’ pragmatic and logical amendments to the agreement are what Tel Aviv fears most: a permanent ceasefire built on strictly determined phases, timelines, and deliverables guaranteed by regional states and world powers, who, in order to stop this problem once and for all, now have their eye on enforcing a permanent resolution to the Palestinian issue.

https://thecradle.co/articles/ceasefire ... -coalition

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New York Times Defames Iraq's Militia As 'Foreign Elements'

The New York Times engages in a mischievous attempt to depict Iraq's popular mobilization forces as an element that is foreign to Iraq and under Iranian control.

Iraq Hosts Both U.S. and Iranian-Backed Forces. It’s Getting Tense. (archived) - New York Times, Feb 7 2024
As Iranian-backed groups and American forces, both of which have bases in Iraq, lock horns around the Mideast, things are becoming uncomfortable for the Iraqi government.


This is from the get go of the headline blatant nonsense:

For years, Iraq has managed to pull off an unlikely balancing act, allowing armed forces tied to both the United States and Iran, an American nemesis, to operate on its soil.
Now things are getting shaky.

When Washington, Tehran and Baghdad all wanted the same thing — the defeat of the Islamic State terrorist group — the relationships were fairly tenable, but in recent months, as the war in the Gaza Strip sends ripples across the region, American and Iranian-backed forces have clashed repeatedly in Iraq and Syria. A U.S. strike on one of those militias last week killed 16 Iraqis, and Iraq is saying it has had enough.

“Our land and sovereign authority is not the right place for rival forces to send messages and show their strength.” the office of Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani said in a statement on Sunday.

For many years, both Iran and the United States had their proponents within the Iraqi government, and the Iranian-backed armed groups and the American troops lived in a tolerable if uneasy balance.
...
Now, Mr. Sudani’s government is sounding increasingly tough.

Its statement Sunday denouncing the fighting on its soil was particularly pointed in its criticism of the United States, describing last week’s attack in western Iraq as “a blatant aggression” that had jeopardized talks on reducing the number of American troops in Iraq. “Violence only begets violence,” the statement warned.


How is the U.S. foreign occupation force, that has been ordered by a majority in the Iraqi parliament to leave the country, comparable to militia groups of Iraqis founded by the Iraqi government, paid by it, and under its direct control?

It ain't.

The Popular Mobilization Force ...

... is an Iraqi state-sponsored umbrella organization composed of approximately 67 different armed factions, with around 230,000 fighters that are mostly Shia Muslim groups, but also include Sunni Muslim, Christian, and Yazidi groups. The Popular Mobilization Units as a group was formed in 2014 and have fought in nearly every major battle against ISIL.
...
The People's Mobilization Forces (PMF) were formed by the Iraqi government on 15 June 2014 after top Iraqi Shia cleric Ali al-Sistani's non-sectarian fatwa on "Sufficiency Jihad" on 13 June. The fatwa called for defending Iraqi cities, particularly Baghdad, and to participate in the counter-offensive against ISIL, following the Fall of Mosul on 10 June 2014. The forces brought together a number of Shia militias, most of which receive direct support from Iran, along with a small number of Sunni tribesmen by uniting existing militias under the "People's Mobilization Committee" of the Iraqi Ministry of Interior in June 2014.
The forces would fall under the umbrella of the state's security services and within the legal frameworks and practices of the Ministry of Interior. On 19 December 2016, Iraqi President Fuad Masum approved a law passed by parliament in November that incorporated PMU in the country's armed forces.


The Iraqi PMF groups were founded by the Iraqi government and are under its control. Some of them are Shia and some may have an ideological affinity to Iran.

In 2014 and later many of these groups, Shia as well as others, received equipment and training from Iran to fight against ISIS. This help was delivered following requests from the Iraqi government.

That does not make those groups into an Iranian element or into something outside of the Iraqi security forces. They are an integral part of the Iraqi state.

To depict these as 'Iran-backed' outside groups comparable to the unwanted U.S. occupation forces in Iraq is pure falsehood designed to allow for attacks on those groups even when such attacks are in fact attacks on the security forces of Iraq and condemned by the Iraqi government.

Posted by b on February 7, 2024 at 17:51 UTC | Permalink

https://www.moonofalabama.org/2024/02/n ... .html#more

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Israel launches airstrikes against Syria

Blinken has failed to achieve most of the stated goals of his repeated visits to the region since October 7 including getting commitment from Saudi Arabia to normalize relations with Israel

February 07, 2024 by Peoples Dispatch

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Syrian media reported Israeli airstrikes on Homs. Photo: SANA

Israel launched missile attacks on Homs and surrounding areas in Syria in the early morning of Wednesday, February 7 killing scores of civilians and destroying significant civilian infrastructure hours before US Secretary of State Antony Blinken’s visit to the country.

“At approximately 00:30 at dawn on Wednesday, the Israeli enemy launched an aerial attack with missiles from the direction of northern Tripoli” Syrian Arab News Agency (SANA) reported. Citing unnamed sources, SANA also said that some of the Israeli missiles were intercepted by the Syrian air defense.

According to Al-Mayadeen, at least four civilians were killed and seven others were wounded in the attacks. The number of casualties may increase as some of the buildings in Homs city collapsed due to the impact of the attack.

The attacks were completely unprovoked and came a day after Syria along with several other countries including Russia and China raised the issue of the violation of its sovereignty by the US, Israel’s closest ally, in the UN Security Council.

The attacks in Syria also coincide with the fifth visit of the Blinken to the region ever since the Israeli war on Gaza began on October 7. One of the stated purposes of Blinken’s repeated visits to the region has been to restrain any possibility of regional escalation of the war.

Despite its stated policy, US forces carried out attacks on Syria and Iraq on Friday February 2 which was considered the largest since the 2003 Iraq war. This has invited global condemnation with countries expressing apprehensions about its possible impact on global peace and security.

Israel has also repeatedly carried out attacks on the neighboring Lebanon and Syria since the beginning of its war on Gaza killing scores of civilians.

The Israeli war in Gaza has killed over 27,500 people including more than 10,000 children and wounded close to 67,000 others. It has also displaced most of the pre-war Gaza population.

Blinken went to Saudi Arabia on Monday and visited Cairo and Qatar on Tuesday. He is expected to meet Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Tel Aviv on Wednesday as well as Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas in Ramallah.

It is already underlined that the US has failed to convince Israel to implement the UN Security Council resolution on the increased humanitarian assistance to Gaza adopted in December. Netanyahu has repeatedly denied any possibility of a two-state solution despite US calls for it. Some of the top Israeli leadership have asked for building settlements inside Gaza going openly against the US declaration against any such plans.

Though Blinken’s visit is expected to give a formal shape to the proposed ceasefire deal between Hamas and Israel, serious concerns have been raised about the fate of the deal. Israel started its air and ground offensive in Rafah also on Wednesday despite concerns of large scale civilian casualties because it is home to close to a million Palestinians who have been forced to flee their homes due to Israeli war.

Blinken also reiterated the US position of normalization of relations between Israel and Saudi Arabia during his visit to Riyadh on Monday. However, Saudi Arabia has maintained that it does not want to establish any formal relations with Israel until there is an independent Palestinian state.

“The kingdom has communicated its firm position to the US administration that there will be no diplomatic relationship with Israel until an independent Palestinian state is recognized on the 1967 borders with East Jerusalem as its capital and that the Israeli aggression of Gaza Strip stops and all Israeli occupation forces withdraw” Saudi Arabia’s foreign ministry said in a statement on Wednesday, days after Blinken’s visit.

https://peoplesdispatch.org/2024/02/07/ ... nst-syria/

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Israeli Government’s Lies About Gaza Shouldn’t Be a Surprise
Posted on February 8, 2024 by Yves Smith

Yves here. This post is an interesting artifact of the persistence of reticence to criticize Israel for its open policy of genocide and its persistence it it even after the ICJ implemented provisional measures intended to stop it. Perhaps this caution is due to censorship threats in the UK.

Note that author Paul Rogers pairs his discussion of Israel’s slaughter of Palestinians, which he refuses to depict as the point of the exercise, with Israel’s banging on about Hamas as a threadbare cover story.

In the meantime, as many of you know now, Israel has contemptuously rejected Hamas’ call for a 135 day (phased) ceasefire and withdrawal of the IDF. From the Financial Times:


In a press conference on Wednesday night, Netanyahu instead vowed to continue Israel’s military offensive in Gaza until “total victory” was secured, saying his country would achieve this “within months”.

“We won’t settle for less,” he said. “Surrendering to Hamas’s delusional demands . . . will not only not lead to the release of the hostages, but will invite another massacre.”


However, the Financial Times gives more prominent play to the continuing slaughter, although the onus is on readers to connect the dots that this is policy, and not an unfortunate byproduct:

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Israel’s four-month military campaign in the besieged Gaza Strip has trapped more than half of the enclave’s population in a sliver of land between the Israeli ground offensive, the Mediterranean and the sealed border with Egypt.

It is a humanitarian crisis with few modern parallels. Now Israel has said its forces will target the city of Rafah in its campaign against Hamas, whose senior leaders in Gaza have evaded capture…

The estimated 1.4mn people crammed into the southern border city, already enduring dire conditions and intermittent bombings, have nowhere further to flee.

Fear of the coming offensive pervades the sprawling tent camps in Rafah, lashed by winter rain, where most of the displaced live after Israel’s military advanced from north to south, razing at least half of the strip’s buildings….

Recent satellite images, radar data on building damage and interviews with displaced people show the extent of the pressure on Gazans in Rafah and the dangers of any extensive Israeli military operations in the densely packed area…

Running water is rare, toilets overflow and fresh food is too expensive for most. Israel has laid siege to the strip since the war began, and only limited aid has entered; people rely on intermittent deliveries of food and medicine trucked in by the UN and others.

The story has a good set of visuals on the progress of the Israel attacks and Palestinian flight, as well as more detailed satellite photos of the Rafah area.

Now to the main event.

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

The on-the-ground situation in Gaza is increasingly difficult to reconcile with the persistent claims from the Israeli government that its defence forces are prioritising the minimising of civilian casualties.

More than 27,000 Palestinians – mostly women and children – have been killed and several thousand are missing according to the Gazan Health Ministry, with many more buried under rubble. More than 66,000 have been wounded, with many thousands more traumatised.

For those who survive this prolonged, horrific attack, there will be life-long impacts on health and life expectancy caused by the malnutrition and spread of infectious diseases being reported by UN bodies such as the UN Relief and Works Agency, the World Health Organisation and the World Food Programme.

Israel president Binyamin Netanyahu’s claims may now seem beyond farcical, but they make a kind of sense if seen as the claims of a government following two different policies at the same time, with messages intended for different audiences.

Given the impact that the mass killing of Palestinians is now having on Israel’s few remaining allies – especially the US and UK, where protests in support of Palestinians regularly draw large crowds – Israel must maintain the pretence of an orderly war with few civilians killed.

Netanyahu’s government is lying, but it would be naive to expect otherwise. Lying is what many powerful states routinely do, particularly in wartime.

The classic example, after all, is on nuclear strategy. Most governments publicly take the stance that nuclear weapons are solely weapons of last resort, the ultimate deterrent to be used when all else has failed. That may be reassuring, but it isn’t true.

In reality, all the nuclear powers – the US, the UK, France, China, Russia and the rest – can see value in nuclear forces that could be used in circumstances of limited war.

Right from the start of Britain’s nuclear age in the late 1950s, consideration was given to using nuclear weapons in all conflicts short of world wars. Some of the earliest nuclear weapons were actually free-fall bombs for use by Scimitar and Buccaneer strike aircraft operating from the Royal Navy’s aircraft carriers in distant waters from early in the 1960s. Nuclear weapons were carried on task force ships during the Falklands/Malvinas war more than 40 years ago. There were even threats of nuclear use from senior politicians during the Iraq war 20 years ago.

US nuclear plans have also existed in myriad different forms. In NATO for example, nuclear options extended from ‘demonstration’ shots to show the Soviets the US meant business, to limited ‘packets’ of nuclear weapons that might include nuclear artillery shells, short-range missiles, to powerful weapons.

The numbers in a package might vary from a handful to 50 or more, always with the idea that a limited nuclear war could be ‘won’, and the opponent defeated.

In both the UK and the US, this reality was a very far cry from the public idea of stable deterrence – but that was only ever the declaratory policy. What we are witnessing in Gaza is something akin to this, an implementation policy that differs from what is said in public – the declaratory policy. Israel has repeatedly failed to minimise civilian casualties and the current Gaza war is no exception apart, of course, from the sheer size of the Palestinian death toll.

From early in Israel’s current attack on Gaza, I have argued the Netanyahu government fell into Hamas’s trap by declaring that nothing less than the group’s total destruction would suffice. This remained the aim even when Israel’s Western allies were getting uneasy at the sheer number of Palestinian civilian casualties.

We are now at the end of the fourth month of the war. Palestinian casualties are massive but Netanyahu and the IDF persist, combining large-scale bombing with attempts to dislodge Hamas paramilitaries.

In areas like northern Gaza, where the IDF has claimed full control for over a month, Hamas continues to fight and fire rockets into Israel, and there are even reports that the group “is rebuilding a system of governance”. Meanwhile, the IDF and intelligence agencies clearly do not know where Hamas is holding a hundred or more hostages.

The really damaging outcome for Israel is that right across the region and beyond, it has lost its reputation for being in control of its security. For a state that puts such a huge stake on being secure, 7 October was a disaster of historic proportions, but the response of this particular government is proving to be an even greater disaster as the Palestinian death toll heads beyond 30,000 and Israel’s reputation plummets as never before.

In short, it is proving extremely difficult to destroy Hamas, the Palestinian death toll rises by the day, half the houses in Gaza have been destroyed or damaged and many thousands of Palestinians are facing the winter in tents. Meanwhile, hard-line Israeli politicians in Netanyahu’s government talk openly of the need to replace Palestinians in Gaza with Israeli settlers and the national security minister, Itmar Ben-Gvir, argues that aid convoys into Gaza should cease.

At some point, reality will intrude, the war will end and Israel will have to start coming to terms with a very different security environment, one that can be resolved only by talking to the Palestinians and working towards a mutually acceptable long-term peace deal.

The US could speed that up, as the only state that has anything like a veto on Israel due to its massive military support. So far there is not much sign of that, but Joe Biden is facing increasing domestic opposition and that may, before long, make a difference.

https://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2024/02 ... prise.html

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Re: Palestine

Post by blindpig » Sat Feb 10, 2024 12:23 pm

Hamas Presents Three-Stage Truce Deal, Demands Full Israeli Withdrawal From Gaza
FEBRUARY 8, 2024

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Palestinian fighters with the Qassam Brigades, the military wing of Hamas, pictured in Gaza in July. Photo: Majdi Fathi/APA.

The resistance group has called on Egypt, Qatar, Turkiye, Russia, and the UN to act as guarantors of the truce deal, stressing that its demands cannot be ‘compromised’ and that any obstacles can be ‘ironed out’ after negotiations start

Hamas, on 6 February, responded to a ceasefire offer presented by Qatari and Egyptian mediators with a counterproposal that calls for a 135-day truce that includes a three-step prisoner exchange process, the cessation of all military operations by the warring sides, the complete withdrawal of Israeli troops from Gaza, the unrestrained entry of humanitarian aid to the strip, and an end to violent settler incursions into Al-Aqsa Mosque.

“This agreement aims to stop mutual military operations between the parties, reach a complete and sustainable calm, exchange prisoners between the two parties, end the siege on Gaza, rebuild, return residents and displaced people to their homes, and provide shelter and relief for all residents in all areas of the Gaza Strip,” the Hamas statement reads.

The proposal calls on Egypt, Qatar, Turkiye, Russia, and the UN to act as guarantors of the agreement.

Divided into three 45-day stages, the prisoner exchange deal would first see the release of all Israeli women captives, males under 19, the elderly, and the sick. The remaining male captives would be freed during the second phase, and the remains of those killed in fighting would be exchanged in the third phase.

The resistance group also wants the release of 1,500 prisoners, a third of whom would be selected from a list of Palestinians handed life sentences by Israel.

During the first stage, Hamas calls for increasing humanitarian aid deliveries to meet the needs of Gazans; the reconstruction of hospitals, homes, and facilities; a repositioning of Israeli forces “far outside” the populated areas in Gaza to allow for the safe transfer of prisoners; and a stop to aerial reconnaissance operations by Tel Aviv.

Before the second stage can start, Hamas says indirect discussions must continue with the aim of returning “to a state of complete calm.” During these 45 days, Israeli troops would need to withdraw “far outside the borders of all areas of the Gaza Strip” while the reconstruction of homes and vital infrastructure is expected to expand.

“[The third] stage aims … to continue the humanitarian procedures for the first and second stages, in accordance with what will be agreed upon in the first and second stages,” the Hamas statement reads.



Other demands in the addendum to the proposal include guarantees from Israel to refrain from re-arresting released Palestinian and Arab prisoners for the original charge of their detention, to improve living conditions in Israeli prisons, to ensure freedom of movement for all citizens in Gaza and the reopening of all crossings into the strip, to allow the delivery of tens of thousands of temporary homes and shelter tents, and to allow the resumption of all humanitarian services in Gaza – in particular by the UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA).

Hamas has also explicitly called for an end to violent settler incursions into Al-Aqsa Mosque in occupied East Jerusalem and “returning the conditions in Al-Aqsa to what they were before 2002.”

Speaking to Al-Jazeera on Wednesday, Muhhamed Nazzal, a senior member of Hamas’ political bureau, said nothing within the proposal can be “compromised.”

“The Israeli killing machine must be brought to a halt. We wish to see Israeli occupation forces withdraw from the Gaza Strip entirely. Our response is realistic, and our demands are reasonable,” Nazzal said. “We expect a negotiation to start. Once it starts, any obstacles can be ironed out along the way to reach a final agreement, whereby we can dot the Is and cross the Ts,” he added.

In response to the comprehensive proposal, Israeli officials told Ynet on Wednesday that “they cannot accept an end to the war.” For its part, the office of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told the Times of Israel that Tel Aviv “does not have a response to Hamas’ demands beyond its statement last night indicating that it was studying the proposal.”

Netanyahu is set to meet with US State Secretary Antony Blinken, who arrived in Israel after visiting Saudi Arabia and Egypt, on Wednesday.

https://orinocotribune.com/hamas-presen ... from-gaza/

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Julani roots out competition in Idlib purge campaign

The HTS chief has accused several of his organization’s officials of plotting against him with help from foreign intelligence

News Desk

FEB 9, 2024

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(Photo credit: Amjad)

Abu Muhammad al-Julani, leader of Syria’s Idlib-based extremist militant group Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), has launched an arrest campaign against members of his group he has accused of plotting against him.

According to Al-Mayadeen, Julani has, over the past four months, accused several members of HTS of “planning a military coup against him, in cooperation with foreign intelligence."

The outlet cited sources on 8 February as saying that “these accusations enabled Julani to eliminate all of his competitors in the leadership of HTS, and to control the city of Idlib … more than 400 military, security, financial, and economic leaders were imprisoned in his security prisons.”

Abu Maria al-Qahtani, who alongside Julani was a founding member of HTS’ precursor organization, the Al-Qaeda-linked Al-Nusra Front, was among those detained at Julani’s order.

“When Julani discovered that other leaders were communicating with the intelligence of foreign countries, he tried to exclude these leaders, such as Abu Maria al-Qahtani,” an HTS military leader, Farouk Abu Omar, told Al-Mayadeen.

“Al-Qahtani tried to present himself as an alternative to Julani, but the latter discovered the plan and was able to arrest him, before Al-Qahtani could form a force that would pose a threat to Al-Julani,” he added.

According to Abu Bakr, Julani accused Qahtani of collaborating with foreign intelligence to transfer HTS rule in Idlib to a military council led by Manaf Tlass, a former Syrian army commander who defected to the opposition in 2012.

HTS detained Qahtani in August 2023.

The detentions of several other high-ranking HTS officials followed his arrest. Some were also accused of collaborating with the Syrian government.

Abu Ahmad Zakour, an HTS financial official, defected from HTS and escaped before being detained.

A journalist linked to Syria’s armed opposition, Hassan Aqeel, told Al-Mayadeen that Zakour “defected because he became certain that his existence was threatened after the arrest of his ally in HTS, Qahtani, who is being severely tortured inside the prison.”

Unconfirmed information has circulated that Qahtani has been killed in HTS detention.

Aqeel added that Julani was able to handle this “leadership crisis” to his advantage, wiping out any internal opposition to make it easier to address the threat of the Turkish-backed Syrian National Army (SNA) coalition.

Julani and HTS have, over the past two years, had political and territorial disputes with the SNA factions in the Aleppo countryside. Julani had been moving against them to secure control over Syrian border crossings and strengthen HTS economically.

In early February, Julani admitted that many of the HTS officials and leaders recently detained were subjected to torture.

Internal squabbling between the forces of the armed opposition in Syria became common in the first few years of the war that began in 2011, and has since surged.

Syrian army operations against HTS and other groups intensified in early October 2023 after a deadly drone attack carried out by Idlib-based extremists on a Syrian military college in Homs, which killed dozens of graduating officers and members of their families.

https://thecradle.co/articles/julani-ro ... e-campaign

Yemen pledges to force all foreign warships out of Red Sea

The UK has withdrawn one of its warships from the Red Sea after being targeted by ballistic missiles from Ansarallah-led Yemeni forces

News Desk

FEB 9, 2024

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Ansarallah's Revolutionary Committee president Mohammad Ali Al-Houthi speaks in Sanaa, Yemen. (Photo credit: Ansarallah.com)

All foreign warships will be forced to leave the Red Sea, a member of Yemen's Supreme Political Council said on 8 February, the day after a UK naval vessel departed the region.

"All [foreign] warships must leave the Red Sea, stop their attacks on Yemen, and end their blockade of the country," Mohammad Ali Al-Houthi said.

Footage released by Yemeni media was said to show a missile hitting the HMS Diamond, a UK naval vessel in the Red Sea, on an unknown date.

"Just as the British warship has left the region for overhaul, the other warships will likewise [be forced to] leave the region," Al-Houthi said.

British media reports revealed that the UK Navy withdrew its HMS Diamond from the Red Sea after Yemeni forces attacked it with three ballistic missiles.

Another Royal Navy warship, the HMS Richmond, will replace it.

GCaptain reported that HMS Diamond will now undergo a maintenance and resupply period.

Abdul-Malik Al-Houthi, the leader of the Ansarallah movement that de facto governs Yemen, said on Thursday the country had achieved a "real victory" by carrying out attacks on Israel-linked commercial ships and US and UK warships.

"The movement of ships linked to Israel has become almost non-existent. For the Israeli enemy's ships, their movement has completely stopped from the Bab al-Mandab strait to the Red Sea, and this is a real achievement and a real victory," Al-Houthi said in a televised speech.

The Ansarallah-led Yemeni forces started attacking Israeli-linked ships in November in response to Israel's campaign of genocide in Gaza that has killed almost 28,000 Palestinians, the majority women and children. The US and UK responded by bombing Yemeni military targets.

https://thecradle.co/articles/yemen-ple ... of-red-sea

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The Epistemicide of the Palestinians: Israel Destroys Pillars of Knowledge
Posted by INTERNATIONALIST 360° on FEBRUARY 3, 2024
Abdulla Moaswes

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On Nov. 6, 2023, an Israeli airstrike destroyed Gaza’s Al-Azhar University, one of the largest educational institutions in the occupied territory. Far from being the sole university targeted during Israel’s recent escalation of ethnic cleansing in Gaza, and indeed throughout Palestine, a short video published by the Palestinian Ministry of Education and Scientific Research on the same day as the attack pointed out that a total of nine university buildings (at the time of the video’s publication) in Gaza and two in the West Bank had been either “completely or partially damaged.” According to the video, at least 227,335 Palestinian students, including 555 Palestinians in Gaza with scholarships abroad, had faced severe disruptions to their higher education at the time.

In the weeks since, Israel’s assault on Palestinian schools and universities has only intensified. On Jan. 18, Israel destroyed Al-Israa University with 315 mines — it was the last university standing. Every university in Gaza had been destroyed, in full or in part, along with over 350 schools, educational institutions, and public libraries during the ongoing genocidal campaign.

With this in mind, the bombing of university buildings in Gaza cannot be simply understood as attacks on bricks and mortar but also as assaults on archives, student and staff records, and the intellectual labor of the university’s community. Indeed, the attack upon Al-Israa University also included the demolition of a nearby museum — a clear attempt by the Israeli military to cover up and dispose of the evidence of their looting of the over three thousand rare artifacts that it housed. Attacks that obliterate universities such as Al-Azhar and Al-Israa equate to the erasure of the accomplishments of Palestinian knowledge producers and contribute to Israel’s ongoing epistemicide of the Palestinian people — a process intertwined with their summary genocide.

Epistemicide can be broadly defined as the destruction of knowledge systems and the knowledge that they generate. The Latin American sociologist Ramón Grosfoguel explains how epistemicide played a crucial role in Europe’s colonization of the rest of the world, including the settler colonization of the Americas. It granted European philosophy an “epistemic privilege,” allowing it to become the “new foundation of knowledge in the modern/colonial world.”

In other words, it created a world in which only knowledge produced by European colonists and settlers was deemed legitimate, while colonized societies were compelled to construct new systems from scratch — often mirroring those of their colonizers — because their own systems had been destroyed. As a result, the structural conditions of knowledge production that facilitated the mechanisms of their colonialization also imposed constraints on their liberation.

Israeli efforts to discredit and sabotage Palestinian knowledge production, along with its literal and material attacks on Palestinian institutions of learning and their respective communities, serve as evidence of this.

The British Mandate and the Hebrew University

An early example of epistemicide in Palestine dates back to the British Mandate’s attempts to thwart the development of a Palestinian system of higher education while enabling the establishment of Zionist Jewish universities. The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, established as a public university in 1925, is the most notable example of this. In response to the absence of a comparable Arab Palestinian institution, the eminent historian Ilan Pappé argues that the failure to open an Arab university in Jerusalem can be attributed to a combination of British colonialism, Zionist lobbying, anti-Arab racism, and an overall underestimation by both British officials and some Palestinian leaders of the scope and ambition of the settler colonial project of Zionism.

Furthermore, according to Pappé, the British Mandate afforded Zionist institutions a level of autonomy that “enabled it to build itself up as part of an independent infrastructure for a state within a state,” thus allowing it to become foundational to the future Israeli state. At the same time, he describes the Mandate as micromanaging Palestinian education in an attempt to keep it apolitical and under the control of British colonial officials. As Pappé explains, the British “deemed the Palestinians yet another colonized people who had to be oppressed, while regarding the Zionist settlers as fellow colonialists.” A Palestinian university, according to Pappé, “would have empowered the anti-colonial narrative, helping to counter the project of the Hebrew University that provided scholarly scaffolding to the Zionist ideology.” In practice, this colonial sabotaging of Palestinian attempts at building knowledge systems laid the foundation for Israeli epistemicide.

The Nakba and Oral History

Nur Masalha describes the Nakba as causing the destruction of Palestinian society, and this would include their knowledge systems. Needless to say, the dispossession of Palestinian land and resources, along with the majority of the Palestinian population’s new status as exiles and refugees, posed significant challenges to attempts to reestablish Palestinian systems of knowledge production. It is, therefore, unsurprising that oral history and memory accounts of the experiences of those who survived the 1948 expulsions are, in Masalha’s words, “central to Palestinian history and the Palestinian society of today.”

Palestinian oral histories, however, are routinely discredited and delegitimized by the Israeli government, its knowledge institutions, and those who participate within them. As the Tantura affair demonstrated over two decades ago, even attempts by Israeli researchers to construct knowledge on Palestinian history, and specifically Palestinian villages, using Palestinian sources and memory accounts (as well as an equal number of Israeli ones in this case) can be dismissed as illegitimate. Although Teddy Katz’s work as the man at the center of the affair has since been vindicated by the publicizing of the recorded confessions of the perpetrators of the Tantura massacre as part of the 2022 documentary film carrying the village’s name, the accounts of the massacre’s Palestinian survivors remain sidelined.

Unlike Katz, however, there is a countless number of Palestinian knowledge producers whose work is yet to be, and may never be within their lifetimes, similarly vindicated. In 2019, the Israeli Ministry of Defense created a department known as Malmab, tasked with concealing and locking away previously declassified archival materials related to the Nakba, among other topics. Former Malmab head Yehiel Horev explained that this was due to the possibility of such materials generating “unrest” among Palestinians. Coupled with the systematic discrediting of Palestinian oral accounts, Malmab’s locking away of Israeli written sources further sabotages Palestinian knowledge production.

Epistemicide and Palestinian Institutions Today

Another facet of Israel’s epistemicide of Palestinians is the interventions that the Israeli Occupation makes into the operations and academic freedom of homegrown Palestinian knowledge institutions.

Beyond the standard pattern of Israeli border control routinely denying exiled Palestinian researchers access to their homeland to conduct research, participate in conferences, or even join the faculty at Palestinian institutions, Israel, in 2022, extended the powers of the Coordination of Government Activities in the Territories (COGAT) authority to determine the terms within which foreign academics, including Palestinian citizens of foreign countries, may conduct their work in the West Bank.

As well as being a clear attack on Palestinian academic freedom, this narrowing of the field of supposed “acceptable knowledge production” maintains the Israeli state’s epistemic privilege over that of Palestinians. The COGAT’s ability to intervene in Palestinian knowledge production in such a patrimonial and patronizing manner — reaching the point where it is tasked with deciding what counts as a “necessary field” in which a Palestinian institution may hire a foreign citizen — further delegitimizes Palestinians not only as knowledge producers but as the sovereigns of their own knowledge production. This amounts to an extermination of the very Palestinian epistemic imperatives that outline the relationship between knowledge and existence, both around the world and in Palestine.

Knowledge and Genocide

It is not only Israel and its institutions that have participated in the silencing, attacking, discrediting, and undermining of Palestinian knowledge production. Powerful institutions within the “blancosphere” (also popularly referred to as “The West”), including governments, news organizations, and academic institutions, also contribute to further enabling the epistemicide of Palestinians.

A brazen example of this would be U.S. President Joe Biden unilaterally passing judgment regarding who was culpable for the attack upon the Al Ahli Baptist Hospital in Gaza, accepting Israel’s claims of innocence uncritically while wholly dismissing the accounts of Palestinian eyewitnesses. Similar roles are played by references from the BBC and many other mainstream media houses to the Gaza Ministry of Health as a “Hamas-run Ministry” — an attempt to delegitimize its reporting of casualties.

Not all examples are so brazen, however. Little has changed since Edward Said argued, in the aftermath of the Israeli invasion of Lebanon, that Palestinians have been denied the “permission to narrate.” According to him, the privileging of a “Western master narrative, highlighting Jewish alienation and redemption” erases the Palestinian understanding of reality, where the struggle for liberation is far from over. In this sense, the epistemic privilege accorded to the Israeli state and its institutions through its epistemicide of Palestinians plays a role in legitimizing it in the eyes of those more powerful than it.

Therefore, in attempting to resist the genocide of Palestinians in Gaza and across the entirety of historic Palestine, it is absolutely vital to recognize and push back against epistemicide in all of its forms. Rana Barakat asserts the importance of centering Palestinian Indigenous sovereignty, resistance, and endurance within analyses of Israel’s settler colonial project. It is crucial to add here that recognizing Palestinians not just as narrators of history but as producers of knowledge within the context of the land of Historic Palestine and the experiences of Palestinian people all over the world pushes back against the Israeli state’s attempts to solidify its epistemic privilege through escalating its epistemicide.

To conclude, Israel’s attempts to destroy Palestinian knowledge and systems of knowledge production form an essential component of its protracted genocide of the Palestinian people. Yet, as my late grandfather, who was expelled from his home in Jerusalem in 1948, said to me throughout my life: “You will always protect your wealth, but your knowledge will always protect you.”

https://libya360.wordpress.com/2024/02/ ... knowledge/

Iraq’s Resistance Plans Hinge on a Gaza Truce
Posted by INTERNATIONALIST 360° on FEBRUARY 9, 2024
Zaher Mousa

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At first glance, Iraq’s resistance factions appear conflicted over the targeting of US occupation troops. But a deeper look suggests this is a strategic ploy, and that their common overarching objectives remain firm.

The secretary general of the Iraqi resistance faction Kataib Hezbollah, Abu Hussein al-Hamidawi, is known for his potent yet precise statements. His words carry weight, often containing coded messages that resonate strongly within his faction and beyond.

Following the US assassination of a key leader in the organization, Wissam Muhammad Saber – also known as Abu Baqir al-Saadi – Hamidawi issued a message containing a carefully chosen verse from the Quran: “Our Lord, pour patience on us, make us stand firm, and help us against the disbelievers.” Interestingly, the context of the verse is an invocation by the army of Prophet Saul against Goliath and his forces.

Hamidawi’s use of the verse likely signals Kataib Hezbollah’s continued resolve against American military presence in the region, despite its recent announcement that it would suspend military operations against US occupation troops in Iraq and Syria. That decision was reportedly taken after immense pressure from the Iraqi government following the Tower 22 operation on the Jordanian–Syrian border, which killed three US soldiers and injured several dozen others.

Factional strategies and regional conflicts

Sources inform The Cradle that Kataib Hezbollah’s suspension of activities is part of a broader strategy aimed at preventing further military escalation in West Asia. Some even speculate that it could pave the way for a potential ceasefire in Gaza, where a genocidal campaign has been waged by Israel for the past four months following the 7 October Al-Aqsa Flood resistance operation.

Meanwhile, the visit of Brian Nelson, the US Department of Treasury’s under-secretary for terrorism and financial intelligence, to Baghdad in the aftermath of the Tower 22 operation signals a new phase in Iraq’s internal political dynamics.

Security measures were notably enhanced during Nelson’s visit, reflecting the gravity of the situation. Iraqi parliamentary sources reveal that Nelson issued harsh warnings of sanctions being imposed on the Iraqi government, particularly targeting the Popular Mobilization Units (PMU), if Baghdad’s efforts to quell resistance activities fall short.

The ramifications of such sanctions extend beyond the resistance factions, impacting various sectors of the Iraqi economy and predominantly Shia-owned institutions. Should these sanctions intensify to affect the PMU itself – an integral part of the Iraqi armed forces – the repercussions would be far-reaching, affecting over a million people, including families of martyrs and wounded personnel, and exacerbating existing socio-political tensions within the country.

Although Kataib Hezbollah is one of the largest and most powerful Iraqi resistance factions, its decision to suspend operations doesn’t imply a halt in military actions by Iraq’s smaller factions. While the move by Hamidawi aligns with a broader regional strategy, particularly the Paris negotiations aimed at reaching a ceasefire in Gaza, not all Iraqi factions have explicitly endorsed it. In particular, Sheikh Akram al-Kaabi’s Al-Nujaba movement has not overtly signaled its support for Hamidawi’s decision.

Analysts suggest that this discrepancy is likely a deliberate strategic maneuver between Kataib Hezbollah and Al-Nujaba. The latter’s strength primarily lies in Syria, which somewhat mitigates the urgency for clear alignment with Iraqi political affairs.

Sudani’s struggle for stability

Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani finds himself in a precarious position since the start of Operation Al-Aqsa Flood. Iraq’s fragile domestic, economic, and political situation has topped his agenda since he first assumed leadership in late 2022, and his cabinet has launched an ambitious agenda to address public grievances through extensive infrastructure projects. But the eruption of war in the Gaza Strip has shattered the fragile ceasefire between Iraqi factions and the US presence in Iraq and Syria, diverting his attention elsewhere.

Facing mounting pressure, the Iraqi premier, under the auspices of the Coordination Framework comprising Shia political forces, initiated negotiations with Washington to redefine the role of US forces in Iraq, with the goal of expelling them and other foreign forces. This move followed intense US airstrikes targeting sites in Iraq and Syria in response to the Tower 22 operation, which has deeply exacerbated tensions between Baghdad and Washington.

The Iraqi government’s stance towards the US hardened further when the US falsely accused Baghdad of having prior knowledge of the airstrikes, labeling it as a betrayal. Despite Baghdad’s denial, Washington’s apology, albeit belated, failed to assuage Iraqi anger, especially considering the recent Turkish, Iranian, and US strikes within Iraqi territory.

Furthermore, Sudani’s inability to secure a meeting with US officials or gain an invitation to the White House – unheard of for any previous Iraqi prime minister in the years following the 2003 invasion of Iraq – illustrates the poor state of bilateral relations between the two countries.

Nevertheless, Sudani has managed to successfully convince both the US and resistance factions to prioritize ceasefire negotiations in Gaza in their military calculations against each other. This diplomatic initiative aimed to shift focus away from escalating tensions within Iraq and positively impact the narrative surrounding Iraqi statehood and sovereignty.

Given the nature of West Asia’s current explosive dynamics, all possibilities remain on the table, including the failure of Gaza truce negotiations, which could resurrect secondary military fronts in the region. Such an outcome would expose the US as a failed peace broker that favors its ally, Israel, above all other considerations.

Moreover, Washington’s frantic attempts to compartmentalize crises in Iraq, Syria, and Yemen from those in occupied Palestine and southern Lebanon persist. This strategy aims to garner political support for pressuring resistance factions – particularly in Iraq – but it is a view that Arabs across the spectrum reject, with recent public opinion polls showing populations fingering the US as the region’s biggest threat – even within allied states.

Consequently, the Iraqi factions are compelled to seek alternative avenues to exert pressure and influence outcomes in Palestine. This may entail exploring new arenas and employing novel methods, as suggested by sources within the Iraqi resistance.

https://libya360.wordpress.com/2024/02/ ... aza-truce/

Despite Warnings by UN and Aid Agencies, Israel Pushes Forward with Brutal Offensive on Rafah
Posted by INTERNATIONALIST 360° on FEBRUARY 9, 2024
Peoples Dispatch

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A camp in Rafah. Photo: WAFA News

Around 1.4 million people are stranded in Rafah where Israel has intensified its offensive. Aid agencies have warned of a disastrous death toll and the collapse of essential services

Israeli bombardment of the city of Rafah intensified on Thursday and Friday, with attacks in other parts of Gaza also continuing as the Israeli offensive entered its 126th day. Dozens of civilians have been killed and injured in the ongoing assault as fears grow of a full-scale ground invasion of Rafah, where more than 1.4 million Palestinians have taken refuge and are effectively trapped with nowhere else to go. Even Israel’s staunchest ally, the United States, has warned against an invasion of Rafah and has stated clearly that it does not support such an invasion, although it has failed to take any concrete and substantial action to prevent any such action.

Fresh airstrikes and ground attacks on Thursday and Friday killed at least 15 people in Rafah, along with at least 5 in Deir al-Balah and az-Zawayda, including several children, besides also injuring numerous others. Israeli airstrikes in these two areas reportedly targeted several homes as well as a kindergarten school where displaced people were taking shelter. Reports additionally have noted that Israeli forces are targeting both the eastern and western parts of Gaza as they step up their attacks on the southern Gazan city. Furthermore, Israeli snipers are reportedly also indiscriminately shooting at Palestinian civilians in Khan Younis. According to Palestinian health ministry statistics on Friday, in the 24 hours since Thursday afternoon, the Israeli bombardment and ground attacks killed at least 107 Palestinians and injured 142 others. The overall death toll in Gaza from the Israeli war has climbed up to 27,947, with the number of wounded rising to 67,459. A majority of the casualties and wounded are women and children.

Meanwhile, rights groups and aid agencies have once again reiterated their warnings against an Israeli ground invasion of Rafah. UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, on social media, said that such an invasion would “exponentially increase what is already a humanitarian nightmare with untold regional consequences,” and that “half of Gaza’s population is now crammed into Rafah with nowhere to go.” The UN’s children’s organization, UNICEF, has also called on Israel not to invade Rafah, with its executive director, Catherine Russell, saying such an invasion would be another “devastating turn in the war,” and that “all parties should refrain from military escalation in Rafah Governorate in Gaza where over 600,000 children and their families have been displaced – many of them more than once.” She stated that “we need Gaza’s last remaining hospitals, shelters, markets and water systems to stay functional,” noting that “without them, hunger and disease will skyrocket, taking more child lives.”

The international charity, the Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC), warned that an Israeli offensive would lead to untold civilian casualties, with Angelita Caredda, NRC’s regional director, saying that “An expansion of hostilities could turn Rafah into a zone of bloodshed and destruction that people won’t be able to escape. There is nowhere left for people to flee to. Conditions in Rafah are already dire, and a full-scale Israeli military operation will lead to even more loss of civilian life. Aid workers have been grappling with insecurity and insufficient aid for months. Attacks in areas where they provide food, water and shelter means this life-saving support will be impeded, if not entirely stopped.”

Similarly, the International Rescue Committee (IRC)’s Bob Kitchen said, “If they aren’t killed in the fighting, Palestinian children, women and men will be at risk of dying by starvation or disease. There will no longer be a single ‘safe’ area for Palestinians to go to.” However, despite these warnings, Israeli forces are escalating their aerial bombardment and tank shelling on the ground in Rafah.

https://libya360.wordpress.com/2024/02/ ... -on-rafah/

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Pushing Gazans Into Rafah And Then Attacking Rafah, Killing UNRWA Funding Without Evidence

The IDF has been packing the population of Gaza into the southernmost part of the enclave like toothpaste toward the end of a tube, and now they’re going to attack that southernmost part, but it’s totally not genocide and you’re an evil Nazi if you say it is.

Caitlin Johnstone
February 10, 2024



Israel is reportedly preparing to launch a ground assault on Rafah, the southernmost part of the Gaza Strip where Gazans have been pushed to flee to. Israel has instructed the 1.4 million refugees sheltering there to evacuate, along with the hundreds of thousands of people who were already living there before, but there doesn’t seem to be anywhere for them to go. This could wind up being the single deadliest phase of Israel’s onslaught to date.

So to summarize, the IDF has been packing the population of Gaza into the southernmost part of the enclave like toothpaste toward the end of a tube, and now they’re going to attack that southernmost part, but it’s totally not genocide and you’re an evil Nazi if you say it is.

This genocide is not a genocide. Ceci n’est pas une pipe.



Can we all just stop and marvel at how successful Israel and its allies have been at moving the conversation from “The ICJ ruled that Israel needs to immediately cease killing Palestinians” to “Is it right or wrong to starve two million people based on unevidenced claims?”

Australian foreign minister Penny Wong has acknowledged that Canberra joined the US, UK and other allies in cutting off UNRWA funding without having seen proof of Israel’s claims against the organization. Empire managers are now openly admitting they suspended aid to Gaza without having seen evidence of the claims that call was based on; they cut the aid because they were told to, then waited for narratives to be provided to them as to why this was a good and righteous decision.

If you’re going to say that a bad thing happened and we therefore need to cut off aid to the most aid-dependent population on earth, then you’d better at least be able to prove the bad thing actually happened. If evidence exists, then show it. If you insist on starving two million people, you can’t do it on vibes alone.

How is this not obvious to everyone? How was it not immediately obvious the instant it came up? Time and time again we are asked to consent to the empire doing the most heinous things to the most vulnerable populations on secret, invisible evidence. We are expected to trust their secret evidence without getting to look at it, even though they’ve been caught lying about things like this over and over and over again.

They think we’re idiots.




Biden is a spent piece of Beltway flotsam with a swiss cheese brain being used as a ventriloquist dummy by DC swamp monsters to commit genocide, expand the US war machine, and play nuclear chicken with Russia. This is the face of the US empire, folks. This is as good as it gets.

I’ll never forget how obnoxious and condescending Democrats were when telling me how wrong I am about Biden obviously having dementia. These people will look you right in the eye and tell you up is down and that if you disagree you’re a Russian agent.

“Biden is too senile to be president” is the wrong lesson to take from this. Replacing Biden with someone less senile won’t change the behavior of the US government, it’ll just lend false credibility to the illusion that the official elected government is calling the shots in DC.


Defense for Children
@DCIPalestine
On Sunday in Balata refugee camp, Israeli forces released a military dog on 4-year-old Ibrahim Hashash, who suffered internal and external injuries after the dog tore off his clothes and bit him for at least three minutes. https://ow.ly/ll8050QySUp
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Support capitalism, it gives you freedom.

The freedom to watch helplessly as sprawling megacorporations feed your planet’s biosphere and your children’s future into a wood chipper.

The freedom to stare impotently as your government commits genocide and ramps up tensions with nuclear-armed states.

The freedom to be transformed into a profit-generating cog and a rent-generating battery in a machine that is fueled by human blood, sweat and tears.

The freedom to have your mind filled with propaganda, advertising and mainstream capitalist culture to keep you thinking, speaking, voting, working and spending like everyone else.

The freedom to watch your world being driven toward dystopia and armageddon and being alienated, marginalized, demonized and silenced if you try to bring its trajectory toward oblivion to a halt.

The freedom to be a slave who has been bullied, indoctrinated and worn down until they believe that they are free.



Believing that the inequality, exploitation and warmongering we see today is the natural state of humanity is like looking at 17th century indigenous populations in the Americas and believing widespread disease, chaos and bloodshed is natural for them. Our society’s injustices have concrete causes brought about by specific individuals and maintained by those who benefit from our abusive status quo. A better world is absolutely possible. It doesn’t have to be this way.

https://caitlinjohnstone.com.au/2024/02 ... -evidence/
"There is great chaos under heaven; the situation is excellent."

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blindpig
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Re: Palestine

Post by blindpig » Sun Feb 11, 2024 1:06 pm

Chris Hedges: Let Them Eat Dirt
February 9, 2024
Save
The Nazis in 1942 systematically starved the 500,000 men, women and children in the Warsaw Ghetto. This is a number Israel intends to exceed.

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Let Them Eat Dirt – by Mr. Fish.

By Chris Hedges
ScheerPost

There was never any possibility that the Israeli government would agree to a pause in the fighting proposed by Secretary of State Antony Blinken, much less a ceasefire.

Israel is on the verge of delivering the coup de grâce in its war on Palestinians in Gaza – mass starvation.

When Israeli leaders use the term “absolute victory,” they mean total decimation, total elimination. The Nazis in 1942 systematically starved the 500,000 men, women and children in the Warsaw Ghetto. This is a number Israel intends to exceed.

Israel, and its chief patron the United States, by attempting to shut down the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA), which provides food and aid to Gaza, is not only committing a war crime, but is in flagrant defiance of the International Court of Justice (ICJ).

The court found the charges of genocide brought by South Africa, which included statements and facts gathered by UNWRA, plausible. It ordered Israel to abide by six provisional measures to prevent genocide and alleviate the humanitarian catastrophe. The fourth provisional measure calls on Israel to secure immediate and effective steps to provide humanitarian assistance and essential services in Gaza.

UNRWA’s reports on conditions in Gaza, which I covered as a reporter for seven years, and its documentation of indiscriminate Israeli attacks illustrate that, as UNRWA said, “unilaterally declared ‘safe zones’ are not safe at all. Nowhere in Gaza is safe.”

UNRWA’s role in documenting the genocide, as well as providing food and aid to the Palestinians, infuriates the Israeli government.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu accused UNRWA, after the ruling, of providing false information to the ICJ. Already an Israeli target for decades, Israel decided that UNRWA, which supports 5.9 million Palestinian refugees across the Middle East with clinics, schools and food, had to be eliminated.

Israel’s destruction of UNRWA serves a political as well as material objective.

“UNRWA’s role in documenting the genocide, as well as providing food and aid to the Palestinians, infuriates the Israeli government.”

The evidence-free Israeli accusations against UNRWA that a dozen of the 13,000 employees had links to those who carried out the attacks in Israel on Oct. 7, which saw some 1,200 Israelis killed, did the trick.

It led 16 major donors, including the United States, the U.K., Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Austria, Switzerland, Finland, Australia, Canada, Sweden, Estonia and Japan, to suspend financial support for the relief agency on which nearly every Palestinian in Gaza depends for food.

Israel has killed 152 UNRWA workers and damaged 147 UNRWA installations since Oct. 7. Israel has also bombed UNRWA relief trucks.

More than 27,708 Palestinians have been killed in Gaza, some 67,000 have been wounded and at least 7,000 are missing, most likely dead and buried under the rubble.

More than half a million Palestinians — one in four — are starving in Gaza, according to the United Nations. Starvation will soon be ubiquitous. Palestinians in Gaza, at least 1.9 million of whom have been internally displaced, lack not only sufficient food, but clean water, shelter and medicine.

There are few fruits or vegetables. There is little flour to make bread. Pasta, along with meat, cheese and eggs, have disappeared.

Black market prices for dry goods such as lentils and beans have increased 25 times from pre-war prices. A bag of flour on the black market has risen from $8 to $200 dollars. The healthcare system in Gaza, with only three of Gaza’s 36 hospitals left partially functioning, has largely collapsed.

Bombing a Designated ‘Safe Zone’

Some 1.3 million displaced Palestinians live on the streets of the southern city of Rafah, which Israel designated a “safe zone,” but has begun to bomb.

Families shiver in the winter rains under flimsy tarps amid pools of raw sewage. An estimated 90 percent of Gaza’s 2.3 million people have been driven from their homes.


“There is no instance since the Second World War in which an entire population has been reduced to extreme hunger and destitution with such speed,” writes Alex de Waal in The Guardian. He is executive director of the World Peace Foundation at Tufts University and the author of Mass Starvation: The History and Future of Famine. “And there’s no case in which the international obligation to stop it has been so clear,” he said.

The United States, formerly UNRWA’s largest contributor, provided $422 million to the agency in 2023. The severance of funds ensures that UNRWA food deliveries, already in very short supply because of blockages by Israel, will largely come to a halt by the end of February or the beginning of March.

Israel has given the Palestinians in Gaza two choices. Leave or die.

I covered the famine in Sudan in 1988 that took 250,000 lives. There are streaks in my lungs, scars from standing amid hundreds of Sudanese who were dying of tuberculosis. I was strong and healthy and fought off the contagion. They were weak and emaciated and did not. The international community, as in Gaza, did little to intervene.

“Israel has given the Palestinians in Gaza two choices. Leave or die.”

The precursor to starvation — undernourishment — already affects most Palestinians in Gaza. Those who starve lack enough calories to sustain themselves.

In desperation people begin to eat animal fodder, grass, leaves, insects, rodents, even dirt. They suffer from diarrhea and respiratory infections. They rip up tiny bits of food, often spoiled, and ration it.

Soon, lacking enough iron to produce hemoglobin, a protein in red blood cells that carries oxygen from the lungs to the body, and myoglobin, a protein that provides oxygen to muscles, coupled with a lack of vitamin B1, they become anemic.

The body feeds on itself. Tissue and muscle waste away. It is impossible to regulate body temperature. Kidneys shut down. Immune systems crash. Vital organs — brain, heart, lungs, ovaries and testes — atrophy.

Blood circulation slows. The volume of blood decreases. Infectious diseases such as typhoid, tuberculosis and cholera become an epidemic, killing people by the thousands.

It is impossible to concentrate. Emaciated victims succumb to mental and emotional withdrawal and apathy. They do not want to be touched or moved. The heart muscle is weakened. Victims, even at rest, are in a state of virtual heart failure. Wounds do not heal.

Vision is impaired with cataracts, even among the young. Finally, wracked by convulsions and hallucinations, the heart stops. This process can last up to 40 days for an adult. Children, the elderly and the sick expire at faster rates.

Israel’s Master Plan


(CSIS | Center for Strategic & International Studies, Flickr, CC BY-NC-SA 2.0)

I saw hundreds of skeletal figures, specters of human beings, moving forlornly at a glacial pace across the barren Sudanese landscape. Hyenas, accustomed to eating human flesh, routinely picked off small children.

I stood over clusters of bleached human bones on the outskirts of villages where dozens of people, too weak to walk, had laid down in a group and never gotten up. Many were the remains of entire families.

In the abandoned town of Maya Abun bats dangled from the rafters of the gutted Italian mission church. The streets were overgrown with tussocks of grass.

The dirt airstrip was flanked by hundreds of human bones, skulls and the remnants of iron bracelets, colored beads, baskets and tattering strips of clothing. The palm trees had been cut in half.

People had eaten the leaves and the pulp inside. There had been a rumor that food would be delivered by plane. People had walked for days to the airstrip. They waited and waited and waited. No plane arrived. No one buried the dead.

Now, from a distance, I watch this happen in another land in another time. I know the indifference that doomed the Sudanese, mostly Dinkas, and today dooms the Palestinians.

The poor, especially when they are of color, do not count. They can be killed like flies. The starvation in Gaza is not a natural disaster. It is Israel’s masterplan.

There will be scholars and historians who will write of this genocide, falsely believing that we can learn from the past, that we are different, that history can prevent us from being, once again, barbarians.

They will hold academic conferences. They will say “Never again!” They will praise themselves for being more humane and civilized.

But when it comes time to speak out with each new genocide, fearful of losing their status or academic positions, they will scurry like rats into their holes.

Human history is one long atrocity for the world’s poor and vulnerable. Gaza is another chapter.

https://consortiumnews.com/2024/02/09/c ... -eat-dirt/

*******

Netanyahu orders 'evacuation' of over one million Gazans from Rafah

More than 1 million Palestinians are 'crammed into Rafah with nowhere to go' the UN chief says

News Desk

FEB 9, 2024

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A displaced Palestinian family who fled Khan Younis sets up camp in Rafah further south near the Gaza Strip's border with Egypt, on 6 December 2023. (Photo credit: Getty)

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu claimed on 9 February that the over one million Palestinian civilians who have taken refuge in the southern Gaza city of Rafah will be able to evacuate before the Israeli army begins a ground operation there.

Netanyahu’s office said in a statement that he had instructed the army to prepare plans for both the evacuation of the Palestinian civilian population from the southern Gaza Strip and the dismantlement of any battalions of Hamas’ armed wing, the Qassam Brigades, in the Rafah area.

“It is impossible to achieve the war goal of eliminating Hamas and leave four Hamas battalions in Rafah,” the statement said.

“On the other hand, it is clear that a massive operation in Rafah requires the evacuation of the civilian population from the combat zones,” it added.

But such a plan to evacuate over 1 million people is likely impossible. UN chief Antonio Guterres says half of Gaza’s 2.3 million population “is now crammed into Rafah with nowhere to go,” warning the displaced “have no homes” and “no hope.”


Israel’s previous warnings to Palestinians to flee northern Gaza and take refuge in the south did not provide safety to civilians, as Israel bombed the proposed evacuation routes and alleged safe zones.

Expressions of concern for civilians in Gaza by Prime Minister Netanyahu have come amid other calls he has made to exterminate the millions of Palestinians in the besieged enclave.

“You must remember what Amalek has done to you, says our Holy Bible — we do remember,” Netanyahu has said on several occasions. According to the New York Times he was referring to the "ancient enemy of the Israelites, in scripture interpreted by scholars as a call to exterminate their ‘men and women, children and infants.’”

Last month, the UK aid group Oxfam said that the Israeli military is killing 250 Palestinians per day, with many more lives at risk from hunger, disease, and cold.

Any plan to evacuate civilians is also likely to be superficial, given that as of Sunday, no such plan was being prepared. CNN reported that Brig. Gen. Dan Goldfuss, who oversees the army’s 98th Division, said that he would work on such a plan “if and when” he receives the order to send his forces into the area and that as of Sunday, the order had not been issued yet.

https://thecradle.co/articles/netanyahu ... from-rafah

Tel Aviv protests demand 'transfer' of Gazans as Rafah invasion looms

Israeli bombing of Rafah, where hundreds of thousands have sought safety, killed 11 on Thursday

News Desk

FEB 9, 2024

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Right wing activists protest to demand the continuation of fighting against Hamas in the Gaza Strip, in Jerusalem, February 8, 2024. (Photo credit: Yonatan Sindel/Flash90)

Israeli forces stepped up airstrikes on Rafah on 8 February amid calls by right-wing protesters to ethnically cleanse 2.3 million Gazans from the besieged enclave.

Residents in Rafah said Israeli planes bombed parts of the city on the border with Egypt on Thursday morning, killing at least 11 people in strikes on two houses. Tanks also shelled some areas in the east of Gaza, signaling an Israeli ground assault may be looming.

Fears of a ground offensive in Rafah – which is sheltering hundreds of thousands of Palestinians displaced from their homes across Gaza – intensified after Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu vowed to expand the military offensive there.

The army escalated bombing in Rafah as thousands of protesters gathered in Jerusalem Thursday night, calling on their government to continue the military offensive on Gaza – which many globally are coming to view as genocide – and reject pressures to end the conflict through a captive-release deal with Hamas.

The rally was the culmination of a five-day march from the Gaza border to Jerusalem by largely right-wing protesters, including reservist soldiers, who want the fighting to continue. Right-wing elements in Israel welcomed the war, which began on 7 October, as they wish to ethnically cleanse Gaza of its 2.3 million indigenous inhabitants and settle it with Israeli Jews.

Activists held signs with slogans in support of Israel’s use of military force rather than negotiations to pressure Hamas into releasing the remaining 136 captives it took to Gaza on 7 October.

They view the potential deaths of the remaining captives as a necessary sacrifice for conquering additional land for Jewish settlement.

Other signs called to avenge the soldiers killed in Gaza during the almost four-month-long ground campaign. The slogans included, “It’s us or them” and “Only [population] transfer will bring peace.”

“Transfer” is a reference to the 1948 Nakba when Zionist militias ethnically cleansed some 750,000 Muslim and Christian Palestinians from the land that became Israel.


Other segments of Israeli society have held protests calling for a negotiated end to the fighting to bring the remaining Israeli captives – who are almost entirely Israeli soldiers – home.

Several relatives of the captives left in Gaza described what they called a “terrible campaign” being waged against them in Israel.

“The feeling is that those who are supposed to be overseeing the return of the hostages are not really interested in doing so,” one of the representatives said in a meeting with US Secretary of State Antony Blinken, according to Channel 12.

“We feel dreadful. We feel that there’s a campaign designed to torpedo the deal and to create public opinion against it. We are told to use pressure abroad, but at home, where we ought to be embraced, there’s an effort to change the public perception at our expense,” the representative was quoted as having said.

Relatives of several captives have alleged that the Israeli government is not only uninterested in their return but wishes to kill them to clear the way for continuing the war on Gaza.

https://thecradle.co/articles/tel-aviv- ... sion-looms

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Robinson. (Photo: Province of British Columbia / Flickr / CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)

Palestine ‘a crappy piece of land’ claim sparks outrage
By John Clarke (Posted Feb 10, 2024)

Originally published: Counterfire on February 7, 2024 (more by Counterfire) |

The social-democratic New Democratic Party (NDP) of British Columbia has been buffeted by a political storm that was unleashed by the comments of its post-secondary education minister, Selina Robinson. She publicly and brazenly asserted that, prior to the creation of Israel, Palestine had been nothing more than a ‘crappy piece of land’.

Despite Robinson’s attempts to backtrack and the party leadership’s efforts at damage control, the outrage that her deeply racist comments generated was so powerful and sustained that she has now been forced out of the cabinet.

On 5 February, Premier David Eby finally bowed to the inevitable and announced that following ‘discussions with Minister Robinson we have reached a challenging and necessary decision that Selina will be stepping down in her role as advanced education minister.’

To appreciate the importance of this development, it is first necessary to understand the role of Robinson in promoting anti-Palestinian racism and undermining Palestine solidarity. Her comments on 30 January were delivered at a gathering that was organised by the hardline Zionist body, B’nai B’rith Canada and they were posted on YouTube.

Robinson suggested that critics of Israel were ill informed on the supposed realities of what existed before the 1948 Nakba. As she put it, they ‘don’t understand that it was a crappy piece of land with nothing on it. You know, there were several hundred thousand people but other than that, it didn’t produce an economy.’

Terra Nullius
With these appalling comments, Robinson advanced the infamous notion of terra nullius, that was employed by colonizing powers, including those in Canada, to claim that Indigenous populations were too primitive and economically undeveloped to retain possession of their land. The brazen crudity of these remarks immediately generated outrage in a number of communities. There were immediate and continuing calls for her to resign or be removed from her position in the government.

Laith Sarhan, a Vancouver-based Palestinian Canadian lawyer and activist, challenged Robinson’s false historical view and called for her to be removed from the provincial cabinet. This was echoed by, among others, Independent Jewish Voices Canada, Indigenous leaders, and federal NDP MP Matthew Green.

It was immediately apparent to Robinson and her government colleagues that she had gone too far and measures of damage control were set in motion. She declared that, ‘I understand that this flippant comment has caused pain and that it diminishes the connection Palestinians also have to the land.’ However, she didn’t acknowledge the racist and thoroughly colonialist nature of her words, but instead suggested that she had chosen them incautiously: ‘I said awful things. It came out not the way I intended. I was sloppy with my storytelling,’ she said.

For his part, Premier David Eby offered the view that her ‘comments increase divisions in our province. They increase the feelings of alienation of groups of people, especially people of Palestinian descent and people who are concerned about the death and the destruction in Palestine that is happening right now.’

Eby added that, ‘She has apologized unequivocally, as she should. And she’s got some more work to do’, and he stressed that she will now be ‘reaching out to communities to repair the damage her remarks caused.’ Clearly Eby hoped that admitting serious failings, while stressing Robinson’s readiness to mend her ways, would be enough to weather the storm without the loss of his minister.

There were, however, some glaring problems with this display of concern and contrition. Robinson’s remarks carried a very clear and deliberate message that can’t be explained away as some careless turn of phrase. Moreover, what she had to say on 30 January was not an isolated incident.

As Robinson dealt with the reaction to her ugly views, another example of her pro-Israel approach was coming home to roost. The Federation of Post-Secondary Educators of BC and the Canadian Association of University Teachers released a letter on 1 February that also called on Eby to remove Robinson from his cabinet. This was over her intervention in the case of Natalie Knight, who had been an instructor at Langara College in Vancouver.

Last October, Knight addressed a rally in Vancouver in which she referred to ‘the amazing, brilliant offensive waged on Oct. 7’ by Hamas and other organisations, in which they broke out of Gaza. Langara launched an investigation into her conduct and she was placed on leave. However, this led to the conclusion that the words she had spoken ‘were not clearly outside the bounds of protected expression’ and she was reinstated.

At this point, Robinson used her ministerial position to intervene and ensure that Knight would lose her job. On 26 January, Langara announced that Knight was no longer employed by them, and this reversal took place one day after Robinson had taken to social media to declare that she was ‘disappointed that this instructor continues to have a public post-secondary platform to spew hatred and vitriol.’ She also made clear that she had met with the college leadership to drive home her views.

Michael Conlon, executive director of the Federation of Post-Secondary Educators of BC, responded to Robinson’s actions by noting that the ‘notion that a minister would intervene directly with a college and call for the termination of a tenured faculty member is highly inappropriate and unprecedented. We will assist the Langara Faculty Association in grieving this unjustified termination.’

Popular anger
From the record of Robinson’s social-media activity, her support for anti-Palestinian and Islamophobic perspectives became clear, as did her readiness to slander those taking to the streets to demand a ceasefire in Gaza. Thousands of people put their names to a letter to David Eby that asserted that a ‘member of your cabinet, Selina Robinson, has continually repeated Islamophobic stereotypes, vilified Muslims, Arabs and Palestinians. She has spread misinformation by aligning herself with the IDF and right-wing media like Fox News.’

On 4 February, it was reported that ‘representatives from more than a dozen B.C. mosques and Islamic associations have sent a letter to Premier David Eby calling for the minister of post-secondary education to be removed from her role. They also say no NDP MLA or candidate for the next election is welcome in their sacred spaces until the premier takes action against Selina Robinson.’

With this growing level of popular anger at work, the effort to protect Robinson was clearly falling short. Having already issued dubious apologies, she now promised, rather desperately, to take ‘anti-Islamophobia training’, again assuring everyone that, ‘I am committed to making amends, learning from the pain I have caused and doing whatever I can to rebuild relationships.’ None of this was working, however, and later that day she no longer had a place at the cabinet table.

Robinson’s misfortunes lay in the jarring fashion in which she justified Israel’s colonial project, but she was by no means an entirely discordant note in the government of which she was a part. Last November, with the slaughter in Gaza underway, the BC NDP’s annual convention passed a resolution calling for a ceasefire but the motion was added to the agenda belatedly, in the face of a Palestine solidarity protest outside the building.

The emergency resolution was opposed by some who considered it inadequate and David Eby wouldn’t associate himself with the demand for a ceasefire, claiming that ‘he wants peace in the Middle East, but his responsibility as premier is to the people of B.C. and addressing the rise in hate seen here since the Oct. 7 attack.’ From all this, it isn’t hard to appreciate that the leadership of the BC government was ready to tolerate someone like Robinson until she provoked a level of outrage that made her a liability.

Robinson’s political downfall is a welcome development at a critical time for the Palestinian struggle and the movement of solidarity with it. Canada has seen the weaponisation of anti-Semitism and an ongoing effort to intimidate those who speak out or take to the streets against Israel’s brutality.

Since the genocidal assault on Gaza got underway, the movement of solidarity with Palestine has grown in strength and confidence. In the face of efforts to criminalise it, it has continued to mobilise and defy attempts to stifle it. It is an indication of the new power and resilience of this movement that anti-Palestinian racism could be challenged so effectively and that Selina Robinson held accountable as she so richly deserved to be.

https://mronline.org/2024/02/10/palesti ... s-outrage/

SDs, what can ya say....?

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“Should I Stay or Should I Go?” – US Stuck in the Middle East, Devoid of Deterrence Power
Posted on February 10, 2024 by Yves Smith

Yves here. There’s something way too Norma Desmond about the desperate US efforts to turn its fading star around in the Middle East. As we said before. hitting 85 targets in retaliation for the deaths of three servicemembers looks both mad and desperate. Hitting some number around 10 with many of them going boom (ideally ammo depots) would have looked sufficiently punitive. And that’s before considering that we put these soldiers in harm’s way by them almost certainly having been in Syria, meaning illegally.

And showing that the US can’t kick its bad habits, we then struck in Baghdad, which in case anyone forgot is a sovereign state at which we are no longer at war but we still fancy we occupy by virtue of doggedly refusing to pull our last troops out. Yes, it was “only” a drone attack against a militia leader in Kataib Hezbollah. But excuses like that don’t get you far. This is no different, substantively, than the alleged murder by India of a separatist Sikh leader in Canada, which had the Western media pillorying Modi for weeks.

And Iraq is predictably Not Happy. From Agence France-Presse:

Iraqi authorities slammed the strike as a “blatant assassination” in a residential neighbourhood of Baghdad.

“The international coalition is completely overstepping the reasons and objectives for which it is present on our territory,” said Yehia Rasool, the military spokesman for Iraq’s prime minister.

And it wan’t just the militia leader that died. From the same account:

An interior ministry official said a total of three people — two Kataeb Hezbollah leaders and their driver — had died in the strike, which was carried out by a drone in the east Baghdad neighbourhood of Mashtal.

And this act is just getting the US mired deeper:

Iraq’s pro-Iran Al-Nujaba movement promised a “targeted retaliation”, saying that “these crimes will not go unpunished”.

The post below explains further why the US is unwilling to extricate itself from the Middle East.

By Uriel Araujo, researcher with a focus on international and ethnic conflicts. Originally published at InfoBRICS

In yet another instance of American attacks against Iran-backed organizations in the Levant, the US Central Command (CENTCOM) confirmed in a statement on February 7 that it “conducted a unilateral strike in Iraq in response to the attacks on US service members, killing a Kata’ib Hezbollah commander responsible for directly planning and participating in attacks on US forces in the region.” The US drone strike targeted Abu Baqir al-Saadi, the influential commander of Iran-backed Kata’ib Hezbollah militia, suspected of carrying out the attack on an American base in Jordan. Yesterday, Yehia Rasool, the spokesperson for the commander in chief of the Iraqi Armed Forces, described this American military action as a “blatant assassination”, adding that the US-led international coalition in the country has “become a factor of instability”, and that “the American forces jeopardize civil peace, violate Iraqi sovereignty, and disregard the safety and lives of our citizens.”

On February 3 Washington started airstriking the Iranian Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) and other targets in Syria and Iraq, as a response to the January 28 drone attack in Jordan that killed three American personnel. According to Pentagon deputy press Secretary Sabrina Singh, the attack had the “footprints” of the Iran-backed Kata’ib Hezbollah militia.

The assassination of the aforementioned militia commander, largely seen as a violation of Iraq’s sovereignty (which it is), triggered wide condemnation and protests in Baghdad, thereby escalating US-Iraq tensions. As I wrote, since last month top Iraqi authorities including Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia’ al-Sudani have been reiterating their calls for US troops to leave the country. And now Baghdhad is seriously threatening to expel the American forces. Washington had already “left” the country but in a way paradoxically, as it seems, it never really left.

The past American occupation of Iraq, complete with “nation-building” efforts, is often described as a (failed) “neocolonial” endeavor. That occupation might have come to an end in 2011, after eight years, but the presence of US troops in that Levantine nation is still at the center of a major controversy. As I argued last year, an emboldened and empowered Islamic Republic of Iran emerged as the main winner of this US disaster in Iraq. Tehran in fact is arguably today’s main power in the Middle East – and not Washington. The Persian nation’s rising influence today is also felt in the wider West Asian region, as we have recently seen with regards to Pakistan-Iranian tensions over both countries having struck each other’s territory while targeting a terrorist group that operates on their shared border (the two nations have recently resumed their diplomatic relations).

Back to the series of attacks carried out by the United States in the Levant and also in the Red Sea, one can argue they are indeed part of an escalating US-Iran confrontation involving Iranian “proxies” or regional partners and the so-called axis of resistance. The rising tensions have much to do with Washington’ support for its Israeli ally: a large part of the ongoing turmoil in the Middle East today after all is about the escalation of the long going “fuel war” and of the so-called shadow war between Iran and the Jewish state. Today’s escalation is in any case mostly a spillover effect of the US-backed disastrous Israeli military campaign in Palestine, as I detailed elsewhere.

Since 2011, that is, for over a decade, Washington has been mostly “withdrawing” from the Middle East, a trend that became abundantly clear ten years later, when its troops left Afghanistan in 2021 – the latest developments however could all arguably be seen as signs that it is making a “come-back” in the area. In a way, from Washington’s perspective, the region keeps pulling it back in – to a large degree thanks to an Israel ally the US cannot quite control or curb.

US national security adviser Jake Sullivan said on February 4 that the strikes against Iranian allies were “the beginning, not the end.” The problem, from an American perspective, is that such a retaliatory campaign has no deterrence effect. With regards to the ongoing Red Sea crisis, in particular, the world has recently learned that for about three months Washington basically begged its Chinese rival to help by pressuring Iran into curbing the Houthi rebels – in a clear display of weakness. Beijing, in any case, simply has no reason, as I’ve explained, to exert too much pressure, the mess being largely a problem caused by American foreign policy mistakes.

According to a recent The Economist piece, one of the reasons American deterrence against Iran is not working pertains to the fact that Washington, in the larger Middle Eastern context, simply cannot decide whether it will “leave” or “stay” and basically does not seem to know what to do in the region. The clearly overburdened Atlantic superpower could be described as being “stuck” in West Asia. As I wrote before, Washington, it appears, wishes to pivot away from the Middle East towards the Indo-Pacific and Eastern Europe plus part of Central Asia – even while its naval supremacy seems to be coming to an end.

The idea that the Middle East should no longer be a priority for Washington began with former president Barack Obama and kept evolving under Donald Trump, to then gain clearer contours under Joe Biden’s administration. The United States however do not wish to give up its role of “global policeman”, as the American Establishment sees it, and thus it is faced with a conundrum: according to Sedat Laçiner, a Turkish academic specialist on the Middle East, “given the geostrategic and cultural significance it embodies, it would not be an overstatement to assert that sustained global leadership is unattainable for any power that fails to exert dominance over the Middle East region in the long term”. Laçiner’s reasoning is that the North American superpower simply cannot “leave” the area, a center of oil and petrodollars. However it is not quite welcome “back” there, as the local actors are pursuing new relationships.

According to the aforementioned The Economist piece, “in the Middle East America is torn between leaving and staying and cannot decide what to do with the forces it still has in the region.” Moreover, it desires “to pivot away from the region while simultaneously keeping troops in it”, thus maintaining a “military presence” that invites tensions but fails to “constrain” its Iranian rival. The world is a complex place with many points of tension, but an undecided declining superpower that refuses to show restraintcertainly contributes a lot to bringing stability to the planet – including in the Middle East.

https://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2024/02 ... power.html

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Israel bombs central Lebanon during Iranian FM's visit

Hezbollah retaliated on the reported assassination attempt of a Hamas leader by bombing the headquarters of the Israeli army's Galilee Division

News Desk

FEB 10, 2024

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(Photo Credit: Mohammad Zaatari/AP)

At least three people were killed by an Israeli drone strike that hit the central Lebanese village of Jadra, south of the capital Beirut, on 10 February.


According to Israeli media, the target of this assassination attempt was Hamas commander Basel Salah, who reportedly survived. The drone strike marks the second deepest Israeli strike inside Lebanon and the first attack in the Chouf district since the start of crossborder hostilities on 8 October.

Following the attack, Hezbollah said its forces launched a salvo of rockets on the Branit military barracks in northern Israel, the headquarters of the army's Galilee Division. The resistance group also announced the capture of an Israeli Skylark reconnaissance drone on Saturday.

Israel's latest act of war on Lebanese soil came on the same day Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian visited Beirut to meet with Hezbollah Secretary General Hassan Nasrallah and caretaker Prime Minister Najib Mikati.

In his talk with Mikati, Amir-Abdollahian stressed “the need for all efforts to come together to reach a halt to the Israeli aggression against Gaza and to secure fair solutions for all of the region’s countries.”

Mikati, for his part, emphasized that the crisis gripping the region is “convoluted” and said it is "imperative to press for a ceasefire,” according to a statement from the Lebanese government.

During Amir-Abdollahian's meeting with Nasrallah, the Hezbollah chief hailed the position of Tehran in support of the Palestinian people and called an eventual victory by the Resistance Axis "certain and definite.”

Hezbollah forces have been conducting daily operations over the past four months on targets in northern Israel in support of the Palestinian resistance in Gaza. On Friday, the resistance hit the Kila army barracks in the occupied Syrian Golan Heights for the first time since the start of the current conflict in retaliation for an Israeli attack on several homes in southern Lebanon.

Hezbollah's operations have forced over 200,000 Israeli settlers to flee their homes in the north, leaving the region nearly empty. Across the border, Israeli attacks have caused about $1.2 billion worth of damage due to the destruction of roads, buildings, and agricultural fields.

With the Israeli's northern front in volatile condition, the US continues to push for a withdrawal of Hezbollah forces from the border.

Senior White House Advisor Amos Hochstein recently met with Israeli officials to discuss a new US proposal for de-escalating the conflict.

The first step of the proposal is an 8–10 kilometer withdrawal of Hezbollah forces from the border. The second step calls for an increased deployment of UNIFIL forces and the Lebanese army in the area. Third, Israeli residents will then return to their evacuated settlements.

The US proposal is also said to include talks for demarcating a land border between Israel and Lebanon, aimed at resolving a dispute over 13 border points which Israel was supposed to withdraw from in 2006. The 13 points are located on Israeli-occupied Lebanese land.

Additionally, the proposal calls for Israel's commitment to limited withdrawals of some reservist units in the border area.

https://thecradle.co/articles/israel-bo ... -fms-visit

Dozens killed in Israeli strikes ahead of Rafah ground assault

The killings come as the body of 6-year-old Hind Rajab was finally found weeks after she called emergency responders for help and before Israeli forces killed her

News Desk

FEB 10, 2024

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Palestinians amid the destruction from an Israeli airstrike in Rafah, in the southern Gaza Strip, on Friday. (Photo Credit: Fatima Shbair/Associated Press)
Israeli air strikes killed 28 Palestinians, including ten children, in Rafah early on 10 February, after the Israeli military intensified air raids ahead of a coming ground invasion.


The killings came hours after aid agencies warned that huge numbers of Palestinians will die if Israel moves forward with a planned large-scale military offensive on the southern Gaza border city, where some 1.3 million Palestinians are living, including hundreds of thousands in tent cities.

"There is a sense of growing anxiety, growing panic in Rafah," Philippe Lazzarini, the head of the UNRWA agency, told Reuters. "People have no idea where to go."

On Friday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced that the army was ordered to develop a plan "for evacuating the population and destroying" four Hamas battalions said to remain in Rafah.

"No war can be allowed in a gigantic refugee camp," said Jan Egeland, secretary-general of the Norwegian Refugee Council, warning of a "bloodbath" if Israeli ground forces invade Rafah.

Palestinian Authority (PA) President Mahmoud Abbas warned that the Israeli goal is to forcibly expel Palestinians to Egypt in a repeat of Israel's ethnic cleansing of Palestinians during the 1948 Nakba.

"Taking this step threatens security and peace in the region and the world. It crosses all red lines," Abbas' office announced.

An anonymous Israeli official claimed Israel wanted Palestinians in Gaza's south to move back northwards, from where many of the displaced have come after their homes were destroyed by Israeli bombing.

BREAKING: 12 days after being missing following an Israeli shelling on her family car, the body of the six-year-old girl Hind Rajab, along with the bodies of five of her family members, have been found in the Tal Al-Hawa neighborhood of Gaza City.

Medical sources reported that… pic.twitter.com/oPM76nYGBH

— Quds News Network (@QudsNen) February 10, 2024


A 6-year-old Palestinian girl, Hind Rajab, was found dead on Saturday. Israeli forces opened fire on the car she was riding in with her relatives late last month. All were initially killed except Hind and her cousin, 15-year-old Layan Hamadeh, who called for help using a cell phone. While on the phone with emergency services, Israeli forces opened fire and killed Layan.

Hind then spoke on the phone while waiting for an ambulance to save her.

"Come take me. Will you come and take me? I'm so scared, please come!" Hind can be heard saying in a recording of the call to responders.

Israeli forces then opened fire and killed the two ambulance workers dispatched to find her, leaving Hind's fate unknown until now.

BREAKING| First scenes of the ambulance, which headed to save Hind.

The bombarded ambulance is located only a few meters away from the car where Hind was surrounded. Burnt remains of the paramedics were found inside. pic.twitter.com/HF9LgVVEwT

— Quds News Network (@QudsNen) February 10, 2024


Israel's continued bombardment, siege, and ground operations are making it difficult for aid groups, including UNRWA, to facilitate the entry and delivery of food into the besieged enclave.

Reuters added that "almost one in 10 Gazans under the age of five are now acutely malnourished, according to initial UN data from arm measurements showing physical wasting."

Alex de Waal, executive director of the World Peace Foundation at Tufts University, warned last week that unless Israel's armed campaign is soon stopped, "Gaza will be in famine."

De Waal explained that "Israel is knowingly creating these conditions, because it has been warned, and warned repeatedly, and yet it has continued. And so that makes it culpable. And regardless of the intent, the crime is being committed."

Israel's bombing and ground campaign have killed 27,947 Palestinians and injured 67,459 more, the majority women and children. More could be buried under the rubble of apartment blocks and homes destroyed by Israeli airstrikes and shelling.

https://thecradle.co/articles/dozens-ki ... nd-assault
"There is great chaos under heaven; the situation is excellent."

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Re: Palestine

Post by blindpig » Mon Feb 12, 2024 12:27 pm

Sayyed Nasrallah Receives Iranian FM, Discuss Latest Regional Developments
1 day ago February 10, 2024
manar-05755370017075499794

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The Secretary-General of Hezbollah, Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah, received the Foreign Minister of the Islamic Republic of Iran, Hossein Amir-Abdollahian,

Amir-Abdollahian and Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah discussed a variety of issues regarding the developments in the region and the situation in the Gaza Strip during the meeting.

Iran’s envoy to Beirut Mojtaba Amani was also present at the meeting.

The parties discussed the latest regional political and security-related developments, especially in relation to the Gaza Strip and South Lebanon, as well as the fronts of the Axis of Resistance. They also discussed the imminent trajectory of the prevailing circumstances in Lebanon and the broader regional context.

Iran’s Foreign Amir-Abdollahian arrived in Beirut on Friday evening.

Upon his arrival, the Iranian top diplomat was welcomed by Iranian diplomats residing in Lebanon and Resistance envoys.

https://english.almanar.com.lb/2042482

Hezbollah Escalates Attacks on Enemy Border Sites in Response to Israeli Aggression on South Lebanon
2 days ago February 11, 2024

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In support of the Palestinian people and resistance in Gaza and in light of the Israeli aggression on the various South Lebanon villages, the Islamic Resistance continued striking the Zionist occupation sites near Lebanon border.
Hezbollah military media issued consecutive statements to illustrate the attacks and their outcomes.

The first statement mentioned that the Islamic Resistance targeted the espionage equipment at Doviv Barracks with appropriate weapons at 11:15 AM on Friday, February 9, 2024, causing direct damage.

Islamic Resistance fighters targeted a Merkava tank at Al-Baghdadi site at 02:20 PM on Friday, February 9, 2024, causing it to be hit and destroyed, the second statement pointed out.

The third statement indicated that Islamic Resistance fighters targeted, at 3:10 PM on Friday, February 09, 2024, the espionage equipment at Al-Ramtha site in the occupied Lebanese Shebaa Farms with appropriate weapons, inflicting direct hits.

According to the fourth statement, Islamic Resistance fighters targeted, at 3:30 PM on Friday, February 09, 2024, the espionage equipment in the vicinity of Al-Malkiya site with appropriate weapons, inflicting direct hits.

Islamic Resistance fighters targeted, at 3:30 PM on Friday, February 09, 2024, Zibdeen site in the occupied Lebanese Shebaa Farms with missile weapons, inflicting direct hits. the fifth statement affirmed.

The sixth statement indicated that Islamic Resistance fighters targeted, at 4:00 PM on Friday, February 09, 2024, Al-Malkiya site with missile weapons, inflicting direct hits.

Islamic Resistance fighters targeted, at 4:35 PM on Friday, February 09, 2024, Bayad Blida site with missile weapons, inflicting direct hits, according to the seventh statement.

Meanwhile, the Israeli enemy intensified its aggression on Southern Lebanon, targeting with dornes the towns of Aita Al-Shaab, Yohmor and Markaba.

The Zionist artillery also targeted the towns of Kfarkila, Kfarshuba and Aytaroun. The enemy’s war jets further raided Maround Al-Ras, Kfartibnit, and Naqoura.

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Source: Al-Manar English Website

https://english.almanar.com.lb/2042295

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Report: Egypt warns Israel Rafah offensive may lead to suspension of peace treaty

Saudis also raise alarm; ground op pledged by Netanyahu in refugee-packed border city draws rebukes even from allies
By TOI STAFF
10 February 2024, 4:58 pm

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Illustrative: Palestinians displaced by the Israeli offensive in the Gaza Strip sit next to the border fence with Egypt in Rafah, Wednesday, January 24, 2024. (AP Photo/Hatem Ali)

Egypt and Saudi Arabia have added their voices to a rising tide of criticism of a planned Israeli ground offensive in the Gaza Strip’s southern city of Rafah, after Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu indicated that such a campaign was forthcoming.

Netanyahu announced Friday that he had ordered the Israeli military to present the cabinet with a plan to both evacuate the city’s civilian population — augmented by over one million refugees from the strip’s north and center — and destroy Hamas’s remaining battalions in the area.

According to Netanyahu, an assault on Rafah is critical to completing Israel’s stated war aim of dismantling Hamas. Earlier in the week, the premier rejected Hamas’s “delusional” terms for a hostage deal, which included a full withdrawal of Israeli troops from the Strip and the release of hundreds of terrorists serving life sentences.


“There is limited space and great risk in putting Rafah under further military escalation due to the growing number of Palestinians there,” Egyptian Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukry said on Saturday during a press briefing, warning that an escalation would have “dire consequences.”

The Wall Street Journal reported Friday that Egyptian officials warned the decades-long peace treaty between Egypt and Israel could be suspended if Israel Defense Forces’ troops enter Rafah, or if any of Rafah’s refugees are forced southward into the Sinai Peninsula.

In addition, Saudi Arabia — which has already conditioned normalization with Israel on an end to hostilities and steps toward the establishment of a Palestinian state — issued a statement Saturday warning of “the extremely dangerous repercussions of storming and targeting the city of Rafah in the Gaza Strip,” given the city being “the last refuge for hundreds of thousands of people.”

Reuters reported that in an effort to forestall a massive influx of refugees, Egypt has over the past two weeks stationed some 40 tanks near its border with Gaza, after having reinforced the border wall since the beginning of hostilities, both structurally and with surveillance equipment.

On Friday, Israel’s Channel 12 also reported that IDF Chief of Staff Herzi Halevi was opposed to Netanyahu’s plan for a swift Rafah campaign, saying that although the military is technically capable of such an operation, it would be unwise to undertake it without coordination with the Egyptians and plans for the city’s massive refugee population.

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Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (left) and IDF Chief of Staff Herzi Halevi at a security assessment at the military’s Northern Command, December 7, 2023. (Amos Ben Gershom/GPO)

The two Arab countries’ admonitions follow similar warnings by the United States, where senior figures in the administration of President Joe Biden have publicly decried the prospect of a Rafah offensive as a “disaster.” Philippe Lazzarini, chief of the UN’s aid agency for Palestinian refugees UNRWA, was also quoted by Reuters saying “there is a sense of growing anxiety, growing panic in Rafah because basically people have no idea where to go.”

Hamas, meanwhile, issued a statement Saturday saying military action in Rafah would have catastrophic repercussions that “may lead to tens of thousands of martyrs and injured,” for which the terror group would hold “the American administration, international community and the Israeli occupation” responsible.

The war in Gaza was triggered by Hamas’s brutal October 7 onslaught, in which thousands of gunmen led by the Palestinian terror group stormed southern Israel to kill nearly 1,200 people, mainly civilians, while taking 253 hostages of all ages, committing numerous atrocities and weaponizing sexual violence on a mass scale.

Pledging to dismantle Hamas, Israel launched a war in the Gaza Strip, which has thus far claimed the lives of over 27,900 Palestinians, according to the Strip’s Hamas-ruled health ministry. The figure, which cannot be independently verified, does not distinguish between civilians and combatants, of whom the IDF claims to have killed over 10,000.

At the outset of the war, Israel ordered residents of northern Gaza to flee southward. The evacuation orders have since expanded to some two-thirds of the Strip, where Rafah is the southernmost city, bordering Egypt.

https://www.timesofisrael.com/report-eg ... ce-treaty/

Egypt throws down the gauntlet. The Zionists attempt to get Egypt ot collaborate in their ethnic cleansing fails as to do so would invite wholesale revolt in Egypt. Are the zionists really mad or desperate enough to add to a list of active enemies that they can barely cope with as is?

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Egypt threatens Israel with suspension of peace treaty if Rafah invaded: WSJ

Israel seeks to forcibly expel Gaza's 2.3 million inhabitants to Egypt's Sinai under the guise of humanitarian concerns

News Desk

FEB 11, 2024

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Tents as far as the eye can see in the southern Gaza city of Rafah, January 9, 2024. (Photo credit: Mohammed Zaanoun)

Egyptian officials warned their Israeli counterparts that any Israeli ground invasion of the southern Gaza city of Rafah "would effectively suspend" the 1979 peace treaty between the two countries, the Wall Street Journal (WSJ) reported on 11 February.

Israel Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced on Friday that an Israeli ground operation in Rafah, located on Egypt's border and where hundreds of thousands of displaced Palestinians are living in tents, was necessary to destroy the four brigades of Hamas' armed wing allegedly present there.

"There is limited space and great risk in putting Rafah under further military escalation due to the growing number of Palestinians there," Egyptian Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukry said on Saturday during a press briefing, warning that an escalation would have "dire consequences."

Aid agencies have warned of a "blood bath" worse than that already taking place in Gaza should Israel move ahead with such an operation.

In response to such warnings, Netanyahu told ABC News, “Those who say that under no circumstances should we enter Rafah are basically saying lose the war, keep Hamas there.”

US Ambassador to the UN Linda Thomas-Greenfield also cautioned against a Rafah invasion. She stated on Saturday night that “we have been absolutely clear that under the current circumstances in Rafah, a military operation now in that area cannot proceed."

Despite publicly admonishing Netanyahu, US officials have not taken steps during the current war to prevent Israel from killing huge numbers of Palestinian civilians.

According to the WSJ, a ground invasion would force Egyptian President Abd al-Fatah al-Sisi "to decide between keeping Egypt's border closed with elevated civilian casualties or allowing throngs of people into his country, thereby opening the door to a mass displacement of Palestinians."

According to an Israel Ministry of Intelligence plan leaked shortly after the start of the 7 October war, Israel wishes to create a scenario in which the forced displacement of Gaza's 2.3 million inhabitants, otherwise known as "ethnic cleansing," to Egypt or other third countries will appear as a necessary humanitarian measure to save lives.

In recent days, Egypt redeployed dozens of M60A3 Patton main battle tanks and YPR-765 infantry fighting vehicles near the Rafah border crossing, Egyptian officials said.

A government delegation from Cairo visited Tel Aviv on Friday for talks with Israeli officials about the situation in Rafah, Egyptian officials told the WSJ. Israeli officials are trying to get Egypt to agree to the ground invasion, but Egyptian officials are resisting, they said.

In late October, Egypt started to deploy more tanks and infantry fighting vehicles to the Rafah border crossing to prepare for a potential refugee crisis.

Israeli airstrikes killed 28 Palestinians, including ten children, in Rafah early on Saturday after the Israeli military intensified air raids ahead of the coming ground invasion.

Though Israel has turned its focus to Rafah, fighting between the Israeli army and fighters from Hamas' military wing, the Qassam Brigades, continued across Gaza on Saturday, including in Khan Yunis as well as north and central Gaza.

https://thecradle.co/articles/egypt-thr ... nvaded-wsj

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The United States is considering a scenario for withdrawing troops from Iraq and Syria within 90 days
February 10, 18:20

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The United States is considering a scenario for withdrawing troops from Iraq and Syria within 90 days

US media reports that preparations are now underway for a full or partial withdrawal of US and coalition troops from Syria and Iraq, according to several senior US Defense Department officials.

Officials explained that the decision was made after a variety of factors, including growing pressure and escalating attacks Iran-backed militias in the region.

A troop withdrawal could take up to 90 days, depending on its size, scope and urgency.

Preparations for the withdrawal of troops were not officially announced, but tomorrow there should be a meeting between the leadership of the Iraqi Ministry of Defense and representatives of the Pentagon, where they will discuss the parameters for the withdrawal of troops. With the withdrawal of troops from Iraq, maintaining a presence in Northern Syria will become difficult for the United States. One option is to urgently pump up the local Kurds with resources and weapons in order to preserve the possibility of further use of the Kurdish factor. Without the US, Kurdish autonomy in Northern Syria will quickly collapse.

Implementation of this decision would mean Iran's biggest strategic victory in years, for which it would easily pay in material and human costs.
Since Washington (and even more so in Tel Aviv) understands this, the United States will most likely delay the withdrawal process, plus internal opposition to the decision to withdraw troops, if it is made, is possible.

PS. The shelling of American bases in Syria and Iraq continues. Attacks on ships in the Red Sea continue. Sanctions and strikes have not solved any of the US strategic problems in the region.

https://colonelcassad.livejournal.com/8954040.html

Google Translator

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Yemen’s Unending Nghtmare: The Hidden Consequences of US/UK Strikes
Posted by INTERNATIONALIST 360° on FEBRUARY 11, 2024
Ahmed Abdulkareem

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When confronted with international appeals for humanitarian aid due to the ongoing crises in Gaza and Yemen, the United States and the United Kingdom have chosen instead to turn Yemen’s Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden into a combat zone, initiating an ariel bombing campaign against the war-torn country already suffering immensely from nine years of deadly conflict spearheaded by Saudi Arabia and backed by the U.S.

For weeks, U.S. and British naval vessels have been perched on the outskirts of Yemen’s territorial waters in the Red Sea, not only to protect ships carrying goods to Israel but to launch a series of airstrikes against Yemen, the poorest country in the world. In recent weeks, at least 320 airstrikes have been launched by warplanes that seem never to leave the skies over Yemen’s major cities. The latest strikes hit Friday morning, targeting Al-Jabana, Al-Taif, and Al-Kathib and followed renewed calls by U.S. officials for regional actors not to escalate conflict in the Middle East.

According to Yemeni citizens who spoke to MintPress, the U.S. bombing campaign, which has struck targets in crowded residential neighborhoods, is the last thing that Yemenis expected. Twenty-seven-year-odl Ibrahim al-Nahari lives with his family near Hodeida International Airport, which was targeted by US airstrikes on Monday afternoon. He said of the bombings: “I never expected we would be attacked because of our solidarity with hungry people in Gaza. Are these America’s morals?”

Last Monday, U.S. airstrikes targeted Yemen’s Al-Katnaib Coast Park, frequented by hundreds of visitors daily, and not only caused damage to nearby homes, hotels and shops but spread panic and fear among civilians. “We need food and medicine, not the ugly American bombs that we have tasted for nine years,” Al-Nahari told MintPress, waving a Palestinian flag at a massive demonstration in support of Gaza on Friday in central Hodeida.

Al-Nahari was among tens of thousands who took to the streets of Hodeida on Friday to condemn U.S.-British attacks on their country and renew their support for the Palestinian people. Massive protests featuring hundreds such as these have become a hallmark in Yemen’s northern provinces and beyond since Israel launched its attack on Gaza following Hamas’ surprise attack on October 7, 2023. In Al-Sabeen Square, south of the capital, Sanaa, officials estimate that an area of 100,000 square meters was packed with demonstrators standing shoulder to shoulder to express their outrage.

“We came here to prove that Palestine is the cause of the Yemeni people, and the world must know this,” Malik Almadani, a prominent writer and human rights activist, told MintPress. “We will not stop the demonstrations, and we will continue weekly. It is our sacred duty, rooted and deep in our souls,” he added. Almadani sees Palestine as a cause dear to Yemen’s people, not something that any authority in the country has the authority to negotiate on their behalf. He warned Western powers that any ground invasion of Yemen due to its support for Gaza would be a war against all of Yemen’s people, not against an institution, state, or party.

RED SEA TENSIONS ESCALATE

U.S. and British leaders have repeatedly stated that their bombing campaign in Yemen is intended to end Ansar Allah’s (known in the West as the Houthis) attacks on international shipping and naval vessels. They claim the strikes are necessary to limit the Houthis’ ability to launch further attacks. Yet, there is little to suggest the attacks are having their intended effect. Ansar Allah has maintained that U.S. and UK strikes have not achieved their military objectives and have done little more than incite terror in the hearts of Yemeni civilians. Indeed, nearly every bombing campaign has been met with renewed attacks by Ansar Allah against Israeli, British and U.S. interests in the region, often more extensive and brazen than the last.

This tit-for-tat is escalating too. This week alone saw at least 86 airstrikes against targets in Yemen, with populated regions of Hodeida hit particularly hard, including Al-Katheib, Ras Issa, Al-Zaidiyah, Al-Hawk, Al-Salif, and Al-Lahiya, which saw 28 separate strikes. Sanaa was targeted with 13 strikes, Taiz with 11, Al-Bayda with 7, Hajjah with seven raids, and Saad with over twenty. Despite the scale of the attacks, Yemeni officials maintain they’ve had little effect on the military capabilities of Ansar Allah.

“There have been casualties from U.S. and UK raids, and there is varying damage to some sites and camps. However, most of the military sites were already evacuated before the airstrikes began. Some of them had already been subjected to bombings in previous years,” Deputy Head of Moral Guidance for the Yemeni Army, Brigadier General Abdullah Bin Amer, told MintPress. “We can deal appropriately with these developments, benefiting from past experiences that began in 2015.”

By all accounts, the U.S.-led aerial campaign in Yemen is a violation of the tenets of just war, which dictates that nations must not only have a just cause for going to war but also resort to military force only after all other options have been exhausted. Despite White House claims to the contrary, the intervention in Yemen is clearly not a case of self-defense. The notion that Yemen, the poorest country in the Middle East, represents a military threat to International trade is absurd, especially as Ansar Allah officials have made it clear through both rhetoric and action that any nations not directly involved in supporting Israel’s genocide in Gaza have been able to pass through the Red Sea unmolested.

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The US-owned Genco Picardy after it came under attack from drone launched by Ansar Allah in the Gulf of Aden, Jan.18, 2024. Photo | AP

AN INEFFECTUAL CAMPAIGN

Despite the U.S. feckless bombing campaign and its specious justification, the leader of Ansar Allah, Abdul-Malik al-Houthi, has confirmed that operations in the Red Sea and the Bab al-Mandab Strait against Israel-linked ships will continue. In a televised speech on Tuesday, he said, “Our actions will escalate as long as the Israeli aggression and siege on the Palestinians continues. The correct solution is to bring food and medicine into Gaza, and continuing airstrikes will not benefit America, Britain, or Israel in any way.”

Al-Houthi blamed the actions of the White House for forcing Ansar Allah to target U.S. and British Naval ships near Yemen, saying, “The U.S. and UK’s involvement in Yemen will not protect Israeli ships, and for the first time since World War II, the Americans are exposing their battleships to being targeted.”

“The continued U.S. and UK aggression constitutes a violation of the sovereignty of an independent state, Muhammed AbdulSalam, the official spokesman for Ansar Allah, added, confirming that attacks will not prevent the Yemeni armed forces from continuing their support mission to Gaza, nor will the aggression be able to provide security for Israeli ships or those heading to the ports of occupied Palestine. “It is this American-British aggression that threatens international navigation in the Red and Arabian Seas and the Gulf of Aden,” he added.

ORIGINS OF A BLOCKADE

In a campaign they maintain is aimed at forcing Israel to allow food and medicine to be allowed into the besieged Gaza Strip, Ansar Allah’s forces have continued to target Israeli-owned, flagged or operated ships in the Red Sea and Arabian Seas, or those destined for Israeli ports. The latest such attack came last Tuesday when the Ansar Allah’s Naval Forces carried out two military operations in the Red Sea, the first against the American ship Star Nasia and another targeting the British ship the Morning Tide, according to the official spokesman for the Yemeni army, Yahya Saree.

Since November 19, when Ansar Allah’s maritime campaign began, the group has conducted at least 20 naval operations. More than 20 ships have been targeted, including three that were Israeli-owned, eight belonging to the U.S., four belonging to Britain, and ten that were en route to Israeli ports. Israel itself was not exempt; at least 200 drones and 50 ballistic and winged missiles have been launched against Israel from Yemen. These include sophisticated long-range ballistic missiles and drones such as the Toofan, a recently unveiled variant of the Zolfaghar mid-range ballistic missile, the Quds cruise missile, and the Samad drone. While relatively inexpensive to manufacture, these projectiles have challenged Western forces, who spend millions on sophisticated missiles to shoot them down, threatening to exhaust their stocks and incur a high financial cost in defense of Israeli interests.

It’s worth noting that Yemeni operations against American and British ships began in earnest only after Western forces started bombing Yemen. In its initial days, Ansar Allah’s campaign strictly targeted Israeli interests in support of Gaza, with Ansar Allah’s arsenal pointed at Israel’s Eliat Port. Washington responded by sending a massive naval flotilla to the Red Sea and with a slew of fiery statements by American officials. In the wake of this failed strategy of intimidation, the U.S. and Britain began launching missiles against Yemeni targets. It was only then that Ansar Allah began actively targeting U.S. and British naval assets.

Ansar Allah officials have reiterated their unwavering stance that the Red Sea is off-limits only to Israeli ships until Israel ensures the unfettered delivery of essential aid to Gaza. It remains open to international maritime shipping for countries not involved in supporting what the International Court of Justice has ruled in genocide in Gaza. Ansar Allah has also stated that operations will stop immediately as soon as medicine and food enter Gaza. Until this humanitarian goal is achieved, Ansar Allah officials maintain, the armed air, sea, and land forces will not only continue to target Israeli, American, and British ships but also escalate, even if it ultimately leads to a ground invasion of Yemen.

“THE CEMETERY OF INVADERS”

Asked about a possible U.S.-led ground invasion of Yemen, Brigadier General Bin Amer, who is also the author of the book “Yemen is the Cemetery of Invaders,” currently the most widely circulated book in Yemen, said, “The decision to invade a country like Yemen is certainly a difficult decision for any power. There are many factors and reasons that make those powers hesitate to make such a decision.”

Yemen’s terrain is the most rugged in the Middle East, posing a significant challenge to foreign invading forces. The country’s topography is characterized by steep mountains, deep valleys, and arid plateaus, creating a complex and challenging environment for foreigners, which complicates military operations and hinders the establishment of military infrastructure.

“Throughout history, Yemen has been the target of the ambitions of invaders, but the Yemeni people fiercely resisted all invasion campaigns and were able to defeat them and triumph over them in the end. The invaders on this land suffered great losses, and thus Yemen was nicknamed the cemetery of invaders.” General Bin Amer added.

According to Bin Amer, the Yemeni people do not accept occupation. They have a deep-rooted culture of independence. In addition, their battle today is a battle of principles and values ​​that have religious, moral, and humanitarian considerations, adding, “There is a popular consensus on this battle, and the Yemeni people, in addition to being natural fighters and an armed people, have an additional factor, which is leadership that expresses this. [This factor] certainly has its importance regarding organization and management under such exceptional circumstances.”

Both in the streets and among the highest echelons of Ansar Allah’s leaders, there is a feeling in Yemen that its military actions in support of Gaza have been validated by the International Court of Justice’s ruling ordering Israel to permit the entry of “humanitarian assistance to address the adverse conditions of life faced by Palestinians in Gaza.”

But the likelihood of a Western-led ground invasion is still being taken seriously. Ansar Allah has undertaken an unprecedented military mobilization on a massive scale, including holding military courses, conducting maneuvers, and bolstering stocks of military equipment.

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Volunteer fighters march during a rally of support for Palestinians in Gaza Strip and against the US strikes on Yemen outside Sanaa, Jan. 22, 2024. Photo | AP

A DOCTRINE OF RESISTANCE

Although Yemen has garnered headlines in recent months for its defiant stance towards Israel, its support for Palestinians long predates October 7. MintPress spoke to Yemeni historical researcher Dr. Hammoud Al-Ahnoumi about the nature of Yemeni support for Palestine

In the wake of the second Palestinian intifada and the events of September 11 following the invasion of Afghanistan and Iraq, an indigenous Yemeni tribal group in the northern country began openly voicing its opposition to what it saw as the unjust colonial ambitions of Israel and the United States in the region. The group traces its roots to the Arab Hamdani tribe residing in northern Yemen and is a subdivision of the larger Banu Hamdan tribe.

Over the years, many northern Yemenis joined the group known now as Ansar Allah. It wasn’t until Ansar Allah’s power began to gain momentum that it was given the moniker “Houthis” by the West and dismissed as an Iranian proxy in a bid to demoralize the movement and alienate it from the local population. Yet Ansar Allah’s on the Palestinian issue cannot be understood without understanding its history and political formation.

The political doctrine of Ansar Allah has its roots in the eighth century, particularly in Imam Zayd (695–740 CE), the son of Ali ibn al-Hussain ibn Ali ibn Abi Talib. Imam Zayd initiated a revolution against the repressive Umayyad Caliphate that became a symbol of resistance to oppression that permeates Yemeni culture to this day.

Over the years, Yemenis internalized and embraced these ideals to such a degree that they became a central tenant in what would become known as the Shia Islamic sect of Zaydis. According to Zaydis, Imam Zayd became the second Imam (leader) after his grandfather, Imam Hussain ibn Ali, who was also killed in a struggle against an oppressive government in Karbala, southern Iraq, on the tenth of Muharram in 680 CE.

Loyalty, resistance to oppression and solidarity with the oppressed have become the main principle of their faith and how they see their duty to God, according to Dr. Al-Ahnoumi. For them, he explained to MintPress, standing in support of Palestine is compliance with their doctrine, which calls for resistance against oppressors and supporting the oppressed.

“Though they may coincide with Iranian Revolutionary ideals of resistance against tyrants and oppressors, and oppose [what they view as] American and Israeli arrogance and tyranny,” Ansar Allah act entirely independently, Dr. Al-Ahnoumi insisted.

A TINDERBOX

The fact that Ansar Allah’s operation in the Red Sea has been reduced by Western power to a binary question of freedom of navigation and framed in an Iran-centric geopolitical context bodes poorly for the chances of a peaceful resolution to the conflict. To avoid another disastrous war in Yemen and a U.S. quagmire in the Middle East, western political leaders and media alike must come to terms with the reality that is the tinderbox in Yemen.

Zaid Al-Gharsi, Head of the Media Department at the Presidency of the Republic of Yemen, blames Western leaders and media for distorting Yemen’s position. He urged media outlets and activists on social media, particularly in Western countries, not to take the White House’s narrative, which frames its bombing campaign as self-defense and protection of global navigation, at face value. The reality, he told MintPress, is “that America is an aggressor and an occupier that came from across the oceans to dominate, plunder, and destroy.”

Feature photo | A man stands on the rubble at the site of a Saudi-led air strike in Sanaa, Yemen. Hani Al-Ansi | AP

https://libya360.wordpress.com/2024/02/ ... k-strikes/

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Israeli quadcopter drones terrorize Gaza civilians

After the Israeli army retreats from an area following clashes with the Palestinian resistance, the drones open fire and kill civilians seeking to return to their homes

News Desk

FEB 11, 2024

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Israeli quadcopter (Photo credit: Getty)

The Israeli army is using quadcopter drones to kill Palestinian civilians in Gaza in a systematic and widespread manner, according to testimonies gathered by the Euro-Med Human Rights Monitor.
Since the beginning of the war on Gaza on 7 October, Israel has killed over 28,000 Palestinians, the majority women and children, through airstrikes, artillery, snipers, and tank fire.
However, the use of quadcopter drones has played a significant role in terrorizing Palestinian civilians as well.
According to a report released by Euro-Med on 11 February, Israel has used quadcopter drones in particular against civilians attempting to return and inspect their homes after the Israeli army retreats following clashes with fighters from Hamas' Qassam Brigades and other groups.


Euro-Med reported that on 4 February, an Israeli quadcopter drone shot and killed 49-year-old Jihad al-Dardasawi from Al-Turkman neighborhood in the Shujaiya area east of Gaza City. After Dardasawi was killed by drone fire, his body was found with at least four bullet holes in the back and one in the thigh.
According to his brother Akram, Jihad was killed while riding his bicycle from his home to the Shifa Medical Complex in Gaza City to deliver food to their injured brother. Akram added that Jihad was subsequently buried in the yard of one of the schools being used as a shelter east of Gaza City.
On Thursday, Euro-Med received reports that an Israeli quadcopter drone opened fire at a refugee school near Al-Awda, east of Khan Yunis, killing two Palestinians and seriously wounding one other.
The Geneva-based rights organization also reported that on 4 February, Muhammad Diab Abdel Qader Barhoum was shot and killed by a quadcopter drone as he was heading to Al-Nasr town, north of Rafah City, to feed his sheep.
Health workers in Gaza have noticed that the bodies of the victims of quadcopter fire show evidence of unusual gunshots, which leave a different shape on the victim's body compared to those killed by snipers.


The Israeli army converted quadcopter drones, which were initially designed for photography, into tools for intelligence gathering and subsequently as weapons.
Developed by Israeli military industries, the drones have four or five rotors, are one meter in diameter, are easy to program, and are operated remotely.
The drones also have precise eavesdropping instruments and high-quality cameras for surveillance purposes. They can also be modified to carry bombs and can be modified to become suicide drones.

https://thecradle.co/articles/israeli-q ... -civilians

US lawmakers want full review of South Africa ties for 'siding with Hamas'

The bipartisan bill seeks to censure Pretoria for taking Israel to the ICJ under genocide charges and 'pursuing closer ties' with China and Russia

News Desk

FEB 12, 2024

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South African Justice Minister Ronald Lamola speaks at a press conference outside the International Court of Justice in The Hague on 11 January, 2024. (Photo Credit: Dursun Aydemir/Anadolu via Getty Images)

US congressmen John James and Jared Moskowitz have introduced a bill to the House of Representatives that seeks a “full review” of bilateral relations between the US and South Africa, citing Pretoria's “history of siding with malign actors,” including Russia, China, and Palestinian resistance group Hamas.

“South Africa has been building ties to countries and actors that undermine America’s national security and threaten our way of life through its military and political cooperation with China and Russia and its support of US-designated terrorist organization Hamas," James told reporters last week.

The text of the bill accuses South Africa of filing “a politically motivated suit in the International Court of Justice (ICJ) wrongfully accusing Israel of committing genocide.”

Last month, the ICJ issued a preliminary ruling in favor of South Africa's case, saying there is credible cause to believe Tel Aviv is committing genocide inside Gaza. During the proceedings at The Hague, Israeli officials accused South Africa of being the "legal arm of Hamas.”

James and Moskowitz also blast Pretoria for pursuing “increasingly close relations with the Russian Federation, which has been accused of perpetrating war crimes in Ukraine,” and for the government's “interactions” with China, whom they accuse of “committing gross violations of human rights in the Xinjiang province and implement economically coercive tactics around the globe.”

South Africa, Russia, and China are major partners in the BRICS bloc of emerging economies.

South Africa's International Relations Minister Naledi Pandor raised concerns about the bill, stating that the officials behind it are trying to “associate the government with terrorism." The presidency spokesperson, Vincent Magwenya, also criticized the bill, saying it would be “unfortunate” for US–South Africa relations if passed.

If the bill is passed, it would require President Joe Biden to submit a report on the review findings within 120 days.

Based on 2022 statistics, the US–SA trade relationship totals around $25.5 billion, making Washington South Africa’s second-largest trading partner after China.

A souring of relations between the two nations would hamper South Africa’s already struggling economy, with 2023 predictions estimating a GDP growth of just one percent in 2024. The legislation could also sway voters at the polls, as the ruling African National Congress (ANC), which has been in control of the country since 1994, is already projected to receive less than 50 percent of the vote in this year's ballots.

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

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Re: Palestine

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Israel faces 'chilling reality' of war with Hezbollah: Report

A detailed report predicted that thousands of missiles, rockets, and drones launched by the Lebanese resistance would quickly overwhelm Israel's air defenses, creating chaos and 'shattering' the Israeli public's illusions of security

News Desk

FEB 12, 2024

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Hezbollah displays an Iranian-made Fajr 5 missile at a military parade in southern Lebanon. (Photo credit: AFP)

A group of Israeli think tanks partnered to draft a detailed report examining the "chilling reality facing Israel in a war with Hezbollah," Israeli news outlet Calcalist reported on 12 February.

The 130-page report, which was drafted before the outbreak of war on 7 October, is the work of six think tanks consisting of over 100 terrorism experts, former senior security officials, academics, and government officials who examined Israel's level of preparedness in the event of a multi-front war.

Foremost among the many threats Israel would face in the case of a full-scale war with the Lebanese resistance movement is the thousands of rockets and precision missiles that would rain down on Israeli military bases – including airbases – and cities, overwhelming Israel's missile defenses.

Calcalist stated that the report predicted Hezbollah attacks "would cause immense destruction in Israel, including thousands of casualties on both the frontlines and the home front, causing public panic, a central objective of the multi-front attack will be to collapse the IDF's air defense systems."

Hezbollah would employ precision-guided munitions and low-signature weapons, such as loitering munitions, drones, and standoff missiles to destroy Iron Dome batteries.

Leading the research is Professor Boaz Ganor, who described the threat of Hezbollah rocket and missile fire:

"They have an arsenal that consists of about 150,000 rockets and missiles, and our working assumption is that they would launch about 3,000 at us each day of the war, which according to our estimates, would last about 21 days."

While claiming Israel would still win such a war, the report said that the Israeli public's expectations of security would be "shattered" and that the threat of Israeli retaliation would not be enough to deter Hezbollah rocket and missile fire.

"The expectation of the public and of a significant portion of the leadership, that the Israeli Air Force and effective Israeli intelligence systems will succeed in preventing most of the rocket attacks on Israel, will be shattered. This is also the case regarding the public's belief that the threat of Israeli retaliation or a substantial Israeli attack on significant Lebanese assets will force Hezbollah to cease fire or significantly impair their ability to continue attacking Israeli territory," said the report.

Israeli leaders regularly threaten to destroy Beirut, including by targeting civilian areas, in the way they are currently destroying Gaza, should a full-scale war with Hezbollah erupt.

Calcalist said, "Chaos will intensify when Hezbollah sends hundreds of Radwan commandos to seize towns and villages, and IDF posts along the Lebanese border. The IDF will have to fight within Israeli territory, diverting efforts from operations on the ground in Lebanon to take control of launch areas."

The report added that Israel would face attacks from other armed groups from Iraq, Yemen, and Gaza, which comprise the Axis of Resistance.

The report's authors also examined what an Israeli pre-emptive attack on Hezbollah could look like, but that section was prohibited from publication by Israeli military censors.

Since the Hamas attack on Israeli military bases and settlements on 7 October, Israel and Hezbollah have been engaged in a limited war along the Lebanese–Israeli border, with daily exchanges of fire. Civilians on either side of the border have been evacuated in large numbers.

Following the 7 October Hamas attack, Israeli military leaders pressed for launching a pre-emptive attack against Hezbollah, which was called off at the last minute.

https://thecradle.co/articles/israel-fa ... lah-report

Illegal settler population surges in occupied West Bank: Report

2023 was the most severe year for settler violence, particularly in the months following 7 October

News Desk

FEB 12, 2024

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(Photo credit: AP)

The number of settlers in the occupied West Bank went up almost three percent last year, according to a new report released by a pro-settler organization based on Israeli government statistics.

The 11 February report by WestBankJewishPopulationStats.com shows that the number of Israeli settlers in the occupied West Bank was 517,407 by the end of December 2023, compared to 502,991 in the previous year.

According to the report, the settler population grew 15 percent over the past five years. It exceeded half a million last year and will see “accelerated growth” in the years to come, it adds.

The report claims that Operation Al-Aqsa Flood and the outbreak of the war on Gaza have led Israelis who were previously critical of settlement expansion to support it.

“Serious cracks have indeed developed in the wall of opposition to Jewish settlement of the West Bank,” it says.

Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank are illegal under international law. However, Israel has continued to expand them without being held accountable.

Palestinians in the territory have faced a dramatic surge in settler violence and forced displacement since 7 October.

Between 1 October and 1 November, over 800 Palestinians from at least 98 households in the occupied West Bank were forced out of their homes by settlers, according to a UN report.

Last month, an Israeli human rights group reported that “2023 was the most violent year in settler violence against Palestinians in the West Bank in both the number of incidents and their severity … The first two months since October 7 were particularly violent.”

According to WAFA news agency, a Palestinian family was attacked by settlers in the village of Kisan, east of Bethlehem, on 12 February.

A group of settlers from the Maale Amos settlement “broke into land owned by a local resident Ibrahim Sawarka in Kisan village … and severely assaulted his wife, giving her bruises,” WAFA reported on Monday.

“Sawarka's family members are still trapped in their house … occupation forces prevented village residents from approaching the house to provide assistance,” WAFA added.

Israeli officials have previously admitted that the government greenlights settler violence against Palestinians.

https://thecradle.co/articles/illegal-s ... ank-report

Under cover of war, Israel builds new Jerusalem settlements

Nofei Rachel is one of four settlements in East Jerusalem that will add 3,000 new residential units exclusively for Jews

News Desk

FEB 12, 2024

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A Palestinian stands on his property overlooking the Israeli settlement of Har Homa, West Bank, February 18, 2011. (Photo credit: UPI/Debbie Hill)
Under the cover of the ongoing war in Gaza, Israel is accelerating the building of settlements for Jews in occupied East Jerusalem, Haaretz reported on 11 February.

Israel is moving forward with plans for a new Jewish settlement, Nofei Rachel, comprising 650 residential units in occupied East Jerusalem, located just meters from Palestinian homes in Umm Tuba.

Like other settlement projects, Nofei Rachel is a joint project of the Justice Ministry and a real estate company controlled by right-wing settler activists.

According to a report by Israeli nonprofits Ir Amim and Bimkom Planners for Planning Rights, planning committees have approved the construction of 8,434 new housing units for Jews in areas of Jerusalem beyond the 1967 border.

The others will be located in the large Jewish settlements built in occupied East Jerusalem after the Six-Day War, such as Gilo, French Hill, and Ramat Shlomo.

"During the period of the war, the planning institutions in Jerusalem have been continuing to advance the settlement enterprise in the city at an accelerated and unprecedented pace," a report by the two organizations stated.

"While essential public services have been harmed due to the conduct of the war, from the standpoint of political officials, the war is another opportunity to create facts on the ground."

In addition, since the beginning of the war, the Jerusalem Municipality has stepped up the pace of home demolitions in East Jerusalem.

The new housing units aim to help prevent the establishment of a Palestinian state with East Jerusalem as its capital.

"The new settlements will deepen the prevention of the contiguity of the Palestinian space in Jerusalem and constitute additional impediments to the possibility of a different future for Israelis and Palestinians in the city and the entire area," the report stated.

https://thecradle.co/articles/under-cov ... ettlements

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MOODY’S JUST TOLD YOU SO — DOWNGRADES ISRAEL, WARNS THAT WEAKER US BACKING FOR ISRAEL, WAR WITH HEZBOLLAH WOULD TRIGGER CRASH

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by John Helmer, Moscow @bears_with

Twice already the warning of the obvious has been posted in the money markets — Israel cannot survive a long war with the Arabs and Iran.

In this long war, the gods do not favour the Chosen People, it was reported on October 27, three weeks after the Hamas offensive began. The decline in Israel’s export earnings from tourism and diamonds; the loss of imported supplies for manufacturing and consumption from the Houthi blockade of the Red Sea; and increasing risk to both imports and exports at the Mediterranean ports within range of Hamas and Hezbollah strikes were identified at that time.

The international ratings agencies, Moody’s, Fitch and Standard and Poors, postponed announcing the obvious for as long as they could.

In attrition war, on the economic front just like the Gaza and other fire fronts, the Axis of Resistance wins by maintaining its offensive capacities and operations for longer than the US and US-backed Israeli forces can defend. Like troops, tanks, and artillery pieces, the operational goal is to grind the enemy slowly but surely into retreat, then capitulation. Last week, Moody’s had already decided in-house to downgrade Israel; for several days senior management fended off a ferocious attack from Israeli officials and their supporters in the US trying to compel postponement of the downgrade and the analytical report substantiating it.

On February 6, in a review of the shekel, bond, credit default swaps (CDS), budget deficit, and other indicators, the conclusion was there could be no stopping the money markets from moving against Israel. Negative ratings from the agencies raise the cost of servicing Israel’s state and corporate bonds, and put pressure on the state budget. A ratings downgrade is a signal to the markets to go negative against the issuer – this usually comes after the smart money has changed its mind and direction. In Israel’s case, however, there has been an exceptional delay between negative outlook and downgrade. The last Fitch report on Israel was dated October 17; Moody’s followed on October 19; Standard & Poors (S&P) on October 24.

That Israeli and US tactics had forced postponement of new reports from the troika was obvious. A fresh warning was published on this website: as real estate and other tax collections collapse, Israel will have to make a large cash call on the US. This is going to come in the near future, just as the government in Kiev has been forced into calling on Congress as the Ukraine war is being lost. The longer both wars are protracted, the more obviously the loss of confidence expresses itself in Washington.

Moody’s has now caught up. According to the Israeli press, this is the first credit and currency downgrade in their country’s history.

In a report dated last Friday but not issued until Saturday, the Jewish sabbath, the agency officially reduced Israel’s rating from A1 to A2, and added pointers of further downgrading to come. The Anglo-American press immediately reacted against Moody’s. “Israel hits back”, the Financial Times headlined. The newspaper added: “[Prime Minister Benjamin] Netanyahu, in a rare statement over the Jewish Sabbath, said: ‘The rating downgrade is not connected to the economy, it is entirely due to the fact that we are in a war. The rating will go back up the moment we win the war — and we will win the war.’” In the Associated Press report, “Israel’s finance minister blasts Moody’s downgrade”. Rupert Murdoch’s platform Fox claimed: “Israel has a strong, open economy despite Moody’s downgrade”. “Israel’s creditworthiness remains high,” according to the New York Times, “but the rating agency noted that the outlook for the country was negative… A rating of A2 is still a high rating.”

The press release version of Moody’s report is republished verbatim so that its meaning can be understood without the propaganda.

Three points have been missed in the Anglo-American counterattack and Israeli government’s bluster. The first is the warning that Israel will soon have to request enormous cash backing from the US, and if there is any sign of weakening on that in Washington, the collapse of the Israeli economy and its capacity to continue its war is inevitable. The Moody’s report camouflaged the point this way: “The related issuances benefit from an irrevocable, on-demand guarantee provided by the Government of the United States of America (Aaa negative) with the government acting through USAID. The notes benefit explicitly from ‘the full faith and credit of the US’ and as per prospectus, USAID is obligated to pay within three business days if the guarantee is called upon.”

The second point strikes at announcements from Israel Defence Forces (IDF) generals and Netanyahu of their plan to expand their operations on the northern front – the Litani River ultimatum they called it in December. According to Moody’s report, “downside risks remain at the A2 rating level. In particular, the risk of an escalation involving Hezbollah in the North of Israel remains, which would have a potentially much more negative impact on the economy than currently assumed under Moody’s baseline scenario. Government finances would also be under more intense pressure in such a scenario.”

The third point is the most explosive. After cutting Israel’s rating to A2, Moody’s warned that further and deeper downgrades may follow, but that there is presently no way the ratings agency can predict what will happen next. “The ongoing military conflict with Hamas, its aftermath and wider consequences materially raise political risk for Israel as well as weaken its executive and legislative institutions and its fiscal strength, for the foreseeable future.”

In flagging those last four words – “for the foreseeable future” — Moody’s has told the markets that the strategic initiative in this war has now passed to the Axis of Resistance. Of course, the Arabs and Iranians already know.

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Source: https://ratings.moodys.com/ratings-news/415081

The text which follows is the unedited version of Moody’s release. Two illustrations have been added with captions which do not appear in the original.


London, February 09, 2024 — Moody’s Investors Service (Moody’s) has today downgraded Government of Israel’s foreign-currency and local-currency issuer ratings to A2 from A1. Moody’s has also downgraded Israel’s foreign-currency and local-currency senior unsecured ratings to A2 from A1 and the foreign-currency senior unsecured shelf and senior unsecured MTN programme ratings to (P)A2 from (P)A1. The outlook is negative. Previously, the ratings were on review for downgrade. This concludes the review for downgrade initiated by Moody’s on 19 October 2023.

Israel’s backed senior unsecured rating has been affirmed at Aaa. The related issuances benefit from an irrevocable, on-demand guarantee provided by the Government of the United States of America (Aaa negative) with the government acting through USAID. The notes benefit explicitly from ‘the full faith and credit of the US’ and as per prospectus, USAID is obligated to pay within three business days if the guarantee is called upon.

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For the history of the US Government’s loan guarantees to Israel, click. The US Congress and President may revoke loans and loan guarantees if there are US weapons violations, breaches of international law, civil activities outside the 1967 borders of the state, etc. The first ruling by the International Court of Justice on Israel’s genocide in Gaza is the most powerful judicial challenge to date for the US Congress.

The main driver for the downgrade of Israel’s rating to A2 is Moody’s assessment that the ongoing military conflict with Hamas, its aftermath and wider consequences materially raise political risk for Israel as well as weaken its executive and legislative institutions and its fiscal strength, for the foreseeable future.

While fighting in Gaza may diminish in intensity or pause, there is currently no agreement to end the hostilities durably and no agreement on a longer-term plan that would fully restore and eventually strengthen security for Israel. The weakened security environment implies higher social risk and indicates weaker executive and legislative institutions than Moody’s previously assessed. At the same time, Israel’s public finances are deteriorating and the previously projected downward trend in the public debt ratio has now reversed. Moody’s expects that Israel’s debt burden will be materially higher than projected before the conflict.

The A2 rating also takes into account the sovereign’s long-standing strengths including very high economic strength, derived from a diversified, high-income and resilient economy; very high monetary policy effectiveness, recently illustrated by the central bank’s ability to swiftly stabilise financial markets; a solid banking sector and the government’s very strong liquidity position and market access. These strengths are moderated by fiscal and debt metrics which, already prior to the conflict were weaker than many similarly-rated sovereigns.

The negative outlook reflects Moody’s view that downside risks remain at the A2 rating level. In particular, the risk of an escalation involving Hezbollah in the North of Israel remains, which would have a potentially much more negative impact on the economy than currently assumed under Moody’s baseline scenario. Government finances would also be under more intense pressure in such a scenario. More generally, the consequences of the conflict in Gaza for Israel’s credit profile will unfold over a long period of time. The negative impact on the country’s institutions and/or public finances outlined above may prove more severe than Moody’s currently assesses.

Moody’s maintained Israel’s local-currency country ceiling at Aaa. The five-notch gap between the local-currency ceiling and the sovereign rating balances the limited government footprint in the diversified Israeli economy and external stability against elevated geopolitical risks. The foreign-currency country ceiling has also been maintained at Aaa, in line with the local-currency ceiling, and reflects very low transfer and convertibility risks, given the very open capital account, the central bank’s very large foreign currency buffers of 39% of GDP as well as solid policy effectiveness.

RATINGS RATIONALE
RATIONALE FOR DOWNGRADE TO A2
ELEVATED POLITICAL RISKS ARE LIKELY TO PERSIST, WEAKENING EXECUTIVE AND LEGISLATIVE INSTITUTIONS

One key driver for the downgrade of the ratings to A2 is that Israel’s elevated exposure to political risks will likely persist for the foreseeable future, even through a reduction in the intensity of or pause in fighting in Gaza.

While there are currently negotiations underway to secure the release of the hostages against a temporary ceasefire and more humanitarian aid into Gaza, there is no clarity on the likelihood, time frame and durability of such an agreement. Also, the governments of the United States and neighbouring countries have presented the broad outlines of a longer-term plan that would include a new governance and political leadership framework in Gaza, which in turn could contribute to improved security for Israel. However, the Israeli government has so far rejected such plans. Moreover, even if a plan is eventually agreed, its durable success will be, for a long time, highly uncertain. As such, Moody’s assesses that geopolitical risk and, in particular security risk, will remain materially higher for Israel into the medium to long term. Equally, Israel may face a period of elevated domestic political upheaval and renewed polarisation when the war cabinet dissolves.

Heightened security risks relate to higher social risk for Israel. In turn, this environment weakens the country’s institutions, in particular the executive and legislative which, for the foreseeable future, will dedicate significant institutional capacity to restoring security. Moody’s assessment also takes into account the strong track record and recent indications of the strength of civil society and the judiciary, which have shown to provide strong checks and balances. The Supreme Court cancelled the government’s attempt to restrict judicial overview, underlining the strength and independence of the judiciary. Moreover, the strength of civil society has been on display since the start of the military conflict.

ISRAEL’S PUBLIC FINANCES ARE WEAKER THAN ASSUMED BEFORE THE CONFLICT

Over the coming years, Israel’s budget deficit will be significantly larger than expected before the conflict. The Bank of Israel estimates the cost of the conflict for the years 2023-2025 to stand at around NIS 255 billion or around 13% of (2024 forecast) GDP, which includes both higher defense and civilian spending as well as lower tax revenues. The interest bill will also be permanently higher. According to the Ministry of Finance, spending will be permanently higher by at least 1.4% of GDP and potentially closer to 2% of GDP if the conflict lasts longer or escalates further than currently expected.

In its baseline scenario, Moody’s expects Israel’s defense spending to be nearly double the level of 2022 by the end of this year and to continue to rise by at least 0.5% of GDP in each of the coming years, with risks tilted towards yet higher defense spending. The 2023 budget deficit was raised from less than 2% of GDP to 4.2% of GDP in the supplementary budget approved in mid-December. The revised 2024 budget sets a deficit of 6.6% of GDP (versus a pre-conflict forecast of around 2.5%).

These estimates take into account a number of mitigating measures. The 2024 budget incorporates a series of deficit-reducing measures, for 2024 and the following years. The single-most important measure is a VAT rate increase by one percentage point next year, which is estimated to bring additional revenues of 0.35% of GDP per year. In total, the government aims to legislate deficit-reducing measures of around 1.1% of GDP both on the revenue and spending side for 2025, with measures of a similar magnitude targeted to remain in place over the following years. If approved in full, these measures could broadly compensate the higher defense and interest spending, although budget deficits will remain much wider than expected before the conflict. The government’s willingness to raise taxes is a positive sign about the strength of the country’s institutions, given the reluctance of successive governments in the past to consider higher taxes.

Still, as a result of much higher budget deficits, Israel’s government debt ratio will rise to a peak of 67% of GDP by 2025, from 60% in 2022. Before the conflict started, Moody’s expected that Israel’s debt burden would decline towards 55% of GDP.

RATIONALE FOR NEGATIVE OUTLOOK

At the A2 rating level, downside risks remain.

In particular, Moody’s considers that the risk of an escalation of the conflict remains significant, especially one involving Hezbollah to the North of Israel, notwithstanding awareness of the very negative consequences of a full-scale conflict on both sides. Conflict with Hezbollah would pose a much bigger risk to Israel’s territory, including material damage to infrastructure, renewed calls on reservists and further delays to the return of the evacuees to the region. The Ministry of Finance estimates that real GDP could contract by up to 1.5% overall this year if this downside scenario materialized compared with positive growth of 1.6% under a status quo scenario.

So far the economy has managed the fall-out from the conflict reasonably well, with high-frequency indicators pointing to a swift rebound over the past three months. The labour force is approaching pre-conflict levels, as schools reopened and reservists have started to be released from duty. That said, some sectors of the economy, in particular construction which relies to an important extent on workers from the West Bank, are operating at much lower levels than normal. Under a scenario of outright conflict in the North, the negative economic impact would spread to more sectors and be longer-lasting. Government finances would also be under more intense pressure in such a scenario, as defense spending would likely be even higher than currently assumed.

More generally, the consequences of the conflict in Gaza for Israel’s credit profile will unfold over a long period of time, potentially well beyond the period of active fighting. The negative impact on the country’s institutions and public finances outlined above may prove more severe than Moody’s currently assesses.

ENVIRONMENTAL, SOCIAL AND GOVERNANCE CONSIDERATIONS

Israel’s ESG Credit Impact Score at CIS-3 reflects elevated social risks linked to the current conflict and Israel’s weakened security environment and to a lesser extent environmental risks which are mitigated to some extent by governance considerations.

Israel has moderate exposure to environmental risks, reflecting primarily physical climate risks and more specifically water stress risk. Israel’s water scarcity reflects its geographical location in a semiarid climate zone. The authorities’ sound water management provides an important mitigant, including through drip irrigation systems, seawater desalination and wastewater recycling. Its overall E issuer profile score is therefore moderately negative (E-3).

Moody’s recently lowered its assessment of Israel’s exposure to social risks (S-4), to reflect the negative impact of the conflict on its assessment of the country’s health and safety situation, as well as risks related to longer-term demographic changes and their impact on the labour market. A lasting solution to the conflict with Hamas is not assured and the security of Israel’s population is less established than assumed before the Hamas attacks. Civil society has proven to be resilient to previous episodes of conflict and indications so far suggest that this remains the case. However, combined with the long-standing challenges with regards to demographics – in particular large differences among the country’s different population groups with respect to labour market participation rates, income, skill and productivity levels – social risks are material, reflected in a highly negative social IPS score.

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The so-called “demographic time bomb” has been reversed in Israel. Instead of higher fertility among the Arab population gradually outstripping the Jewish population, the Arab rate has been declining while the fertility rate among the Jewish ultra-Orthodox and settler populations, the haredim, has accelerated. Annexation of the Arab territories and genocide aimed especially at Arab women and children are the fundamental policies of the haredim, and accordingly of the Israeli government and IDF. This cannot be reversed by the replacement of Prime Minister Netanyahu. For analysis of the underlying demographic changes in Israeli society, click to read.

Governance considerations mitigate the above social and environmental risks to some extent, reflected in a positive governance and institutions score (G-1). Civil society and the independent judiciary have proven to provide strong checks and balances in Israel’s institutional structure. The country’s macroeconomic and monetary policy framework is sound and has supported timely policy interventions. In the past, Israel conducted independent inquiries into major security failings and also established a commission to assess the country’s longer-term defense needs, which were important signals for high levels of transparency and disclosure.

By virtue of the ratings having been on review for downgrade, the conclusion of the review deviates from the previously scheduled dates announced in the EU Sovereign Release Calendar, published on https://ratings.moodys.com.

*GDP per capita (PPP basis, US$): 51,990 (2022) (also known as Per Capita Income)
*Real GDP growth (% change): 6.5% (2022) (also known as GDP Growth)
*Inflation Rate (CPI, % change Dec/Dec): 5.3% (2022)
*Gen. Gov. Financial Balance/GDP: 0.4% (2022) (also known as Fiscal Balance)
*Current Account Balance/GDP: 3.9% (2022) (also known as External Balance)
*External debt/GDP: 29.7% (2022)
*Economic resiliency: a1
*Default history: No default events (on bonds or loans) have been recorded since 1983.

On 06 February 2024, a rating committee was called to discuss the rating of the Israel, Government of. The main points raised during the discussion were: The issuer’s institutions and governance strength, have not materially changed. The issuer’s fiscal or financial strength, including its debt profile, has materially decreased. The systemic risk in which the issuer operates has materially increased.

FACTORS THAT COULD LEAD TO AN UPGRADE OR DOWNGRADE OF THE RATINGS

Given the negative outlook, an upgrade to the rating is unlikely. Moody’s would stabilize the outlook if there was evidence that Israel’s institutions are able to formulate policies that support the economic and public finance recovery and restore security while dealing with a wide range of policy priorities.


The ratings would likely be downgraded if the situation in the North escalated to a full-scale conflict with Hezbollah with a significantly more negative impact on Israel’s infrastructure and ability of the economy to recover. Indications that Israel’s institutional capacity is more diminished than Moody’s currently assesses by the need to focus on the country’s security would also be negative. Moreover, an increasing likelihood of a materially larger negative impact on the sovereign’s economic and fiscal strength over the medium term than Moody’s currently projects would also put downward pressure on the rating.


NOTE: the cartoon in the lead was composed by Steve McGinn of Newton, Massachusetts.

https://johnhelmer.net/moodys-just-told ... more-89358

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Denis's adventures in Israel
February 12, 17:41

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Denis's adventures in Israel

Denis had been planning to visit Israel for many years, but it never worked out. And so in January there was a choice: where to spend your vacation and how to celebrate your 25th anniversary. Hesitating between Morocco, Egypt, Serbia and Israel, he finally decided to close the gestalt and bought tickets to Israel.

The plan was: five days in Tel Aviv and five in Jerusalem - ten days in total. Denis booked tickets and checked in online at a hotel on the Mediterranean coast. The guy also wanted to attend the show of Maxim Katz (recognized as a foreign agent in Russia).

The flight was successful, and on February 5 Denis landed in Tel Aviv. At passport control at Ben Gurion Airport, he was asked standard questions: purpose, amount of money, hotel reservation and return tickets, whether he had been to Israel before. He answered all the questions and showed supporting documents, but his passport was taken away and sent to the commissioner. According to him, Denis waited for the commissioner in the common room with other “prisoners” for two hours. After some time, he was invited to a conversation.

However, according to Denis, it was more likely a real interrogation. For a whole hour the guy answered various questions, some of which seemed inadequate and illogical to him.

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Denis managed to post the story on a banned social network.

Denis told where he works, where and how long he studies, where and with whom he lives, what sights he plans to see in Tel Aviv (they asked for a list), how much money is in his accounts. The commissioner asked about Denis’s sexual orientation, what faith he professed, and whether he knew at least one Jew or Israeli. Denis especially remembered the rhetorical questions: “why are you Russians rushing here,” “how long can you go here,” “what’s wrong with you here?”

The commissioner wailed: “you Russians are already sick of everyone,” “you don’t need to come here,” “no one is waiting for you here”
- Denis
Denis took out his phone to show some documents. Then the commissioner moved him to her place and began to look at the search history in Safari, correspondence in instant messengers and mail (by searching for certain words) without permission. Another commissioner came into the office, while they were chatting, the phone was blocked. When the interrogation continued, the commissioner demanded to unlock the phone and Denis refused, pointing out his rights. Then, according to Denis, one of the inspectors began shouting that this was her country and she would do as she saw fit, that he was “nobody” and should not have come to Israel. After this, Denis was taken to the common room.

Half an hour later, Denis was again taken into the office of the commissioner, but to a different one. It all started again: the same questions and the same comments. At the end, the commissioner announced that Denis had been denied permission to enter Israel and would soon be deported. Under escort, he was taken to the waiting room for foreign citizens; 15 minutes later, together with other “prisoners,” he was placed in a local “paddy wagon” and taken to a migration prison.

The first day in the migration prison, a walk under escort and sandwiches in cellophane

Upon arrival at the prison, all those arrested (Denis, a Jewish woman who came to fill out documents on the recommendation of the Israeli embassy, ​​a Belarusian, a Ukrainian, a Russian and a Moldovan woman) were taken to a doctor for an examination. He asked just one question: “Denys, how old is it?” and that's it. Afterwards, everyone was given towels and some were given bed linen. Two women who asked for pillows were given blankets and the police showed them that they could be used as pillows.

According to Denis, there was no clean bed linen in the cell, and on the empty bed there were several layers of dirty, used sheets. There was dirt, garbage, and an unpleasant smell all around. All the walls are painted with the names of cities and the terms of their “prison”: 95% are cities of countries of the former Soviet republics, a couple of names of cities in North Africa, the name of a Romanian city.

Denis demanded to provide a translator, since the guards hardly spoke Russian. He demanded the right to a telephone call, a lawyer, and notification of the Russian consul about his detention - but all the man’s requests, according to him, were ignored.

Three times a day, prisoners were taken for a ten-minute walk. According to Denis, five or six people were accompanied by at least four police officers. Three times a day they brought a sandwich made of stale bread, wrapped in cellophane, and two ladles: one with water, the other with tea.

In the evening, Denis recalls, the Georgian who was sitting in the cell with him suggested calling a doctor - he allegedly felt ill. They called the police, knocked on the door for about ten minutes and showed the law enforcement officers with all possible pantomimes that the person was feeling unwell. The police said that the doctor would come soon, and quickly walked away. The doctor came only the next day, around 10–11 o’clock in the morning.

Second day in a migration prison, beating at the airport and deportation.

In the morning, the arrested were again taken out for a walk, and at this time the cells were cleaned. Denis was surprised that half of the garbage remained in its place. He thought about how to take a picture of it all. All his belongings were confiscated and left in the storage room. But the Apple Watch remained on my hand, but completely discharged. Denis persuaded the guard to charge the watch in order to monitor his pulse and heart rate. He asked if they had fast charging and promised to return them in ten minutes.

The guard deceived me: neither ten minutes nor an hour later he returned the watch. When leaving, Denis, together with other prisoners, had to practically beat this clock; the police refused to return it.

Closer to noon, everyone was taken to the airport. According to Denis, the police who escorted them treated him poorly. One security officer, from whom Denis asked for an interpreter, twirled his finger near his temple and said “stupid” (stupid) in his direction. Denis asked if he was sane, after which the policeman, in front of everyone, hit him with his knee in the groin and his fist in the shoulder, started shouting something in Hebrew and left.

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Tel Aviv Airport

According to Denis, he did not break any laws. From the refusal of entry permission it follows that he did not come to travel, but to live in the country, and since there are no Jewish roots and relatives living in Israel, he does not have the right to cross the border. Denis believes that only the Russian passport is to blame for everything.

Denis is now banned from entering Israel for the next ten years. According to him, employees of the Russian Foreign Ministry told him that “this is a typical story for Israel” and advised him to contact the media.

“In this whole situation, I was afraid that any resistance would be regarded as an attempt to prevent the special services employees from doing their work and, accordingly, as a violation of the law, so I was forced to swallow a lot of things said and done to me. But, despite this, I am banned from entering Israel for the next ten years, but I don’t plan to go there even after years,” says Denis.

https://baza.io/posts/0e1b3f58-cdae-426 ... c3079be026 - zinc

Let's go to a peaceful, non-war country to see Maxim Katz. Denis is dangerous.

https://colonelcassad.livejournal.com/8957827.html

Google Translator

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Israel Weaponizes Sympathy And Victimhood

In this dynamic, anything Israel does causes more people to hate Israel both in the middle east and around the world, to which Israel responds by tearfully proclaiming “See?? They hate us! We must defend ourselves against their hostilities!”

Caitlin Johnstone
February 12, 2024

There’s a certain particularly toxic personality type which thrives on being hated. They behave in wildly odious and destructive ways, and then when people react to this with hostility they plunge into poor-me victimhood, which they then use to justify more odious and destructive behavior.

You may have been unfortunate enough to have encountered such personalities in your own life. They behave atrociously, and then when people react to it they say “See?? I really AM being persecuted!”

Hillary Clinton is a perfect example of this personality type taken to the extreme. People hate her because she’s a phony, egomaniacal sadist who has spent her entire political career pushing for mass military bloodshed at every opportunity, but she then frames this hatred as evidence of widespread misogyny and far-right extremism, which is why the world desperately needs Hillary Clinton to help fight those things.

Any remotely normal person who was both as wealthy and as despised as Hillary Clinton would have simply retired from public life to enjoy their hundreds of millions of dollars, blissfully sheltered from the vitriol and condemnation of the common riff raff. But Clinton keeps showing up, adamantly refusing to go away, because the hatred she receives is actually what fuels her entire personal dynamic.


We see a large-scale version of this same dynamic with the state of Israel. A Jewish anti-Zionist Israeli named Alon Mizrahi posted an interesting piece on Twitter a few days ago that’s been rattling around in my head ever since, wherein he argues that Israel is actually intentionally generating hatred towards itself in order to shore up political power.

Claiming that “Israel and American Jewish organizations took it upon themselves to keep Jews afraid and isolated” in a “strategy of intentional paranoia,” Mizrahi opines that when October 7 hit, “the right wing, nationalistic, paranoid section of the Jewish political spectrum, realized it could be translated into political gold.”

“It doesn’t seem like Israel is trying to be hated globally. It is actually what it’s doing,” Mizrahi writes. “It is intentionally airing its cruelty and barbarity so that it will remain closed up to the world, thus guaranteeing the continued rule of the paranoia camp.”

“Palestinians are just crash test dummies in this scenario,” he adds. “Their deaths are used to get people angry and Israel hated, so it becomes even more paranoid.”


Whether you accept or reject Mizrahi’s perspective, you can’t deny that Israel’s apologists have been seizing on the outrage its actions in Gaza have caused as evidence of anti-semitic persecution. The Anti-Defamation League has started categorizing pro-Palestine rallies as anti-semitic incidents, including rallies organized and attended by Jewish groups, leading to the Israel-friendly mass media reporting a massive spike in “anti-semitism” in the wake of October 7. Common pro-Palestine chants like “From the river to the sea Palestine will be free” have been deceitfully labeled calls for the genocide of Jews, and any criticism of Israel’s actions is met with a deluge of accusations of anti-semitism.

Once Israel and its western supporters succeeded in framing any opposition to to the Israeli government as evidence of anti-semitism, it was guaranteed that any time Israel does something evil it will cause a new wave of “anti-semitism” per those standards. This perceived hatred and persecution could then be cited as evidence for why Israel needs to be even more violent, militaristic and tyrannical than it already was, and why its brutal treatment of Palestinians is justified and correct. This in turn could be used by western governments to justify pouring more weapons into Israel and providing military support against its neighbors.

In this dynamic, anything Israel does causes more people to hate Israel both in the middle east and around the world, to which Israel responds by tearfully proclaiming “See?? They hate us! We must defend ourselves against their hostilities!”

This is not the sort of behavior you would accept from someone in your life, and it shouldn’t be the sort of behavior we accept from nuclear-armed ethnostates. As with any other widespread dysfunction, the key to dismantling this one is to spread awareness of what it is that Israel is doing.


And what Israel is doing, ultimately, is weaponizing sympathy and victimhood. When somebody is using a weapon to hurt others, you take their weapon away. The world needs to stop giving Israel sympathy and stop buying into its victimhood narratives, because those narratives are only ever used to justify more and more western-backed atrocities.

This won’t happen until enough awareness has spread of what’s really going on here. For there to be a movement toward health, a lot of eyes need to open to the unwholesomeness of this manipulative dynamic — both inside and outside of Israel.

Luckily that does appear to be the case. More and more people are recognizing the unwholesomeness of the pro-Israel victimhood narrative, just as you’d eventually recognize the unwholesomeness of someone in our own life who keeps behaving terribly and then playing the victim. It’s going to be a messy, two-steps-forward-one-step-back slog, but I think we’ll find our way out of this mess eventually.

https://caitlinjohnstone.com.au/2024/02 ... ictimhood/
"There is great chaos under heaven; the situation is excellent."

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Re: Palestine

Post by blindpig » Wed Feb 14, 2024 12:33 pm

The International Community is Killing Palestinians Through Useless Debate
Posted by INTERNATIONALIST 360° on FEBRUARY 12, 2024
Ramona Wadi

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Relatives mourn over the body of Palestinian Yazan Al-Najmi Relatives mourn over the body of Palestinian Yazan Al-Najmi during his funeral on January 18, 2024. Nine Palestinians were killed in an Israeli drone strike that targeted two camps in the West Bank. Photo: Ayman Nobani/picture alliance via Getty Images

Are priorities so misplaced that world leaders cannot articulate the necessity of a permanent cease-fire as the way to alleviate the Palestinian people’s suffering?


As Israel’s genocide against the Palestinian people unfolds for the entire world to see in real time on social media, world leaders have only managed to debate humanitarian “pauses” rather than a ceasefire. Even the context of such temporary “ceasefires” is grossly misplaced, with the focus resting solely on the Israeli hostages held by Hamas, even though Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has no qualms about them ending up as collateral damage as he seeks the complete annihilation not just of Hamas, but also the entire Palestinian population in Gaza.

Netanyahu has rejected the Hamas proposal for a 135-day pause in fighting, during which a gradual release of all the hostages would be carried out in return for Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails. While Netanyahu’s rejection was to be expected, it is still aided largely by US rhetoric, which focuses solely on the Israeli hostages’ release and blames Hamas for all civilian deaths in Gaza, despite the fact that it is Israel that is bombing the enclave to total destruction.

There is no need to debate how to stop genocide, or whether to stop it, as it is clearly a violation of international law.

“We’re looking at it intensely, as is, I know, the government of Israel,” US Secretary of State Antony Blinken told Israeli President Isaac Herzog yesterday in Jerusalem, with regard to the Hamas proposal. “We are very much focused on doing that work and hopefully, being able to resume the release of hostages that was interrupted so many months ago.” Of course, there was no mention of the fact that Israel was so eager to resume bombing Gaza that, so far, it has not yet agreed to another meagre humanitarian pause, not even to save its own settlers.

Yet despite Netanyahu’s refusal to even consider the Israeli hostages’ safety, any deal is still being discussed within the context of securing their release. Thus, the narrative remains controlled by Israel and all that is left for the international community to do is to feign any concern and speak of humanitarian ceasefires and the release of Israeli hostages. What happens to Palestinians in Gaza has never been of concern to world leaders, who pretend to solve mass starvation with trucks of humanitarian aid that are targeted by Israel’s military, and who suspended funding to UNRWA, in the full knowledge that they are now overtly complicit in genocide.

Are priorities so misplaced that world leaders cannot articulate the necessity of a permanent ceasefire as the way to alleviate the Palestinian people’s suffering? A ceasefire should benefit Palestinians first and foremost; they are a colonised population on the verge of permanent annihilation or displacement, facing mass starvation as part of Israel’s genocidal actions, and yet the focus remains on Israeli hostages which the Israeli government keeps in danger for “complete victory” over Hamas. Netanyahu and his murderous ministers must know that ideas cannot be killed and anti-colonial resistance is as much a concept, as it is a legitimate action.

If the world wants to stop genocide, and to date it is clearly reluctant to do so, calling for a permanent ceasefire should be done with the Palestinians’ urgent needs uppermost in everyone’s mind. There is no need to debate how to stop genocide, or whether to stop it, as it is clearly a violation of international law. And yet, rambling on about Israeli hostages who would be freed as part of a deal that Netanyahu refuses to accept, remains the driving narrative. What is clearly missing from the rhetoric and yet remains visible in plain sight, is that Netanyahu has stretched the parameters of what constitutes an acceptable violation of international law, which is in itself an aberration, to the point of no return, with complete impunity. This has to stop.

https://libya360.wordpress.com/2024/02/ ... ss-debate/

Displaced Palestinians in Rafah Shot in Their Tents as Israeli Strikes Kill Scores of Civilians
Posted by INTERNATIONALIST 360° on FEBRUARY 12, 2024
Maha Hussaini in Gaza, Sondos Shalaby and Ahmed Al-Sammak

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People inspect the damage in the rubble of a mosque following Israeli bombardment, in Rafah (AFP/Mohammed Abed)

Israel launched air strikes on Rafah in southern Gaza in the early hours of Monday morning, killing scores of Palestinians sheltering in houses and tents and stoking fears of an imminent offensive on the area, which is densely packed with displaced people.

The attacks targeted 14 homes and three mosques in Rafah, Palestinian officials said. The Palestinian health ministry said at least 67 people were killed.

Several people told Middle East Eye they were shot by quadcopters inside their tents on Monday.

A displaced Palestinian from Khan Younis, Wesam Abu Jamee, said he lost two of his sons, one of them disabled, in a quadcopter attack that targeted their tent at 1:45 am.

“The bombardment was so intense. My two sons, Wahib (19) and Ilyas (17) got killed inside the tent,” he said. “Ilyas had a mental and physical disability,” he added.

Footage of the two brothers shared with MEE shows them lying dead next to each other in a makeshift tent.

تغطية صحفية : "شهداء داخل خيمة النزوح استهدفهم الاحتلال وهم نيام فجر اليوم في رفح." pic.twitter.com/1ZCMXTrF4E

— حسن اصليح | Hassan (@hassaneslayeh) February 12, 2024

The Israeli military said on Monday it had “conducted a series of strikes on terror targets in the area of Shaboura in the southern Gaza Strip”.

It also said it freed two captives taken by Hamas in its 7 October attack in an overnight operation in Rafah. The captives were identified as Fernando Simon Marman and Norberto Louis Har, and are both in good condition, Israeli officials said.

Hamas denounced the raid on Rafah as “a continuation of the genocidal war and the attempts at forced displacement it is waging against our Palestinian people”.

Israeli air strikes on Rafah have intensified over the past week, with dozens of deadly bombardments of densely populated neighbourhoods and residential buildings.

The aerial attacks come after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he had ordered his military to prepare for a ground offensive on the town.

Most of Gaza’s displaced population – around 1.4 million people, including 610,000 children – have fled to Rafah as the last safe refuge, due to intense military operations in the rest of the Palestinian enclave.

The area around Rafah – estimated to be around a fifth of Gaza – has become a squalid tent city. The Palestinians there have nowhere else to go, and are sheltering in makeshift tents or the open air, with little access to food, water or medicine.

Doctors Without Borders has warned that “Israel’s declared ground offensive on Rafah would be catastrophic and must not proceed”.

“There is no place that is safe in Gaza and no way for people to leave,” the group said in a statement.

Children and adults in panic

Umm Ahmad, a resident of Shaboura camp, was an eyewitness to the air strike that targeted a neighbouring house belonging to the Abu Adhra family, killing nine members.

She said she and her family escaped their home after they heard multiple air strikes around 1:50 am. When they returned, their neighbours’ building was in flames.

‘The sound of bombardment woke everyone up… Both children and adults were crying out of fear’

– Doaa Hassan, resident of Rafah


Doaa Hassan, a resident of Rafah, told Middle East Eye that the overnight air strikes started at around 12:30 am.

“The sound of bombardment woke everyone up,” she said. “Both children and adults were crying out of fear.”

[youtube]http://twitter.com/i/status/1757110562385690655[/youtube]
Children make up the majority of casualties from the Israeli bombardment of Rafah this morning. pic.twitter.com/BIw06rqSik

— Quds News Network (@QudsNen) February 12, 2024

She said her residential building is also hosting many displaced people and is surrounded by makeshift tents.

“People sheltering in the tents were in panic. I heard people screaming and saying they have nowhere else to flee to.”

Meanwhile, Shahad Safi, a 24-year-old Palestinian resident of Rafah, said she woke up to the sound of intensive air strikes.

“The house suddenly started to shake, but I told myself it’s just one strike,” she told MEE.

Safi lives in her grandfather’s three-story house adjacent to the Kuwait hospital.

“The children were in panic. We tried to calm them down,” she added. But the sound of attacks did not stop.

Safi and her family were worried the ground offensive had started, as several displaced people in the same house said the bombardment pattern was similar to the one that preceded the ground offensive in the north of Gaza in October.

“We are very close to Khan Younis, so we were worried that the troops entered Rafah,” she said. “But thank God we survived. We went back to our home.”

A devastated mother mourns the loss of her children and family in the Rafah massacre perpetrated by Israeli forces. pic.twitter.com/ORFYPHQOCW

[youtube]http://twitter.com/i/status/1757104076800610804[/youtube]
— Quds News Network (@QudsNen) February 12, 2024

Shot inside their tent

After his sons were killed in their tent, Abu Jamee sought refuge at a nearby building. He had to wait for three hours while he was bleeding from wounds in both of his two legs and one hand, he told MEE.

He was then taken to the Kuwaiti hospital for treatment.

‘There were so many quadcopters in the air. No one was able to move. We were scared’

– Mohamed Osama Sobh, displaced Palestinian

“They had no medical equipment to operate on me,” he said.

So, he went to Mohammed Yousef el-Najjar hospital, where his wounds were stitched but doctors couldn’t remove the shrapnel due to a lack of equipment, he explained.

“We thought Rafah was safe. It certainly isn’t,” he said.

Mohamed Osama Sobh, 35, was another eyewitness to the attack on the tents.

“There were so many quadcopters in the air. No one was able to move. We were scared,” he told MEE.

“There was nowhere to go outside our tents. When people left their tents, they were also targeted.”

“The attack was for about half an hour. It was very intense.”

Marwa Abu Khater and her family were also targeted inside their tent on Monday. Her sister, 29, was seriously wounded after being hit in the head by quadcopter fire, and her son was shot in both his legs. Her husband also got hit in his back, and she was wounded by shrapnel in her arm, Abu Khater said.

“We heard the aerial bombardment and thought it was to prepare for a ground invasion,” she said.

Warnings of ‘disaster’

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said his government’s goal of “eliminating Hamas” would not be possible to achieve without defeating four Hamas battalions in Rafah.

He added that he had ordered the military and security agencies to prepare a plan to eliminate the battalions and evacuate civilians from the area.

The prime minister plans for the operation to end before the start of Ramadan around 10 March, an Israeli official told CNN.

On Sunday, Netanyahu told Fox News that “there’s plenty of room” north of Rafah for Palestinians to flee.

But Egyptian officials are wary of a ground offensive that would force Palestinians towards the border with Egypt and further block access to aid through the Rafah crossing, which is the only way in or out of Gaza not directly controlled by Israel.

Egyptian officials and western diplomats were cited by the Associated Press as saying that Cairo is threatening to suspend its 1979 peace treaty with Israel if Israeli troops are sent into Rafah. But Egyptian foreign minister Sameh Shoukri denied the reports on Monday, saying his country is committed to the treaty.

On Friday, Reuters reported that Egypt has deployed 40 tanks and armoured personnel carriers to Rafah to bolster security around the border.

The Sinai Foundation for Human Rights posted a video on X on Sunday showing Egyptian security forces fortifying the fence separating Egypt and the Gaza Strip with barbed wire.

Local sources told the organisation on Monday that the Israeli army’s latest attacks struck areas just 300 metres from the Egyptian border as well as areas adjacent to the border fence.

UN and international officials have warned about the consequences of a Rafah offensive, as civilians have nowhere else to flee.

UK Foreign Secretary David Cameron on Monday warned Israel to “stop and think seriously” before launching a ground assault in Rafah.

“We are very concerned about the situation and we want Israel to stop and think seriously before it takes any further action,” Cameron told reporters during a visit to Scotland.

Meanwhile, the EU’s chief diplomat, Josep Borrell, said on Monday that he is “extraordinarily concerned” about threats made by Netanyahu to launch attacks on Rafah with no evacuation plan and no prospect of refugee camps in Egypt.

“I am happy to know that two hostages have been liberated but also very much worried by the situation in the border with Egypt where new military operations seem to be taking place by the Israeli defence forces,” said Borrell.

The US, Israel’s main ally in the Gaza war, has warned against launching a large-scale offensive into Rafah.

US National Security Council spokesman John Kirby told reporters on Thursday that the White House “would not support” such an operation.

“Any major military operation in Rafah at this time, under these circumstances, with more than a million – probably more like a million and a half – Palestinians who are seeking refuge [there], without due consideration for their safety would be a disaster,” Kirby said.

Image
At least 1.1 million Palestinians have been displaced to the southern border with Egypt since the start of Israel’s ethnic cleansing campaign in Gaza

Israeli jets struck the overcrowded city of Rafah in southern Gaza during the early hours of 12 February with approximately 40 airstrikes that killed over 100 Palestinians and injured hundreds more.

Bombs were dropped on numerous homes, mosques, and hospitals. The air raids were accompanied by intense artillery shelling and naval bombardment by the Israeli navy.

The Director of Kuwait Hospital in Rafah, Suhaib al-Hams, told WAFA that the hospital is overwhelmed with patients in critical condition and said the facilities lack sufficient medications and supplies.

Grieving families bid a final farewell to their loved ones after an Israeli bloodbath in Rafah resulting in hundreds of civilian casualties.

Ironically, Rafah was initially designated as a ‘safe zone’ by the Israeli army, which forcefully demanding Palestinians from all of the… pic.twitter.com/BHWKXLgek7

— Quds News Network (@QudsNen) February 12, 2024


“The Nazi occupation army’s attack on the city of Rafah tonight … which [has] claimed the lives of more than a hundred martyrs so far, is considered a continuation of the genocidal war and the attempts at forced displacement it is waging against our Palestinian people,” Hamas stated in a press release on Monday.

In the wake of the latest bloodbath in Gaza, Tel Aviv announced the rescue of two Israeli settlers from Rafah, marking the first successful retrieval of captives held by the Palestinian resistance in over four months.

Israel says about 130 captives remain in Gaza, although recent intelligence findings suggest 29 of them have been killed by the intense blitz that has leveled over half of the buildings inside the enclave.

Israel’s genocidal campaign since 7 October has displaced about 1.7 million people – over 80 percent of Gaza’s population – with nearly half crammed inside Rafah, making this Palestine’s largest mass exodus since the 1948 Nakba.

Israel Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced on Friday an imminent ground operation in Rafah, located on Egypt’s border, saying it was necessary to destroy the remaining Hamas brigades present there.

Fearing Tel Aviv plans to force displaced Gazans into the Sinai Desert, Egypt recently deployed dozens of M60A3 Patton main battle tanks and YPR-765 infantry fighting vehicles near the Rafah border crossing. Cairo has also warned that pushing Palestinians into the Sinai would “effectively suspend” the 1979 peace treaty between the two countries.

Ahead of Monday’s offensive in Rafah, US President Joe Biden spoke over the phone with Netanyahu in their first call since 19 January. According to a White House readout of the call, Biden “reaffirmed his view that a military operation in Rafah should not proceed without a credible and executable plan for ensuring the safety of and support for the more than one million people sheltering there.”

At least 28,000 Palestinians have been killed by the Israeli army since 7 October, over half of whom are women and children. The onslaught on the world’s largest concentration camp has been fueled by regular arms deliveries and political cover from the US.

https://libya360.wordpress.com/2024/02/ ... civilians/

There is No Place for the Palestinians of Gaza to Go
Posted by INTERNATIONALIST 360° on FEBRUARY 13, 2024
Vijay Prashad

Image
UNRWA teams work to deliver critical food supplies in Rafah (Photo: UNRWA)

There is no place for the Palestinians in Rafah to go if they go north. Their homes have been destroyed.


On February 9, 2024, Israel’s prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu said that his army would advance into Rafah, the last remaining city in Gaza not occupied by the Israelis. Most of the 2.3 million Palestinians who live in Gaza had fled to its southern border with Egypt after being told by the Israelis on October 13, 2023, that the north had to be abandoned and that the south would be a “safe zone.” As the Palestinians from the north, particularly from Gaza City, began their march south—often on foot—they were attacked by Israeli forces, who gave them no safe passage. The Israelis said that anything south of Wadi Gaza, which divides the narrow strip, would be safe, but then as the Palestinians moved into Deir-al-Balah, Khan Younis, and Rafah, they found the Israeli jets following them and the Israeli troops coming after them. Now, Netanyahu has said that his forces will enter Rafah to combat Hamas. On February 11, Netanyahu told NBC news that Israeli would provide “safe passage for the civilian population” and that there would be no “catastrophe.”

Catastrophe

The use of the word “catastrophe” is significant. This is the accepted English translation of the word “nakba,” used since 1948 to describe the forced removal that year of half of the Palestinian population from their homes. Netanyahu’s use of the term comes after high officials of the Israeli government have already spoken of a “Gaza Nakba” or a “Second Nakba.” These phrases formed part of South Africa’s application to the International Court of Justice (ICJ) on December 29, 2023, alleging that they are part of the “expressions of genocidal intent against the Palestinian people by Israeli state officials.” A month later, the ICJ said that there was “plausible” evidence of genocide being conducted in Gaza, highlighting the words of the Israelis officials. One official, the Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant said, “I have released all restraints” (quoted both by the South African complaint and in the ICJ’s order).

Netanyahu saying that there would be no “catastrophe” after over 28,000 Palestinians have been killed and after two million of the 2.3 million Palestinians in Gaza have been displaced is puzzling. Since the ICJ’s order, the Israeli army has killed nearly 2,000 Palestinians. The Israeli army has already begun to assault Rafah, a city with a population density now at 22,000 people per square kilometer. In response to the Israeli announcement that it would enter Rafah city, the Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC)—one of the few groups operating in the southern part of Gaza—said that such an invasion “could collapse the humanitarian response.” The NRC assessed nine of the shelters in Rafah, which are housing 27,400 civilians and found that the residents have no drinking water. Because the shelters are operating at 150 percent capacity, hundreds of the Palestinians are living on the street. In each of the areas that the NRC studied, they found the Palestinian refugees in the grip of hepatitis A, gastroenteritis, diarrhea, smallpox, lice, and influenza. Because of the collapse of this humanitarian response from the NRC, and from the United Nations—whose agency UNRWA has lost its funding and is under attack by the Israelis—the situation will deteriorate further.

Safe passage

Netanyahu says that his government will provide “safe passage” to the Palestinians. These words have been heard by the Palestinians since mid-October when they were told to keep going south to prevent being killed by the Israeli bombing. Nobody believes anything that Netanyahu says. A Palestinian health worker, Saleem, told me that he cannot imagine any place of safety within Gaza. He came to Rafah’s al-Zohour neighborhood from Khan Younis, walking with his family, desperate to get out of the range of the Israeli guns. “Where do we go now?” he asks me. “We cannot enter Egypt. The border is closed. So, we cannot go south. We cannot go into Israel, because that is impossible. Are we to go north, back to Khan Younis and Gaza City?”

Saleem remembers that when he arrived in al-Zohour, the Israelis targeted the home of Dr. Omar Mohammed Harb, killing 22 Palestinians (among them five children). The house was flattened. The name of Dr. Omar Mohammed Harb stayed with me because I recalled that two years ago his daughter Abeer was to be married to Ismail Abdel-Hameed Dweik. An Israeli air strike on the Shouhada refugee camp killed Ismail. Abeer was killed in the strike on her father’s house, which had been a refuge for those fleeing from the north. Saleem moved into that area of Rafah. Now he is unsettled. “Where to go?” he asks.

Domicide

On January 29, 2024, the UN special rapporteur on the right to adequate housing, Dr. Balakrishnan Rajagopal wrote a strong essay in the New York Times called “Domicide: the Mass Destruction of Homes Should be a Crime Against Humanity.” Accompanying his article was a photo essay by Yaqeen Baker, whose house was destroyed in Jabalia (northern Gaza) by Israeli bombardment. “The destruction of homes in Gaza,” Baker wrote, “has become commonplace, and so has the sentiment, ‘The important thing is that you’re safe—everything else can be replaced.’” That is an assessment shared across Gaza amongst those who are still alive. But, as Dr. Rajagopal says, the scale of the destruction of housing in Gaza should not be taken for granted. It is a form of “domicide,” a crime against humanity.

The Israeli attack on Gaza, Dr. Rajagopal writes, is “far worse than what we saw in Dresden and Rotterdam during World War II, where about 25,000 homes were destroyed in each city.” In Gaza, he says, more than 70,000 housing units have been totally destroyed, and 290,000 partially damaged. In these three months of Israeli fire, he notes, “a shocking 60 to 70 percent of structures in Gaza, and up to 84 percent of structures in northern Gaza, have been damaged or destroyed.” Due to this domicide, there is no place for the Palestinians in Rafah to go if they go north. Their homes have been destroyed. “This crushing of Gaza as a place,” reflects Dr. Rajagopal, “erases the past, present, and future of many Palestinians.” This statement by Dr. Rajagopal is a recognition of the unfolding genocide in Gaza.

As I speak with Saleem the sound of the Israeli advance can be heard in the distance. “I don’t know when we can speak next,” he says. “I don’t know where I will be.”

https://libya360.wordpress.com/2024/02/ ... aza-to-go/

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The World’s Gyre

Alastair Crooke

February 12, 2024

Biden may see himself needing some ‘grand victory’, as much as does Netanyahu, Alastair Crooke writes.

The U.S. is edging closer to war with Iraq’s Popular Mobilisation Forces, a state security agency composed of armed groups, some of which are close to Iran, but which for the main are Iraqi nationalists. The U.S. carried out a drone strike in Baghdad, Wednesday that killed three members of the Kataeb Hizbullah forces, including a senior commander. One of the assassinated, al-Saadi, is the most senior figure to have been assassinated in Iraq since the 2020 drone strike that killed senior Iraqi Commander al-Muhandis and Qassem Soleimani.

The target is puzzling as Kataeb more than a week ago suspended its military operations against the U.S. (at the request of the Iraqi government). The stand down was widely published. So why was this senior figure assassinated?

Tectonic twitches often are sparked by a single egregious action: the one final grain of sand which – on top of the others – triggers the slide, capsizing the sandpile. Iraqis are angry. They feel that the U.S. wantonly violates their sovereignty – showing contempt and disdain for Iraq, a once great civilisation, now brought low in the wake of U.S. wars. Swift and collective retaliation has been promised.

One act, and a gyre can begin. The Iraqi government may not be able to hold the line.

The U.S. tries to separate and compartmentalise issues: AnsarAllah’s Red Sea blockade is ‘one thing’; attacks on U.S. bases in Iraq and Syria, an unrelated ‘another’. But all know that such separateness is artificial – the ‘red’ thread woven through all these ‘issues’ is Gaza. The White House (and Israel) however, insists the connecting thread instead to be Iran.

Did the White House think this through properly, or was its latest assassination viewed as a ‘sacrifice’ to appease the ‘gods of war’ in the Beltway, clamouring to bomb Iran?

Whatever the motive, the Gyre turns. Other dynamics are running that will be fuelled by the attack.

The Cradle highlights one significant shift:
“by successfully obstructing Israeli vessels from traversing the Bab al-Mandab Strait, the Ansarallah-led Sanaa government has emerged as a powerful symbol of resistance in defence of the Palestinian people – a cause deeply popular across Yemen’s many demographics. Sanaa’s position stands in stark contrast to that of the Saudi and Emirati-backed government in Aden, which, to the horror of Yemenis, welcomed attacks by U.S. and British forces on 12 January”.

“The U.S.–UK airstrikes have prompting some heavyweight internal defections … a number of Yemeni militias previously aligned with the UAE and Saudi Arabia, consequently switched allegiance to Ansarallah … Disillusionment with the coalition will have profound political and military implications for Yemen, reshaping alliances, and casting the UAE and Saudi Arabia as national adversaries. Palestine continues to serve as a revealing litmus test throughout West Asia – and now in Yemen too – exposing those who only-rhetorically claim the mantle of justice and Arab solidarity”.
Yemen military defections – How does this matter?

Well, the Houthis and AnsarAllah have become heroes across the Islamic World. Look at social media. The Houthis are now the ‘stuff of myth’: Standing up for Palestinians whilst others don’t. A following is taking hold. AnsarAllah’s ‘heroic’ stance may lead to the ousting of western proxies, and so to dominate that ‘rest of Yemen’ they presently do not control. It seizes too, the Islamic world imagination (to the concern of the Arab Establishment).

In the immediate aftermath of the assassination of al-Saadi, Iraqis took to the streets of Baghdad chanting: “God is Great, America is the Great Satan”.

Do not imagine this ‘turn’ is lost on others – on the Iraqi Hashd al-Sha’abi, for example; or on the (Palestinians) of Jordan; or on the mass foot-soldiers of the Egyptian army; or indeed in the Gulf. There are 5 billion smartphones extant today. The ruling class do watch the Arabic channels, and view (nervously) social media. They worry that anger against the western flouting of international law may boil over, and they will be unable to contain it: What price the ‘Rules Order’ now since the International Court of Justice upended the notion of a moral content to western culture?

The wrongheadedness of U.S. policy is astonishing – and now has claimed the most central tenet in the ‘Biden strategy’ for resolving the crisis in Gaza. The ‘dangle’ of Saudi normalisation with Israel was viewed in the West as the pivot – around which Netanyahu would either be forced to give up on his maximalist security control from the River to the Sea mantra, or see himself pushed aside by a rival for whom the ‘normalisation bait’ held the allure of likely victory in the next Israeli elections.

Biden’s spokesperson was flagrant in this respect:

“[We] … are having discussions with Israel and Saudi Arabia … about trying to move forward with a normalization arrangement between Israel and Saudi Arabia. So those discussions are ongoing as well. We certainly received positive feedback from both sides that they’re willing to continue to have those discussions”.

The Saudi Government – possibly angry at the U.S. recourse to such deceptive language – duly kicked the plank out from beneath the Biden platform: It issued a written statement confirming unequivocally that: “there will be no diplomatic relations with Israel unless an independent Palestinian state is recognized on the 1967 borders, with East Jerusalem as its capital, and that the Israeli aggression on the Gaza Strip stops – and all Israeli occupation forces are withdraw from the Gaza Strip”. The Kingdom stands by the 2002 Arab Peace Initiative, in other words.

Of course, no Israeli could campaign on that platform in Israeli elections!

Recall how Tom Friedman set out how the ‘Biden Doctrine’ was supposed to fit together as a interlinked whole: First, through taking a “strong and resolute stand on Iran” the U.S. would signal to “our Arab and Muslim allies, that it needs to take on Iran in a more aggressive manner … that we can no longer allow Iran to try to drive us out of the region; Israel into extinction and our Arab allies into intimidation by acting through proxies — Hamas, Hezbollah, the Houthis and Shiite militias in Iraq — while Tehran blithely sits back and pays no price”.

The second strand was the Saudi dangle that would inevitably pave the path into the (third) element which was the “building of a credible legitimate Palestinian Authority as … a good neighbour to Israel …”. This “bold U.S. commitment to a Palestinian state would give us [Team Biden] legitimacy to act against Iran”, Friedman foresaw.

Let us be plain: this trifecta of policies, rather than gel into a single doctrine, are falling like dominoes. Their collapse owes to one thing: The original decision to back Israel’s use of overwhelming violence across Gaza’s civil society – ostensibly to defeat Hamas. It has turned the region and much of the World against the U.S. and Europe.

How did this happen? Because nothing changed by way of U.S. policies. It was the same old western bromides from decades ago: financial threats, bombing and violence. And the insistence on one mandatory ‘stand with Israel’ narrative (with no discussion).

The rest of the world has grown tired of it; even defiant towards it.

So to put it bluntly: Israel has now come face-to-face with the (self-destructive) inconsistency within Zionism: How to maintain special rights for Jews on territory in which there is an approximately equal number of non-Jews? The old answer has been discredited.

The Israeli Right argues that Israel then must go for broke: All or nothing. Take the risk of wider war (in which Israel, may or may not, be ‘victorious’); tell Arabs to move elsewhere; or abandon Zionism and themselves move on.

The Biden Administration, rather than help Israel look truth in the eye, has discarded the task of obliging Israel to face up to the contradictions in Zionism, in favour of restoring the broken status quo ante. Some 75 years after the founding of the Israeli state, as former Israeli negotiator, Daniel Levy, has. noted:

‘[We are back to] “the “banal debate” between the U.S. and Israel over “whether the bantustan shall be repackaged and marketed as a ‘state’”.

Could it have been different? Probably not. The reaction comes from deep in Biden’s nature.

The trifecta of U.S. failed responses paradoxically has nonetheless facilitated Israel’s slide to the Right (as evidenced by all recent polling). And has – absent a hostage deal; absent a Saudi credible ‘dangle’; or any credible path to a Palestinian State – precisely opened the path for the Netanyahu government to pursue his maximalist exit from collapsed deterrence through securing a ‘grand victory’ over the Palestinian resistance, Hizbullah, and even – he hopes – Iran.

None of these objectives can be achieved without U.S. help. Yet, where is Biden’s limit: Support for Israel in a Hizbullah war? And were it to widen, support for Israel in an Iran war too? Where is the limit?

The incongruity, coming as it does, at a moment when the West’s Ukraine Project is imploding, suggests that Biden may see himself needing some ‘grand victory’, as much as does Netanyahu.

https://strategic-culture.su/news/2024/ ... rlds-gyre/

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Israel 'obliterating families with impunity' in Rafah: Amnesty

Israeli airstrikes killed 100 Palestinians overnight in the southern Gaza city ahead of a planned Israeli ground offensive

News Desk

FEB 12, 2024

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Palestinians inspect the site of an Israeli strike on a house, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and Palestinian group Hamas, in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip, February 10, 2024. (Photo credit: Reuters)

Israeli airstrikes killed at least 100 people in the desperately overcrowded city of Rafah on 12 February, the Palestinian Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Expatriates reported.

The Israeli military said it "conducted a series of strikes on terror targets in the area of Shaboura in the southern Gaza Strip."

On Friday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu ordered preparations for a ground offensive in Rafah despite warnings from international aid agencies that any attack on Rafah would be a "blood bath" due to the 1.3 million civilians in the city, including hundreds of thousands of displaced people sheltering there.

When questioned where civilians might go, Netanyahu said: "You know, the areas that we've cleared north of Rafah, plenty of areas there. But, we are working out a detailed plan."

Netanyahu claimed to express concern for civilians in Rafah on the same day Amnesty International issued a report which found "Fresh evidence of deadly unlawful attacks in the occupied Gaza Strip," showing how "Israeli forces continue to flout international humanitarian law, obliterating entire families with total impunity."

The organization carried out an investigation into four Israeli strikes, three in December 2023 and one in January 2024, that killed at least 95 civilians, including 42 children, in Rafah, when it was supposedly the "safest" area in the strip.


The massacre of women and children in #Rafah is another reminder that the West's political establishment is totally racist and irredeemable. Just as the bodies of the victims of the #GazaHolocaust have been torn apart, so has the credibility of the West been completely destroyed. pic.twitter.com/hGFF3fWIL1

— Seyed Mohammad Marandi (@s_m_marandi) February 12, 2024


Netanyahu is planning the Rafah offensive while Gaza is on the brink of famine.

The population of the Gaza Strip is suffering "unprecedented" levels of "near famine-like conditions" as the Israeli assault continues, the UN's agriculture agency said Monday.

"There are unprecedented levels of acute food insecurity, hunger, and near famine-like conditions in Gaza," FAO Deputy Director General Beth Bechdol said in an interview published by the Rome-based agency.

"We are seeing more and more people essentially on the brink of and moving into famine-like conditions every day," she added.

https://thecradle.co/articles/israel-ob ... ah-amnesty

Egypt ready to turn blind eye to Israeli Rafah operation: Report

Cairo reportedly told Tel Aviv that it will not suspend the peace treaty between the two states if the operation commences, as was recently reported

News Desk

FEB 12, 2024

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(Photo credit: Avi Ohayun)

Al-Araby Al-Jadeed reported on 11 February, citing Israeli army radio, that Egyptian officials have informed Israel that they will not object to a ground operation in Rafah so long as Palestinians are not harmed or displaced into the Sinai Peninsula.

The Egyptian Foreign Ministry rejected claims that it has greenlit the assault on Rafah.

According to Hebrew media reports, Egyptian officials told Israel that Cairo has concerns that an influx of Palestinians into Egypt could lead to renewed “militancy.”

“This could indicate that Egypt will give tacit acceptance to any assault that doesn't lead to Gazans being displaced towards the country,” The New Arab – Al-Araby al-Jadeed’s English page – wrote on Sunday.

The report came a day after the Wall Street Journal (WSJ) reported that Egypt has considered suspending the 1978 Camp David Accords – the Israeli-Egyptian peace treaty – in the event that Palestinians are pushed into the Sinai desert. WSJ cites a senior western official.

An Israeli attempt to do this "would effectively suspend" the Camp Davids Accords, WSJ said.

Israeli army radio said that Egypt has stressed to the Israelis that these reports are false and that the decades-old Egyptian-Israeli agreement is under no threat.

Egypt has denied recent reports that claim it has been fortifying its side of the Rafah border with concrete and barbed wire.


Cairo has repeatedly vowed that it will not allow a displacement of Palestinians into the Sinai, which Tel Aviv has plans to implement, according to leaked Israeli documentation.

Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi held a meeting with Jordan’s King Abdullah II in Cairo on 27 December, where they once again rejected Israel’s plans for forced displacement of Palestinians in both Gaza and the occupied West Bank.

In a joint statement at the time, the two leaders announced their "complete rejection of all attempts to liquidate the Palestinian issue and forcibly displace Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza."

Nearly two million Palestinians are trapped in Rafah. Most of them have been displaced from other areas of the strip.

In the first months of the war, Tel Aviv said Gazans would be safe if they fled south. Those who fled south now have nowhere to go.

Israel has rejected the latest proposal for a truce agreement and announced that its army is preparing to advance on Rafah – which the UN and several officials of different countries, including the US, have said poses the threat of an unprecedented humanitarian catastrophe.

The planned Israeli operation aims to seize control of the Philadelphi Corridor, which includes the Rafah border crossing with Egypt. Israel claims Rafah is the last Hamas stronghold.

Dozens of civilians were killed when Israeli jets pounded Rafah overnight and into Mond

https://thecradle.co/articles/egypt-rea ... ion-report

Egypt's 'moment of truth' approaches...Of course the Zionist army never lies.

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Image

Ignore What Western Officials Say About Israel; Watch Their Actions Instead
The Biden administration is feeding pleasing sound bites to the mass media about the president saying mean things about Netanyahu in order to placate their base, while having their foot firmly on the gas pedal of concrete actions toward continuing the genocide in Gaza.

Caitlin Johnstone
February 13, 2024

Another fake, stupid story is making headlines in the mass media today about how bad and wrong President Biden secretly believes Israel’s actions in Gaza are. NBC News is now reporting that Biden has been referring to Benjamin Netanyahu as an “asshole” in private conversations and saying the assault in Gaza “has to stop”.

“Biden has grown steadily more frustrated with the rising Palestinian civilian death toll in Gaza — now a reported 28,000 — and Netanyahu’s reluctance to pursue a long-term peace agreement,” NBC News reports.

Buried all the way down in paragraph 15 of the article, we get to the real story:

“Yet, even as Biden has escalated his rhetoric, he is not yet prepared to make significant policy changes, officials said. He and his aides continue to believe his approach of unequivocally supporting Israel is the right one.”


All the relevant information in this news story that’s getting so much attention today is contained in paragraph 15. None of the words outside of paragraph 15 matter. Paragraph 15 is the whole entire story.

The Biden administration keeps feeding these bogus stories to the press about how “frustrated” they are with Israel’s insistence on massacring civilians with unbelievable savagery, without ever actually making any meaningful policy changes or taking any meaningful actions to stop it. The White House has expressed “concerns” about Israel’s actions in Gaza in more than 20 statements, all without any actual, real-life steps having been taken to curb those actions in any way.

It’s absurd to pretend that the things Biden is privately thinking and feeling about Israel and Gaza are of any interest or significance when Biden is actively backing Israel’s atrocities and bombing anyone in the middle east who tries to stop them. Biden’s feelings aren’t going to stop kids from getting ripped to shreds by Israeli massacres Rafah.

(As an aside, it’s also absurd to pretend Biden thinks anything of any relevance at all given what we now know about the state of his cognitive decline. Even if he really did call the Israeli prime minister an asshole in private conversations, for all we know he was talking about a long-dead Israeli prime minister from his senate days like Ariel Sharon. Hell, he could’ve been talking about the president of Mexico.)

The White House could end this with a phone call, just as it ended the Israeli bombardment of Lebanon with a phone call in 1982. Israel is fully dependent on the United States to perpetrate these mass atrocities in Gaza, and the Israelis are fully aware of this. The genocidal massacres have continued in Gaza for four months because the US empire wants them to continue.


But the shitlib media have taken this ridiculously fake “Biden wants Netanyahu to stop but he just won’t” story and run with it. MSNBC’s Andrea Mitchell just got together with Washington Post columnist David Ignatius to tell their brainwashed viewers that we’re looking at a “showdown” between the brave and righteous Biden and the sinister and murderous Netanyahu.

Really these institutions are just telling American progressives what they want to hear, in the same way Israeli officials provide liberal-sounding messaging for western audiences while spouting genocidal rhetoric in Hebrew to their own citizens. The Biden administration is feeding pleasing sound bites to the mass media about the president saying mean things about Netanyahu in order to placate their base, while having their foot firmly on the gas pedal of concrete actions toward continuing the genocide in Gaza.

This is just what Democrat presidencies look like. Republican presidents like Trump and Bush just come right out say things like they invaded Syria “to take the oil” and they invaded Iraq because God told them to, whereas the Bidens and the Obamas have to make it look pretty. Obama spent eight years feeding eloquent words to the public while continuing and expanding all the most depraved aspects of the Bush administration, thus accomplishing the necessary straddle of facilitating the violence and tyranny of the empire while simultaneously allowing liberals to feel good about themselves.

That’s why you’re seeing this phony song and dance about Biden and Netanyahu being secretly at odds, even while the Biden White House explicitly says “We’re going to continue to support Israel” when asked if they’ve ever threatened to withhold military support if Israel commits war crimes in Rafah.


Western officials keep babbling about how “concerned” they are about what’s happening in Gaza without actually doing anything. US Secretary of State Antony Blinken, British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, British Labour leader Keir Starmer, Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, Australian Foreign Minister Penny Wong, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, and Canadian Minister of Foreign Affairs Mélanie Joly have all been making use of the word “concern” with regard to Gaza so as to be seen as publicly fretting about Israel’s actions without actually presenting any concrete opposition to them.

The correct response to all this lip service to the stated values of the liberal international order is to ignore their words and watch their actions. This is good advice for government policy on Israel and Gaza, and it’s good advice for all other government policy too.

Words can be used to spin narratives and manage perception in ways that concrete actions cannot. Disregard the narrative spin and the public statements and watch the concrete, physical movements of money, weapons and resources. That’s how you penetrate through the distortions of the propaganda matrix and distinguish fact from empty word stories.

Ignore their official public statements and the unofficial public statements they feed the press; watch their actions instead. Disregard what they say and watch what they do. That will show you their true position. That will tell you who they are.

https://caitlinjohnstone.com.au/2024/02 ... s-instead/

And that $4.3M that Biden has taken from the Zionist lobby over the course of his political career has absolutely nothing to do with it.....
"There is great chaos under heaven; the situation is excellent."

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Re: Palestine

Post by blindpig » Thu Feb 15, 2024 12:20 pm

Palestinian arrests in West Bank exceeds 7,000 since 7 October

Israeli forces arrested 18 Palestinians overnight, including children, women, and former prisoners

News Desk

FEB 14, 2024

Image
(Photo Credit: Anadolu Ajansı)

The number of arrests in the West Bank since 7 October has risen to around 7,020, multiple institutions concerned with the rights of detained Palestinians reported in a joint statement on 13 February.

According to the statement, 18 arrests were made in the West Bank overnight, including two women from Jericho alongside other children and former prisoners.

Overnight arrests made by the Israeli forces were mainly carried out in Hebron and Qalqiliya, while other arrests were made across Jericho, Nablus, Jerusalem, and Ramallah.

The Ministry of Detainees and Ex-Detainees Affairs, the Palestinian Prisoners Society (PPS), and the Addameer Prisoner Care and Human Rights Association behind the joint statement revealed that the total number of arrests – including individuals from the 1948 territories – amounted to approximately 220 women and 440 children.


The number reported includes those arrested in their homes, at military checkpoints, those taken hostage, and those forced to surrender under pressure.

The statement added that 53 journalists had been detained since 7 October – 36 of whom remain imprisoned – with 21 others under administrative detention without charge or trial.

The detention campaigns are accompanied by escalating instances of abuse, beatings, and threats against the detainees and their family members. This includes the destruction of homes as well as the confiscation of vehicles, money, and jewelry.

They also reported executions targeting members of detainees' families.

The data given by the prisoner rights groups does not include those arrested from Gaza due to Israel's refusal to disclose such information.

The total number of Palestinians detained in Israeli prisons is estimated to exceed 9,000 individuals. Among them, there are 3,484 administrative detainees and 606 individuals classified as “illegal fighters” from Gaza.

https://thecradle.co/articles/palestini ... -7-october

Hezbollah launches ‘unprecedented’ attack on northern Israel

A soldier was killed, and several were wounded in a command center in Safad, one of several sites targeted on Wednesday morning

News Desk

FEB 14, 2024

Image
Wounded Israelis arriving at a hospital in the occupied city of Safad. 14 February, 2023. (Photo credit: Flash90)

At least one Israeli soldier was killed and several were injured on 14 February after rockets from Lebanon landed in the northern occupied city of Safad.


Several rockets were fired from Lebanon towards several Israeli sites, including the Meron air base and the Israeli northern command headquarters in Safad, Hebrew media reported. A rocket directly hit the northern command site.

“Numerous launches were identified crossing from Lebanon into the areas of Netua, Manara, and into an IDF base in northern Israel,” the Israeli army said in a statement.

"As a result of the launches, an IDF soldier was killed and several other IDF soldiers were injured.” One of the injured was airlifted to a hospital in Haifa due to shrapnel in the skull, The Times of Israel reported.

Hezbollah has yet to announce the attack on its military media page.

Several Israeli media outlets referred to the attack as “unprecedented,” and the largest and most serious since fighting erupted on the Lebanese border in October.

“This is not a trickle [of rockets], it’s war. It’s time to leave behind the ‘conception’ in the north as well,” Israeli National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir, calling for escalation and a shift in Israel’s tactics against the Lebanese resistance.

Knesset member and former finance minister Avigdor Lieberman said the “red line has turned into a white flag” and the Israeli “war cabinet has caved to Hezbollah and lost the north.”

The attack comes one day after a speech by Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah.

“Whoever threatens us with expansion of the war, we threaten him with expansion as well,” Nasrallah said.

The resistance leader vowed Hezbollah would not stop fighting until the war in Gaza was brought to an end.

He also rejected recent proposals made by western states, including France and the US, to de-escalate the southern front against Israel.

“These delegations coming to Lebanon are trying to intimidate us … this has been to no avail, and the benefits they are waving in front of us cannot affect our position and will not lead to stopping this front.”

https://thecradle.co/articles/hezbollah ... ern-israel

Over 400 US, UK attacks on Yemen in one month: Sanaa

Yemeni forces have attacked several US warships since Washington’s campaign against the country began last month

News Desk

FEB 14, 2024

Image
(Photo credit: Reuters)

The information minister in Yemen’s Sanaa government, Dhaifallah al-Shami, announced on 14 February that the US and UK have conducted hundreds of attacks on Yemen since last month.

Washington and London have carried out 403 attacks on the country, including 203 airstrikes.

Shami added that Yemeni naval forces have carried out operations against 14 US vessels, three British vessels, and 17 Israeli vessels since the start of the Gaza–Israel war in October.

"We banned the entry of 99 American commodities, merchandise, and companies that support the criminal Zionist entity," Shami said.

“We shut down 354 agencies and 12 companies and 23 branches of companies … [linked to] American and Zionist trademarks,” he continued.

"A draft law is being prepared to list certain entities and countries as hostile to the Republic of Yemen."

In November, the Armed Forces of Yemen’s Sanaa government, in alignment with the Ansarallah resistance movement, initiated military operations targeting Israeli-owned or linked vessels in the Red Sea and ships destined for Israeli ports. These actions were undertaken in support of Palestine and the resistance in Gaza.

Sanaa has pledged to persist with these operations until both the war and siege in Gaza are brought to an end and until adequate aid reaches the Palestinians.

The attacks have dealt a significant blow to the Israeli economy and global shipping as a whole. Several major shipping companies were forced to suspend journeys in the Red Sea and make lengthy and expensive reroutes.

The US and UK launched a violent campaign against Yemen last month in response to Ansarallah and the Yemeni army’s blockade, prompting Yemen to respond by striking US and British vessels.

"All [foreign] warships must leave the Red Sea, stop their attacks on Yemen, and end their blockade of the country," Mohammad Ali al-Houthi, a member of Yemen’s Supreme Political Council, said on 8 February, vowing that all foreign military vessels would soon be forced out of the region.

The latest US-British attack on Yemen took place on Wednesday in the city of Hodeidah.

https://thecradle.co/articles/over-400- ... onth-sanaa

China demands Israel halt military operations in Rafah

Rafah is now home to over 1 million internally displaced Palestinians living on its streets and in makeshift tents

News Desk

FEB 13, 2024

Image
(Photo Credit: AFP)

China’s Foreign Ministry spokesperson, on 13 February, gave a formal condemnation of the Israeli attacks against Palestinian civilians in Rafah and called on Tel Aviv to halt its military operations.

“China is closely watching the developments in Rafah,” the spokesperson read. “We oppose and condemn acts against civilians and international law. We call on Israel to stop military operations as soon as possible, do everything possible to avoid casualties among innocent civilians, and prevent a more devastating humanitarian disaster in Rafah.”

Israel is planning to carry out a ground operation in Rafah where over 1 million Palestinians have been internally displaced, with thousands seeking shelter in public squares and make-shift tents.

On Monday, Israel launched a series of over 40 airstrikes on Rafah that killed over 100 people and injured hundreds more. The onslaught, carried out by the Israeli air force, navy, and other artillery, inflicted devastation on displaced Palestinians in the region.

“The Nazi occupation army’s attack on the city of Rafah tonight … which [has] claimed the lives of more than a hundred martyrs so far, is considered a continuation of the genocidal war and the attempts at forced displacement it is waging against our Palestinian people,” Hamas said in a statement.

Israel alleges the presence of four Hamas brigades in Rafah, which serves as the pretext for its air attacks and imminent ground invasion.

A ground operation by the Israelis into Rafah has come under international condemnation, with Australia and Japan voicing their concerns on Monday.

“153 countries, including Australia, have already called for an immediate humanitarian ceasefire,” Australian Foreign Minister Penny Wong said via social media, adding that many of Israel’s allies are worried about a military operation into Rafah, saying that it would have “devastating consequences for civilians.”

Japan voiced deep concerns about the situation, noting that Rafah is an “important location for the delivery of humanitarian supplies.”

Since 7 October, Israeli aggression against Palestinians has left up to 30,000 Palestinians dead – most of whom are women and children – and over 67,000 injured.

https://thecradle.co/articles/china-dem ... s-in-rafah

Israel bans UN special rapporteur for Palestine

The independent expert previously said the 7 October operation was a response to Israel's oppression

News Desk

FEB 13, 2024

Image
(Photo Credit: ZUMA Press)

Israel announced on February 12th that it would impose a visa ban on Francesca Albanese, the UN special rapporteur for the occupied Palestinian territories. This decision comes in response to Albanese's recent statements denying that the attacks on October 7th were “anti-Jewish.”

Israeli Foreign Minister Israel Katz and Interior Minister Moshe Arbel demanded in a joint statement that UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres should fire the UN-appointed independent expert.

“If the UN wants to return to being a relevant body, its leaders must publicly disavow the antisemitic words of the ‘special envoy’ – and fire her permanently. Preventing her from entering Israel might remind her of the real reason why Hamas slaughtered babies, women, and [the elderly].”

They added that “the era of Jews being silent is over.”

The @UN's recent statement to the French President, framing the October 7th massacre as a reaction to 'Israeli oppression' rather than an act of anti-Jewish hatred, is deeply troubling. I call on Secretary-General @antonioguterres to fire @FranceskAlbs immediately. The time of… https://t.co/PTItZRTJNG

— ישראל כ”ץ Israel Katz (@Israel_katz) February 11, 2024
In a post on X, Albanese voiced disagreement with French President Emanuel Macron’s description of the 7 October Al Aqsa Flood operation as “the greatest antisemitic massacre of our century.”


“No, [Mr. Macron]. The victims of 7/10 were not killed because of their Judaism, but in response to Israel's oppression,” the UN special rapporteur said.

Albanese, as well as all other UN special rapporteurs, had been refused entry for years prior, she wrote in another post on X. The Foreign Ministry and the Interior Ministry have now taken to formalize an official ban on her entry into the nation.

BREAKING: Israel's "denying me entry" is not news: Israel has denied entry to ALL Special Rapporteurs/oPt since 2008!
This must not become a distraction from Israel's atrocities in Gaza, which are taking a new level of horror with the bombing of people in 'safe areas' in #Rafah.
— Francesca Albanese, UN Special Rapporteur oPt (@FranceskAlbs) February 12, 2024
Israel had also stripped the resident visa of UN humanitarian coordinator Lynn Hastings in December 2023, after she voiced concern for the Palestinian people living under Israeli aggression.
https://thecradle.co/articles/israel-ba ... -palestine

******

Yemeni forces attack US ship trying to cross Red Sea, Hezbollah retaliates Israeli strikes

The regional resistance to Israeli war in Gaza and US support to it has continued despite US attacks in various countries in the region including Yemen, Iraq and Syria

February 13, 2024 by Abdul Rahman

Image
The US Cent Com has carried out a series of airstrikes on Yemen in retaliation for Ansar Allah's blockade of Israel-bound ships in the Red Sea. Photo: CENT COM

Lebanese resistance force Hezbollah carried out several attacks inside Israel on February 12 in response to Israel’s latest airstrikes inside southern parts of the country which killed at least five of its members.

Hezbollah claimed it targeted Israeli military sites in northern Israel at seven different locations with missiles and that Israeli soldiers were present at most of these locations, Al-Mayadeen reported.

Hezbollah stated that Monday’s strikes took the total number of its attacks against Israeli targets since October 8 — a day after the Israeli war on Gaza began — to 1,020. The group said it has avoided strikes on civilians in Israel and only targeted military installations.

Repeated Israeli attacks inside Lebanon since October 8 have killed more than 268 people, a large number of them civilians, and destroyed civilian infrastructure.

Meanwhile, a US ship Star Iris was attacked by the Ansar Allah group in Yemen on Monday in the Bab al-Mandab region in the Red Sea.

Yahya Saree, spokesperson of Yemen’s armed forces said that the US ship was attacked in response to US and British strikes inside the country. The strike also signifies that “the Yemeni armed forces, fulfilling their religious, moral and humanitarian duty affirm their commitment to preventing Israeli navigation and any vessels heading to occupied Palestinian ports in the Red and Arab seas,” he added.

US Central Command (CENTCOM) acknowledged that Yemeni strikes hit the ship at around 3:45 am on Monday. However, it claimed that the ship was still “seaworthy with minor damage and no injuries to the crew.” CENTCOM claimed that the ship was a “Greek-owned, Marshall Islands-flagged cargo vessel”.

The Yemeni attacks are part of retaliation to the repeated airstrikes carried out by the US, UK and other western countries since last month. The US has claimed the attacks inside Yemen were carried out in response to Yemeni forces hampering freedom of navigation in the Red Sea.

However, Ansar Allah has denied these allegations, claiming that its forces are only targeting ships heading to Israel through the Red Sea and Bab-al-Mandab in opposition to its war in Gaza which has killed over 28,000 Palestinians and wounded close to 69,000 others.

Egypt calls Israeli finance minister a war monger
Meanwhile, Egypt joined the countries protesting Israel’s proposed ground offensive inside Rafah in southern Gaza. The Egyptian foreign minister was also quoted by media a few days ago threatening the suspension of the country’s peace treaty with Israel if the attack in Rafah is carried out as planned.

Egypt was the first country in the Arab world to sign a peace deal with Israel in 1979.

It has opposed Israeli attempts to push Palestinians inside its territory through Rafah following the October 7 offensive fearing Israel would never let Palestinians return to Gaza afterwards.

Rafah currently has a population of over 1.4 million. Most of these are people who have been forced to leave their homes due to Israeli bombings and ground offensives elsewhere in the besieged Palestinian territory.

Egypt fears that a ground offensive inside Rafah will force a large number of these Palestinians to cross the border in desperation.

On Monday, Egypt also reacted angrily to the statement by Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich alleging Egypt’s responsibility in Operation Al-Aqsa Flood on October 7. Smortich was reported saying that the Palestinian resistance group Hamas gets weapons through Egypt.

The Egyptian foreign ministry called Smotrich’s statement “irresponsible and inflammatory” claiming it only reveals “a hunger for killing and destruction.”

https://peoplesdispatch.org/2024/02/13/ ... i-strikes/

*******

Image
Pablo Picasso, Guernica, 1937. Oil on canvas. Guernica is in the collection of Museo Reina Sofia, Madrid.

From Guernica to Gaza
Originally published: Janata Weekly on February 4, 2024 by Raouf Halaby (more by Janata Weekly) | (Posted Feb 13, 2024)


Image
Pablo Picasso’s Guernica, 1937

To say that I was awed is an understatement.

Standing in front of Picasso’s 11.5 ft. x 25.5 ft. celebrated painting Guernica is one of the most sobering encounters I’ve had the displeasure of experiencing. Displeasure because the massive composition’s theme is revoltingly gruesome. Since that dastardly first-of-its-kind-waging-of-wars, nations have not learned to abide by and practice peaceful and harmonious existence.

World War 2 was followed by wars in Hiroshima/Nagasaki, Korea, Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos, the Near East/Palestine (8 wars), Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan, Libya, Ukraine, Yemen, and Gaza, to name but a few. And in each of these wars massive bombings and aerial bombardment have been the weapon of choice, resulting in the death of millions of human beings.

Aerial bombardment is brutal, heinous, and vicious. Aerial bombardment is the cowardly weapon of arrogant, fascistic, hegemonic, and egotistical maniacs. Aerial bombardment is the screen behind which powerful thugs hide to absolve themselves of crimes against humanity. Aerial wars’ indiscriminate annihilation of mostly innocent civilians, reducing them to paupers and beggars, goes against every decent norm.

For well over 35 years I’d been showing Guernica to my students, expounding on the painting’s blending of a heinously ghoulish theme executed in the cubist style on a-never-seen-before massive scale. One of the world’s most prominent museums, Madrid’s Museo Reina Sofia, is finally home to this one-of-a-kind artistic expression bearing witness to ghastly human depravity.

On my last visit to Spain some 12 years back, I spent well over an hour studying Picasso’s ingenious blending of form and theme in monochromatic colors. Standing in front of the composition, I viewed it from every angle, and I relived years of lecture terms, phrases, descriptions, questions, answers, student responses/opinions, and so much more.

On April 27, 1937, mostly German and Italian warplanes conducted the first large-scale aerial bombardment on the town of Guernica. Nestled in northern Spain and with the complicity of Franscico Franco, Spain’s Fascist dictator, the Germans wanted to test their newly fabricated war machinery—the Nazi Luftwaffe’s planes and their newly designed bombs—produced solely for destruction on a massive scale. Because of its remoteness, Guernica was chosen as the perfect out-of-sight out-of-mind target.

Like today’s Gaza, Guernica was reduced to massive rubble shrouding innocent civilians whose flesh, blood, bones, and sinews cloaked the bleak landscape of rubble, rebar, and crater-size pocked apocalyptic destruction where once high-rise structures, streets, and alleyways existed. And hospitals, ambulances, mosques, churches, and schools are being targeted—deliberately and mercilessly.

In response to this nightmarish bombing, Picasso isolated himself in his studio for a lengthy time and vented his fury by working long hours and in isolation on what is perhaps the world’s foremost artistic political statement.

Here is what I see today in Picassos’ composition: to the far right is a Gaza woman holding her arms to high heaven; she is screaming, pleading, imploring the gods for deliverance. At the top is a light, accompanied by a hand holding a lamp as though to shed light on the unfolding carnage. Call this the 90 plus journalists killed by Israeli snipers and drones so as to draw a curtain on what God’s chosen are doing in Gaza, today’s “graveyard of children.” In addition to its military strength, Israel is adept at conducting its carnage under the cover of dark. And its powerful choking of U.S. media is adept at portraying it as the victim. To the top left Netanyahu and Co., along with Biden and Co., prance bullishly over the devastation as they squash the emaciated mother holding on to her dead infant. How many white shrouds have to be buried to appease the Hebraic God of revenge? And how many corpses have to be pulled out, with bare hands, from under the rubble? And how many tattered remains have to be placed in makeshift bags? Careful scrutiny of the foreground depicts newsprint, Picasso’s manner of telling the world “I am Guernica: Remember Me, Remember What Heinous Crimes You’ve committed.” And the crushed supine figure holding onto a broken weapon represents trampled, crushed justice under the weight of brute force.

It is worth noting that while Peter Paul Rubens, Pieter Bruegel the Elder, and scores of mostly European artists have produced a massive volume of compositions under the title Massacre of the Innocents, a theme associated with Herod (the Not so Great), King of Judea, and around the time of Christ’s birth, Picasso’s Guernica stands in a class of its own.

And is it not ironic that right around the time Christendom is about to celebrate the birth of its Savior, the Prince of Peace, the Redeemer, the Israelis are raining down 2000-pound bombs, some of them the awful phosphorus kind that vaporize their victims? To date the equivalent of three Hiroshima/Nagasaki bombs have been dropped on a starved, thirsty, disoriented 2.3 million displaced citizenry.

And could we say that to date, timed with Christmas 2023, Israel has massacred over 8,000 thousand innocent children—and counting. And the West, today’s bastion of Christianity, is abhorrently supportive and silent?

Yes, in the last few years Fascism has slowly sneaked into our halls of justice, our public spaces, our airwaves, and our digital formats. Joe “I am a Zionist to the Core,” Netanyahu’s puppet and apologist, has draped himself in the Israeli flag and has fashioned and emblazoned his tie, his shirt, his suit, and his rhetoric in the same style and rhetoric of Netanyahu, his alter ego and master.

On December 10, 2023, Spain, the only Western nation with the moral fortitude to express its outrage at the Gaza carnage, held a solidarity event in the Basque city of Guernica’s market square, the same square that was bombed by the Nazis and Fascist forces way back in 1937. An aerial view depicts a massive Palestinian flag (the size of the entire square) in mosaic form the tesserae of which were held by citizens, trade unionists, artists, anti-war and anti-fascist groups, along with a large depiction of Picasso’s image depicting the mother, her child in her arms, crying to the high heavens.

And for a whole minute the sirens blazed in solidarity with Gaza’s mothers and children.

Viva Espana. Viva Palestina.

https://mronline.org/2024/02/13/from-guernica-to-gaza/

******

In a Flagrant Violation of International Law, Israel Intensifies Siege of Nasser Medical Complex
Posted by INTERNATIONALIST 360° on FEBRUARY 14, 2024
Ana Vračar

Image
The Nasser Medical Complex has been under siege for several days

After over 20 days of besieging Nasser Medical Complex, Israeli occupation forces attacked thousands of people sheltering inside the hospital.


On February 14, the Israeli Occupation Forces (IOF) launched an attack against thousands of civilians seeking shelter at Nasser Medical Complex in Khan Younis, including the hospital’s staff and patients. The complex has endured a siege by the IOF for over 20 days, during which those inside were kept under sniper threat, resulting in the deaths of dozens in the vicinity of the hospital. Among the casualties were children who attempted to fetch water, as well as healthcare personnel.

“Get out, animals! Get out, dogs!” shouted IOF soldiers at the people inside Nasser Hospital during the final stages of the siege. Additionally, soldiers forced a young Palestinian man, whom they had detained, to deliver evacuation orders to the hospital. Reportedly, the man was coerced to return to the IOF after carrying out the task, under threat of the soldiers invading the hospital to find him. The Israeli soldiers then shot the man as he was walking back to them.

Most of the complex became unusable due to Israeli attacks throughout the siege. The IOF demolished the northern wall of Nasser Hospital, leaving only one passage usable—the same one through which they marched people out on Wednesday. Before forcing them to leave, Israeli soldiers reportedly positioned face-recognition technology near the exit. This move, according to observers tracking attacks on healthcare in the Gaza Strip, indicates the declaration of Nasser Hospital as a military target, likely to be followed by mass arrests and abuse of healthcare workers and patients.

Until the evacuation was enforced, Nasser was one of the last major health centers remaining in Gaza. Its capacities seconded only those of Al-Shifa Hospital, the Strip’s largest hospital. According to Ubai Aboudi, Executive Director of Bisan Center for Research and Development, Nasser’s beds accounted for some 12% of the overall capacities in Gaza.

The attack on the hospital is certain to have a devastating effect on the tens of thousands of people injured in Israeli attacks. While the hospital was besieged, the World Health Organization (WHO) and Doctors Without Borders (MSF) warned that it was crucial to keep the complex operational as IOF attacks south of the Wadi Gaza line intensified.

Despite all the warnings and pleading, the WHO was last able to deliver supplies to Nasser Hospital at the end of January. After that, attempts to organize medical missions were blocked by Israeli authorities. This meant that health workers had barely anything to work with, especially after an attack on nearby school buildings led to a fire, which then destroyed approximately 80% of the stocks in Nasser’s medical warehouse. As a result of the incessant attacks, the hospital’s emergency department was flooded in sewage water, making it unusable.

“The hospital is barely functioning, but we are trying to work as much as possible to save lives,” Mohammed Harara, a doctor from the hospital, told WHO officials days before the attack. “We are scared that any moment we might lose our lives, and we have no clue about our families.”

Staff from the hospital faces additional threats, as the Israeli forces continue to target health workers in particular. Dozens of nurses, paramedics, and doctors have been disappeared by the IOF. They are still be held under torture and extreme duress, without any access to legal or humanitarian protection.

The dehumanizing attacks against patients, staff, and displaced people at Nasser Hospital are another step towards making Gaza uninhabitable, according to Aboudi. Little doubt remains that the few health institutions that remain in southern Gaza will meet a similar fate as the Israeli armed forces approach.

After that, says Aboudi, “there will be no care, simply put.”



https://libya360.wordpress.com/2024/02/ ... l-complex/

The UN is Complicit in the Forced Displacement of the Palestinians
Posted by INTERNATIONALIST 360° on FEBRUARY 14, 2024
Ramona Wadi

Image
Palestinians, including children, collect usable belongings in the heavily damaged buildings after Israeli attacks in Rafah, Gaza on February 12, 2024 [Yasser Qudih - Anadolu Agency]Palestinians, including children, collect usable belongings in the heavily damaged buildings after Israeli attacks in Rafah, Gaza on February 12, 2024 [Yasser Qudih – Anadolu Agency]

Never, ever, trust the UN’s concept of human rights. As Israel continues its genocide in Rafah, supposedly a safe zone designated by Israel itself while it hounds out Hamas in other areas of Gaza, the UN held its daily press briefing and made use of its usual jargon, carefully evading any statement that could be interpreted as a reaction against Israel’s war crimes.

One would expect that after Israel has killed tens of thousands of Palestinians and rounded up almost the entire population in Rafah for convenient annihilation, the UN would at least avail itself of stronger words. However, as the UN Secretary General’s Spokesman Stephane Dujarric stated, humanitarian colleagues from the Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) “have heightened concerns of an escalation in Gaza’s southernmost city, where hundreds of thousands of Palestinians have sought refuge.”

Heightened concerns? It gets worse.

“We saw again Palestinians being killed yesterday. What we need is a humanitarian ceasefire,” Dujarric said in response to another question regarding the situation in Rafah. “The Secretary-General feels it’s extremely important to have this humanitarian ceasefire. We also saw yesterday the release of two Israeli hostages, which we very much welcome the fact that these two have regained their freedom. And it’s important to see the immediate and unconditional release of all remaining hostages.”

Palestinians are being slaughtered by Israel, and the UN annihilates their presence even from statements that should deal with the genocide they are living and dying through. The Israeli hostage situation is being used as a diversion, not least from the fact that Hamas proposed a plan which Israel rejected outright. The UN is sending a clear message: any humanitarian ceasefire would be tied strictly to the release of Israeli hostages and only if Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu agrees to it. So far, Netanyahu has clearly demonstrated that the remaining Israeli hostages are already collateral damage in the genocide inflicted upon Palestinians in Gaza.

Another question was related to Israel requesting the UN’s help in forcibly displacing Palestinians., “We want to ensure that anything that happens is done in full respect of international law, in full respect of civilians,” said Dujarric. “We will not be party to forced displacement of people.” Wrong on both counts. Maybe the UN needs to hear that it is encouraging Israel’s international law violations including genocide, and it is, and has always been, party to the forced displacement of the Palestinian people since entertaining the Zionist colonial ideology and coming up with the 1947 Partition Plan.

Dujarric’s words not only ring hollow in terms of the UN’s purported concern for Palestine, of which it has none, but he also seeks to conceal the UN’s historical role in forced displacement of Palestinians. The UN’s role in creating Israel – a colonial entity on stolen Palestinian land – is equivalent to complicity in forced displacement, ethnic cleansing and now also genocide. And yet, the Palestinians have been forced perpetually by the UN itself to remain subservient to international demands and conjectures. From Israel’s establishment and subsequent international recognition, to the defunct two-state compromise, the result Palestinians have been forced to reap is their own annihilation with the full blessings of the UN. Any official or entity asking Palestinians to abide by international law has always been a hypocrite. At this stage, anyone advocating for less than a permanent ceasefire, full recognition of the Palestinians’ right to anti-colonial resistance and their full political rights to their land and liberation, would do better to remain silent. The colonised have the right to defend themselves against the coloniser. The UN should get that.

https://libya360.wordpress.com/2024/02/ ... estinians/
"There is great chaos under heaven; the situation is excellent."

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Re: Palestine

Post by blindpig » Fri Feb 16, 2024 12:14 pm

AS`AD AbuKhHALIL: Arabs Divided on ICJ Ruling
February 14, 2024

The liberal Arab camp thinks the ICJ ruling will lead to a peaceful settlement of the Palestinian question, while the popular camp has lost faith in international organizations, including the ICJ.

Image
South African President Cyril Ramaphosa arriving in Cairo for a. peace summit on Oct. 21, 2023. (GovernmentZA, Flickr, CC BY-ND 2.0)

By As`ad AbuKhalil
Special to Consortium News

Israel will forever be stained with the label of genocide and its supporters will always be accused of supporting genocide after the International Court of Justice ruled last month that there was prima facie evidence to put Israel on trial for genocide.

Even powerful foreign lobbies will find it difficult to remove the stigma. This is not lost on U.S. citizens who have spent untold millions of dollars and have heard too many lies to continue supporting an image of moral superiority.

If an Arab country rather than South Africa had brought the charge of genocide, the U.S., and other Israel supporters would have easily dismissed it, pointing to a sordid record of human rights violations and repression by that government.

But this was South Africa which, given its own record of human rights adherence since the end of apartheid, and high standards of democracy and equality embedded in the South African constitution, has emerged as a moral leader not only of developing countries but of the world. South Africa is a moral superpower, while the U.S. has been reduced to a mere bully.

South Africa now leads the “Free World” and not the U.S., NATO and its coalition of former colonial powers. South Africa is the new superpower, without nuclear weapons. Its soft power is not the same as America’s, which camouflages naked aggression and the subjugation of other countries.

Arabs Divided

There are two camps on ICJ ruling in the Arab world. The liberal intellectuals who are funded by Gulf despots and/or NATO governments/Soros insist that Arabs should never abandon their belief in the “international community” (a code word for the genocide axis of NATO) and in international law and human rights.

It is essential for this camp to push Arabs away from belief in the efficacy of armed struggle and resistance. It wants to undermine resistance movements in the Middle East by maintaining that there is a “peace process” and that the West — yet again — is serious this time about reaching a peaceful settlement of the Palestinian issue. The camp regards the ICJ ruling as yet another opportunity to reach justice peacefully through international organizations.

The other camp, which speaks more for free Arab public opinion, regard the notion of international law and human rights as tools and even Western government tricks to solidify their domination over people of the South.

They want to tranquilize and delude them into thinking justice can be restored through international fora. The fact that a month after the ICJ ruling, Israel continues its genocide in Gaza, and Western governments continue to endorse and sponsor it is testimony to the limitations and even the impotence of international organizations.

Hamas’ Popularity

The rise of the Hamas phenomenon is a manifestation of the popularity of belief in armed struggle. Arabs have spent years suffering from Israeli aggression and occupation while being deceived by the presence of a so-called “peace process” that would solve the Palestinian problem.

Many Arabs on the other hand are celebrating the World Court’s denigration of Israel by pinning the genocide label onto its war on Gaza.

And for the first time, genocidal statements by Israeli leaders (those statements go back to even before the founding of the apartheid state) are being used as legal evidence of intent to commit genocide under international law.

But Arabs are accustomed to the U.S. shielding Israel from all forms of international legal accountability. From the U.N. General Assembly Partition Plan of 1947 — when the U.S. bullied and bribed other countries to produce the desirable vote (see Walid Khalidi, From Haven to Conquest) — to the recent court order in The Hague, the U.S. usually resorts to bribery, trickery, pressure, intimidation and threats of sanctions against states and individuals to get what it wants.

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Participants arriving for a special meeting in observance of the International Day of Solidarity with the Palestinian People on Nov. 29, 2023. (UN Photo/Mark Garten)

It didn’t escape Arab attention that not a single Arab state dared submit the petition to the World Court because they feared the wrath of the U.S. and its subservient Western allies. Jordan initially expressed willingness to issue a supportive document at The Hague but later seemed to equivocate, according to this report.

Even the Palestinian Authority (which relies on NATO governments’ funding and Israeli-collected tax revenues) obediently followed U.S. orders regarding the PA’s repeated threats to challenge Israel in international institutions and fora.

Arabs have been jubilant that Israel finally earned its genocide marks, even if the court did not rule that Israel has indeed committed acts of genocide. But that the court requested that Israel prevent the occurrence of genocide and to submit a report in that regard after a month, indicates that a country that was declared by David Ben-Gurion to be “a light unto the nations” is now regarded as a moral pariah — perhaps not by Western governments but by most developing countries and large swaths of Western public opinion.

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State reactions to South Africa vs. Israel at the ICJ. (Alonso Gurmendi, Wikimedia Commons, Public domain)

The Tide Has Turned

When I first came to the U.S., all demographic segments of the American population identified with Israel over the Palestinians by a ratio of 6-or-7-to-1. Today, the youth of the U.S. are split in support between Hamas and Israel. Those numbers were unthinkable only 40 years ago.

The South African case against Israel broke through a thick wall of Western protection of Israel. It is a precedent that can’t be reversed. Israel won’t be able to wash off the stigma of genocide, no matter how many resolutions are produced by the U.S. Congress. People around the world understand that Congress is subservient to AIPAC.

South Africa stood up against U.S. hegemony and opened the road for China, down the road, to muster more courage in standing up to U.S. control of international organizations.

Yet, there is a need for caution. Firstly, the ruling did not make much sense. It cautioned Israel against perpetrating genocide, but it did not call for a ceasefire. It also left it for Israel to report on its own genocide. Genocide is too serious a breach of international law that the court should have assigned a special, outside commission to adjudicate the matter and not leave it to the goodwill of Israel.

Despite South Africa’s courage and the ICJ’s willingness to investigate the charge, Israel was protected by the Western coalition that ludicrously maintained that the statements of Israeli officials (in which clear genocidal intent was registered) should be dismissed because they did not represent official policy.

Imagine if the Nazi statements about Jews were dismissed at Nuremberg because this or that Nazi official did not represent official policy. Certainly, the president of Israel and the minister of defense are much higher in the echelons of the government hierarchy than Eichmann was in the Nazi regime.

The ruling is just one more sign that the international order set up by the U.S. after the collapse of the U.S.S.R. is coming apart before our eyes. The system of Western hegemony and injustice must be dismantled for the sake of world peace and justice, and only the Republic of South Africa could muster the courage to breach it. Even China and Russia fell short of this.

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South Africa’s representatives on left, Israel’s on right, 15 judges in foreground on Jan. 11 during public hearings at the World Court in The Hague, Netherlands, on genocide charges against Israel. (International Court of Justice)

For propaganda purposes, the U.S. throws the charge of genocide against its enemies even when no evidence exists. No Arab, indeed no reasonable human being, would ever take seriously the U.S. charge that China has been committing genocide against Muslims.

In Gaza, we now have clear photographic evidence of genocide. We “know it when we see it” in the words of Supreme Court Justice Potter Stewart on pornography.

The preliminary ruling by the ICJ (the final ruling may take months and years, with the U.S. working to make sure it doesn’t come sooner) is a political milestone, not an international juridical one.

On Goes the Killing

The genocide in Gaza continues unbated after the ruling and the Israeli government — by virtue of unconditional Western support — does not show any restraint whatever in the wake of the ruling.

But South Africa showed that the West is not the world’s destiny: the Western monopoly over international morality has to end for the sake of the people of the world. The U.S. and Israel (and the rest of the genocide coalition) are not happy with the verdict as the U.S. continues to officially oppose a ceasefire in the name of Israeli self-defense.

Will the ruling make Arabs, and people of developing countries in general, more amenable to resorting to international justice?

That is highly unlikely especially since the court did not devise a mechanism to halt the war of aggression, not that it has the power to do that. It is the International Criminal Court that was established to compensate for the ICJ’s lack of implementation powers of the ICJ, and the ICC, by virtue of U.S. bullying, has been dormant throughout this war.

South Africa took its lead from the brave Palestinians of Gaza. Their message: it is high time to change the world.

https://consortiumnews.com/2024/02/14/a ... cj-ruling/

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In a flagrant violation of international law, Israel intensifies siege of Nasser Medical Complex

After over 20 days of besieging Nasser Medical Complex, Israeli occupation forces attacked thousands of people sheltering inside the hospital

February 14, 2024 by Ana Vračar

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The Nasser Medical Complex has been under siege for several days

On February 14, the Israeli Occupation Forces (IOF) launched an attack against thousands of civilians seeking shelter at Nasser Medical Complex in Khan Younis, including the hospital’s staff and patients. The complex has endured a siege by the IOF for over 20 days, during which those inside were kept under sniper threat, resulting in the deaths of dozens in the vicinity of the hospital. Among the casualties were children who attempted to fetch water, as well as healthcare personnel.

“Get out, animals! Get out, dogs!” shouted IOF soldiers at the people inside Nasser Hospital during the final stages of the siege. Additionally, soldiers forced a young Palestinian man, whom they had detained, to deliver evacuation orders to the hospital. Reportedly, the man was coerced to return to the IOF after carrying out the task, under threat of the soldiers invading the hospital to find him. The Israeli soldiers then shot the man as he was walking back to them.

Most of the complex became unusable due to Israeli attacks throughout the siege. The IOF demolished the northern wall of Nasser Hospital, leaving only one passage usable—the same one through which they marched people out on Wednesday. Before forcing them to leave, Israeli soldiers reportedly positioned face-recognition technology near the exit. This move, according to observers tracking attacks on healthcare in the Gaza Strip, indicates the declaration of Nasser Hospital as a military target, likely to be followed by mass arrests and abuse of healthcare workers and patients.

Read more: Palestinian health workers kidnapped by Israel subjected to torture and humiliation
Until the evacuation was enforced, Nasser was one of the last major health centers remaining in Gaza. Its capacities seconded only those of Al-Shifa Hospital, the Strip’s largest hospital. According to Ubai Aboudi, Executive Director of Bisan Center for Research and Development, Nasser’s beds accounted for some 12% of the overall capacities in Gaza.

The attack on the hospital is certain to have a devastating effect on the tens of thousands of people injured in Israeli attacks. While the hospital was besieged, the World Health Organization (WHO) and Doctors Without Borders (MSF) warned that it was crucial to keep the complex operational as IOF attacks south of the Wadi Gaza line intensified.

Despite all the warnings and pleading, the WHO was last able to deliver supplies to Nasser Hospital at the end of January. After that, attempts to organize medical missions were blocked by Israeli authorities. This meant that health workers had barely anything to work with, especially after an attack on nearby school buildings led to a fire, which then destroyed approximately 80% of the stocks in Nasser’s medical warehouse. As a result of the incessant attacks, the hospital’s emergency department was flooded in sewage water, making it unusable.

“The hospital is barely functioning, but we are trying to work as much as possible to save lives,” Mohammed Harara, a doctor from the hospital, told WHO officials days before the attack. “We are scared that any moment we might lose our lives, and we have no clue about our families.”

Staff from the hospital faces additional threats, as the Israeli forces continue to target health workers in particular. Dozens of nurses, paramedics, and doctors have been disappeared by the IOF. They are still be held under torture and extreme duress, without any access to legal or humanitarian protection.

The dehumanizing attacks against patients, staff, and displaced people at Nasser Hospital are another step towards making Gaza uninhabitable, according to Aboudi. Little doubt remains that the few health institutions that remain in southern Gaza will meet a similar fate as the Israeli armed forces approach.

After that, says Aboudi, “there will be no care, simply put.”

https://peoplesdispatch.org/2024/02/14/ ... l-complex/

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Escalation In Northern Palestine

The situation on the northern Israeli border is escalating. It is likely to soon evolve into a full fledged war. The situation is already increasing the economic price Israel has to pay for its misdeeds.

The international rating agency Moody's has downgraded Israel's credit rating. This will lead to higher interest payments on Israeli government debt:

In a report dated last Friday but not issued until Saturday, the Jewish sabbath, the agency officially reduced Israel’s rating from A1 to A2, and added pointers of further downgrading to come. The Anglo-American press immediately reacted against Moody’s.

“Israel hits back”, the Financial Times headlined. The newspaper added: “[Prime Minister Benjamin] Netanyahu, in a rare statement over the Jewish Sabbath, said: ‘The rating downgrade is not connected to the economy, it is entirely due to the fact that we are in a war. The rating will go back up the moment we win the war — and we will win the war.’” In the Associated Press report, “Israel’s finance minister blasts Moody’s downgrade”.

Rupert Murdoch’s platform Fox claimed: “Israel has a strong, open economy despite Moody’s downgrade”. “Israel’s creditworthiness remains high,” according to the New York Times, “but the rating agency noted that the outlook for the country was negative… A rating of A2 is still a high rating.”


There are several negative issues that could lead to a further downgrading:

According to Moody’s report, “downside risks remain at the A2 rating level. In particular, the risk of an escalation involving Hezbollah in the North of Israel remains, which would have a potentially much more negative impact on the economy than currently assumed under Moody’s baseline scenario. Government finances would also be under more intense pressure in such a scenario.”

Shortly after the Moody's report appeared Hizbullah leader Hassan Nasrallah set out to increase the pressure on Israel:

Hezbollah Secretary General Sayyed Hasan Nasrallah reiterated that Hezbollah will continue its border offensive against the Israeli occupation sites near Lebanon border till the Zionist barbaric war on Gaza ends.
“When the aggression on Gaza stops fire will be ceased in South Lebanon,” Sayyed Nasrallah said.
...
Hezbollah Secretary General commented on the recent threats made by the Zionist defense minister Yoav Gallant who said that the IOF will not stop aggression on South Lebanon even after Gaza ceasefire, stressing that, then, Hezbollah will continue its offensive.

“When the war on Gaza ends, we will stop our offensive. If the enemy resumes its hostilities, we will, act in light of the rules and the formulas.”


Nasrallah rejected western demands, passed through the Lebanese government, to pull back Hizbullah's forces and to cease fire:

It is Hezbollah duty and responsibility to deter the enemy and prevent the assault on Lebanon, Sayyed Nasrallah affirmed, adding that the Resistance responses will be proportionate, yet effective and productive.
Sayyed Nasrallah stressed that the hundreds of thousands of settlers already displaced from the North will not be able to return to their homes in case of escalation.

‘Israel’ must prepare shelters, basements, hotels and schools to house 2 million settlers who will be displaced from northern Palestine if it expands the war zone, Sayyed Nasrallah warned.

If the Israeli enemy expands its war zone against Lebanon, Hezbollah will do too, Sayyed Nasrallah emphasized.
...
“It is easier to move Litani River forward to the borders than pushing back Hezbollah fighters from the borders to the Litani River,” Sayyed Nasrallah said.


More will be announced later:

Sayyed Nasrallah stressed that ‘Israel’ has failed over 130 days to achieve any target in Gaza war, except the monstrous attacks on the civilians.
Concerning the Zionist war on Gaza, Sayyed Nasrallah stressed that he will address more details about during a speech he is scheduled to deliver on Friday (February 16) the anniversary of Hezbollah Martyr Commanders.


Rarely mentioned in western news is the extend of Hizbullah's activities against the military of the Zionist entity:

Al-Manar correspondent:
The resistance in Southern Lebanon, has so far attacked:

HQ of the Northern Region Command in Safad.
Command HQ of the 91st Galilee Division in “Branit”
HQ of the 769th Eastern Brigade in Kiryat Shmona.
Meron Air command and control base
Beit Hillel IOF base
Training camp in Kela, in the occupied Golan Heights
Ma’ale Golan IOF base on Mount Hermon
Most artillery positions along the rear front and military concentrations
Every single border military IOF sites
All of these attacks carried out by the resistance confirm that all military and fire pressure and Israeli threats will not deter it from continuing its operations. The resistance is proceeding with full confidence, first relaying on God, and then its military capabilities, the spirit of its fighters, and the resilience of its people.


The Safad headquarter site was only hit this morning. This followed after more Israeli attacks had hit civilian structures in southern Lebanon.

Hala Jaber @HalaJaber - 23:01 UTC · Feb 13, 2024
URGENT: #Hezbollah fired a barrage of rockets targeting an army base #Israel’s northern city of Safed.
One reportedly killed & eight wounded, one in serious condition.
The IDF said some of the rockets hit the Northern Command headquarters base in #Safed, some 13 kilometers (8 miles) from the Lebanese border.


Hitting Safad was a (mild) escalation after previous attacks.

Unlike the daily Palestinian victims of Israel's brutality, the Israeli casualties of the strike created headlines in Israel:

An Israeli woman was killed and eight others were wounded as a barrage of rockets fired from Lebanon slammed into Safed and an army base in the northern city, the military and medical officials said.
In response to the attack, the IDF said it launched “widespread” airstrikes in Lebanon.

There was no immediate claim for the rocket fire, although it was believed to have been carried out by the Hezbollah terror group, which has been launching daily rocket, missile, and drone attacks on northern Israel in recent months, saying it is doing so in support of the Hamas terror group in Gaza, against whom Israel is waging war.

The Israel Defense Forces and Safed’s municipality said rockets hit an army base in the area, some 13 kilometers (8 miles) from the Lebanon border.


The casualty count on Israel's northern border is still very uneven:

So far, the skirmishes on the border have resulted in six civilian deaths on the Israeli side, as well as the deaths of at least nine IDF soldiers and reservists. There have also been several attacks from Syria, without any injuries.
Hezbollah has named 194 members who have been killed by Israel during the ongoing skirmishes, mostly in Lebanon but some also in Syria. In Lebanon, another 29 operatives from other terror groups, a Lebanese soldier, and some two dozen civilians, three of whom were journalists, have been killed.


If Israel does not evacuated more settlers, at high economic costs, the casualty ratio is likely to change.

The Lebanese Hezbollah expert Amal Saad, who is currently teaching in Cardiff, Britain, explained Hizbullah's thinking:

Amal Saad @amalsaad_lb - 10:58 UTC · Feb 14, 2024
There are several messages behind Hizbullah's qualitatively different strike on Safed this morning, which Israel is treating as the gravest attack since the start of the war, with Ben Gvir calling it a "declaration of war".

At the forefront, is Hizbullah's message that it won't capitulate to Israeli and western demands that it cease hostilities across the border, as per Nasrallah's speech yesterday. It's also a response to several Israeli assassination strikes in South Lebanon, reaching as deep as Sidon.

But the timing of this escalation also appears to be related to Netanyahu's scuppering of the Paris cease-fire proposal and his government's threats to invade Rafah, which in turn, would make a full-out attack on Lebanon more likely. Hizbullah is giving Israel a taster of the type of strikes and casualty tolls its military will have to bear, should Netanyahu continue to reject a cease-fire.


Predictably the Israeli occupation forces responded to the strike on Safad by escalating further:

The Israeli military said Wednesday its fighter jets "began a series of strikes in Lebanon", raising fears of a war between the two countries after months of cross-border fire.
The military gave no further details of the air strikes, while Lebanese media reported air raids on southern villages including Adchit, Sawwaneh and Shihabiyeh.

The strikes came hours after fire from Lebanon wounded multiple people in northern Israel, according to medics.
...
Fears have been growing of another full-blown conflict between Israel and Hezbollah, with tens of thousands displaced on both sides of the border and regional tensions soaring.

"I don't know when the war in the north is, I can tell you that the likelihood of it happening in the coming months is much higher than it was in the past," Israeli military chief Herzi Halevi said last month.


Following the last Israeli strikes, the Lebanese side said that four civilians had been killed or wounded by them.

The increase of hostility is getting to a point where there will no longer be the question "if" another war between Israel and Hizbullah will occur but only the question of "when".

Posted by b on February 14, 2024 at 15:23 UTC | Permalink

https://www.moonofalabama.org/2024/02/e ... .html#more

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Palestinian Exodus From Rafah: ‘Where Do We Go?’
FEBRUARY 14, 2024

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Two Palestinian children ride atop a vehicle in Rafah, February 13, 2024. Photo: Mohammed Abed/AFP.

Palestinian journalist Yousef Fares reports from Gaza for Al-Akhbar.

This is the eighth time that Mohammed Abu Amsha has been displaced. His journey in search of safety has taken him from the city of Beit Lahia in the northern Gaza Strip to the Nuseirat refugee camp, then to Maghazi, then Khan Yunis, and finally to Rafah. At each stop, the man moved from one house to another, from one shelter to a hospital. Yesterday, Abu Amsha packed his bags and returned from the Shaboura camp to the Nuseirat camp. The 30-year-old man says to Al-Akhbar, “By God, I don’t know where I’m going. I have a family to care for, and the shrapnel burned the tents we were sleeping in two days ago. I’m heading from Rafah into the unknown. They told us Rafah was safe, but if it is safe and they killed more than 100 martyrs in one night, what would they do if it were a battlefield?”

The road from the eastern and western neighborhoods of Rafah, passing through the al-Awda junction, is crowded with thousands of families who have boarded cars, trucks, and carts pulled by animals, carrying with them tents and firewood. On all departing faces, even those overwhelmed by gloom and silence, one phrase is read and heard from those speaking: “Where do we go?” For these people, the repeated Israeli threats against the city of Rafah necessarily imply an intention and plan to invade the city.

As for the hundreds of statements issued by the international community and national capitals, Abu Khalil Al-Muzayn describes them as follows: “If they were useful, they would have stopped the dozens of massacres that started in northern Gaza and will end in Rafah. This war has proven that Israel is not accountable to anyone. If it decides to invade the city, it will trample over the skulls of a million displaced people without any humanitarian restraint, so there is no way we can leave the fate of our families to analysts and estimates.”



As for the living conditions in Rafah, a reliable source in the Government Emergency Committee of Gaza confirms that the city has plunged into a food crisis. This is exacerbated by the Israeli occupation’s blockade that has been preventing aid trucks from entering for over a week. The source adds in conversation with Al-Akhbar, “Everything that enters represents just a drop in the ocean of daily needs. We are talking about nearly a million and a half people squeezed into an area not exceeding 30 kilometers. With the limited aid entering, there is a shortage of many products, and there has been a significant increase in the prices of basic goods, including vegetables.” He pointed out, for example, that “the price of a kilo of onions has reached 50 shekels, while a single pack of baby diapers is nearly $100.”

As the international warnings about catastrophic consequences in the event of the occupation army storming the city of Rafah continue to grow, writer and political analyst Ismail Mohammed believes that the totality of warnings about the Israeli ground operation in the southern city is not aimed at preventing the occupation from doing it, but is a warning addressed to the Hamas movement. A warning that urgent concessions should be made at the negotiating table to prevent the tragedy that will start with a ground operation in the city. “It is understandable that everything that the enemy is doing now is seeking to achieve victories at the negotiating table, and it is even more understandable that the world, which could not stop Israel’s crimes that have been going on for 130 days, will not stop them today,” Mohammed adds. “Israel, all Arab and regional countries, and the international community stand as one front to exert pressure on the resistance at the negotiating table. Therefore, there is a high possibility of a military invasion of Rafah.”

(Al-Akhbar) by Yousef Fares

https://orinocotribune.com/palestinian- ... -do-we-go/

Robbery as a Political Decision: Israeli Army Robs Bank of Palestine in Gaza
FEBRUARY 14, 2024

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Israeli army personnel and a tank in a detsroyed neighborhood of Gaza City. Photo: Reuters.

While stealing from their Palestinian victims is a common practice by the Israeli occupation army, the latest robbery of the Bank of Palestine headquarters in Gaza is different, as it was politically motivated, the Israeli army said.

The Anadolu news agency, cited the Israeli newspaper Maariv as reporting on Sunday, February 11, that Israeli soldiers seized 200 million shekels ($54.29 million) from the Bank of Palestine headquarters in Gaza.

Maariv, referencing Israeli officers, reported that a military force took the funds allocated for the Ramallah-based Palestinian Authority in the Al-Rimal neighborhood last week.

There was no comment from the Palestinian Authority or the Palestinian Resistance Movement Hamas on the report.

The Israeli army, however, justified the robbery using unique logic.

“Israeli soldiers were at the Bank of Palestine headquarters in Gaza last week to prevent money from reaching Hamas,” an Israeli military spokesman told Maariv, without providing further details.

He said that this step “was decided at the political level.”

Despite an International Court of Justice’s provisional ruling last month, Israel continues its deadly offensive on the Gaza Strip. According to Gaza’s Ministry of Health, 28,473 Palestinians have been killed, and over 68,000 wounded in Israel’s ongoing genocide in Gaza starting on October 7, 2023.

At least 8,000 people are unaccounted for, presumed dead under the rubble of their homes throughout the Strip.

Palestinian and international organizations say that the majority of those killed and wounded are women and children.

The Israeli aggression has also resulted in the forceful displacement of nearly two million people from all of the Gaza Strip, with the vast majority of the displaced forced into the densely crowded southern city of Rafah near the border with Egypt—in what has become Palestine’s largest mass exodus since the 1948 Nakba.

https://orinocotribune.com/robbery-as-a ... e-in-gaza/

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Why Israel's war on UNRWA is so sinister

Tel Aviv's goal of dismantling the UN agency in the name of security is a strategic move aimed not only at depriving Palestinian refugees of lifesaving assistance, but completely eradicating the notion that they will one day return to the lands they were expelled from.


William Van Wagenen

FEB 15, 2024

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The UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) is facing the gravest existential crisis in its 74-year history, as funding cuts by several western countries come on top of ongoing atrocities perpetrated by Israel in Gaza.

The UN agency is unique in being the only one dedicated to a specific group of refugees in specific areas, and the only relief organization that operates a full-fledged educational system. UNRWA is also the only organization mandated to work in Gaza and distribute aid to the two million people currently trapped and starved in the besieged enclave.

To compound these challenges, the occupation wants to see it dismantled.

UNRWA must be destroyed

In January, Israel alleged that Palestinian members of UNRWA’s staff participated in the resistance’s Operation Al-Aqsa Flood on 7 October, leading the US and 18 other nations to swiftly suspend funding for the organization.

The suspensions were met with shock, as UNRWA plays a key role in providing food and medicine to starving Gazans struggling to survive Israel’s siege and bombardment of the coastal enclave.

However, Israel’s allegations are not based on any evidence. They are instead part of a classified plan prepared in advance by Israel’s foreign ministry to destroy UNRWA. It believes that UNRWA “works against Israel’s interests” by perpetuating the dream of the right of return of Palestinian refugees and the idea of armed struggle against occupation.

The foreign ministry plan leaked to Israel’s Channel 12 on 28 December, set out a three-stage process to eliminate UNRWA in Gaza, using the Hamas-led resistance operation as a pretext:

First, prepare a case alleging UNRWA’s cooperation with Hamas; second, reduce UNRWA’s field of activity and find replacement service providers; and third, transfer UNRWA’s responsibilities to another entity.

Channel 12 noted that Israel wants to move slowly, given that the US government sees UNRWA as crucial to humanitarian efforts in Gaza. The foreign ministry is seeking to gradually build the case for ousting the organization as part of the discussions on “the day after” the war – should Hamas be dismantled.

A sequence of events

According to a report by The New York Times, the “sequence of events” that led the US to suspend UNRWA funding began on 18 January when Amir Weissbrod, a deputy director general at the Israeli Foreign Ministry, met with Philippe Lazzarini, the head of UNRWA in Tel Aviv.

Weissbrod showed Lazzarini a dossier from Israeli intelligence claiming that 12 UNRWA employees had participated in the 7 October attacks.

After the meeting in Israel, Lazzarini made no effort to confirm the validity of the claims. Instead, he flew to New York to meet with UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres and immediately began firing the employees, a UN official said.

The Guardian reported that Lazzarini was later asked in a press conference if he had looked into whether there was any evidence for the allegations presented to him by Weissbrod.

“No,” Lazzarini replied, “the investigation is going on now.”

Lazzarini said he made the “exceptional, swift decision” due to “the explosive nature of the claims,” rather than any evidence.

Lazzarini said he did not even read the dossier himself because it was in Hebrew. Instead, Weissbrod “was reading this and translating for me,” he said.

How did the US know?

The same New York Times report notes that UNRWA informed US officials about the allegations on 24 January. Just two days later, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken announced the suspension of funding to UNRWA.

Shockingly, the State Department made the announcement amid reports that Gaza was on the brink of famine, and despite acknowledging that “UNRWA plays a critical role in providing lifesaving assistance to Palestinians, including essential food, medicine, shelter.”

Like Lazzarini, Blinken made the decision without seeking any evidence from Israel, but solely based on the supposedly serious nature of the allegations alone. Blinken justified his decision to suspend aid to starving Palestinians by saying, “We haven’t had the ability to investigate [the allegations] ourselves. But they are highly, highly credible.”

In a seemingly coordinated effort, other countries – including Germany, Britain, and Australia – swiftly followed suit. Even Australian Foreign Minister Penny Wong acknowledged suspending aid without first receiving any evidence from Israel or even asking Lazzarini to share any evidence he might have.

The funding crisis escalated to such an extent that Juliette Touma, the UNRWA director of communications, said that after “decades of working together,” in “just over 24 hours, nine of our donors suspended funding to UNRWA.”

Another dodgy dossier

As criticism of the aid suspensions mounted, Israeli foreign ministry officials released a dossier to several foreign news organizations.

But after seeing the dossier, both the Financial Times and the UK’s Channel 4 reported that it provided “no evidence” for the claims.

Former UNRWA head Chris Gunness compared it to the “dodgy dossier” used by Tony Blair to take Britain to war in Iraq.

“There is no actual evidence. There are accusations,” Gunness concluded.

Lior Haiat, a spokesperson for Israel’s foreign ministry, tried to justify its refusal to provide any actual evidence by claiming, “the very nature of the allegations makes it impossible for Israel to share all the evidence it has with UNRWA.”

“They think that we can give them intelligence information, knowing that some of their employees work for Hamas? Are you serious?” he asked.

But Israeli propagandist and spokesperson Eylon Levy declined to say if Israel had provided evidence even to the US and UK governments. “I’m not personally aware of what material may have been passed on between our intelligence agencies,” he stated to Channel 4 when pressed for proof of the claims.

Links to Hamas?

The Israeli foreign ministry continued to implement the three-step leaked plan to destroy UNRWA by making additional allegations of UNRWA’s cooperation with Hamas.

On 29 January, the Wall Street Journal (WSJ) reported claims based on Israeli intelligence that “1,200 of UNRWA’s roughly 12,000 employees in Gaza has links to Hamas or Palestinian Islamic Jihad, and about half have close relatives who belong to the Islamist militant groups.”

The article also provided no evidence, citing only Israeli intelligence, and was co-written by Carrie Keller-Lynn, an American who volunteered for the Israeli military and has a personal relationship with an Israeli army spokesperson.

Even if true, the allegations are meaningless. Hamas is the governing party in Gaza, making it self-evident that many UNRWA employees would be sympathetic or have family ties to the resistance movement.

Similarly, it would be unsurprising if an employee of an Israeli NGO or aid group was sympathetic to the Israeli army or had family members in the ruling Likud party.

As Haaretz noted, UNRWA employees in the West Bank and other countries where the organization operates are usually more aligned with whatever Palestinian faction is dominant in that area.

‘We could not verify this’

The Israeli foreign ministry's plan to paint UNRWA as linked to Hamas soon continued with new and bizarre allegations that Hamas had placed a massive data center directly underneath the UNRWA headquarters in Gaza.

The Times of Israel claimed that the data center was “built precisely under the location where Israel would not consider looking initially, let alone target in an airstrike.”

But Israel has been bombing UNRWA schools and other UN facilities for decades, including when large numbers of civilians have been sheltering in them. No Hamas leader would imagine this would provide it any protection.

But as OSINT analyst Michael Kobs has shown, the alleged data center the Israeli army showed to foreign journalists was not under the UNRWA headquarters.

Kobs also notes that when Tageschau journalist Sophie van der Tann was taken through a tunnel to see the alleged data center, she stated, “We could not verify” it was under the UNRWA headquarters.

Erasing the right of return

But why is Israel determined to destroy UNRWA?

One reason is Israel’s ongoing effort to slowly starve Gaza’s 2.3 million inhabitants.

At the beginning of the war on 7 October, Defense Minister Yoav Gallant notoriously ordered a “complete siege” of Gaza, saying, “There will be no electricity, no food, no fuel, everything is closed.” The late January campaign to suspend UNRWA funding then came at a time when “famine” was already “around the corner” in Gaza, according to UN Emergency Relief Chief Martin Griffiths. Israeli officials knew that suspending funding for UNRWA at this time would only bring famine closer. One Israeli military official acknowledged to the WSJ on 13 February that “Without UNRWA, there is no humanitarian aid in Gaza.”

But there is another reason Israel wants to destroy UNRWA, which predates the current war.

Palestinian political analyst and researcher Hanin Abou Salem explained that Israel wants to dismantle UNRWA because it transmits refugee status from generation to generation, which keeps the right of return for Palestinian refugees alive and “ensures that their hopes for returning to their ancestral homeland do not perish with the death of the original 1948 refugees.”

If UNRWA is dismantled and replaced by the United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR), as Israel hopes, this will guarantee that Palestinians can only be resettled in third countries and never return to the homes and lands from which Israel forcibly expelled their grandparents during the Nakba.

In 2017, Israel launched a propaganda campaign against UNRWA and succeeded in convincing the Trump administration to cut around $300 million in funding to the organization the following year, only for the Biden administration to restore $235 million in 2021.

Destroying an idea

But with the start of the war on 7 October, Israel feels it has a second chance, not only to destroy the right of return, but also the “idea” of armed struggle to achieve it.

Noga Arbell, a researcher at the right-wing Kohelet Forum, recently explained that UNRWA needs to be “annihilated” because it is the “source of the idea.”

“It gives birth to more and more terrorists in all kinds of ways. UNRWA needs to be wiped out immediately – now – or Israel will miss the window of opportunity."

UNRWA allegedly ‘gives birth to terrorists’ through its 706 schools, where some 543,075 Palestine refugee children receive free basic education.

In Gaza, UNRWA uses Palestinian Authority (PA) textbooks and supplements these with its own materials. Israel has long been irked that these textbooks include lessons on the life of one of the most famous symbols of Palestinian armed resistance, an 18-year-old young woman and Palestinian refugee born in Lebanon, Dalal al-Mughrabi.

In 1978, Mughrabi led a group of Palestinian guerrillas from PLO chairman Yasser Arafat’s Fatah party to carry out an operation in Israel.

According to the Israeli version of events, Mughrabi “led one of the deadliest suicide attacks in Israel's history,” by hijacking a bus and taking its passengers hostage on the highway between Haifa and Tel Aviv. During the operation, the bus exploded, and “38 Israelis were murdered, including 13 children.”

Israel claims that UNRWA is, therefore, teaching “mass murder” by using PA books that encourage everyone to be like Mughrabi.

However, Palestinians claim that Israeli forces killed the hostages.

You can kill a revolutionary, but not the revolution

According to a 2008 report in the Guardian, Mughrabi and the Palestinian guerillas intended to attack the Ministry of Defense in Tel Aviv and hijacked two buses carrying civilians on the coastal road near Haifa. Along the way, they engaged in an intense 15-hour gun battle with Israeli forces.

Palestinians maintain the bus exploded, killing the guerillas and hostages, after it was fired on from the air by Israeli helicopters or elite Israel commandos, in a possible early instance of the mass Hannibal Directive.

Israeli forces implemented the Hannibal Directive on 7 October, killing large numbers of their own civilians – and burning many of them alive – using attack helicopters, tanks, and drones, while blaming all these deaths on Hamas.

Even if Israel succeeds in executing its plan to destroy UNRWA, while starving and bombing tens of thousands to death in Gaza, it will not be able to erase the spirit of Dalal al-Mughrabi and the thousands of martyrs like her who have sacrificed themselves for the freedom of Palestinians.

Within 24 hours of the unsubstantiated accusations against UNRWA, the US, the UK, and 14 other nations suspended funding to the organization the Wall Street Journal described as the “main pillar of operations to move food aid, medicine, and other humanitarian supplies into Gaza.”

The abruptness of these cuts was particularly jolting in light of the looming threat of famine, as highlighted by Griffiths, who warned that Gaza was on the brink of a humanitarian catastrophe.

These drastic measures were instigated by allegations based on a dubious six-page dossier, arguably part of a meticulously crafted plan orchestrated by Israel's foreign ministry, aimed at dismantling the humanitarian and educational infrastructure serving internally displaced Palestinians.

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.

https://thecradle.co/articles/why-israe ... o-sinister

Egypt builds 'buffer zone' in Sinai as 1.4 million Gazans face displacement: Report

Local human rights groups say Cairo is preparing an 'isolated security zone' on the Gaza border to possibly house Palestinian refugees

News Desk

FEB 15, 2024

Image
(Photo Credit: Getty Images)

The Egyptian government has started building an “isolated security zone” in the eastern Sinai Desert on the border with the Gaza Strip that would serve as a buffer zone for Palestinian refugees if they are forced out of Rafah by the Israeli army, according to the Sinai Foundation for Human Rights.

Local contractors told the rights group that the construction work was commissioned by the Sons of Sinai Construction and Building Company, owned by businessman Ibrahim al-Arjani, a former warlord from the Tarabin tribe in northern Sinai who holds close ties with the family of Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi.

The construction work aims to “create an area surrounded by walls seven meters high, after removing the rubble of indigenous homes that had been destroyed.” The construction is expected to be completed in under 10 days and is supervised by the Egyptian Armed Forces Engineering Authority, with a heavy security presence.

“This morning, the Foundation’s team … monitored the construction of a seven-meter-high cement wall, starting from a point in the village of Goz Abu Waad, south of the city of Rafah, and heading north toward the Mediterranean Sea, parallel to the border with the Gaza Strip,” the Sinai Foundation said on 14 February.


“The construction work seen in Sinai along the border with Gaza – the establishment of a reinforced security perimeter around a specific, open area of land – are serious signs that Egypt may be preparing to accept and allow the displacement of Gazans to Sinai, in coordination with Israel and the United States,” Muhannad Sabry, a researcher in Sinai affairs and security in Egypt, told the Sinai Foundation.

Earlier this month, Egyptian journalist Ahmed el-Madhoun shared a video showing workers strengthening the security wall separating Egypt and Gaza. Since the outbreak of the war on 7 October, Cairo has constructed a concrete border topped with barbed wire and extending six meters into the ground.


Cairo recently boosted its military presence on the Gaza border, citing fears of a spillover of Israel's ethnic cleansing campaign onto its territory once the ground invasion of Rafah begins. Western media has also quoted Egyptian officials as saying that the government considered suspending the 1978 Camp David Accords if Palestinians were forcibly displaced into the Sinai Desert.

Nevertheless, Israel's Army Radio reported over the weekend that Cairo informed Tel Aviv that they will not object to a military operation in Rafah as long as it is conducted without harming Palestinian civilians. Other Israeli outlets, as well as the New York Times, have reported Egyptian officials expressing fears that any influx of Palestinians could lead to a resurgence of “Islamist militancy.”

Israeli officials have repeatedly made clear their desire not only to defeat Hamas but also to force Gaza's 2.3 million citizens to flee to Egypt or other countries as refugees. Those statements coincided with explicit plans to annex Gaza and build settlements for Israeli Jews over destroyed Palestinian homes.

Israeli settler groups and Knesset members recently held a conference to discuss building Jewish settlements in Gaza once its indigenous inhabitants have been ethnically cleansed.

https://thecradle.co/articles/egypt-bui ... ent-report

US, Arab partners draft 'timeline for Palestinian state': Report

Top Israel officials have already rejected the plan, which hinges on Tel Aviv not launching an offensive into the city of Rafah

News Desk

FEB 15, 2024

Image
People wander through the devastated area near the Al-Maqoussi towers in the aftermath of an Israeli bombardment in Gaza City on 3 February. (Photo Credit: AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES(

The US and several of its Arab partners are putting together a plan to achieve “long-term peace between Israel and Palestinians, including a firm timeline for the establishment of a Palestinian state,” according to US and Arab officials who spoke with the Washington Post.

This plan is expected to be made public in the coming weeks and hinges on the success of ongoing talks for a six-week ceasefire and a new prisoner exchange deal.

“Planners hope a hostage agreement can be reached before the beginning of Ramadan, the month of Muslim fasting that begins March 10, lest it compound the deprivation and pressure-cooker atmosphere in Gaza,” the Washington Post reports. The news outlet also cites US officials saying that “the menu of actions under consideration include early US recognition of a Palestinian state – even as elements of political reform, security guarantees for both Israel and Palestine, normalization and reconstruction are being implemented.”

Egypt, Jordan, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and Palestinian representatives are participating in the US-led discussions. Neither Israel nor Hamas have been included.

The participants are reportedly aware that convincing Israel to consent to the proposal is a near-impossible task, as current discussions call for “the withdrawal of many, if not all, settler communities on the West Bank; a Palestinian capital in East Jerusalem; the reconstruction of Gaza; and security and governance arrangements for a combined West Bank and Gaza.”

To sweeten the deal, Washington is ready to offer “specific security guarantees” to Tel Aviv and normalization with Saudi Arabia and other Arab nations in a package described as “hard to refuse.”

Part of the deal would also see eventual elections in the newly-established Palestinian state. However, the officials mention keeping Palestinian Authority (PA) President Mahmoud Abbas in “his position as head of state in a role similar to that of Israeli President Isaac Herzog.”

“Participants in the talks are putting forward their favored candidates to serve in other top government roles and debating whether Hamas’s political leadership would have any role in a postwar Gaza,” the report highlights.

“The intention of the US, together with the Arab states, to establish a terror state alongside the State of Israel is delusional and part of the misguided conception that there is a partner for peace on the other side,” Jewish supremacist National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir said about the proposed plan on Thursday.

“We will never agree, under any circumstances, to this plan that basically says the Palestinians deserve a prize for the terrible massacre they carried out against us: A Palestinian state with a capital in Jerusalem … The message is that it pays to slaughter citizens of Israel,” Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich said via social media.

“Everybody who talks about a two-state solution — well, I ask, what do you mean by that?” Netanyahu told ABC News on Sunday. “Should the Palestinians have an army? ... Should they continue to educate their children for terrorism and annihilation? Of course, I say, of course not.”

“The most important power that has to remain in Israel’s hands,” he said, “is overriding security control in the area west of the Jordan [river]."

The PA-led Palestinian Foreign Ministry issued a statement on Thursday condemning Israeli officials, saying their words are “a ridiculous pretext to justify their position denying the existence of the Palestinian people and their rights.”

“Any political initiative to stop the war and resolve the conflict that does not begin with the full membership of the State of Palestine in the UN and its recognition by western countries and the US is doomed to failure and will, like its predecessors, be among the initiatives that were born hostage to the Israeli position,” PA officials added.

Hamas politburo chief Ismail Haniyeh said Thursday that any agreement with Israel “should secure a ceasefire and an Israeli military withdrawal from Gaza in addition to achieving a serious prisoner swap deal.”

Complicating matters for Washington and its Arab allies, the plan depends on Israel not launching an offensive into the city of Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip, where 1.4 million Palestinians are taking shelter in makeshift tent cities after being displaced by Israel’s four-month blitz of the coastal enclave.

“We will fight until complete victory, and this includes a powerful action also in Rafah after we allow the civilian population to leave the battle zones,” Netanyahu said on Wednesday.

However, the premier has failed to specify where such a large number of displaced civilians could evacuate, stating only that "there are plenty of areas” north of Rafah.

https://thecradle.co/articles/us-arab-p ... ate-report

Lebanon reels from Israeli massacre in south

Israel bombed several villages indiscriminately on Wednesday following a large rocket attack on its military sites

News Desk

FEB 15, 2024

Image
(Photo credit: AP)

At least eight were killed – including four children – and a minimum of seven were wounded in an Israeli airstrike on the southern Lebanese city of Nabatiyeh on the evening of 14 January, including a child who was pulled out from under the rubble alive.


“Shortly after midnight, the ambulance and relief teams were able to pull out the child Hussein Ali Amer from under the rubble alive, after more than 4 hours of searching for survivors,” Lebanon’s National News Agency (NNA) reported.

NNA reported that the strike targeted a residential building on Marjayoun Street in central Nabatiyeh with a guided missile. It caused “massive damage” and resulted in the killing of an entire family. The attack has been referred to as a massacre.

This brings the number of those killed by Israeli air strikes in south Lebanon on Wednesday up to eleven.

Israel carried out intensive bombing across several villages in south Lebanon during the afternoon following the large rocket attack on several Israeli military sites that morning.

One of the Israeli strikes on the town of Adchit caused “major destruction,” NNA said.

Several rockets and missiles were fired at a number of Israeli army sites on the morning of 14 January. One rocket landed inside Israel’s northern command headquarters in the occupied city of Safad.

At least one Israeli soldier was killed, and a minimum of seven others were wounded.

Several Israeli media outlets referred to the attack as “unprecedented” and the largest and most serious since fighting erupted on the Lebanese border in October.

Israeli news outlet Walla reported the defense establishment is facing harsh criticism across Israel for not intercepting the incoming fire.

“The war cabinet has caved to Hezbollah and lost the north,” Knesset member and former finance minister Avigdor Lieberman said on Wednesday.

The Lebanese resistance has yet to announce the attack. One day earlier, on 13 February, Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah vowed that operations against Israel would not stop until the war in Gaza is brought to an end.

https://thecradle.co/articles/lebanon-r ... e-in-south
"There is great chaos under heaven; the situation is excellent."

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Re: Palestine

Post by blindpig » Sat Feb 17, 2024 12:32 pm

Majority of Israelis want expanded war against Hezbollah: Poll

Israel killed seven members of a Lebanese family in the city of Nabatiyeh in an air strike two days ago as the war continues to escalate

News Desk

FEB 16, 2024

Image
Civil defence and rescue workers remove rubble from a building that was attacked by an Israeli air strike in Nabatieh, southern Lebanon. (Mohammed Zaatari/AP Photo)
According to an online survey conducted by Maariv, 71 percent of Israelis support an immediate launch of extensive action to push Hezbollah from the Lebanese–Israeli border.

Twelve percent of respondents opposed military action, while 17 percent said they did not know whether such action should be taken.

Israel and Hezbollah have been fighting a limited war on the Lebanese–Israeli border since 8 October 2023, the day after the Hamas-led Palestinian resistance attacked Israeli military bases and settlements.

But the war between the Israeli army and the Lebanese resistance group has escalated in recent weeks.

On 14 February, Israel launched an extensive wave of attacks. At least ten were killed – including four children – and a minimum of seven were wounded in an Israeli airstrike on the southern Lebanese city of Nabatiyeh, including a child who was pulled out from under the rubble alive.

Maariv added that after Israel killed the family, senior Hezbollah leader Hussein Fadlallah said Israel “will pay the price for these crimes.”

On 15 February, several rockets were fired from Lebanon towards Israeli sites, including the Meron air base and the Israeli northern command headquarters in Safad, Hebrew media reported. A rocket directly hit the northern command site.

"Numerous launches were identified crossing from Lebanon into the areas of Netua, Manara, and into an IDF base in northern Israel," the Israeli army said in a statement.

"As a result of the launches, an IDF soldier was killed, and several other IDF soldiers were injured." One of the injured was airlifted to a hospital in Haifa due to shrapnel in the skull, The Times of Israel reported.

Hezbollah Central Council member Nabil Kauk also said: "Defeating Israel on the ground is the only way to force it to stop the war in Gaza. It understands that our rockets and UAVs are capable of hitting all settlements, airports, and strategic facilities. We will respond quickly and forcefully to any escalation with escalation, displacement with displacement, and destruction with destruction."

Later, Israeli Minister of Defense Yoav Galant convened the supreme emergency preparedness committee, which held an exercise to test the readiness of the home front in a war scenario in the north. This included the possibility of difficulties in supplying electricity and energy, transporting food, and evacuating casualties to hospitals.

The Israeli military nearly launched a pre-emptive war against Hezbollah shortly after the start of the war on 7 October, but this was called off at the last minute, a member of Israel's War Cabinet confirmed to the AP in January.

Gadi Eisenkot, a former army chief, said he was among those arguing against such a strike during the 11 October cabinet meeting.

Such a preemptive attack would have been a "strategic mistake" and would likely have triggered a regional war, Eisenkot said in a wide-ranging interview broadcast on Israel's Channel 12 TV.

https://thecradle.co/articles/majority- ... ollah-poll

Lebanon reels from Israeli massacre in south

Israel bombed several villages indiscriminately on Wednesday following a large rocket attack on its military sites

News Desk

FEB 15, 2024

Image
(Photo credit: AP)

At least eight were killed – including four children – and a minimum of seven were wounded in an Israeli airstrike on the southern Lebanese city of Nabatiyeh on the evening of 14 January, including a child who was pulled out from under the rubble alive.

#بالفيديو | لحظة انتشال طفل، في قيد الحياة، من تحت أنقاض المبنى الذي استهدفه الاحتلال الإسرائيلي، في مدينة #النبطية.#الميادين #الميادين_لبنان pic.twitter.com/krmC2VaBf4

— الميادين لبنان (@mayadeenlebanon) February 14, 2024
“Shortly after midnight, the ambulance and relief teams were able to pull out the child Hussein Ali Amer from under the rubble alive, after more than 4 hours of searching for survivors,” Lebanon’s National News Agency (NNA) reported.

NNA reported that the strike targeted a residential building on Marjayoun Street in central Nabatiyeh with a guided missile. It caused “massive damage” and resulted in the killing of an entire family. The attack has been referred to as a massacre.

This brings the number of those killed by Israeli air strikes in south Lebanon on Wednesday up to eleven.

Israel carried out intensive bombing across several villages in south Lebanon during the afternoon following the large rocket attack on several Israeli military sites that morning.

One of the Israeli strikes on the town of Adchit caused “major destruction,” NNA said.

Several rockets and missiles were fired at a number of Israeli army sites on the morning of 14 January. One rocket landed inside Israel’s northern command headquarters in the occupied city of Safad.

At least one Israeli soldier was killed, and a minimum of seven others were wounded.

Several Israeli media outlets referred to the attack as “unprecedented” and the largest and most serious since fighting erupted on the Lebanese border in October.

Israeli news outlet Walla reported the defense establishment is facing harsh criticism across Israel for not intercepting the incoming fire.

“The war cabinet has caved to Hezbollah and lost the north,” Knesset member and former finance minister Avigdor Lieberman said on Wednesday.

The Lebanese resistance has yet to announce the attack. One day earlier, on 13 February, Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah vowed that operations against Israel would not stop until the war in Gaza is brought to an end. .

https://thecradle.co/articles/lebanon-r ... e-in-south

Biden discusses ‘next stage’ of Gaza war with Netanyahu

Biden warned Netanyahu again not to launch an operation in the desperately overcrowded city of Rafah without a ‘credible plan’

News Desk

FEB 16, 2024

Image
(Photo credit: Reuters)

US President Joe Biden held a 40-minute phone call with Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on 15 February, according to a statement released by the Israeli premier’s office.

“The two discussed the hostages taken during the October 7 onslaught, Rafah and the next stage in the fight against Hamas, and touched on the humanitarian situation in the Gaza Strip,” an official in Netanyahu’s office told The Times of Israel.

A White House statement confirmed prisoner talks and the planned Israeli assault on Rafah were discussed.

“The President reaffirmed his commitment to working tirelessly to support the release of all hostages as soon as possible, recognizing their appalling situation after 132 days in Hamas captivity,” the White House said.

Biden “also raised the situation in Rafah, and reiterated his view that a military operation should not proceed without a credible and executable plan for ensuring the safety of and support for the civilians in Rafah.”

Netanyahu had been meeting with CIA chief William Burns, the Israeli war cabinet, and the security cabinet before stepping out of the meeting to take the call with Biden, according to Hebrew media reports.

“My positions can be summarized in the following two sentences. Israel categorically rejects international dictates regarding a permanent settlement with the Palestinians. Such an arrangement will be reached only through direct negotiations between the parties, without preconditions,” he said after the phone call.

“Israel will continue to oppose the unilateral recognition of a Palestinian state. Such recognition in the wake of the October 7 massacre would give a huge reward to unprecedented terrorism and prevent any future peace settlement.”

The phone call comes after the latest round of truce talks in Egypt between Israeli, Egyptian, Qatari, and US officials ended. Earlier this month, Hamas responded to an Egyptian proposal for a prisoner exchange and truce deal – calling for a complete end to the war, a withdrawal of Israeli troops, and an end to the blockade on Gaza.

"Hamas's position has not changed, and it still insists on ending the war, which Israel has not accepted," an unnamed Israeli official told KAN radio.

Israel is now planning to attack Gaza’s southernmost border city of Rafah, where 1.5 million Palestinians are stranded in harsh and desperate conditions. Israel claims the city is Hamas’ last stronghold – but its army continues to face fierce resistance from fighters across the strip.

Several countries have issued statements expressing serious concern over the severe humanitarian threat posed by Israel’s plans to invade Rafah.

POLITICO reported on 13 February that Washington has no plans to “reprimand” Israel or hold it accountable if the Rafah assault commences.

https://thecradle.co/articles/biden-dis ... -netanyahu

There it is, they're gonna do it. Otherwise Biden would have said so in order to claim credit. $4.3M....it's just how it's done.

******

Israeli Siege Has Placed Gazans at Risk of Starvation − Prewar Policies Made Them Vulnerable in the First Place
Posted on February 16, 2024 by Yves Smith

Yves here. As we learn more about the Israel genocide campaign against Palestinians, we see how its mechanisms are not just deliberate but rise to a level of study and calculation that can be called scientific….much like the one perpetrated by the Nazis. The Israelis have heeded too well their saying, “Love your enemy, for you will become him.”

And the starvation campaign has become even more blatant than before. Today as Mondoweiss pointed out, the US confirmed that Israel has been blocking flour shipments into Gaza. From Axios:

Israeli ultranationalist Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich is blocking a U.S.-funded flour shipment to Gaza because its recipient is the UN Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA), two Israeli and U.S. officials told Axios.

Why it matters: U.S. officials said this is a violation of a commitment Benjamin Netanyahu personally made to President Biden several weeks ago and another reason the U.S. leader is frustrated with the Israeli prime minister.

And confirming that Israel is going full Amalek, they are making sure the pets of Gazans die too. From TPS (hat tip BC):

Israel’s Ministries of Agriculture and Health asked the public to refrain from bringing dogs and cats from the territories of the Palestinian Authority, Gaza and from over the northern border into the territory of Israel.

The official excuse is as lame as the ones used to hold up truck deliveries of humanitarian aid.

By Yara M. Asi, Assistant Professor of Global Health Management and Informatics, University of Central Florida . Originally published at The Conversation

The stories of hunger emerging from war-ravaged Gaza are stark: People resorting to grinding barely edible cattle feedto make flour; desperate residents eating grass; reports of cats being hunted for food.

The numbers involved are just as despairing. The world’s major authority on food insecurity, the IPC Famine Review Committee, estimates that 90% of Gazans – some 2.08 million people – are facing acute food insecurity. Indeed, of the people facing imminent starvation in the world today, an estimated 95% are in Gaza.

As an expert in Palestinian public health, I fear the situation may not have hit its nadir. In January 2024, many of the top funders to UNRWA, the U.N.’s refugee agency that provides the bulk of services to Palestinians in Gaza, suspended donations to the agency in response to allegations that a dozen of the agency’s 30,000 employees were possibly involved in the Oct. 7, 2023, attack by Hamas. The agency has indicated that it will no longer be able to offer services starting in March and will lose its ability to distribute food and other vital supplies during that month.

With at least 28,000 people confirmed dead and an additional 68,000 injured, Israeli bombs have already had a catastrophic human cost in Gaza – starvation could be the next tragedy to befall the territory.

Indeed, two weeks after Israel initiated a massive military campaign in the Gaza Strip, Oxfam International reported that only around 2% of the usual amount of food was being delivered to residents in the territory. At the time, Sally Abi Khalil, Oxfam’s Middle East director, commented that “there can be no justification for using starvation as a weapon of war.” But four months later, the siege continues to restrict the distribution of adequate aid.

Putting Palestinians ‘on a Diet’

Israeli bombs have destroyed homes, bakeries, food production factories and grocery stores, making it harder for people in Gaza to offset the impact of the reduced imports of food.

But food insecurity in Gaza and the mechanisms that enable it did not start with Israel’s response to the Oct. 7 attack.

A U.N. report from 2022 found that a year before the latest war, 65% of Gazans were food insecure, defined as lacking regular access to enough safe and nutritious food.

Multiple factors contributed to this food insecurity, not least the blockade of Gaza imposed by Israel and enabled by Egypt since 2007. All items entering the Gaza Strip, including food, become subject to Israeli inspection, delay or denial.

Basic foodstuff was allowed, but because of delays at the border, it can spoil before it enters Gaza.

A 2009 investigation by Israeli newspaper Ha’aretz found that foods as varied as cherries, kiwi, almonds, pomegranates and chocolate were prohibited entirely.

At certain points, the blockade, which Israel claims is an unavoidable security measure, has been loosened to allow import of more foods; for example, in 2010 Israel started to permit potato chips, fruit juices, Coca-Cola and cookies.

By placing restrictions on food imports, Israel seems to be trying to put pressure on Hamas by making life difficult for the people in Gaza. In the words of one Israeli government adviser in 2006, “The idea is to put the Palestinians on a diet, but not to make them die of hunger.”

To enable this, the Israeli government commissioned a 2008 study to work out exactly how many calories Palestinians would need to avoid malnutrition. The report was released to the public only following a 2012 legal battle.

The blockade also increased food insecurity by preventing meaningful development of an economy in Gaza.

The U.N. cites the “excessive production and transaction costs and barriers to trade with the rest of the world” imposed by Israel as the primary cause of severe underdevelopment in the occupied territories, including Gaza. As a result, in late 2022 the unemployment rate in Gaza stood at around 50%. This, coupled with a steady increase in the cost of food, makes affording food difficult for many Gazan households, rendering them dependent on aid, which fluctuates frequently.

Hampering Self-Sufficiency

More generally, the blockade and the multiple rounds of destruction of parts of the Gaza Strip have made food sovereignty in the territory nearly impossible.

Much of Gaza’s farmland is along the so-called “no-go zones,” which Israel had rendered inaccessible to Palestinians, who risk being shot if they attempt to access these areas.

Gaza’s fishermen are regularly shot at by Israeli gunboats if they venture farther in the Mediterranean Sea than Israel permits. Because the fish closer to the shore are smaller and less plentiful, the average income of a fisherman in Gaza has more than halved since 2017.

Meanwhile, much of the infrastructure needed for adequate food production – greenhouses, arable lands, orchards, livestock and food production facilities – have been destroyed or heavily damaged in various rounds of bombing in Gaza. And international donors have hesitated to hastily rebuild facilities when they cannot guarantee their investment will last more than a few years before being bombed again.

The latest siege has only further crippled the ability of Gaza to be food self-sufficient. By early December 2023, an estimated 22% of agricultural land had been destroyed, along with factories, farms, and water and sanitation facilities. And the full scale of the destruction may not be clear for months or years.

Meanwhile, Israel’s flooding of the tunnels under parts of the Gaza Strip with seawater risks killing remaining crops, leaving the land too salty and rendering it unstable and prone to sinkholes.

Starvation as Weapon of War

Aside from the many health effects of starvation and malnutrition, especially on children, such conditions make people more vulnerable to disease – already a significant concern for those living in the overcrowded shelters where people have been forced to flee.

In response to the current hunger crisis in Gaza, Alex de Waal, author of “Mass Starvation: The History and Future of Famine,” has made clear: “While it may be possible to bomb a hospital by accident, it is not possible to create a famine by accident.” He argues that the war crime of starvation does not need to include outright famine – merely the act of depriving people of food, medicine and clean water is sufficient.

The use of starvation is strictly forbidden under the Geneva Conventions, a set of statutes that govern the laws of warfare. Starvation has been condemned by United Nations Resolution 2417, which decried the use of deprivation of food and basic needs of the civilian population and compelled parties in conflict to ensure full humanitarian access.

Human Rights Watch has already accused Israel of using starvation as a weapon of war, and as such it accuses the Israeli government of a war crime. The Israeli government in turn continues to blame Hamas for any loss of life in Gaza.

Yet untangling what Israel’s intentions may be – whether it is using starvation as a weapon of war, to force mass displacement, or if, as it claims, it is simply a byproduct of war – does little for the people on the ground in Gaza.

They require immediate intervention to stave off catastrophic outcomes. As one father in Gaza reported, “We are forced to eat one meal a day – the canned goods that we get from aid organizations. No one can afford to buy anything for his family. I see children here crying from hunger, including my own children.”

https://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2024/02 ... place.html

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‘The Zone of Interest’ Is a Film About Auschwitz – and Gaza

Steven Sahiounie

February 15, 2024

Jews like to say “Never again” referring to the Holocaust, but it is happening once again, and the film makes us all come to face the ugly truth.

The Zone of Interest is a film directed by Jonathan Glazer, who has said, “This is not about the past, it’s about now”. The film’s story mirrors the current story in Gaza, even though the film is set next door to the gas chambers at Auschwitz in the WW2 era.

A German family with children live in a lovely home and garden right on the walls of Auschwitz. The father of the family is a Nazi officer, and the wife and children live a seemingly normal life while ignoring the deaths of thousands of Jews next door.

The German wife enjoys wearing a lovely fur coat taken off a wealthy Jew who is murdered by her husband’s military unit. This reminded me of Laila Jardali, a Palestinian refugee in Fresno, California. She and her family were driven from their home in Palestine in 1948. She recalled seeing Jewish immigrants fresh off the refugee boats from Europe, living in Palestinian homes they had confiscated, and wearing the homeowners clothing, while eating on their China dishes.

Having the garden plays a significant role in the family home, as the German father was a follower of the Artaman League, a German anti-urban, back-to-the-land movement that advocated for family farms and living off the land. Many Jews live in a Kibbutz in Israel, which are communal farms. The farm houses living on the walls of Gaza are full of families who chose to live within sight of the Palestinians living in Gaza because they lied farming.

Jews in Europe were rounded up by the Nazis and forcibly displaced to concentration camps, like Auschwitz. The UN and other human rights organizations have labeled Gaza the largest open-air concentration camp on earth, which had housed about 3 million people prior to the Israeli attack which has killed about 28,000 people, mainly women and children, with another 65,000 injured.

The Jews live in freedom just yards away from 3 million Palestinians who are denied all human rights. Gaza has been under siege since 2007, and life had deteriorated there prior to the October 7 Hamas attack on Israel. Now, the last remaining Palestinians in Gaza are huddled in the extreme southern portion of Gaza, with nowhere to hide. 1.2 million people are just hours away from the promised Israeli ground invasion of Rafah which will likely end in a bloodbath of civilians.

The Jewish farm-kids can grow up with the opportunity to go to any University abroad for higher degrees, while having the right to return home to Israel and work. The Palestinian children have no opportunity to study abroad, or to return home if they leave. Studies abroad result in a lifetime of exile.

In the film, the Nazi family lived a normal life just yards away from the gas chambers, and yet were seemingly oblivious to their neighbors suffering. This is a mirror image of Gaza; faced on two sides by Israeli homes, schools and farms full of seemingly educated and sophisticated Jews who are well aware of their neighbors plight, but chose to ignore it. Their self-absorption and self-isolation turns them into unfeeling narcissists, who only feel their own pain acutely. The inability to feel the pain of others is a sign of mental illness, as the ability to feel empathy is the foundation to having a healthy mind.

But, the Jews are not alone in their lack of empathy. The U.S., UK, France, Germany and Italy all have sent weapons to Israel to use to commit genocide in Gaza.

In WW2, the Germans were taking over land, and expanding the Nazi state. It was this expansion and occupation which brought the U.S. government into the war. While the Nazis were marching through Europe, the U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt declined to step in to stop the genocide of Jews. Roosevelt ignored the obvious and allowed the gas chambers to keep functioning until the British PM Winston Churchill begged FDR to save Great Britain from invasion and occupation. The holocaust did not sway F.D.R., it was only the land-grab by Hitler’s regime that got the U.S. to enter the war.

Just as the American newspapers in WW2 were publishing the articles of incredible suffering in Europe, and the American Jewish groups were speaking out in an effort to save the Jews in the concentration camps, the U.S. and European media, and social media, today carry the news of the genocide unfolding in Gaza. The whole world is well aware of what atrocities are being carried out by the IDF in Gaza, but no one takes action today, and in WW2 no one took action until the U.S. stood up to Hitler.

Only the U.S. President Joe Biden can stop the genocide in Gaza. Pleading, and begging Netanyahu, Ben Gvir and Smotrich to stop the war crimes will not have any affect. Biden needs to play his hand, as he holds all the weapons and cash promised to Israel in his hand. Biden simply needs to say, “Ceasefire now, or no more weapons and cash.”

The German Nazi officer was following an unquestioning commitment to National Socialism, which made it acceptable to murder millions of Jews. This parallels with the Israeli dedication to Zionism, which also is a political ideology, which makes it acceptable, and necessary, to kill and displace millions of Palestinians. Israeli ministers in the Netanyahu government,

Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant said on October 9, “We are fighting human animals and we will act accordingly,” and added, “there will be no electricity, no food, no fuel. Everything is closed”.

“My right, my wife’s, my children’s, to roam the roads of Judea and Samaria are more important than the right of movement of the Arabs,” said Israel’s National Security Minister, Itamar Ben Gvir.

Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich said, that there is “no such thing as Palestinians” and they are a “fictitious nation invented only to battle against the Zionist movement.”

The Nazi party was based on a racist view that German “Aryan” blood was pure, and Jews were inferior and deserved to be exterminated because of their race. The Zionist political ideology of the Jewish State of Israel is the same, but with a twist. In their view, Jews are the exalted race, and all non-Jews are inferior and sub-human.

The reviews written about this shocking, and chilling film are describing it a film which will change the viewer forever. There are some films which stick in your mind a lifetime, and this film is branded a hard film to watch. It has secured Oscar nominations in the category of best screenplay, best picture, best director and others.

What happens when you deny your neighbors of their human rights? Israelis, Americans and Europeans all live in freedom. The Palestinians in Gaza and the Occupied West Bank are asking for their rights which for 75 years have been denied from them. Jews refer to the Holocaust and like to say, “Never again”, but it is happening once again, and the Zone of Interest makes us all come to face the ugly truth.

https://strategic-culture.su/news/2024/ ... -and-gaza/

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Palestinians in Gaza Do Have Somewhere to Go: Their Homes in What is Now Israel
Posted by INTERNATIONALIST 360° on FEBRUARY 16, 2024
Sam Husseini

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Palestinian protesters take part in a mass protest demanding the right to return to their homeland, Khan Younis, southern Gaza Strip, March 30, 2018.

Many professing solidarity with Palestinians — including legal experts — being slaughtered in Gaza have said they have “nowhere to go”.

It’s not true.

They do.

Somewhere they actually should go.

Their homes in what is now Israel.


The majority of families of Palestinians in Gaza were forced there by Israel in 1948.

See great thread by Hanine Hassan: “Who told you that the 1.5 million displaced Palestinians sheltering in Rafah have nowhere left to go? My family, now in Rafah, has a home in Jaffa, from which we were expelled by a fascist German family. The majority of our people in Gaza have homes to go to, all over Palestine.”

As Prof. John Quigley has noted: “They are entitled to repatriation under international law, including the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination which Israel has signed and ratified.” See his writing on this subject here and here.

And of course there’s UN Resolution 194 of Dec. 11, 1948 which “Resolves that the refugees wishing to return to their homes and live at peace with their neighbours should be permitted to do so at the earliest practicable date, and that compensation should be paid for the property of those choosing not to return…”

The extremely pro-Israel Harry Truman would state the following year that if “Israel continues to reject the basic principles set forth” in that UN resolution, the US government “will regretfully be forced to the conclusion that a revision of its attitude toward Israel has become unavoidable.” (See below re JFK.)

UN mediator Count Folke Bernadotte would report on September 18, 1948: “It would be an offence against the principles of elemental justice if these innocent victims of the conflict were denied the right to return to their homes, while Jewish immigrants flow into Palestine, and, indeed, at least offer the threat of permanent replacement of the Arab refugees, who have been rooted in the land for centuries.” Actually, Bernadotte wouldn’t report that, because the Stern Gang shot him six times the day before his report was issued. They shot his French assistant no less than 17 times. No one was ever brought to justice for killing the mediator.

The prospect of Palestinians going back to their homes continues to bring out the most murderous impulses in Israeli officials. AntiWar.com reports: “Israeli Minister of National Security Itamar Ben Gvir said on Sunday that Israeli forces should shoot Palestinian women and children in Gaza if they get too close to the Israeli border. … ‘We cannot have women and children getting close to the border… anyone who gets near must get a bullet [in his head],’ Ben-Gvir said during an argument with Israeli Defense Forces Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Herzi Halevi about the IDF’s open fire policies, according to The Jerusalem Post.

“After his comments leaked to the press, Ben Gvir doubled down. In a post on X, the Israeli minister said he ‘does not stutter and does not intend to apologize. All those who endanger our citizens by getting near the border must be shot. This is what they do in any normal state.’”

Indeed, in 2018 the “Great March of Return” began, as Palestinians in Gaza tried to simply walk back to their homes. On Aug. 31, 2023, The Palestine Chronicle reported: “Gaza to Resume Great March of Return Protests.” Maureen Clare Murphy at the Electronic Intifada noted in September:

Protests along the Gaza-Israel boundary resumed in August. Massive demonstrations dubbed the Great March of Return were held on a regular basis for nearly two years beginning in early 2018.

The protests were aimed at ending the Israeli siege on Gaza and allowing Palestinian refugees to exercise their right of return as enshrined in international law. Some two-thirds of Gaza’s population of more than two million people are refugees from lands just beyond the boundary fence.

More than 215 Palestinian civilians, including more than 40 children, were killed during those demonstrations, and thousands more wounded by live fire during those protests between March 2018 and December 2019.

A UN commission of inquiry found that Israel’s use of lethal force against protesters warrants criminal investigation and prosecution and may amount to war crimes and crimes against humanity.

Excessive use of force against Great March of Return protests is expected to be a major focus of the International Criminal Court’s Palestine investigation, should it move forward.


The recently slain Palestinian writer Refaat Alareer noted on Oct. 8, 2023: “The very Israeli snipers that gunned down hundreds of Palestinian marchers in the Great Return March in 2018/19 were neutralised by Palestinian freedom fighters.”

In a recent piece in the New York Review of Books — “Gaza: Two Rights of Return — Most Palestinians in Gaza are now displaced at least twice over. They have a right to choose where to return” — Sari Bashi from Human Rights Watch writes as a Jewish woman married to a Palestinian man whose family was forced from their homes in 1948 and again during the current assault: “I’ll be relieved if my in-laws are merely allowed to return to northern Gaza and receive support to rebuild a house there.”

Israel is great at that. Committing so many crimes such that some people are relieved that the most recent may be alleviated. In fact, such a posture may well facilitate a festering of chronic injustices — and an incentive for Israel to continue its criminality.

https://libya360.wordpress.com/2024/02/ ... ow-israel/

How is the Proposed Ben Gurion Canal and Offshore Gas Development Tied to Israel’s Gaza Invasion?
Posted by INTERNATIONALIST 360° on FEBRUARY 16, 2024
Patrick Mazza

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The proposed Ben Gurion Canal would create an alternative to the Suez Canal. Its proximity to Gaza has raised questions about whether it is one of the motivations for the Israeli invasion. Credit: Wikimedia Commons.

In the past several years, interest has revived in the Ben Gurion Canal, a proposed alternative to the Suez Canal named after Israel’s founding father running through Israel close to Gaza. Creating an incentive for removal of Palestinians from Gaza, particularly the north end, it has raised suspicions that Israel had foreknowledge of Hamas’ October 7 attacks and let them happen.


It has now been documented that Israel received multiple warnings something was about to occur. The New York Times reported that Israeli officials obtained detailed knowledge of attack plans a year before. (Link not paywalled.) Egyptian intelligence made repeated warnings as October 7 approached that a major event was about to take place.

Whether or not these facts offer definitive proof that elements of Israel’s government knew something was on the way, the new interest in creating an alternative to one of the world’s most important east-west transit points has raised questions. As the accompanying map shows, the Mediterranean end of the canal would run close to the northern boundary of Gaza. Obviously, a situation where shipping was subject to rocket attacks would make that untenable, as Houthi attacks at the southern entrance of the Red Sea have proved.

To obtain the investment capital necessary to build the canal, a secure situation would have to be established. The only options for that would be a peace settlement with the Palestinians, or their removal. An Israeli government dead set against the first option would have to exercise the second.

The concept of building a transoceanic canal through Israel dates to 1963, when the U.S. Lawrence Livermore Laboratory developed a scenario that would have used nuclear explosions to dig the canal. The classified document was not made public until 1993. That was part of a particular insanity of the time when both the U.S. and Soviet Union considered using nukes in massive excavation projects. The U.S. version was Operation Plowshare.

The idea for a new canal had been spurred by Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser’s nationalization of the Suez Canal in 1956, taking it over from British and French interests. That resulted in a war involving both those countries and Israel against Egypt. Intervention by U.S. President Dwight Eisenhower forced them to concede, but the canal was blocked to Israeli traffic for a year.

The Ben Gurion Canal concept went into abeyance for decades due to concern about radioactive releases and Arab opposition. But new prospects for cooperation between Arab nations and Israel emerged with the Abraham Accords under the Trump Administration, which saw the normalization of relations between Israel and Arab countries including the United Arab Emirates. Almost immediately after normalization in 2020, a deal was made to ship UAE oil via a pipeline from Eliat on an arm of the Red Sea to the Mediterranean, but it was later blocked by Israeli environmental authorities based on concerns about oil spills.

At the September 2023 G20 meeting shortly before the Hamas attack, the India-Middle East Corridor was announced. It would create a transportation link from India to Europe across the Arabian Peninsula via Dubai in the UAE to the Israeli port of Haifa. In December 2023, even after Israel launched its invasion of Gaza, UAE and Israeli interests made a deal to create a land bridge between Dubai and Haifa.

Suez blockage leads to announcement

With the Abraham Accords in the background, an event in 2021 brought new attention to the Ben Gurion Canal, this time excavated by more conventional means. In March of that year, a massive container ship suffered a steering malfunction and grounded in the Suez Canal, shutting off traffic. The Ever Given blockage raised concerns about how this vital artery of global shipping could become a choke point. (See: Suez Crisis Highlights Fragility of Globalization.)

In April Israel announced it would begin construction of a dual-channel canal that could handle 2-way traffic in June. At 50 meters deep, 10 more than the Suez, and 200 wide, it would be capable of accommodating the world’s biggest ships, an advantage over the more limited Suez Canal. Unlike Suez with its sandy shores, rock walls would reduce maintenance requirements to a minimum. Its 181 miles in length would exceed Suez by about one-third. Around 300,000 workers would be needed to complete the project, with a wide range of estimated costs from $16 billion to $55 billion. Israel would expect to earn around $6 billion annually in transit fees, deeply cutting in Egypt’s revenues, which reached a record $9.4 billion in fiscal year 2022-23.

Despite the announcement, construction did not start. “Many analysts interpret the current Israeli re-occupation of the Gaza Strip as something that many Israeli politicians have been waiting for in order to revive an old project,” the Eurasia Review reports. “Although it was not the original idea, according to the wishes of some Israeli politicians, the last port of the canal could be in Gaza. If Gaza were to be razed to the ground and the Palestinians displaced, a scenario that is happening this fall, it would help planners cut costs and shorten the route of the canal by diverting it into the Gaza Strip.”

The new focus on the Ben Gurion Canal coincides with a revival of interest in another Gaza-related project, the exploitation of gas reserves off the Gaza Coast. This was detailed in a recent post. The Gaza Marine field was first discovered in 1999, but proposals to tap it were blocked for many years by Israel. Then in March 2021 the Palestinian Investment Fund, a branch of the Palestinian Authority (PA), and the Egyptian government signed a memorandum of understanding aimed at developing the field. But Hamas representatives raised objections.

On June 18 2023, a little under 4 months before the attack, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced plans to move forward on development in conjunction with the PA and Egypt. It had been reported that secret talks on development took place between Israel and the PA the prior month.

The PA is widely seen as complicit in Israeli occupation of the West Bank, and is a political rival to Hamas. Striking a deal to exploit Gaza Marine would further buy off the PA and strengthen it vis-à-vis Hamas. As with the revival of the canal proposal, this has also stirred suspicions that Israeli authorities deliberately ignored warnings about the October 7 Hamas attack. For development would entail getting Hamas out of the way in Gaza. Hamas would not agree to drilling unless it received a share of the earnings, something unacceptable to Israel.

Providing Israel with global shipping leverage

The Ben Gurion Canal would provide Israel with leverage over one of the world’s most important shipping points. Around 22,000 ships transited the Suez Canal in 2022, representing 12% of world trade. It is a crucial artery for shipments of manufactured goods, grain and fossil fuels. The International Energy Agency reports, “About 5% of the world’s crude oil, 10% of oil products and 8% of LNG seaborne flows transit the canal.” Though the flow from east to west is still important, increasingly fossil products move from the Atlantic basin to feed Asia’s growing economies.

Suez was closed to Israel from 1948-50 during and immediately after the first Arab-Israeli War and then again in 1956-57 as an outcome of the second conflict. After the 1967 war, when Israel occupied the Sinai Peninsula up to the canal, it was closed to all traffic until a 1975 settlement when Israel pulled back. Since the 1979 peace treaty between Israel and Egypt, traffic has remained unrestricted.

But the 2021 closure raised concerns by the U.S. military, for which Suez remains a vital transit point. As well, the increasing alignment of Egypt with Russia and China through its new membership in BRICS and participation in China’s Belt and Road Initiative gives pause to the U.S. national security establishment. All this would provide motivation to Israel’s closest ally to see an alternative waterway created.

Did revived interest in the Ben Gurion Canal cause Israeli authorities to look the other way when they had clear warnings of a Hamas attack? When analyzing the forensics of a case, one looks at means, motive and opportunity. Between the new focus on the canal as well as offshore gas reserves that both date to around 2021, Israel clearly had motives to clear Gaza, or a large part of it, of its Palestinian population, even beyond the drive-by rightist elements to create an exclusive Jewish state throughout historic Palestine. With its military power, it had the means. The Hamas attacks of October 7 gave it the opportunity.

The actions since fortify the case. With the vast destruction of Gaza beyond any rational necessity to fight Hamas, making the strip virtually uninhabitable, it is hard to argue the goal isn’t expulsion of the population. Taken in the context of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s ordering a plan to “thin” Gaza’s population “to a minimum,” as reported in Israeli media, and Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich’s calls to depopulate Gaza, the intent seems clear. Underscoring the point was Netanyahu’s display of a map of “the new Middle East” that erased Palestine and showed an Israel “from the river to the sea” when he addressed the U.N. two weeks before October 7.

It is unlikely we will ever know for sure. But the prospect of occupying a key point in global shipping, with all the leverage and money that comes with that, provides at least reasonable grounds for suspicion that Israeli officials indeed had foreknowledge of October 7 and allowed the attacks to happen. It would only be one factor playing into a general desire for an ethnically cleansed region “from the river to the sea,” but a powerful factor nonetheless.

Donate to UNRWA

The United States and other countries have opted to defund the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestinian Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) on the grounds that 12 named and one unnamed employee of its 13,000 participated in the October 7 attacks. The 12 were immediately fired. But, as Responsible Statecraft reported, “ . . . while the Israelis make a number of claims and accusations that they say are based on intelligence and other source data, the document itself contains no direct evidence that these 12 identified UNRWA employees participated in or assisted the Oct. 7 attack.”

The Israeli report came immediately after another U.N. arm, the International Court of Justice, ruled there is a case that Israel is committing genocide in Gaza, and ordered it to take measures to prevent it. The report and subsequent funding are widely seen as a way to divert attention from the ruling and discredit the U.N. in general.

Defunding the UNRWA undermines the prime agency bringing humanitarian aid into Gaza and intensifies the now widespread starvation of the population. But just because the U.S. and other nations have cut off funding doesn’t mean you have to. You can make a direct donation to UNRWA here. Please do.

How is Gaza offshore gas development tied to the Israeli invasion?

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Gaza Marine is a gas field offshore from Gaza that is supposed to be under Palestinian jurisdiction, but Israel has blocked development. Credit: UNCTAD

A common thread seems woven through the world’s major conflicts, access to fossil fuels. Ukraine is rich in coal, oil and gas. The South China Sea has major undersea reserves of oil and gas. The current conflict in Gaza is no exception. Significant deposits of gas exist in an offshore area that is supposed to be under Palestinian jurisdiction, but Israel has taken control and held back development.


Gaza Marine with an estimated 1.4 trillion cubic feet of gas is 17 to 21 miles offshore. The area up to 20 miles from the coast was placed under the Palestinian National Authority (PNA) by the 1995 Oslo II accords. But Israel has blocked development, and the complex politics between Hamas which controls Gaza and Fatah which controls the PNA have played into a twisted path of on-again-off-again negotiations around drilling.

The British Gas Group (BGG) discovered the field in 1999 and signed a 25-year contract with the PNA to exploit it. The PNA saw it as an opportunity to supply its own energy, including electrical power, and gain export revenues. Under Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak, the drilling was approved. BGG sought to negotiate a purchase deal with Israel Electric Corporation, but that was nixed by incoming Prime Minister Ariel Sharon. That decision was again reversed in 2002 through intervention by the UK, and Sharon agreed to begin negotiations on an agreement that would have supplied 0.05 trillion cubic feet for 10-15 years. But Sharon got cold feet and shut down negotiations. The money could be used to fund terrorism, he claimed.

A new government led by Ehud Olmert in April 2007 revived the deal. Of the $4 billion expected to flow from the deal, $1 billion was to go to the PNA. But elements of the government were raising objections. The Hamas takeover of Gaza in 2007, and its break from the Fatah-controlled PNA on the West Bank, had changed the picture. Hamas was pressing for a better deal.

“In September 2007, a former Israeli chief of staff strongly advised the Government of Israel not to conclude an agreement with BGG on the grounds that Israel’s transferring $1 billion ‘into local or international bank accounts on behalf of [PNA] would be tantamount to Israel’s bankrolling terror against itself,’” reports the United Nations Commission on Trade and Development (UNCTAD). The Israeli government moved to strike a deal with BGG that would keep cash out of the hands of the PNA and instead pay it in goods and services, effectively cancelling the 1999 agreement.

BGG withdrew from negotiations at the end of 2007. Israel unsuccessfully tried to re-engage the firm in 2008 to close a deal, it is thought on an expedited basis before Israel’s planned Operation Cast Lead military incursion into in Gaza in December 2008. “In the wake of the operation, Palestinian natural gas fields were effectively brought under Israeli control without regard for international law,” UNCTAD says.

The costs to Palestinian people

In its 2019 report, The Economic Costs of the Israeli Occupation for the Palestinian People: The Unrealized Oil and Natural Gas Potential, from which the above quotes are drawn, UNCTAD concluded, “In 2018, 18 years had passed since the drilling of Marine 1 and Marine 2. Since PNA has not been able to exploit these fields, the accumulated losses are in the billions of dollars. Accordingly, the Palestinian people have been denied the benefits of using this natural resource to finance socioeconomic development and meet their need for energy over this entire period, and counting.”

UNCTAD noted, “The Marine 1 and Marine 2 reserves were discovered in 1999 and BGG drilled for gas in 2000. Palestinians could have hypothetically monetized these fields and invested the net value of $4.592 billion for 18 years now. Assuming a low annual real rate of return of 2.5 per cent, Palestinians have already lost roughly $2.570 billion through prevention of the exercise of their right to benefit from the exploitation of their natural resources, guaranteed under international law. The longer Israel prevents Palestinians from exploiting their oil and natural gas reserves, the larger the opportunity costs of these reserves and the larger the costs of the occupation borne by Palestinians become.”

Gaza Marine is dwarfed by another resource, the Meged oil and gas field situated largely under the West Bank. It was found in the 1980s. Production has taken place since 2010. The value of the estimated 1.5 billion barrel field was put at $99 billion by UNCTAD at a $65/barrel rate. Removing production costs, the estimated loss to Palestinians was put at $68 billion. At the current OPEC price of $79/barrel, the overall field value would be nearly $120 billion, and the net after costs would be $84 billion.

Fossil fuel reserves in the Palestine-Israel region are massive. UNCTAD notes, “Levant Basin Province encompasses approximately 83,000 km2 of the Eastern Mediterranean. . . . USGS has estimated a mean (average) of 1.7 billion barrels of recoverable oil and a mean of 122 trillion cubic feet of recoverable gas in the Levant Basin Province. This means that this basin is one of the most important natural gas resources in the world.”

Some of those resources are in international waters, but the overall figures underscore that Israel’s appropriation of land and resources formerly belonging to the Palestinians has deprived them of major economic opportunities. One can argue whether in a time of climate chaos these resources should be developed at all. But the fact is they are being developed, and the Palestinians are being cut out of the deal.

Gaza Marine returns

Over the last several years, the Gaza Marine prospect has been revived in a way that has stirred suspicions that Israeli authorities deliberately ignored warnings about the October 7 Hamas attack. For development would entail getting Hamas out of the way in Gaza. In March 2021, the Palestinian Investment Fund, a branch of the PNA, and the Egyptian government signed a memorandum of understanding aimed at developing the field. But Hamas representatives raised objections.

“Our people have the right to know how the authority behaves on major issues because precedent confirms that it acts without the slightest degree of transparency, and determines its actions and relations based on narrow partisan and factional interests,” Hamas spokesperson Hazem Qassem said.

Moussa Abu Marzook, deputy chairman of Hamas’s Political Bureau, tweeted, “Gaza must be present in any understandings about the gas fields on its shores. If Gaza is forced to import natural gas from the occupation [Israel] for the only power plant in the strip, then we should not stand by while our natural resources are exported to far-off lands. We need to know the details of the agreement that was signed with the Investment Fund.”

(This plant is now shut down because of Israel’s blockade of fuel to Gaza.)

Then on June 18 2023, a little under 4 months before the attack, after many years when Gaza Marine was sidelined, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced plans to move forward on development in conjunction with the PNA and Egypt. It had been reported that secret talks on development had been taking place between Israel and the PNA the prior month.

The Cradle reported, “According to Netanyahu’s office, the plan will emphasize ‘Palestinian economic development and maintaining security and stability in the region.’ The plan is ‘subject to coordination between the security services and direct dialogue with Egypt, in coordination with the PA.’ Plans to develop the field were among the main topics of discussion during recent security meetings between Israel and the PA in Aqaba.”

Israel has clearly been interested in building up the PNA, regarded as complicit in Israeli occupation, as an option to Hamas. A deal that puts money in PNA’s pocket furthers that aim, and buys off further complicity. But it is equally clear that gas development off the Gaza coast could not proceed with Hamas’ objections. Hamas would want a share of the revenues, which would be unacceptable to Israel. Hamas would somehow have to be taken out of the picture.

Gaza Marine is relatively small compared to other offshore gas fields being developed by Israel. Its reserves amount to 38 trillion cubic feet. But developing Gaza Marine to further buy the PNA’s complicity is where the recent moves toward development seem tied to the invasion and attempt to eliminate Hamas. That is the apparent fossil fuel connection to this conflict. Seen as part of a larger strategy to elevate and buy off the PNA while eliminating Hamas, this would be one more incentive to ignore the warnings and intelligence reports that accurately predicted Hamas’ October 7 actions.

https://libya360.wordpress.com/2024/02/ ... -invasion/
"There is great chaos under heaven; the situation is excellent."

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