Palestine

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blindpig
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Re: Palestine

Post by blindpig » Sat Apr 27, 2024 11:10 am

Egypt holds ‘secret’ intel meeting with Israel on Rafah
Egypt has been briefed on and is involved in Israeli plans to evacuate Rafah's civilians into Khan Yunis

News Desk

APR 25, 2024

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(Photo credit: AFP via Getty Images)
Top Israeli and Egyptian officials held a secret meeting in Cairo on 24 April, aimed at discussing Tel Aviv’s plans for an invasion of Gaza’s southernmost city of Rafah.

Three senior Israeli officials told Axios on Wednesday that Shin Bet chief Ronen Bar and Israeli army chief Herzi Halevi met with the head of Egyptian intelligence, Abbas Kamel, and Egypt’s army chief Osama Askar.

The report came the same day that an Israeli defense official said that Israel will launch the operation in Rafah as soon as it gets government approval. Israel is “moving ahead” with the operation, a spokesman for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said, but gave no specific time frame.

Israel is developing a plan to evacuate civilians from the desperately overcrowded city. Egypt has expressed concern over the possibility of an influx of Palestinian refugees entering its territory once Rafah is attacked and has vowed not to allow any mass displacement of Gazans into its Sinai desert.

Washington has repeatedly called on Israel to ensure the safe evacuation of civilians from Rafah, where military operations pose the threat of a severe humanitarian catastrophe.

“Everyone is waiting for Netanyahu's directive to start evacuating the civilian population from Rafah. It's parked at his desk. He needs to resolve the matter with both the Americans and the Egyptians,” one of the Israeli officials told Axios.

US and Israeli officials held a virtual meeting last week to discuss plans for Rafah. The decision to launch the operation is “conditions-based and not time-based, and connected to the humanitarian situation on the ground,” Tel Aviv emphasized to Washington during the meeting, according to US officials.

The Wall Street Journal (WSJ) reported on 23 April, citing Egyptian officials, that Israel’s evacuation plans for Rafah are near complete. The plan will take two to three weeks and will be carried out in cooperation with Washington, Cairo, and other Arab states, including the UAE.

Egyptian forces have deployed in the northern Sinai and along the Gaza border, and are at “full readiness” after being briefed by Israel on plans for Rafah, Al-Araby Al-Jadeed reported on 18 April.

Israel’s evacuation plan involves moving Rafah’s civilian population upwards towards the southern city of Khan Yunis, as well as other areas of the strip, the report states, adding that shelters with tents, food supplies, and medical facilities will be set up.

Recently published satellite images show a large tent compound in Khan Yunis and Israeli troop gatherings at army bases and outposts near the strip – signaling that the invasion of Rafah may be imminent.

https://thecradle.co/articles/egypt-hol ... l-on-rafah

Just what exactly are the Egyptians ready for?

US troops begin building Gaza port ahead of Israel's Rafah invasion

The Israeli prime minister has suggested the US built port could assist in ethnically cleansing Palestinians from Gaza

News Desk

APR 26, 2024

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The General Frank S Besson is carrying the first load of equipment to build a floating harbour in Gaza (Photo credit: US Central Command)

US troops have begun construction of a maritime port off the coast of Gaza, the Pentagon said on 26 April, as hundreds of thousands of Palestinians face further displacement ahead of Israel’s anticipated invasion of Rafah.

“I can confirm that US military vessels, to include the USNS Benavidez, have begun to construct the initial stages of the temporary pier and causeway at sea,” Pentagon spokesperson Major General Patrick Ryder told reporters.

US President Joe Biden announced the building of the port on 7 March, claiming it would allow a large-scale delivery of humanitarian aid to Gaza as the threat of famine loomed.

However, the plan to build the port was first suggested to Biden by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on 22 October, shortly after the war began, the Jerusalem Post reported.

Speaking at a private meeting of the Knesset’s Foreign Affairs and Security Committee on 20 March, Netanyahu suggested the port could also facilitate the removal of Palestinians from Gaza, Kan News reported.

“As far as the State of Israel is concerned, there is no obstacle for the Gazans to leave, maybe even the port they are building could be used for this, but there are no countries in the world that are ready to receive them,” Netanyahu said.

Netanyahu’s statement raises fears the port could be used to expel Palestinians who have nowhere to flee ahead of Israel’s long-planned invasion of Rafah on the Gaza–Egypt border.

At the time of Biden’s 7 March announcement of the pier, Israeli officials were blocking most aid deliveries to Gaza overland by truck. A week before the announcement, the Israeli army fired into a crowd of hungry and starving people seeking to receive sacks of flour at Al-Rashid Street in Gaza City. Israeli fire and the subsequent stampede it caused killed 118.

Reuters reports that a senior White House official said humanitarian aid reaching the pier by sea “will need to pass through Israeli checkpoints on land. That is despite the aid having already been inspected by Israel in Cyprus prior to being shipped to Gaza.”

Israel claims it wants to prevent any aid from getting to Hamas fighters that would allow them to keep fighting occupying Israeli forces.

Reuters adds that Israeli checkpoints at the pier “raises questions about possible delays even after aid reaches shore. The United Nations has long complained of obstacles to getting aid in and distributing it throughout Gaza.”

The pier will initially receive enough aid to load 90 trucks daily, but the number is expected to increase as the pier becomes fully operational.

Under heavy international pressure, Israel has allowed additional aid into Gaza in the past month. According to the UN, an average of 200 trucks a day have been allowed into Gaza in April. On Monday, Israel allowed 316 trucks into the besieged strip.

Despite this apparent increase, the number of aid trucks allowed in remains insufficient. According to UN aid agencies and other humanitarian groups, at least 500 to 600 trucks are needed daily to sustain Gaza's population.

Despite the recent increase in aid trucks, northern Gaza is still heading toward a famine, the deputy UN food chief warned Thursday. He appealed for Israel to allow direct access from its southern Ashdod port to the Erez crossing.

The White House official cited by Reuters added that about 1,000 US troops would support the building and operation of the pier, including in coordination cells in Cyprus and Israel. President Biden has previously stated no US troops would set foot in Gaza itself.

The official added that a third party will drive trucks down the pier onto the beach.

The Israeli military said it would provide security and logistics support for the pier, including protecting the US troops constructing and operating it.

A UN official speaking anonymously with Ynet said several disagreements remain around how Israel will manage the port’s security. The military is reportedly seeking to install remote-controlled gun positions, which the UN opposes, the official said.

https://thecradle.co/articles/us-troops ... h-invasion

Hezbollah ambushes Israeli army convoy hiding under cover of night

A member of the military convoy was killed by a Hezbollah anti-tank missile during the ambush

News Desk

APR 26, 2024

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A Hezbollah anti-tank missile being fired at an Israeli base. (Photo credit: Hezbollah Military Media)

The Israeli army published details on 26 April on its truck driver who was killed in a Hezbollah attack the night before.

“Terrorists launched anti-tank missiles towards the Mount Dov area during the night. As a result of the launch, an Israeli citizen was injured during infrastructure activity in the area, and a short time later he was pronounced dead,” the Israeli army said in a statement.

According to Hebrew news site Ynet, the man who was killed was an Israeli military truck driver who was in the area “as part of infrastructure work to erect an obstacle that does not yet exist on Mount Dov [occupied Lebanese Shebaa Farms].”

“The work is carried out mainly at night, in the dark and usually without lights, so as not to be caught by Hezbollah surveillance,” Ynet added.

The army has begun an investigation into how the truck driver and his vehicle were spotted. The Hebrew outlet went on to say that the Israeli rescue operation lasted several minutes, during which forces attempted to avoid Hezbollah fire through smoke shells and airstrikes.

“In support of our steadfast Palestinian people in the Gaza Strip and in support of their valiant and honorable resistance, the Islamic Resistance prepared a combined ambush of guided missiles, artillery, and missile weapons for an armored convoy near the Ruwaisat al-Alam site in the occupied Lebanese Kfar Shuba hills … At 23:10 PM on the night of Thursday 4/25/2024, it was targeted with guided weapons, artillery, and missiles,” Hezbollah said in a statement early on Friday.

The ambush “led to the destruction of two vehicles. The enemy worked to create a smokescreen to cover the losses.”

The Lebanese resistance group carried out several other attacks that night and earlier on Thursday, including a drone attack on the Israeli Ain Margaliot artillery headquarters.

Israeli warplanes carried out heavy airstrikes on southern Lebanon following the killing of the army truck driver. It also struck Tumat Niha, for the first time during this war, in the Jabal Mashghara region of eastern Lebanon’s Bekaa Valley at dawn on Friday.

On 24 April, Israel bombarded over a dozen Lebanese villages with heavy strikes. Several attacks on Israeli military sites were carried out by Hezbollah that day.

Hezbollah attacked the headquarters of the Israeli army's Golani Brigade with drones on 23 April, in its deepest strike into the occupied territories since the start of the war.

The south of Lebanon has been under continuous bombardment since 8 October, when Hezbollah began daily operations against Israel in support of the resistance in Gaza. Israeli attempts to infiltrate south Lebanon with ground troops have failed after being thwarted by Hezbollah.

The group has vowed to continue attacking Israeli military sites until the war in Gaza is brought to an end.

https://thecradle.co/articles/hezbollah ... r-of-night

******

Hamas Says Rafah Brigades Have a Surprise in Store
APRIL 25, 2024

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Ali Baraka, head of Hamas' Foreign Relations Department pointing at an are in besieged Gaza. Photo: Hawraa Ali/Al Mayadeen Net.

Ali Baraka, the head of Hamas’ Foreign Relations Department, underscores that while the Rafah Brigades have refrained from direct involvement, they have diligently upheld their equipment and capabilities.

The Rafah brigades have not yet been involved in the ongoing war, however, they are prepared for a potential confrontation, Ali Baraka, the head of Hamas’ Foreign Relations Department, told Al Mayadeen Net on Wednesday.

Baraka emphasized that despite them still not having participated, the Rafah Brigades have maintained their equipment and capabilities, leveraging experience gained from previous battles.

He cautioned that any Israeli invasion of Rafah should expect significant losses in terms of personnel and military assets.

Commenting on tunnel warfare, Baraka affirmed that the IOF were unable to enter and act offensively inside the Hamas tunnel network.

He further detailed that Palestinian fighters used the tunnels to carry out operations, with the network spread underground from North to South, assuring that the enemy had been taken aback by Palestinian weaponry.

Currently, the IOF are engaged in a war of attrition and find themselves trapped in Gaza.

The top Hamas official said that the enemy experienced two surprises in this ongoing battle: the first occurred on October 7, and yesterday saw the resignation of Aharon Haliva, the head of the Israeli Military Intelligence Directorate Aman, acknowledging his failure to anticipate such a significant attack. The second surprise was the unexpected strength displayed by Resistance forces in ground combat.

Is the US helpless against ‘Israel’?
On Hamas’ military capabilities, Baraka affirmed that the Palestinian Resistance has shifted towards local manufacturing and has utilized time effectively.

“Over the past 10 years, preparations have been made for this battle, with the Resistance benefiting from the experiences of allies in Syria and Iran, who assisted in transferring military technology,” he stressed.

Regarding the airdrop of aid, he commented, “Firstly, we do not prohibit aid from anyone, as the hungry seek to secure food and medicine for their families. But why drop aid from the air? Are America, along with Egypt, Jordan, and the UAE, so helpless against Israel that they are unable to deliver aid through the Rafah or Kerem Shalom crossings? It’s part of Israel’s policy of starvation and humiliation.”

Elsewhere in his remarks, he emphasized the urgent need for Arab nations to provide aid, stressing the requirement for 500 trucks daily. He further urged for immediate action, calling for an Arab delegation to cross the Rafah crossing, reminiscent of the 2012 event that broke the siege on the Palestinian people.

Baraka’s plea extended to the populace, urging thousands to mobilize and facilitate the delivery of essential medicine and food.

Supporting fronts paralyzed and disrupted IOF
After the 1,998 operations conducted by all supporting fronts in Lebanon, Yemen, and Iraq during the 200 days of aggression, Baraka affirmed that these were “real fronts” in the war, disrupting and paralyzing the enemy.

He also stressed that the enemy is constrained in the Lebanese front, realizing that after its failure in Gaza, it could not open a new front.

The Lebanese front has presented more than 300 martyrs, immobilizing the movement of the occupying army, which was forced to transfer four brigades from the South to the North, relieving pressure on the Gaza front, he further contended.

“This also led to the displacement of more than 100,000 settlers from al-Jalil [Galilee], with material losses exceeding a billion dollars, in addition to the paralysis of economic activity in the North. If you monitor the past week’s development, starting with the Arab al-Aramshe Operation, you will notice that the Resistance is conducting important operations, and the Zionist enemy is considering the Resistance’s moves a thousand times,” Baraka told Al Mayadeen Net.

He added, “The enemy realizes that after its failure in the Gaza Strip, it cannot open a major front because the Lebanese Resistance is larger and stronger due to the open supply from Syria and Iran, unlike besieged Gaza.”

Yemen shut down port of Eilat
Regarding the Yemeni front, Baraka elaborated that Ansar Allah disrupted Red Sea navigation, shut down the Israeli port of Eilat and also blocked ships from delivering goods to “Israel”, causing an international crisis.

The actions undertaken have offered crucial aid and relief to the residents of Gaza, as per Baraka.

Additionally, he extended his regards to Yemen, “a nation enduring a prolonged siege and grappling with a US-led Arab struggle.”

Despite Yemen’s challenges, the nation remains steadfast in its support for the Palestinian cause, emphasizing that the captives held by the Yemeni Armed Forces are bound to the solution put forward by the Al-Qassam Brigades, he stressed.

He further mentioned that the Iraqi Resistance, which, despite disagreements with the government, has targeted US bases with rockets and drones, affirming that Gaza is not alone.



Iranian drones paved the way for a new front
During the exclusive interview for Al Mayadeen Net, Baraka spoke extensively about what he described as “the night of the drones” over al-Quds and Palestine, elaborating on “the Iranian response, which was a strategic response that greatly impacted the Zionist entity.”

“There was a difficult psychological situation, if we may say so. The drones arrived, flew, sent images and information, and revealed who stands with the occupation in any upcoming war,” he tersely stated.

As he describes what happened as a “live maneuver,” he says, “Our people in Palestine rejoiced to see allied rockets lighting up the sky of al-Quds, sending a strong message to our people, and that itself sufficient.”

The top Hamas official emphasized that the Iranian strike is no less important than Operation Al-Aqsa Flood, which paved the way for the upcoming liberation battle.

‘Why do u blame Iran?’
As he sarcastically asked, “Why do you blame Iran?” Baraka clarified that its leadership did not claim that this strike would liberate Palestine, but rather it was a punishment for the attack on its consulate in Damascus.

“The Iranian strike revealed that Israel cannot defend itself alone and exposed its psychological weakness. Contrary to what they claim, the strike achieved its objectives excellently and boosted morale regarding a new front,” he stated.

Regarding what was said to be an Israeli response, he commented, “What happened was a farce, consisting of three small drones launched from somewhere inside Iran by US and Israeli agents and then amplified in the media.”

Unified Resistance: Factions stand firm in West Bank confrontation
The senior Hamas official additionally disclosed that Israeli plans are underway for the occupied West Bank, involving killings, house demolitions, and the burning of farms and vehicles, aimed at compelling large-scale displacement to Jordan.

He warned, “This is a real and serious matter. Therefore, now the Palestinian Resistance [with all its factions] has decided to confront the occupation in the West Bank and face settlement projects and displacement.”

“This is a real and serious issue. Therefore, the Palestinian Resistance, along with all its factions, has now decided to confront the occupation in the West Bank and oppose settlement projects and displacement,” he cautioned.

Furthermore, Baraka has offered insights into the ongoing negotiations, suggesting that the US administration is grappling with Israeli pressure tactics.

He indicated that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu refrains from responding to Iran due to purported support from the US against Resistance movements like Hamas in Gaza. This stance, according to Baraka, stems from US concerns about regional stability and its interests, thus seeking to prevent further escalation in the region.

“The Americans are now complicit in Israeli war crimes in Gaza. They are the ones covering and arming the occupation, thus succumbing to Israeli blackmail and decisions,” he stressed.

He concluded by clarifying, “Qatar did not ask the Hamas leadership to leave; there is a welcoming, embracing, and strict security protection for Hamas there, because the enemy threatened and pressured Doha and blackmailed it, and Netanyahu’s government wants it to pressure Hamas, so rumors were spread."

https://orinocotribune.com/hamas-says-r ... -in-store/

*******

Abu-Obeida’s Multi-Layered Message: Gaza’s Resistance Could Be Transformative for the Arab World
Posted by INTERNATIONALIST 360° on APRIL 26, 2024
Abdel Bari Atwan

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Millions of people around the world eagerly await the occasional televised appearances of Abu-Obaida, the official spokesman of Hamas’ military wing the Izzedin al-Qassam Brigades.

There are several reasons for this. His speeches are short and to-the-point. He conveys morale-raising good news about the resistance’s achievements in confronting the occupation. And he does not seek personal fame or attention: he covers his face completely, and it is his resonant voice alone that lifts moods and strengthens the spirit of steadfastness and resistance.

In his latest videotaped appearance on Tuesday night marking 200th days since the start of Israel’s assault on the Gaza Strip he made several key points.
— He called for stepped-up resistance activity in all its forms in every arena. This suggests there will be an escalation on the various confrontation fronts in the coming days and weeks.
— He affirmed that the enemy remains mired in the sands of Gaza, reaping only defeat and disgrace and ‘achieving’ only mass death and destruction — and that it will be costly for it either to withdraw or remain.
— He reaffirmed that military pressure on the Brigades and the resistance will only make them hold faster to their positions and the full rights of the Palestinian people, and that no concessions whatsoever should be expected.
— Hamas will not abandon its demands for the full withdrawal of Israeli forces from Gaza, lifting of the siege, and return of all displaced people to their homes — and that the movement is firmly rooted and will remain.
— He alluded to Iran’s military retaliation against Israel involving 360 drones and missiles as a rewriting of the rules of engagement that confounds the enemy’s calculations.
— He praised the escalating resistance against the occupation in the West Bank despite Israel’s brutal repressive measures, and cast its hysterical reaction as a mark of its despair and confusion
— He expressed great thanks and appreciation to all the peoples and groups in the Arab world — mentioning Lebanon, Yemen, and Iraq in particular — and around the globe who have taken action in solidarity with the Palestinians.
The resistance in the starved and besieged Gaza Strip forced the head of Israel’s military intelligence to resign and its army to withdraw most of its brigades and battalions to cut their losses. It trashed the myth of Israeli deterrence, undermining the very foundations of the Zionist enterprise. It is entitled, 200 days on, to celebrate its achievements, its steadfastness and resistance, its foiling of the enemy’s plans, and its confounding of its setters and supporters.

Thanks to that steadfastness and resistance, and the ‘unity of fronts’, Iran has become a ‘confrontation state’.

Yemen has developed into a regional naval power that fearlessly confronts Israeli shipping in the Red Sea and the US-led naval forces deployed to protect it.

The Galilee region of northern occupied Palestine has become an inferno, with hundreds of thousands of settlers evacuated because of the long-term drone and missile war of attrition waged by Hezbollah.

And now, the Iraqi resistance has engaged forcefully, directing drones and missiles at US military bases in Iraq and Syria and Israeli transport and energy infrastructure.

So long as Yahya al-Sinwar and his comrades continue leading the heroic struggle in Gaza, and Abu-Obaida speaks out, we can hope for a change and the emergence of a New Arab World that achieves the goals of victory and justice.

Full Text of the Speech https://www.palestinechronicle.com/we-d ... ay-of-war/#
"There is great chaos under heaven; the situation is excellent."

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Re: Palestine

Post by blindpig » Sun Apr 28, 2024 11:56 am

A Productive Language’: On Western Intellectual Paradigms and Refaat al-Areer
23-04-2024
Ameed Faleh

On the 6th of December 2023, Refaat Al-Areer was assassinated along with his brother, sister, and their children by an Israeli airstrike. Before his murder, Refaat had been contacted by an Israeli intelligence officer threatening to kill him. A literature professor at the Islamic University of Gaza and a refugee living in the al-Shuja’iyya neighbourhood in Gaza, whose brother was martyred during the 2014 aggression, Refaat had not only endured personal sacrifices that Israel imposed on him but also acted as a social leader and a role model for Palestinians and academics worldwide – in life and posthumously. Israel recognised his crucial role both in the blockaded Gaza Strip and beyond, and for that he was murdered. His death is thus premeditated, an attempt to tear apart Gaza’s social cohesion – a necessary condition for the collapse of any mass-based resistance movement – in the hope of demobilising Gaza through massacres of people in their thousands and through the tightening of the blockade. The Israeli-American ideological hegemony over Arabs assumes its most grotesque yet crystalline form in Gaza: an airstrike targeting a luminary intellectual and his family members for his personal and intellectual fight against Zionism and imperialism. This tribute to Refaat expounds upon the nature of his role within the context of Gaza, detailing the values he represents in the wider historical moment as one among many historical antecedents in the struggle for liberation.

Class Suicide: The Theoretical in Practice
Against the backdrop of the 1968 Battle of al-Karameh1 and Fatah’s rise to power in the Palestinian National Movement, Hanna Mikhail, a young Palestinian assistant professor of political science at Washington University in Seattle, decided to travel to Jordan to join the Palestinian resistance. His family pleaded with him to stay in the United States, to no avail; Mikhail’s response was always ‘Those are our people. We need to improve their conditions and strengthen their abilities.’2 Before his mysterious disappearance off the coast of North Lebanon in 1976, he spent the majority of his time in the training camps of the Fedayeen in Jordan and Lebanon where he was chiefly responsible for developing political mobilisation materials for Fatah outside and inside of the training camps – drawing inspiration from the Vietnamese, Algerian, and Chinese examples. Able to forge relationships between the socialist bloc and Fatah, Mikhail helped secure political and military support for Fatah from like-minded progressive movements and states throughout the world.


Comrades often recall Mikhail’s Marxist groundings, as well as his ‘sufi’3 attitude towards life and revolutionary praxis – his preference for staying on the front lines rather than having an office job. In one incident, he was granted the opportunity to represent the Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO) in Washington, D.C. He declined the offer on the basis that diplomatic work did not suit him, and that he would prefer to stay with his people in the training camps.4 When asked about the role of the intellectual cadres in the fight against Zionism, he replied that ‘every intellectual that does not engage in praxis is not worthy of being a cadre member in a revolutionary organisation.’5 Mikhail advocated for Palestinian intellectuals to reject material incentives, joining hands with the displaced masses for liberation, a sentiment shared by V.I. Lenin who rejected the stratum of intelligentsia that rejected their historical duty towards the land and the people. For both Mikhail and Lenin, the intelligentsia has the ability to put theory into practice and to use their knowledge for the betterment of mankind, and any role outside of this is simply rejected out of revolutionary necessity.


Amilcar Cabral’s theory of class suicide further elaborates on Mikhail and Lenin’s assertions. Calling for the petit-bourgeoisie to commit suicide as a class, they must ‘be reborn as revolutionary workers, completely identified with the deepest aspirations of the people to which they belong’6 – in order to shape and mould the intellectual into a fighting force in the revolutionary context. Cabral’s recognition that the involvement of the petit-bourgeoisie and its intellectuals will go against their fundamental class interests is an invitation to this stratum of society to join progressive liberatory causes wherever they may be. It is through such a class suicide that revolutionary reincarnation happens, where estrangement from the fighting masses becomes near non-existent. Cabral, in this context, elaborates succinctly the stakes which the petit-bourgeoisie are put under at times of need. Basil al-Araj similarly elaborated on the role of the intelligentsia, asking, ‘Do you want to become an intellectual? You need to be a fighting intellectual. If you do not want to fight, then your intellectual [status] is worthless.’7



Fathi al-Shiqaqi’s Call to Action

Despite the loss of many of its cadres and intellectuals such as Mikhail, the PLO fought on. Its exile to Tunisia after 1982 pushed Palestinian intellectuals to conceive of alternative ideological models that were able to wage armed struggle against Israel in the heartlands of Palestine. In 1992, the Secretary General of the Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ), Fathi al-Shiqaqi, opened his speech at the Fourth Islamic Conference in Support of the Palestinian Intifada by emphasising the necessity of a revolutionary discourse at the time of the First Intifada. He stated that,

in large part due to the excessive consumption of words, we need to find a new productive language. A language that creates action and revolution, a language that is coalesced with blood and sweat… We need to take a serious step in the right direction, and I assert that this step necessitates the liberation of the will from what it has succumbed to – from the accumulated inaction and futility, as well as the poisonous culture that breaks [one’s] soul under the pretext of [political] realism!8

A cry for the intellectuals of Palestine to create a new revolutionary discourse amid signs of normalisation between the PLO and Israel, al-Shiqaqi himself is an example of this class suicide for abandoning both mathematics and medicine to create a revolutionary resistance organisation. He rationalised the creation of the PIJ as the alternative to the stalemate of the factions of the PLO on both the political and military fronts against Israel and soon the organisation began to discuss the necessity of Islam as a mobilising factor in the Palestinian context. Through rallying the Palestinian masses, the PIJ took up arms against Israel in the mid-80s until the present moment.

In the face of Western support for Israel during its genocidal assault on Gaza, we have seen several academics – Rashid Khalidi, Naomi Klein, Gilbert Achcar, and Adam Shatz to name but a few – condemn the October 7th military operation based on, to borrow from Lenin, intellectualist phrase-mongering, whereby semantics of how revolutionary violence should be used in congruence with the international US-led world order is prioritised over 75 years of dispossession and a 16-year brutal siege on the Gaza Strip. In the case of Shatz, he strips Frantz Fanon of the contemporary revolutionary element of his work – pushing the conversation away from the necessity of decolonial violence in the face of genocide into an intra-intellectual discussion on how Fanon should be read in the face of the so-called ethno-tribalism of the decolonial left. Shatz refuses the application of Fanon in any modern neocolonial context, focusing on isolating him within his time period while portraying the Palestinian resistance as having ‘primordial’ tendencies.9 He seeks to frame the discussion of resistance on a specific personal reading of Fanon, recasting decolonial violence as a simple desperate violent impulse rather than a calculated political decision brought forth by decades of settler-colonialism. For Achcar, meanwhile, he cannot imagine Hamas as a rational actor acting beyond pathological emotions, employing a successful military plan which aimed to bring the world’s attention to Palestine as they employed warfare as another means of conducting politics. The operation on October 7th was an attempt at a political rejuvenation of Palestine beyond the paradigms of Israeli-Palestinian peace talks, but Achcar seemed to have missed that very crucial point for the convenient mainstream analysis of Hamas being an emotionally-charged religious fundamentalist movement. These analyses rehash old notions of the futility of resistance by virtue of its purported irrationality and extremism, while embellishing such faulty analysis with vague wording which is neither elaborated upon nor contextualised in their contemporary timeframe. One cannot help but make the connection to Lenin’s denunciation of intellectual phrase-mongering: vague slogans and words that are repeated ad-nauseam to downplay revolutionary sentiments while contributing nothing to liberation.

These positions by prominent academics, however, are hardly surprising; Western academia’s attempts at a positive and objective neutrality that won’t indemnify them lends itself to siding with Zionism. After all, what is the net gain for siding with Palestinians? One has so much more to lose materially in siding with Palestine and its resistance – whether it is that prize, work opportunity, or fellowship that may be denied. Never talking about the Palestinian resistance, or only talking about it when absolutely pressed to, coating it with a fundamentalist, primordial paint is convenient; it does not cost academics anything but rather asserts a dominant narrative that seeks to decontextualise October 7th and to disregard armed action entirely. Western academia is unable to grasp Palestinian resistance precisely because the latter represents the antithesis of what it stands for; it is a contemporary struggle for liberation from Israeli-American domination that is costly for its supporters in many cases. In some distant future, one may see a litany of literature about the Palestinian resistance and Palestine’s long march to liberation after the demise of Zionism. Writing about Palestine retrospectively will then become safe, and the books will laud Hamas and any other Palestinian movement for liberation. Until then, however, one is forced to make the conclusion that Palestine will remain impossible to tackle for Western academia outside of unproductive languages and terminologies because to scrutinise Israel comes with risk. It is within this context that Refaat’s martyrdom presents itself: it is a litmus test for the intellectual both in the Global North as well as the Global South. It is a call for class suicide, for humility in the face of Palestinian armed struggle.

Refaat, A Nodal Link in Liberation
Refaat al-Areer, like Mikhail, Lenin, Cabral, al-Araj and al-Shiqaqi before him, emphasised the importance of staying close to his people. His students remember him on a very personal level; his tireless devotion to pushing them to do their best highlights his affectionate relationship with them. Elevating their voices, Refaat compiled their talents in Gaza Writes Back, a collection of writings of fifteen young Palestinian voices in Gaza. Refaat understood the necessity of becoming one with the people, of the futility of elitism in a colonial context, and it is in this sense that he was committing his own class suicide. Through his degree in English literature, academic skills, and socioeconomic standing, he could have left Gaza and lived the rest of his life in any European capital like many did before him. Instead, he (and as Louis Allday makes the comparison, Ghassan Kanafani too) chose to stay on the front lines knowing full well that he might one day be martyred.

Refaat’s TEDxShujaiyya talk is indicative of how he positioned himself on a personal level. He emphasised that ‘oral history should always belong to the people,’ stressing that this history is not of concern to just the elites, nor is it their property to claim. ‘Let’s beg [our forefathers] to tell us stories,’ exclaimed Refaat, in a manner reminiscent of Ghassan Kanafani’s approach in writing his famous short story, Umm Saad. Ghassan used to wait every Tuesday of the week to sit down with Umm Saad, asking her for the latest news about the Fedayeen. A Palestinian refugee from the Galilee that saw her own son joining the Fedayeen, the novella is not merely an abstract motif symbolising the plight of our ancestors with the flame of revolutionary vigour being passed down from generation to generation but is also a present material reality of the resistance in Gaza and its cells in the West Bank. It is through his real experience with Umm Saad that the story developed. Ghassan, just like Refaat, emphasised the role of the story as a driver for change – a story rooted in the experience of dispossession and war derived primarily from the material conditions of the masses. Iraqi Marxist Hadi al-Alawi’s attempts to regionalise Marxism in a West Asian framework, criticising the Marxists of his time for their failure to take oral and written heritage into account, is likewise strikingly similar to Refaat’s approach to literary writing.10 One can see the throughlines between Hadi and Refaat, whereby both of them reject the elitism which plagued their respective fields: Hadi in the Marxist academic sphere, and Refaat in the literary writing sphere.


Refaat’s martyrdom manifests itself in Shiqaqi’s call to produce a new language that appeals to the common people and unites them under revolutionary principles. Consumption of words has stifled us for generations: books, articles, intra-intellectual discussions in cosy cafés and the like. Such a criticism need not be anti-intellectual: it is clear that such a phenomenon of ‘consumption of words’ (peace, coexistence, terrorism, religious fundamentalism) is aimed at a large portion of intellectuals and their treatment of Palestine as a career in of itself or just another subject to talk about rather than a serious cause for the liberation of an entire people. Would Fanon support October 7th? Is Hamas acting on some sort of ‘primordial’ tendencies? Is there a compromise between Israelis and Palestinians that appeases both sides? What about the fact that Hamas is somehow fundamentalist? All of these discussions, in hindsight, seem to be moot in the face of everything happening to Gazans; their significance (and convenience) lies in the moment that such arguments are being made, but they do not form a productive discourse that Refaat would have wanted us to tackle. These arguments, focusing the crux of their attention on mainstream analyses of the resistance, are not made in good faith; they are meant to undermine the resistance. Focusing on debunking them, time and time again, is wasted energy that could be put to better use.


Intellectuals like Ghassan and Hanna Mikhail criticised the ‘bureaucratisation of the Palestinian Revolution,’ whereby fancy suits replace military gear, and semantic intellectual discussions replace actual work on the ground. Decades later, this bureaucratisation has manifested itself in the Palestinian Authority. It is clear how the slippery slope of elitism can drive entire national liberation movements (the PLO in this case) into submission and collaboration with Zionism and American imperialism. We cannot mourn Refaat without ridding ourselves of the old language of rational compromises, realpolitik and other buzzwords that aim to strip us of our collective agency for an amorphous solution to our plights – a solution imposed from the halls of the White House and intellectual conversations in the imperial core. Any solution to our plight should stem from the alleys of the refugee camps and the fields of the villages, from the very people who are suffering under the yoke of US imperialism and Israeli settler colonialism. Unequivocal support for the Palestinian resistance should be non-negotiable in the face of a world assault on its material existence, and such support should be the backbone of the new language that we can (finally) mourn Refaat in.

The thread that ties Refaat al-Areer to Hanna Mikhail, V.I. Lenin, Amilcar Cabral, Fathi al-Shiqaqi, Hadi al-Alawi, as well as Ghassan Kanafani, is the collective rejection of attempts to place the intellectual on a podium separate from the masses. This podium is the logical outcome of the theory of homo economicus, which positions individualist material advancement above the collective interest of the people; the dominant ideology necessitates submission in favour of certain material gains which strip one’s class consciousness from that of the ordinary people. As such, rejecting this dominant ideology necessitated the revolutionary thinkers stepping off this podium and joining the masses. Some of them took up the gun, and others, like Refaat, took up the pen. In Refaat’s case, he built love among his peers and disciples. Unabashedly clear-cut and affectionate with his people, Refaat did not spare Zionists and conditional allies alike from critique. Within the tragedy of his assassination, one can find a semblance of solace: that he lived for his students, children, and friends, that he will become immortalised in the mind of every student who is writing on Gaza, and that he will forever stay cherished as a social leader who was invaluable to Gaza. He will be remembered by people firstly as a friend, secondly as a proud Palestinian, and thirdly as an intellectual whose love for Palestine and its resistance knew no bounds. To honour Refaat, to really mourn him, is to produce a new language unbounded by Western concerns. Striving to be just like Refaat, uncompromising towards bad-faith actors while focusing the crux of our attention on discussions that merit a response to people who are genuinely trying to learn and broaden their theoretical and historical lens, is the truest mourning one could give to him.

References

1 The Battle of Al-Karameh (21st of March, 1968) was an Israeli offensive against the Palestinian Fedayeen at the border town of al-Karameh. It resulted in approximately 28 dead and 90 wounded Israeli soldiers. The casualties forced Israel to halt its offensive, with the Fedayeen winning the Arab public’s support as a result of this battle in contrast to the still-fresh defeat of 1967.

2 Helo, Jihan. Ghoyyeba Fa Izdada Houdoran: Hanna Ibrahim Mikhael (Abu Omar) He Was Absent but More Present: About Hanna Mikhael. (Amman: Al-Ahliyya, 2019), p. 91.

3 The word sufi here is a reference to an Islamic ascetic approach to life which posits the material as a factor to an individual's moral and ethical corruption.

4 Helo, Jihan. Ghoyyeb Fa Izdada Houdoran, p. 62.

5 Helo, Jihan. Ghoyyeb Fa Izdada Houdoran, p. 58.

6 Cabral, Amílcar, and Richard Handyside. Revolution in Guinea: An African People’s Struggle: Selected Texts. (London: Stagel, 1974), p. 89.

7 Rafidi, Wesam, 'The Researcher-Fighter in the Face of Settler-Colonialism: Palestine as a Case Study.' In al-Araj, Basil. Wajjadtu Ajwibati: Hakatha Takallama Asshaheed Basil al-Araj I Have Found My Answers: This Is How Martyr Basil Al-Araj Spoke. (Jerusalem: Dar Ra’bal, 2018), p. 374.

8 Al-Shiqaqi, Fathi, and Refaat Sayyed Ahmad. Rihlat al-Dam Allathi Hazzam al-Sayef: al-Aamal al-Kamila Lal Shaheed al-Doctor Fathi al-Shiqaqi The Journey of the Blood that Defeated the Sword: The Complete Works of the Martyr Dr. Fathi al-Shiqaqi. (Cairo: Yaffa Center for Studies and Research, 1997), 2:1283.

9 This issue was discussed by Abdaljawad Omar in his interview for Ebb with Louis Allday in November 2023.

10 Hadi al-Alawi, named the Scion of the Two Civilisations for his interest in both Islamic and Chinese histories and heritage, is an Iraqi Marxist thinker and opposition figure that attempted, through his writings, to root West Asian (primarily Arab) culture in a Marxist lens via examining the social relations that produce the history and heritage of the region. See: Suleiman, Khaled, and Haidar Jawad. Al-Hiwar al-Akheer Ma’ al-Mufakker Hadi al-Alawi: Hiwar al-Hadir wa al-Mustaqbal The Final Conversation with Hadi Al-Alawi: A Discussion about the Present and the Future. (Damascus: Dar al-Talee’a, 2015), p. 56.

Ameed Faleh
Ameed Faleh is a Palestinian student at al-Quds University.

https://www.ebb-magazine.com/essays/a-p ... e-language

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Troubled waters: Al-Yasat dispute reignites Saudi–Emirati contest

Despite their public portrayal as close allies, Riyadh and Abu Dhabi are, at best, ‘frenemies,’ engaging in ferocious competition for regional and economic dominance. Now, their territorial dispute over Al-Yasat has entered the international realm, with a formal UN complaint filed by the Saudis.


Mawadda Iskandar

APR 26, 2024

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(Photo Credit: The Cradle)

A significant strain in relations may be brewing between Riyadh and Abu Dhabi.

An official document released on the UN website dated 28 March 2024 reveals a complaint filed by the Saudi Ministry of Foreign Affairs against the UAE concerning a longstanding territorial dispute over the Yasat area.

Specifically, the complaint addresses the UAE Emiri Decree No. 4 of 2019, which designates Al-Yasat as a protected maritime area. According to the UN memorandum, Saudi Arabia contests the decree, declaring it “contrary to international law.”

Saudi Arabia also reiterated its position, refusing to acknowledge any actions or measures undertaken by the UAE in the maritime zone adjacent to Saudi territorial waters, including the shared sovereign area and the islands of Makasib and Al-Qafai.

Although disputes between Saudi Arabia and the UAE regularly crop up in the region’s media, they tend not to impact formal diplomatic relations between the two Persian Gulf states. But this one, contested territory, looks to be different.

The roots of the dispute

The disagreement’s origins trace back to the UAE’s formative years in the twentieth century. Amid territorial disputes over control and expansion among the area’s ruling tribes, the late founder of the UAE, Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan al-Nahyan, sought recognition from neighboring states following the country’s independence from Britain in 1971.

A pivotal moment in these boundary negotiations was the 1974 Treaty of Jeddah. The deal marked a compromise in which Riyadh relinquished claims to the Al-Rimi area – rich in oil and located between Oman and the UAE – in exchange for other territories, including the oil-rich Shaybah field.

This field has since become a focal point of contention between the two states.

Al-Yasat is a marine reserve of great ecological and historical significance, located near Abu Dhabi’s southernmost point. The area hosts a diverse ecosystem, including over 200 species of fish, 40 species of coral, and 13 species of marine mammals.

The area also bears historical importance for its archaeological sites and has acquired a cultural status linked to the pearling sites scattered within its waters.

During the existing border disputes of that period, the nascent Persian Gulf emirate sought recognition from its surroundings and turned to Saudi Arabia for help. The UAE’s founders were subsequently forced to abandon a 50-kilometer strip of coastline separating the UAE and Qatar.

But the 2004 accession of Khalifa bin Zayed al-Nahyan (KbZ) to leadership marked a notable shift in the country’s stance on these longstanding issues. The new emir viewed the Jeddah Agreement as inequitable, forged under duress, and prioritized renegotiating it during his first visit to Riyadh in 2005. Since then, matters have not been resolved; they’ve only worsened.

Evolution of disagreement

With his efforts at an impasse, KbZ declared Al-Yasat an Emirati-protected area by Emiri Decree No. 33 in January 2005. The area comprises the sub-island, the Greater and Lesser Yasat Islands, Karsha, Essam, and the surrounding waters, to be administered by the Environment Agency in Abu Dhabi.

In 2006, the dispute intensified, with the UAE releasing new maps showing Saudi territory as part of the UAE. In an attempt to impose a fait accompli, the maps included Khor al-Udeid as part of the emirate of Abu Dhabi, extending the boundaries in the Empty Quarter to 80 percent of the Shaybah field owned by the UAE.

The Saudi response came in several steps: preventing Emiratis from entering the kingdom using only an ID card instead of a passport, obstructing land traffic between the two countries, and obstructing the UAE–Qatar bridge project that passes through Saudi territory.

The situation worsened in 2010 when two Emirati boats engaged a Saudi border patrol boat in the Khor al-Udeid area, capturing two Saudi personnel.

However, the Arab Spring in late 2010 brought a temporary reprieve, as regional geopolitical dynamics shifted, leading to a temporary detente between Riyadh and Abu Dhabi.

But, by 2019, the old disputes resurfaced with renewed intensity when the UAE unilaterally expanded the Al-Yasat Marine Protected Area more than fivefold, revoking previous agreements.

This move coincided with the August 2019 attacks by Yemeni forces on the Shaybah oil field, which the UAE insisted wouldn’t have occurred if it held control of the area – an implicit criticism of Saudi security measures.

Outstanding controversies

Now, five years after the UAE expanded the Al-Yasat Marine Protected Area, Saudi Arabia has escalated the issue by lodging a formal complaint with the UN. Riyadh’s decision to approach the highest international body and bypass regional forums such as the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) or the Arab League exposes the depth of the conflict and the extent of deterioration in direct bilateral relations.

The Wall Street Journal has characterized the two countries as “enemy friends,” highlighting a relationship that, while outwardly cordial, seethes with underlying tensions.

In December 2022, Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman (MbS) expressed his frustrations openly, accusing UAE officials of betrayal and threatening punitive measures “worse than what it did to Qatar.”

Foreign Policy provides further context, describing a “quiet conflict” between Riyadh and Abu Dhabi as they vie for regional dominance and engage in geoeconomic competition. This rivalry is particularly pronounced as both states anticipate a future less dependent on oil revenues and more focused on diversified economic growth.

Divergence over Yemen

One indicator of the end of the ‘bromance‘ between Mohammed bin Zayed (MbZ) and Mohammed bin Salman is the passage of more than a year since the last direct meeting. Bin Zayed was notably absent from the Arab–Chinese summit held in Saudi Arabia in December 2022, while Bin Salman was a no-show at Bin Zayed’s meetings with Arab leaders in January 2023.

Among the major differences between the two states is the Yemeni file. The Emiratis withdrew from the Saudi-led coalition’s devastating war on Yemen after sensing the danger following retaliatory strikes that targeted the Shaybah oil field, Abu Dhabi airport, and the Expo 2020 center in Dubai by the Ansarallah-aligned armed forces.

Yemen’s proactive military operations against adversary states forced an Emirati about-turn, leaving Saudi Arabia mired in the Yemeni quagmire while the UAE pursued its own geopolitical and geoeconomic interests in the country’s south, working with local groups and militias to control strategic Yemeni islands and ports on the southwestern coast.

Abu Dhabi also sought to reap the rewards from these new strategies by occupying Mayun Island on the Bab al-Mandab and providing services to Israel and the US in Socotra and Abdul Kori.

Scenarios for the resolution of UAE–Saudi relations

The main contentions between Saudi Arabia and the UAE span a range of geopolitical and economic arenas.

They include historical disputes over land and sea boundaries and control of oil resources like the Shaybah field, differing approaches to the conflict in Yemen, and a proxy war in Sudan that reflects their broader contest for regional influence and leadership.

The two neighbors also butt heads within OPEC over oil production policies and engage in fierce economic competitions that include, notably, the UAE’s rejection of Saudi proposals for regional banking integration.

Both states also engage in a covert competition for global status. Riyadh and Abu Dhabi have each launched independent, headline-grabbing initiatives toward resolving regional conflicts and normalizing relations with key international players – all while touting their respective economic diversification successes through competitive investments in hot sectors like aviation and tourism.

As their contest for regional leadership heats up, the future of UAE–Saudi relations appears uncertain, trending towards two potential outcomes:

They can temporarily ease tensions by kicking the proverbial can down the road to avoid direct conflict – as indicated by recent communications between MbS and MbZ and, ironically, mediation efforts by Qatari Emir Tamim bin Hamad.

Or, the two ‘frenemies‘ can escalate in increasingly public confrontations via political, media, and diplomatic channels – though likely stopping short of complete alienation or military conflict.

https://thecradle.co/articles/troubled- ... ti-contest

Rafah operation poses 'disaster for Israel': Ex-army commander

The former officer said Hamas is planning a 'strategic ambush' for Israeli troops upon their upcoming entry into Rafah

News Desk

APR 26, 2024

Image
(Photo credit: Reuters)

Former Israeli army officer, Major General Israel Ziv, said on 26 April that Hamas’ military wing is preparing an ambush to confront Israeli forces upon their entry into Gaza’s southernmost city of Rafah, where the army’s long-planned invasion is approaching.

Hamas is working on a “strategic ambush” for when Israeli troops decide to enter Rafah, Ziv said, adding that this would be a “disaster for Israel.”

“The Rafah invasion poses a high risk, one higher than everything [Israel] did in Gaza, given the fact that Rafah is a very crowded place and difficult to fight in, as well as the US and Egypt's sensitivity toward it,” the former officer said, according to Al-Mayadeen.

His comments came two days after a joint statement released by several Palestinian resistance factions, including Hamas and the Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ) movement, in which they vowed to confront any upcoming attack on Rafah.

The Palestinian resistance “will not sit idly by” as Israeli troops enter Rafah, the statement said, adding that “all options [for escalation] are on the table.”

The factions vowed in the statement “to defend our people and counter the aggression with full force and responsibility, promising to teach the Zionist enemy a lesson it will never forget.”

Israel claims Rafah is Hamas’ final stronghold, despite the group’s military wing being entrenched across Gaza along with several other resistance factions.

Hamas’ Qassam Brigades said on 25 April that they destroyed an Israeli surveillance site in a mortar attack in the central Gaza Strip.

The southernmost city of Rafah holds over one million people, and military operations there pose the threat of an unprecedented humanitarian catastrophe.

Israel’s plan to evacuate the city involves moving Rafah’s civilian population upwards towards the southern city of Khan Yunis, according to recent reports. Recently published satellite images show a large tent compound in Khan Yunis and Israeli troop gatherings at army bases and outposts near the strip – signaling that the invasion of Rafah may be imminent.

https://thecradle.co/articles/rafah-ope ... -commander

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Naomi Klein: We need an exodus from zionism

This Passover, we don’t need or want the false idol of zionism. We want freedom from the project that commits genocide in our name

Increasing numbers of jewish citizens in the west are standing up and declaring that ‘Anti-zionism is not antisemitism!’ and that imperialism’s fascistic proxies do not speak for them.
Naomi Klein

Friday 26 April 2024

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The following speech was delivered in New York City to an Emergency Seder in the Streets, marking the jewish Passover holiday in the context of the Gaza genocide.

We reproduce it here as an important indicator of the increasing disgust felt by growing numbers of jewish people at the zionisation of Judaism; at the cooptation of their religion to justify the unjustifiable crimes of US imperialism and its middle-eastern settler colony.


*****

I’ve been thinking about Moses, and his rage when he came down from the mount to find the Israelites worshipping a golden calf.

The ecofeminist in me was always uneasy about this story: what kind of God is jealous of animals? What kind of God wants to hoard all the sacredness of the Earth for himself?

But there is a less literal way of understanding this story. It is about false idols. About the human tendency to worship the profane and shiny, to look to the small and material rather than the large and transcendent.

What I want to say to you tonight at this revolutionary and historic Seder in the Streets is that too many of our people are worshipping a false idol once again. They are enraptured by it. Drunk on it. Profaned by it.

That false idol is called zionism.

It is a false idol that takes our most profound biblical stories of justice and emancipation from slavery – the story of Passover itself – and turns them into brutalist weapons of colonial land theft, roadmaps for ethnic cleansing and genocide.

It is a false idol that has taken the transcendent idea of the promised land – a metaphor for human liberation that has travelled across multiple faiths to every corner of this globe – and dared to turn it into a deed of sale for a militaristic ethnostate.

Political zionism’s version of liberation is itself profane. From the start, it required the mass expulsion of Palestinians from their homes and ancestral lands in the Nakba.

From the start it has been at war with dreams of liberation. At a Seder it is worth remembering that this includes the dreams of liberation and self-determination of the Egyptian people. This false idol of zionism equates Israeli safety with Egyptian dictatorship and client states.

From the start it has produced an ugly kind of freedom that saw Palestinian children not as human beings but as demographic threats – much as the pharaoh in the Book of Exodus feared the growing population of Israelites, and thus ordered the death of their sons.

Zionism has brought us to our present moment of cataclysm and it is time that we said clearly: it has always been leading us here.

It is a false idol that has led far too many of our own people down a deeply immoral path that now has them justifying the shredding of core commandments: thou shalt not kill. Thou shalt not steal. Thou shalt not covet.

It is a false idol that equates jewish freedom with cluster bombs that kill and maim Palestinian children.

Zionism is a false idol that has betrayed every jewish value, including the value we place on questioning – a practice embedded in the Seder with its four questions asked by the youngest child.

Including the love we have as a people for text and for education.

Today, this false idol justifies the bombing of every university in Gaza; the destruction of countless schools, of archives, of printing presses; the killing of hundreds of academics, of journalists, of poets – this is what Palestinians call scholasticide, the killing of the means of education.

Meanwhile, in this city, the universities call in the NYPD and barricade themselves against the grave threat posed by their own students daring to ask them basic questions, such as: how can you claim to believe in anything at all, least of all us, while you enable, invest in and collaborate with this genocide?

The false idol of zionism has been allowed to grow unchecked for far too long.

So tonight we say: it ends here.

Our Judaism cannot be contained by an ethnostate, for our Judaism is internationalist by nature.

Our Judaism cannot be protected by the rampaging military of that state, for all that military does is sow sorrow and reap hatred – including against us as jews.

Our Judaism is not threatened by people raising their voices in solidarity with Palestine across lines of race, ethnicity, physical ability, gender identity and generations.

Our Judaism is one of those voices and knows that in that chorus lies both our safety and our collective liberation.

Our Judaism is the Judaism of the Passover Seder: the gathering in ceremony to share food and wine with loved ones and strangers alike, the ritual that is inherently portable, light enough to carry on our backs, in need of nothing but each other: no walls, no temple, no rabbi, a role for everyone, even – especially – the smallest child. The Seder is a diaspora technology if ever there was one, made for collective grieving, contemplation, questioning, remembering and reviving the revolutionary spirit.

So look around. This, here, is our Judaism. As waters rise and forests burn and nothing is certain, we pray at the altar of solidarity and mutual aid, no matter the cost.

We don’t need or want the false idol of zionism. We want freedom from the project that commits genocide in our name. Freedom from an ideology that has no plan for peace other than deals with murderous theocratic petrostates next door, while selling the technologies of robo-assassinations to the world.

We seek to liberate Judaism from an ethnostate that wants jews to be perennially afraid, that wants our children to be afraid, that wants us to believe the world is against us so that we go running to its fortress and beneath its iron dome, or at least keep the weapons and donations flowing.

That is the false idol.

And it’s not just Netanyahu, it’s the world he made and that made him – it’s zionism.

What are we? We, in these streets for months and months, are the exodus. The exodus from zionism.

And to the Chuck Schumers of this world, we do not say: “Let our people go.”

We say: “We have already gone. And your kids? They’re with us now."

https://thecommunists.org/2024/04/26/ne ... m-zionism/

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How and Why Is Israel Trying To Downplay Havoc Wreaked by Iranian Missiles
APRIL 26, 2024

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By Ivan Kesic – Apr 17, 2024

In the early hours of April 14, the Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC) carried out the retaliatory ‘Operation True Promise’, which targeted military sites in the occupied territories with drones and missiles, the success of which the Zionist regime has sought to downplay.

The multi-pronged and hugely successful operation was carried out in retaliation for an attack by Israel on Iran’s diplomatic premises in the Syrian capital of Damascus on April 1.

The Israeli missile attack on Iran’s diplomatic facilities in Syria resulted in the martyrdom of Brigadier General Mohammad Reza Zahedi, a commander of the IRGC’s Quds Force, his deputy, General Mohammad Hadi Haji Rahimi, and five other IRGC officers.

The attack, which was in breach of international law and the Vienna Conventions, drew categorical condemnation from senior Iranian political and military leaders, who vowed “definitive revenge.”

The unprecedented operation ended Iran’s strategic patience and half a century of inviolability of the Israeli regime, as Tehran sent a message that it would respond directly to any hostile move.

Commentators from different sides of the political spectrum are unanimous in their assessment that through the operation Iran achieved strategic deterrence over the Tel Aviv regime and its backers.

But the Israeli regime officials and their media have been desperate to downplay the efficacy of Iranian ballistic missiles and the havoc they wreaked in the occupied territories.

Iran warns of ‘painful response’ to any aggression pic.twitter.com/4ZAPmZDBtR

— Press TV 🔻 (@PressTV) April 17, 2024

What did Israeli regime and media claim?
Israeli regime’s military sources, through their media outlets, have claimed that between 300 and 350 drones and missiles were launched by Iran and its allies, including approximately 170 drones, 30 cruise missiles and 120 ballistic missiles, of which only a few went through.

They published footage with the accompanying description “This is what a 99 percent interception rate looks like” in which the jets used air-to-air missiles to destroy a maximum of four Shahed-136 drones and two cruise missiles of an unknown model.

In another published footage, an F-35I Adir fighter jet returns to the Nevatim Air Base after allegedly successfully defending the regime’s airspace, thus suggesting a successful interception operation and little or no damage on the air base.

They also tried to support the claims with photographs of extremely questionable credibility that show alleged craters from the impact of Iranian ballistic missiles.

Later that day, it was revealed that the United States, the United Kingdom, France, Jordan and some other countries were assisting the Israeli regime in intercepting Iranian missiles.

Speaking to ABC News, a senior US official said at least nine Iranian missiles bypassed Israeli air defenses and hit two of their air bases, five at Nevatim and four at Ramona, damaging a runway, buildings and a C-130 transport aircraft.

Israeli officials later denied that a C-130 aircraft was damaged and claimed that the damage in the two air bases was minor, that there were no human casualties and that only one girl was injured.

The day after the attack, three unnamed US officials claimed that roughly 50 percent of the ballistic missiles that Iran fired at Israel either failed to launch or crashed.

The Western mainstream media unanimously accepted the Israeli interpretation of the event, as well as the ludicrous claim about “99 percent interception,” without any critique.

What does the available evidence suggest?
The Iranian military operation, which came two weeks after the consulate attack, was not shrouded in secrecy. It was announced days before by political and military officials, and the United States was reportedly also informed about the day of the attack through diplomatic channels, 72 hours earlier.

Besides, all leading Iranian media outlets, including Press TV, reported that Iran launched a barrage of drones at the occupied territories hours before they reached their intended target.

Iranian military sources at first did not announce the precise types and quantity of weapons launched, mostly stating that they were “dozens” of drones and missiles.

One local news agency published information about 500 drones launched during the attack, although not referring to domestic military sources but to a foreign news network.

This claim was pleasurable at the time and served the purpose of causing panic as it sent millions of Israeli settlers and regime officials into underground shelters and safe houses.

Later, the IRGC released three pieces of footage showing the launch of at least 20 ballistic missiles, 20 cruise missiles and a dozen drones.

Private footage recorded in Iraq showed only a single drone and a cruise missile, so there was no independent visual evidence of initially reported huge ballistic volleys or drone swarms.

Despite Israeli attempts at censorship, leaked footage from the occupied territories showed numerous powerful explosions of heavy warheads, apparently caused by Iranian quasi-ballistic or hypersonic missiles.

Only in the case of one air base in the Negev, either Nevatim or Ramon, at least four films from different angles showed that at least five Iranian missiles smashed the intended target within 11 seconds.

Satellite images of two large air bases established that the missiles were not fired randomly, but buildings and infrastructure were hit with pinpoint accuracy.

An informed source told Press TV that the occupied territories were targeted with hypersonic missiles and that none was intercepted, without specifying whether it was the newly unveiled Fattah missile.

Other Iranian media outlets reported that the weapon in question was actually the Kheibar Shekan, a maneuverable missile that has a hypersonic final stage.

Major General Mohammad Baqeri, the chief of staff of the Iranian armed forces, said Iran hit a large Israeli intelligence base and Nevatim Airbase in the occupied lands, adding that the strikes “reached its goals” as the regime’s air defense failed to engage it properly.

1- Heroic and brave: World lauds Islamic Republic of Iran for teaching Israel a lesson

By @HumairaAhad_83 https://t.co/4kSzI5Yb8a pic.twitter.com/1ppuxBks9a

— Press TV 🔻 (@PressTV) April 16, 2024

What makes claim of Israeli regime and media ludicrous?
Israel’s claims of extremely successful interception of drones and missiles are debunked by verified numbers, contradictory official reports, attempts of censorship, falsification of evidence, various other manipulations, and the regime’s furious reactions.

First of all, the claims of 300-350 enemy targets and 99 percent downing, including all drones and cruise missiles, imply that three ballistic missiles hit the intended targets, which is untrue as at least nine such successful hits have been verified.

The true extent of the damage cannot be determined because the Israeli regime has made enormous efforts to censor private footage and photos, openly threatening settlers not to post them online.

Although they initially claimed that not a single hostile drone or cruise missile had reached the occupied territories, later the regime’s media in Hebrew acknowledged the damage caused by drones in the vicinity of the Hermon Base.

There were also serious reports from neighboring countries that the sites on the Golan Heights were severely hit, presumably by low-flying drones and cruise missiles, since there were no ballistic traces in the sky.



The very purpose of the drones was not to cause significant damage, but to arrive at the target in coordination with salvos of cruise and ballistic missiles and then, together with hostile interceptor jets and missiles, overload the enemy radars.

There is nothing to support the Israeli figures of “hundreds” of enemy targets, as there are no Iranian statements or independent confirmations, only Iranian footage of 50 different launches and Israeli footage of a handful being shot down.

Israeli long-range anti-ballistic systems such as Arrow and David’s Sling operate at a range of tens or hundreds of kilometers and very high altitudes. In other words, above Jordan, Syria and Iraq.

If Israel’s claims of 120 ballistic missiles and 99 percent interceptions were true, there should have been more than a hundred widely visible intercept explosion traces over the skies of those three countries, but not a single one was recorded.

Considering also at least 20 verified launches and at least 9 successful hits, all the evidence supports Iran’s official claims that the majority of missiles successfully completed their mission and that Israeli air defense systems completely failed.

"All Iranian missiles were intercepted"

So, it seems that the latest Israeli technology in missile defense is… the ground itself! pic.twitter.com/a5NZH5cgJ2

— Press TV 🔻 (@PressTV) April 16, 2024

Why didn’t Israel present evidence of interception?
In contrast to the meager evidence of shooting down drones and cruise missiles, Israeli military sources did not publish any technical evidence of intercepting ballistic missiles but instead tried to use at least three deceptions.

Some of their media tried to present the early stages of Iranian multi-stage missiles as “failures,” even though they were visibly perfectly intact, which excludes the possibility of either a malfunction explosion or interception demolition.

They also published photos of a supposed impact crater in the Negev desert, suggesting that no important target was hit, although the shape and plants at the edges testify that there was no explosion and that it was a theatrically dug hole.

Iran’s statements about “successful hits” were dramatically misinterpreted as the claims of “complete destruction” of the air base, and the morning footage of the F-35 landing at the Nevatim Air Base was supposed to refute their own distortion.

The panic-stricken moves of the Israeli regime and the settler population before the operation also showed that they did not have too much confidence in their air defense systems.

For two weeks, there was a mass panic, stores were empty of supplies, schools were closed and shelters were full, and three Western powers were called to help militarily.

Later, after the Iranian strike was carried out, the Israeli regime asked the world to impose international sanctions on Iran’s “99 percent unsuccessful” missile program.

False data on effectiveness is currently providing the Israeli regime with an excuse not to respond against Iran, and for the same reasons, the data is frenetically accepted by the media of Western countries, not satisfied with the possible escalation in the region.

Last summer, Press TV published an analysis of the mythological “over 90 percent success rate” of Israel’s air defense systems, arguing that it was done for planned lucrative exports and psychological calming of its own settler population.

The genocidal war against Gaza, from which thousands of missiles were fired in retaliatory attacks, as well as the recent humiliation of land-based and naval air defense systems by a drone attack on the Eilat Naval Base, prove that the effectiveness is actually low.

Today, after the proven vulnerability of short-range systems like Iron Dome, the successful Iranian missile attack on the theoretically best-guarded air bases embarrassed both Israeli and American long-range air defense systems.

(Al Mayadeen – English)

https://orinocotribune.com/how-and-why- ... -missiles/

******

Gaza, Hezbollah and the Decline of Zionism
Posted by INTERNATIONALIST 360° on APRIL 26, 2024



Interview With Asad Abukhalil

https://libya360.wordpress.com/2024/04/ ... f-zionism/
"There is great chaos under heaven; the situation is excellent."

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Re: Palestine

Post by blindpig » Mon Apr 29, 2024 11:13 am

Yemen downs third US MQ-9 Reaper drone since November

A US-led naval mission to protect Israeli trade interests has failed to deter Yemeni attacks in the Red Sea and the Indian Ocean

News Desk

APR 27, 2024

Image
(Photo Credit: US Air National Guard/Staff Sgt. Joseph Pagan)

The spokesman for the Yemeni armed forces, Brig. Gen. Yahya Saree, announced on 27 April that Sanaa downed another MQ-9 Reaper drone and that its troops successfully targeted the British-owned MV Andromeda Star crude oil tanker.


بيان القوات المسلحة اليمنية بشأن استهداف سفينة ( ANDROMEDA STAR) النفطية البريطانية في البحر الأحمر، وإسقاط طائرة MQ9 الأمريكية في محافظة صعدة.pic.twitter.com/9FTQJDsXho

— أمين حيان Ameen Hayyan (@ameenhayan) April 26, 2024
According to the US Central Command (CENTCOM), the Yemeni armed forces launched three anti-ship ballistic missiles into the Red Sea, causing minor damage to the Andromeda Star.
One of the missiles landed near a second vessel, the MV Maisha, but it was not damaged, CENTCOM said.
On Saturday, an unnamed US military official confirmed to CBS News that an MQ-9 Reaper drone “crashed” inside Yemen early on Friday and said an investigation is underway.

According to Saree, the $30 million drone was shot down by Yemeni air defenses in Sadaa province.

Yemen has downed three MQ-9 Reaper drones since the start of its operations in support of Palestine last November, costing the US government at least $90 million.

Despite launching an illegal war on the Arab world's poorest country, the US has failed to deter attacks on the Red Sea and Indian Ocean by Sanaa.

The Yemeni armed forces initially targeted only Israeli-linked ships passing through the Bab al-Mandab Strait but expanded the operation to include US and UK ships after Washington and London began bombing the country.

An EU naval mission to “protect navigation” in the Red Sea has also failed to deter the attacks, as officials from Germany and France have said that the situation “remains the same.”

In the face of its failure, Washington recently offered Yemeni officials “an acknowledgment of its legitimacy” in exchange for its neutrality in the war on Gaza.

“[Washington] pledged to repair the damages, remove foreign forces from all occupied Yemeni lands and islands, and remove Ansarallah from the State Department’s ‘terrorism list’ – as soon as they stop their attacks in support of Gaza,” according to Yemeni sources who spoke exclusively with The Cradle.

The offer also included “severely reducing” the role of the Saudi-appointed Presidential Leadership Council (PLC) and “accelerating the signing of a roadmap” with the Saudi-led coalition to end the nine-year war that has decimated Yemen.

Nevertheless, Yemeni officials have maintained that their operations in the Red Sea, Gulf of Aden, and the Indian Ocean will continue until Israel stops the genocide of Palestinians in Gaza.

On 22 April, the Yemeni armed forces announced that they would expand military operations against Israeli-linked ships in the Red and Arabian Seas and the Indian Ocean following the discovery of mass graves around several of Gaza's hospitals.

https://thecradle.co/articles/yemen-dow ... e-november

******

Israel uses foreign mercenaries in Gaza

Steven Sahiounie

April 27, 2024

The US are trying to make the Kurds partners with Israel. But, many Kurds take the side of the people of Gaza and the Palestinian resistance.

The international community is not only silent about Israel’s genocide but also sends foreign mercenaries to fight alongside Israel Defense Forces (IDF) in Gaza.

The IDF summoned hundreds of reserve soldiers to reinforce its ranks in preparation for its ground attack on the Gaza Strip. To bolster their Israeli ranks the IDF promoted an influx of people holding Israeli passports and living in foreign countries.

However, the Spanish newspaper, El Mundo, reported that Tel Aviv contacted international security contractors to provide fighters to perform military tasks during its ongoing war in Gaza.

Pedro Diaz Flores Corrales, aged 27 years, is a former soldier in the Spanish army and had previously fought as a mercenary in both Ukraine and Iraq. In addition to this, he is known for belonging to a fascist political group, the so-called Neo-Nazi movement, according to the Middle East website ‘Monitor’.

The group is involved in illicit arms trafficking, as well as mercenary exploitation.

Corrales justified his decision to fight alongside the IDF, and said that each participant in the fighting receives about 3,900 euros ($4,187) a weekly salary, and perks associated with the tasks they perform.

El Mundo reported that it had seen pictures of Corrales surrounded by mercenaries of different nationalities, including French, Germans, and Albanians, and even American Marines or members of the Special Forces who fought in Iraq, Afghanistan, Mali, or Kosovo.

Last October, French media circulated news about a large number of French fighters joining the fight alongside the IDF.

A report by the Euro-Mediterranean Observatory revealed in the past the presence of hundreds of European mercenaries who volunteer for military service in the ranks of the IDF, as part of special forces, especially in the Gaza Strip.

Organizations directly linked to right-wing Jewish and Christian groups within Europe are organizing projects and campaigns to invite Europeans to join the IDF, as well as to join campaigns to support illegal settler operations against Palestinians in the West Bank.

Intending to use them in tunnels of Hamas, Israel offers Kurdish PKK terrorists $ 2,200 to join the frontlines in its genocidal war against Palestinians with thousands of terrorists and mercenaries already transported to Israel.

The Israeli government made a contract with PKK terrorists, with whom they agreed to a salary of 9 thousand Israeli shekels ( $2,200 ) in addition to $25,000 of compensation in case of death or injury.

Israel intends to use PKK terrorists in its land attack on Gaza as it does not want to send its own soldiers into the tunnels of Hamas. Nearly 2,000 terrorists and mercenaries from Europe, Iraq, Syria and the US have moved into Israel. Peshmerga forces from northern Iraq have also been sent to the frontlines in Israel.

Calls are being made to recruit militants to fight for Israel, and many organizations have been carrying out extensive activities, such as: the “Kurdish-Israeli Friendship Union” founded by Mordehay Zaken, the “Kurdish Institute” and the “Israeli Jewish Kurds” organization.

Israeli organizations have been negotiating with Peshmerga to send Kurds from northern Iraq to Israel, reminding them of the support given by the Tel Aviv regime to them since 1958.

In Ayn al-Arab, an Israeli colonel and his team of seven people have been carrying out activities to find people experienced in urban warfare. The mercenaries recruited from Iraq and Syria were given Israeli citizenship identities. These were then transported to Israel by three planes. The last flight took off on October 29 from Erbil. Eight of those whom Israel sent to the front were killed in Gaza.

Kurdish singer and actor, Idan Amedi, who plays in the Netflix TV series “Fauda”, announced that he voluntarily joined the IDF and shared images from the Gaza Strip. The IDF are using social media influencers like Amedi. Images of Amedi calling Kurds to kill Palestinian are broadcast on Israeli television. Meanwhile, Duran Kalkan, one of the ringleaders of the PKK in Qandil, blamed Hamas and made statements in favor of Israel.

There are a total of 4,600 foreign volunteers in the ranks of the Israeli forces, in addition to many dual citizens from all over the world, whether in active or reserve service.

Israel relies on private security contractors, most notably the local company Global CST. The mercenaries working for this company are accused of committing crimes against humanity in the conflicts in which they participated in Latin America, South Ossetia and Africa.

Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) said they have sent 2,000 mercenaries to Israel to fight in Gaza. The PKK is an international recognized terrorist organization which has killed over 30,000 people in Turkey over three decades.

The IDF are afraid to enter the tunnels dug by Hamas, and fear that they will not emerge from the tunnels alive, and for this reason they use PKK and other mercenaries for this purpose, and mercenary fighters from European countries, Iraq, Syria, and America have arrived in Israel.

The Kurdish PKK members sent to Israel are mainly from northern Iraq, and were sent with the help of Masoud Barzani. It is estimated that there are about 200,000 Kurdish Jews in the area, some of whom have been sent

War crimes and Genocide

Foreigners fighting for Israel in Gaza are war criminals and mercenaries along with the IDF.

In December, Thomas Portes, a member of the French National Assembly (Parliament) revealed a letter he had sent to the Minister of Justice, Eric Dupond-Moretti , asking him to investigate some 4,185 French citizens believed to have been fighting with the IDF. The letter, posted on X, calls for the investigation of war crimes the French volunteers might have been participating in while fighting in Gaza, where war crimes have widely been reported.

French volunteers make up some 45 % of the total foreign volunteers joining the IDF as mercenaries. In contrast, the French people have been pouring, in their hundreds of thousands into the streets in support of Palestine and demanding a ceasefire.

According to Israel’s Defense Ministry report, published in 2016, Americans contribute 29 % of the foreigners joining the IDF annually, followed by the British, at 5 %. Some 100 Brits are currently serving in the IDF as it continues its genocidal war in Gaza.

80 % of the mercenaries usually serve for 18 months within the ranks of the IDF and get the same pay and treatment as regular IDF personnel. The majority of them join the IDF’s combat infantry, responsible for the daily killing of Palestinians in the West Bank, East Jerusalem and Gaza. On top of their regular monthly salaries, they receive nearly $7,000 after they complete their training.

Western countries turn a blind eye

Not a single European country, or the US and the UK, have publicly warned their own citizens against joining the IDF. The foreign fighters have participated in the war crimes taking place in Gaza.

A study published in the journal of Sociological Forum in June 2022, at least 1,200 Americans are serving in the IDF at any given time. The study found that, on any given year, some 3,500 foreign Jewish soldiers have been serving in the IDF over the last two decades.

21 American soldiers were killed when the IDF suffered its biggest single day loss in Gaza at the hands of the Palestinian Resistance fighters, who killed a total of 24 soldiers of the invading IDF.

While precise number of American citizens fighting in Gaza is unknown, they are thought to be in their hundreds. Since the Israeli attack on Gaza started on 7 October, at least 10,000 people living in the US have received draft notices from the Israel army to report for duty. Many of them do have dual Israeli citizenship, making accountability for possible war crimes a tricky legal issue, despite America’s Neutrality Act, dating back to the founding days of the US, making it illegal for any American citizen to take part in any foreign war, or establish a militia for that purpose. However, the Act has not been reinforced recently, as hundreds of Americans have participated in wars in Ukraine, in Libya in 2011 and, now, in Gaza.

Besides the US, foreign fighters joining the IDF come from at least five European countries, including Italy, France, Belgium, the Netherlands and the United Kingdom. According to Italy’s Foreign Minister, Antonio Tajani, there were some 18,000 Italian nationals working and living in Israel when the war started, among them 1,000 who work for the IDF.

Not a single Western government has, so far, taken any action to punish its citizens fighting for Israel as it carries out genocide in Gaza.

Israeli-Kurdish relationship

Israel has become the only country to openly support an independent Kurdish state, a result of good ties between Kurds and Jews.

In September 2017, Israel became the first and so far only country to openly voice support for “the legitimate efforts of the Kurdish people to attain a state of its own,” as Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said.

The Kurds have been and will continue to be reliable and long-term allies of Israel since they are, like us, a minority group in the region, according to Kurd-Israel analysts.

The relationship between Israel and PKK and also the Peshmerga forces of northern Iraq, is nothing new. One of the biggest supporters of Massoud Barzani’s failed independence referendum in 2017 was Israel. While Israel was being established, many Jewish Kurds immigrated to Palestine. There are currently more than 200 thousand Jewish Kurds living in Israel. Mickey Levy, who was once elected as the Speaker of the Israeli Parliament, is one of them.

The Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) in northern Iraq has remained silent amid Israel’s escalating war in Gaza. With delicate political and economic ties to the US, Israel and Iran, it’s hoping to avoid being dragged into a regional conflict.

The Kurdistan Region is a pro-American island in a sea of anti-American sentiment. If the war escalates, there will be pressure on it from both sides.

The two main parties are the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP), and the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK), and the main political power lies with the KRG Prime Minister Masrour Barzani, who has studiously avoided commenting on the war in Gaza.

Although the KRG has no official ties with Israel, the two governments have economic ties and Israel has supported the establishment of an independent Kurdish state.

Should the Kurdish authorities take a pro-US and Israel tilt in the war on Gaza, Iran-backed parties in Baghdad could decide to turn up the pressure on the KRG, and for this reason the Kurds are trying to avoid taking a position.

They want to maintain a balance in the middle and appear neutral in the current war, while they will express sympathy for the Palestinians as a moral issue and consider the Kurdistan Region and its people to be uninvolved, say regional analysts.

In contrast, the Kurdistan Region’s two Islamist parties — the Kurdistan Islamic Union (KIU) and the Kurdistan Justice Group (KJG) — have loudly condemned Israel’s bombardment of Gaza.

There are also economic considerations. Until the Kurdistan Region’s independent oil exports were suspended in March 2023, Israel was a major destination of Kurdish crude starting in 2014. According to media reports, it received 183,000 barrels per day in February, although the amount fluctuated from month to month.

Conclusion

The US are trying to make the Kurds partners with Israel. But, many Kurds take the side of the people of Gaza and the Palestinian resistance.

Some have warned that the Kurds, who side with Israel in Gaza, would become a new target in the Islamic world together with Israel.

For other Kurds, there is a sense of empathy with the Palestinian suffering, but they also feel that there’s an immense double standard against the Kurds. This is leading the Kurds to refrain from showing any public support for Palestinians.

https://strategic-culture.su/news/2024/ ... s-in-gaza/

*******

Craig Murray: Worse Than You Can Imagine
April 26, 2024

The author has no doubt the Western political elite are complicit in the genocide of Palestinians at a much deeper level than the people have yet understood.

Image
Sunak and Netanyahu in Israel, Oct. 19, 2023. (No. 10/Wikimedia Commons)

By Craig Murray
CraigMurray.org.uk

Governments cannot take big decisions extremely quickly except in the most extreme of circumstances.

There are mechanisms in all states that consider policy decisions, weigh them up, involve the various departments of the state whose activities are affected by that decision, and arrive at a conclusion, though not necessarily a good one.

The decision to stop aid funding to UNRWA, the specialized U.N. refugee agency for Palestinians, was not taken by numerous Western states in a single day.

In the U.K., several different government ministries had to coordinate.

Even within only a single ministry, the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office (FCDO,), views would have to be coordinated through written submissions and interdepartmental meetings between the departments dealing with the Middle East, with the United Nations, with the United States, with Europe and then of course between the diplomatic and development wings of the ministry.

That process would include seeking the views of British ambassadors to Tel Aviv, Doha, Cairo, Riyadh, Istanbul and Washington and to the United Nations in Geneva and in New York.

It is not necessarily a lengthy process but it is not a day’s work, and nor would it need to be. There was no practical impact to making the announcement of cutting UNRWA funding a day sooner or a day later.

Consider that the parallel process had to be completed in the United States, in Canada, in Germany, in Australia and in all the other Western powers that contributed to starvation in Gaza by cutting aid to UNRWA.

All of these countries had to go through their procedures, and it could only be by prior coordination – weeks in advance – between these states that they announced all on the same day the destruction of the life support system for Palestinians, then in absolute need.

And then consider that we now know for certain that the Israelis had produced no evidence whatsoever of UNRWA complicity in Hamas resistance, on which these decisions in all those states were allegedly based.

I have no doubt at all that the Western political elite, paid tools of the zionist machine, are complicit in the genocide of Palestinians and ethnic cleansing of Gaza at a much deeper level than the people have yet understood.

The refusal by Labour leader Keir Starmer and Prime Minister Rishi Sunak to contemplate ending arms sales and military support to Israel is not due to inertia or concern for the arms industry. It is that they actively support the destruction of the Palestinians.

Within an Hour

Image
British barrister Malcom Shaw arguing for Israel before the World Court on Jan 12, 2024. (UN TV Screenshot)

The coordinated decision of the Western nations to fast track famine by stopping UNRWA funding was announced within an hour of the ICJ ruling that Gazans were at immediate risk of genocide, driving from the headlines that adverse ruling against Israel.

This sent the clearest signal in response that the Western powers would not be stopped from genocide by international law or institutions.

The Western powers give not a fig for 16,000 massacred Palestinian infants. No evidence of mass graves in hospitals will move them. They knew genocide was happening and continued actively to arm and abet it.

This genocide is the desired goal of the West. No other explanation is remotely plausible.

I have never believed the spin that Joe Biden is trying to restrain Benjamin Netanyahu, while simultaneously arming and funding Netanyahu and using U.S. forces to fight alongside him.

Biden is making no effort to restrain Netanyahu. Biden fully supports the genocide.

My reading of this was reinforced when I was looking back at the Israeli murders on the Mavi Mamara in 2010, when they killed ten unarmed aid workers attempting a Freedom Flotilla aid delivery to Gaza.

Israel’s actions were clearly both murderous and in breach of international law. Biden as vice president defended Israel staunchly then. It is essential to understand that Genocide Joe has always been Genocide Joe. I wrote:

“Joe Biden took the lead in defending the raid to the U.S. public. In an interview with PBS, he described the raid as ‘legitimate’ and argued that the flotilla organizers could have disembarked elsewhere before transferring the aid to Gaza.

‘So what’s the big deal here? What’s the big deal of insisting it go straight to Gaza?’ Biden asked about the humanitarian mission. ‘Well, it’s legitimate for Israel to say, ‘I don’t know what’s on that ship. These guys are dropping eight — 3,000 rockets on my people.’”


Biden is not being outplayed by Netanyahu. He is actively abetting Netanyahu and shares with him the objective of full Israeli occupation of Gaza after the Palestinian people are killed or expelled into Sinai.

He also shares with Netanyahu the aim of a wider regional conflict in which the U.S. and Gulf states ally with Israel against Iran, Syria, Yemen and Hezbollah. This is their joint vision of the Middle East – Greater Israel, and U.S. hegemony operating through the Sunni monarchies.

“This genocide is the desired goal of the West. No other explanation is remotely plausible.”

If you believe all the spin from the White House about Biden trying to restrain Netanyahu, I suggest you look instead at the White House and State Department spokesmen refusing to accept any single instance of Israeli atrocity and deferring to Israel on every single crime.

I am currently in Pakistan, and I must say it has been a great refreshment to be in a country where everybody understands why ISIS, Al Nusra etc. never attacked Israeli interests, and sees precisely what Western governments are doing over Gaza. What is understood by developing nations is thankfully understood by Gen Z in the West as well.

The Arab regimes of the Gulf and Jordan are dependent upon Israeli and U.S. security services and surveillance for protection from their own people.

The lack of really massive street protest against their own regimes by Arab peoples is a direct testimony to the effectiveness of that vicious repression, particularly when states like Jordan actually fight alongside Israel against Iranian weapons.

The anti-Iranian card is of course the trick both Biden and Netanyahu have left to play. By promoting an escalation with Iran, Western politicians were able to default to a position of claiming the case for arming Israel was proven – and I think were genuinely perplexed to find the public did not buy it.

The political class, across the Western world and the Arab world, is utterly divorced from its people over Gaza.

We are seeing worldwide repression, as peaceful conferences are stormed by police in Germany, students are beaten by police on American campuses, and in the U.K. old white people like me suffer the kind of continual harassment long suffered by young Muslim men.

This is not the work of Netanyahu operating as a rogue. It is the result of the machinations of a professional political class across the Western world welded to zionism, with the supremacy of Israel as an article of fundamental belief.

Times are not this dark by accident. They were designed to be this dark.

https://consortiumnews.com/2024/04/26/c ... n-imagine/

******

Delay of Freedom Flotilla is illegal, facilitates genocide of Palestiniansp.
April 27, 2024 PAL Law Commission

Image

The PAL Law Commission and Worldwide Lawyers Association (WOLAS), joined by lawyers and legal organizations globally, alongside U.N. Human Rights Office of the High Commissioner, demand the immediate release and safe passage of the Freedom Flotilla which is the first humanitarian mission to Gaza carrying aid sufficient to meaningfully and substantially alleviate the food and medical supply shortage in Gaza.

Each moment of delay of the flotilla is illegal and causes life-threatening harm to Palestinians, and helps escalate the pace of Israeli genocide in Palestine. As the Office of the High Commissioner stated, “Israel’s siege and genocidal violence, including an unprecedented starvation campaign…created famine.”

Yet the Israeli government, supported by the U.S. government, continues to flout its legal obligations and has delayed the Gaza Freedom Flotilla by four days. First by issuing illegal threats to physically harm the ships and engaging in training exercises to prepare for a procedurally illegal and violent boarding. In the same threat, the Israeli government admitted its intelligence confirms that the flotilla is carrying 5,500 tons of humanitarian aid.

And now, after failing to pressure multiple governments from stopping the aid flotilla, and failing to scare away passengers, the Israeli government resorted to pressuring Guinea Bissau to further delay the flotilla, using the pretext of an inspection requirement by the flag country, although the flotilla has passed a thorough scrutiny and inspection by the Turkish State Port. Guinea Bissau has capitulated to that pressure and intends to potentially cause further life-threatening delay in the receipt of life-saving supplies.

It is clear that Israeli government actions are intended to obstruct, steal, and destroy aid—this is expressed in their illegal threat to board and intercept the flotilla and evidenced by their prior practices wherein Israeli forces destroyed aid live on camera, killed World Central Kitchen workers, and killed Mavi Marmara passengers. All pretexts the Israeli government offers are just that: pretexts intended to continue their illegal and genocidal agenda in Palestine, and must be rejected as such by all governments and agencies.

All tenets of international law require that the provision of humanitarian aid be unimpeded and rapid. The San Remo Manual Article 102 and the Fourth Geneva Convention Article 70 expressly require lifesaving supplies to be rapidly distributed. The requirement of rapid aid is intended to prevent and redress the humanitarian atrocities caused by aggression, an aggression that has been declared a genocide by human rights experts and organizations globally and as plausibly so by the International Court of Justice, which has twice ordered the unhindered delivery of humanitarian aid to Gaza, as has U.N. Security Council Resolution 2728, which are binding on all States under the U.N. Charter and the Vienna Convention.

The flotilla is the only party meaningfully acting to execute the orders of the ICJ, the UNSC, and international maritime and human rights law. The Israeli blockade is inherently and prima facie illegal as it has grossly exceeded any ostensible claim of proportionality by being preliminarily found to be genocidal, thus depriving the Israeli government of all defenses and justifications for the blockade. Delay, obstruction, interception, and diversion of the flotilla violate the requirement for delivery of unhindered and rapid aid and are equally illegal acts in furtherance of war crimes as defined by the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court, whether undertaken by the blockading party or other parties, and subjects all actors, the Israelis and those complicit with them, to clear, and indefensible, liability.

As stated unequivocally by the U.N. Office of the High Commissioner, “The Freedom Flotilla has the right of free passage in international waters and Israel must not interfere with its freedom of navigation, long recognized under international law.”

We demand an immediate end to all delays, obstruction, and impediments of the flotilla, as such delays and obstructions are gross breaches of international law and are leading to the death and suffering of Palestinians in Gaza.

The PAL Law Commission, WOLAS, and Shabnam Ebrahim Mayet are legal, strategy, and diplomacy advisors to the Flotilla Law Commission.

THE GLOBAL LEGAL ALLIANCE FOR PALESTINE (GLAP)

International Commission to Support Palestinian Rights (HASHD)

Young Muslim Lawyers Association (Nadeem Mahomed)

Lawyers for Palestine (Pablo Araya Zacarias)

Gipuzkoa Bar Association (Urko Airatza Azurtza)

Lawyers for Justice in the Middle East ( (Dominique Cochain and Alix Ines Berylmarie

Boussemart)

Khuloud Alkhatib, Human Rights Lawyer, PhD International Law

Meriam Nazih Alrashid

CRED (Fabio Marcelli)

CAPJPO- Europalestine

Carlos Alberto Ruiz Socha, Lawyer, Peace Process Advisor in Colombia, PhD Law

Dr. Nurhayati Ali Essagad, GCIAD President

https://www.struggle-la-lucha.org/2024/ ... estinians/

******

Why Israel Is Afraid of Hezbollah
Posted by INTERNATIONALIST 360° on APRIL 26, 2024



BreakThrough News

Hezbollah, the Lebanese resistance forces, have been fiercely confronting the Israeli army along its southern border in solidarity with the Palestinian resistance. But while there have been tit-for-tat exchanges of fire, Israel ultimately does not want another war with Lebanon because they know Hezbollah is capable of defeating them. Ali Mortada, a South Lebanon-based journalist and host for Al-Mayadeen network, whose two colleagues were assassinated by Israel in December, explains why Israel cannot win: “They have been trying to kill us for 76 years now and we are still here and we are still fighting.”

https://libya360.wordpress.com/2024/04/ ... hezbollah/

******

Fearful Netanyahu scrambles to prevent ICC arrest warrant: Report

An Israeli analyst said that the US is engaged in Israel’s efforts to block the ICC from issuing a warrant against the premier

News Desk

APR 28, 2024

Image
(Photo credit: AFP via Getty Images)

The US is involved in a diplomatic effort to prevent the International Criminal Court (ICC) from issuing an arrest warrant against Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, according to Hebrew media reports.

Haaretz analyst Amos Harel said on 28 April that Washington is “already” engaged in efforts to block the ICC warrant against Netanyahu.

The prime minister is reportedly in a state of extreme anxiety over the matter.

Israeli journalist Ben Caspit wrote that Netanyahu is “under unusual stress” over the possibility of an arrest warrant being issued against him by the UN tribunal at the Hague, adding that he is leading a “nonstop push over the telephone” to prevent it.

Both Washington and Tel Aviv are not among the 124 states that signed the ICC Rome Statute of 1998, which established genocide as one of four major international crimes, along with war crimes, crimes against humanity, and crimes of aggression.

Hebrew newspaper Maariv newspaper also reported that Netanyahu is fearful of the prospect of an ICC warrant against him.

Sources close to the matter told the newspaper that Netanyahu has made an extensive number of phone calls to international leaders and officials, particularly US President Joe Biden, in an attempt to prevent the issuance of an arrest warrant against him and that the Israeli prime minister is indirectly trying to pressure Biden to act against the ICC.

“Netanyahu realizes that the international arrest warrant could make him subject to prosecution and detainment, so he attempts to thwart its issuance daily,” the sources said.

The sources also did not rule out the possibility that the recent shift in the Israeli position regarding a prisoner exchange and ceasefire deal, which now appears to be in favor of an agreement, is part of efforts to avoid the ICC warrant.

The ICC could also issue warrants to Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant and Israeli Army Chief of Staff Herzi Halevi, according to the report.

“We will never stop defending ourselves. Whereas decisions of the court in the Hague will not affect Israel’s actions, they would be a dangerous precedent threatening the soldiers and officials of any democracy fighting criminal terrorism and aggression,” Netanyahu said on 26 April.

Earlier this month, it was reported that arrest warrants could be issued against top Israeli officials, including Netanyahu, prompting an emergency meeting at the prime minister's office on 16 April.

Israel has been accused of genocide by the International Court of Justice (ICJ).

An interim ruling at the start of the year determined that Israel was plausibly guilty of the crime of genocide and ordered it to stop genocidal acts during its war on Gaza and take measures to guarantee the efficient provision of humanitarian aid to the strip.

https://thecradle.co/articles/fearful-n ... ant-report
"There is great chaos under heaven; the situation is excellent."

User avatar
blindpig
Posts: 10850
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Re: Palestine

Post by blindpig » Tue Apr 30, 2024 11:02 am

“Military and Moral Failures”: How Iran’s Israel Strike Reshaped the Region
Posted by INTERNATIONALIST 360° on APRIL 29, 2024
Kit Klarenberg

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On April 13, Iran, alongside Lebanon’s Hezbollah and Yemen’s Ansar Allah, executed Operation True Promise, a vast wave of drone, cruise and ballistic missile strikes on Israel, launched in retaliation to Tel Aviv’s criminal bombing of Tehran’s Damascus embassy less than two weeks earlier, which killed two Iranian generals. As a result, history was made, and the world – particularly West Asia – will never be the same again.

“This action was hugely significant. Now, the Israelis will have to be extremely careful about what they do in Syria against Tehran. The regional balance of power has permanently shifted away from the Zionists. Tel Aviv will never recover at all. It is the end of them. They have destroyed themselves. They are seen as a regime that has no place in the civilized world, a Nazi state, across the entire globe,” geopolitical expert Dr. Mohammad Marandi tells MintPress News.

Iran’s first-ever strike on Israel, following decades of provocations, escalations, assassinations, incendiary threats, and determined lobbying for U.S.-led war against Tehran by Tel Aviv officials, the effort targeted airbases, Israeli Air Force intelligence HQ and a constellation of air defense systems. The U.S., Britain, and France scrambled jets to help shoot the vast payload down – unsuccessfully – while Jordan controversially permitted Western powers to use its airspace for the purpose. Israel claimed a 99% interception rate.

However, extensive photo and video material shows that most missiles hit their targets and wrought much damage. In the process, Iran demonstrated to Tel Aviv and its Western backers a hitherto unknown ability to circumvent layer upon layer of protective measures, including top-tier fighter jets, NATO-supplied air defense systems, and the much-vaunted Iron Dome. One by one, they largely failed in their duty, leading to the astonishing sight of Iranian missiles soaring unmolested over the Knesset.

This righteous scene no doubt sent untold chills through Western and Israeli corridors of power, searching vainly for spines to run up. It also dispatched a palpable message—Tehran could, if it wished, have struck the Zionist legislature but didn’t do so. For the time being, at least. The floor was now Tel Aviv’s to decide whether—and how—to retaliate. A response came on April 19 in the form of pre-dawn drone sorties across Iran.

Initially framed by Western media as hugely impactful, in reality, a small swarm of Israeli quadcopters attempted to breach Tehran’s air defenses but ultimately couldn’t. An Iranian spokesperson referred to the effort as “failed and humiliating.” This characterization surely applies more widely to the pathetic state to which Tel Aviv has been reduced following Operation True Promise’s seismic success. As we shall see, Israel now has little time remaining and no good choices left to make.

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Iraqi military personnel inspect Israeli missile fragments found by farmers in Latifiya and Aziziya. Photo | Sabreen
‘NEW EQUATION’

Despite its astonishing optics and unprecedented nature, some West Asian observers were disappointed that the attack on Israel wasn’t a decapitation. Such perspectives overlook Iran’s longstanding commitment to caution. Devastation of Tehran’s Syrian embassy was without historical parallel and concerned with Israel eliciting a major escalation to drag the U.S. into total war. A measured, well-advertised show of strength deterred a broader response while signaling a major shift in Iranian policy towards Israel. IRGC commander Hossein Salami has said:

We have decided to create a New Equation, and that is if from now on the Zionist regime attacks our interests, assets, personalities, and citizens, at any point, we will attack against them.”

Those are fighting words, and Operation True Promise demonstrated they can be backed with action. Iran has shown it can strike Israel directly from its own soil, its fleets of missiles and drones capable of traveling thousands of kilometers over both friendly and hostile airspace, separate timezones, and multiple countries. Along the way, Tehran will have gleaned an enormous amount of invaluable intelligence on the defensive capabilities and vulnerabilities of Israel and the local Western infrastructure upon which its defenses depend.

Any future Iranian strike would make the most of whatever was learned on April 13, and the data yield was surely enormous. Since Russia’s “Special Military Operation” began in February 2022, defense cooperation between Moscow and Tehran has reached extraordinary levels – and intensive learning and on-the-go refinement of battle strategy is core Russian military doctrine. As a nameless Ukrainian Army officer bitterly told Politico on April 3, Western weapons systems sent to Kiev “become redundant very quickly because they’re quickly countered by the Russians”:

We used Storm Shadow and SCALP cruise missiles [supplied by Britain and France] successfully – but just for a short time. The Russians are always studying. They don’t give us a second chance. And they’re successful in this.”

If there’s a next time, too, Iran’s missile and drone fleet is likely to be considerably more sustained, playing out over several days, weeks, or even months, wave after wave, burst after burst. Estimates suggest around 300 separate projectiles were fired at Israel during Operation True Promise. Largely unsuccessful attempts to repel the blitz by Tel Aviv alone cost $1.08 – 1.35 billion, according to an Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) general.

“One Arrow missile used to intercept an Iranian ballistic missile costs $3.5 million, while the cost of one David Sling missile is $1 million, in addition to the sorties of aircraft that participated in intercepting the Iranian drones,” they told local media. Meanwhile, an Israeli think tank researcher calculates the costs “were enormous,” comparable to what Israel burned through during the entire 1973 Arab-Israeli war, which lasted almost three weeks.

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IDF personnel remove debris from missile intercepted during the Iranian attack in southern Israel. Photo | IDF
Those sums were spent on missile interceptors, missiles, jet fuel, and other military equipment and infrastructure. It is uncertain how much Iran spent on the Operation, but it is undoubtedly a great many orders of magnitude less. Some sources have suggested $30 million, which could well be accurate. Dr. Marandi tells MintPress News that “most” of the initial “decoy” barrage, including drones, were collecting dust. “Tehran was looking for an excuse to get rid of them,” he says.

“Most of the heavy-duty work attempting to counter Iran’s strike was done by the Americans anyway, not the Israelis. The Iron Dome barely factored in. The two places hit hardest – the southern airbase where F35s are based and Tel Aviv’s Golan Heights intelligence base resulted in significant damage and casualties. Of course, the Zionists don’t admit this,” Dr. Marandi adds.

This massive cost discrepancy is a very, very grave issue for Israel, as the U.S. can attest, given its embarrassing experiences attempting – and completely failing – to end Ansar Allah’s anti-genocide blockade of the Red Sea. Almost immediately, Politico reported that the Pentagon was aghast at squandering missiles costing millions to shoot down $2,000 Ansar Allah drones. A CIA officer lamented:

That quickly becomes a problem because the most benefit, even if we do shoot down their incoming missiles and drones, is in their favor. We, the U.S., need to start looking at systems that can defeat these that are more in line with the costs they are expending to attack us.”

‘ISRAEL GOES UNDER’

There is no sign yet of Washington having publicly rectified this concern, which may account for why U.S. officials at the start of April offered Ansar Allah a sweeping offer of total surrender in return for ending the Red Sea blockade. This was summarily rejected. No business as usual – no commerce, no trade – on Yemen’s watch while Palestinians are slaughtered. In the event of any subsequent Iranian strike on Tel Aviv, too, Tehran’s drones will not be used to deter shipping either, but tie up, smoke out, and exhaust Israeli air defenses.

This tactic was used to significant effect on April 13, as it has been by Russia since its airstrikes on critical Ukrainian infrastructure began in late 2022. Now, Kiev is on the verge of being de-electrified, which will cause battlefield collapse and population displacement, with potentially devastating knock-on effects on neighboring countries and states trying to keep Kiev’s lights on. It seems safe to say neither Israel nor its Western allies could sustain a serious defense to a protracted assault by Tehran, economically or materially.

That conclusion is supported by an April 22 Wall Street Journal report, which revealed the Biden administration was shocked at the scale of Iran’s barrage. It “matched worst-case scenarios” outlined by U.S. intelligence and the Pentagon, an unnamed senior official despairing, “this was on the high end…of what we were anticipating.” White House Situation Room attendees on the day allegedly feared Israel and its allies would not be able to repel the assault. And they couldn’t.

On top of a mass crime against humanity amounting to a 21st-century Holocaust, Israel’s genocide in Gaza has been utterly destructive to its own economy. A Financial Times investigation published on November 6 documented how the assault has ravaged personal finances, job markets, businesses, industries, and the Israeli government itself.

Thousands” of companies were teetering on the brink of collapse, with entire sectors plunged into an unprecedented crisis. One in three businesses had either shuttered or were operating at 20 percent capacity.

One can imagine how much worse things have gotten in the six months since, and Israel isn’t yet embroiled in an all-out war. An extended period of mass strikes from Iran, Ansar Allah and Hezbollah could completely paralyze the country economically, render entire areas uninhabitable – or, at least, uninhabited – destroy infrastructure, and much more. Among the infrastructure in Tehran’s crosshairs could well be the Dimona nuclear power plant, which would unleash deadly chaos on a terrifying scale.

Resultantly, Israel’s “Samson Option,” under which it is committed to launch a mass nuclear strike if its existence is threatened, should no longer be taken very seriously. Israeli military theorist Martin van Creveld once boasted, “We have the capability to take the world down with us, and I can assure you that will happen before Israel goes under.” But Tehran’s hypersonic missile capabilities are in every way an effective counter-deterrent. They could even deliver a nuclear, chemical or biological payload of their own.

‘WHOEVER MOVES’

Israel’s Iranian drubbing is further exacerbated by its attempt to crush Hamas being an absolute disaster in every conceivable way. The fiasco’s consequences are and will remain wide-ranging and grave, to the extent they could be fatal. This may account for Netanyahu’s flailing bid to draw Tehran into all-out war. After all, the scale of the Israeli Defense Forces’ defeat is such that in a scathing op-ed for Haaretz on April 11, Zionist “journalist” Chaim Levinson lamented:

We’ve lost. Truth must be told… It’s unpleasant to say, but we may not be able to safety [sic] return to Israel’s northern border…No cabinet minister will restore our sense of personal security. Every Iranian threat will make us tremble. Our international standing was dealt a beating. Our leadership’s weakness was revealed to the outside. For years we managed to fool them into thinking we were a strong country, a wise people and a powerful army. In truth, we’re a shtetl with an airforce, and that’s on the condition it’s awakened in time.”

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Haaretz | Apr 11, 2024

Even the Western media, which since the genocide began has been at best silent and at worst complicit – and much more active in the latter sphere than the former – has acknowledged Tel Aviv’s battlefield cataclysm. The Economist, a nakedly Zionist publication that has whitewashed, diminished, or outright justified every conceivable crime committed by the IDF, has condemned the Forces’ “military and moral failures” and how “its generals botched the strategy, and discipline among troops has broken down”:

[Israel is] accused of two catastrophic failures. First, it has not achieved its military objectives in Gaza. Second, it has acted immorally and broken the laws of war. The implications for both the IDF and Israel are profound…Hamas fighters are still ambushing Israeli forces throughout Gaza, and the group is reasserting itself in areas the IDF has left…Accusations that Israel has broken the laws of war are plausible.”

The Economist went on to slam a “lack of enforcement” of already virtually non-existent “rules of engagement” under which the IDF operates. A “veteran reserve officer” was quoted as saying commanders could arbitrarily “decide that whoever moves in his sector is a terrorist or that buildings should be destroyed.” A sapper in another unit admitted, “The only limit to the number of buildings we blew up was the time we had inside Gaza”:

“Soldiers have filmed themselves vandalizing Palestinian property and, in some cases, put those videos online. On February 20, the IDF’s chief of staff published a public letter to all soldiers warning them to use force only where necessary, ‘to distinguish between a terrorist and who is not, not to take anything which isn’t ours – a souvenir or weaponry – and not to film vengeance videos.’ Four months into the war, this was too little, too late.”

That The Economist printed such things at all reflects how far Israel has fallen since October 7, 2023. Now, it is a global pariah, viscerally loathed by the overwhelming majority of the world’s citizenry. Adversaries do not fear its once-vaunted military and its ability to unilaterally strike neighboring countries with total impunity, and no comebacks, is over. Tel Aviv’s claim to “defense” and security primacy, upon which much of its exports were successfully marketed for decades, has been amply demonstrated to be bogus.

Meanwhile, Israel has suffered population collapse, with simultaneous mass brain drain and workforce freefall as settlers flee or get conscripted. Demand for mental health services has reached all-time highs. The trauma of perpetrating genocide and living under the daily threat of attack, as Palestinians have since 1948, has ravaged soldiers and civilians alike. But scores of psychiatrists have relocated elsewhere due to stressful workloads and likely won’t return. Such are the foundational flaws of a settler colonial state.

“I don’t think 10 years from now Israel will exist. Zionism will die. The only solution is equal rights for Christians, Muslims, and Jews throughout Palestine. This war will continue, but direct engagement with Iran would be totally destructive, militarily. So the Israelis now target Rafah, but they will be defeated there, and they know that. As long as Netanyahu is leader, we will have a continuation of this tragedy. The only way out is a coup in Tel Aviv,” Dr. Marandi concludes.

For many, these developments may be little consolation, coming as they do off the back of thousands of murdered and mutilated Palestinian children. Yet, Israel as we know it is on the brink of extinction, which wasn’t the case before Hamas breached Gaza’s concentration camp walls. Palestine is now closer to being free than at any point since Israel’s creation. And there is no going back to “normal.”

Time is now and forever on the side of the tenacious, undefeated Resistance – so, too, justice and virtue. We should never forget the immortal, galvanizing words of Palestinian poet Refaat Alareer, slain in cold blood by a targeted IDF airstrike on December 6, 2023:

If I must die, let it bring hope.”

https://libya360.wordpress.com/2024/04/ ... he-region/

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Palestinian Resistance Movement Hamas Says It Received Israeli Response to Prisoner Exchange Proposal[/b]
APRIL 28, 2024

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Members of Hamas armed wing Al-Qassam Brigades during the prisoner exchange with Israel in November 2023. Photo: Screenshot of video circulated by Al Jazeera.

The Palestinian Resistance Movement Hamas announced that it had received Israel’s official response to a prisoner and ceasefire proposal it had sent to Egypt and Qatar earlier in April.

“Hamas received Israel’s official response to the movement’s proposal delivered to mediators, Egypt and Qatar, on April 13,” Khalil al-Hayya, the group’s deputy head in the Gaza Strip, said in a statement on Saturday, APril 27.

“The movement will study this proposal, and upon completion, will submit its response to the mediators,” al-Hayya added.

The Israeli response coincided with a visit by a top Egyptian security delegation to Tel Aviv on Friday to discuss a possible Gaza ceasefire, according to Egyptian and Israeli media.

Private broadcaster Al Qahera news TV quoted an unnamed Egyptian source as saying that the delegation will discuss a comprehensive ceasefire framework, saying there was “significant progress” narrowing differences between the Egyptian and Israeli delegations.

Meanwhile, the Israeli Public Broadcasting Corporation reported that security services “believe that this is the last opportunity to return the hostages from Gaza.”

Israeli news website Ynet also confirmed the arrival of an Egyptian delegation in Israel to meet with officials in efforts to achieve a deal.

On Friday, White House National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan said that there are new Qatari-Egyptian efforts underway to try to reach a deal between Hamas and Israel.

He added that there is new momentum in talks about conducting a prisoner exchange deal, without providing further details.

Hamas has repeatedly stated that it requires an end to Israel’s genocidal war on the Gaza Strip and the withdrawal of Israeli forces from the territory.



Gaza Genocide
Currently on trial before the International Court of Justice for genocide against Palestinians, Israel has been waging a devastating war on Gaza since October 7, 2023.

According to Gaza’s Ministry of Health, 34,388 Palestinians have been killed, and 77,437 wounded in Israel’s ongoing genocide in Gaza starting on October 7.

Moreover, some 11,000 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 war has resulted in an acute famine, mostly in northern Gaza, resulting in the death of many Palestinians, mostly children.

The Israeli aggression has also resulted in the forceful displacement of nearly two million people from all over 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.

Israel says that 1,200 soldiers and civilians were killed during the Al-Aqsa Flood Operation on October 7. Israeli media published reports suggesting that many Israelis were killed on that day by “friendly fire."

https://orinocotribune.com/palestinian- ... -proposal/

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Gaza 'Freedom Flotilla' blocked in Turkey
By Al Mayadeen English
Source: Agencies
27 Apr 2024 19:48

The alliance of NGOs and groups failed to set sail after Guinea-Bissau withdrew their flagged vessels.

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A Freedom Flotilla attempting to bring supplies to Gaza was halted in Turkey on Saturday after being refused access to two of its ships, which organizers blame on Israeli pressure.

The Freedom Flotilla Coalition (FFC), an international humanitarian organization, unveiled plans to dispatch three vessels from the port of Tuzla on the Sea of Marmara with intentions to take off Friday.

With over 1,000 professionals, including doctors, lawyers, and academics, onboard, the Gaza Freedom Flotilla aims to deliver aid directly to the besieged Strip.


The alliance of NGOs and groups failed to set sail after Guinea-Bissau withdrew their flagged vessels.

"Sadly, Guinea-Bissau has allowed itself to become complicit in Israel's deliberate starvation, illegal siege and genocide of Palestinians in Gaza," the Freedom Flotilla Coalition stated in a statement.

The statement detailed that "The Guinea-Bissau International Ships Registry (GBISR), in a blatantly political move, informed the Freedom Flotilla Coalition that it had withdrawn the Guinea Bissau flag from two of the Freedom Flotilla’s ships, one of which is our cargo ship, already loaded with over 5,000 tons of life-saving aid."

Read more: Palestinian testimonies show depth of Israeli atrocities: UN expert

The organization said that Guinea-Bissau officials made many "extraordinary" demands for information, including destinations, prospective future port calls, cargo manifests, and predicted arrival dates and times.

Freedom flotilla to set sail tomorrow with three scenarios in sight
"Normally, national flagging authorities concern themselves only with safety and related standards on vessels bearing their flag," it added, comparing the situation to being questioned about destinations when registering a car.

At an Istanbul news conference, some 280 volunteers -- activists, attorneys, and physicians -- who had wanted to join the ships chanted chants such as "Flag the flotilla," "We will sail," and "Free Palestine."

Concerns are being voiced, especially after the last incident back in 2010 when an attempt to break the blockade on Gaza by a flotilla setting sail from Turkey brought a fatal confrontation between the Israeli navy and crew onboard, causing the deaths of nine passengers and sparking a diplomatic crisis between the two parties.

UN agencies have warned that naval supply alone will not be adequate to prevent hunger in Gaza, and have urged Israel to open up more border crossings for road convoys.

War on Gaza resulted in worst food crisis ever recorded: IPC analysis
According to the Global Report on Food Crises (GRFC) 2024, wars are the leading cause of food insecurity, describing the food crisis in the Gaza Strip as the worst in eight years.

The GRFC is the flagship report of the Global Network against Food Crises (GNAFC), which was facilitated by the Food Security Information Network (FSIN). The GNAFC is a coalition of development and humanitarian agencies working to alleviate food shortages.

The study identifies war as the primary driver of acute food insecurity, and this year's edition focuses on two crisis-stricken regions: Sudan and Gaza.

The war on the Gaza Strip resulted in the greatest food crisis ever recorded, according to an Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) research. The whole Gaza population is classified as IPC Phase 3 (crisis) or worse, with 50% anticipated to be in a condition of disaster (IPC Phase 5), which occurs when people confront an acute scarcity of food and exhaustion of coping skills.

In early April, the US humanitarian envoy in Gaza, David Satterfield, affirmed that famine looms over all 2.2 million Palestinians in Gaza.

During a briefing hosted by the American Jewish Committee, Satterfield stated that "this is not a point in debate. It is an established fact, which the United States, its experts, the international community, its experts assess and believe is real," adding that the ongoing dehumanization of Palestinians cannot continue, regardless of the events of October 7 and its effects on settler society and the capturing of captives.

Famine threatens the 300,000 Palestinians in northern Gaza, he highlighted, as "Israel" deliberately prevents aid deliveries and intentionally starves civilians in the territory.

https://english.almayadeen.net/news/pol ... -in-turkey

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News of Mass Graves Isn’t Much News to US Outlets
XENIA GONIKBERG
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Reuters (4/23/24)
The bodies of over 300 people were discovered in a mass grave at the Nasser medical complex in Khan Younis, a Gaza city besieged by Israeli forces. The discovery of these Palestinian bodies, many of which were reportedly bound and stripped, is more evidence of “plausible” genocide committed by Israel during its bombardment of Gaza. Over 34,000 Palestinians have died thus far, with more than two-thirds of the casualties being women and children (Al Jazeera, 4/21/24).

Yet this discovery prompted few US news headlines, despite outlets like the Guardian (4/23/24), Haaretz (4/23/24) and Reuters (4/23/24) covering the story. Instead, headlines relating to Palestine have predominantly focused on protests happening at university campuses across the country—an important story, but not one that ought to drown out coverage of the atrocities students are protesting against.

Israel’s Haaretz noted that

emergency workers in white hazmat suits had been seen digging near the ruins of Nasser Hospital. They reportedly dug corpses out of the ground with hand tools and a digger truck. The emergency services said 73 more bodies had been found at the site in the past day, raising the number found over the week to 283.

The bodies included people killed during the Israeli siege of Khan Yunis, as well as people killed after Israel occupied the medical complex in February (Guardian, 4/22/24). They were found under piles of waste, with several bodies having their hands tied and clothes stripped off (UN, 4/23/24; Democracy Now!, 4/25/24). Similar mass graves, containing at least 381 bodies, were found at Gaza’s Al-Shifa hospital after Israel withdrew from occupying that complex on April 1 (CNN, 4/9/24).

The discovery of these mass graves “horrified” UN rights chief Volker Turk (Reuters, 4/23/24). But it has yet to prompt so strong a reaction from several major US news outlets.

Limited response
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PBS NewsHour (4/22/24)
In comparison to the widespread coverage from international outlets, the US response has been limited at best. Newsweek (4/23/24) published an article that included claims from the IDF that the deaths were a result of a “precise” operation against Hamas near Nasser Hospital:

About 200 terrorists who were in the hospital were apprehended, medicines intended for Israeli hostages were found undelivered and unused, and a great deal of ammunition was confiscated.

The article centered on the US response to the reports of mass graves. Along with CNN (4/23/24), Newsweek included quotes from the IDF that called reports of mass burials of Palestinians by the Israeli army “baseless and unfounded.” Rather, the IDF said, they were merely exhuming the bodies to verify whether or not they were Israeli hostages.

The Washington Post (4/23/24) relegated the news to a small section of their live updates feed: “UN Calls for Investigation of Gaza Mass Grave; IDF Says It Excavated Bodies.”

CNN and PBS (4/22/24) both published relatively well-rounded reports of the discovery, noting reports of 400 missing people and allegations of IDF soldiers performing DNA tests on the bodies, along with accounts of people still searching for their loved ones amidst the rubble. CNN released an update April 24:

At least 381 bodies were recovered from the vicinity of the complex since Israeli forces withdrew on April 1, Gaza Civil Defense spokesperson Mahmoud Basal said, adding that the total figure did not include people buried within the grounds of the hospital.

The update was also released to CNN‘s Meanwhile in the Middle East newsletter.

As FAIR (11/17/23, 2/1/24, 4/17/24) has repeatedly noted, coverage of the war has widely been from an Israel-centered perspective. The CNN and PBS articles, however, along with an NBC video, prominently included quotes from Palestinians searching for family members.
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New York Times (4/23/24)
The same cannot be said for outlets like the Washington Post and New York Times, who cited sources from the UN and the Palestinian Civil Defense—a governmental organization that operates under the Palestinian Security Services—but didn’t include additional first-hand accounts from Palestinian civilians.

The Times said that “it was not clear where the people discovered in the mass grave were originally buried.” It didn’t mention that several family members of the deceased remembered where they buried them, but were no longer able to find them, they said, due to IDF interference (CNN, 4/23/24):

Another man, who said his brother Alaa was also killed in January, said: “I am here today looking for him. I have been coming here to the hospital for the last two weeks and trying to find him. Hopefully, I will be able to find him.”

Pointing to a fallen palm tree, the man said his brother had been temporarily buried in that spot.

“I had buried him there on the side, but I can’t find him. The Israelis have dug up the dead bodies, and switched them. They took DNA tests and misplaced all the dead bodies.”

Playing catch-up
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Democracy Now! (4/25/24)
As mentioned above, US news outlets have had considerable coverage of pro-Palestine university protests, particularly since April 18, when more than 100 demonstrators were arrested at New York’s Columbia University (FAIR.org, 4/19/24). News of these protests have dominated US headlines since (e.g., Wall Street Journal, 4/25/24; AP, 4/25/24; The Hill, 4/24/24); while the discovery of mass graves just a few days later has received next to no coverage in comparison. In the case of the New York Times, for instance, they published just two stories (4/23/24, 4/25/24) about the mass graves since the news broke on April 21, while publishing seven stories about the campus protests in the span of two days.

The New York Times has been telling writers not to use words like “genocide” and “ethnic cleansing” to describe the violence in Gaza, a leaked internal memo revealed (Intercept, 4/15/24; FAIR.org, 4/18/24). Accordingly, the Times used the phrase “wartime chaos” to explain the mass graves, as if they were merely a side effect of war, not the result of intentional bombing campaigns.

While some prominent US media outlets are beginning to report on this discovery (ABC, 4/25/24; AP, 4/23/24; HuffPost, 4/24/24), they are playing catch-up with their international counterparts, whose reporting makes up a majority of search results on Google. Even articles that do appear on the first page rely heavily on reports from official spokespeople (e.g., Spectrum News, 4/23/24; The Hill, 4/23/24).

The UN’s Turk (4/23/24) has called for an independent investigation into the mass graves, saying “the intentional killing of civilians, detainees and others who are hors de combat is a war crime.” Corporate news outlets have been quick to note that the claims of bodies being found with their hands tied “cannot be substantiated,” despite consistent reports from both Palestinian officials and the office of the UN high commissioner for human rights about the condition of the bodies.

https://fair.org/home/news-of-mass-grav ... s-outlets/

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Gaza Campus Protestors: Today’s “Have You No Sense of Decency?”
Posted on April 29, 2024 by Yves Smith

Yves here. The spectacle of a wave of campus uprisings across the US in opposition to Israel’s genocide in Gaza evoke many memories and associations, above all to the Vietnam War demonstrations of 1968. But as Michael Hudson points out below, the Congressional campaign to ruin anyone who supports the protestors or even the right to free speech as anti-semitic comes right out of Senator Joe McCarthy’s playbook.

One of my two Communist college roommates had a grandmother who was the first to take the Fifth Amendment through her entire grilling by McCarthy, a source of pride in her circle. But then she became a Maoist when the rest of the family was Stalinist, so you could not longer talk about Russia at holiday gatherings.

Nevertheless, both roommates were very involved in the South Africa solidarity movement and promoted South African divestiture. I was apolitical and very much a nerd at the time and so regarded their campaign with curiosity, only to see later that they had been right, and early on top of that.


There’s a lot to like in Michael Hudson’s post below, such as his shellacking of Columbia President Nemat Shafik’s bootlicking performance before Congress.

By Michael Hudson, a research professor of Economics at University of Missouri, Kansas City, and a research associate at the Levy Economics Institute of Bard College. His latest book is The Destiny of Civilization. Originally published in the Investigación Económica (Economic Research), produced by UNAM (Autonomous National University of Mexico)

The recent Congressional hearings leading to a bloodbath of university presidents brings back memories from my teen-age years in the 1950s when everyone’s eyes were glued to the TV broadcast of the McCarthy hearings. And the student revolts incited by vicious college presidents trying to stifle academic freedom when it opposes foreign unjust wars awakens memories of the 1960s protests against the Vietnam War and the campus clampdowns confronting police violence. I was the junior member of the “Columbia three” alongside Seymour Melman and my mentor Terence McCarthy (both of whom taught at Columbia’s Seeley Mudd School of Industrial Engineering; my job was mainly to handle publicity and publication). At the end of that decade, students occupied my office and all others at the New School’s graduate faculty in New York City – very peacefully, without disturbing any of my books and papers.

Only the epithets have changed. The invective “Communist” has been replaced by “anti-Semite,” and the renewal of police violence on campus has not yet led to a Kent State-style rifle barrage against protesters. But the common denominators are all here once again. A concerted effort has been organized to condemn and even to punish today’s nationwide student uprisings against the genocide occurring in Gaza and the West Bank. Just as the House Unamerican Activities Committee (HUAC) aimed to end the careers of progressive actors, directors, professors and State Department officials unsympathetic to Chiang Kai-Shek or sympathetic to the Soviet Union from 1947 to 1975, today’s version aims at ending what remains of academic freedom in the United States.

The epithet of “communism” from 75 years ago has been updated to “anti-Semitism.” Senator Joe McCarthy of Wisconsin has been replaced by Elise Stefanik, House Republican from upstate New York, and Senator “Scoop” Jackson upgraded to President Joe Biden. Harvard University President Claudine Gay (now forced to resign), former University of Pennsylvania President Elizabeth Magill (also given the boot), and Massachusetts Institute of Technology President Sally Kornbluth were called upon to abase themselves by promising to accuse peace advocates critical of U.S. foreign policy of anti-Semitism.

The most recent victim was Columbia’s president Nemat “Minouche” Shafik, a cosmopolitan opportunist with trilateral citizenship who enforced neoliberal economic policy as a high-ranking official at the IMF (where she was no stranger to the violence of “IMF riots) and the World Bank, and who brought her lawyers along to help her acquiesce in the Congressional Committee’s demands. She did that and more, all on her own. Despite being told not to by the faculty and student affairs committees, she called in the police to arrest peaceful demonstrators. This radical trespass of police violence against peaceful demonstrators (the police themselves attested to their peacefulness) triggered sympathetic revolts throughout the United States, met with even more violent police responses at Emory College in Atlanta and California State Polytechnic, where cell phone videos were quickly posted on various media platforms.

Just as intellectual freedom and free speech were attacked by HUAC 75 years ago, academic freedom is now under attack at these universities. The police have trespassed onto school grounds to accuse students themselves of trespassing, with violence reminiscent of the demonstrations that peaked in May 1970 when the Ohio National Guard shot Kent State students singing and speaking out against America’s war in Vietnam.

Today’s demonstrations are in opposition to the Biden-Netanyahu genocide in Gaza and the West Bank. The more underlying crisis can be boiled down to the insistence by Benjamin Netanyahu that to criticize Israel is anti-Semitic. That is the “enabling slur” of today’s assault on academic freedom.

By “Israel,” Biden and Netanyahu mean specifically the right-wing Likud Party and its theocratic supporters aiming to create “a land without a [non-Jewish] people.” They assert that Jews owe their loyalty not to their current nationality (or humanity) but to Israel and its policy of driving the Gaza Strip’s millions of Palestinians into the sea by bombing them out of their homes, hospitals and refugee camps.

The implication is that to support the International Court of Justice’s accusations that Israel is plausibly committing genocide is an anti-Semitic act. Supporting the UN resolutions vetoed by the United States is anti-Semitic.

The claim is that Israel is defending itself and that protesting the genocide of the Palestinians in Gaza and the West Bank frightens Jewish students. But research by students at Columbia’s School of Journalism found that the complaints cited by the New York Times and other pro-Israeli media were made by non-students trying to spread the story that Israel’s violence was in self-defense.

The student violence has been by Israeli nationals. Columbia has a student-exchange program with Israel for students who finish their compulsory training with the Israeli Defense Forces. It was some of these exchange students who attacked pro-Gaza demonstrators, spraying them with Skunk, a foul-smelling indelible Israeli army chemical weapon that marks demonstrators for subsequent arrest, torture or assassination. The only students endangered were the victims of this attack. Columbia under Shafik did nothing to protect or help the victims.

The hearings to which she submitted speak for themselves. Columbia’s president Shafik was able to avoid the first attack on universities not sufficiently pro-Likud by having meetings outside of the country. Yet she showed herself willing to submit to the same brow-beating that had led her two fellow presidents to be fired, hoping that her lawyers had prompted her to submit in a way that would be acceptable to the committee.

I found the most demagogic attack to be that of Republican Congressman Rick Allen from Georgia, asking Dr. Shafik whether she was familiar with the passage in Genesis 12.3. As he explained” “It was a covenant that God made with Abraham. And that covenant was real clear. … ‘If you bless Israel, I will bless you. If you curse Israel, I will curse you.’ … Do you consider that to be a serious issue? I mean, do you want Columbia University to be cursed by God of the Bible?”[1]

Shafik smiled and was friendly all the way through this bible thumping, and replied meekly, “Definitely not.”

She might have warded off this browbeating question by saying, “Your question is bizarre. This is 2024, and America is not a theocracy. And the Israel of the early 1st century BC was not Netanyahu’s Israel of today.” She accepted all the accusations that Allen and his fellow Congressional inquisitors threw at her.

Her main nemesis was Elise Stefanik, Chair of the House Republican Conference, who is on the House Armed Services Committee, and the Committee on Education and the Workforce.

Congresswoman Stefanik: You were asked were there any anti-Jewish protests and you said ‘No’.

President Shafik: So the protest was not labeled as an anti-Jewish protest. It was labeled as an anti-Israeli government. But antisemitic incidents happened or antisemitic things were said. So I just wanted to finish.

Congresswoman Stefanik: And you are aware that in that bill, that got 377 Members out of 435 Members of Congress, condemns ‘from the river to the sea’ as antisemitic?

Dr. Shafik: Yes, I am aware of that.

Congresswoman Stefanik: But you don’t believe ‘from the river to the sea’ is antisemitic?

Dr. Shafik: We have already issued a statement to our community saying that language is hurtful and we would prefer not to hear it on our campus.[2]

What an Appropriate Response to Stefanik’s Browbeating Might Have Been?

Shafik could have said, “The reason why students are protesting is against the Israeli genocide against the Palestinians, as the International Court of Justice has ruled, and most of the United Nations agree. I’m proud of them for taking a moral stand that most of the world supports but is under attack here in this room.”

Instead, Shafik seemed more willing than the leaders of Harvard or Penn to condemn and potentially discipline students and faculty for using the term “from the river to the sea, Palestine will be free.” She could have said that it is absurd to say that this is a call to eliminate Israel’s Jewish population, but is a call to give Palestinians freedom instead of being treated as Untermenschen.

Asked explicitly whether calls for genocide violate Columbia’s code of conduct, Dr. Shafik answered in the affirmative — “Yes, it does.” So did the other Columbia leaders who accompanied her at the hearing. They did not say that this is not at all what the protests are about. Neither Shafik nor any other of the university officials say, “Our university is proud of our students taking an active political and social role in protesting the idea of ethnic cleansing and outright murder of families simply to grab the land that they live on. Standing up for that moral principle is what education is all about, and what civilization’s all about.”

The one highlight that I remember from the McCarthy hearings was the reply by Joseph Welch, the U.S. Army’s Special Council, on June 9, 1954 to Republican Senator Joe McCarthy’s charge that one of Welch’s attorneys had ties to a Communist front organization. “Until this moment, senator,” Welsh replied, “I think I never gauged your cruelty or your recklessness. … Have you no sense of decency, sir? At long last, have you left no sense of decency?”

The audience broke into wild applause. Welch’s put-down has echoed for the past 70 years in the minds of those who were watching television then (as I was, at age 15). A similar answer by any of the three other college presidents would have shown Stefanik to be the vulgarian that she is. But none ventured to stand up against the abasement.

The Congressional attack accusing opponents of genocide in Gaza as anti-Semites supporting genocide against the Jews is bipartisan. Already in December, Rep. Suzanne Bonamici (D-Ore.) helped cause Harvard and Penn’s presidents to be fired for their stumbling over her red-baiting. She repeated her question to Shafik on April 17: “Does calling for the genocide of Jews violate Columbia’s code of conduct?” Bonamici asked the four new Columbia witnesses. All responded: “Yes.”

That was the moment when they should have said that the students were not calling for genocide of the Jews, but seeking to mobilize opposition to genocide being committed by the Likud government against the Palestinians with President Biden’s full support.

During a break in the proceedings Rep. Stefanik told the press that “the witnesses were overheard discussing how well they thought their testimony was going for Columbia.” This arrogance is eerily reminiscent to the previous three university presidents who believed when walking out of the hearing that their testimony was acceptable. “Columbia is in for a reckoning of accountability. If it takes a member of Congress to force a university president to fire a pro-terrorist, antisemitic faculty chair, then Columbia University leadership is failing Jewish students and its academic mission,” added Stefanik. “No amount of overlawyered, overprepped, and over-consulted testimony is going to cover up for failure to act.”[3]

Shafik could have pointedly corrected the implications by the House inquisitors that it was Jewish students who needed protection. The reality was just the opposite: The danger was from the Israeli IDF students who attacked the demonstrators with military Skunk, with no punishment by Columbia.

Despite being told not to by the faculty and student groups (which Shafik was officially bound to consult), she called in the police, who arrested 107 students, tied their hands behind their backs and kept them that way for many hours as punishment while charging them for trespassing on Columbia’s property. Shafik then suspended them from classes.

The Clash Between Two Kinds of Judaism: Zionist vs. Assimilationist

A good number of these protestors being criticized were Jewish. Netanyahu and AIPAC have claimed – correctly, it seems – that the greatest danger to their current genocidal policies comes from the traditionally liberal Jewish middle-class population. Progressive Jewish groups have joined the uprisings at Columbia and other universities.

Early Zionism arose in late 19th-century Europe as a response to the violent pogroms killing Jews in Ukrainian cities such as Odessa and other Central European cities that were the center of anti-Semitism. Zionism promised to create a safe refuge. It made sense at a time when Jews were fleeing their countries to save their lives in countries that accepted them. They were the “Gazans” of their day.

After World War II and the horrors of the Holocaust anti-Semitism became passé. Most Jews in the United States and other countries were being assimilated and becoming prosperous, most successfully in the United States. The past century has seen this success enable them to assimilate, while retaining the moral standard that ethnic and religious discrimination such as that which their forbears had suffered is wrong in principle. Jewish activists were in the forefront of fighting for civil liberties, most visibly against anti-Black prejudice and violence in the 1960s and ‘70s, and against the Vietnam War. Many of my Jewish school friends in the 1950s bought Israel bonds, but thought of Israel as a socialist country and thought of volunteering to work on a kibbutz in the summer. There was no thought of antagonism, and I heard no mention of the Palestinian population when the phrase “a people without a land in a land without a people” was spoken.

But Zionism’s leaders have remained obsessed with the old antagonisms in the wake of Nazism’s murders of so many Jews. In many ways they have turned Nazism inside out, fearing a renewed attack from non-Jews. Driving the Arabs out of Israel and making it an apartheid state was just the opposite of what assimilationist Jews aimed at.

The moral stance of progressive Jews, and the ideal that Jews, blacks and members of all other religions and races should be treated equally, is the opposite of Israeli Zionism. In the hands of Netanyahu’s Likud Party and the influx of right-wing supporters, Zionism asserts a claim to set Jewish people apart from the rest of their national population, and even from the rest of the world, as we are seeing today.

Claiming to speak for all Jews, living and dead, Netanyahu asserts that to criticize his genocide and the Palestinian holocaust, the nakba, is anti-Semitic. This is the position of Stefanik and her fellow committee members. It is an assertion that Jews owe their first allegiance to Israel, and hence to its ethnic cleansing and mass murder since last October. President Biden also has labeled the student demonstrations “antisemitic protests.”

This claim in the circumstances of Israel’s ongoing genocide is causing more anti-Semitism than anyone since Hitler. If people throughout the world come to adopt Netanyahu’s and his cabinet’s definition of anti-Semitism, how many, being repulsed by Israel’s actions, will say, “If that is the case, then indeed I guess I’m anti-Semitic.”

Netanyahu’s Slander Against Judaism and What Civilization Should Stand For

Netanyahu characterized the U.S. protests in an extremist speech on April 24 attacking American academic freedom.

What’s happening in America’s college campuses is horrific. Antisemitic mobs have taken over leading universities. They call for the annihilation of Israel, they attack Jewish students, they attack Jewish faculty. This is reminiscent of what happened in German universities in the 1930s. We see this exponential rise of antisemitism throughout America and throughout Western societies as Israel tries to defend itself against genocidal terrorists, genocidal terrorists who hide behind civilians.

It’s unconscionable, it has to be stopped, it has to be condemned and condemned unequivocally. But that’s not what happened. The response of several university presidents was shameful. Now, fortunately, state, local, federal officials, many of them have responded differently but there has to be more. More has to be done.[4]

This is a call to make American universities into arms of a police state, imposing policies dictated by Israel’s settler state. That call is being funded by a circular flow: Congress gives enormous subsidies to Israel, which recycles some of this money back into the election campaigns of politicians willing to serve their donors. It is the same policy that Ukraine uses when it employs U.S. “aid” by setting up well-funded lobbying organizations to back client politicians.

What kind of student and academic protest expressions could oppose the Gaza and West Bank genocide without explicitly threatening Jewish students? How about “Palestinians are human being too!” That is not aggressive. To make it more ecumenical, one could add “And so are the Russians, despite what Ukrainian neo-Nazis say.”

I can understand why Israelis feel threatened by Palestinians. They know how many they have killed and brutalized to grab their land, killing just to “free” the land for themselves. They must think “If the Palestinians are like us, they must want to kill us, because of what we have done to them and there can never be a two-state solution and we can never live together, because this land was given to us by God.”

Netanyahu fanned the flames after his April 24 speech by raising today’s conflict to the level of a fight for civilization: “What is important now is for all of us, all of us who are interested and cherish our values and our civilization, to stand up together and to say enough is enough.”

Is what Israel is doing, and what the United Nations, the International Court of Justice and most of the Global Majority oppose, really “our civilization”? Ethnic cleansing, genocide and treating the Palestinian population as conquered and to be expelled as subhumans is an assault on the most basic principles of civilization.

Peaceful students defending that universal concept of civilization are called terrorists and anti-Semites – by the terrorist Israeli Prime Minister. He is following the tactics of Joseph Goebbels: The way to mobilize a population to fight the enemy is to depict yourself as under attack. That was the Nazi public relations strategy, and it is the PR strategy of Israel today – and of many in the American Congress, in AIPAC and many related institutions that proclaim a morally offensive idea of civilization as the ethnic supremacy of a group sanctioned by God.

The real focus of the protests is the U.S. policy that is backing Israel’s ethnic cleansing and genocide supported by last week’s foreign “aid.” It is also a protest against the corruption of Congressional politicians raising money from lobbyists representing foreign interests over those of the United States. Last week’s “aid” bill also backed Ukraine, that other country presently engaged in ethnic cleansing, with House members waved Ukrainian flags, not those of the United States. Shortly before that, one Congressman wore his Israeli army uniform into Congress to advertise his priorities.

Zionism has gone far beyond Judaism. I’ve read that there are nine Christian Zionists for every Jewish Zionists. It is as if both groups are calling for the End Time to arrive, while insisting that support for the United Nations and the International Court of Justice condemning Israel for genocide is anti-Semitic.

What CAN the Students at Columbia Ask For:

Students at Columbia and other universities have called for universities to disinvest in Israeli stocks, and also those of U.S. arms makers exporting to Israel. Given the fact that universities have become business organizations, I don’t think that this is the most practical demand at present. Most important, it doesn’t go to the heart of the principles at work.

What really is the big public relations issue is the unconditional U.S. backing for Israel come what may, with “anti-Semitism” the current propaganda epithet to characterize those who oppose genocide and brutal land grabbing.

They should insist on a public announcement by Columbia (and also Harvard and the University of Pennsylvania, who were equally obsequious to Rep. Stefanik) that they recognize that it is not anti-Semitic to condemn genocide, support the United Nations and denounce the U.S. veto.

They should insist that Columbia and the other universities making a sacrosanct promise not to call police onto academic grounds over issues of free speech.

They should insist that the president be fired for her one-sided support of Israeli violence against her students. In that demand they are in agreement with Rep. Stefanik’s principle of protecting students, and that Dr. Shafik must go.

But there is one class of major offenders that should be held up for contempt: the donors who try to attack academic freedom by using their money to influence university policy and turn universities away from the role in supporting academic freedom and free speech. The students should insist that university administrators – the unpleasant opportunists standing above the faculty and students – must not only refuse such pressure but should join in publicly expressing shock over such covert political influence.

The problem is that American universities have become like Congress in basing their policy on attracting contributions from their donors. That is the academic equivalent of the Supreme Court’s Citizens United ruling. Numerous Zionist funders have threatened to withdraw their contributions to Harvard, Columbia and other schools not following Netanyahu’s demands to clamp down on opponents of genocide and defenders of the United Nations. These funders are the enemies of the students at such universities, and both students and faculty should insist on their removal. Just as Dr. Shafik’s International Monetary Fund fell subject to its economists’ protest that there must be “No more Argentinas,” perhaps the Columbia students could chant “No More Shafiks.”

[1] https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=syPELLKpABI

[2] https://stefanik.house.gov/2024/4/icymi ... rship-role

[3] Nicholas Fandos, Stephanie Saul and Sharon Otterman, “Columbia’s President Tells Congress That Action Is Needed Against Antisemitism,” The New York Times, April 17, 2024., and “Columbia President Grilled During Congressional Hearing on Campus Antisemitism,” Jewish Journal, April 18, 2024. https://jewishjournal.com/news/united-s ... tisemitism

[4] Miranda Nazzaro. “Netanyahu condemns ‘antisemitic mobs’ on US college campuses,” The Hill, April 24, 2024.

https://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2024/04 ... cency.html
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Re: Palestine

Post by blindpig » Wed May 01, 2024 11:09 am

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February 2016 report: 616 Palestinians arrested by occupation forces. (Photo: samidoun.net)

Israel is holding more hostages than Hamas
Originally published: Speaking Security on April 10, 2024 by Stephen Semler (more by Speaking Security) (Posted Apr 29, 2024)

Hamas is holding 132 hostages: 130 of them1 were taken captive on October 7 and two were taken hostage before then (one in 2014, the other in 2015).

Israel holds thousands of Palestinians as de facto hostages. According to the Israel Prison Service, 3,661 of its 9,312 “security” inmates2 are held without charge or trial as “administrative detainees.” What’s administrative detention? B’Tselem explains:

In administrative detention, a person is held without trial without having committed an offense, on the grounds that he or she plans to break the law in the future. As this measure is supposed to be preventive, it has no time limit. The person is detained without legal proceedings, by order of the regional military commander, based on classified evidence that is not revealed to them. This leaves the detainees helpless—facing unknown allegations with no way to disprove them, not knowing when they will be released, and without being charged, tried or convicted.

Israel routinely uses administrative detention and has, over the years, placed thousands of Palestinians behind bars for periods ranging from several months to several years, without charging them, without telling them what they are accused of, and without disclosing the alleged evidence to them or to their lawyers.


Israel holds 2,397 more people in administrative detention now than it did before October 7. Omar Al-Khatib is one of them. He was taken hostage (administratively detained) by Israel on March 1. Why? Like many of the other Palestinians Israeli forces have arbitrarily detained since October 7, Israel probably intends to use Al-Khatib as currency in a prisoner exchange deal. As Zachary Foster writes:

In all likelihood, he will be leveraged as a bargaining chip in hostage negotiations with Hamas. In other words, he was taken for the same reason that Hamas took Israeli civilians hostage on Oct. 7th, as leverage in a prisoner swap.3

In September, Israel broke the 30-year record for the number of Palestinians it had unlawfully imprisoned under administrative detention (1,264). Critically, freeing Palestinian prisoners was Hamas’ central motivation for taking hostages on October 7. This is from Hamas’ official statement on its attack:

Operation Al-Aqsa Flood on Oct. 7 targeted the Israeli military sites, and sought to arrest the enemy’s soldiers to pressure the Israeli authorities to release the thousands of Palestinians held in Israeli jails through a prisoner exchange deal. Therefore, the operation focused on destroying the Israeli army’s Gaza Division, the Israeli military sites stationed near the Israeli settlements around Gaza.

The White House doesn’t mention Israel’s hostage taking of Palestinians. Not because it excuses Hamas’ actions (it doesn’t), but because acknowledging it delegitimizes Biden’s Hamas-is-ISIS narrative. This narrative aims to legitimize Israel’s continued brutalization of Gaza by making it seem like Hamas can’t be negotiated or reasoned with, that it’s the only obstacle to peace, and that Israel’s merely acting in self-defense.4

May all the hostages return to their homes soon.

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SPECIAL THANKS TO: Alan F., Andrew R., Anthony T., Bart B., BeepBoop, Chris G., David S., Francis M., George C., Jerry S., Linda B., Lora L., Marie R., Mark G., Megan., Nick B., Omar D., Peter M., Philip L., Springseep, Tony L.

Notes:
↩ Israel said 34 hostages are dead but didn’t clarify how they died. Hamas claims dozens have been killed in Israeli airstrikes, which seems plausible. Several freed hostages said they were almost killed by Israel’s bombs, and another had briefly escaped captivity after an Israeli airstrike collapsed the building on top of him.
↩ These figures were provided to HaMoked by the Israel Prison Service. Security inmates lose their fundamental rights. The treatment of these prisoners violates international law and, as you probably guessed, the overwhelming majority are Palestinians from occupied territories. This total includes 2,071 sentenced prisoners, 2,731 remand detainees, 3,661 administrative detainees, and 849 people held as unlawful combatants, which is a category that doesn’t exist in international law and is Israel’s way of ignoring the Third Geneva Convention of August 12, 1949.
↩ Read more (recommended): Meet the Palestinian Hostages Taken by Israel, Known as “Administrative Detainees”
↩ The Biden administration’s policy of obliterating any notion of historical context is also why White House officials talk about Hamas as if it fell from the sky (and wasn’t the direct product of Israeli occupation).

https://mronline.org/2024/04/29/israel- ... han-hamas/

Why should Hamas have to make excuses after 75 years of Zionist terror?

*****

US Regime Arrests Presidential Candidate Involved in Pro-Palestine Protest
APRIL 28, 2024

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Featured image: Students being arrested in the United States for protesting against Israel’s genocide on Palestinians. Photo: X/@ShayoniMitra.

Jill Stein, Green Party candidate in the upcoming US presidential elections, was arrested for participating in a protest against the ongoing Israeli genocide in the Gaza Strip.

Jill Stein, 73, was arrested on Saturday, April 27, on the campus of Washington University in St. Louis, Missouri, where students are holding demonstrations in support of Palestine.

Police officers took the presidential candidate to a van after she refused to leave the university campus. As part of this demonstration, another 80 people were also arrested.

Stein declared, “We are here with WashU students, defending our constitutional rights, defending the American people who want to end this genocide now.”

https://x.com/drjillstein/status/1784411081340809348

During the rally, Stein criticized university officials for condoning the use of force against their own students who are simply calling for peace, human rights, and an end to a genocide that the US people abhor.

Demonstrations against Israel’s genocide of the people of Palestine are spreading across several universities in the United States and are facing police repression and criminalization.

Arizona State University Police arrested 72 people on Friday, including 15 students.

Likewise, at Emory University in Atlanta, 28 people were arrested, one of them an economics professor, Caroline Fohlin, whom an agent knocked to the ground.

Nearly 100 arrests were recorded at Northeastern University and Cal Poly Humboldt in Northern California. The latter have closed its doors for the rest of the year and will offer virtual classes.



Faced with repression from the New York Police Department (NYPD), students at Columbia University (the epicenter of the movement) reported that they filed a complaint for violation of civil rights.

The lawsuit came after the arrest of more than 100 people by NYPD and threats to deploy the National Guard at that university.

Despite police repression, the students say they will continue their protests, claiming that what worries them most is “the violence that Palestinians have been suffering daily” at the hands of the Zionist colony.

(RedRadioVE)

https://orinocotribune.com/us-regime-ar ... e-protest/

******

The Interlocking of Strategic Paradigms

Alastair Crooke

April 29, 2024

Many Europeans would opt for making Europe competitive again; making Europe a diplomatic actor, rather than as a military one.

Theodore Postol, Professor of Science, Technology and National Security Policy at MIT, has provided a forensic analysis of the videos and evidence emerging from Iran’s 13th April swarm drone and missile ‘demonstation’ attack into Israel: A ‘message’, rather than an ‘assault’.

The leading Israeli daily, Yediot Ahoronot, has estimated the cost of attempting to down this Iranian flotilla at between $2-3 billion dollars. The implications of this single number are substantial.

Professor Postol writes:

“This indicates that the cost of defending against waves of attacks of this type is very likely to be unsustainable against an adequately armed and determined adversary”.

“The videos show an extremely important fact: All of the targets, whether drones or not, are shot down by air-to-air missiles”, [fired from mostly U.S. aircraft. Some 154 aircraft reportedly were aloft at the time] likely firing AIM-9x Sidewinder air to air missiles. The cost of a single Sidewinder air-to-air missile is about $500,000”.

Furthermore:

“The fact that a very large number of unengaged ballistic missiles could be seen glowing as they reenter the atmosphere to lower altitudes [an indication of hyper-speed], indicates that whatever the effects of [Israel’s] David’s Sling and the Arrow missile defenses, they were not especially effective. Thus, the evidence at this point shows that essentially all or most of the arriving long-range ballistic missiles were not intercepted by any of the Israeli air and missile-defense systems”.[

Postel adds, “I have analyzed the situation, and have concluded that commercially available optical and computational technology is more than capable of being adapted to a cruise missile guidance system to give it very high precision homing capability … it is my conclusion that the Iranians have already developed precision guided cruise missiles and drones”.

“The implications of this are clear. The cost of shooting down cruise missiles and drones will be very high and might well be unsustainable unless extremely inexpensive and effective anti-air systems can be implemented. At this time, no one has demonstrated a cost-effective defense system that can intercept ballistic missiles with any reliability”.

Just to be clear, Postol is saying that neither the U.S. nor Israel has more than a partial defence to a potential attack of this nature – especially as Iran has dispersed and buried its ballistic missile silos across the entire terrain of Iran under the control of autonomous units which are capable of continuing a war, even were central command and communications to be completely lost.

This amounts to paradigm change – clearly for Israel, for one. The huge physical expenditure on air defence ordinance – 2-3 billion dollars worth – will not be repeated willy-nilly by the U.S. Netanyahu will not easily persuade the U.S. to engage with Israel in any joint venture against Iran, given these unsustainable air-defence costs.

But also, as a second important implication, these Air Defence assets are not just expensive in dollar terms, they simply are not there: i.e. the store cupboard is near empty! And the U.S. lacks the manufacturing capacity to replace these not particularly effective, high cost platforms speedily.

‘Yes, Ukraine’ … the Middle East paradigm interlinks directly with the Ukraine paradigm where Russia has succeeded in destroying so much of the western supplied, air-defence capabilities in Ukraine, giving Russia near complete air dominance over the skies.

Positioning scarce air defence ‘to save Israel’ therefore, exposes Ukraine (and slows the U.S. pivot to China, too). And given the recent passage of the funding Bill for Ukraine in Congress, clearly air defence assets are a priority for sending to Kiev – where the West looks increasingly trapped and rummaging for a way out that does not lead to humiliation.

But before leaving the Middle East paradigm shift, the implications for Netanyahu are already evident: He must therefore focus back to the ‘near enemy’ – the Palestinian sphere or to Lebanon – to provide Israel with the ‘Great Victory’ that his government craves.

In short, the ‘cost’ for Biden of saving Israel from the Iranian flotilla which had been pre-announced by Iran to be demonstrative and not destructive nor lethal is that the White House must put-up with the corollary – an attack on Rafah. But this implies a different form of cost – an electoral erosion through exacerbating domestic tensions arising from the on-going blatant slaughter of Palestinians.

It is not just Israel that bears the weight of the Iranian paradigm shift. Consider the Sunni Arab States that have been working in various forms of collaboration (normalisation) with Israel.

In the event of wider conflict embracing Iran, clearly Israel cannot protect them – as Professor Postol so clearly shows. And can they count on the U.S.? The U.S. faces competing demands for its scarce Air Defences and (for now) Ukraine, and the pivot to China, are higher on the White House priority ladder.

In September 2019, the Saudi Abqaiq oil facility was hit by cruise missiles, which Postol notes, “had an effective accuracy of perhaps a few feet, much more precise than could be achieved with GPS guidance (suggesting an optical and computational guidance system, giving a very precise homing capability)”.

So, after the Iranian active deterrence paradigm shift, and the subsequent Air Defence depletion paradigm shock, the putative coming western paradigm shift (the Third Paradigm) is similarly interlinked with Ukraine.

For the western proxy war with Russia centred on Ukraine has made one thing abundantly clear: this is that the West’s off-shoring of its manufacturing base has left it uncompetitive, both in simple trade terms, and secondly, in limiting western defence manufacturing capacity. It finds (post-13 April) that it does not have the Air Defence assets to go round: ‘saving Israel’; ‘saving Ukraine’ and preparing for war with China.

The western maximalisation of shareholder returns model has not adapted readily to the logistical needs of the present ‘limited’ Ukraine/Russia war, let alone provided positioning for future wars – with Iran and China.

Put plainly, this ‘late stage’ global imperialism has been living a ‘false dawn’: With the economy shifting from manufacturing ‘things’, to the more lucrative sphere of imagining new financial products (such as derivatives) that make a lot of money quickly, but which destabilise society (through increasing disparities of wealth); and which ultimately, de-stabilise the global system itself (as the World Majority states recoil from the loss of sovereignty and autonomy that financialism entails).

More broadly, the global system is close to massive structural change. As the Financial Times warns,

“the U.S. and EU cannot embrace national-security “infant industry” arguments, seize key value chains to narrow inequality, and break the fiscal and monetary ‘rules’, while also using the IMF and World Bank – and the economics profession– to preach free-market best practice to EM ex-China. And China can’t expect others not to copy what it does”. As the FT concludes, “the shift to a new economic paradigm has begun. Where it will end is very much up for grabs.”
‘Up for grabs’: Well, for the FT the answer may be opaque, but for the Global Majority is plain enough – “We’re going back to basics”: A simpler, largely national economy, protected from foreign competition by customs barriers. Call it ‘old- fashioned’ (the concepts have been written about for the last 200 years); yet it is nothing extreme. The notions simply reflect the flip side of the coin to Adam Smith’s doctrines, and that which Friedrich List advanced in his critique of the laissez-faire individualist approach of the Anglo-Americans.

‘European leaders’, however, see the economic paradigm solution differently:

The ECB’s Panetta gave a speech echoing Mario Draghi’s call for “radical change”: He stated for the EU to thrive it needs a de facto national-security focused POLITICAL economy centered around: reducing dependence on foreign demand; enhancing energy security (green protectionism); advancing production of technology (industrial policy); rethinking participation in global value chains (tariffs/subsidies); governing migration flows (so higher labour costs); enhancing external security (huge funds for defence); and joint investments in European public goods (via Eurobonds … to be bought by ECB QE)”.

The ‘false dawn’ boom in U.S. financial services began as its industrial base was rotting away, and as new wars began to be promoted.

It is easy to see that the U.S. economy now needs structural change. Its real economy has become globally uncompetitive – hence Yellen’s call on China to curb its over-capacity which is hurting western economies.

But is it realistic to think that Europe can manage a relaunch as a ‘defence and national security-led political economy’, as Draghi and Panetta advocate as a continuation of war with Russia? Launched from near ground zero?

Is it realistic to think that the American Security State will allow Europe to do this, having deliberately reduced Europe to economic vassalage through causing it to abandon its prior business model based on cheap energy and selling high-end engineering products to China?

This Draghi-ECB plan represents a huge structural change; one that would take a decade or two to implement and would cost trillions. It would occur too, at a time of inevitable European fiscal austerity. Is there evidence that ordinary Europeans support such radical structural change?

Why then is Europe pursuing a path that embraces huge risks – one that potentially could drag Europe into a whirlpool of tensions ending in war with Russia?

For one main reason: The EU leadership held hubristic ambitions to turn the EU into a ‘geo-political’ empire – a global actor with the heft to join the U.S. at Top Table. To this end, the EU unreservedly offered itself as the auxiliary of the White House Team for their Ukraine project, and acquiesced to the entry price of emptying their armouries and sanctioning the cheap energy on which the economy depended.

It was this decision that has been de-industrialising Europe; that has made what remains of a real economy uncompetitive and triggered the inflation that is undermining living standards. Falling into line with Washington’s failing Ukraine project has released a cascade of disastrous decisions by the EU.

Were this policy line to change, Europe could revert to what it was: a trading association formed of diverse sovereign states. Many Europeans would settle for that: Placing the focus on making Europe competitive again; making Europe a diplomatic actor, rather than as a military actor.

Do Europeans even want to be at the American ‘top table'?

https://strategic-culture.su/news/2024/ ... paradigms/

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Hamas lights up Netzarim corridor in deadly ambush on Israeli troops

Qassam Brigades fighters used unexploded Israeli F16 missiles to ambush soldiers in central Gaza

News Desk

APR 29, 2024

Image
(Photo credit: Qassam Brigades Military Media)

Several Israeli soldiers were killed and injured in explosive attacks carried out by fighters of Hamas’ Qassam Brigades near the Netzarim corridor in the central Gaza Strip on 28 April.

“Al-Qassam Mujahideen lured a Zionist force into a mine ambush using explosive devices and [Israeli] F16 missiles that were fired at civilians but did not explode,” the Qassam Brigades said in a statement on Sunday. This was not the first time Qassam fighters recycled unexploded Israeli missiles for use against the army in Gaza.

The ambush took place on Al-Sikka street in the Al-Mughraqa area, near the Netzarim corridor in central Gaza – which the Israeli army controls to keep the strip divided into two.

Earlier that evening, the Qassam Brigades announced heavy-caliber mortar strikes on an Israeli command headquarters near Netzarim.

Hebrew news outlet Router reported on Sunday night that three Israeli soldiers were killed and 11 others wounded after explosives were detonated in the central Gaza Strip.

Video footage circulating on social media shows the wounded being transported via helicopter.


In early April, the Israeli army withdrew a large bulk of its forces from the Gaza Strip. However, it left many troops in control of the Netzarim corridor.

The fighters of the Qassam Brigades and several other resistance factions remained entrenched across the Gaza Strip despite Israeli government claims that the southernmost city of Rafah is the group’s final stronghold.

Western and Israeli analysts recently concluded that Israel has lost the ongoing war by failing to achieve any of its goals – namely, the destruction of Hamas’ fighting force and the rescue of its prisoners.

The Netzarim ambush came two days after a former Israeli officer said that a “disaster” awaits Israel if it chooses to launch an operation in Rafah. Hamas is working on a “strategic ambush” for if and when Israeli troops decide to enter the city, the officer added.

https://thecradle.co/articles/hamas-lig ... eli-troops.

What comes first, a Rafah invasion or a Netanyahu ousting?

Facing domestic and international pressure for Israel’s US-backed Gaza assault, the Biden administration appears poised to throw Netanyahu under the proverbial bus.


Khalil Harb

APR 29, 2024

Image
(Photo Credit: The Cradle)

In Gaza, a metaphorical “hostage” scenario has emerged, centered on Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, whose political future is being bartered at a steep political price.

Although not physically detained, Netanyahu has been shackled by a complex situation since the 7 October Operation Al-Aqsa Flood, when Palestinian resistance groups took hundreds of soldiers and civilians captive as a bargaining chip.

That operation and Israel’s subsequent brutal assault on Gaza has ensnared Netanyahu in a political and strategic quagmire, complicating his position daily and undermining his war objectives.

Internationally, Israel’s carefully constructed image has entered pariah status, as accusations of “genocide,” “war crimes,” and “apartheid” fly liberally around global capital buildings and in mass street protests. This is a language that signals a strategic defeat for Tel Aviv – not at all the ‘military victory‘ Netanyahu had promised his constituents and allies.

Resignations and repercussions

After seven months of grossly disproportionate aggression against the mainly civilian, densely-populated Gaza, the Israeli premier’s prospects of deriving strategic benefits from further military action are dwindling.

Even his attempts to pivot to political achievements – like ceasefire deals and grand bargains – are fraught with considerable risks for his shaky government coalition.

Today, Netanyahu’s threat to invade Rafah, the southernmost area of Gaza where over a million displaced Palestinians seek relief, could either further entrench him in crisis or precipitate his political downfall.

The bad news keeps rolling in. Last week’s resignation of Israel’s head of Military Intelligence, Aharon Haleva, over failures related to 7 October, signals a broader national crisis about to unfold. Reports from Yedioth Ahronoth suggest that additional senior military and security officials are also expected to resign.

“The domino effect of the resignation of the head of military intelligence may soon occur, including the Chief of Staff as well,” the Hebrew daily reported.

Despite its enthusiasm for Palestinian bloodshed, Israeli public opinion, as reflected in various polls over recent months, overwhelmingly holds Netanyahu and his administration accountable for the now obvious failures of the war. This sentiment is compounded by the inability of the once-touted “invincible army” to secure the release of any of the Israeli captives held in Gaza by the Palestinian resistance.

Israeli writer and historian Yuval Harari argues in a recent Haaretz article that “the ruinous policy of the Netanyahu government following October 7 has placed Israel in existential danger.”

With US elections around the corner, President Joe Biden is seeking to strike the posture of a “peacemaker” who averted a greater catastrophe in Gaza – redeeming himself for Washington’s unabashed military and political support for genocide by forcing through a fragile truce in Rafah.

Tel Aviv’s Gaza war has left bruises all over the Biden administration and its western allies. They now calculate that a Rafah invasion will not produce results different from Israel’s northern and central Gaza invasions.

Collision course with the US

As the electoral countdown begins in the United States, Biden’s already low poll ratings are further eroded by images of mass student protests at prestigious American universities across the country – almost 80 campuses at the time of writing.

As with the large-scale US student opposition movements during the Vietnam War and South African apartheid eras, these universities have a long-standing tradition of challenging the policies of the deep state.

Essentially, Biden’s choices are down to two: The US president can use international diplomacy to impact Israeli politics while alleviating domestic pressures, or he can focus on maintaining his electoral viability amid escalating dissent at home.

The first approach necessitates taking a firm stance against the imminent Israeli invasion of Rafah, only possible by exerting significant pressure on Netanyahu, which is likely to strain the latter’s alliances within Israel’s far-right coalition.

Prominent far-right leaders Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich and National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir have already indicated their readiness to destabilize the coalition government over disagreements. This could ignite factional disputes within the Likud party, particularly with the extremist factions like Jewish Power and Religious Zionism parties.

The tensions are rooted in the coalition agreements Netanyahu secured to form his government in December 2022, which included controversial judicial reforms and aggressive settlement policies in the occupied West Bank.

Today, Netanyahu’s hesitation to proceed with a full-scale offensive in Rafah and his openness to truce and political negotiations – pushed by Washington and supported by many western and some Arab states – could alienate the hardliner elements within his government. But it may also be his only option to avoid a US-backed “coup” that would see him replaced with a prime minister more amenable to Washington’s outlook.

The ‘Shamir model’

The Biden administration is signaling a potential shift in its approach to military support for Israel, particularly over any incursions into Rafah. The New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman notes that Washington may consider limiting arms sales to Tel Aviv if it proceeds in Rafah without US coordination.

Friedman suggests that Israel could only double down on its other Gaza failures if it invades Rafah, citing an unnamed US official as pointing out that Tel Aviv had previously bombarded Khan Yunis in search of Hamas leaders yet failed to locate them.

The Biden administration has warned Israel from the outset of its Gaza assault to avoid the same mistakes the US made in Iraq after the attacks of September 11 2001. Just like Washington’s quagmire in Iraq, it has been clear to US officials that Tel Aviv does not have a post-war plan in Gaza. But the appeals of US officials, experts, and military personnel to their Israeli counterparts have largely been ignored.

If history is any indication, Tel Aviv has seldom pursued political solutions to the Palestinian issue without significant pressure from Washington. According to Foreign Policy magazine, US president George HW Bush’s secretary of state, James Baker, had to threaten to withhold guarantees for $10 billion in US loans for Israeli prime minister Yitzhak Shamir to halt new settlements in the West Bank.

That stance faced fierce opposition from pro-Israel lobbying groups like AIPAC in 1992, with accusations of antisemitism directed at Bush Sr, who stuck to his guns and insisted he would “not give one inch.”

At the time, Baker had an interesting confrontation with Netanyahu – then Israel’s deputy foreign minister – who had taken to mocking the White House’s stance. The US secretary of state ordered his State Department to block the Israeli upstart from entering the building.

The sum result of this extraordinary US pressure was that Yitzhak Shamir’s Likud party was ousted in Israeli elections – as a direct result of Baker’s refusal to provide the $10 billion loan guarantee – and Labour Party leader Yitzhak Rabin, who was more open to negotiating a “land for peace” formula, was ushered into office.

Netanyahu’s leadership is in a similarly precarious position today. Embattled from all sides – domestic and external – the prime minister is believed to be seeking the continuation of conflict in Gaza to avoid the many political and legal consequences awaiting him at the end of his tenure.

The outcome of such a scenario will likely depend not only on military strategies and political maneuvers within Israel but also on the international diplomatic pressures exerted by allies like the US.

The question today is whether an invasion of Rafah will occur before the removal of Netanyahu from office.

https://thecradle.co/articles/what-come ... hu-ousting

Hamas, Fatah make ‘positive progress’ in China talks

China has long been an advocate of Palestinian unity and a two-state solution

News Desk

APR 30, 2024

Image
(Photo credit: Flash90)

Representatives of Hamas and the Palestinian Authority’s (PA) Fatah party met recently in Beijing and held talks on reconciliation, the Chinese Foreign Ministry announced on 30 April.

“Representatives of the Palestine National Liberation Movement and the Islamic Resistance Movement recently came to Beijing,” China’s Foreign Ministry spokesman Lin Jian said.

“The two sides fully expressed their political will to achieve reconciliation through dialogue and consultation, discussed many specific issues, and made positive progress,” he added. The spokesman did not clarify exactly what day the meeting took place.

China, Hamas, and Fatah confirmed on 26 April, that intra-Palestinian talks would be held in the Chinese capital.

“They agreed to continue the course of talks to achieve the realization of Palestinian solidarity and unity at an early date,” Jian went on to say, adding that the two sides thanked China for efforts to “promote Palestinian internal unity and reached an agreement on further dialogue.“

China has continued to call for a ceasefire and an end to the war in the Gaza Strip and has long been an advocate of Palestinian unity and a two-state solution between the Palestinians and Israelis.

Chinese diplomat Wang Kejian met with Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh in Qatar last month, where they both called for an end to the war in Gaza and the achievement of “political goals and aspirations of establishing an independent Palestinian state.”

Hamas assumed leadership of Gaza in 2006 after a political victory against Fatah in local elections.

The Beijing talks come as Hamas has yet to deliver an official response to a new Israeli–Egyptian initiative for a ceasefire and prisoner release deal.

While the initiative reportedly reflects an Israeli openness for the return of the displaced to northern Gaza and the establishment of a sustainable ceasefire, a Hamas official told Al-Mayadeen on Sunday that the proposal “does not reflect a fundamental shift” in Tel Aviv’s position.

Washington has been promoting the idea of a reformed PA assuming control over post-war Gaza, something Hamas has rejected.

US–Israeli efforts to “create bodies to manage Gaza is a failed conspiracy that will not come to fruition,” a Hamas official said last month.

https://thecradle.co/articles/hamas-fat ... hina-talks

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An Israeli Ambassador & the Failure of Media
April 29, 2024
Save
New Zealand national broadcaster TVNZ had a chance to hold Israel’s ambassador to New Zealand to account. What transpired was hard to look at, writes Mick Hall.

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Jack Tame (right) interviews Israel’s ambassador to New Zealand, Ran Yaakoby on TVNZ’s Q+A programme on Sunday, April 21. (Photo: TVNZ/Screenshot)

By Mick Hall
in Whangarei, New Zealand
Substack



When I first heard TVNZ’s Q+A with Jack Tame would feature an interview with Israel’s Ambassador to New Zealand Ran Yaakoby I gave the national broadcaster’s news leaders way too much credit.

As we face into a ground assault on Gaza’s southern city of Rafah, with over 34,000 officially dead, a military siege deliberately inducing famine and a mountain of evidence with the International Court of Justice (ICJ) pointing to Israel committing genocide, I suspected savvy editorial bosses had determined they better act now to claw back some credibility.

Because, for the last six months New Zealand’s media has ignored a preponderance of evidence that Israel’s ethnic cleansing of Gaza had devolved further into a full-blown genocidal onslaught, its largely U.S.-provided military machine ratcheted up, the gears well oiled by Western diplomacy, dehumanisation and widely-propagated lies.

While New Zealand media followed the lead of government in framing Israel’s actions as legitimate self-defence and an albeit brutal war against Hamas after its Oct. 7 attack, many of us had been consuming non-curated social media clips and statements by various individuals and organisations that rightly contradicted this messaging.

Ongoing atrocities have been making the official narrative much harder to sustain.

Surely news chiefs now knew they’d left themselves exposed and that something needed to be done to arrest the reputational damage would be inevitably follow, particularly after a recent academic survey that found trust in media in the country had already taken a major nose dive over recent years.

Not giving the Israeli ambassador any quarter during an interview over Gaza may help do so and suggest the broadcaster had done its bit in exposing Israeli lies and crimes, instead of being perceived as a mere informational cog in the Western war machine.


‘An Unmissable Conversation’

It was clear from the TVNZ introductory segment on April 21 that was not the way this interview was going to play out.

Basically, I’d made the mistake of assuming media bosses had adequate self-insight, empathy for Palestinians or any real understanding of what is unfolding in the Middle East.

Its website blurb also gave a decent clue of what was to come. It read:

“An unmissable conversation with Israel’s ambassador to New Zealand, about terrorism, the impact of war on civilians, and how this country should respond.”

Instead of pulling down the ideological architecture of media genocide complicity, Jack Tame left it standing. Some have argued the journalist, known for his combative style of questioning, had been ill-prepared. But it seems much more than that.

When it comes to reporting on the polarising issue of the Israel-Palestine conflict, news managers at national broadcasters like RNZ and TVNZ are afraid of their own shadows. As well as being grossly uninformed of the history and politics of the issue, these people are terrified of the Israeli lobby and political pushback, as the ABC firing of host Antoinette Lattouf demonstrates.

The net result is the imposition of a version of due impartiality vitiated by political consideration, careerism, group think and orthodoxy. News stories and programmes omit facts inconvenient to a type of safe editorial positioning that doesn’t contradict Western foreign policy settings.

News bosses here usually take their lead from international colleagues at the BBC, AP, CNN and Reuters, who are masters at doing this, republishing such content. Journalists who step outside this self-censoring framework do so at their own peril, something every journalist in New Zealand to date seems to have avoided.

Double standards and Bias

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Palestine solidarity protesters picket outside the Christchurch offices of TVNZ on April 22, a day after the Q+A interview with Israeli ambassador to New Zealand Ran Yaakoby was broadcast. (Palestine Solidarity Network Otautahi)

Likewise, Tame stayed on message with his editorial superiors. Not only was he unable or unwilling to adequately push back against a second-rate Israeli propagandist, he was happy to engage in Western media platitudes and hypocrisy.

He repeatedly used terms like “barbaric” to describe Oct. 7, while not using the same condemnatory adjectives to describe Israel’s killing of Palestinian civilians. He agreed with the genocide-enabling view that Hamas used Palestinians as human shields, again calling it barbaric.

He never contradicted the widely discredited claims of widespread rape and other Oct. 7 disinformation employed to condition the public to fall in line with Israel’s military reaction.

Tame ignored international law when he characterised Palestinian armed resistance as “terrorism”. Palestinians’ right under occupation to violently resist is upheld under Additional Protocol I to the Geneva Conventions of 1949.

United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) resolutions have reaffirmed the right, including the 1982 resolution 3743, which upholds the “legitimacy of the struggle of peoples for independence, territorial integrity, national unity and liberation from colonial and foreign domination and foreign occupation by all available means, including armed struggle”.

Tame’s line of questioning was facile and misleading. In posing a philosophical question about whether it was morally correct to kill a Hamas operative alongside a child, he seemed to implicitly accept the assumption IDF soldiers were solely fighting a war against Hamas and not intentionally ethnic-cleansing Gazans, when the evidence strongly suggests otherwise.

Tame did not question Yaakoby on whether Israeli was committing ethnic cleansing, or whether Israel was an apartheid regime, in response to his assertion that Israel was a democracy.


Was Tame given explicit direction to avoid raising these questions? There is precedent in New Zealand for such self-censorship, with at least one incident at Radio New Zealand (RNZ) where claims of genocide made by a Palestinian guest last November were removed and not aired.

An Exercise in Propaganda

In any case, Tame must take responsibility for his interview. Unless trapped inside the same bubble as his bosses, he must surely be doing some soul-searching in light of significant social media criticism and numerous complaints now clogging up inboxes at TVNZ and New Zealand’s media watchdog.

If the intent of the interview wasn’t to break out of a discredited mainstream media narrative and win back some credibility amongst an increasingly distrusting public, what was it?

It is probable the interview was an attempt at scrutiny of Israel, but within the narrow parametres of Western liberal discourse. It did nothing to challenge the legitimacy of a “rules-based international order” that would allow a genocide against a captive population. It masked the colonial nature of the apartheid settler state and it avoided much-needed scrutiny of its ethnic-cleansing end game.

Tame also failed to push back on war-hawk narratives of Iran being a self-serving “puppet master”, pulling the strings of Hamas to sow chaos in the Middle East. Nor did he challenge Yaakoby’s ridiculously incoherent comments that Syria must be blamed in its failure to protect Iran’s diplomatic mission in Damascus and that in any case a military hub had been bombed next to the building, not the Iranian embassy proper.


The programme allowed the ambassador to urge New Zealand to “take sides” in an existential battle between the evil “monster” Iran with its “proxies” on one side and Israel and the West on the other, a statement TVNZ conveniently posted on social media when advertising its interview.

This should be considered particularly disturbing, given New Zealand’s increasing integration into Western military blocs and its military involvement targeting the Houthis in Yemen.

The interview ended up a crude exercise in propaganda, plain and simple and will likely add to the continuing decline in media trust.

https://consortiumnews.com/2024/04/29/a ... -of-media/
"There is great chaos under heaven; the situation is excellent."

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Re: Palestine

Post by blindpig » Thu May 02, 2024 11:09 am

At least 10,000 Gazans trapped under neighborhood ruins

Officials say that the cleanup of bombed Gaza streets could take up to three years

News Desk

APR 30, 2024

Image
(Photo Credit: Anadolu Ajansi)

Gaza’s Civil Defense, in a statement released on 30 April, estimates that there are roughly 10,000 bodies of Palestinians stuck under the rubble since the beginning of Israel’s bombardment of the Gaza Strip.

The general director said that these missing bodies are not included in the death toll numbers issued by the Ministry of Health as their bodies have not been brought and counted in the hospitals. This brings the current number of Palestinians killed to over 44,000.

According to the Euro-Med Human Rights Monitor (Euro-Med) numbers published on 23 April, the current death toll is at 42,510.

The Euro-Med figures include those missing after being detained and forcibly disappeared by Israeli forces and those who have been trapped under rubble for over two weeks.

The general directorate of Gaza’s civil defense said that it received many calls from people volunteering to remove the bodies of Palestinians from under the rubble to give them a proper burial.

Al-Jazeera journalist Anas al-Sharif documented the efforts of civil defense crews which took on the task of recovering bodies from under the rubble.

“Efforts by civil defense teams and volunteers began to recover the bodies of martyrs from under the rubble of their homes,” Sharif said in a video posted on social media from inside what remained of a building subjected to Israeli attacks late last year. “It is estimated that there are more than fifty martyrs under the rubble of the house.”

Sharif continued by saying, “Civil defense personnel face great difficulties due to the lack of advanced equipment, which forces them to use primitive tools in search and recovery operations for the decomposed bodies of the martyrs.”


Gaza’s civil defense said that with the methods it is forced to use to clear the debris, it will take two to three years to search through 37 tons of rubble.

Pehr Lodhammar, the former United Nationals Mine Action Service chief for Iraq, says that, on average, there are 300 kilograms of rubble per square meter of land in Gaza. “Based on the current [amount] of debris in Gaza, with 100 trucks, we are talking about 14 years of work … to remove it,” he said.

The General Directorate also warned that the accumulation of bodies risks the spread of disease in the already-dire humanitarian situation in Gaza, especially as summer approaches.

According to the latest numbers, at least 34,535 people have been killed as a result of Israel’s bombing campaign, this includes over 14,500 children and 8,400 women. Over 77,000 people are reported missing.

https://thecradle.co/articles/at-least- ... hood-ruins

Yemen targets US warships, commercial vessels in Red Sea

Sanaa expanded attacks on Israeli-linked ships following the discovery of hundreds of bodies in mass graves around several Gaza hospitals

News Desk

APR 30, 2024

Image
(Photo Credit: Wikimedia)

Yemen, in a statement released on 29 April, announced that they have targeted a number of “hostile” vessels in their continued solidarity with the Palestinian people.

“The Yemeni armed forces carried out military operations against enemy warships in the Red Sea, including targeting two American warships with a number of drones,” Yemeni Armed Forces spokesman Yahya Saree said in a televised statement on Monday. “The military operations achieved their goals successfully.”

One of the ships named by Saree was the MSC Orion, a Portugal-flagged container ship whose registered owner is Zodiac Maritime, a company partly owned by Israeli businessman Eyal Ofer, according to LSEG data.

“With a number of drones, the Yemeni Armed Forces‘ air force, with the help of God Almighty, targeted the Israeli ship (MSC ORION) in the Indian Ocean,” the operation announcement stated.

Saree also announced that the naval, missile, and armed forces air forces conducted a “joint operation targeting the ship (CYCLADES) in the Red Sea, and the hit was accurate.”

He announced that the targeting of the Cyclades bulk carrier ship was a result of the vessel’s dishonest reporting that it was heading to a port other than the prohibited Eilat Port.

The ship was placed on Yemen’s list of targeted ships “prohibited from sailing in the area of operations of the Yemeni armed forces.” The Cyclades were later targeted in the Indian Ocean.

US Central Command (CENTCOM) announced that the USS Philippine Sea and USS Laboon were in the Red Sea but that Yemen‘s drones were destroyed prior to impact.

Yemen’s recent attacks come after the nation announced that it would expand its targeting of Israeli-linked ships following the discovery of mass graves in Gaza medical complexes previously raided by Israeli forces.

“The genocidal crimes that the Palestinian people are facing in Gaza and the occupied West Bank reflect an unparalleled level of Zionist hatred and crime,” Yemen’s armed forces previously said in a statement on Yemen’s Al-Masirah channel.

They added that as a result of the crimes exposed by the mass graves found, Yemen would “escalate their operations in the Red Sea.”

Over 300 bodies were found across two mass graves found in Khan Yunis’ Nasser Medical Complex. Gaza medical authorities expect about 700 victims will be found.

https://thecradle.co/articles/yemen-tar ... in-red-sea

******

ICJ Declines Nicaragua’s Request for Provisional Measures Against Germany
Posted by INTERNATIONALIST 360° on APRIL 30, 2024

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While the court declined ordering provisional measures, it did not dismiss the case against Germany for complicity in Israel’s genocide.

ALLEGED BREACHES OF CERTAIN INTERNATIONAL OBLIGATIONS IN RESPECT OF THE OCCUPIED PALESTINIAN TERRITORY
(NICARAGUA v. GERMANY)
REQUEST FOR THE INDICATION OF PROVISIONAL MEASURES ORDER

FULL TEXT OF THE ORDER
ICJ PRESS RELEASE
Nicaragua’s Position on the International Court of Justice Case against Germany
alemania, nicaragua, corte internacional de justicia, cij, haya, israel,

Image

The following is a communiqué from the Government of Nicaragua on the Case of Germany in the International Court of Justice.

The Government of Reconciliation and National Unity informs the people of Nicaragua and the international community that today the International Court of Justice ruled on the request for provisional measures requested by Nicaragua against the Federal Republic of Germany for violations of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide.

The Geneva Conventions of 1949 and their Additional Protocols, the non-derogable principles of international humanitarian law and other peremptory norms of general international law in relation to the Occupied Palestinian Territory, in particular the Gaza Strip. In its application to the high court Nicaragua made essentially two requests, the first that Germany suspend its military support to Israel and the second that it renew its financial support to the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA).

The Court decided that under the circumstances it was not necessary to use interim measures today, as Germany explained that it had significantly decreased the amount of material to be exported to Israel from 200 million in October 2023 to 1 million in March 2024, and that no further arms licenses had been approved. In addition, Germany also stated that it had provided new funds for UNRWA, which as of today have been completely renewed. In this regard, Nicaragua welcomes the outcome of its campaign for Germany’s compliance with its international obligations under these Conventions and the Court’s Order in the case brought by South Africa against Israel, in which the risk of genocide in Gaza had already been pointed out.

In that regard, after reaffirming its concern about the catastrophic situation in Gaza, the Court essentially recalled that it is an obligation of all states parties that are aware or should normally be aware of the serious risk of the commission of genocide to employ all reasonable means at their disposal to prevent genocide, including Germany. Similarly, the Court noted that, under all circumstances, whether part of an armed conflict or not, the obligation to ensure compliance with international humanitarian law must be respected.

On the other hand, in its decision the Court also emphasizes that it considers it particularly important to remind all states of their international obligations regarding the transfer of arms to parties to an armed conflict, in order to avoid the risk that such arms are used to violate the aforementioned conventions.

And in this regard the Court emphasized that these obligations are incumbent upon Germany as a state party to the Conventions with regard to its provision of arms to Israel.

Finally, the Court rejected Germany’s request to dismiss the case for lack of jurisdiction, and will therefore continue with the process involving a review of Germany’s conduct before it reduced its material support to Israel, among other points.

The Government of Reconciliation and National Unity wishes to express its recognition of the Court’s decision to remind all states of their international obligations with respect to the transfer of arms to Israel, including Germany.This reaffirms that no state can ignore its obligations with respect to the risk of genocide in Gaza and other violations of international law.

The Government of Reconciliation and National Unity reaffirms its firm commitment to the rule of law at the international level and the peaceful settlement of disputes between states.

Managua, April 30, 2024

Government of Reconciliation and

National Unity

Republic of Nicaragua

Canal 4

https://libya360.wordpress.com/2024/04/ ... t-germany/

As ICC Interviews Gaza Hospital Staff, US Threatens Against Prosecuting Israeli Officials for War Crimes
Posted by INTERNATIONALIST 360° on APRIL 30, 2024
The Cradle

Image

Gaza’s two largest hospitals, Al-Shifa and Al-Nasser, have witnessed brutal Israeli attacks throughout the war

International Criminal Court (ICC) prosecutors have held meetings with the staff of Gaza’s two largest hospitals, Al-Shifa Hospital in the north of the strip and Al-Nasser Hospital in the southern city of Khan Yunis.

Two unnamed sources told Reuters on 29 April that ICC prosecutors have listened to the testimonies of several staff members of the two hospitals – both of which have been stormed by the Israeli army since the start of the war in October.

One source said that the Israeli army’s operations in and around both hospitals could become part of an ICC investigation. The sources refused to provide further details, and the ICC prosecutor’s office declined to comment on the operational aspect of the probe, citing concerns over the safety of witnesses and victims.

The ICC has said it is investigating both sides of the conflict.

In November, Al-Shifa Hospital was invaded by the Israeli army, who evacuated its staff at gunpoint and turned the facility into a detention center. The hospital was attacked again on 18 March, and hundreds were killed in a subsequent two-week Israeli operation inside and around the medical center.

Khan Yunis‘ Al-Nasser hospital was also stormed by Israeli troops in February. Several people were killed, including patients.

Palestinian rescue workers demanded urgent probes and international intervention following this month’s discovery of hundreds of bodies – many unidentifiable – buried in mass graves near the two hospitals.

Some of the bodies found showed signs of torture and execution. Other bodies had missing organs. Among the corpses found at the mass graves were those of children and elderly persons.



The investigations come after reports earlier this month saying the ICC was looking to issue arrest warrants against top Israeli officials – including Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Yoav Gallant.

Netanyahu is reportedly in a state of extreme anxiety over the matter. According to Hebrew reports, Washington is involved in an effort to block the ICC from issuing the warrants.

A bipartisan group of US lawmakers has threatened the ICC with “retaliation” if international arrest warrants are issued against senior Israeli officials for war crimes committed in Gaza.

“Legislation to that effect is already in the works,” officials told Axios on 29 April.

US lawmakers threaten ICC against issuing arrest warrants for Israeli officials

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US law allows for the use of military force in The Hague to ‘liberate‘ any US citizen or citizen of a US-allied country being held by the ICC

A bipartisan group of US lawmakers has threatened the International Criminal Court (ICC) with “retaliation” if international arrest warrants are issued against senior Israeli officials for war crimes committed in Gaza.

According to officials who spoke with Axios, “legislation to that effect is already in the works.”

House Foreign Affairs Committee Chair Michael McCaul told the US publication that the legislation would call for sanctions against ICC officials “involved in investigating the US and its allies.“

Representative Brad Sherman is quoted as saying that Washington should “think of whether we stay a signatory“ to the Rome Statute — the treaty that established the ICC and established four core international crimes: genocide, crimes against humanity, war crimes, and the crime of aggression.

Neither Washington nor Tel Aviv are among the 124 states that remain signatories of the ICC Rome Statute of 1998.

“We have to think about talking to some of the countries that have ratified [the treaty] as to whether they want to support the organization,“ he added.

“If unchallenged by the Biden administration, the ICC could create and assume unprecedented power to issue arrest warrants against American political leaders, American diplomats, and American military personnel,“ House Speaker Mike Johnson said in a statement issued on 29 April.

The Republican lawmaker also called on the White House to “immediately and unequivocally demand that the ICC stand down” and “use every available tool to prevent such an abomination.”

Based in The Hague, Netherlands, the ICC has been investigating war crimes committed by the Israeli military in Gaza. The court says it is also probing alleged violations by Palestinian resistance groups.

After reports broke earlier this month saying the ICC was looking to issue arrest warrants against top Israeli officials – including Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Yoav Gallant – the US and its allies began pressuring the court to back out, claiming the warrants could “jeopardize” a ceasefire deal for Gaza.

“Group of Seven nations have begun a quiet diplomatic effort to convey that message to the Hague-based court,” diplomatic sources who spoke with Bloomberg are quoted as saying.

Israel has been accused of genocide by the International Court of Justice (ICJ), also based in The Hague.

An interim ruling at the start of the year determined that Israel was plausibly guilty of the crime of genocide and ordered it to stop genocidal acts during its war on Gaza and take measures to guarantee the efficient provision of humanitarian aid to the strip.

In 2002, two years after Washington withdrew from the Rome Statute, then-president George W Bush signed into law the “American Servicemembers Protection Act of 2002,” which authorizes the use of military force in the Netherlands to “liberate” any US citizen or citizen of a US-allied country held by the ICC.



https://libya360.wordpress.com/2024/04/ ... ar-crimes/

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‘This Weaponization Is Meant to Shift Focus Away From Gaza’:
CounterSpin interview with Sam on Students for Justice in Palestine
JANINE JACKSON

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Janine Jackson interviewed Sam, representative from National Students for Justice in Palestine, for the April 26, 2024, episode of CounterSpin. This is a lightly edited transcript.

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National Students for Justice in Palestine

Janine Jackson: There is a long and growing list of US college campuses where encampments and other forms of protests are going on, in efforts to get college administrations to divest their deep and powerful resources from weapons manufacturers, and other ways and means of enabling Israel’s war on Palestinians, assaults that have killed some 34,000 people just since the Hamas attack of October 7.

One key group on campuses has been SJP, Students for Justice in Palestine. It’s not a new, hastily formed group; they’ve been around and on the ground for decades.

We’re joined now by Sam, a representative of National Students for Justice in Palestine. Welcome to CounterSpin.

Sam: Thank you for having me.
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Middle East Eye (4/8/24)
JJ: I can only imagine what a time this is for you, but certainly a time when the need for your group is crystal clear. Individuals who want to speak up about the genocide in Palestine are helped by the knowledge that there are other people with them, behind them, but also that there are organizations that exist to support them and their right to speak out. I wonder, is that maybe especially true for students, whose rights exist on paper, but are not always acknowledged in reality?

S: Yes and no. I think a lot of people definitely want to support students, because what we’re doing is very visible, and also I think people are more willing to assume good faith from 20-year-olds. At the same time, also, free speech on college campuses, especially private campuses, the First Amendment doesn’t apply. So if you’re on a campus, that means that it is sometimes harder to speak out, especially because we’re seeing students getting suspended, and when they get suspended, they get banned from campus, they get evicted from their student housing, sometimes they lose access to healthcare. And, basically, the schools control a lot more of students’ lives than any institution does for adults in the workforce, for example.

JJ: Right. So what are you doing day to day? You’re at National SJP, and folks should know that there are hundreds of entities on campuses, but what are you doing? How do you see your job right now?

S: SJP is a network of chapters that work together. It’s not like they’re branches, where we are giving them orders; they have full autonomy to do what they want within this network.

So what we’re doing is what we’ve been trying to do for our entire existence, which is act as a hub, act as a resource center, provide resources to students, connect them with each other, offer advice, offer financial support when we can. One thing we’re really trying to do is pull everything together, basically present a consistent narrative to the public around this movement.
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New York Times (4/29/24)
JJ: Speaking of narrative, the claim that anyone voicing anti-genocide or pro-Palestinian ideas is antisemitic is apparently convincing for some people whose view of the world comes through the TV or the newspaper. But it’s an idea that is blown apart by any visit to a student protest. It’s just not a true thing to say. And I wonder what you would say about narratives. It’s obviously about work, supporting people, but on the narrative space, what are you trying to shift?

S: I mean, I’m Jewish. I’m fairly observant. I was at a Seder last night. When people say the pro-Palestinian movement is antisemitic, they’re lying. I’m just flat-out saying I think a lot of people, on some level, know that this isn’t about Jews. This isn’t about Judaism. It’s about the fact that Israel is committing a genocide in our people’s name. And if you support it, that is going to lead people to make a bunch of bad inferences about you, because you’re vocally supporting a genocide.

This weaponization is meant to shift focus away from Gaza, away from Palestine, the people who are being massacred, the people whose bodies they found in a mass grave at a hospital yesterday. The point is to distract from the fact that there is no moral case to defend what Israel was doing. So the only thing that Zionists have going for them is just smears, attacking the movement, tone-policing, demanding we take stances that they’re never asked to take. No one ever asks pro-Israel protestors, “Do you condemn the Israeli government,” because Israel is seen as a legitimate entity.

First of all, I want to clarify, this is about Palestine. I don’t want to get too far into talking about how the genocide, the Zionist backlash to the movement, affects me as a Jewish person, because I have a roof over my head. There’s not going to be a bomb dropping into my home.

The narrative that we’re really trying to put out is this, what we’re calling the Popular University for Gaza, and it’s an overarching campaign narrative over this. Basically, the idea is that everything that’s happening is laying bare the fact that universities do not care about their students, or their staff, or their faculty, who are the people who make the university a university, and not just an investment firm. They care about their investments and profit and their reputation and, essentially, managing social change.
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Columbia University Press Blog (2/27/19)
So what we’re doing is, as students, making encampments, taking up space on their campuses. And a crucial part of these encampments is the programming in them. It’s drawing on the traditions of Freedom Schools in the ’60s and in the South, and also the Popular University for Palestine, which was a movement, I think it’s still ongoing, in Palestine, basically educators teaching for liberation, teaching about the history of Palestinian figures, about resistance, about colonialism.

But the idea is that students are inserting themselves, forcibly disrupting the university’s normal business; and threatening the university’s reputation is a big part of it, and just rejecting their legitimacy, establishing the Popular University for teaching, where scholarship is done for the benefit of the people, not for preserving hegemony.

With this whole thing, we’re trying to emphasize, basically, that our universities, they have built all these reputations and all these super great things about them, but they don’t care about the people in them. So we’re going to take the structures that make up them, which are the people within them, and essentially turn them toward liberation, and against imperialism, against the ruling class.
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Reuters (4/29/24)
JJ: Well, thank you very much. I want to say it’s very refreshing, and refreshing is not enough. A lot of folks are drawing inspiration from hearing people say, “The New York Times is saying I’m antisemitic. Maybe I should shut up, you know? Media are saying I’m disruptive. Oh, maybe I should quiet down.” I don’t see any evidence of shutting up or quieting down, despite, really, the full narrative power, along with other kinds of power, being brought against protesters. It doesn’t seem to be shutting people up.

S: No, because that’s the thing, is students have had enough, students are perfectly willing now to risk suspension, risk expulsion, because they know that, essentially, the university’s prestige has been shattered. Even me, I’m currently in school, I’m a grad student. I’ve realized, so far I’ve been OK, but even if I did get expelled, or forced to drop out of my program, that’s a risk I’m willing to take. That’s a tiny sacrifice compared to what people in Palestine are going through. We are willing to sacrifice our futures in a system that increasingly doesn’t give us a future anyway. I think that’s another big part of it, is the feeling that, basically, even if you get a degree, you’re still going to be living precariously for a decade.

And another thing is, also, that today’s college seniors graduated from high school in the spring of 2020. They never really had a normal college experience. Their freshman year was online, so they never developed the bonds with that university, traditional attachment to the university. And also, the universities, the way they handled Covid generally has been terrible, and just seeing them completely disregard their students during the pandemic, I think, has really radicalized a lot of students. Basically, they’re willing to defy the institution.

This is first and foremost about Gaza. It’s about the genocide, it’s about Palestine. It’s not about standing with Columbia students. They have repeatedly asked: Don’t center them; center Gaza. And, basically, we reject the university system as the arbiter of our futures, the arbiter of right and wrong. And we’re going to make our own learning spaces until they listen to us and stop investing our tuition dollars in genocide.

So yeah, free Palestine.

JJ: We’ve been speaking with Sam from Students for Justice in Palestine, NationalSJP.org. Thank you so much, Sam, for joining us this week on CounterSpin.

S: Yeah, thanks for having me.

https://fair.org/home/this-weaponizatio ... from-gaza/

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PFLP: Workers and Free Peoples of the World.. Unite Against Enemies of Humanity
Posted by INTERNATIONALIST 360° on MAY 1, 2024

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[Statement issued by the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine on International Workers’ Day

Long live the first of May as a day of struggle for the workers and the free people of the world against the enemies of humanity.


O our great Palestinian people,
O people of the Palestinian working class and strugglers everywhere,
O all the free and honorable in our nation and the world,

Every year on the first of May, the peoples of the world, especially the global working class, and all the poor, oppressed, and downtrodden in this world, celebrate in the face of the brutal, savage, and enslaving practices perpetrated against them by a ferocious financial elite, which disregards all human values and principles, striving with all their might to perpetuate their control and dominance over the peoples of the world and their resources, using for their political, economic, and social objectives everything that military industries and modern technology have developed, and all methods of treachery and deceit, to achieve their goals and interests, without any moral or human scruple or conscience.

Our people, along with all the workers and free people of the world, commemorate the first of May this year, at a time when they are subjected to the most brutal and fierce campaign of genocide and ethnic cleansing, surpassing in savagery and bloodiness the fascists and the Nazis, at the hands of a group of murderers calling themselves an army for an invasive replacement entity, under the leadership, partnership, support, cover, and complicity of the American administration and the colonial Western imperial powers, the enemies of humanity. They believe that, with their crimes and brutality, they can break the will of our people and impose surrender and defeat on them. In a frenzied attempt not only to kill humans and destroy stones and uproot trees but also to erase the identity, history, and civilization of our people, and make it impossible for our people to remain on their land.

At a time when the massacres and crimes committed by the zionist-imperialist alliance continue and escalate, our steadfast people, believing in the justice of their cause, in all their cities, villages, and towns, across the entire land of historic Palestine, and in all places of their presence, especially our steadfast people in the Gaza Strip, write a new page of heroism and miracle each day, the likes of which history has rarely witnessed. Despite the wounds and pain, despite the blood and body parts, and the torrent of flowing blood, and ethnic cleansing in its ugliest forms, our people always rise from under the rubble and debris, carrying their wounds and marching towards victory and freedom, raising the flag of resistance, with more determination and belief in the justice of their cause and the inevitability of victory, their weapons being patience, steadfastness, and resistance, and the support of all the free and honorable people in our nation and the world.

As we bow in reverence and awe before the sacrifices, steadfastness, and determination of our people, we must emphasize the importance of strengthening the internal front and fortifying it, and unity of stance and action across various political, field, and social levels, and depriving the enemy of the ability to achieve through deceit and political maneuvers what it failed to achieve on the battlefields.

We also call for enhancing social solidarity and support among the various political and social components of our people, to overcome this ordeal with greater strength and resilience in the face of conspiracies and thwart them.

In light of the intensification of the confrontation between the forces of aggression, injustice, and war profiteers, and the forces of peace, justice, freedom, and humanity in the world, despite all the financial capabilities, military capabilities, and economic hegemony that the forces of aggression possess, the forces of freedom and justice grow more aware and discerning in defending their interests against the imperialist plans aiming to eliminate all noble human and ethical values. In this context, we extend our highest expressions of thanks and appreciation to all the free and honorable in the world, who stand today alongside our people and their just cause, in the face of imperialist-zionist crimes.

We send a salute of respect and pride to the university students all over the world, especially to the students at American universities, who are protesting against the crimes of the occupation and the support of the U.S. administration for it, and who demand a halt to the aggression against the Palestinian people.

We also salute all the labor and women’s organizations that stand in solidarity with our people and their cause, and all the free and honorable who fill the squares and fields of the capitals and cities of the world in support of our people and supporting their just cause.

Glory and eternity to the martyrs, freedom to the prisoners, and healing to the wounded.

A salute to our steadfast people across the entire land of historic Palestine and in all places of their presence.

A salute of love and loyalty to our brave workers as they, alongside all components of our people — political and social — wage the battle for national, economic, and social liberation.

A salute to the global working class in the face of injustice, aggression, and the onslaught of global imperialism.

A salute to all the honorable and free people in the world who stand against injustice and aggression.

Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, Central Media Department

May 1, 2024

https://libya360.wordpress.com/2024/05/ ... -humanity/
"There is great chaos under heaven; the situation is excellent."

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Re: Palestine

Post by blindpig » Fri May 03, 2024 11:30 am

Israel-US Gaza Plan Stares Us in the Face
May 1, 2024

The media is pretending the West’s efforts to secure a ceasefire are serious. But a different script has clearly been written in advance.

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Smoke and flames billow after Israeli forces struck a high-rise tower in Gaza City, Oct. 7, 2023. (Palestinian News & Information Agency, Wafa, in contract with APAimages, CC BY-SA 3.0)

By Jonathan Cook
Jonathan-Cook.net

One does not need to be a fortune-teller to understand that the Israel-U.S. game plan for Gaza runs something like this:

In public, Biden appears “tough” on Netanyahu, urging him not to “invade” Rafah and pressuring him to allow more “humanitarian aid” into Gaza.

But already the White House is preparing the ground to subvert its own messaging. It insists that Israel has offered an “extraordinarily generous” deal to Hamas – one that, Washington suggests, amounts to a ceasefire. It doesn’t. According to reports, the best Israel has offered is an undefined “period of sustained calm”. Even that promise can’t be trusted.

If Hamas accepts the “deal” and agrees to return some of the hostages, the bombing eases for a short while but the famine intensifies, justified by Israel’s determination for “total victory” against Hamas – something that is impossible to achieve. This will simply delay, for a matter of days or weeks, Israel’s move to step 5 below.

If, as seems more likely, Hamas rejects the “deal”, it will be painted as the intransigent party and blamed for seeking to continue the “war”. (Note: This was never a war. Only the West pretends either that you can be at war with a territory you’ve been occupying for decades, or that Hamas “started the war” with its October 7 attack when Israel has been blockading the enclave, creating despair and incremental malnutrition there, for 17 years.)

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Blinken meets Netanyahu in Tel Aviv in November 2023. (Israeli Government Press Office)

Last night US Secretary of State Antony Blinken moved this script on by stating Hamas was “the only thing standing between the people of Gaza and a ceasefire… They have to decide and they have to decide quickly”.

The U.S. will announce that Israel has devised a humanitarian plan that satisfies the conditions Biden laid down for an attack on Rafah to begin.

This will give the U.S., Europe and the region the pretext to stand back as Israel launches the long-awaited assault – an attack Biden has previously asserted would be a “red line”, leading to mass civilian casualties. All that will be forgotten.

As Middle East Eye reports, Israel is building a ring of checkpoints around Rafah. Netanyahu will suggest, falsely, that these guarantee its attack meets the conditions laid down in international humanitarian law. Women and children will be allowed out – if they can reach a checkpoint before Israel’s carpet bombing kills them along the way.

All men in Rafah, and any women and children who remain, will be treated as armed combatants. If they are not killed by the bombing or falling rubble, they will be either summarily executed or dragged off to Israel’s torture chambers. No one will mention that any Hamas fighters who were in Rafah were able to leave through the tunnels.

Rafah will be destroyed, leaving the entire strip in ruins, and the Israeli-induced famine will worsen. The West will throw up its hands, say Hamas brought this on Gaza, agonise over what to do, and press third countries – especially Arab countries – for a “humanitarian plan” that relocates the survivors out of Gaza.

The western media will continue describing Israel’s genocide in Gaza in purely humanitarian terms, as though this “disaster” was an act of God.

Under U.S. pressure, the International Court of Justice, or World Court, will be in no hurry to issue a definitive ruling on whether South Africa’s case that Israel is committing a genocide – which it has already found “plausible” – is proved.

Whatever the World Court eventually decides, and it is almost impossible to imagine it won’t determine that Israel carried out a genocide, it will be too late. The western political and media class will have moved on, leaving it to the historians to decide what it all meant.

Meanwhile, Israel is already using the precedents it has created in Gaza, and its erosion of the long-established principles of international law, as the blueprint for the West Bank. Saying Hamas has not been completely routed in Gaza but is using this other Palestinian enclave as its base, Israel will gradually intensify the pressures on the West Bank with another blockade. Rinse and repeat.

That’s the likely plan. Our job is to do everything in our power to stop them making it a reality.

https://consortiumnews.com/2024/05/01/i ... -the-face/

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US interceptors saw dismal success rate defending Israel against Iran: Report

The US, along with the UK, France, and Jordan, openly acted to defend Israel against Iran's retaliatory attack

News Desk

MAY 1, 2024

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(Photo Credit: US Navy)

US interceptor missiles launched in support of Israel during Iran's retaliatory attack last month recorded a 25 percent success rate, according to a report by Israel's Army Radio on 1 May.

The report highlights that “only two of eight” missiles launched from US warships in the Red Sea succeeded in hitting Iranian missiles and drones that swarmed the combined defenses of Israel, Jordan, France, the US, and the UK.

On the other hand, Israeli interceptors reportedly achieved a “90 percent” success rate against the Iranian barrage. Tel Aviv claimed its defenses intercepted 99 percent of the projectiles fired during Operation True Promise.

Nevertheless, the claim was discredited by Israeli media days later.

“The interception percentage of the missiles is about 84 percent, a very high percentage but not comparable to the numbers that the IDF provided, which gave the feeling that there had been an absolute interception of all Iranian threats,” Israeli military expert Or Fialkov told Hebrew daily Maariv in an interview last month.

Israel had come under a massive attack from Iran on 13 April in retaliation for the bombing of the Iranian consulate in Damascus two weeks earlier. According to western officials, the Islamic Republic launched 185 drones, three dozen cruise missiles, and 110 ballistic missiles, seeking to overwhelm the air defenses of Israel and its allies.

Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi hailed the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) for the success of its operation against Israel, highlighting that Tehran acted alone against Israel and its allies. He also claimed that “over 10 countries” took part in defending Tel Aviv.

“[Operation True Promise] took place even though Iran did not use the element of surprise but came according to a prior announcement. Therefore, the opposing front mobilized all its strength on that day and at the hour of the operation’s implementation to thwart it."

https://thecradle.co/articles/us-interc ... ran-report

Israeli settlers vandalize Gaza aid in latest attack on humanitarian convoy

Food and medicine have been blocked from reaching Gaza several times due to settler sabotage and military delays

News Desk

MAY 1, 2024

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(Photo Credit: The New Arab)

A group of Israeli settlers attacked and damaged an aid convoy heading to Gaza from Jordan on 30 April.

Videos show settlers climbing the aid trucks and dumping their food contents onto the ground as Gaza continues to face a looming famine.

The new shipment of aid to Gaza was announced by US Secretary of State Antony Blinken on Tuesday following his meeting with Jordanian officials.


The Foreign Ministry of Jordan slammed the settlers in a statement, referring to them as “extremists.”

“Today, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Expatriate Affairs condemned in the strongest terms the attack by extremist Israeli settlers on two Jordanian aid convoys carrying food, flour, and other humanitarian aid to the Gaza Strip,” it said in the statement.

The government body added that one of the trucks was headed to the Kerem Shalom (Karam Salem) crossing, and the other was the first truck expected to enter the strip through the Erez crossing.

“The Ministry considered the failure of the Israeli government to protect the two aid convoys and allowing them to be attacked as a gross violation of its legal obligations, as the occupying power, and of its obligations to allow aid to enter Gaza,” the statement continued.

The two trucks continued despite the attack, according to the foreign ministry’s official spokesman, Dr Sufyan al-Qudah, to deliver needed aid “in light of the humanitarian catastrophe [Gaza] is facing.”


Israeli settlers have repeatedly attacked and obstructed aid trucks from entering Gaza.

Footage of setters blocking an aid truck at the Nitzana border crossing in February shows them smiling and carrying flags. One claimed to be “protecting Israel” by “blocking food from Hamas.”

“Someone is going to sleep hungry tonight,” a settler could be heard saying into a megaphone.

In another case, in the Ashdod port, roughly 38 kilometers north of Gaza, settlers barred trucks from leaving the port and began inspecting the trucks’ documents and contents.

Anadolu Agency reported that one settler brought his entire family with him “to stop the trucks from supplying oxygen to Palestinian resistance group Hamas in Gaza.”

“All the Gaza people, from our side, are terrorists,” the settler said. “Why should we send food and fuel to Gaza? It's not normal.”

An Oxfam report also revealed that aid entry into Gaza was deliberately delayed for up to 20 days as deliveries were “subjected to onerous, repetitive and unpredictable bureaucratic procedures."

https://thecradle.co/articles/israeli-s ... ian-convoy

To Israel’s horror, Hamas brings ‘two-state solution’ back into focus

Not only has Israel failed to defeat Hamas, but it is being dragged into discussions on Palestinian statehood, which its Gaza genocide has put back onto the international agenda.


A Cradle Contributor

MAY 2, 2024

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(Photo Credit: The Cradle)
After seven months of a brutal military assault on Gaza, it is abundantly clear that Israel has not succeeded in eradicating Hamas. Instead of delivering a decisive military victory, the occupation state finds itself being drawn kicking and screaming into negotiations over a two-state solution.

Withstanding the impracticality of establishing a genuinely independent, sovereign Palestinian state in the occupied West Bank, East Jerusalem, and Gaza Strip, this scenario is becoming increasingly likely despite long-standing opposition from the Israeli government. It is an extraordinary development, particularly as Tel Aviv’s strategy, as articulated by foreign policy advisor Ophir Falk, was mainly to “destroy Hamas” and its military and governance capabilities entirely.

Today, the two-state option is frantically being resuscitated in Washington, of all places, and by stalwart allies of Tel Aviv.

Martin Indyk, a former US ambassador to Israel and staunch supporter of the occupation state, argues in Foreign Affairs magazine that far from being “dead,” the two-state solution now looks to be the only reasonable game in town:

The reason for this revival is not complicated. There are, after all, only a few possible alternatives to the two-state solution. There is Hamas’ solution, which is the destruction of Israel. There is the Israeli ultra-right’s solution, which is the Israeli annexation of the West Bank, the dismantling of the Palestinian Authority (PA), and the deportation of Palestinians to other countries. There is the ‘conflict management’ approach pursued for the last decade or so by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, which aimed to maintain the status quo indefinitely – and the world has seen how that worked out. And there is the idea of a binational state in which Jews would become a minority, thus ending Israel’s status as a Jewish state. None of those alternatives would resolve the conflict – at least not without causing even greater calamities. And so if the conflict is to be resolved peacefully, the two-state solution is the only idea left standing.

Disarmament for statehood?

In widely publicized comments last week, Khalil al-Hayya, deputy head of Hamas in Gaza, has appeared to endorse the 1967 borders for a future Palestinian state explicitly.

In a recent interview with AP, Hayya spoke of “a fully sovereign Palestinian state in the West Bank and Gaza Strip and the return of Palestinian refugees in accordance with the international resolutions” along Israel’s pre-1967 borders.

Most significantly, though, he hinted that the resistance movement’s military wing, Al-Qassam Brigades, could potentially dissolve itself and/or fold its cadres into a Palestinian national army:

All the experiences of people who fought against occupiers, when they became independent and obtained their rights and their state, what have these forces done? They have turned into political parties and their defending fighting forces have turned into the national army.

Instead of embracing these possibilities, Falk dismissed Hayya as a “high-ranking terrorist” and sought to redirect the conversation back to intransigent Israeli demands:

“Prime Minister Netanyahu’s government set a mission to destroy Hamas’ military and governing capabilities in Gaza, free the hostages, and ensure that Gaza does not pose a threat to Israel and the rest of the civilized world in the future,” he said, adding, “Those goals will be achieved.”

Diplomacy in Doha and Istanbul

Although Hayya emphasized that his views are aligned with Hamas’ historical positions, as articulated by the resistance movement’s spiritual leader, Sheikh Ahmed Yassin, in 1998 and reiterated in its 2017 charter of general principles and policies, his public statements highlight the immense political pressures faced by Hamas, notably from political allies Qatar and Turkiye.

These pressures aim to foster high-level international and regional talks that could potentially end the conflict and establish ‘permanent stability.’ As with any negotiation, there are essential questions to address: Who will have the authority to enforce these terms? What limitations will be imposed? These are critical issues for Palestinians besieged in Gaza and for their broader cause – as well as for Al-Qassam and the entire resistance.

Behind the scenes, both Qatar and Turkiye have been instrumental in shaping Hamas’ new diplomatic approach. The movement’s external leaders, including Khaled Meshal and Ismail Haniyeh, have participated in discussions facilitated by both countries in Doha and Istanbul.

Earlier this month, in a joint press conference with his Qatari counterpart, Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al-Thani, Turkiye’s Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan was explicitly supportive, also highlighting the west’s positive stance toward intensifying peace efforts based on the two-state solution.

“In our political talks with Hamas for years, they have accepted a Palestinian state to be established within the 1967 borders,” Fidan told reporters.

“They have told me that following the establishment of the Palestinian state, Hamas would no longer need an armed wing and they would continue as a political party,” he added.

The ball is in Israel’s court

Although Israel’s western allies have long sought to exclude Hamas from any and all Palestinian processes, it has become abundantly clear that Gaza’s military leadership, particularly Al-Qassam Brigades, is set to play a crucial role in any negotiation process.

This is an extraordinary victory of sorts for Hamas, which has successfully managed to insert itself into future deliberations, not only on Gaza but Palestine as a whole. The movement’s tactical decision to endorse the 1967 borders not only aims to position Hamas as a credible negotiator but also strategically corners the far-right coalition government of Benjamin Netanyahu.

By signaling willingness to demilitarize in exchange for statehood, Hamas aims to place the onus on Tel Aviv, toying with the inherent vulnerability of its coalition government and potentially precipitating its collapse. This move not only improves Hamas’ leverage in any forthcoming negotiations but, ironically, also aligns with the US interests in seeing regime change in Israel.

It is clear that Hamas has – whether out of conviction, under pressure, or as a wily tactic – become a necessary partner in broader and long-term political negotiations concerning the future of Palestine and the region.

Over the years, the movement has itself been compelled to engage in several rounds of indirect negotiations with Israel, most notably at the end of the first decade of the millennium when Hamas was still based in Damascus. That was part of a larger regional effort spurred by Ankara to rejuvenate the peace process.

Twenty-six years ago, Khaled Meshaal met with former US President Jimmy Carter in Damascus during the latter’s nine-day West Asia tour aimed at breaking the deadlock between Israel and Hamas early in their governance of Gaza.

The Palestinian resistance movement enjoyed considerable leeway for political maneuvering due to the geopolitical climate at the time. Carter reported that Hamas expressed willingness to accept a Palestinian state within the 1967 borders if agreed upon by the Palestinians and acknowledged Israel’s right to exist peacefully as a neighboring state.

Compelling Israel to do Hamas’ will

But today, Hamas’ renewed strength comes from two main factors: the relentless, unified military pushback by the region’s Axis of Resistance in support of their Palestinian allies and unprecedented global condemnation of Israel’s Gaza genocide – both sharply impacting and confounding Tel Aviv’s initial, over-confident war objectives.

Rather than defeating Hamas, Israel now finds itself on the back foot, engaging in negotiations that center around the one outcome it had least expected – that of a two-state solution.

Tel Aviv’s disturbing dilemma also showcases the political acumen of Hamas and the Palestinian resistance, who recognized the utility of hard power in achieving political ends rather than as an end in itself – in sharp contrast to Israel’s approach throughout this conflict.

The fact that, seven months after Operation Al-Aqsa Flood, Hamas retains its array of capabilities signifies not only the abject failure of Israel’s military and political objectives but also an unexpected humbling of Tel Aviv. Israel, today, is being forced into negotiations on Palestinian statehood that it has assiduously avoided for 30 long years.

This shift is undoubtedly energized by the unprecedented US student protest movement and other anti-colonial voices around the world, adding a global dimension to the local struggle. These developments are yet another ace in the hand for Hamas and another nail in the coffin for Israeli leverage.

https://thecradle.co/articles/to-israel ... into-focus

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Shooting Children: The Other IDF Specialty
Posted by INTERNATIONALIST 360° on MAY 2, 2024
C.B. Forde

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Salma Jaber, 4 years old. Killed by an Israeli tank crew.

Israeli soldiers enjoy killing Palestinian children. This is not hyperbole. This is a tragic fact.

The endless cruelty that we are witnessing in Gaza and the West Bank raises a crucial question—what is the point of remembering the Holocaust of the early 1940s when the people on whom it was committed have now became perpetrators of a Holocaust upon the Palestinian people, whom they see as non-human? All the intimidation that the Holocaust Industry has carried out through the years, all the name-calling of anti-Semitic this and anti-Semitic that, all the laws to protect the Jews—was it all a ploy to hide what has been and is going on in Israel since 1948?

Is the current Palestinian genocide the bitter fruit of this Holocaust Industry, because it has made us blind to Israel’s cruelty, because we are forever lost in the cruelty of yesteryears?

It would appear that the world is emerging from the “hold” that the earlier Holocaust has had upon the modern mind because it is seeing atrocities unimaginable today, carried out by the very hands that we imagined would be less cruel because of the memory of that earlier Holocaust. But no. We see the same dehumnaization, followed by the same gleeful mass murder.

The fact remains, Israeli soldiers enjoy killing Palestinians, especially children. No doubt there is the deep-seated Israeli logic of annihilating future “terrorists.”

More questions come to the fore.

What kind of martial culture exists in the Israeli army which encourages the shooting of little children?

What kind of spirit inhabits an Israeli soldier who aims carefully and sprays a 4-year-old girl on the road with machine gun fire, and then goes off to relax, having done a good day’s work?

How cold must the blood be to shoot a little boy sitting in his father’s car, and then go about with other duties?

Or is it that these Israeli soldiers do not see children, only the hated, non-human “Palestinians” who must utterly be destroyed, no matter what their age or sex?

And all the while, America sends more bombs, more bullets, as if to say, “Keep up the good work.”

“Israeli forces have installed Israeli military infrastructure, like checkpoints, all throughout the occupied West Bank. Palestinian children are at risk every time they are forced to interact with Israeli soldiers,” said Ayed Abu Eqtaish, accountability program director at DCIP. “Israeli forces opened fire with no regard for Ruqaya’s life. This is just one example of the impunity enjoyed by Israeli forces emboldened in an environment where the international community refuses to hold them accountable” (Defense for Children International-Palestine).

“You guys are saying that this is a twelve-year old boy. Stop it. This is a twelve-year old terrorist” (Itamar Ben-Gvir, Israeli National Security Minister).

12-year-old boy holding firework shot dead dy IDF, family to sue Israelis responsible

We are now sadly familiar with what the bombs have wrought in Gaza— 32,552 Palestinians killed, including 13,000 children, and 74,980 wounded. And counting…

What about the bullets dutifully supplied by the cargo-plane load? Since October 7, the US has sent 100 shipments of munitions to Israel.
Leaving aside what these bullets hit when fired at Hamas, this ammo is also used to kill children (not to mention unarmed men and women).

For example, on March 28, 2024, Israeli soldiers shot dead and then bulldozed into a pit full of garbage two Palestinian men who were stopped on a road and then shot. One of them was waving a white piece of fabric. They were just trying to go home on foot.

Here is a very brief and sad list of some of the many children killed by Israeli soldiers, brief because it is so very difficult to catalogue the slaughter of such beautiful little lives, as you are quickly overwhelmed by utter horror.

January 8, 2024, Ramallah, West Bank
Ruqaya Ahmad Odeh Jahalin, aged 4.
Her crime: She was sitting in the backseat of a taxi when she was shot. The IDF confiscated her body, for full investigation.

January 24, 2024. Al-Amal, west of Khan Younis
Nahedh Barbakh, aged 13.
His crime: He stepped outside his house, waving a white flag in order to evacuate as ordered by the IDF. He was shot three times and killed. His older brother, Ramez, aged 20, tried to rescue him but was also shot dead. The family could not recover their bodies because of intense gunfire. The family escaped by breaking through the rear wall of their home in order to avoid going out into the street. The bodies of their two sons were never recovered.

February 22, 2024, West Bank
Nihal Abu Ayash, aged 16.
His crime: He was heading off to play soccer. He was shot first in the leg and then when he got up, he was shot in the head.

December 5, 2023, Gaza City
Salma Jaber, aged 4.
Her crime: She and nher family were trying to escape. She and her nine-year old sister were sprayed with bullets from a tank. Though shot, little Salma bravely tried to run away. When her father picked her up, he too was shot in the arm. Her sister, though shot at, miraculously survived. Little Salma did not.

March 4, 2024. Burin, south of Nablus in the northern occupied West Bank
Amr Mohamed Ghaleb Najjar, aged 10.
His crime: Sitting in his father’s car. Shot in the head by the IDF Israeli forces.

March 14, 2024. Shuafat Refugee Camp, Jerusalem
Rami Hamdan Al-Halhouli, aged 12.
His crime: He held up a lit piece of fireworks. Shot through the heart and his body was confiscated.

Will any of theese murderers in uniform ever be known, let alone brought to justice? Don’t hold your breath. The leaders of the world have long accepted the shooting of kids as Israel’s “right of defense.” Therefore, the slaughter will continue. America is happy to supply the bullets and the bombs to kill many, many more children, just like the few noted above. It’s good business, after all. This is “civilization” against “terrorism.”

Few remember this, but the Israeli soldiers have been shooting children for a very long time.

For example, twenty years ago, in May of 2004, in Rafah, little Rawan Abu Zeid, just 3 years old, was shot in the neck by a nameless IDF sniper. A further 22 children were also shot that day.

Palestinian children have been killed since 1948 in Israel.

What kind of a monstrous country is this place they call Israel? And why is it untouchable? Why are its crimes tolerated? Why can no one stop this cruel barbarity? Is killing Palestinian children not a big deal in this world? Whatever happened to the UN, the ICC, even the ICJ? What justifies their salaries, their existence as organized bodies when they have zero power to stop a little girl or boy being shot? How do these people justify what they do?

Israel, along with the entire Western political class, are now the real terrorists, who will kill without any qualms, who sleep very well at night, because they know that no one will stop them.

But we must also not despair, for that is defeat. We can start by not voting for war-pigs, no matter what party they belong to. Stop enabling these cowardly politicians who will do anything to line their pockets, especially start wars and kill innocents, because for them war is the really big business.

We must learn to emerge from the enchantment that party-politics and party-rivalry puts us all in. Stop being loyal to a party name. It is all a ruse to keep us common folk divided, while those we empower look after all their own “special interests.” Find your own way to defeat this political diabolism that has killed off so much of humanity and continues to do so, because we blindly keep voting.

Here is a report of the endless slaughter of children in Israel by their army of criminals. Next time you hear politicians trying to appeal to some “morality” of theirs, just shove this report in their face. They all have the blood of children on their hands. Stop empowering them, and all their ilk.

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

Right out of the US Calvary playbook: "Nits breed lice."

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Türkiye will stop trade with Israel
May 2, 10:45 p.m

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Türkiye will stop trade with Israel

Israeli media: Türkiye decided today, Thursday, to stop trade with Israel. So what does this look like in practice? What trade volume are we talking about? What is the reaction in Israel? Why now?

There is a ban, there is still no official announcement. These events began to gain momentum this morning. Unexpectedly, it turned out that goods were not loaded onto ships heading to the ports of Haifa and Ashdod. Within the framework of trade between Israel and Turkey, imports account for the lion's share, amounting to $6.8 billion, of which 76% are imports from Turkey. Sensitive goods for Israel are cement, plastics and rubber.

Were there first signs and why now? The most significant early sign was the defeat of the ruling AKP in local elections in Turkey in all major cities. In addition, the tiny New Welfare party won two constituencies seen as Erdogan's electoral heartlands on a message calling for an end to trade with Israel. About a week and a half ago, Erdogan held a joint press conference with his German counterpart Steinmeier, at which he declared: “We no longer maintain close commercial ties with Israel, it’s over.” It is quite possible that Erdogan meant exactly what he said when he said “it’s over.” Today Erdogan met with CHP Chairman Ozel in Ankara, and it is quite possible that he was aware of the events - after Ozel himself called for such measures to be taken.

Reactions:
“For many years, the business sectors of both countries have observed measures not to involve economic relations in political events, and it is a pity that the Turkish authorities do not maintain this tradition. The main losers from Erdogan's move are Turkish traders, not the state of Israel. The Israeli economy is strong enough to find alternatives to imports from Turkey, and we, as we at the chamber of commerce, will help all chamber members with trade ties to Turkish industry find new import destinations. We all hope that this crisis will pass soon and we will return to doing business with the Turkish business sector."

“We warned you! Israel must be independent in production and must not depend on other countries. Unfortunately, financial policies encouraged imports, which did not lower prices but harmed agriculture. Tomato imports from Turkey have hurt Gazan farmers responsible for growing 70% of Israel's tomato production. And now this. It’s unpleasant to say: we warned you!”

“For a month and a half now, we at the Association of Industrialists have been warning that Erdogan is going to a complete stop - an embargo. “Unfortunately, Israel suffers from the ‘battered woman’ syndrome—first in denial, then saying it was an accident, then running away, and in the end the truth blows up in our face.”

“As long as Erdogan does this, Israel is collapsing. Just a month ago, we asked the Israeli Ministry of Finance to also respond with a threat and then impose 100% protective tariffs against Turkey to signal to Erdogan and the world that Israel will not remain silent and watch the boycott against it. In addition to weakening and losing national dignity, we have lost an important message to everyone who asks to boycott us - that we are capable of responding to a boycott, that we will not accept it, that any boycott will be punished."

“It’s too l

Google Translatorate to talk about it, but it’s better late than never! We must impose 100% protective tariffs on all imports from Turkey for 3 years! To completely ban imports from there. Only in this way will Erdogan understand that he cannot just play with us, and that his step causes a reaction and is long-term. And these duties will help local industrialists maintain production independence in order to get out of dependence on Turkey.”

Does this mean we won't be seeing more products made in Turkey anytime soon? The answer is no. Not only because a complete ban will take time, but also because businessmen from the two countries have been experimenting with bypass routes for some time now.

https://t.me/c/1414518068/4357 - zinc

Here, as they said in the old advertisement “Believe only in deeds,” Erdogan has made it clear more than once that statements are one thing, but deeds are another.
At the same time, it can be stated that the pressure on the current Nazi regime in Israel is increasing in many directions.
Iran may be pleased with this development in its strategy.

https://colonelcassad.livejournal.com/9131942.html

Google Translator
"There is great chaos under heaven; the situation is excellent."

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blindpig
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Re: Palestine

Post by blindpig » Sat May 04, 2024 11:10 am

Israeli Truce Offer ‘Fails to Address’ Hamas’ Main Terms: Report
MAY 2, 2024

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Destroyed buildings caused by Israeli bombing on the Zuwaida area in the central Gaza Strip. Photo: AFP.

The document detailing the new initiative, published by Lebanese media, does not guarantee a full Israeli withdrawal or permanent ceasefire

Lebanese newspaper Al-Akhbar published on 1 May what it says is the document detailing the latest Egyptian–Israeli proposal for a truce and prisoner exchange in the Gaza Strip.

The Al-Akhbar report details the “basic principles for an agreement between the Israeli side and the Palestinian side in Gaza on the exchange of detainees and prisoners between the two sides and the return of sustainable calm.”

The initiative is made up of three stages.

The first stage lasts 40 days and calls for a temporary cessation of hostilities and the withdrawal of Israeli troops “eastward and away from densely populated areas” towards the border in all areas of Gaza. Israel would cease aerial surveillance of the strip for eight hours a day, and 10 hours on days when prisoners are released.

It also calls for the return of some of the displaced civilians to their homes. Israeli troops would withdraw from Al-Rashid Street to the east near Salah al-Din Street, and the Netzarim Corridor in a manner that allows the delivery of aid and the return of the displaced to their homes.

Israel would allow 500 aid trucks to enter the strip each day, including 250 for the north and 50 fuel trucks. The fuel will be used to operate power stations and equipment for clearing rubble. Efforts to renovate hospitals and bakeries will be ongoing throughout the three stages of the initiative.

Hamas must release at least 33 living Israeli prisoners, including female soldiers, children under the age of 19, the elderly, the sick, and the injured.

For every Israeli female or child released by Hamas, Israel should release 20 minors and female Palestinian prisoners. For every elderly, sick, and injured prisoner, Israel would have to release 20 prisoners over 50 years of age who are also sick and injured, as long as they are not serving a sentence of over 10 years.

For every female soldier released by Hamas, Israel would have to release 20 prisoners serving a life sentence, and another 20 serving up to 10 years, who could be released to Gaza or abroad.

Hamas would provide a list of up to 20 prisoners it wants to be released.

After 16 days, indirect negotiations on a deal to restore “sustainable calm” will take place.

The second stage, lasting 42 days, will see the arrangements for “sustainable calm,“ along with the remaining prisoner exchanges. It also calls for preparation for an Israeli withdrawal from Gaza and the reconstruction of the strip.

The third stage calls for exchanges of bodies from both sides, a five-year reconstruction plan, and a Palestinian vow to refrain from “reconstructing military infrastructure and facilities, and not importing any equipment, raw materials, or other components used for military purposes.”

Al-Akhbar notes in another report released the same day that the initiative falls short of Hamas’ demand for a full withdrawal of Israeli forces from the strip. Israeli forces are already not present in residential and densely populated areas, where the truce paper says Israel must withdraw from.

The initiative also fails to guarantee a full and permanent ceasefire, another of the resistance group’s main terms.

“The problem with the mediators in the file of negotiations with the resistance in Gaza is that they act from the position that the enemy is the victor, and that the resistance is in a weak position that requires it to concede and accept whatever is offered to it,” Al-Akhbar writes.

Hamas has not yet issued a formal response to the proposal.

https://orinocotribune.com/israeli-truc ... ms-report/

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The Students Will Not Tolerate Hypocrisy: The Eighteenth Newsletter (2024)

From universities to grassroots movements worldwide, young people are fighting back against the complicity in Israel’s genocide of Palestians, setting up encampments and facing repression with resilience. This resistance is rooted in a long tradition to impose clarity upon a world encrusted by compromise, from the movement against apartheid in South Africa to China’s May Fourth Movement.
MAY 2, 2024

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Askhat Akhmedyarov (Kazakhstan), Autumn Purge, 2012.

Dear friends,

Greetings from the desk of Tricontinental: Institute for Social Research.

It was inevitable that the Global North governments’ full-throated support for Israel’s genocide against Palestinians would result in furious retribution from their citizenry. That this retribution began in the United States is also not a surprise, given the ongoing cycle of protests that, since October 2023, have contested the US government’s blank cheque to the Israeli government. The US bankrolling of Israel’s extermination campaign against Palestinians includes over one hundred weapons shipments to Israel since 7 October and billions of dollars of aid.

For a long time now, young people in the United States – as in other countries of the Global North – have felt the demise of promise from their society. Permanent precarious work awaits them, even those with higher degrees, and a more precious hold on morality has developed within them due to their own experiments to become better humans in the world. Cruelties of austerity and of patriarchal norms have forced them to turn against their ruling classes. They want something better. The assault against Palestinians has spurred a rupture. How much further these young people will go is yet to be seen.

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Eng Hwee Chu (Malaysia), Lost in Mind, 2008.

Across the United States, students have built encampments on over a hundred of university campuses, including the country’s most prestigious institutions such as Columbia, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Stanford, Emory, Washington University in St. Louis, Vanderbilt, and Yale. The students are part of a range of local campus groups as well as national organisations, among them Students for Justice in Palestine, the Palestinian Youth Movement, Jewish Voice for Peace, CodePink, the Democratic Socialists of America, and the Party for Socialism and Liberation. At these encampments, students sing and study, pray and discuss. These universities have invested their vast endowments in funds that are entangled with the weapons industry and Israeli companies, with the total endowments at US institutions of higher education reaching roughly $840 billion. Seeing their ever-expanding tuition payments go towards institutions that are complicit in and profiting from this genocide is far too much for these students. Hence their determination to resist with their bodies.

Democracy is corroded when basic civil actions such as this are met with the full force of the state’s repressive apparatus. College administrators and local urban authorities have sent in heavily armed police forces to use any means necessary to remove the encampments, further reinforced by placing snipers on campus rooftops at multiple universities. Scenes of sensitive students and faculty members being ripped away from their campuses, tased, brutalised, and arrested by police in riot gear are scattered across social media. But rather than demoralise the youth, these violent measures have simply sparked the creation of new encampments at colleges not only in the United States, but in countries as far afield as Australia, Canada, France, Italy, and the United Kingdom. Excuses such as the tents being a fire hazard might stiffen the resolve of the administrators, but they make no sense to the students, the faculty members who came out to defend them, or concerned people around the world. The images of this violence are reminiscent of the photographs of the massacres against US students protesting the Vietnam War and of police dogs being unleashed on young Black children during the US civil rights movement.

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Liang Yulong (China), May Fourth Movement, 1976.

This is not the first time that young people, particularly college students, have tried to impose clarity upon a world encrusted by compromises. In the United States, earlier generations fought to get their colleges to divest from apartheid South Africa and from the ugly US-driven wars in Southeast Asia and Central America. In 1968, young people from France to India, from the United States to Japan, erupted in anger at the imperialist wars in Algeria, Palestine, and Vietnam, their eyes firmly set on Paris, Tel Aviv, and Washington for their murderous culture. Their attitude was captured by the Pakistani poet Habib Jalib, who sang at Lahore’s Mochi Gate kyun darate ho zindan ki divar se (why do you scare me with the prison’s gate?), and then zulm ki baat ko jahl ki raat ko, main nahin manta main nahin jaanta (oppression’s words, ignorance’s night, I refuse to acknowledge, I refuse to accept).

Since we are at the start of May, it might be valuable to recall the brave young people of China who took to the streets on 4 May 1919 to condemn the humiliations forced upon the Chinese people during the Paris Peace Conference (which resulted in the Treaty of Versailles). During the conference, the imperialist powers decided to give Japan a large part of the Shandong Province, which Germany had seized from China in 1898. In this transfer of power, Chinese youth saw the weakness of China’s republic, which had been set up in 1911. Over four thousand students from thirteen universities in Beijing took to the streets under a banner that read ‘Strive for sovereignty externally, eliminate national traitors internally’. They were angry both at the imperialist powers and their own sixty-member delegation to the Paris conference, led by Minister of Foreign Affairs Lu Zhengxiang. Liang Qichao, a member of the delegation, was so frustrated with the treaty that he sent a bulletin back to China on 2 May, which was published and spurred on the Chinese students. The student protests pressured the Chinese government to dismiss pro-Japanese officials such as Cao Rulin, Zhang Zongxiang, and Lu Zongyu. On 28 June, the Chinese delegation in Paris refused to sign the treaty.

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Nidhal Chamekh (Tunisia), Dessin 8, 2012.

The actions of the Chinese students were powerful and far-reaching, with their May Fourth Movement not only protesting the Treaty of Versailles but unfolding a broader critique of the rot in China’s elite republican culture. The students wanted more, their patriotism finding shelter in currents of left-wing thought such as anarchism but more profoundly in Marxism. Just two years later, several of the important young male intellectuals that were shaped by this uprising, such as Li Dazhao, Chen Duxiu, and Mao Zedong, founded the Communist Party of China in 1921. Women leaders founded organisations that brought millions of women into political and intellectual life, later becoming core elements of the Communist Party. For instance, Cheng Junying founded the Beijing Women’s Academic Federation; Xu Zonghan established the Shanghai Women’s Federation; Guo Longzhen, Liu Qingyang, Deng Yingchao, and Zhang Ruoming created the Tianjin Women’s Patriotic Comrades Association; and Ding Ling became one of the leading storytellers of China’s countryside. Thirty years after the May Fourth Movement, many of these men and women displaced their rotten political system and established the People’s Republic of China.

Who knows where the refusals of students in the Global North today will go. The students’ refusal to acknowledge the excuses of their ruling class and accept its policies are dug deeper into their soil than their tents. The police can arrest them, brutalise them, and displace their encampments, but this will only make radicalisation harder to disrupt.

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In the midst of the white heat of the May Fourth Movement, the poet Zhu Ziqing (1898–1948) wrote ‘Brightness’. His words rush from 1919 to our own time, from one generation of students to another:

In the deep and stormy night,
Ahead lies a barren wilderness.
Once past the barren wilderness,
There lies the path of the people.
Ah! In the darkness, countless paths,
How should I tread correctly?
God! Quickly give me some light,
Let me run forward!
God quickly replies, Light?
I have none to find for you.
You want light?
You must create it yourself!


That is what young people are doing: they are creating this light, and, even as many of their elders try to dim it, the brightness of their souls continues to illuminate the wretchedness of our system – at its heart the ugliness of Israel’s war – and the promise of humanity.

Warmly,

Vijay

https://thetricontinental.org/newslette ... palestine/

******

Leading Gaza surgeon tortured to death in Israeli detention
Nearly 500 healthcare workers have been killed by the Israeli army in Gaza since 7 October

News Desk

MAY 3, 2024

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(Photo Credit: X)

Palestinian orthopedic surgeon Adnan al-Bursh, who served as the head of orthopedic surgery at Al-Shifa Hospital, was killed in an Israeli detention center after being imprisoned for more than four months.

According to a statement from the Palestinian Prisoners Society, Bursh, 50, was tortured to death on 19 April in Ofer Prison, an Israeli-run incarceration facility in the occupied West Bank. The group characterized his murder as a "deliberate assassination."

His body has not been released by Israeli authorities, according to the Palestinian Civil Affairs Committee.

Another detainee, Ismail Abdul Bari Khader, 33, also died in custody, the joint statement from the Palestinian organizations says. Khader'sis body was released on 2 May along with 64 other prisoners.

“The two victims died of torture and crimes committed against Gazan detainees,” the statement stresses.

Bursh was arrested last December along with 10 other medical workers during the Israeli military ground assault of the Jabalya refugee camp as he was treating patients at Al-Awada Hospital in northern Gaza.

After patients, health workers, and hundreds of forcibly displaced Palestinians were violently evicted from Al-Shifa by the invading troops, he moved to the Indonesian Hospital, where he was injured in an attack. He later relocated to Al-Awada Hospital before his capture.

Gaza health authorities said in a statement that Bursh’s murder has raised the number of healthcare workers killed by Israel in Gaza to 496. It added that 1,500 others had been wounded while 309 had been arrested since 7 October.

Francesca Albanese, the UN Special Rapporteur on the Occupied Palestinian Territories, said on Friday that she was "extremely alarmed" at the death of the prominent doctor.

"I urge the diplomatic community to intervene with concrete measures to protect Palestinians. No Palestinian is safe under Israel's occupation today," she said via social media.


Last month, the Commission for Prisoners’ and Ex-Prisoners’ Affairs and the Palestinian Prisoners Society revealed that the number of Palestinian prisoners being held across Israeli prisons surpassed 9,500.

The prisoners include 80 women and over 200 children held in Israel’s Megiddo, Ofer, and Damon prisons. However, these numbers do not include the thousands detained or subjected to forced disappearance by Israeli forces in Gaza.

According to the joint statement, more than 3,660 Palestinians are being held without charge, including 22 women and 40 children.

An Israeli doctor who worked at an Israeli detention center in Gaza recently warned authorities in Tel Aviv about the inhumane conditions Palestinian prisoners face, revealing that the detainees are regularly blindfolded, fed through straws, forced to defecate in diapers, and are shackled by all four limbs 24 hours a day, re[/img]sulting in severe injuries that often require amputation.

https://thecradle.co/articles/leading-g ... -detention

Israeli jets bombard Syrian army base

Eight Syrian soldiers were injured in the Israeli attack near Syria's capital Damascus

News Desk

MAY 3, 2024

Image
(Photo credit: Reuters)
Eight Syrian soldiers were injured in an Israeli airstrike near the capital, Damascus, on the evening of 2 May.

“At approximately 10:05 PM on Thursday evening, the Israeli enemy launched an air attack from the direction of the occupied Syrian Golan, targeting one site in the vicinity of Damascus. The aggression resulted in the injury of eight military personnel and some material losses,” a Syrian military source told SANA news agency.

Reuters cited an unnamed source as saying that a security building was targeted in an Israeli airstrike on Thursday night.

Sputnik’s correspondent in Damascus said that the Syrian army attempted to intercept the Israeli missiles with its air defenses.

According to the opposition-linked war monitor, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR), a site belonging to Syria’s General Intelligence, was targeted. It added that Israel has bombed Syria 36 times since the start of 2024.

SOHR also claimed that the targeted site hosts a presence of Lebanon’s Hezbollah.

On 19 April, the Syrian Defense Ministry reported an Israeli attack targeted Syria’s air defense sites, resulting in some material damage. Earlier in the month, on 9 April, Israeli warplanes bombed Deraa in the south of Syria, in response to a rocket attack from Syrian territory towards Israel.

Israel has been attacking Syria for several years, targeting what it says are Iranian and Hezbollah interests in the country in an attempt to stifle Tehran’s military support for the resistance in Lebanon. This unofficial campaign, which Israel does not publicly acknowledge, has been referred to as ‘the battle between wars.’

However, the strikes have been unable to affect the flow of weaponry to Hezbollah.

“The ongoing battle between wars has seen the resistance in Lebanon significantly augment its weapons capabilities in terms of quantity, quality, and diversity. This represents a substantial strategic setback for Israel, which has expended vast sums on its strategy in Syria without achieving its objectives,” Khalil Nasrallah, Lebanese journalist and expert on regional affairs, wrote for The Cradle on 2 April.

https://thecradle.co/articles/israeli-j ... -army-base

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The Bizarre Gymnastics Of The Gaza Aid Pier

And this is all being done because Israel isn’t simply letting people drive an adequate amount of aid through the custom-built gates directly into Gaza.

Caitlin Johnstone
May 3, 2024



So glad Trump lost in 2020 otherwise we’d be seeing fascistic crackdowns on political dissent, police brutalizing protesters, tyrannical suppression of free speech, and the facilitation of racist and Islamophobic agendas. That psycho would probably be committing genocide by now.



So let me get this straight. The US wound up building its “floating pier” a few miles off the coast of Gaza to deliver humanitarian aid, but nobody will be able to ship the aid directly to the pier to get it to Gaza. Instead, the aid will be delivered to Cyprus via air or sea, and then from Cyprus the aid will be shipped 200 miles to the pier. From there the pallets of aid will be loaded onto smaller US army boats, which will then carry the aid from the pier to a long causeway on Gaza’s actual coast. Those pallets will then be carried from the boats to the shore via the causeway — possibly by British troops or possibly by Israeli troops depending on what source you’re reading — and taken into Gaza by IDF troops after careful examination and approval of their contents. All to deliver some 90 to 150 truckloads worth of aid per day, which is far short of the 500 truckloads the UN says Gaza needs.

And this is all being done because Israel isn’t simply letting people drive an adequate amount of aid through the custom-built gates directly into Gaza. Since Washington doesn’t want to exert any pressure on Israel to allow such a self-evident move, this immensely complicated and expensive dance is being performed to deliver a pathetically inadequate amount of aid instead. Aid that is only necessary because Israel has been destroying Gaza in its genocidal bombing campaign which it has been carrying out with total impunity.

Cool. Very normal and cool.



In a speech on Thursday Biden defended the violent nationwide police crackdowns on university protests against his genocide in Gaza, saying “dissent must never lead to disorder”.

Ah yes Joe, that’s very progressive of you. Dissent obviously should always be completely innocuous and obedient and not disruptive in any way. As Martin Luther King Jr said, “Our foremost value is to obey the law at all times and inconvenience nobody, because dissent must never lead to disorder. That’s why our civil rights movement famously never has any run-ins with law enforcement.” He said this in one of his most influential works, Letter from Birmingham Candy Shop.



The Wall Street Journal has an article out titled “In Gaza, Authorities Lose Count of the Dead,” which confirms what’s been obvious for months: the Gaza health ministry doesn’t have the infrastructure to keep track of how many people Israel is killing. This means the official death toll from the Israeli onslaught is almost certainly a massive undercount.



“You guys I’m super sincerely concerned about hate speech on university campuses,” said the person who’s made an entire career out of pushing for the mass murder of brown-skinned foreigners at every opportunity.



The US war machine views Palestinians as an inconvenient obstacle to its military agendas in the middle east, in the same way it views the local flora and fauna as an inconvenient obstacle when it’s constructing a new military base, or how it sees whales as an inconvenient obstacle because of public concern about navy sonar testing damaging their hearing and killing them. Palestinians are just viewed as an annoying indigenous animal that gets in the way of the imperial war machinery, and they’d be more than happy for that nuisance to be eliminated completely.



I’ve had multiple Biden supporters seriously tell me that January 6 was worse than backing a genocide in Gaza in order to argue that Trump was worse than Biden. The mainstream liberal worldview will twist you up so bad inside that you can’t even see Palestinians as human beings.



Everything Americans were warned would happen under Trump has happened under Biden. The only retort Democrats have to this is “oh yeah well this all woulda been way worse under Trump,” a claim which is (A) based on literally nothing and (B) completely unfalsifiable.

As I’ve said before, the lesson here is not that Trump is better than Biden or that you should support Republicans. The lesson is that no matter who you vote for you get surging authoritarianism at home and war, military expansionism and brinkmanship abroad, and that this system has got to go.

To look at what’s happening and make it about who you should vote for is to completely miss the lesson of what’s happening: that it doesn’t matter who you vote for, because the system is rigged to only let you vote for murderous tyrannical imperialists who serve the interests of plutocrats and empire managers instead of normal human beings. That bickering about where your votes should go is exactly what those plutocrats and empire managers want you to do, because it keeps you trapped within the framework of status quo politics and prevents you from looking at measures that could actually bring about real change like direct action, general strikes, the fomenting of revolutionary ideas, and the emergence of a powerful revolutionary faction.

https://caitlinjohnstone.com.au/2024/05 ... -aid-pier/

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The ‘Antisemitism’ Moral Panic Has Officially Jumped The Shark

So, to be absolutely clear, Israel’s top government official has announced that charges against himself and other Israeli leaders for obvious war crimes like intentionally bombing and starving civilians would be both “antisemitic” and a “hate crime”.

Caitlin Johnstone
May 2, 2024

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has responded to the International Criminal Court’s rumored plans to indict Israeli officials for war crimes by claiming that for the ICC to do so would be an “antisemitic hate crime”.

Yes, you read that correctly.

“If this does happen, it will be an indelible stain on humanity. It would be an unprecedented antisemitic hate crime that would add fuel to the antisemitic incitement that is already raging in the world,” said Netanyahu this past Tuesday.

So, to be absolutely clear, Israel’s top government official has announced that charges against himself and other Israeli leaders for obvious war crimes like intentionally bombing and starving civilians would be both “antisemitic” and a “hate crime”.

So, to make things even clearer, when a supporter of the state of Israel claims to be sincerely super duper worried about “antisemitism”, this is the kind of thing they are talking about. This is what the label “antisemitism” has come to mean. It means literally any opposition to, criticism of, or consequences for a nuclear-armed genocidal apartheid ethnostate which is backed by the most powerful empire that has ever existed.


Keeping that in mind, let’s turn now to the bill that just passed in the US House of Representatives which can be used to suppress entirely legitimate political speech critical of Israel as “antisemitic”.

Antiwar’s Dave DeCamp reports:

“The House on Wednesday overwhelmingly passed a bill that conflates criticism of the modern state of Israel with antisemitism and will mandate that definition be used by the Department of Education when enforcing federal anti-discrimination laws.

“The bill could be used to crack down on pro-Palestine protesters at college campuses across the country, who have been falsely labeled ‘antisemitic’ despite Jewish students participating in the protests.

“The legislation adopts the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance’s (IHRA) definition of antisemitism, which lists ‘drawing comparisons of contemporary Israeli policy to that of the Nazis’ as an example of antisemitism.

“The IHRA also defines antisemitism as applying ‘double standards’ to Israel by ‘requiring of it a behavior not expected or demanded of any other democratic nation’ and ‘denying the Jewish people their right to self-determination’ by ‘claiming that the existence of a State of Israel is a racist endeavor.’”



This comes as House Democrat Richie Torres teams up with Republican Mike Lawler to advance a bill which would create “antisemitism monitors” on university campuses which receive federal funding, which means the US government is actively working to police political speech in response to criticisms of US government policies. Perfectly normal thing to happen in a healthy liberal democracy.

And again, this is happening within a political climate in which the Israeli government publicly announces that “antisemitism” includes charging Israeli war criminals for extensively documented war crimes.

The thing about conflating support for Israel with Judaism and criticism of Israel with anti-semitism is that it necessarily asserts that there’s a religion which holds as an article of faith that your tax dollars must be used to murder foreigners in the middle east, and that any objection to this on your part therefore amounts to religious persecution. Anyone who makes this conflation is saying, “Judaism is a religion which believes your tax dollars need to go toward support for the military adventurism of the state of Israel, and if you don’t like it then you’re basically a Nazi.”

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Which is as self-evidently ridiculous as any position could possibly be, from any angle you could possibly look at it. Obviously the religion of Judaism itself does not say that western governments should be backing nonstop mass military slaughter in the Palestinian Territories and in Israel’s neighboring countries, which is why many Jews do not hold the position that this should be happening. And even if that was a fundamental tenet of the Jewish faith, a religion which asserts that a foreign country has a right to immensely consequential support from your country’s government would need to be criticized aggressively and relentlessly.

You don’t get to claim that criticism of any part a powerful country’s foreign policy is not allowed because such criticism is against your religion or religiously persecutes you. That’s not a thing.

The “antisemitism” moral panic has officially jumped the shark. It has long been absurd, but now it’s a parody of itself. Things are only going to get dumber and more insulting to your intelligence from here.

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

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Re: Palestine

Post by blindpig » Sun May 05, 2024 11:49 am

WHO Warns of ‘Bloodbath’ in Rafah
May 3, 2024

The World Health Organization said in a statement Friday that an Israeli incursion into Rafah in southern Gaza would lead to “substantial additional mortality and morbidity.”

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The Nasser Medical Complex in Gaza being restored by the WHO. (WHO)

On Tuesday Israeli prime minister vowed to invade Rafah “with or without” a deal with Hamas. The World Health Organization (WHO) has been working to restore medical facilities, including the Nasser Medical Complex, where on April 24 a mass grave with more than 300 bodies was found, victims of the Israeli army.

The WHO released the following statement on Friday:


Jerusalem/Cairo/Geneva, 03 May 2024 — WHO is deeply concerned that a full-scale military operation in Rafah could lead to a bloodbath. More than 1.2 million people are currently sheltering in the area, many unable to move anywhere else.

A new wave of displacement would exacerbate overcrowding, further limiting access to food, water, health and sanitation services, leading to increased disease outbreaks, worsening levels of hunger, and additional loss of lives.

Only 33 percent of Gaza’s 36 hospitals and 30 percent of primary health care centers are functional in some capacity amid repeated attacks and shortages of vital medical supplies, fuel, and staff.

As part of contingency efforts, WHO and partners are urgently working to restore and resuscitate health services, including through expansion of services and pre-positioning of supplies, but the broken health system would not be able to cope with a surge in casualties and deaths that a Rafah incursion would cause.

The three hospitals (Al-Najjar, Al-Helal Al-Emarati and Kuwait hospitals) currently partially operational in Rafah will become unsafe to be reached by patients, staff, ambulance, and humanitarians when hostilities intensify in their vicinity and, as a result quickly become nonfunctional.

The European Gaza Hospital in east Khan Younis, which is currently functioning as the third-level referral hospital for critical patients, is also vulnerable as it could become isolated and unreachable during the incursion. Given this, the south will be left with six field hospitals and Al-Aqsa Hospital in the Middle Area, serving as the only referral hospital.

As part of ongoing contingency efforts, WHO, partners and hospital staff have completed the first phase of restoration of Nasser Medical Complex, including cleaning and ensuring essential equipment is functioning. The emergency ward, nine operating theaters, intensive care unit, maternity ward, neonatal intensive care unit and the outpatient department are now partly functional, and national staff alongside emergency medical teams are working there.

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A hospital bed at the Nasser Medical Complex in Gaza. (WHO)

To alleviate the burden on hospitals, WHO and partners are establishing additional primary health centers and medical points in Khan Younis, Middle Area, and northern Gaza as well as pre-positioning medical supplies to enable these facilities to detect and treat communicable and non-communicable diseases and manage wounds.? A new field hospital is being set up in Al Mawasi in Rafah.??

A large WHO warehouse has been established in Deir al Bala and a sizable volume of medical supplies has been shifted there from WHO warehouses in Rafah as they could become unreachable during the incursion. These measures will help to ensure the rapid movement of supplies to Khan Younis, Middle Area and northern Gaza when needed.

In the north, WHO and partners are scaling up efforts to resupply and expand services at Kamal Adwan, Al-Ahli, and Al-Awda hospitals, along with supporting the transfer of very ill patients to hospitals where they can get the treatment they need to survive. Plans are also underway to support the restoration of Patients’ Friendly Hospital, focusing on pediatric services.

Despite the contingency plans and efforts, WHO warns that substantial additional mortality and morbidity is expected when the military incursion takes place.

WHO calls for an immediate and lasting ceasefire and the removal of the obstacles to the delivery of urgent humanitarian assistance into and across Gaza, at the scale that is required.?

WHO additionally calls for the sanctity of health care to be respected. Parties to the conflict have the coordinates of health facilities: it is imperative they are actively protected and remain accessible to patients, health workers and partners. The safety of health and humanitarian workers must be guaranteed. Those striving to save lives should not have to endanger their own?

https://consortiumnews.com/2024/05/03/w ... -in-rafah/

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Israel gives extremist settler 'absolute' control of occupied West Bank

The new head of the army's Central Command has overseen several major army major operations and stood by as settlers carried out pogroms in the occupied West Bank

News Desk

MAY 3, 2024

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Avi Bluth, commander of the Israeli Army Judea and Samaria Division (Photo credit by Sraya Diamant/Flash90)

Brigadier General Avi Bluth, an extremist religious settler, has been appointed to the position of Central Command commander of the Israeli army, Israeli media reported on 2 May.

Bluth has previously served as commander of the Army’s Judea and Samaria Division and as Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s Military Secretary.

According to Muhammad Shehada of Euro Med Human Rights, Bluth will now have absolute powers over the West Bank, including the ability to demolish homes and conduct army raids.

Bluth contributed to pogroms against Palestinians in the towns of Huwara and Burqa by standing by as Jewish settlers lynched civilians and burned and destroyed homes, shops, and vehicles.

He also played a role in incorporating extremists from a religious settler group called the Hilltop Youth into units of the Israeli army.

Bluth pushed for Operation Break the Wave in 2022, in which the army killed 149 Palestinians in the West Bank and abducted 2000 others in a series of raids, and Operation Bayit Vagan in July 2023, in which the army carried out a massive assault on Jenin, killing 12 Palestinians and leaving widespread destruction in its wake.

Bluth is a signatory to the army’s 2015 policy change, which loosened the conditions for using live fire against Palestinians throwing stones and carrying out ramming operations.

Shehada adds that Bluth has links to the Religious Zionism Party led by Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich, which is committed to stealing and annexing Palestinian land in the West Bank.

Bluth was raised in Neve Tzuf, an illegal settlement in the occupied West Bank. He earned a BS in philosophy, economy, and political science from Hebrew University and an MA in strategic thinking from the US Army War College in Carlisle, Pennsylvania.

https://thecradle.co/articles/israel-gi ... -west-bank

Probe shows Israel sympathizers sparked UCLA violence

Police stood by for hours as Israel supporters attacked pro-Palestine student protesters

News Desk

MAY 4, 2024

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A pro-Palestinian demonstrator is beaten by counter-protesters attacking the anti-Israel encampment set up on the campus of the University of California Los Angeles (UCLA) as clashes erupt, May 1, 2024. (Photo credit: Etienne Laurent/AFP)

Pro-Israel counter-protesters attacked students in the pro-Palestinian encampment at a US university for several hours, including beating them with sticks, spraying them in the face with chemicals, and launching fireworks as weapons, a New York Times investigation published on 4 May showed.

Students erected the encampment at the University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA) on 25 April as part of a broader student movement throughout the US to protest Israel’s genocide in Gaza.

On Tuesday, UCLA officials declared the encampment illegal. Later that day, a group of Israel supporters attacked the encampment.

According to The Times’ review of video footage taken by protesters and journalists, the attack began when a group of counter-protesters started tearing away metal barriers that had been in place to cordon off pro-Palestinian protestors.

Security personnel hired by the university are seen in yellow vests, standing by and watching throughout the attack without intervening.

Attacks on the encampment continued for nearly three hours before police arrived.

"Counter-protesters shot fireworks toward the encampment at least six times” and “sprayed chemicals both into the encampment and directly at people’s faces,” The Times stated.

The videos show many of the counter-protesters were wearing pro-Israel slogans on their clothing and blaring loud music, including Israel’s national anthem and “Harbu Darbu,” a popular Israeli song that calls for the annihilation of Palestinians in Gaza and the killing of western celebrities Bella Hadid, Mia Khalifa, and Dua Lipa, all of whom have expressed solidarity with Gaza.

Video shows groups of counter-protesters surrounding and attacking both groups and individual pro-Palestinian protesters. “They could be seen punching, kicking and attacking people with makeshift weapons, including sticks, traffic cones and wooden boards,” The Times writes.

The Times adds that “Except for a brief attempt to capture a loudspeaker used by counter-protesters, and water bottles being tossed out of the encampment, none of the videos analyzed by The Times show any clear instance of encampment protesters initiating confrontations with counter-protesters beyond defending the barricades.”

Despite the violence, police officers remained standing about 100 meters away from the area for roughly an hour without intervening.

At 2:42 am, police officers finally began to move toward the encampment, after which time the counter-protesters left the scene.

The Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) and the California Highway Patrol did not respond to questions from The Times regarding the incident.

Mary Osako, UCLA vice chancellor of strategic communications, also declined to answer questions but issued a statement saying: “We are carefully examining our security processes from that night and are grateful to U.C. President Michael Drake for also calling for an investigation. We are grateful that the fire department and medical personnel were on the scene that night.”

On Thursday, UCLA police arrested 200 people at the pro-Palestinian encampment at UCLA, claiming the protesters resisted arrest.

The arrests came after university officials declared the encampment an "unlawful assembly" on Wednesday and ordered demonstrators to leave the area.

https://thecradle.co/articles/probe-sho ... a-violence

Delivering a ‘True Promise’: an insider account of Iran’s strikes on Israel

Iranian firebrand MP Mahmoud Nabavian reveals the calculated strategy, diplomatic intrigue, and bold military prowess that showcased Tehran’s 13 April missile strikes on Israel.


The Cradle

MAY 3, 2024

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(Photo Credit: The Cradle)

Following the strategic success of Iran’s ‘True Promise’ retaliatory drone and missile operation in response to last month’s Israeli bombing of the Iranian consulate in Damascus, The Cradle presents an exclusive insider‘s narrative provided by Iranian Member of Parliament Mahmoud Nabavian, a principalist who won the most votes in Tehran during the country’s March elections.

His account of the retaliatory strikes against the occupation state offers unparalleled insights into the 13–14 April events. With access to military sources, Nabavian’s testimony serves as the most detailed view to date by an Iranian government official on Iran’s response, one that has sorely exposed the vulnerabilities of Israel’s air defense systems.

In a closed Telegram posting, Nabavian explained that Israel’s “cowardly” attack, which led to the martyrdom of prominent leaders in Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), occurred “on our soil” – a reference to the Iranian diplomatic mission in Damascus:

“As the Imam [Ali Khamenei] said, the enemies made a mistake.” Iran’s full-on retaliatory strikes, he thus maintains, were justified and legal under Article 51 of the UN Charter.

Below is a transcript (edited for length) from Nabavian’s important revelations about Iran’s military strikes on Israel and the flurry of international deal-making attempts that preceded them:

Two hours after the attack on the consulate in Damascus, the Iranian National Security Council convened and affirmed the inevitability of a response and gave a 10-day deadline to take the necessary diplomatic measures and for the armed forces to prepare their plan to respond.

Diplomatically, the first step was to go to the Security Council, even though we knew that this would be futile. But it was necessary to file a complaint about the attack on our land, assert our natural right to self-defense, and request a Security Council session. Because we are not members of the Council, we had to talk to member states to request that the session be held.

China, Russia, and Algeria agreed. Russia submitted the request, and the session was held, but the US, Germany, Britain, and France did not allow a statement to be issued condemning Israel. The heads of our missions abroad were also active in informing the concerned countries that we would respond to the Zionist entity.

Due to these pressures, Israel denied it had attacked a diplomatic building and that those who were targeted were not diplomats. The consulate building, four of its five floors, were purchased 45 years ago and were designated for diplomatic work. It was indeed a diplomatic building.

After we assured the international community of our right to respond, some countries, such as the US, Germany, England, France, Canada, and Egypt, tried to convince us not to do so, and they confirmed their readiness to meet Iran’s requests. For example, some of these countries that were not previously willing to grant entry visas to our diplomats or officials suddenly decided to do so immediately.

When the US realized that we were serious, it sent a threat that if the response was launched from Iranian territory, it might attack Iran. Our response was that the US is not among our targets, but if it decides to involve itself in defense of Israel, we will respond by targeting it as well, and as you know, there are many American bases around us.

Despite this, the US, Britain, France, and Germany insisted on the same message, yet our answer was that Israel crossed a red line. Then, they said, if we must respond, let it be from outside Iranian territory.

Why did they insist that the strike not be from inside Iran? Because for a long time, they have been assassinating our nuclear scientists and carrying out sabotage operations at the Natanz nuclear reactor. In the last six months alone, they have assassinated 18 members of our armed forces, and we have always responded through our allies [in the Axis of Resistance], but if we did that this time, we would lose face.

If Lebanese Hezbollah had responded to Israel, it could have bombed Beirut, and western powers would have seized upon this to say, ‘If this is a war between Iran and Israel, why did Hezbollah involve itself in it?’ They would also hold it responsible for the subsequent unrest in Lebanon.

Therefore, the insistence that the Iranian response should be through Iran’s allies was meant to distort Hezbollah’s reputation and unleash Israel to target it and other resistance forces in the region and to portray them as mercenaries of Iran. We read these western intentions well, and accordingly, the decision was taken to respond from within Iranian territory.

On the night of Eid al-Fitr, a meeting was held with the heads of diplomatic missions of the countries of the region, and we informed them that we are keen on good neighborliness, but if the US uses any of your countries to carry out action against us, we will strike the US bases on your lands.

This message was conveyed to Washington, and they realized that Iran was serious. They asked us to exercise restraint. The US, Germany, England, France, and Canada – these countries that support brutality and crime in the world and provide the weapons with which the people of Gaza are bombed – ask us to exercise restraint.

[UK Foreign Secretary] David Cameron called the night after the Iranian attack and said he couldn’t sleep last night. This is the malicious British foreign secretary. Why? Because we sent 300 drones and missiles over the heads of the Israelis. The Iranian official who spoke to him said, ‘For six months, rockets have been falling on the people of Gaza, and you slept well every night.’ This is the same malicious Britain that encouraged the US to launch attacks on Yemen.

The important thing is coordination at all levels before responding, politically, diplomatically, and in the media. After the Leader [Ali Khamenei] affirmed in his Eid al-Fitr sermon that we will certainly discipline the enemy, messages came to us requesting that the response be proportionate and not forceful.

Our answer was clear: that first, we would definitely strike Israel; second, that the attack would be direct from Iranian territory; and third, that the National Security Council decided that the response would be a deterrent.

Meanwhile, Azerbaijan informed us that it had information that we would bomb the Israeli embassy in Baku, and they asked us not to carry out any action on their territory. I think this was a message that they could turn a blind eye to striking Israeli targets in a neighboring country, but we were already aware of that.

The messages we received were not limited to the US and European countries, but we also received messages from some countries in the region. We tried to take advantage of the matter to reach a ceasefire in Gaza, and we told everyone that this might be a solution to the problem.

They asked us whether a ceasefire in Gaza meant that we would refrain from responding. We answered that we would strike Israel in any case, but perhaps a decision like this would help reduce the severity of the attack. They asked that we give them a few days.

We asked our military forces to postpone the response for 24 hours and gave the countries of the world the opportunity to adhere to their obligations stipulated in international laws and for Israel to pledge not to attack Iranian forces and interests in the region and the world.

Regarding the Iranian request to conclude a permanent, complete, and immediate truce in the Gaza Strip: US President Joe Biden sent a message stating that he would work to achieve it himself, but he set a malicious condition, which is that the Palestinian resistance releases all Israeli prisoners in exchange for Israel releasing 900 Palestinian prisoners, after which the implementation of the truce begins.

Of course, Hamas did not agree to the matter, and this was the correct decision. We understood that they [the Americans] are not serious about reaching a truce and that they are only looking to achieve their malign goals.

Everyone realized that we would attack Israel. The US, France, Britain, and even Italy harnessed all their military capabilities in Qatar, alongside the UAE, Saudi Arabia, and Jordan.

They equipped six missile launchers in the region’s waters with a range of between 2,000 and 3,000 kilometers. They harnessed all modern satellites and radars, moved 103 aircraft into the region’s airspace to strike our missiles, and placed all air defense systems under unified command under the supervision of the US to confront Iranian missiles in several stages.

That is, if the Iranian missiles were able to pass any defense line, they would be targeted and shot down in the next.

What is interesting is that the German foreign minister, 24 hours before the Iranian operation was carried out, called us and was pleading that we not target Israel from inside Iranian territory. He said that our missiles would not be able to pass the obstacles and defense lines that they had prepared to intercept our missiles and that the US was using 70 drones in Iraq for that, and it would increase the number to 700.

They were monitoring the movements of our soldiers, missiles, and drones, and they believed that none of the Iranian missiles would reach Israel. They were confident that the missiles would not be able to penetrate air defense systems.

At the Turkish Incirlik base, which includes 5,000 soldiers, a large number of AWACS planes and 15 jamming planes were harnessed to repel our attack.

As such, they were astonished at how Iran was able to evade the huge layers of defense they had activated, and what surprised them even more was that it took five and a half to seven hours for the drones to reach the Zionist entity, and their speed was not great, which meant that they were easy to shoot down.

Twenty-four hours before the operation, Washington sent a firm message stating that if we decided to attack Israel from our territory, they will respond militarily against Iran. This time, they did not talk about possibilities but rather said that they would definitely attack Iranian territory. Our answer was decisive, that we will definitely strike Israel from within our territories, and if you commit any mistake, we will target all your bases in the region.

We informed Saudi Arabia and the countries of the region that if Iranian territory is targeted from within your territory, we will definitely respond. Saudi Arabia announced that it would not allow any operation against Iran to be carried out from its territory, and the authorities in Cyprus also informed us of a similar message.

We knew that the Iraqi and Jordanian airspace was completely under US control. We thought about the Israeli targets that we were going to hit, and we faced two obstacles: the first was that their air defenses were very strong, and we had to find a way for our drones and missiles to pass them, and the second was not to take action that will lead to us being condemned.

The decision was to strike two military targets: the first was the [Nevatim] airport from which the F-35 plane that bombed the Iranian consulate took off, and the second was an Israeli intelligence center in the Golan. By coincidence, the fighter jet that targeted the consulate fired its missiles from above this intelligence headquarters.

Our drones, numbering about 130, were launched, the majority of which belonged to us, and between two and three were sent by our allied forces. We also launched missiles carrying explosive warheads, a large number of which deflected the air defenses from their path.

I will not talk much about the number of hits we targeted, but out of 17 missiles, 15 hit their targets, meaning 89 percent. The whole west was there, and we delivered an important message to the world.

In the aftermath of the operation, 15 countries contacted and said that they were seeking a ceasefire in Gaza and asked Israel not to respond.

The British and German foreign ministers contacted us and said that international law does not include the term “punishment.” We answered them: If that does not exist in international law, why did you propose punishing Hamas after 7 October? The calls continued to ask whether we would attack Israel again. We said that if we were attacked, we would respond tenfold.

The countries of the region have now understood Iran’s capabilities and it seems that they will seek to significantly improve their relations with Iran. The Israelis realized that when the spirit of despair takes hold, as Ben Gurion says, ‘we will begin to fall down the slope that leads to the abyss,’ and this has become clear to the world.


Mahmoud Nabavian’s account not only exposes the meticulous planning behind the Islamic Republic’s response but also reveals a resolve to defend sovereignty and impose a credible deterrence against future violations – at all costs.

Tehran’s military response should be interpreted beyond the current regional war centered on Gaza and signals a broad recalibration of power dynamics in West Asia. As western and neighboring states assess the implications of Iran’s new assertive military posture, alliances, and strategies will require careful reconsideration.
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https://thecradle.co/articles/deliverin ... -on-israel

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Entire Areas of the West Bank Have Been Emptied of Their Communities
Posted by INTERNATIONALIST 360° on MAY 4, 2024
Hagar Shezaf

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October 7 brought settler violence to a head in the West Bank: 18 Palestinian herding communities have since been uprooted from their homes, with the residents now living in makeshift dwellings on the outskirts of other villages, impoverished and anxious for the futurOctober 7 brought settler violence to a head in the West Bank: 18 Palestinian herding communities have since been uprooted from their homes, with the residents now living in makeshift dwellings on the outskirts of other villages, impoverished and anxious for the future.

Ibrahim Mohammed Malihat looks toward the Jordan Valley. From the area where he lives, about a 20-minute drive from Jerusalem, you can see wide expanses where the people of his village used to graze their livestock, but which are now off-limits.

“Today, everything is empty from here to Jericho. We don’t go down or south. Everything is left only for the settlers; there’s no area where the flocks can graze,” he says.

Inside the village of Maghayyir A-Dir, a flock of sheep walks around and eats straw that is scattered on the ground. “We only take them between the houses,” notes Malihat. “There are cameras here,” he adds, pointing to an area near the village, “and if the sheep go out, the settlers see it and send masked men. They tell us: ‘We’re the police and we’re the army.’”

Since the Gaza war began on October 7, four pastoral communities have been displaced from their places of residence in the area due to threats and violence from settlers. Four other nearby communities were displaced in the two preceding years, between the village of Duma and Malihat’s village.

Another community further south was also uprooted. This had a dramatic effect on both the lives of the communities that remained in place and those that fled. Their residents describe a process of impoverishment and huge fear over the future.

‘There’s no one in the government to tell them to stop. Go to any village in the area and you’ll see that they’ve destroyed everything there.’

According to estimates by researcher Dror Etkes from the Kerem Navot nongovernmental organization that monitors the Israeli settlement and land management policy in the West Bank, there are currently some 125,000 dunams (31,000 acres) in the area that Palestinians are de facto prevented from entering due to fear of violence, and due to the restrictions imposed by the settlers and the army.

The lands to the east of the Allon Road (Route 458), which runs between Maghayyir A-Dir and Duma, have been emptied of the communities who lived there. Mostly, just Jewish outposts and settlements remain. “A few years ago, settlers from the Nablus and Duma area came here, the ones with the long sidelocks,” says Ibrahim, indicating their length with his hand. “Gradually, they moved south until they reached here. There’s no one in the government to tell them to stop. Go to any village in the area and you’ll see that they’ve destroyed everything there.”

Advised to evacuate

One of the largest communities expelled in the months since the war began was from the village of Wadi al-Siq, which is separated from Maghayyir A-Dir only by a beautiful green wadi. Next to the ruins of the village, which are still visible, cows from the nearby outpost that was established only about a year ago are grazing today. The road that used to lead to the village is now blocked with stones.

According to Ibrahim, on the day the residents of Wadi al-Siq were expelled, a group of settlers he knew – and with whom he previously had a good relationship – entered his village. He says they recommended that the villagers evacuate for 10 days because the settlers were “angry” following October 7.

‘They stole [the contents of] my whole house. They destroyed and took everything: stove, kitchen utensils, cabinets.’

Like other communities in the area, the people of Wadi al-Siq suffered violence and threats even before the outbreak of the war, but these escalated significantly afterward. Theapproximately 180 residents who make up the community, from around 20 families, fled for their lives after an attack on the village on October 12 and threats that preceded it. The residents split up and today live in makeshift dwellings on the outskirts of several Palestinian villages, on land to which they have no rights and which they fear they will be forced to vacate.

“On October 11, we took the children and women to relatives in another village, to sleep there. We thought it would be for two or three days and then we’d bring them back,” relates Abd el-Rahman Mustafa Ka’abneh, from his new temporary residence on agricultural land near the village of Taybeh. The next day, while some of the villagers were busy packing their belongings, settlers and soldiers came and attacked them at the site. Several residents and activists who had come to help them were arrested and detained for hours inside the village. Some were beaten and subjected to abuse, including, as previously reported in Haaretz, severe beatings, burns and attempted sexual assault.

“They told us we had half an hour to leave, people ran away,” Ka’abneh recalls. Hunched over, he looks despondent as he describes what happened. “We didn’t know where to go. At first we went out on foot. There were small children whose parents carried them and there were young people who hid in the wadi. When it got dark, people from the villages of Ramun and Taybeh gave us tents.”

The police told Haaretz that the investigation into the attack in Wadi al-Siq is ongoing, while the IDF gave the same response regarding an investigation by the military criminal investigation division into the conduct of the soldiers. Haaretz learned that several soldiers and a civilian were interrogated with a warning as part of the investigation. In October, the IDF dismissed the commander of the military force who belongs to the Desert Frontier unit and who was involved in the incident.

In view of the inability of the army to assure the residents that they will not be harmed if they return home, they do not dare return. The only time they came to their village after fleeing to collect the belongings they left behind – in coordination with the Civil Administration and escorted by activists – they discovered that most of their equipment was gone.

“They stole [the contents of] my whole house. They destroyed and took everything: stove, kitchen utensils, cabinets,” Ka’abneh says. “We found almost nothing.” In his estimation, the value of the property stolen from the house was about 200,000 shekels ($53,000).

In an attempt to recoup their losses, community members took out loans, sold part of their livestock and received donations from organizations. “I had 100 sheep and I sold 40 for nothing, because there was a war and we fled,” says Suleiman Mustafa Ka’abneh, another member of the Wadi al-Siq community.

He and his family now live on the outskirts of Ramun village, alongside other residents. “I personally owe 40,000 shekels today,” he adds. The loss of grazing land has severely affected the livelihood of the residents – partly because they’re now forced to purchase food for their flocks, at significantly higher costs than before.

At the end of March, the residents filed a petition with the human rights organization Torat Tzedek, demanding that the state dismantle the outpost set up near their village so they can return to their homes. In the petition, submitted by attorney Tamir Blank, it’s argued that since the outpost is a source of violence and is involved in land incursions, the state must prioritize and expedite its evacuation.

Until the matter is resolved, the residents face an uncertain future. Abd el-Rahman Mustafa Ka’abneh and his family, for example, live on private land belonging to a resident of Taybeh. “It’s temporary. We have no lease here and the agreement was that we would leave after the war. We didn’t think the war would last so long,” he says.

The transience is evident even in small details, such as the fact that the community’s current residence has no toilets. “There is no future, this is the end,” says Suleiman Ka’abneh. “This is someone else’s land. They will let us sit here for four months, six months, a year – but ultimately it’s their land and they won’t want us here.”

Constant vigilance

Since the beginning of the war, the human rights organization B’Tselem has documented 18 pastoral communities that were displaced from their homes throughout the West Bank.

According to Etkes, when dealing with what happened in the Allon Road area, an area larger than the 126,000 dunams between Duma and Maghayyir A-Dir must be factored into the equation. He explains that due to state land declarations and the displacement of additional communities in the area between Ma’aleh Adumim and the settlements of the Jordan Valley, in effect there are now about 160,000 dunams where Palestinians are no longer herding.

In addition to this area, five more pastoral communities in the South Hebron Hills have been displaced or expelled since the beginning of the war, and two communities were kicked out even before that.

In Khirbet Zanuta, the largest of the communities to be expelled in the South Hebron Hills area since October 7, the local school was very badly damaged in what seems to be a vandalism incident. On a visit to the place almost six months after the expulsion of the residents, textbooks were scattered on the floor among the rubble, and an English studies poster was still hanging on one of the walls. Outside, an inscription in Arabic adorned what remained of the building. “We have the right to study,” it stated.

The uprooting of the communities is inextricably linked to the outposts adjacent to the Palestinian lands. The outposts have multiplied greatly in recent years, and it is clear that the United States and other countries that have begun imposing sanctions on settlers recognize this.

The Khirbet Zanuta community, for instance, lived near Yinon Levy’s Meitarim Farm, an illegal outpost that was subject to U.S. sanctions on the grounds that it was involved in attacking and threatening Palestinians. In the case of Wadi al-Siq, the neighboring outpost that was established in early 2023 is called Havat Machoch and its leader is Neria Ben-Pazi – a well-known settler shepherd who has also been subject to U.S. sanctions in recent weeks.

He was even barred from the West Bank for a few months by order of Israel’s Central Command commander. Following this order, several religious Zionist rabbis – including Dov Lior and Shmuel Eliyahu – came to visit Ben-Pazi’s outpost as an act of solidarity. The sanctions against settlers were met with a strong protest by extremist ministers such as Bezalel Smotrich and Itamar Ben-Gvir.

Before the war, Mohammed Suleiman Malihat, a resident of a herding community called Maraja’at, used to cross the road near his village with his herd. On the other side of the road, an outpost called Zohar’s Farm was established in recent years: at some point, all the remaining herders gave up on crossing it after repeatedly being driven away by settlers in the surrounding area.

“From the moment the war started, if the settlers saw me enter even 2 meters into the area, they would come immediately. I felt that for my safety, I just can’t do it anymore,” says Malihat. He also sold part of his flock due to the reduced size of his lands for pasture. He says that since another grazing area, heading toward the settlement of Mevo’ot Yericho, also became inaccessible to the residents of the community – he only grazes on land adjacent to the village.

A few days before Haaretz visited Maraja’at, two structures belonging to families who had fled were set on fire on the outskirts of Ras al-Uja, another village in the area. Settlers were recorded at the location and a military source confirmed to Haaretz that according to the IDF’s knowledge, it was settlers who torched the buildings. The message resonates strongly with the residents of Maraja’at. Malihat’s family also says that late at night settlers sometimes stand armed at the entrance of their house, without saying a word.

As a result, the community lives in constant vigilance. During our visit to the site, residents noticed a herd belonging to the settlers grazing at the top of the hill, and Malihat’s daughter, Aaliya, ran there to film it while other residents called the police. According to them, the sense of threat has worsened in recent months, especially after the neighboring community left due to the harassment. “The settlers succeeded in driving them out, and that whetted their appetite,” reflects Malihat. “Since then, they’ve started coming to us more."

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

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Houthi Causing Headaches For the White House
By Jeremy Kuzmarov - May 3, 2024 0

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Murals in Sana’a depicting military and political figures of the Iran-backed Shiite movements of Yemen, Lebanon, Iraq and Palestine. [Source: nytimes.com]

Group That is Widely Vilified in U.S. Media Has Large Popularity in Yemen

On April 7, the U.S. Central Command issued a press release boasting about their destruction of a mobile surface-to-air missile system in the Houthi-controlled territory of Yemen.

Since commencing a bombing operation on January 12, the U.S. and Great Britain have carried out 424 air strikes targeting the Houthis in Yemen, resulting in at least 37 deaths and 30 injuries.

The pretext for the bombing was the Houthis’ disruption of Western shipping in the strategic Bab al-Mandab waterway—a gateway of ocean trade linking ports in Europe, the Middle East and Asia—in protest of the U-S.-backed Israeli genocide in Gaza. More than 60 Houthi missile and drone strikes led to a drop in shipping through the Red Sea by more than 50%, according to the International Monetary Fund.[1]

Prior to the onset of the bombing, the Biden administration had designated the Houthis—who also go by the name Ansar Allah, or God’s Helpers—as a terrorist organization. The Houthis have been widely vilified by American political leaders and in the mainstream U.S. media and accused of being an Iranian proxy that receives most of its weapons from Iran.[2]

Caleb T. Maupin’s short book, Who are the Houthis? What are they fighting for? (New York: Center for Political Innovation, 2024) presents the Houthis in a more positive light, arguing that their establishment of a “picket line” in the Red Sea to disrupt shipping in protest of the massacres in Gaza is inspiring anti-war activists and anti-imperialists.

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[Source: amazon.com]

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Caleb T. Maupin [Source: glabaltimes.cn]

Maupin in his pamphlet quotes from folk singer David Rovics’ “Song for the Houthi Army,” which proclaims:

Shukran jazeelan to the Houthi Army
Standing for the conscience of us all
When they say no business as usual
While the bombs continue to fall [on Gaza]

For a country that doesn’t have an air force
They’re painting black, red, green, and white
On the helicopters that they use to board the ships
To show their cause is right
The president says this terrorism
Must stop right away
To which the Houthis respond, yes
That’s exactly what we’re trying to say!”


Image
[Source: youtube.com]

Maupin is a New York-based writer and political activist involved with the Occupy Wall Street movement who is a member of the Workers World Party.

His pamphlet on the Houthis provides important historical background, detailing how the Houthi movement emerged among Zaidiyyah Shia Muslims in northern Yemen in the early 1990s. They followed an Islamic teacher named Hussein Badr al-Din al-Houthi, one of twelve brothers who headed a charitable association and gained election to the Yemeni House of Representatives from the “Party of Truth” which represented the Zaid perspective.

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Hussein Badr al-Din al-Houthi [Source: britannica.com]

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Ali Abdullah Saleh [Source: washingtonpost.com]

Yemen had been divided during the Cold War, with South Yemen being ruled by Marxist-Leninists, and North Yemen, from 1978, by Ali Abdullah Saleh, who was largely pro-West. After its unification following the end of the Cold War, Saleh ruled Yemen until he was overthrown in the 2011 Arab Spring.

Rooted in the northern city of Saada, al-Houthi inspired his supporters by speaking out about how economic mismanagement had forced Yemen to import beans, lentils and wheat from foreign countries despite the country posessing arable land suitable for cultivation.[3]

Maupin provides an analogy between Yemen and Mexico under the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), where the lowering of trade barriers was designed to flood the country with cheap imports to the detriment of local agriculture and industry.

Maupin says that south Yemen has a huge amount of untapped oil that, if placed under national control, could be used to finance economic development and the eradication of illiteracy, which stands at around 30%.[4]

When al-Houthi named his organization “Ansar Allah” in January 2002, he unfurled the slogan “The Cry in the Face of the Arrogant.”[5] The latter was a reference to Western powers which had long tried to carve up the Middle East and exploit its oil resources.

Maupin calls al-Houthi’s embrace of the slogan “curse the Jews” as unfortunate and emblematic of an illiberal and bigoted strainamong the Houthis—which should not be idealized by Western leftists or anti-war activists.[6]

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The official logo of Ansar Allah. The gun represents self-defense, a large hand represents God, and a shaft of wheat stands for economic development. [Source: taasnimews.com]

Nevertheless, Maupin points out that the statement derives largely from an abhorrence for the crimes of the Israeli state and the global economic system that created and props up Israel.

Maupin also emphasizes that most of al-Houthi’s sermons were positive in their reference to building hospitals, bridges and factories, and talk of providing necessary services to mothers and children and of expanding agricultural output.[7]

One of al-Houthi’s chief role models was Ayatollah Khomeini of Iran who led the 1979 Islamic Revolution against the Shah, in which Iran regained control over its economy, moved toward self-sufficiency in agriculture, and increased its manufacturing output while building hospitals and bridges.[8]

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Ayatollah Khomeini [Source: thefamouspeople.com]

Another inspiration is Hugo Chávez and Venezuela’s Bolivarian Revolution because of its anti-imperialist character and the benefits that it brought to Venezuela’s poor.

In 2015, a Houthi spokesman castigated the BBC for asking only about Iran, stating that they did this to “sow sectarian religious divisions,” and that we “are inspired by Iran, but we are also inspired by Hugo Chávez and Venezuela. We support the oppressed everywhere in the world.”[9]

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The Bolivarian Revolution is a major inspiration for the Houthis. [Source: liberationnews.org]

In 2004, after the Ansar Allah movement convened a protest to denounce U.S. imperialism and the Iraq War, 640 protesters were arrested after a police crackdown. Islamic scholars aligned with President Saleh issued Fatwahs against al-Houthi, calling him a heretic and announcing it would pay $55,000 to anyone who could capture him.[10]

Maupin writes that “the Americans who had just launched their war on terror had instructed the Yemeni puppet regime [led by Saleh] to move in on them. They were being called ‘terrorists’ despite the fact that they only used guns for self-defense and only engaged in peaceful community organizing.”[11]

After the Yemeni army launched an all-out offensive, armed battles took place and many Houthis were killed. On September 10, 2004, the Yemeni military dropped a bomb on a café where al-Houthi was eating with his family, resulting in his death. That is when the Ansar Allah movement adopted the nickname “Houthi” in honor of their martyred leader.[12]

The Yemeni government buried his body inside of a prison to prevent his grave from being made into a shrine.[13] Al-Houthi’s brother, Abdul-Malik Badruldeen al-Houthi, succeeded him in leading the Ansar Allah movement. Today, he remains the Houthi movement’s most prominent public face and idealogue.[14]

After the resignation of Ali Saleh following the 2011 Arab Spring, Saudi Arabia installed its man, Abdrabbuh Mansur Hadi, as Yemen’s president. When Hadi cut fuel subsidies, making it more expensive for Yemenis to travel by car, the Ansar Allah movement mobilized people to pour into the streets to denounce the austerity move.[15]

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Abdul-Malik Badruldeen al-Houthi [Source: hodhodyyemennews.net]

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Abdrabbuh Mansur Hadi [Source: en.wikipedia.org]
After the Yemeni army pulled back, Ansar Allah took control of the city of Sana’a. In January 2015, they seized the presidential palace and a number of key military sites, and announced that they were forming a new government with the support of the Yemeni socialist party, which declared that the leaders who had fled to Saudi Arabia had been expelled.[16]

Historian Isa Blumi wrote that a broad coalition backed by the Houthis “threw out the corrupt foreign imposed government filled with crooks and Islamist bigots [and] reversed the selling of Yemen’s economic future.”

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[Source: geopoliticsandempire.com]

The Saudis responded to the 2015 revolution by unleashing what Maupin terms a “bloodthirsty onslaught that horrified the world.” With Pentagon generals in Riyadh advising them and U.S. satellites providing support, “the Saudi military moved to retake its southern neighbor and make it their impoverished colony once again.”[17]

The Saudis bombed the port of Hodeidah eight times in a single day and a medical hospital in Hodeidah, murdering 26 medical students, while imposing a devastating naval blockade as they tried to re-install Hadi as president.[18]

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[Source: thetimes.co.uk]

In 2022, The Washington Post reported that the Saudi-led coalition carried out more than 50 air strikes on civilian targets in Yemen, including homes, hospitals and communication towers, killing at least 9,000 civilians. Many of the bombs and weapons were supplied by the U.S.

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[Source: rt.com]

Representing the national liberation movement of Yemen, the Houthis kept fighting with considerable popular backing. Maupin writes that, “if Abdul Malik al-Houthi and his army were merely a bunch of stooges for Tehran, why did the population keep supporting them? Why was the Houthi army able to hold out against such a relentless onslaught?”[19]

According to Maupin, the essence of the Houthi movement is “anti-imperialism and a struggle against austerity.”[20] In the face of Israel’s horrendous bombardment of Gaza in the aftermath of October 7, the Ansar Allah movement began stopping ships in the Red Sea, including from countries that were supplying arms to the Israelis.

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[Source: alamdarnews.com]

The demands of the Houthis were simple: stop bombing Gaza. Malik Abdul al-Houthi gave a speech in which he said that “we are a people who reject injustice.” He added that “American targeting of Yemen [as a backlash for the ship seizures]” would be met with “targeting of American battleships, interests and navigation with missiles, drones and military operations.[21]



Maupin believes that progressives in the West should ultimately support the Houthis as part of the struggle for their own liberation from the tentacles of corporate capitalism and a U.S. government that “imposes unilateral sanctions on scores of nations across the planet, arbitrarily restricting, and locking them out of global trade” while “telling us that Houthis blocking of ships in the Red Sea is an intolerable crime.”[22]

(Much more at link.)

https://covertactionmagazine.com/2024/0 ... ite-house/
"There is great chaos under heaven; the situation is excellent."

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Re: Palestine

Post by blindpig » Mon May 06, 2024 11:09 am

Rafah Invasion Imminent
Posted by INTERNATIONALIST 360° on MAY 4, 2024
Maureen Clare Murphy

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Palestinians look at the destruction after an Israeli airstrike in Deir al Balah, central Gaza Strip, on 30 April.

Palestinian human rights groups say that Israel has escalated its attacks in Rafah, southern Gaza, where approximately 1.3 million people, the vast majority of them displaced from other areas in the territory, are now concentrated.

Israel has also intensified artillery shelling in the eastern area of Rafah in what Al-Haq, Al Mezan and the Palestinian Center for Human Rights describe as a campaign of intimidation aimed at compelling a new wave of forced displacement ahead of a large-scale military assault on Rafah.

More than 40 Palestinians, including 13 children and 12 women, were killed during intensified Israeli attacks on Rafah between 26 and 29 April, according to the rights groups.

A baby less than a week old was killed when Israeli warplanes targeted a home belonging to the al-Khawaja family in Rafah’s al-Shabura refugee camp. Nine people were killed in the attack, the majority of them Palestinians displaced from the Gaza City area and Deir al-Balah, central Gaza.

The deadly strikes on the al-Khawaja family home, and several other residences in Rafah, occurred without warning.

In another case, a Palestinian man was killed in a strike that involved a warning.

Khaled Hameed, a 43-year-old with a speaking disability, was killed when Israeli warplanes bombed the al-Ghalban family home southeast of Rafah on 26 April. Hameed was inside of his home next to the one that was targeted at the time of the attack.

“Before the bombing, Israeli forces contacted one of the neighbors, instructing them to evacuate nearby houses,” the rights groups said.

Flight to al-Mawasi

The threat of shelling has led to tens of thousands of people moving from Rafah to already overcrowded al-Mawasi, an area of Khan Younis in southern Gaza, where displaced people have set up tents or makeshift nylon shelters on farmland, roadsides and along the coast without basic infrastructure.

More than 34,500 Palestinians have been killed in Gaza since 7 October and nearly 78,000 injured, according to the health ministry in the territory. Thousands of others remain buried under the rubble of destroyed buildings or are missing.

The three Palestinian human rights groups called for urgent intervention to prevent an Israeli ground invasion of Rafah and to “secure the return of displaced Palestinians to their homes and ensure the unhindered provision of urgently needed basic services and humanitarian assistance.”

The groups called for “diplomatic, economic and individual sanctions, and a two-way arms embargo” to pressure Israel to comply with its international obligations, including orders to halt genocidal acts from the UN’s World Court and a ceasefire demanded by the Security Council.

Martin Griffiths, the UN humanitarian chief, warned this week that a ground operation in Rafah “is on the immediate horizon.”

He said that an invasion of the area would “be nothing short of a tragedy beyond words” and it would “strike a disastrous blow” against efforts by “agencies struggling to provide humanitarian aid.”

“We are in a race to stave off hunger and death, and we are losing,” Griffiths added.

“Extraordinarily deep anxiety”

Philippe Lazzarini, the head of UNRWA, the UN agency for Palestine refugees, described “an extraordinarily deep anxiety prevailing” in Gaza over the question of a ground offensive in Rafah.

“And the likelihood of a military offensive all depends on whether or not a ceasefire deal will be reached this week,” Lazzarini said on Tuesday.

“Just to let you know that people have not yet been asked to evacuate from Rafah,” he added. “But there is a sense that if there is no deal this week, this can happen at any time.”

Hamas said on Thursday that it was sending a delegation to Egypt for further ceasefire talks and was studying Israel’s latest proposal.

But a seemingly unbridgeable impasse remains.

Hamas demands a permanent end to Israel’s war while Israel has indicated only a willingness to “the restoration of sustainable calm” to secure the release of the remaining captives in Gaza.

Benjamin Netanyahu, Israel’s prime minister, reportedly told Antony Blinken, the US secretary of state, that Rafah will be invaded if Hamas continues to condition a deal on a full ceasefire.

Washington says it opposes an Israeli incursion into Rafah without a credible plan to protect civilians, which humanitarian groups say is all but impossible.

The Biden administration has refused to apply anything other than rhetorical pressure on Israel to thwart an assault on Rafah and the Pentagon has presented Israel with a supposedly alternative, phased approach to dismantling Hamas’ battalions in the area.

Netanyahu, who seeks to prolong the war to hold onto political power and delay his criminal trial over charges of corruption, has repeatedly insisted that Israel will invade Rafah regardless of any deal.

No alternative strategy

John Kirby, the White House national security spokesperson, admitted on Tuesday that the administration has no other strategy for ending the war in Gaza besides indirect talks that have repeatedly reached a stalemate.

Netanyahu’s government is coming under pressure from other sources, with Colombia cutting off diplomatic ties with Israel in protest over the Gaza genocide, and Turkey halting exports and imports to and from Israel.

Meanwhile, Israeli leaders appear to be convinced that arrest warrants from the International Criminal Court targeting senior officials are imminent, creating an “atmosphere of panic” among its foreign ministry diplomats.

Israeli leaders are coming to the late realization that the catastrophic violence wrought on Gaza will come at a cost to the country’s international standing, particularly after the targeted killing of several aid workers with World Central Kitchen, including a nationals of the US, UK and Australia – Israel’s closest allies.

Unprecedented humanitarian catastrophe

Even if a ceasefire deal is reached in the coming days, an unprecedented humanitarian catastrophe remains.

Three quarters of Gaza’s population of 2.3 million people have been displaced from their homes, and nearly two-thirds of all housing in the territory has been destroyed.

UN officials say that it could take 14 years to remove the rubble and unexploded ordnance where houses, schools, universities, mosques, commercial towers and other infrastructure once stood.

More than a million Palestinians in Gaza are experiencing catastrophic levels of hunger, according to the World Food Program, and more than two dozen children have already died from malnutrition and thirst since February, the health ministry said.

Rebuilding destroyed homes in Gaza will take at least until 2040 in a best-case scenario but would be drawn out for decades if reconstruction is conducted at the same pace that followed Israel’s previous major destructive assaults, according to a UN report.

Israel’s genocidal war in Gaza, which began almost seven months ago, has thrust “nearly 1.74 million additional people into poverty,” according to UN estimates.

Achim Steiner, an administrator for the UN Development Program, said the projections from a new assessment “warn that the suffering in Gaza will not end when the war does."



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

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For the First Time Ever, Bahraini Resistance Launches Attack on Israel
MAY 4, 2024

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For the first time, Bahraini Islamic Resistance hit a target in Israel. Photo: Palestine Chronicle.

For the first time since the start of the war, the Islamic Resistance in Bahrain has declared its responsibility for an attack on an Israeli target in the Eilat region, in the southern Occupied Territories.

This is the first time that a Bahraini-based group takes action as part of growing regional solidarity with Gaza.

The Ashtar Brigades announced that they have hit the Israeli target using drones, and that their action was done in solidarity with “the patient people in resisting Gaza.”



The Bahraini Brigades said in a statement on Thursday, May 2, that its target was the headquarters of the “company responsible for ground transportation in the Zionist entity [Trucknet].”

Even though the statement was made on Thursday, the operation was carried out on April 27.

The group said that they will continue their attacks on Israel until the war stops.


Below is the full statement by Saraya Al-Ashtar:

The Islamic Resistance in Bahrain – Saraya Al-Ashtar – announces the targeting of the headquarters of the company responsible for ground transportation in the Zionist entity (Trucknet) in the city of Umm al-Rashrash in occupied Palestine (Eilat), on Tuesday, April 27, 2024, using drones, in support of the Palestinian cause and in solidarity with our resisting people in Gaza.

The Islamic Resistance in Bahrain affirms that it will continue its movements and support on all fronts for our patient people in resisting Gaza, and that it will not cease its operations until the zionist aggression on Gaza stops.

(The Palestine Chronicle)

https://orinocotribune.com/for-first-ti ... on-israel/

Universities as Tentacles of the Police State
MAY 4, 2024

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Art of medusa. Photo: Pixbay.

By Michael Hudson – Apr 29, 2024

“Have you no sense of decency?”

The recent Congressional hearings leading to a bloodbath of university presidents brings back memories from my teen-age years in the 1950s when everyone’s eyes were glued to the TV broadcast of the McCarthy hearings. And the student revolts incited by vicious college presidents trying to stifle academic freedom when it opposes foreign unjust wars awakens memories of the 1960s protests against the Vietnam War and the campus clampdowns confronting police violence.

I was the junior member of the “Columbia three” alongside Seymour Melman and my mentor Terence McCarthy (both of whom taught at Columbia’s Seeley Mudd School of Industrial Engineering; my job was mainly to handle publicity and publication). At the end of that decade, students occupied my office and all others at the New School’s graduate faculty in New York City – very peacefully, without disturbing any of my books and papers.
Only the epithets have changed.

The invective “Communist” has been replaced by “anti-Semite,” and the renewal of police violence on campus has not yet led to a Kent State-style rifle barrage against protesters. But the common denominators are all here once again. A concerted effort has been organized to condemn and even to punish today’s nationwide student uprisings against the genocide occurring in Gaza and the West Bank. Just as the House Unamerican Activities Committee (HUAC) aimed to end the careers of progressive actors, directors, professors and State Department officials unsympathetic to Chiang Kai-Shek or sympathetic to the Soviet Union from 1947 to 1975, today’s version aims at ending what remains of academic freedom in the United States.

The epithet of “communism” from 75 years ago has been updated to “anti-Semitism.” Senator Joe McCarthy of Wisconsin has been replaced by Elise Stefanik, House Republican from upstate New York, and Senator “Scoop” Jackson upgraded to President Joe Biden. Harvard University President Claudine Gay (now forced to resign), former University of Pennsylvania President Elizabeth Magill (also given the boot), and Massachusetts Institute of Technology President Sally Kornbluth were called upon to abase themselves by promising to accuse peace advocates critical of U.S. foreign policy of anti-Semitism.

The most recent victim was Columbia’s president Nemat “Minouche” Shafik, a cosmopolitan opportunist with trilateral citizenship who enforced neoliberal economic policy as a high-ranking official at the IMF (where she was no stranger to the violence of “IMF riots”) and the World Bank, and who brought her lawyers along to help her acquiesce in the Congressional Committee’s demands. She did that and more, all on her own. Despite being told not to by the faculty and student affairs committees, she called in the police to arrest peaceful demonstrators.



This radical trespass of police violence against peaceful demonstrators (the police themselves attested to their peacefulness) triggered sympathetic revolts throughout the United States, met with even more violent police responses at Emory College in Atlanta and California State Polytechnic, where cell phone videos were quickly posted on various media platforms.

Just as intellectual freedom and free speech were attacked by HUAC 75 years ago, academic freedom is now under attack at these universities. The police have trespassed onto school grounds to accuse students themselves of trespassing, with violence reminiscent of the demonstrations that peaked in May 1970 when the Ohio National Guard shot Kent State students singing and speaking out against America’s war in Vietnam.

Today’s demonstrations are in opposition to the Biden-Netanyahu genocide in Gaza and the West Bank. The more underlying crisis can be boiled down to the insistence by Benjamin Netanyahu that to criticize Israel is anti-Semitic. That is the “enabling slur” of today’s assault on academic freedom.

By “Israel,” Biden and Netanyahu mean specifically the right-wing Likud Party and its theocratic supporters aiming to create “a land without a [non-Jewish] people.” They assert that Jews owe their loyalty not to their current nationality (or humanity) but to Israel and its policy of driving the Gaza Strip’s millions of Palestinians into the sea by bombing them out of their homes, hospitals and refugee camps.

The implication is that to support the International Court of Justice’s accusations that Israel is plausibly committing genocide is an anti-Semitic act. Supporting the UN resolutions vetoed by the United States is anti-Semitic.

The claim is that Israel is defending itself and that protesting the genocide of the Palestinians in Gaza and the West Bank frightens Jewish students. But research by students at Columbia’s School of Journalism found that the complaints cited by the New York Times and other pro-Israeli media were made by non-students trying to spread the story that Israel’s violence was in self-defense.

The student violence has been by Israeli nationals. Columbia has a student-exchange program with Israel for students who finish their compulsory training with the Israeli Defense Forces. It was some of these exchange students who attacked pro-Gaza demonstrators, spraying them with Skunk, a foul-smelling indelible Israeli army chemical weapon that marks demonstrators for subsequent arrest, torture or assassination. The only students endangered were the victims of this attack. Columbia under Shafik did nothing to protect or help the victims.
The hearings to which she submitted speak for themselves. Columbia’s president Shafik was able to avoid the first attack on universities not sufficiently pro-Likud by having meetings outside of the country. Yet she showed herself willing to submit to the same brow-beating that had led her two fellow presidents to be fired, hoping that her lawyers had prompted her to submit in a way that would be acceptable to the committee.

I found the most demagogic attack to be that of Republican Congressman Rick Allen from Georgia, asking Dr. Shafik whether she was familiar with the passage in Genesis 12.3. As he explained” “It was a covenant that God made with Abraham. And that covenant was real clear. … ‘If you bless Israel, I will bless you. If you curse Israel, I will curse you.’ … Do you consider that to be a serious issue? I mean, do you want Columbia University to be cursed by God of the Bible?”

Shafik smiled and was friendly all the way through this bible thumping, and replied meekly, “Definitely not.”
She might have warded off this browbeating question by saying, “Your question is bizarre. This is 2024, and America is not a theocracy. And the Israel of the early 1st century BC was not Netanyahu’s Israel of today.” She accepted all the accusations that Allen and his fellow Congressional inquisitors threw at her.

Her main nemesis was Elise Stefanik, Chair of the House Republican Conference, who is on the House Armed Services Committee, and the Committee on Education and the Workforce.

Congresswoman Stefanik: You were asked were there any anti-Jewish protests and you said ‘No’.

President Shafik: So the protest was not labeled as an anti-Jewish protest. It was labeled as an anti-Israeli government. But antisemitic incidents happened or antisemitic things were said. So I just wanted to finish.
Congresswoman Stefanik: And you are aware that in that bill, that got 377 Members out of 435 Members of Congress, condemns ‘from the river to the sea’ as antisemitic?

Dr. Shafik: Yes, I am aware of that.

Congresswoman Stefanik: But you don’t believe ‘from the river to the sea’ is antisemitic?

Dr. Shafik: We have already issued a statement to our community saying that language is hurtful and we would prefer not to hear it on our campus.

What an appropriate response to Stefanik’s browbeating might have been?

Shafik could have said, “The reason why students are protesting is against the Israeli genocide against the Palestinians, as the International Court of Justice has ruled, and most of the United Nations agree. I’m proud of them for taking a moral stand that most of the world supports but is under attack here in this room.”
Instead, Shafik seemed more willing than the leaders of Harvard or Penn to condemn and potentially discipline students and faculty for using the term “from the river to the sea, Palestine will be free.” She could have said that it is absurd to say that this is a call to eliminate Israel’s Jewish population, but is a call to give Palestinians freedom instead of being treated as Untermenschen.

Asked explicitly whether calls for genocide violate Columbia’s code of conduct, Dr. Shafik answered in the affirmative — “Yes, it does.” So did the other Columbia leaders who accompanied her at the hearing. They did not say that this is not at all what the protests are about. Neither Shafik nor any other of the university officials say, “Our university is proud of our students taking an active political and social role in protesting the idea of ethnic cleansing and outright murder of families simply to grab the land that they live on. Standing up for that moral principle is what education is all about, and what civilization’s all about.”

The one highlight that I remember from the McCarthy hearings was the reply by Joseph Welch, the U.S. Army’s Special Council, on June 9, 1954 to Republican Senator Joe McCarthy’s charge that one of Welch’s attorneys had ties to a Communist front organization. “Until this moment, senator,” Welch replied, “I think I never gauged your cruelty or your recklessness. … Have you no sense of decency, sir? At long last, have you left no sense of decency?”

The audience broke into wild applause. Welch’s put-down has echoed for the past 70 years in the minds of those who were watching television then (as I was, at age 15). A similar answer by any of the three other college presidents would have shown Stefanik to be the vulgarian that she is. But none ventured to stand up against the abasement.

The Congressional attack accusing opponents of genocide of Jews violate Columbia’s code of conduct?” Bonamici asked the four new Columbia witnesses. All responded: “Yes.”

That was the moment when they should have said that the students were not calling for genocide of the Jews, but seeking to mobilize opposition to genocide being committed by the Likud government against the Palestinians with President Biden’s full support.

During a break in the proceedings Rep. Stefanik told the press that “the witnesses were overheard discussing how well they thought their testimony was going for Columbia.” This arrogance is eerily reminiscent to the previous three university presidents who believed when walking out of the hearing that their testimony was acceptable. “Columbia is in for a reckoning of accountability. If it takes a member of Congress to force a university president to fire a pro-terrorist, antisemitic faculty chair, then Columbia University leadership is failing Jewish students and its academic mission,” added Stefanik. “No amount of overlawyered, overprepped, and over-consulted testimony is going to cover up for failure to act.”

Shafik could have pointedly corrected the implications by the House inquisitors that it was Jewish students who needed protection. The reality was just the opposite: The danger was from the Israeli IDF students who attacked the demonstrators with military Skunk, with no punishment by Columbia.

Despite being told not to by the faculty and student groups (which Shafik was officially bound to consult), she called in the police, who arrested 107 students, tied their hands behind their backs and kept them that way for many hours as punishment while charging them for trespassing on Columbia’s property. Shafik then suspended them from classes.

The clash between two kinds of Judaism: Zionist vs. assimilationist

A good number of these protestors being criticized were Jewish. Netanyahu and AIPAC have claimed – correctly, it seems – that the greatest danger to their current genocidal policies comes from the traditionally liberal Jewish middle-class population. Progressive Jewish groups have joined the uprisings at Columbia and other universities.
Early Zionism arose in late 19th-century Europe as a response to the violent pogroms killing Jews in Ukrainian cities such as Odessa and other Central European cities that were the center of anti-Semitism. Zionism promised to create a safe refuge. It made sense at a time when Jews were fleeing their countries to save their lives in countries that accepted them. They were the “Gazans” of their day.

After World War II and the horrors of the Holocaust, anti-Semitism became passé. Most Jews in the United States and other countries were being assimilated and becoming prosperous, most successfully in the United States. The past century has seen this success enable them to assimilate, while retaining the moral standard that ethnic and religious discrimination such as that which their forbears had suffered is wrong in principle.

Jewish activists were in the forefront of fighting for civil liberties, most visibly against anti-Black prejudice and violence in the 1960s and ‘70s, and against the Vietnam War. Many of my Jewish school friends in the 1950s bought Israel bonds, but thought of Israel as a socialist country and thought of volunteering to work on a kibbutz in the summer. There was no thought of antagonism, and I heard no mention of the Palestinian population when the phrase “a people without a land in a land without a people” was spoken.

But Zionism’s leaders have remained obsessed with the old antagonisms in the wake of Nazism’s murders of so many Jews. In many ways they have turned Nazism inside out, fearing a renewed attack from non-Jews. Driving the Arabs out of Israel and making it an apartheid state was just the opposite of what assimilationist Jews aimed at.

The moral stance of progressive Jews, and the ideal that Jews, blacks and members of all other religions and races should be treated equally, is the opposite of Israeli Zionism. In the hands of Netanyahu’s Likud Party and the influx of right-wing supporters, Zionism asserts a claim to set Jewish people apart from the rest of their national population, and even from the rest of the world, as we are seeing today.

Claiming to speak for all Jews, living and dead, Netanyahu asserts that to criticize his genocide and the Palestinian holocaust, the nakba, is anti-Semitic. This is the position of Stefanik and her fellow committee members. It is an assertion that Jews owe their first allegiance to Israel, and hence to its ethnic cleansing and mass murder since last October. President Biden also has labeled the student demonstrations “antisemitic protests.”

This claim in the circumstances of Israel’s ongoing genocide is causing more anti-Semitism than anyone since Hitler. If people throughout the world come to adopt Netanyahu’s and his cabinet’s definition of anti-Semitism, how many, being repulsed by Israel’s actions, will say, “If that is the case, then indeed I guess I’m anti-Semitic.”

Netanyahu’s slander against Judaism and what civilization should stand for

Netanyahu characterized the U.S. protests in an extremist speech on April 24 attacking American academic freedom.

What’s happening in America’s college campuses is horrific. Antisemitic mobs have taken over leading universities. They call for the annihilation of Israel, they attack Jewish students, they attack Jewish faculty. This is reminiscent of what happened in German universities in the 1930s. We see this exponential rise of antisemitism throughout America and throughout Western societies as Israel tries to defend itself against genocidal terrorists, genocidal terrorists who hide behind civilians.

It’s unconscionable, it has to be stopped, it has to be condemned and condemned unequivocally. But that’s not what happened. The response of several university presidents was shameful. Now, fortunately, state, local, federal officials, many of them have responded differently but there has to be more. More has to be done.

This is a call to make American universities into arms of a police state, imposing policies dictated by Israel’s settler state. That call is being funded by a circular flow: Congress gives enormous subsidies to Israel, which recycles some of this money back into the election campaigns of politicians willing to serve their donors. It is the same policy that Ukraine uses when it employs U.S. “aid” by setting up well-funded lobbying organizations to back client politicians.

What kind of student and academic protest expressions could oppose the Gaza and West Bank genocide without explicitly threatening Jewish students? How about “Palestinians are human being too!” That is not aggressive. To make it more ecumenical, one could add “And so are the Russians, despite what Ukrainian neo-Nazis say.”
I can understand why Israelis feel threatened by Palestinians. They know how many they have killed and brutalized to grab their land, killing just to “free” the land for themselves. They must think “If the Palestinians are like us, they must want to kill us, because of what we have done to them and there can never be a two-state solution and we can never live together, because this land was given to us by God.”

Netanyahu fanned the flames after his April 24 speech by raising today’s conflict to the level of a fight for civilization: “What is important now is for all of us, all of us who are interested and cherish our values and our civilization, to stand up together and to say enough is enough.”

Is what Israel is doing, and what the United Nations, the International Court of Justice and most of the Global Majority oppose, really “our civilization”? Ethnic cleansing, genocide and treating the Palestinian population as conquered and to be expelled as subhumans is an assault on the most basic principles of civilization.

Peaceful students defending that universal concept of civilization are called terrorists and anti-Semites – by the terrorist Israeli Prime Minister. He is following the tactics of Joseph Goebbels: The way to mobilize a population to fight the enemy is to depict yourself as under attack. That was the Nazi public relations strategy, and it is the PR strategy of Israel today – and of many in the American Congress, in AIPAC and many related institutions that proclaim a morally offensive idea of civilization as the ethnic supremacy of a group sanctioned by God.

The real focus of the protests is the U.S. policy that is backing Israel’s ethnic cleansing and genocide supported by last week’s foreign “aid.” It is also a protest against the corruption of Congressional politicians raising money from lobbyists representing foreign interests over those of the United States. Last week’s “aid” bill also backed Ukraine, that other country presently engaged in ethnic cleansing, where House members waved Ukrainian flags, not those of the United States. Shortly before that, one Congressman wore his Israeli army uniform into Congress to advertise his priorities.

Zionism has gone far beyond Judaism. I’ve read that there are nine Christian Zionists for every Jewish Zionist. It is as if both groups are calling for the End Time to arrive, while insisting that support for the United Nations and the International Court of Justice condemning Israel for genocide is anti-Semitic.

What CAN the students at Columbia ask for:

Students at Columbia and other universities have called for universities to disinvest in Israeli stocks, and also those of U.S. arms makers exporting to Israel. Given the fact that universities have become business organizations, I don’t think that this is the most practical demand at present. Most important, it doesn’t go to the heart of the principles at work.

What really is the big public relations issue is the unconditional U.S. backing for Israel come what may, with “anti-Semitism” the current propaganda epithet to characterize those who oppose genocide and brutal land grabbing.

They should insist on a public announcement by Columbia (and also Harvard and the University of Pennsylvania, who were equally obsequious to Rep. Stefanik) that they recognize that it is not anti-Semitic to condemn genocide, support the United Nations and denounce the U.S. veto.

They should insist that Columbia and the other universities making a sacrosanct promise not to call police onto academic grounds over issues of free speech.

They should insist that the president be fired for her one-sided support of Israeli violence against her students. In that demand they are in agreement with Rep. Stefanik’s principle of protecting students, and that Dr. Shafik must go.

But there is one class of major offenders that should be held up for contempt: the donors who try to attack academic freedom by using their money to influence university policy and turn universities away from the role in supporting academic freedom and free speech. The students should insist that university administrators – the unpleasant opportunists standing above the faculty and students – must not only refuse such pressure but should join in publicly expressing shock over such covert political influence.

The problem is that American universities have become like Congress in basing their policy on attracting contributions from their donors. That is the academic equivalent of the Supreme Court’s Citizens United ruling. Numerous Zionist funders have threatened to withdraw their contributions to Harvard, Columbia and other schools not following Netanyahu’s demands to clamp down on opponents of genocide and defenders of the United Nations. These funders are the enemies of the students at such universities, and both students and faculty should insist on their removal. Just as Dr. Shafik’s International Monetary Fund fell subject to its economists’ protest that there must be “No more Argentinas,” perhaps the Columbia students could chant “No More Shafiks."

https://orinocotribune.com/universities ... ice-state/

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Hezbollah responds to Israeli massacre in south Lebanon with rockets on Kiryat Shmona

Dozens of rockets struck the settlement in northern Israel after a family of four was killed by Israeli strikes in south Lebanon

News Desk

MAY 5, 2024

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(Photo credit: AFP/Getty Images)

Hezbollah fired dozens of rockets into Israel’s northern Kiryat Shmona settlement on 5 May in response to the Israeli massacre which killed an entire family in south Lebanon that day.

“In support of our steadfast Palestinian people in the Gaza Strip and in support of their valiant and honorable resistance, and in response to the horrific crime committed by the Israeli enemy in the town of Mays al-Jabal and the number of martyrs and wounded civilians, the Mujahideen of the Islamic Resistance bombed on Sunday afternoon, 05/05/2024, the settlement of Kiryat Shmona with dozens of Katyusha and Falaq rockets,” the resistance group said in a statement.

Israeli police said they are dealing with several impact sites and property damage in Kiryat Shmona, according to Hebrew media.

Video footage on social media shows smoke and damage to buildings and a vehicle, as well as the moment some of the rockets and missiles made impact.

A family of four was killed by an Israeli airstrike in the southern Lebanese village of Mays al-Jabal on 5 May.

“The number of martyrs of the Mays al-Jabal massacre has risen to four from one family after the body of a boy was found under the rubble … two people were injured, including a woman whose condition was described as moderate,” Lebanon’s National News Agency (NNA) reported.

The four have been identified as Fadi Muhammad Khader Hanikah, his wife Maya Ali Ammar, and their two children, 21-year-old Muhammad and 12-year-old Ahmad.

NNA said the attack resulted in “massive destruction.”

Hezbollah launched several attacks at Israeli border sites the day before, on Saturday, 4 May, including an artillery attack on Israeli soldiers at the Bayad Blida site.

On 8 October 2023, a day after the start of the war in Gaza, Hezbollah began attacking Israeli military sites on the border in solidarity with the Palestinians.

The attacks have continued since then on a daily basis, and Israel has responded with an indiscriminate bombing campaign on southern Lebanese villages. Hezbollah’s operations have resulted in the uprooting of tens of thousands of Israeli settlers from their homes and towns in Israel’s north.

The Lebanese resistance has vowed not to stop attacking Israel until the war in Gaza is brought to an end. US and French-sponsored de-escalation efforts – which mainly focus on pushing Hezbollah away from the border area without any significant concessions from Israel – have failed.

https://thecradle.co/articles/hezbollah ... yat-shmona

Yemen expands front against Israel to include Mediterranean Sea
Sanaa has warned that if the Israeli army enters Rafah, navigation in the 'area of military operations' will not be allowed

News Desk

MAY 3, 2024

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(Photo Credit: AP)

The Yemeni armed forces announced on 3 May the start of the “fourth phase” of escalation against Israel and in support of Palestine, threatening to target Israeli-linked ships “anywhere within our reach."

Sanaa highlights in a statement that the attacks, which have successfully locked Israel out of the Red Sea, will expand to the Mediterranean Sea. Earlier this year, the Yemeni armed forces expanded the scope of their pro-Palestine operations to include the Indian Ocean, severely affecting the Israeli economy.


BREAKING | Yemeni Armed Forces announces fourth phase of escalation against Israel:

○ Will target ships heading to Israel in the Mediterranean Sea.

○ Will prevent all ships of companies linked to Israeli ports from passing through the armed forces' area of ​​operations,… pic.twitter.com/v36CtSK7ZQ

— The Cradle (@TheCradleMedia) May 3, 2024


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Friday's statement from the Ansarallah-led government also warns Tel Aviv against launching their assault on the city of Rafah in southern Gaza, saying that, with immediate effect, any ships “linked to the provision of supplies and entry into the Palestinian ports under occupation” would be subject to “severe penalties.”

The statement stresses that these ships will not be allowed to “sail through the area of military operations, regardless of their destination.”

The escalation by Yemen was made public by armed forces spokesman Brigadier General Yahya Saree, who made the announcement in front of hundreds of thousands of Yemenis who continue to gather in the capital every week to show their support for the Palestinians in Gaza.


رداً على استمرار الحرب على #غزة.. القوات المسلحة اليمنية تعلن بدأ المرحلة الرابعة من التصعيد

المتحدث باسم القوات المسلحة اليمنية العميد يحيى سريع يتحدث عنها خلال مسيرات #اليمن، نصرةً لـ #غزة و #فلسطين #صنعاء #الميادين pic.twitter.com/1QheEZhCYs

— قناة الميادين (@AlMayadeenNews) May 3, 2024


Since mid-November, Yemen has maintained a naval trade blockade against Israel. The armed forces' operations remain mostly unaffected despite an illegal US bombing campaign and the heavy militarization of the Red Sea by NATO countries.

“We didn’t necessarily expect this level of threat. There was an uninhibited violence that was quite surprising and very significant. [The Yemenis] do not hesitate to use drones that fly at water level, to explode them on commercial ships, and to fire ballistic missiles,” Jerome Henry, the commander of France's Aquitaine-class FREMM frigate Alsace, told Le Figaro last month.

Ansarallah leaders have repeatedly stated that the Yemeni operations will continue until Israel's genocidal war in Gaza comes to a stop and a lasting ceasefire is implemented.

In the face of its failure to deter Yemen, Washington recently offered the country “an acknowledgment of its legitimacy” in exchange for its neutrality in the war on Gaza.

“[Washington] pledged to repair the damages, remove foreign forces from all occupied Yemeni lands and islands, and remove Ansarallah from the State Department’s ‘terrorism list’ – as soon as they stop their attacks in support of Gaza,” according to Yemeni sources who spoke exclusively with The Cradle.

The offer also included “severely reducing” the role of the Saudi-appointed Presidential Leadership Council (PLC) and “accelerating the signing of a roadmap” with the Saudi-led coalition to end the nine-year war that has decimated Yemen.

https://thecradle.co/articles/yemen-exp ... ranean-sea

Syrian forces kill dozens of ISIS militants near US occupation base

Russia and Syria say the US harbors and trains militants from ISIS and other groups in the 55 km buffer zone surrounding its base in Al-Tanf

News Desk

MAY 3, 2024

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ISIS fighters in the Syrian desert (Photo credit: Syria Press)

ISIS militants launched a massive attack on 3 May on several points belonging to the forces supporting the Syrian army in the Al-Sukhna desert in the Homs countryside in eastern Syria, Sputnik reported.

A Sputnik correspondent in Homs said that the Syrian army and its auxiliary forces were able to repel the attack with the help of reinforcements, killing and wounding 40 ISIS militants. At the same time, 13 members of the Syrian army's auxiliary forces were killed in the battle.

ISIS launched the attack on Syrian military outposts in the Al-Sukhna desert, which lies north of the 55-kilometer buffer area surrounding the illegal US base at Al-Tanf on the Syrian–Jordanian–Iraqi border.

The US claims it occupies the Al-Tanf base to fight ISIS. However, the Russian and Syrian governments say US forces use the 55-kilometer buffer zone around the base to harbor and train militants from ISIS and other mercenary groups, including the Syrian Revolutionary Commandos, Ahrar al-Sharqiya, and the Ahmed al-Abdo Army.

US warplanes bomb any Syrian forces attempting to enter the Al-Tanf buffer zone to fight these groups.

On 19 April, at least 20 fighters from Liwa al-Quds, a Palestinian armed group supporting the Syrian army, were killed when their bus was ambushed by ISIS militants in Al-Sukhna.

ISIS militants attacked the bus with heavy machine guns and B7 artillery shells as it was traveling between the village of Al-Koum and the city of Al-Sukhnah in the eastern Badia desert near Palmyra.

Last Tuesday, the Deputy Head of the Russian Reconciliation Center between the warring parties in Syria, Major General Yuri Popov, announced that the Russian Air Force destroyed two bases for militants who had left the Al-Tanf area and were hiding in difficult-to-reach mountainous areas in Homs Governorate in central Syria.

Popov said, “Russian air force strikes destroyed two bases for militants who left the Al-Tanf area and were hiding in inaccessible areas in the Al-Amur mountain range in Homs province.”

ISIS emerged in Syria as part of the covert US and Israeli war on Damascus that began in 2011. Through Operation Timber Sycamore, the CIA and allied intelligence agencies funneled billions of dollars in weapons and aid to Al-Qaeda-linked militants in Syria from Iraq, Saudi Arabia, the UK, and Libya in an effort to topple Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's government.

https://thecradle.co/articles/syrian-fo ... ation-base
"There is great chaos under heaven; the situation is excellent."

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