Palestine

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Re: Palestine

Post by blindpig » Tue Nov 07, 2023 11:14 pm

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BLOOD STAINS ON AN AMBULANCE OF THE PALESTINIAN RED CRESCENT, FOLLOWING AN ISRAELI AIRSTRIKE AT THE ENTRANCE OF AL-SHIFA HOSPITAL IN GAZA CITY, NOVEMBER 3, 2023. (PHOTO: SAEED JARAS/APA IMAGES)

Israeli doctors urge the bombing of Gaza hospitals
Originally published: Mondoweiss on November 5, 2023 by Tali Shapiro & Jonathan Ofir (more by Mondoweiss) | (Posted Nov 06, 2023)

About 90 Israeli doctors have signed a letter calling for the bombing of hospitals in Gaza.

Only last week, dozens of prominent Israeli rabbis had already assured Israeli leaders that they have a right to bomb al-Shifa’ hospital in Gaza, and this week’s letter signed by “Doctors for the Rights of IDF Soldiers” urges the bombing of any and every hospital in Gaza.

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LETTER IN HEBREW FROM DOZENS OF ISRAELI DOCTORS CALLING ON THE IDF TO BOMB GAZA’S HOSPITALS.

The letter states, in no uncertain terms, that due to suspicion of “terrorist activity,” the hospitals are “a legitimate target for annihilation.” They claim that “ambulances that are evacuating patients to the south in order to be treated elsewhere are at their disposal.” It does not mention that these ambulances, too, are being bombed by Israel, or that the south is also being mercilessly pummeled.

The doctors claim that “the residents of Gaza… are the ones who brought their annihilation upon themselves”–echoing the genocidal rhetoric of centrist Israeli politicians who have even claimed that “the children of Gaza have brought this upon themselves.”

The doctors apply the terms “snakes,” “wasps,” and “terrorist nests” in the dehumanization of the enemy, which appears to be expanded from Hamas to the whole of the Palestinian people.

The original letter with an initial list of 9 doctors was posted today by Quds News Network, and has already been signed by an additional 83 signatories and has been circulated by various Jewish orthodox sites (such as here and here).

We have identified the initial 9 signatories below, who include various gynecologists and pediatricians, several of them with a clear religious-Zionist settler leaning and affiliation (see some details in brackets in the signatory list).

The letters
We, the undersigned, doctors who work in the healthcare system responsibly and professionally, hereby urge:

The moment that murderous terrorist organizations built murder and terrorism headquarters as an integral part of hospitals, they turned the hospitals into legitimate targets by their own hands.

For years the citizens of Israel have suffered murderous terror, while the head of the snake and head murderers enjoy complete shelter and protection, as they built terror headquarters within the hospitals, understanding that no harm would come to them.

After the Simhat Torah [Oct. 7] massacre, the many murdered and kidnapped, and the hair-raising atrocities, which we have no room here to detail and write, there is complete agreement in the Israeli security forces that the terror organization Hamas should be eradicated to dust, which is worse than ISIS.

This is the same terror organization that isn’t above cruel murder and unprecedented atrocities towards men, women, and children–therefore, any place where its men hide and/or is used for terrorist activity is a legitimate target for annihilation, including hospitals.

Whoever mixes hospitals with terrorism must understand that he has no safe place and cannot seek refuge in hospitals in order to produce terror and enjoy protection.

Ambulances that are evacuating patients to the south in order to be treated elsewhere are at their disposal.

No more! The residents of Gaza, who saw fit to turn the hospitals into terrorist nests in an attempt to take advantage of Western morality, are the ones who brought their annihilation upon themselves–terrorism must be eliminated everywhere and in any way.

Attacking terrorist headquarters located inside of a hospital is the right of the IDF [Israeli army] and its duty.

It is unthinkable that the citizens of Israel are abandoned, and arch-murderers are protected only because they are hiding in hospitals.

After the IDF repeatedly warned the hospitals to stop the cynical use made of them for terrorism, and after all citizens were asked to evacuate the area in light of the presence of terrorists, there is an obligation to destroy the wasps’ nests and the hospitals they use to shelter them, the sooner, the better.


We, the undersigned:

Dr. Tal Nir [elected ”most dedicated doctor” under COVID in 2021, orthodox Jewish Chabad member]

Dr. Audray Azran [Gynecologist, Haifa]

Dr. Shlomi Ben-Nun [Pediatrician, retired 2022, Afula]

Dr. Hannah Katan [Religious-Zionist gynecologist, founded the Family Center at the settlement of Elkana, serves as its president]

Dr. Ori Attias [Pediatrician, Intensive Care Rambam Hospital, Jerusalem]

Dr. Hannah Kremer [family doctor at the Elkana settlement clinic]

Dr. Yeruham Priner [pediatrician, Beitar Illit settlement]

Dr. Carmit Almog [specializes in Nephrology, high blood pressure, Rabin Medical Center, Tel Aviv area]

Dr. Menuha Vilk [pediatrician, Jerusalem]

https://mronline.org/2023/11/06/israeli ... hospitals/

Unbelievable, despicable, monsters.

As previously noted, it was the vicious behavior of colonial militaries to which the term "terrorism" was first applied. Therefore, violent responses by the afflicted parties can only be called 'counter-terrorism'.

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Secret U.S. War in Lebanon Is Tinder for Escalation of Israel–Gaza Conflict
Posted by INTERNATIONALIST 360° on NOVEMBER 5, 2023
Nick Turse

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Billions in security aid to Lebanon, along with off-the-books commandos, could embroil the U.S. in a regional conflagration.

THE STATE DEPARTMENT urged U.S. citizens to leave Lebanon on Sunday “due to the unpredictable security situation.” The warning followed clashes between protesters and Lebanese security forces in a Beirut suburb near the U.S. Embassy after hundreds of Palestinians were killed last week in a blast at Al-Ahli hospital in Gaza. The unrest seems to confirm the fears of almost eight in 10 Americans that the war between Israel and Hamas will lead to a broader conflict in the Middle East.

But few Americans realize that the United States has long been embroiled in a wider war in Lebanon, and that U.S. forces may be a target there, as well. The U.S. has, over decades, poured billions of dollars in security assistance into Lebanon and conducted counterterrorism efforts against Hezbollah, an Iran-backed Shia group with political and military wings. Lebanon’s dominant political and military force, Hezbollah has long been designated a terrorist organization by the U.S.

In the shadow of that conflict, the U.S. has waged another “secret war” in Lebanon against Sunni terror groups like the Islamic State and Al Qaeda, according to a former four-star commander who oversaw the effort, declassified documents, former special operators with knowledge of the program, and analysts who have investigated U.S. Code Title 10 § 127e — known in military parlance as “127-echo” — which allows Special Operations forces to use foreign military units as proxies.

Attacks on U.S. forces in the Middle East have already ramped up with drone strikes on American troops in multiple locations across Iraq and Syria, and drone and missile attacks from Yemen on a U.S. Navy destroyer in the northern Red Sea. Experts say that secrecy surrounding the 127e program in Lebanon, known as Lion Hunter, whose existence The Intercept revealed last year, could embroil the U.S. in a wider war in the Middle East and pose an additional threat to U.S. troops.

Neither Special Operations Command nor Central Command, which oversees U.S. military operations in the greater Middle East, will comment on Lion Hunter and the number of U.S. troops who have been, and may still be, involved. But in a June “war powers” letter to Congress, President Joe Biden noted that “approximately 89 United States military personnel are deployed to Lebanon to enhance the government’s counterterrorism capabilities and to support the counterterrorism operations of Lebanese security forces.”

The Israeli–Palestinian conflict makes it all the more crucial that secret wars like the one carried out via the 127e program in Lebanon are subject to congressional oversight, said Katherine Yon Ebright, counsel in the Brennan Center’s liberty and national security program and author of the most comprehensive analysis of the 127e authority. “Already, we have seen U.S. forces in the region targeted over the United States’s political support for and arms transfers to Israel,” Ebright said. “Congress and the public must know where U.S. forces are deployed in the region and whether those forces are at risk of attack, particularly as Hezbollah in Lebanon contemplates joining the conflict against Israel.”

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View of the destruction and damage at the scene of the suicide bombing of the American Embassy in Beirut on April 18, 1983. Photo: Peter Davis/Getty Images

A $3 Billion Partnership

The U.S. military has a long and checkered history of engagement in Lebanon, including a 1958 intervention by U.S. Marines to forestall an insurrection there. In 1983, during a civil war that lasted 15 years, bombings of the U.S. Embassy and the U.S. Marine Corps barracks in Beirut killed more than 300 people. The United States blames Hezbollah for both attacks.

On Monday, during a speech to honor those killed in the barracks bombing 40 years before, U.S. Ambassador to Lebanon Dorothy C. Shea called out Hamas and Hezbollah for trying to “rob Lebanon and its people of their bright future,” saying that the U.S. and the Lebanese people “reject the threats of some to drag Lebanon into a new war.”

Israeli President Isaac Herzog, meanwhile, has signaled a willingness to widen the current conflict. “I think Hezbollah is playing with fire,” he said. “And I want to make clear, we are not looking for a confrontation in our northern border … but if Hezbollah will drag us into war, it should be clear that Lebanon will pay the price.”

America has a long-standing relationship with the Lebanese Armed Forces, or LAF. In a country where 80 percent of the population lives in poverty, the U.S. has provided more than $3 billion in military aid since 2006. “The United States is committed to a relationship that reinforces Lebanon’s security and stability,” said Lt. Col. Karen Roxberry, a Central Command spokesperson. “The Department of Defense provides training and security assistance to help support the LAF’s counterterrorism operations and border security.”

The U.S. routinely decries “Iran’s continuing arms transfers to Hezbollah,” even as it works to arm the LAF with sophisticated weaponry. The U.S. government has facilitated almost $2 billion in Lebanese purchases through the Foreign Military Sales program, including light attack aircraft, helicopters, and Hellfire missiles. Through another program, the U.S. provided 130 armored and tactical ground vehicles. From 2016 to 2021, the United States also authorized the export of more than $82 million in U.S. military equipment to Lebanon, including $12 million in “firearms and related articles.”

The State Department did not respond to detailed questions about the full extent of U.S. security assistance to Lebanon prior to publication.

More than 6,000 members of the LAF have received training in the United States since 1970, including 120 members in 2020. Under the 127e authority, the U.S. trained, armed, advised, and directed an elite unit known as the G2 Strike Force. “The U.S. supporting proxy forces in Lebanon is part of a decades-long, overly militarized policy towards the Middle East that has ignored the root causes of the region’s turmoil and struggles and not brought the peace or stability Americans have been promised,” said Seth Binder, director of advocacy at the Project on Middle East Democracy.

The U.S. is ramping up its military presence in the Middle East, sending the USS Dwight D. Eisenhower Carrier Strike Group and its roughly 7,500 sailors, along with the USS Bataan amphibious ready group, which consists of three ships carrying thousands of troops from the 26th Marine Expeditionary Unit.

“By posturing these U.S. naval assets and advanced fighter aircraft in the region, we aim to send a strong message intended to deter a wider conflict,” said Pentagon Press Secretary Air Force Brig. Gen. Pat Ryder on Thursday. Binder warned that it threatens to do the exact opposite. “The administration’s rush to move forces into the region in order to ‘bolster deterrence’ is a dangerous response that puts the United States at greater risk of what the majority of Americans are afraid of: a broader war.”

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A demonstration supporting Palestinians in Beirut on Oct. 20, 2023. Photo: Joseph Eid/AFP via Getty Images

Exempt From Vetting

Roxberry, the Central Command spokesperson, said that U.S. counterterrorism efforts in Lebanon are primarily aimed at Hezbollah. A formerly secret document obtained by The Intercept stops just short of revealing the target of the Lion Hunter program, noting only that its “activities serve to identify, isolate, and deny safe haven to [redacted].” Gen. Joseph Votel, who headed Special Operations Command from 2014 to 2016 and then Central Command until 2019, filled in the blank, noting that the effort was especially focused on Sunni extremist organizations, including the Islamic State, Al Qaeda, and affiliated terror groups.

The 127e program in Lebanon was one of 20 in operation as recently as 2019, according to the formerly secret Special Operations Command document obtained via the Freedom of Information Act. Votel said it was one of the most effective proxy war efforts of the last decade. “We often held this program up as the gold standard,” he told The Intercept, calling America’s proxies in Lebanon “motivated and capable partners who were well led and very effective at what they were doing.”

Central Command would not comment on the 127e program or proxies employed in Lebanon more generally. “We have no details to share specifically to G2 Strike Force,” said Roxberry, noting only that the Defense Department “supports broader efforts to build the LAF’s institutional capacity to train and operate its forces in a professional manner.”

Votel, who observed the G2 Strike Force firsthand, praised their capability and prowess. “In comparison to other LAF units, they had a more direct chain of command, were smaller and thus more agile and responsive and were focused specifically on offensive operations. Their mission set was smaller and better defined than normal LAF organizations,” he told The Intercept.

According to the formerly secret document, members of the G2 Strike Force undergo “comprehensive assessment” by U.S. Special Operations forces and are “subjected to counter-intelligence screening, polygraph testing, and physical and mental challenges before being selected.” But 127e programs have long been exempt from a vetting process required of other U.S. efforts supporting foreign forces under the “Leahy law.” The measure, named after former U.S. Sen. Patrick Leahy, requires the U.S. to scrutinize the human rights records of forces receiving U.S. security aid.

Without such vetting, Brennan Center’s Ebright told The Intercept, the Pentagon “can end up supporting groups and individuals whose conduct may cause civilian harm, undermine U.S. credibility, and even create U.S. legal liability.”

“Congress, not the president, has the constitutional role of deciding when, where, and against whom the nation is at war,” Ebright said. “By overclassifying basic information about 127e programs, the Department of Defense hinders Congress’s ability to fulfill this role and potentially to stave off undemocratic, unaccountable U.S. involvement in a new war in the Middle East.”

https://libya360.wordpress.com/2023/11/ ... -conflict/

Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine Calls on the PLO to Abstain from Schemes Hostile to the People
Posted by INTERNATIONALIST 360° on NOVEMBER 6, 2023

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The Popular Front calls on the leadership of the Authority to boycott American officials and not to engage with any schemes hostile to our people.

The Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine called on the [Palestinian] Authority leadership to completely boycott American officials and to not engage with any proposals or initiatives put forth by these criminals whose hands are stained with the blood of the children, women, and elderly of our people in the Gaza Strip.

The horrific crimes committed by the zionist entity in the Strip, in full partnership and coordination with the American administration, require the Authority’s leadership to elevate their behavior to the level of our people’s sacrifices, and the magnitude of the crimes and the ongoing genocide around the clock in the Strip.

The Front considers that the American schemes that aim to create a new entity in the Strip, or to hand over the Strip to an administration, away from the will and approval of the Palestinian people, as rejected and doomed to failure by our people, calling on the Authority to not engage with these schemes hostile to the Palestinian people.

The American administration, which shares the occupation’s aggression against the Palestinian people, and supports it politically and militarily with the most powerful internationally banned weapons, should be targeted with all forms of resistance as is the zionist entity. The only thing required from the leadership of the Authority is to boycott it and to prevent any meetings of any of its officials with them, as the continuation of these meetings will be tantamount to legitimizing the aggression and marketing the plans hostile to our people.

The Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine
November 6, 2023


https://libya360.wordpress.com/2023/11/ ... he-people/

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Western Propaganda Gets More Desperate as World Majority Sides with China and Russia Against the US over Gaza
Posted on November 7, 2023 by Conor Gallagher

The New York Times, Financial Times, Wall Street Journal, and The Telegraph have all recently run pieces attempting to paint Russia and China as anti semitic and/or anti Israel. The propaganda comes as the US tries to discredit any attempts by Moscow and Beijing to lead more international involvement in the Palestine-Israel peace process.

Let’s start with The New York Times, which has run at least two articles in recent days in which the argument basically boils down to the following: some people in Russia and China say bad things about Jews on the Internet; therefore the governments are anti-Israel.

Here’s the New York Times in an Oct. 28 piece, “As China Looks to Broker Gaza Peace, Antisemitism Surges Online”:


But even as China seeks to turn down the temperature diplomatically, a surge of antisemitism and anti-Israeli sentiment is proliferating across the Chinese internet and state media, undermining Beijing’s efforts to convey impartiality. China has already come under pressure from the United States and Israel for its refusal to condemn Hamas for its Oct. 7 attack that started the war.

On China’s heavily censored internet, inflammatory speech critical of Israel is rampant, with commenters seemingly emboldened by that refusal. And China’s state-run media is seizing on the conflict to accuse the United States of turning a blind eye to Israeli aggression, while perpetuating tropes of Jewish control of American politics.

China Daily, a state-run newspaper, ran an editorial on Monday declaring that the United States was on the “wrong side of history in Gaza.” It said Washington was exacerbating the conflict by “blindly backing Israel.”

The piece goes on to mention other cases of private citizens making statements the Times deems questionable, such as an influencer with millions of followers who decided to call Hamas a “resistance organization” rather than a “terrorist organization.” The Times concludes:

It is hard to say whether the anti-Israeli positions in state media and antisemitism on the Chinese internet are part of a coordinated campaign. But China’s state media rarely veers from the official position of the country’s Communist Party, and its hair-trigger internet censors are keenly attuned to the wishes of its leaders, quick to remove any content that sways public sentiment in an unwanted direction, especially on matters of such geopolitical importance.

First off, I remember when news media outlets in the First Amendment-loving US used to criticize China for its lack of press freedom; but the New York Times is now accusing Beijing of not cracking down enough on its news media and online discourse in order to silence criticism of Israel and the US. Good luck with that.

Inherent in this complaint from the Times is a belief that China should not try to take a balanced approach to the conflict, it must “condemn Hamas” and it cannot criticize the US approach to the conflict, nor the US’ decades-long failure to broker a peace agreement.

What’s more is that the Times is in effect concluding that the comments of random private citizens (and the government’s inability or unwillingness to censor them) in a country of 1.4 billion people is therefore the official position of the Chinese government. If we apply that same standard to the US, how easy is it to go on Twitter, Facebook, etc. and find crazy comments by Americans? Is it fair to conclude that those rantings represent US policy? In many cases, they’re not far removed from Washington’s increasingly unhinged actions throughout the world, but that still doesn’t make them the official position of the state.

A Nov. 3 piece, “In a Worldwide War of Words, Russia, China and Iran Back Hamas” goes a step further and lumps China, Russia and Iran together as backers of Hamas. The headline itself is false, and it only gets worse from there. The nut:

Iran, Russia and, to a lesser degree, China have used state media and the world’s major social networking platforms to support Hamas and undercut Israel, while denigrating Israel’s principal ally, the United States….

The campaigns do not appear to be coordinated, American and other government officials and experts said, though they did not rule out cooperation.

What does the Times cite as evidence for these claims?

The Spanish arm of RT, the global Russian television network, for example, recently reposted a statement by the Iranian president calling the explosion at Al-Ahli Arab Hospital in Gaza on Oct. 17 an Israeli war crime, even though Western intelligence agencies and independent analysts have since said a missile misfired from Gaza was a more likely cause of the blast.

Well, non-Western analysts do not agree with the West’s version of events. And it would appear that the Times is arguing that RT (and other media outlets) should censor any statements by world leaders that do not have the stamp of approval from Western intelligence agencies.

Here’s another:

A profile on X that bore the characteristics of an inauthentic account — @RebelTaha — posted 616 times in the first two days of the conflict, though it had previously featured content mostly about cricket, they said. One post featured a cartoon claiming a double standard in how Palestinian resistance toward Israel was cast as terrorism while Ukraine’s fight against Russia was self-defense.

The Times does not mention that @RebelTaha has a whopping total of 18 followers (as of Nov. 5).



The Times goes on to list “false or unverified content” across a range of social media platforms. Who exactly is supposed to “verify” all this content? The Times doesn’t say, although one would be forgiven for thinking they want Western intelligence agencies to play a role given their criticism of RT en Espanol for running information that didn’t agree with “Western intelligence agencies and independent analysts.” Who is the Times’ source for all this unverified, anti-Israel, anti-US content?

It is Rafi Mendelsohn, vice president at Cyabra, a social media intelligence company based in Tel Aviv, and the Times says that the company has tracked down at least 40,000 bots or “inauthentic accounts” in the past month. The Times does not mention that two of Cyabra’s founders served in information warfare units in the Israel Defense Forces.

The Times concludes with this gem:

The war has heightened concerns in Washington and other Western capitals that an alliance of authoritarian governments has succeeded in fomenting illiberal, antidemocratic sentiment, especially in Africa, South America and other parts of the world where accusations of American or Western colonialism or dominance find fertile soil.

Russia and China, which have grown increasingly close in recent years, appear intent to exploit the conflict to undermine the United States as much as Israel. The State Department’s Global Engagement Center, which combats state propaganda and disinformation, has in recent weeks detailed extensive campaigns by Russia and China to shape the global information environment to their advantage.

This is getting closer to what’s at the heart of the matter. Aside from the Times’ yearning for mass censorship run out of Langley, its allegations that China and Russia harbor anti semitic and anti-Israel positions are part of an effort to discredit any of their efforts to become more involved in the peace process.

China and Russia have been entirely consistent in their positions and statements on the issue. They support a two-state solution, and they believe the decades-long US peace process has obviously failed. Even if you accept that the US has been operating in good faith in its efforts to find a solution to the Palestine-Israel conflict, the very fact that the current conflict is where the situation stands after 60 years would seem to support Russia and China’s claims.

The US, however, does not want other powers muscling in on its monopoly over the never ending Palestine-Israel peace process.

Currently, China and Russia are onboard with the vast majority of the rest of the world calling for a humanitarian truce in Gaza and the US is increasingly isolated at the UN. Longer term, Moscow and Beijing are also trying to internationalize the Palestine-Israel peace process. Here’s what the Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson said on Oct. 8 – a position it has maintained throughout the current fighting:

The recurrence of the conflict shows once again that the protracted standstill of the peace process cannot go on. The fundamental way out of the conflict lies in implementing the two-state solution and establishing an independent State of Palestine. The international community needs to act with greater urgency, step up input into the Palestinian question, facilitate the early resumption of peace talks between Palestine and Israel, and find a way to bring about enduring peace. China will continue to work relentlessly with the international community towards that end.

On the long-term answer, Beijing shares ssentially the same position of the US: a two-state solution, (which the US at least says it supports although in practice it helps Israel make that reality increasingly difficult). The US wants to maintain a monopoly on this process that only ever grows more elusive under US guidance. China wants more involvement from the international community at the UN. The US, in turn, is stonewalling those efforts at the UN.

The New York-based China Project tries to paint Beijing’s efforts in the same light as The Times, but I think inadvertently shows how rational China’s position is:

China wants to portray itself as “a great power on the one hand but a different kind of great power from the U.S. that has this kind of kinship with the Global South,” said John Calabrese, an assistant professor at American University’s School of International Service and a senior fellow at the Middle East Institute. “They’re trying to maneuver and shape their conduct in a way that can capitalize on that dual identity.”

This response is consistent with China’s decades-long diplomatic support for Palestine and calls for a two-state solution, even as China and Israel have developed a close economic relationship since establishing diplomatic ties in 1992. Beijing’s posture also aligns China with its partners in the Middle East and will serve its regional interests there.

Of course, the US insists neutrality is not an option for China – just like the conflict in Ukraine – as Washington prefers to paint political disagreements in terms of good and evil with the US naturally on the side of the angels. Western governments and media are apparently no longer capable of enough critical thought to realize geopolitics are more complicated than this and that viewing international relations in this light guarantees endless conflict.

But that is where we are. And the US, rather than voluntarily cede its almost complete control over the Palestine-Israel peace process, is attempting to discredit China and Russia with the charges of being anti-Israel and/or anti semitic. For example, US Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer criticized China for not showing enough sympathy or support for Israel.

“I urge you and the Chinese people to stand with the Israeli people and condemn these cowardly and vicious attacks,” said Schumer.

Of course, even Schumer must realize that if China were to “condemn” Hamas and “stand with” Israel, its neutral position in any future peace negotiations would evaporate and it would harm China’s position elsewhere in the Middle East.

***

Elsewhere in the propaganda war to discredit China we have the Wall Street Journal running an Oct. 31piece about Baidu and Alibaba maps of the Middle East:

Internet users in China are expressing bewilderment that the name Israel doesn’t appear on leading online digital maps from Baidu and Alibaba, an ambiguity that matches Beijing’s vague diplomacy in the region and contrasts with its attentiveness to maps generally.

Baidu’s Chinese language online maps demarcate the internationally recognized borders of Israel, as well as the Palestinian territories, plus key cities, but don’t clearly identify the country by name. The same is true with online maps produced by Alibaba’s Amap, where even small nations like Luxembourg are clearly marked. Neither company responded to questions on Monday. It is unclear whether the development is new, though it has been discussed by Chinese internet users since war broke out.

China’s government has over the years cried foul and levied fines over maps published elsewhere online, such as on hotel websites, for failing to strictly adhere to Beijing’s territorial claims, like leaving off a nine-dotted line stretching around the South China Sea that isn’t internationally recognized.

The UK’s Telegraph ran a similar story, declaring it a “major provocation from China,” and more and more outlets picked up the story. Soon, it was “Chinese companies remove ‘Israel’ from digital maps as Xi backs Palestine.” Pekingnology, which is a project of former Xinhua reporter Zichen Wang, pointed out a problem with the Journal’s claims and another with its conclusion, writing that:

It’s not a recent development with some questioning the labels as far back as 2021.
China’s official map service shows both the names of Israel and Palenstine.
***

The Financial Times ran sloppy propaganda about an anti-Semitic riot at Makhachkala airport in Dagestan, Russia. Gilbert Doctorow has been all over that and you can read his insightful observations here and here.

Essentially a US and Ukrainian PsyOp helped instigate the chaos that was quickly brought under control by Russian police. It was, however, embarrassing for Moscow and not just the Financial Times, but also the US State Department pounced to make claims about pogroms in Russia. From RT:

Speaking during a press briefing in Washington DC on Monday, State Department spokesperson Matthew Miller said: “I saw the video, as I’m sure all of you did. It looked like a pogrom to me.”

His assessment was echoed the same day by John Kirby, coordinator for strategic communications at the National Security Council in the White House.
“Some people have compared it to the pogroms of the late 19th and early 20th century, and I think that’s probably an apt description,” he stated.

Kirby went on to allege, falsely, that the Kremlin had failed to condemn the Makhachkala riot.

Other news outlets like RFE/RL are now running pieces about Jews living in fear in Russia. Why? Much like with China, it was apparently Moscow’s failure to condemn Hamas and show enough support for Israel.

Of course, Russia, while maintaining a position on Palestine-Israel similar to China, has been much more outspoken in its criticism of the US, blaming Washington for not only failing to achieve peace between Palestinians and Israel but also claiming that its entire peace process has been a charade. While acknowledging that the Hamas terror attack started this current phase of violence, Russian President Vladimir Putin added the following at an Oct. 30 meeting with the Russian security council:

I will repeat again: the ruling elites of the United States and its satellites are behind the tragedy of the Palestinians, the massacre in the Middle East in general, the conflict in Ukraine, and many other conflicts in the world – in Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria, and so on. This has become obvious to everyone. It is they who install their military bases everywhere, who use military force on every pretext and without any pretext, who send weapons to conflict areas. They are also channelling financial resources, including to Ukraine and the Middle East, and fuelling hatred in Ukraine and the Middle East.

They are not achieving results on the battlefield, so they want to split us from within, as far as Russia is concerned, to weaken us and sow confusion. They do not want Russia to participate in solving any international or regional problems, including in the Middle East settlement. They are not satisfied at all when someone does not act or speak exactly as they are instructed. They believe only in their own exclusivity, in being allowed to do anything.

They do not need durable peace in the Holy Land; they need constant chaos in the Middle East. Consequently, they are trying hard to discredit countries that are insisting on an immediate ceasefire in the Gaza Strip, on ending the bloodshed, and that are ready to make a real contribution to resolving the crisis, rather than parasitising on it. They are even attacking, ostracising and trying to discredit the UN and the clear position of the global community.

I would like to note that, unlike the West, our approaches towards the situation in the Middle East have always lacked mercenary interests, intrigues and double standards. We have stated and continue to openly state our position, which does not change every year. The key to resolving the conflict lies in establishing a sovereign and independent Palestinian state, a full-fledged Palestinian state. We have repeatedly said this openly and honestly during our contacts with the Palestinian and Israeli leaders.

***

So what to make of the recent reporting from The New York Times, Wall Street Journal, Financial Times, and The Telegraph?

I think it can be argued that the standards of Western propaganda are slipping, for one. But it also makes sense, from a US perspective, to paint Moscow and Beijing in this light as Washington does not want China and Russia to play a role in any Palestine-Israel peace process – one that the US has monopolized for decades. The global majority is ready for a new, more even handed approach – as evidenced by the increasingly lopsided UN votes that sees the US evermore isolated.

So the US can try to weaponize charges of antisemitism against Russia, China and the majority of the world that opposes apartheid and ethnic cleansing, but it will only be forestalling the inevitable. As the relative power of the US declines, Israel will eventually have to take into account the position of the world majority.

Now there has been speculation that the neocons in Washington feel their time running out with the pliable Biden and so want to go big before going home by attacking Iran and others in the Middle East. Likewise, Israel might be trying to maximize all its territorial gains before Biden exits.

The sad irony in all this for the neocons and the Zionists is that their efforts to preserve their systems only result in more self harm, worsening their longterm position. And reasonably so because the systems they have constructed – whether apartheid or a global empire – were never sustainable.

Both are overextended, facing internal crises, believe all political problems can be solved with force, and both are in a perpetual panic about all their enemies – real or imagined. The good news is their actions are hastening their demise; the bad is there is no real limit to the amount of destruction they can cause.

https://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2023/11 ... -gaza.html

The Marvel Comic Universe is the key to understanding why this propaganda works: the audience has been primed.

Iran’s Proposed Embargo Could Cause Chaos in Oil Markets
Posted on November 7, 2023 by Yves Smith

Yves here. Note that Iran had earlier called for an oil embargo against Israel only, which at the time was clearly intended to be largely symbolic (Israel imports little oil) but still get the Islamic oil producing stated to act together. The anger across the Middle East has reached such a level that going directly to an embargo against Israel and all its backers is reasonably likely, particularly since it’s an escalation to which the US and Israel would be bereft of good responses. They certainly can’t attack all or even some oil producers to bring them to heel.

By Simon Watkins, a former senior FX trader and salesman, financial journalist, and best-selling author. He was Head of Forex Institutional Sales and Trading for Credit Lyonnais, and later Director of Forex at Bank of Montreal. He was then Head of Weekly Publications and Chief Writer for Business Monitor International, Head of Fuel Oil Products for Platts, and Global Managing Editor of Research for Renaissance Capital in Moscow. He has written extensively on oil and gas, Forex, equities, bonds, economics and geopolitics for many leading publications, and has worked as a geopolitical risk consultant for a number of major hedge funds in London, Moscow, and Dubai. Originally published at OilPrice

*Iran has urged OPEC members to halt oil exports to countries supporting Israel, echoing the 1973 oil embargo, which dramatically increased oil prices and altered global economies.
*The call for an embargo is a response to the Israel-Hamas conflict, with the potential to significantly disrupt global oil supply and prices.
*As it now stands, there is every chance of a military or diplomatic misstep occurring in the Israel-Hamas War that may see a widening out of the conflict.

Iran’s Supreme Leader, Ali Khamenei, last week called on the Islamic members of OPEC to halt oil exports to Israel immediately. Given that Israel buys virtually none of its oil from Islamic members of OPEC – purchasing mainly from Azerbaijan, the U.S., Brazil, Nigeria, and Angola instead – this would seem in and of itself a somewhat peculiar threat to make. But that is not the actual threat being made by Iran’s spiritual leader, with the full backing of the practical guardians of the 1979 Islamic Revolution – the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC). The real threat is that Iran is angling for a full oil embargo from all Islamic OPEC member states on countries that support Israel in its war against Islamic militant group Hamas. Saudi Arabia did exactly the same thing in 1973 for exactly the same reason – a war between Israel and Islam, as it also sought to portray it – with devastating results for oil prices, Western economies, and global geopolitical alliances for decades to come, as analysed in full in my new book on the new global oil market order.

Back in 1973, Egyptian military forces moved into the Sinai Peninsula, while Syrian forces moved into the Golan Heights – two territories that had been captured by Israel during the Six-Day War of 1967. By attacking from multiple points on the holiest day of the Jewish faith, Yom Kippur (the same attack method and religious date as the 7 October Hamas attacks used 50 years later) the two Arab countries thought they could take Israel off guard. And they did, for a while at least, finding increasing military support from Saudi Arabia, Morocco, and Cuba, and broader support from Algeria, Jordan, Iraq, Libya, Kuwait, Tunisia, and North Korea. The War ended on 25 October 1973 in a ceasefire brokered by the United Nations.

Around the same time as this, though, OPEC members – plus Egypt, Syria, and Tunisia – began an embargo on oil exports to the U.S., the U.K., Japan, Canada, and the Netherlands in response to their collective supplying of arms, intelligence resources, and logistical support to Israel during the War. As global supplies of oil fell, the price of oil increased dramatically, exacerbated by incremental cuts to oil production by OPEC members over the period. Gas prices also rose, as historically around 70 percent of them are comprised of the price of oil. By the end of the embargo in March 1974, the price of oil had risen around 267 percent, from about US$3 per barrel (pb) to nearly US$11 pb. This, in turn, stoked the fire of a global economic slowdown, especially felt in the net oil importing countries of the West.

Some later branded the embargo a failure, as it did not result in Israel giving back all the territory that it had gained in the Yom Kippur War. However, in a broader sense, as also analysed in full in my new book on the new global oil market order, the wider war had been won by Saudi Arabia, OPEC and other Arab states in shifting the balance of power in the global oil market from the big consumers of oil (mainly in the West at that time) to the big producers of oil (mainly in the Middle East at that point). This shift was accurately summed up by the then-Saudi Minister of Oil and Mineral Reserves, Sheikh Ahmed Zaki Yamani, who was widely credited with formulating the embargo strategy. He highlighted that the effects on the global economy of the oil embargo marked a fundamental shift in the world balance of power between the developing nations that produced oil and the developed industrial nations that consumed it.

The end of the oil embargo in 1974 also marked a decisive shift in the foreign policy of the U.S. towards the Middle East. From around April 1933 (when the U.S.’s Standard Oil made a one-off US$275,000 payment to Saudi Arabia – equivalent to around US$6.5 million in 2023 – to secure the exclusive rights to drill across the entire Kingdom), the fate of the Middle East’s oil supplies had largely been governed by the several formal and informal networks centred around Western international oil companies (IOCs), just as Sheikh Yamani had said. This had changed after the OPEC oil embargo was lifted in March 1974 but, as also analysed in full in my new book on the new global oil market order, under the guidance of Henry Kissinger (U.S. National Security Advisor from 1969 to 1975, and Secretary of State from 1973 to 1977) the new U.S. foreign policy towards the Middle East had the single objective of ensuring that the U.S. and its allies were never again held hostage by Middle Eastern oil producers. The policy, as fully detailed in the book, was a variant of the triangular diplomacy that Kissinger had been using to great effect in the U.S.’s dealings with Russia and China, with the use of ‘constructive ambiguity’ in the language used in dealing with the countries involved. In short, this meant the U.S. appearing to be on the side of various elements of the Arab world but, in reality, seeking to exploit their existing weaknesses to set one against another. Although this strategy provide successful for many decades, it has been challenged more recently by Russia and then China, with considerable success in wooing several major Middle Eastern oil countries away from the U.S.’s sphere of influence and into their own. These include the two powerhouse countries of the region – Iran and Saudi Arabia – which back on 10 March agreed a stunning historic deal to reestablish relations, brokered exclusively by China.

As it now stands, there is every chance of a military or diplomatic misstep occurring in the Israel-Hamas War that may see a widening out of the conflict. That would be the perfect point for Iran to push for a simultaneous widening out of an oil embargo on Israel alone into a broader one covering all its supporters in the West. Already, on 16 October Iran’s Foreign Minister, Hossein Amir Abdollahian, warned that its regional network of militias would open “multiple fronts” against Israel if its attacks continue to kill civilians in Gaza. It seems highly likely that the first new front would be a full activation of Hezbollah in Lebanon, to Israel’s direct north – a 100,000-strong very well-equipped fighting force funded and trained by Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) that dwarfs the fighting capabilities of Hamas in all respects. Israel has already stated that its mission is to “annihilate Hamas” and has launched ground operations into Palestine for as long as it takes to do so. Additionally, on 21 October, Israel’s Minister of Economy, Nir Barkat, said that if Hezbollah fully joins the war then Israel would “cut off the head of the snake” and launch a military attack against Iran. A third front could also be opened by Iran, using its own IRGC and proxy militant forces stationed in Syria, to Israel’s northeast.

So, what would a broader oil embargo look like? According to the latest assessment by the World Bank, a loss in global crude oil supply of 6-8 million bpd – which it refers to as a “large disruption” scenario comparable to the 1973 Oil Crisis – would result in a 56-75 percent increase in prices to between $140 and $157 a barrel. However, a broadening out of the embargo on Israel by the Islamic members of OPEC, as called for by Iran, would likely lead to a much bigger loss of global oil supplies than the World Bank has calculated. The Islamic members of OPEC are Algeria, with an average crude oil production rate of around 1 million barrels (bpd), Iran (3.4 million bpd), Iraq (4.1 million bpd), Kuwait (2.5 million bpd), Libya (1.2 million bpd), Saudi Arabia (9 million bp), and the UAE (2.9 million bpd). This totals just over 24 million bpd – or about 30 percent – of the current average total global production of about 80 million bpd.

https://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2023/11 ... rkets.html

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Turks demonstrate at Incirlik air base against US support for Israel

Turkyie's President Erdogan has issued statement's condemning Israel's bombing campaign on Gaza but has not taken any concrete steps to support the Palestinian resistance

News Desk

NOV 5, 2023

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Protesters clash with riot police during a demonstration outside the US-Turkish Incirlik Air Base in Adana, Türkiye, November 5, 2023 (Photo credit: AP / Mehmet Sancakzade)

Pro-Palestinian protesters gathered on 5 November outside the Incirlik Air Base in southeastern Turkiye to protest US support for Israel’s bombing campaign in Gaza that has now killed almost 10,000 Palestinians, the majority women and children.

The Incirlik base is owned by Turkiye but hosts US warplanes and nuclear weapons, enabling the US to project power through out West Asia and to threaten Russia.

In 2012, Turkiye set up a “nerve center” either in or near Incirlik to provide weapons in coordination with the US to Jihadist groups seeking to topple the Syrian government starting in 2011.

Sunday's protest was organised by the IHH humanitarian relief fund, which in 2010 led a flotilla of ships full of peace activists to Gaza to break the Israeli blockade on the enclave. Israeli forces attacked the flotilla, raiding its ships from helicopters and killing ten Turkish activists.

During today's demonstration, police stepped in when some protesters broke the barricades, trying to enter the airbase.


Video on social media showed hundreds of people waving Palestinian flags running across a field chased by the police, who used water cannons to disperse the crowds.

There were no reports of injuries or arrests.

Bulent Yildirim, the IHH head, said in a speech that there were protests against the attacks on Gaza all over Europe and the US, adding that he hopes to see more demonstrations like this.

In his speech, Yildirim warned protesters to refrain from trying to enter the base.

"Do not clash with the police. The police are as concerned about Gaza as you are," he said.

The IHH protest was timed to coincide with a visit to Ankara by US Secretary of State Antony Blinken, who was to arrive late Sunday and meet Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan on Monday.

Fidan cooperated closely with US officials in supporting Jihadist groups in Syria, including the Nusra Front and ISIS, which are both Al-Qaeda offshoots.

Blinken traveled to Israel on Friday to press for a humanitarian pause to the fighting to allow aid to reach Gaza, but his requests were rejected by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

Blinken then traveled on Saturday to Jordan to meet with Arab leaders, who demanded the US support efforts for a ceasefire. Blinken rejected the idea of a ceasefire, claiming Israel was free to continue bombing Gaza in “self-defense.”

Nearly 1,000 people also rallied Sunday outside the US embassy in Ankara, according to an AFP photographer at the scene.

Last month, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan led a massive rally in Istanbul last month that he said was attended by 1.5 million people. At the rally, Erdogan called Israel an "occupier" that was acting like a “war criminal.”

Despite strong rhetoric condemning Israel, Erdogan continues to allow oil from Azerbaijan destined for Israel to pass through Turkish pipelines and be loaded at the port of Ceyhan to tankers for delivery to Haifa.

Erdogan cooperated closely with Netanyahu to facilitate the flow of Kurdish oil from northern Iraq via Turkiye to Israel starting in 2014, against the wishes of Iraq’s central government in Baghdad.

Before war erupted between the Hamas-led Palestinian resistance and Israel on 7 October, Erdogan and Netanyahu were in talks to build a natural gas pipeline from Israel to Turkiye, which would allow Tel Aviv to export its gas to Europe.

https://new.thecradle.co/articles/turks ... for-israel

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UNIFIL Warns of Escalation on Lebanon's Southern Border

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Israeli occupation forces, Nov. 7, 2023. | Photo: X/ @JackStr42679640

Published 7 November 2023 (2 hours 57 minutes ago)

Attacks against civilians constitute a violation of international law and are considered "war crimes."


On Monday, Andrea Teneti, the spokesperson for the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL) said the potential for escalation on the Lebanese-Israeli border is clear and must be stopped.

"We heard tragic reports about the killing of four civilians, including three girls and a woman, in the vicinity of Aitaroun in southern Lebanon," Tenenti said.

He reiterated that attacks against civilians constitute a violation of international law and are considered "war crimes," calling for a cease-fire in southern Lebanon to "stop harming more people."

On Sunday, an Israeli drone attack hit a vehicle in the southern Lebanese village of Aitaroun, killing three children and their grandmother while injuring their mother.


Confrontations on the Lebanese-Israeli border continued on Monday, with Israeli forces attacking the outskirts of Naqoura and targeting Jabal Blat and the outskirts of the southern town of Marwahin with artillery shells, killing two Hezbollah fighters, said the NNA report.

It raised the number of casualties among members of the Shiite military group to 66. For its part, Hezbollah announced that its fighters targeted Israeli sites in al-Malikiyah and Jal al-Deir with missiles and attacked the technical equipment at Israel's al-Rahib military site.

On the same day, some 30 rockets were launched from Lebanon toward northern Israel, triggering Israeli artillery fire in response, Israel's military said in a statement. Hamas claimed responsibility for the rocket attack, saying 16 rockets were launched.

https://www.telesurenglish.net/news/UNI ... -0003.html

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German people’s movements march in solidarity with Palestine

As thousands took to the streets in Germany, people’s movements condemned the government’s crackdown on solidarity with Palestine. They also spoke out against the Olaf Scholz government’s complicity in Israel’s war on Gaza

November 06, 2023 by Peoples Dispatch

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German activists protest in solidarity with Palestine. Photo: DIE LINKE Neukölln

On Saturday, November 4, thousands of people marched in Berlin in solidarity with Palestine and demanding an end to the ongoing genocide in Gaza by Israel. In the march called by various groups including the Palestine Campaign, Palestine Speaks, Jewish Bund, Migrantifa Berlin, Diem 25, and Klass gegen Klass, people marched holding placards and banners that read Stop Genocide, Free Palestine, Anti-Zionism is not Anti-semitism, etc. Protesters also raised the Palestine flag over the Neptune Fountain in Berlin. The march took place under heavy police surveillance due to the hostile attitude of the government towards pro-Palestine protests in Germany. Meanwhile, sections within the conservative Christian Democratic Union and other right-wing groups came out against the march and accused the government of not properly implementing the November 2 ban imposed on pro-Hamas activity and the prisoner solidarity group Samidoun.

The Palestine Campaign said that “the German government led by Olaf Scholz continues to offer Israel its unconditional support. The city of Berlin banned almost all protests in solidarity with Palestine, banned symbols of Palestinian identity from our schools, and triggered a wave of police violence against Palestinians and their supporters, with hundreds of people arrested. In the face of this escalation of the decades-long Israeli occupation of Palestine and restrictions on free expression in Germany, we need to take to the streets for Palestine, in more numbers than ever before.”

On Friday, hundreds of students and employees of the Free University of Berlin also organized a Palestine solidarity demonstration. They condemned the criminalization of Palestine solidarity in Germany, especially the ban on Samidoun.

Klass gegen Klass stated that “even the UN speaks of war crimes in the Israeli bombings of hospitals, schools, and refugee camps, while in Germany, the government, all established parties, and the media justify genocide carried out by Israeli army in the name of the “fight against Hamas terror.”

Socialist German Workers’ Youth (SDAJ) stated that “the ground offensive and Israel’s war against Palestine must be stopped immediately, humanitarian aid and rescue measures should be started immediately, the benign German silence on the war must be ended and the German Bundeswehr must not intervene in the conflict under any circumstances.”

Meanwhile, Israel’s genocidal war on Gaza continued unabated for the fifth week as the death toll neared 10,000. Over 30,000 people have been injured and over 1.4 million Gazans displaced.

https://peoplesdispatch.org/2023/11/06/ ... palestine/
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Re: Palestine

Post by blindpig » Wed Nov 08, 2023 2:35 pm

What's happening in Palestine and Israel: chronicle for November 7
November 7, 2023
Rybar

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The situation in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict zone remains tense. Massive IDF strikes continue in the Gaza Strip, accompanying attempts to advance north of the enclave's capital. There are clashes in the coastal area of ​​Beit Lahia , as well as on the border of the Al-Shati region .

There is an exchange of blows between the IDF and Hezbollah on the Lebanese border. Almost along the entire border from Labune to the village of Mays al-Jabal, Israeli artillery burned out forests and olive groves, and in the area of ​​An-Nakura, an IDF UAV attacked a shooting range of the Lebanese Armed Forces.

In the West Bank, mass detentions of journalists, activist demonstrators and other potential supporters of Hamas took place again. In addition, Palestinian law enforcement officers controlled by the autonomy government conducted an operation to detain drug traffickers in the Jalazun camp near Ramallah . As a result, a fairly large-scale shootout occurred, which some media reported as an attempt on the life of Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas .

Progress of hostilities
Gaza Strip

The IDF ground operation continues as usual. In the north, fighting continues on the border of the Al-Shati camp , where, according to the assurances of the representative of Kataib Izz ad-Din al-Qassam, several tanks were destroyed and the IDF command post at the Pioneer plant was also hit .

In addition, Hamas channels published footage of fighting in the coastal area of ​​Beit Lahiya . Probably, as we suspected, there was an attack from the rear through the tunnels.


Representatives of the IDF, in turn, published footage of the explosion of one of the Hamas tunnels in Beit Hanoun . We were able to establish the location of the explosion, which at best confirms the presence of the IDF on the outskirts of Beit Hanoun .


There did not appear to be much fighting south of Gaza today. Israeli media published footage of a column of refugees walking along the Salah al-Din highway with white flags. The video shows an IDF tank and also records the absence of firefights. Later, after the closure of the Kataib Izz ad-Din al-Qassam humanitarian corridor, IDF positions south of the intersection of Route 10 and the Salah ad-Din Highway were fired with mortars .

South direction

In the southern direction, with the exception of another statement about UAV launches from Yemen , which ended in nothing, nothing happened.

In the evening, representatives of the Ansarallah movement published footage of yesterday’s UAV launches across Israeli territory. Where they flew to remains a mystery.

Border with Lebanon
On the Lebanese-Israeli border everything goes as usual. Hezbollah launched several ATGM attacks on IDF border guard military installations in the area of ​​Aramsha , Birkat Risha and Shomer .

In response, tanks and artillery from Israeli forces shelled the forests in the Labuneh area , south of Al-Naqura , as well as the villages of Yarin and Al-Bustan and the surrounding area of ​​Mays al-Jabal. According to local Lebanese media reports, Israeli drones carried out a raid in the area of ​​the Lebanese Army training ground south of An-Nakura .


In addition, two Iron Dome missiles fell in the At-Tiri area and, for an unknown reason, flew into Lebanon almost ten kilometers from the border. It is possible that the issue is the re-opening of stocks and the use of missiles with an expiring or expired shelf life.

By evening, several rockets were launched from Lebanese territory into the northern part of the occupied Golan Heights. Air defense systems went off in Ain Qiniya and the surrounding area. No injuries or casualties were reported. In response, the IDF launched strikes in the area of ​​Al-Qalia and Deir Memas . Due to this, the Lebanese army blocked the road between Nabatiyah and Marjayoun .

West Bank

A large-scale campaign of arrests and detentions of anti-Israeli Palestinians continues in the West Bank. In Jenin and Tulkarm, clashes have traditionally occurred due to the actions of the IDF.

In the village of Ar-Raba, an IED was thrown at the security forces during protests, but no one was injured. At the Qalandiya checkpoint near Jerusalem , a Palestinian woman was detained with shooting, who, according to Israeli border guards, intended to commit a terrorist attack. A knife and a Hamas flag were found on her.

Another failed terrorist attack attempt occurred in the area of ​​Kibbutz Ofra . A young Palestinian approached the gate with a knife, but was driven off by gunfire and fled.


The shootout in the Jalazun camp, where several security forces were injured, deserves special attention.

During the operation to arrest drug traffickers, six security officers were injured, one of them seriously, according to security spokesman Talal Duikat. Some media reported the incident as an attempt on the life of Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas. However, this was later denied by local authorities.

Actions of pro-Iranian formations in the Middle East

Pro-Iranian proxies continue to show limited, but essentially formal, activity. Several UAVs were sent to Green Village bases in Syria , as well as Erbil Airport and Harir Base in Iraq . In addition, US Army positions in the area of ​​the Conoco oil refinery in Syria came under rocket fire. No deaths or injuries were reported.

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Political-diplomatic background
About incidents at pro-Israeli and pro-Palestinian rallies

In the United States, an elderly local Jew died after a clash at a pro-Israeli rally attended by pro-Palestinian activists. 65-year-old Paul Kessler was attacked with a megaphone, resulting in a traumatic brain injury and death from a cerebral hemorrhage.

Various Jewish organizations have repeatedly announced an increase in crimes motivated by anti-Semitism in countries around the world. And on November 6, the European Commission said that the surge in anti-Semitic incidents across Europe had reached extraordinary levels over the past few days. Given the ban on supporting Palestine and the dominance of footage of dead children in the media, the incidents are not at all surprising.

On the evacuation of Russian citizens from Gaza

According to a TASS source, the evacuation of Russian citizens from the Gaza Strip is expected in the coming days. To date, not a single Russian has left the enclave.

“There is reason to believe that in the next day or two, Russians will be evacuated from the Gaza Strip,” the agency’s interlocutor said.

Demonstrations for Netanyahu's resignation in Israel


Demonstrations took place in Kiryat and Haifa demanding the resignation of the prime minister due to the failure, as well as a ceasefire and the immediate start of a prisoner exchange.

https://rybar.ru/chto-proishodit-v-pale ... -noyabrya/

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The US and Hezbollah Want the Same Thing from Israel-Hamas War
Posted by INTERNATIONALIST 360° on NOVEMBER 5, 2023
Scott Ritter

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The leader of Hezbollah, Hassan Nasrallah, delivered a much-anticipated speech outlining his organization’s approach to the ongoing conflict between Hamas and Israel in Gaza. At the same time Nasrallah was speaking, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken delivered some remarks of his own and took questions from the press about the Gaza conflict and the resulting humanitarian crisis that has gripped the Palestinians there.

In the leadup to Nasrallah’s speech, Hezbollah had released several videos suggesting that something momentous was going to come out of his presentation. Many observers, angered by the ongoing slaughter of innocent Palestinian civilians – many of them children – through the indiscriminate bombing of Gaza by the Israeli Air Force, believed that this was the moment when Nasrallah would unleash the might of the Hezbollah resistance, exacting revenge on an Israeli nation that had operated outside the framework of international law for far too long.

Other observers believed that Nasrallah would fail to rise to the occasion and would offer the Palestinian people, whose cause he claimed to champion, nothing more than empty platitudes when they needed a second front.

Blinken’s remarks, on the other hand, were not prepared in advance, but rather a byproduct of an American diplomatic intervention designed to preempt any potential Hezbollah action. The fact that Blinken and Nasrallah delivered their remarks simultaneously was no accident – Blinken was clearly seeking to distract from the Hezbollah leader’s ‘moment’.

But the simultaneous messaging signaled something else as well – that the message being imparted by each of the parties was not contingent upon the content of the other, but rather set in stone prior to Nasrallah’s presentation (indeed, the fact that Nasrallah did not deliver a live address, but rather had pre-recorded his speech, underscores the reality that what was happening was carefully constructed theater.)

On the surface, the tone and content of these competing presentations appear to point to mutually incompatible goals. Nasrallah said Hezbollah’s objectives were to “stop the aggression” against Gaza and assure that Hamas “achieves victory” against Israel, and that to help this, his troops had tied up a part of Israeli forces in skirmishes at the Lebanese border. Blinken, for his part, warned both Hezbollah and Iran against “taking advantage of the situation” and opening a second front.

If you look deeper, though, the fact is both Nasrallah and Blinken were actively seeking to avoid an escalation of the Hamas-Israeli conflict, not by stepping back from their respective strongly held positions, but rather by implementing a carefully managed process of escalation management, where each side created the opportunity for the passions generated by the Gaza conflict to find outlets sufficient to relieve the pressure, while simultaneously avoiding any precipitous escalation of violence or geographic expansion of the zone of conflict.

In short, both the US and Hezbollah were, and are, implementing a model of conflict management known as the ‘escalation ladder’. And while this reality might prove frustrating for those on either side of this conflict who seek a decisive, one-sided victory, it is the only responsible path that can be taken to avoid turning a local conflict into a regional war that could have global ramifications.

The escalation ladder process focuses on how the parties involved escalate and de-escalate against competitors, measuring these actions against the different levels of escalation, which equate to the ‘steps’ on the ‘ladder’ used to visualize the model. By assessing the possible upward or downward trajectory of escalation at each level, based upon the actions of each party and their outcomes, the model helps participants to predict plausible outcomes and, as such, plot future scenarios. The most popular expression of the escalation ladder is what is known as ‘linear escalation’, where a sequential line of actions is plotted from lowest to highest, and the relationship between two competing powers assessed accordingly.

Linear escalation as a model works if there are only two participants to the crisis in question. The problem with the ongoing Gaza conflict is that there are many parties to the conflict, all of which have differing goals and objectives. As such, the escalation model that is most applicable to this scenario is what is known as horizontal escalation, where within a given escalation vector, differing participants can be segregated based upon their respective goals and objectives, allowing a sub-set of comparative escalatory calculations to take place, which in turn can be subjected to factors that influence their specific escalation, de-escalation, and maintenance issues separate from other parallel escalation management trajectories.

By way of example, one can speak of a ‘horizontal escalation’ model, where a US/Israeli track is paired off against a Hamas/Hezbollah track. However, the US/Israeli track is also paired off against itself, since the US and Israel are at odds over ceasefire options, the provision of humanitarian air, and specific military tactics. The same applies to Hamas/Hezbollah, where the Palestinian-specific goals of Hamas may clash with the regional aspirations of Hezbollah. Moreover, the specific actions of the US and Israel, when competing, can impact the Hamas and Hezbollah escalation calculations differently, causing these two tracks to lose their equilibrium by having one party escalate when the other may be seeking either maintenance and/or de-escalation.

The horizontal escalation model becomes even more complex when other tracks, such as the United Nations, the international community, Iran, Yemen, and the Iraqi and Syrian Shia militias become involved. When seen in this light, the horizontal escalation model becomes horribly complicated, requiring all parties to be cognizant about the competing interests of everyone involved, and develop a sound understanding of the intricacies associated with every facet of the cause-effect relationships involved.

When deciphering the presentations given by both Blinken and Nasrallah, the casual observer might be compelled to be highly critical of the less-than decisive content provided. But a careful parsing of the language used by both men shows that each, in his own way, is cognizant of the complexity of the issues at play, and the absolute need to manage the pressures generated by the emotions of all parties involved so that a crisis that could easily expand into a regional war remains localized.

However, one cannot escape the reality that, at the end of the day, there cannot be a solution that is satisfactory to all parties. Israel seeks the destruction of Hamas as a military and political entity. Hamas seeks a Palestinian homeland built in its image. These two visions of victory are mutually incompatible. Both parties will seek to manipulate the escalation ladder in a way that best promotes their respective desired outcome. The key to the other parties is how to prevent this inherent incompatibility from spinning out of control, and to manage defeat as well as victory.

It is this aspect of the escalation management process where Hamas has the advantage. As Nasrallah repeatedly noted in his presentation, the most important aspect of the anti-Israeli resistance is its ability to persevere. Israel finds itself in an increasingly untenable situation, where the political and military methodologies undertaken are increasingly rejected by its supporters. The friction between the US and Israeli positions was evident in Blinken’s address. This friction will only increase if the conflict between Israel and Hamas is maintained on its current trajectory. The only chance Israel has to break this paradigm is if the conflict escalates, forcing the US to reevaluate its conflict resolution model with larger geopolitical concerns, such as a war with Iran. Blinken has made it clear that the Biden administration is not seeking such an outcome.

Neither is Hassan Nasrallah.

It is in this light that one must examine the totality of Nasrallah’s speech, and the complexity of his argument. There is not a single facet of the Israeli-Hamas conflict he left unexamined. Moreover, he not only discussed each of these matters in isolation, but also in respect to how they relate overall. Nasrallah’s speech was the embodiment of how to manage a complex horizontal escalation model and achieve a desired outcome.

Let there be no doubt – Hamas is on the trajectory toward victory, though not the kind of victory a casual observer might imagine as its end goal. When the definitive history of the Hamas-Israeli conflict is finally written, rest assured that the speech given by Hassan Nasrallah will be recorded as one of the critical moments in shaping the conflict so that it avoided exploding into a wider war, and instead allowing the various parties to focus on the more limited, although admittedly complex, issues relating to the core matters as defined by Hamas – a prisoner exchange, freedom of religion at the Al Aqsa Mosque, and Palestinian statehood. These limited objectives, and not the destruction of Israel, are the likely outcomes of this conflict. And for that we can all thank Hassan Nasrallah, a man who knows how to effectively manage the complexities of the horizontal escalation model.

https://libya360.wordpress.com/2023/11/ ... hamas-war/

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Palestinian prisoners in the crosshairs

October 31, 2023 Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine

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Statement issued by the Office of Martyrs, Prisoners, and Wounded for the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP):

Our prisoners are in the crosshairs.

O masses of our Palestinian people,

Since the 7th of October 2023, during the Al-Aqsa Flood battle, the zionist occupation has proceeded to transfer prisoners and detainees to an unknown location, notably including the Secretary-General of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, Comrade Leader Ahmad Sa’adat and his comrades, as well as the prisoner leader and intellectual Walid Daqqah, who is suffering from a severe health condition. Moreover, the occupation forces are carrying out an arbitrary arrest campaign targeting released prisoners and resistance fighters from among our people in the West Bank.

In this context, the Office of Martyrs, Prisoners, and Wounded for the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine issues a call through the media, all social media platforms, international human rights and humanitarian institutions to break this silence which makes them a fundamental partner in all these crimes. It is inconceivable that the lives of prisoners remain constantly threatened by these fascist and Nazi gangs. We fear that our prisoners may become martyrs due to the torture and deprivation inflicted by the zionist prison services, depriving the prisoners of their most basic rights guaranteed by all international and humanitarian laws and conventions.

We call upon the International Committee of the Red Cross and the World Health Organization to fulfill their humanitarian duties, exert efforts to visit the prisoners, learn about their conditions, and provide all necessary medicine and treatment.

We, in the Office of Martyrs, Prisoners, and Wounded for the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, closely follow the conditions of the prisoners and exert great effort to determine their fate, including children, women, elderly, and the sick suffering from heart diseases, diabetes, blood pressure, and kidney issues.

We demand the formation of a swift investigative committee to investigate all the details that led to the martyrdom of a number of prisoners due to torture, beating, and deliberate medical negligence.

We also call upon our Palestinian people to engage in the widest campaign of mobilization and solidarity with the prisoners and detainees in the zionist prisons.

Furthermore, the Office of Martyrs, Prisoners, and Wounded for the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine condemns the barbaric and brutal zionist aggression against the Gaza Strip, targeting hospitals, innocent citizens, medical and media crews, and committing massacres against our Palestinian people.

Glory and eternity to the martyrs,
Freedom for the prisoners,
Healing for the wounded,
And victory for our people.

Office of Martyrs, Prisoners, and Wounded for the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine
Saturday, October 28, 2023


https://www.struggle-la-lucha.org/2023/ ... rosshairs/

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What We’re Not Hearing About Oct 7
November 6, 2023

Any journalist who wishes to avoid colluding in the genocide unfolding in Gaza ought to be wary of repeating the Israeli claims about what happened during the initial Hamas assault, writes Jonathan Cook.

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The main entrance to the BBC’s Broadcasting House in London in 2019. (Igbofur, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 4.0)

By Jonathan Cook
Jonathan-Cook.net

The BBC’s Lucy Williamson was taken once again this week to view the terrible destruction at a kibbutz community just outside Gaza attacked on Oct. 7.

As we have been shown so many times before, the Israeli homes were riddled with automatic fire, both inside and out. Sections of concrete wall had holes in them, or had collapsed entirely. And parts of the buildings that were still standing were deeply charred. It looked like a small snapshot of the current horrors in Gaza.

There is a possible reason for those similarities — one that the BBC is studiously failing to report, despite mounting evidence from a variety of sources, including the Israeli media. Instead the BBC is sticking resolutely to a narrative crafted for them, and the rest of the Western media, by the Israeli military: that Hamas alone caused all this destruction.

Simply repeating that narrative without any caveats has by now reached the level of journalistic malpractice. And yet that is precisely what the BBC does night after night.




Just a cursory look at the wreckage in the various kibbutz communities that were attacked that day should raise questions in the mind of any good reporter. Were Palestinian militants in a position to actually inflict physical damage to that degree and extent with the kind of light weapons they carried?

And if not, who else was in a position to wreak such havoc other than Israel?

A separate question that good journalists ought to be asking is this: What was the purpose of such damage? What did the Palestinian militants hope to achieve by it?

The implicit answer the media is supplying is also the answer the Israeli military wants Western publics to hear: that Hamas engaged in an orgy of gratuitous killing and savagery because … well, let’s say the quiet part out loud: because Palestinians are inherently savage.

With that as the implicit narrative, Western politicians have been handed a licence to cheer for Israel as it murders a Palestinian child in Gaza every few minutes. Savages only understand the language of savagery, after all.

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U.K. Prime Minister Rishi Sunak with Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Jerusalem on Oct. 19. (Simon Walker / No 10 Downing Street, CC BY 2.0)

Brutal Tango

For this reason alone, any journalist who wishes to avoid colluding in the genocide unfolding in Gaza ought to be increasingly wary of simply repeating the Israeli military’s claims about what happened on Oct 7. Certainly, they should not credulously regurgitate the latest agitprop from the IDF press office, as the BBC is so evidently doing.

What we know from a growing body of evidence gleaned from the Israeli media and Israeli eyewitnesses — carefully laid out, for example, in this report from Max Blumenthal — is that the Israeli military was completely blindsided by that day’s events. Heavy artillery, including tanks and attack helicopters, was called in to deal with Hamas. That appears to have been a straightforward decision in regard to the military bases Hamas had overrun.

Israel has a long-standing policy of seeking to prevent Israeli soldiers from being taken captive — chiefly, because of the high price Israeli society insists on paying to ensure soldiers are returned.

For decades, the military’s so-called Hannibal procedure has directed Israeli troops to kill fellow soldiers rather than allow them to be taken captive. For the same reason, Hamas expends a great deal of energy in trying to find innovative ways to seize soldiers.

The two sides are essentially engaged in a brutal tango in which each understands the other’s dance moves.

Given Hamas’ situation, effectively managing the Israeli-controlled concentration camp of Gaza, it has limited resistance strategies available to it. Capturing Israeli soldiers maximises its leverage. They can be traded for the release of many of the thousands of Palestinian political prisoners held in jails inside Israel, in breach of international law. In addition, in the negotiations, Hamas usually hopes to win an easing of Israel’s 16-year siege of Gaza.

To avert this scenario, Israeli commanders reportedly called in the attack helicopters on the military bases overwhelmed by Hamas on Oct. 7. The helicopters appear to have fired indiscriminately, despite the risk posed to the Israeli soldiers in the base who were still alive. Israel’s was a scorched-earth policy to stop Hamas achieving its aims. That may, in part, explain the very large proportion of Israeli soldiers among the 1,300 killed that day.

Charred Bodies

But what about the situation in the kibbutz communities? By the time the army arrived and was in position, Hamas was well dug in. It had taken the inhabitants as hostages inside their own homes. Israeli eyewitness testimony and media reports suggest Hamas was almost certainly trying to negotiate safe passage back into Gaza, using the Israeli civilians as human shields. The civilians were the Hamas fighters’ only ticket out, and they could be converted later into bargaining chips for the release of Palestinian prisoners.

The evidence — from Israeli media reports and eyewitnesses, as well as a host of visual clues from the crime scene itself — tell a far more complex story than the one presented nightly on the BBC.

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Damage in the Gaza “envelope,” or Israeli territory near the Gaza Strip, after the Oct. 7 coordinated surprise offensive on Israel; photo taken Oct. 11.(Kobi Gideon / Government Press Office of Israel, CC BY-SA 3.0)

Did the Israeli military fire into the Hamas-controlled civilian homes in the same fashion as it had fired into its own military bases, and with the same disregard for the safety of Israelis inside? Was the goal in each case to prevent at all costs Hamas taking hostages whose release would require a very high price from Israel?

Kibbutz Be’eri has been a favoured destination for BBC reporters keen to illustrate Hamas’ barbarity. It is where Lucy Williamson headed again this week. And yet none of her reporting highlighted comments made to the Israeli Haaretz newspaper by Tuval Escapa, the kibbutz’s security coordinator. He said [link is in Hebrew] Israeli military commanders had ordered the “shelling [of] houses on their occupants in order to eliminate the terrorists along with the hostages.”

That echoed the testimony of Yasmin Porat, who sought shelter in Be’eri from the nearby Nova music festival. She told Israeli Radio that once Israeli special forces arrived: “They eliminated everyone, including the hostages because there was very, very heavy crossfire.”


Are the images of charred bodies presented by Williamson, accompanied by a warning of their graphic, upsetting nature, incontrovertible proof that Hamas behaved like monsters, bent on the most twisted kind of vengeance? Or might those blackened remains be evidence that Israeli civilians and Hamas fighters burned alongside each other, after they were engulfed in flames caused by Israeli shelling of the houses?

Israel will not agree to an independent investigation so a definitive answer will never be forthcoming. But that does not absolve the media of their professional and moral duty to be cautious.

‘Hamas as Savages’

Consider for a moment the stark contrast in the Western media’s treatment of events on Oct. 7 and its treatment of the strike on the car park at Al-Ahli Baptist Hospital in northern Gaza on Oct. 17, in which hundreds of Palestinians were reported killed.

In the case of Al-Ahli, the media were only too ready to cast aside all the evidence that the hospital had been hit by an Israeli strike immediately Israel contested the claim. Instead journalists hurriedly amplified Israel’s counter-allegation that a Palestinian rocket had fallen on the hospital. Most of the media moved on after concluding “The truth may never be clear” or even less credibly, that Palestinian militants were the most likely culprits.

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Casualty in Gaza Strip, Oct. 17, during the 2023 War. (Fars Media Corporation, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY 4.0)

In telling contrast, the Western media have not been willing to raise even a single question about what happened on Oct. 7. They have enthusiastically attributed every horror that day to Hamas. They have ignored the reality of utter chaos that reigned for many hours and the potential for poor, desperate and morally dubious decision-making by the Israeli military.

In fact, the media have gone much further. In advancing the narrative of “Hamas as savages,” they have promoted obvious fictions, such as the story that “Hamas beheaded 40 babies.” That piece of fake news was even taken up briefly by U.S. President Joe Biden, before it was quietly walked back by his officials.

Similarly, it is still a popular throwaway line among the Western commentariat that “Hamas carried out rapes,” though once again the allegation is evidence-free so far.

We should be clear. If Israel had serious evidence for either of these claims, it would be aggressively promoting it. Instead, it is doing the next best thing: letting innuendo gently sink into the audience’s subconscious, settling there as a prejudice that cannot be interrogated.

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Kibbutz Bari four days after the Oct. 7 Hamas offensive. (Kobi Gideon / Government Press Office of Israel, CC BY-SA 3.0)

Hamas undoubtedly committed war crimes on Oct. 7— not least, by taking civilians as human shields. But that kind of crime is one we are familiar with, one “ordinary” enough that the Israel military has been regularly documented carrying it out too. The practice of Israeli soldiers taking Palestinians as human shields goes under various names, such as the “neighbour procedure” and the “early warning procedure.”

Worse atrocities may have happened too, especially given the unexpected scale of Hamas’ success in breaking out of Gaza. Large numbers of Palestinians escaped the enclave, some of them doubtless armed civilians with no connection to the operation. In such circumstances, it would be surprising if there were no examples of the headline-grabbing atrocities being committed.

The issue is whether such atrocities were planned and systematic, as Israel claims and the Western media repeats, or examples of rogue actions by individuals or groups. If the latter, Israel would be in no position to judge. Israel’s own history is littered with examples of such crimes, including the documented case of an Israeli army unit taking captive a Bedouin girl in 1949 and repeatedly gang-raping her.

Savagery would certainly not be a uniquely Hamas trait. Following the Oct. 7 attack, videos have been emerging of systematic abuses of any Hamas fighters captured, whether alive or dead. Images show them being beaten and tortured in public for the gratification of onlookers, when there is clearly not even the pretence of information gathering. Others show the bodies of Hamas fighters being defiled and mutilated.

No one can claim the moral high ground here.

What the media’s uncritical promotion of Israel’s “Hamas as savages” narrative has achieved is something sinister — and all too familiar from the West’s long colonial history. It has been used to demonise a whole people, presenting them either as barbarians or as the willing protectors and enablers of barbarism.

The “savages” narrative is being weaponised by Israel to justify its mounting campaign of atrocities in Gaza. Which is why it is so important that journalists don’t simply allow themselves to be spoon-fed. Far too much is at stake.

Hamas committed war crimes on Oct. 7 on a scale that is unprecedented for any Palestinian group. But there is little more than Israeli narrative spin so far to suggest that there was an unparalleled depravity to Hamas’ actions. Certainly from what we know, it is hard to see that anything Hamas did that day was worse, or more savage, than what Israel has been doing daily in Gaza for weeks.

And Israel’s actions — from bombing Palestinian families to starving them of food and water – has the blessing of every major Western politician.

https://consortiumnews.com/2023/11/06/w ... out-oct-7/

Blinken’s Humiliation
November 6, 2023

Wherever he turned in the Middle East, the U.S. secretary of state was met by opposition, reports Joe Lauria.

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Antony Blinken in July. (Office of U.S. Department of State Spokesperson Matthew Miller/Wikimedia Commons)

By Joe Lauria
Special to Consortium News

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken has ended his four-day excursion to the Middle East where he was publicly rebuffed by Israel, schooled by Egypt and Jordan and protested in Turkey.

Blinken will arrive back in the United States where hundreds of thousands of Americans, including many Democratic Party voters, are in the streets eviscerating the Biden Administration for its role in genocide.

He returns to a State Department where one official resigned over the administration’s unconditional support for Israel, and a second Department employee accused Joe Biden on social media of being “complicit in genocide.”

Arab-American voters of Blinken’s party, who helped Joe Biden win the White House in 2020 by delivering him the swing state of Michigan, are openly rebelling this time because they see on their screens what anyone with a half a heart is seeing and they know Biden’s part in it.

He is ahead of Donald Trump in only one of six swing states, according to a new New York Times and Siena College poll. The level of barbarity being unleashed by the rabid, rightwing regime in Tel Aviv has taken Blinken and Biden aback, if only because of the political consequences.

U.S. officials are so used to automatically backing Israel, that they’re having a hard time coming to terms with what it is exactly that they are backing this time. But it’s starting to sink in. If there are embers of a human conscience left in Biden and Blinken they are not unmoved. Lacking normal human reactions, they clearly don’t know what to do other than what they’ve always done: back Israel to the hilt despite what their eyes tell them.

The political calculus is muddied because of the unmistakable power of the Israel lobby to destroy American political careers by “primarying” a candidate or backing a general election opponent. This adds to Biden’s dilemma.

Caitlin Johnstone, in a column republished in Consortium News today comments on a Washington Post article, which says:

“As Israel’s ground invasion of Gaza escalates, the Biden administration finds itself in a precarious position: Administration officials say Israel’s counterattack against Hamas has been too severe, too costly in civilian casualties, and lacking a coherent endgame, but they are unable to exert significant influence on America’s closest ally in the Middle East to change its course. …

With every missile unleashed on Gaza, with every killing of a Palestinian child – and Israel has killed in this war more children than all global conflicts did since 2019 – the whole region is sinking in a sea of hatred that will define generations to come. ”


Given that Washington is Israel’s military underwriter and the White House has asked Congress for another $14 billion for Israel in the midst of its atrocities, Johnstone remarks, “The Biden administration does in fact have tons of leverage it can use to stop the genocidal massacre in Gaza, it just doesn’t want to because it would be ‘politically unpopular’ and because ‘Biden himself has a personal attachment to Israel.'”

Humiliated by Netanyahu

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Blinken meets Netanyahu in Tel Aviv on Friday. (Israeli Government Press Office)

Blinken flew to Israel on Friday to press Benjamin Netanyahu to accept what the U.S. had just days earlier vetoed at the U.N. Security Council: humanitarian pauses to get aid into Gaza and foreign nationals out. It’s a little like stopping the torturer for a minute to give the victim a sip of water before encouraging the torture to resume.

The fact that the administration is now pushing these pauses — instead of a ceasefire — where before they exercised their veto against them — not a light matter — shows what a quandary it is in and how desperate it is to find a way out.

The unsophisticated Blinken is no match for a world-class Machiavellian like Benjamin Netanyahu. Still, he had to meet Blinken because after all there’s $14 billion on the table. Pulling that money back would be a major setback for Netanyahu and relief for the Gazans. So he patted Blinken on the head and said thanks for coming, but no thanks to your pauses.

Blinken had to make a statement to the press alone when normally he would be standing next to the leader he’d just met. But Netanyahu was too busy. He has a cleansing operation to run.

Afterward Netanyahu appeared alone in blackshirt to say no to humanitarian pauses, no to fuel, no to everything going into Gaza but death.

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Netanyahu at the Ramon Air Force Base on Sunday: “There will be no ceasefire without the return of the hostages. We say this to our friends and to our enemies. We will continue until we defeat them.” (Israeli Government Press Office)

Lectured by Egypt & Jordan

Next it was off to Amman where Blinken was totally outmatched by the foreign ministers of Jordan and Egypt, who schooled him on the massive crimes Israel is committing around the clock. Jordanian Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi talked about “the importance of abidance” to

“international humanitarian law … and the rejection of the displacement of Palestinians, of their land. … We consider that this is a war crime that we will stop with all our strength. … The killing must stop, and also Israeli immunity from committing war crimes must stop. … How can we even entertain what will happen in Gaza when we do not know what kind of Gaza will be left after this war is done? Are we going to be talking about a wasteland? Are we going to be talking about a whole population reduced to refugees?”

Egyptian Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukry could not have been blunter when he said, with Blinken in the room:

“The collective punishment – Israel targeting innocent civilians and facilities, medical facilities, paramedics, in addition to trying to force migration for Palestinians to leave their lands – this cannot be a legitimate self-defense at all. … I would like to ask for an immediate and intensive ceasefire in Gaza without any condition, and that Israel would stop … its violations of international law and the laws of war.”

There is a severe disconnect in Blinken’s thinking, when he says, “We believe pauses can be a critical mechanism for protecting civilians, for getting aid in, for getting foreign nationals out, while still enabling Israel to achieve its objective: defeat Hamas.”

Does he not get that Israel’s objective is the destruction of the Palestinian people in Gaza en route to defeating Hamas?

Completely unaware of where he was or who he was appearing with, Blinken thought out loud, justifying the monstrous Israeli policy of bombing civilian targets like hospitals because of an alleged Hamas presence and their use of “human shields.”

Tamer Smadi of Al Jazeera asked Blinken: “What are the results that Israel has achieved, and what is the number of victims exactly, of civilians, that would make the United States to stop and think and look at this most open massacre and to ask Israel decisively to stop this bloodshed in the Gaza Strip?”

All but explicitly justifying Israel’s war crimes, Blinken answered:

“Hamas cynically, monstrously embeds itself in the midst of civilians; puts its fighters, its commanders, its weapons, its ammunition, command and control in residential buildings, under schools and in schools, under hospitals and in hospitals, under mosques and in mosques – monstrous.”

Getting Stuffed in Turkey


After an unexpected detour to Baghdad, Blinken flew to Ankara, where just a week earlier President Recep Tayyip Erdogan led a rally of nearly a million people at the airport, which roundly condemned Israel.

Two days before Blinken’s arrival, Erdogan embarrassed him by recalling Turkey’s ambassador from Israel. (Of course he won’t cut off 40 percent of Israel’s oil supplies that pass through Turkey). Blinken came to the Turkish capital but Erdogan didn’t have time to meet him. Turkey is demanding a ceasefire and isn’t buying Blinken’s belated pauses appeal.

Before Blinken’s meeting with the Turkish foreign minister, Turkish police had to use tear gas and water cannon to stop hundreds of protestors from storming the Incirlik air base, which houses U.S. troops. About 1,000 protestors also demonstrated outside the U.S. embassy in Ankara.

It was a weekend that should seize minds in Washington.

As Blinken said in Amman,

“When I see a Palestinian boy or girl pulled from the wreckage of a building, it hits me in the gut just as it hits everyone’s gut, and I see my own children in their faces. And as human beings, how can any of us not feel the same way?”

Then act on it. Stop Israel.

https://consortiumnews.com/2023/11/06/b ... miliation/

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The Demand For a Ceasefire is Necessary But Not Sufficient: The Demand Must Be for Decolonization and Palestinian Self-Determination
BY AJAMU BARAKA
NOV 8, 2023

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Father with body of his child killed by Israeli shelling in Khan Younis, October 10, 2023 (Photo: AFP)

The people of Gaza are in desperate need of a cease fire, but ultimately they need decolonization and self-determination.

“The nightmare in Gaza is more than a humanitarian crisis. It is a crisis of humanity,” UN Secretary-General António Guterres told reporters in New York, adding that the need for a ceasefire is becoming “more urgent with every passing hour.”

Hundreds of thousands of people are demonstrating across the planet in opposition to the outrage of being forced to witness the barbaric state terror and collective punishment of the occupied and oppressed people of Palestine by the illegitimate settler-colonial state of Israel.

The flood of images of dead Palestinian children and even the audio of Palestinian women screaming in between the sounds of bombs being dropped on buildings in the pitched black darkness of Gaza that house the 2.2 million displaced Palestinians sparked a moral outrage that politically is being expressed by the call for a ceasefire. It’s believed that a ceasefire would at least stop the carnage. And it probably would, but that is the problem. While a ceasefire would temporarily stop the mindless slaughter of innocent Palestinians, the ongoing agony of Palestinians forced to live under the inhumane conditions of occupation in the Gaza concentration camp and the rest of occupied Palestine would continue until the next escalation of resistance or attacks by the settlers.

Why?

Like all European settler projects since 1492 when Europeans spilled out of what became Europe first into the “Americas” where they grew fat and powerful off of the stolen land and most vicious form of slavery humanity has ever known and then through the industrial fueled global colonial/capitalist expansion, the Jewish European settlers have one objective - the expansion of Israeli colonial power and control over all of the lands currently occupied by the Indigenous Palestinians. Unlike other settler projects where the indigenous peoples were subjected to genocide, the Israeli bourgeoisie has the problem that they have not been able to murder and/or displace all of the Palestinian peoples.

The incessant expansion of Israeli settlements, the apartheid wall, checkpoints meant to make live miserable for Palestinians, the neighborhood raids, impunity for the violence of the settlers, thief of houses, massive incarceration, assassinations of Palestinians leaders, peaceful demonstrations met with live fire, the inhumane siege of Gaza and periodic attacks (mowing the lawn as the Israeli govt calls it) in Gaza – all expose the extreme violence of the Israeli settler project that will persist until the colonial relationship is altered.

This means quite clearly that without ending the Israeli settler project with its apartheid laws, racialization of Palestinians and normalized violence, it will be ceasefire today and war tomorrow, because opposition by Palestinians will continue until they are all murdered and/or expelled, and even then, opposition will continue from the displaced Palestinians joining the other displaced Palestinians from the last 75 years of Palestinian dispersal.

The only solution is authentic decolonization. But that solution must be imposed on the Israeli colonists in a similar fashion as the wars for national liberation that took place in Algeria, Vietnam, Kenya, Zimbabwe, and South Africa. Israelis understand that the success of European settler projects only occurred where the settlers were able to murder most of the indigenous population and then subject the survivors to permanent internal colonization such as the current situations in the U.S., Canada, New Zealand, and Australia. Elements of the Israeli ruling class represented by the fascist coalition of forces currently in power under Netanyahu, are quite clear that they are prepared to impose a “final solution” to the Palestinian problem.

Genocide has been the handmaiden of the European Settler Projects

No electricity, no food, no water, no fuel...We are fighting human animals, and we act accordingly.” (Yoav Gallant, Israeli Defense Minister)

The Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (CPPCG), or the Genocide Convention, defines genocide as the intentional destruction of a national, ethnic, racial or religious group in whole, or in part. A genocide is accepted to be represented by any of five acts:

1. Killing members of the group
2. Causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group
3. Deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part
4. Imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group
5. Forcibly transferring children of the group to another group

It should not be necessary to systematically chronicle Israeli policies from the murder of Palestinian resisters to the gruesome stories of Palestinian women dying in the process of giving birth at Israeli checkpoints, to the current murder of thousands of Palestinian children in Gaza and the West Bank, to conclude that the colonial policies of Israel fit the classic definition of genocide.

The horrific violence deployed by the colonial powers to establish the parasitic colonial relationship pales in comparison to the violence needed to impose a settler colonial project where the intent to permanently settle the conquered land with the population from the “mother-country” or other territories that requires eliminating or severely reducing the physical presence of the indigenous peoples.

This understanding of the genocidal nature of settler-colonialism should be more developed in the U.S. as a result of it being the most developed settler state with its history of violent conquest, slavery, and internal colonization. However, the framing of the U.S. as a settler state with a practice of systematic genocide that continues up to this day has only started to penetrate the theoretical frameworks of left and radical discourse in a meaningful way over the last two decades.

Yet for those of us struggling against this colonial criminal state, its nature is clear, and as a consequence, the historic task – turning imperialist/colonial wars into wars against colonialism it all its various forms.

Therefore, as necessary as it is to demand that the Israeli stop the slaughter, a ceasefire is not enough. The genocidal Israeli project must be completely dismantled and the officials directly responsible for its implementation along with their enablers in the successive U.S. regimes must be brought to justice.

There must not be any hesitation in calling for justice in this form. Gaza has revealed the true nature of European colonialism to a public that had not given much thought to the subject. Establishing the connection between colonialism and capitalist exploitation must be the next step to take advantage of this incipient new consciousness among the public in the West. Today it is going to be a little easier to do that as a consequence of Gaza. The gap between the “collective West” and the global humanity beyond the 10% that represents the U.S. and Europe, a population that the collective West refers to as the “world,” is hardening. But the gap between the elite policymakers and the people in the West and Europe is also expanding and hardening – that is a positive development.

The demands that must serve as the foundation of for a realistic resolution of the colonial relationship in Israel/Palestine must also be demands that serve as basis for the global movement to finally identify and defeat what the Black Alliance for Peace calls the U.S./EU/NATO Axis of Domination.

https://blackagendareport.org/news/1663 ... ermination

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Another Interview With Dominique De Villepin On The Conflict In Palestine (As Translated By Arnaud Bertrand)
On October 28 I posted (with the author's permission):

An Interview On Gaza With Dominique De Villepin (As Translated By Arnaud Bertrand).

There is a new interview with Dominique De Villepin which has also been translated by Arnaud Bertrand.

Arnaud Bertrand @RnaudBertrand - 1:22 UTC · Nov 8, 2023https://twitter.com/RnaudBertrand/status/1722061957803770143
Another masterful interview on Gaza of Dominique De Villepin, former Prime Minister of France, who IMHO is the best diplomat the West has produced in decades.

Again I believe that his words are so important and so rare among Western leaders today, that I decided to translate it in full (the bold parts are emphasis Villepin himself made when speaking):[/i]

One does not have to agree with De Villepin. But one has to acknowledge that he is one of the few European politicians who has put real thoughts into the issue and who points to a potentially sensible end:

What follows is Arnaud Bertrand's translation:

--- Begin of translation ---

"The Israeli government, Benjamin Netanyahu, failed on October 7th and failed doubly. Firstly, in its ability to ensure the protection of the Israeli people by allowing massacres that are an abomination to occur. He bears direct responsibility for what happened. And his second failure is having encouraged a policy of occupation and colonization, which continues at this moment in the West Bank and constitutes another threat to Israel if a second front in the West Bank were to open.

"The Israeli government, Benjamin Netanyahu, failed on October 7th and failed doubly. Firstly, in its ability to ensure the protection of the Israeli people by allowing massacres that are an abomination to occur. He bears direct responsibility for what happened. And his second failure is having encouraged a policy of occupation and colonization, which continues at this moment in the West Bank and constitutes another threat to Israel if a second front in the West Bank were to open.

Force does not ensure the security of a people! This is what all Israelis must understand today. And what is important is that since October 7th, the Israeli government's choice has been to escalate the use of force. You know, neither force nor vengeance ensures peace and security. What ensures peace and security is justice! And justice is not being served today.

The rationale of the Israeli government for the bombings happening today is flawed, and the whole international community can see it. The principle is: "we target terrorists, and unfortunately, there are also civilian populations," what is euphemistically called in military language "collateral damage." It must be understood that this collateral damage is not accidental. That is to say, it is perfectly predictable and fully accepted.

[Host: "But once again, the responsibility is not solely Israeli."]

But once more, let's stop asking about responsibility; let's look at the reality of what's happening on the ground! Assigning fault, allow me to tell you, we will leave to historians. What we want is to stop this violence, to stop these massacres. Israel is putting itself in danger, even more today, with this type of warfare and these types of strikes.

We are essentially dealing with a policy of vengeance from the Netanyahu government. Israel has the right to self-defense, but self-defense does not give an indiscriminate right to kill civilian populations. When you target an ambulance, you can always imagine that there was a terrorist in one of the ambulances, or not. But the result is that there are children, women who die. Every child, every woman killed, that's more terrorists. Therefore, Israel's objective, what Israel achieves, is exactly the opposite of what they wish. So, it is essential today to change this logic and return to a strategy that is sound.

Hostages, everything must be done to secure their release. But let's not forget: the Palestinian people are also taken hostage, by Hamas and by Israel. And Hamas, we all know, cares little for the Palestinian people. So telling Hamas: "we will not lift the siege, we will not have a humanitarian truce until the hostages are released," is a dialogue of the deaf.

Benjamin Netanyahu is waging a war to do everything so that the political solution does not come to the table. And this is where the international community, Europe, the United States, must tell Benjamin Netanyahu that this war is not acceptable. It is not acceptable because it leads us directly [to escalation] - because we can see it well, from Hamas we will move to Iran, from Iran we will move to other targets, and we then enter into the logic of a clash of civilizations. When Mr. Benjamin Netanyahu says that on one side there is the people of light and on the other the people of darkness, we can see the kind of spiral we are getting into.

All the wars that have been going on for the past twenty years are wars that begin and do not end. These are frozen conflicts. We know how to start a war; we do not know how to end it. And Mr. Benjamin Netanyahu could control Gaza, it would change nothing. There will continue to be terrorist attacks, Israelis will continue to live in fear. We must get out of this. The second reason why this is yesterday's war is that the war against terrorism has never been won anywhere. Force is not the answer, once again. Vengeance is not the answer. The answer is justice, and that is what all the peoples of the world, all those who today watch what is happening, call for justice.

Today the direction we must follow is to prevent Benjamin Netanyahu from continuing his suicidal logic that will make Israel a besieged state. They can besiege Gaza, but they will be besieged. And do not think that tomorrow we will again have a pacified discourse with Saudi Arabia, with the Arab states that will normalize the situation: no! The wounds of history are awakening.

Israel's interest is to have a responsible state at its side. And this responsible state, let's stop splitting hairs, must clearly be the West Bank, all of the West Bank. It must be Gaza, with access between the two territories, and East Jerusalem. The problem, and this is the whole point of Benjamin Netanyahu's escalation, is that Benjamin Netanyahu does not want it. And the policy of separation must be dignified. That is, it must confer to the Palestinians a state where they can live, a viable state, a true state, which can build itself and which will be all the more at peace...

[Host: "Does that mean that the settlements in the West Bank have to be removed?"]

Well, when we left Algeria, there were a million French who left Algeria. Today there are 500,000 Israelis colonizing the West Bank, and there are 200,000 in East Jerusalem.

[Host: "They must leave the West Bank?"]

Yes. Yes, that is history, that is responsibility, that is the price! I tell you solemnly, it is the price of security for Israel! And all those who today consider that it will never be enough are pursuing the worst policy."


--- End of translation ---

Bertrand adds:

Credit to @caissesdegreve who took these extracts from the original interview which can be found here: Conflit Israël-Hamas : la riposte israélienne n'est "ni ciblée ni proportionnée"

Posted by b on November 8, 2023 at 9:22 UTC | Permalink

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Re: Palestine

Post by blindpig » Thu Nov 09, 2023 12:33 pm

What's happening in Palestine and Israel: chronicle for November 8
November 8, 2023
Rybar

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The Israelis continue their ground operation in the Gaza Strip. In the northwestern sector, fighting continues near Al-Mashtal Street and in the Sheikh Radwan area off the Mediterranean coast. Today, Palestinian groups published a video of the destruction of an IDF tank in this direction. Fighting is also taking place near Beit Hanoun and Beit Lahia.

Footage also appeared online confirming the Israeli advance on the southern flank: IDF forces published a video from the vicinity of the Al-Nur amusement park south of Gaza City . In addition, collisions were recorded at the intersection of street No. 10 and the Ar-Rashid highway.

If Israeli troops were really able to take control of this area, then the IDF’s plan to divide the Gaza Strip into north and south with a physical blockade of the enclave’s capital can be considered completed. Also today, the Israelis reopened the Salah ed-Din highway for refugees to pass through.

There are no significant changes on the border with Lebanon: Hezbollah fighters attacked IDF strongholds at Dovev and Shomera , resulting in two people being wounded. The Israelis, as before, respond with fire into the southern Lebanese territories.

Progress of hostilities
Gaza Strip
The Israelis continue to move in the Gaza Strip: the main actions continue south of the capital of the enclave. The IDF's progress is at least confirmed by several images from the Al-Nur amusement park near the southern outskirts of Gaza , where Israeli troops were previously seen (coordinates: 31.480223, 34.417962). The network also publishes materials that the Israelis went deep into the area of ​​the regional capital Tal al-Hawa, but there is currently no visual evidence of this information. In addition, a video from the vicinity of the Ansar district in Gaza was distributed online , in which one can see the consequences of either military operations or an IDF airstrike on the neighborhood. The smoke in the video is likely coming from somewhere in the area of ​​the Ar-Rashid intersection and Route 10 , where the presence of Israeli military personnel was previously confirmed.


Meanwhile, the Israelis managed to advance in the northwestern sector: Palestinian groups published a recording of one of the militants striking an IDF tank with an ATGM on Al-Mashtal Street near the Mediterranean coast. Fighting also continues near Beit Lahiya and Beit Hanoun.


The IDF air force, in turn, continues to carry out massive attacks on the territory of the strip: journalists from The New York Times state that to date, IDF bombing has destroyed more than a third of all buildings in Gaza City. Among other things, today the Israeli command announced the liquidation of the head of the Hamas military industry and weapons division , Mohsed Abu Zin, during one of the air raids .


In addition, as of 10:00 am today, traffic on the Salah ed-Din highway was reopened for civilians trying to escape from the combat area to the south. Footage of a large column of refugees walking along the road against the backdrop of ruins was actively distributed on Telegram.


South direction
Palestinian groups, as before, are attacking settlements near the border with the Gaza Strip: Kfar Aza, Meftahim, Sderot and other settlements came under fire. In addition, militants periodically attack central Israel: today the target has again become the vicinity of Tel Aviv.

Border with Lebanon
In the northern sector, the situation is virtually unchanged: Hezbollah periodically attacks Israeli strongholds and settlements, and they respond with massive attacks on southern Lebanon. Today, the pro-Palestinian group targeted IDF strongholds near Dovev and Shomer , and two IDF fighters were wounded. The military, in turn, responded with fire at Kafr Killa, Blida, Yarun, Hula and other settlements.


West Bank
In the West Bank, Israeli security forces are again storming Palestinian settlements and arresting civilians en masse. The Israelis were most active in the Shuafat camp, where the house of 13-year-old Palestinian Muhammad Zalbani, who had previously mortally wounded an IDF fighter at a checkpoint nearby, was destroyed . During the attack, the teenager was killed.


In addition, clashes continue in Tulkarm, Qalqilya, Tuku, Tubas, Jenin and other Palestinian settlements in the region.

Actions of pro-Iranian formations in the Middle East

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Pro-Iranian forces in Syria again fired at the American al-Shaddadi base in the east of the country, but there is no information about casualties or wounded. Meanwhile, journalists from the American publication NBC News, citing the Pentagon, reported that over the entire period of such attacks, 45 US military personnel were injured , although much lower numbers were previously reported in the States.

Political-diplomatic background
Activities of the Saudi authorities in the context of the conflict

Saudi Investment Minister Khalid al-Falih gave an interview to Bloomberg , in which he stated that despite the events taking place in the Gaza Strip, the normalization of relations with Israel remains relevant for the kingdom. He also stressed that the country's authorities are not going to stop exporting oil to the Israelis in order to influence the course of the conflict. In addition, news is spreading in the Israeli media segment that the Saudi Arabian police expelled from the country an Islamic cleric who called on all Arabs to support Hamas in the war against Israel.

In general, there is nothing surprising in this position: the Saudi authorities, without having a formal peace agreement with the Israelis, have long maintained close and friendly relations with them. We previously wrote that the kingdom is actively investing in Israel, and also purchases technology from the latter and exchanges data with intelligence services. Therefore, hopes that the Saudis will act to spite the Israelis even despite the massacre in the Gaza Strip are extremely naive.

Statements by representatives of the Yemeni Armed Forces


Yemen's Houthis said they were able to shoot down an American MQ-9 Reaper reconnaissance and attack drone in Yemen's territorial waters with "appropriate weapons." The Yemenis have enough Iranian-made air defense systems - they demonstrated the Barq-2 at the parade two months ago. Another question is that if the Americans now declare that they did not lose the UAV, the Yemenis will hardly be able to present evidence to the contrary. But there is a significant reason for joy, of course. There is jubilation in the Arabic-speaking segment: pro-Iranian forces were able to destroy exactly the same UAV as the one that killed Qassem Soleimani in January 2020.

Rumors of a possible truce

Rumors are circulating online that US President Joe Biden is allegedly persuading his Israeli counterpart Benjamin Netanyahu to agree to a three-day truce in the Gaza Strip in exchange for the release of 10-15 hostages by Hamas. At the same time, the Israeli side is allegedly not ready to do this due to distrust that Hamas will keep its promise to release the captives. On the other hand, Palestinian sources circulated information that the militants were not ready for a truce in this format - they demanded that a ceasefire be declared for at least a week.

At the same time, Egyptian media are reporting on the possible imminent achievement of a humanitarian truce and an exchange of prisoners, but there is no confirmation of these reports.

The threat of famine in the Gaza Strip

Israeli bombing of the Gaza Strip in the north of the enclave has threatened the city. According to Arab media, in the northern part of the region almost all bakeries that could produce bread were destroyed. In addition, the Hamas leadership stated that the shortage of drinking water in the enclave is 90%. the same information is confirmed by the UN: representatives of the organization stated the fact that the vast majority of basic enterprises that provide the population with bread are closed due to a lack of raw materials, water and fuel. At a minimum, the reports about the bakeries are true: Since the beginning of the operation in Gaza , the Israeli Air Force has regularly destroyed bakeries in the regional capital. Most likely, this is being done to force the population to flee to the south of the sector in order to facilitate the IDF's ground operation.

https://rybar.ru/chto-proishodit-v-pale ... -noyabrya/

Google Translator

The residual affection some Russians have for the Zionists makes me shake my head. They refuse to realize that this is an ethnic cleansing operation.

******

Gaza-Israel Catastrophe — Settlers & Wider War
November 7, 2023

The war in Gaza serves as a smokescreen to the escalation of settler expansion and violence in the West Bank, writes Dan Steinbock. Meanwhile, Biden’s hawks refocus on Iran. Last of a 5-part series.

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Sept. 8, 2006: Israeli soldier checking IDs of four Palestinian men on a 4 men on a tractor in the West Bank city of Nablus. (Michael loadenthal, Flickr, CC BY-NC-SA 2.0)

This is the final article in a five-part series. Here is part one, two, three and four.

By Dan Steinbock
The World Financial Review

he Jewish settlements have fostered a de facto one-state reality in Israel, wherein Israelis have rights and Palestinians don´t. Meanwhile, talks for a two-state solution have been stalling since 2014. Rhetoric aside, Prime Minister Benhamin Netanyahu’s government has “engaged in actions that annex the West Bank and threaten the prospects for a just and lasting resolution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.”

In the past, periods of heightened security tension and military operations have ensured an opportunity for settlers to establish facts on the ground. After the brutal attack by Hamas, the alarming trend of increased settler violence has rapidly escalated. Nothing has halted the settlers’ steady expansion since the late 1960s and the Israelis’ expansion in East Jerusalem.

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Expansion of Jewish settlers in the West Bank, 1967-2021. (ICBC)

In South Africa, the system of apartheid, based on white supremacy and racial segregation, was in place from 1948 until 1994. In April 2021, Human Rights Watch warned that Israel had crossed the apartheid threshold.

In early September this year, the ex-chief of Mossad, Tamir Pardo, said that Israel’s mechanisms for controlling the Palestinians matched the old South Africa. “There is an apartheid state here,” since “two people are judged under two legal systems.”

Even amid the peace talks in Oslo in the early 1990s, Palestinian per capita income was just 15 percent relative to the Israeli level. But hopes for peace died with the Jewish far-right assassination of Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin.

Despite all the hoopla by the Trump and Biden administrations that the Middle East is at the cusp of peace and prosperity, Palestinian per capita income has fallen and is now only 12.9 per cent relative to the Israeli level, lower than decades ago.

As bad as these aggregate figures are, they reflect Palestinian averages, not Gaza’s hell. Years of isolation and recurrent conflicts have left the local economy far behind the West Bank’s, due to the Israeli-imposed blockade, four wars, and domestic divisions.

Gazan per capita income is now less than a third of that in the West Bank. Half of the labour is unemployed; over half of the population lives below the national poverty line, according to International Monetary Fund data.

Long before the Hamas offensive, Palestinian stagnation reflected economic ruin that was excessive even relative to apartheid South Africa. During the apartheid (1948-94), blacks’ per capita income relative to the whites climbed from 8.6 per cent to 13.5 per cent. In relative terms, the Palestinians’ starting point relative to Israelis was almost twice as high after the Oslo Accords. But today it’s behind that of blacks at the end of the apartheid. The reversal occurred under the watch of the Trump and Biden administrations.

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Two Kinds of Apartheid: South Africa to Palestine. (Author; data from IMF)

Farsighted Israeli leaders no longer deny the reality of apartheid. Last year, former Attorney General Michael Ben-Yair called Israel “an apartheid regime.” Recently, the Parliament’s former speaker, Avraham Burg, and renowned historian Benny Morris were among more than 2,000 Israeli and U.S. public figures who signed a public statement that “Palestinians live under a regime of apartheid.”

Hall of Mirrors

The standard narrative about the 2023 War in Gaza is a mere façade. Even the argument that Hamas’ offensive was an “intelligence failure” doesn’t seem valid. Based on two years of video evidence, Hamas militants trained for the brutal attacks in at least six sites across Gaza in plain sight and less than a mile from Israel’s heavily fortified and monitored border. For all practical purposes, the offensive was preventable. If the intelligence failure wasn’t a failure at all, what was it?

Similarly, the naïve story about Hamas as Israel’s nemesis doesn’t hold water. The group and its brutal attacks went hand-in-hand with more than two decades during which Likud and the far-right were rising.

Just as the Operation Cyclone had led the U.S. to train, arm and finance a generation of Islamist fedayeen in Afghanistan, including Osama Bin Laden, Israelis thought they could use Hamas; not that Hamas could use them.

Moreover, the war in Gaza serves as a smokescreen to the escalation of settler expansion and violence in the West Bank, which Netanyahu’s far-right ministers hope would result in its annexation and Palestinian expulsions.

Regionally, the war has led U.S. President Joe Biden’s hawks to refocus attention on Iran. It’s an old project. Since 2003, the U.S. Army has conducted an analysis called TIRANNT (Theater Iran Near-Term) for a full-scale war with Iran.

Reportedly, this contingency plan (CONPLAN 8022) would be activated in the eventuality of a second 9/11, on the presumption that Iran would be behind it.

Expectedly, the war has inflamed tensions with Hezbollah in southern Lebanon, which many in the U.S. Congress and the White House would like to link with Iran, to legitimize a major regional confrontation.

Tellingly, after the Hamas attack, when Republican Sen. Lindsay Graham was asked whether he wanted the U.S. and Israel to “bomb Iran even in the absence of direct evidence of their involvement,” he responded, “Yeah.” The answer stunned even the CNN interviewer, so she asked the question twice and got the same response.

Recently, U.S. Rep. Michael McCaul, the Republican chair of the U.S. House Foreign Affairs Committee, said his panel is drafting legislation to authorize the use of military force in Iran, although U.S. intelligence has said there is no evidence to support the claim of Iran’s direct involvement. McCaul’s comments came on the 21st anniversary of the enactment of a measure that authorized the 2003 misguided U.S. invasion of Iraq.

To Netanyahu’s government, an Iran conflict would divert attention from Gaza and the West Bank. It’s a long dream.

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Protest in Tehran opposing Israeli assault on the Gaza Strip, Oct. 14. (Amin Ahouei, TasminNews, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 4.0)

In 2011 Netanyahu ordered the Mossad and Israel Defense Forces to prepare for an attack on Iran within 15 days, until Pardo and then-Chief of Staff Benny Gantz — now in opposition but a key member in Netanyahu’s not-so-united war cabinet — questioned the prime minister’s legal authority to give such an order without cabinet approval. So, Netanyahu backed off.

But Iran remains on the government’s agenda. And some critics argue that it is part of the Gaza war agenda. A month ago, in parallel with the domestic Supreme Court turmoil, Netanyahu’s Mossad chief David Barnea vowed to target Iran’s “highest echelon” if Israeli Jews would be hurt in terror.44

Nor has the Biden administration avoided the temptation to use the war and its “solidarity with Israel” as a demonstration effect for other hotspots. When Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin met with Netanyahu and members of the Israeli war cabinet, he conveyed the U.S.’ “ironclad support” for Israel.

It is the liturgical term that the White House has used in the context of Japan, Taiwan, Ukraine, the Philippines and other major U.S. non-NATO allies that have committed to common defence objectives, military bases and arms purchases from U.S. Big Defense, such a Raytheon, Austin’s former employer.

Giving Peace a Chance, Finally

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Zhang Jun, China’s U.N. ambassador, center, after the Security Council meeting on the Middle East, Oct. 18. (UN Photo/Paulo Filgueiras)

The ongoing war has severely undermined U.S. credibility as a neutral broker in the region. Officially, Washington seeks to de-escalate tensions. But rhetoric aside, as Israel escalated its counter-offensive, U.S. diplomats were being discouraged from publicly using phrases that would urge calm. In leaked messages, State Department staff wrote that high-level officials did not want press materials to include three specific phrases: “de-escalation/ceasefire,” “end to violence/bloodshed” and “restoring calm.” It preceded the U.S. veto in the U.N. Security Council to block a “humanitarian pause” and corridors into Gaza.

The Democratic Biden administration has continued Trump’s Middle East policies, which effectively ignore the Palestinian nightmare. Washington’s bipartisan consensus is driven by the priorities of the Pentagon and the Big Defense, which profits from every new major violent conflict by selling security without peace. The Gaza war is a textbook case.

In the first week of its counter-offensive, Israel dropped 6,000 bombs on Gaza. That’s almost the number of bombs the U.S. dropped on Afghanistan in an entire year. But that may be just a prelude to what’s still ahead. If and when the expected Israeli ground assault – a “disaster foretold,” as the Israeli columnist Gideon Levy puts it – will begin, all these casualty figures will pale in comparison.


When one million people are internally displaced, 90,000 residential units are damaged, electricity and water are effectively denied (and all this before the actual assault), the consequent damage can no longer be considered collateral but intended. And if health systems collapse, misery and vice will follow in the form of famine, epidemics paving the way to new massacres and new wars.


Today, the worst economic risks are unwarranted geopolitical tensions. The outbreak of the 2023 War in Gaza is threatening to inject new volatility into energy markets, harking back to last year’s commodity chaos after the proxy war in Ukraine. As Biden made his primetime case for “wartime aid to Israel and Ukraine,” he expanded U.S. involvement into two major fronts; multiplied the need for tens of billions of dollars in military aid in addition to the past hundreds of billions of dollars; and accelerated the probability of a looming U.S. debt crisis that could have global repercussions.

After $8 trillion in the misguided post-9/11 wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, U.S. war theaters have not disappeared. It’s only the arenas that are shifting. The Biden administration is preparing another unwarranted Global Cold War in a perceived Manichean world of “noble democracies” and “evil autocracies.”

In the past half a century, no U.S.-brokered initiative has achieved enduring peace in the Middle East. Washington has a geopolitical interest in the region as an energy reserve and U.S. defence contractors’ lucrative client. By contrast, China’s approach is premised on stability and cooperation that are necessary for economic development. Stressing the importance of peace and development, Beijing has called for an “immediate ceasefire” and repeated its support for a two-state solution with an independent state of Palestine as a way out of the conflict.

Both the U.S. and China have a role in the Middle East. But without peace, there can be no stability. And without stability, there can be no development. Half a century of wars, colonisation and apartheid will never bring peace to the region; but they will surely ensure more despair, more wars and more dead and injured civilians. What is needed in the region is multilateral cooperation and multipolar diplomacy.

It is time to give peace and development a chance – before it’s too late.

Dr. Dan Steinbock is the founder of Difference Group and has served at the India, China and America Institute (U.S.), Shanghai Institute for International Studies (China) and the EU Center (Singapore). For more, see here.

The original version of this article was published by The World Financial Review

https://consortiumnews.com/2023/11/07/g ... wider-war/

Doctors in Gaza Respond
November 8, 2023

The medical providers called on the WHO and rights groups to hold accountable the group of Israeli physicians who betrayed their profession by endorsing the bombing of a hospital in Gaza.

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A wounded Palestinian child getting treated at the overcrowded emergency ward of Al-Shifa hospital in Gaza City following an Israeli airstrike on Oct. 11. (Palestinian News & Information Agency, or Wafa, for APAimages, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 3.0)

By Julia Conley
Common Dreams

Physicians who have been working for four weeks to save as many lives as possible from Israel’s “complete siege” of Gaza, even as the healthcare system collapses around them, responded on Monday to a statement by a group of Israeli doctors who over the weekend called for the bombing of a hospital in the besieged territory.

“We as doctors are ambassadors of peace. We save lives,” said the doctors, led by Dr. Marwan Shafiq Al-Ham, director of Muhammad Yusuf Al-Najjar Hospital, in a statement.

“Israeli doctors who signed a letter promoting [the] bombing of hospitals with patients inside have committed a betrayal to their noble profession and bear responsibility.”

The medical providers called on the World Health Organization and human rights groups that work in the healthcare field to help hold the signers of the letter accountable.


The weekend letter was signed by about 100 members of a group called Doctors for the Rights of Israeli Soldiers and was first reported Sunday by the Israeli outlet HaMedash.

The doctors claimed the bombing of al-Shifa Hospital, the largest medical facility in Gaza, was a “legitimate right” of Israel because it serves as a base for “Palestinian armed groups.”

“The residents of Gaza saw fit to turn hospitals into terrorist nests to take advantage of western morality, they are the ones who brought destruction upon themselves; terrorism must be eliminated everywhere,” reads the letter. “Attacking terrorist headquarters is the right and the duty of the Israeli army.”

An ambulance convoy outside the hospital was bombed last Friday, with Israel claiming an ambulance was carrying Hamas fighters. Officials at Al-Shifa said the convoy was carrying wounded civilians to Egypt via the Rafah crossing for treatment, as medical supplies are running extremely low in Gaza.

At least 15 Palestinians were killed and 60 were injured in the bombing.

[On Nov. 3, health workers in New York City rallied in their scrubs to honor colleagues in Gaza who have been killed by Israel since Oct. 7.]

The signatories of the Israeli letter, said the doctors in Gaza, are “fully responsible if, God forbid, something happens to the hospitals.”


Jewish Voice for Peace (JVP), which has led protests against Israel’s bombardment of Gaza and has long called for an end to the country’s apartheid policies in the occupied Palestinian territories, said the doctors who signed the letter are “derelict in their duty” to protect human lives.


“We want to build a world that upholds the sanctity of life—equally, for everyone—not one that promotes the extermination of Palestinians,” said JVP. “And we won’t stop fighting until we get justice, for Palestinians and for all people.”

Al Jazeera journalist Sana Saeed said Israel’s bombing of hospitals and claims that they are terrorist targets has aimed to “dehumanize” medical workers as they’ve “put their lives on the line” for the more than 2 million people — about half of them children — who live in Gaza.

“We have sworn to protect human lives,” said the doctors in Gaza. “Therefore, it is not permissible to betray the oath and the profession.”

https://consortiumnews.com/2023/11/08/d ... a-respond/

******

‘Turning Gaza into Ashes’: Israeli Hasbara vs the World
Posted by INTERNATIONALIST 360° on NOVEMBER 7, 2023
Ramzy Baroud

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Gaza has changed the political equation in Palestine.

Moreover, the repercussions of this devastating war are likely to alter the political equation in the entire Middle East and to re-center Palestine as the world’s most urgent political crisis for years to come.

Since the establishment of Israel, facilitated by Britain and protected by the United States and other Western countries, the priorities have been entirely Israeli.

‘Israeli security,’ Israel’s ‘military edge,’ ‘Israel’s right to defend itself,’ and much more have defined the West’s political discourse on the Israeli occupation and apartheid in Palestine.

This bizarre US-western understanding of the so-called conflict that an oppressor has ‘rights’ over the oppressed has enabled Israel to maintain a military occupation over the Palestinian Territories that has lasted for over 56 years.

It has also empowered Israel to neglect the roots of this ‘conflict,’ namely the ethnic cleansing of Palestine in 1948 and the long-denied Right of Return for Palestinian refugees.

Within this context, every Palestinian-Arab overture for peace was rejected; even the supposed ‘peace process,’ namely the Oslo Accords, turned into an opportunity for Tel Aviv to entrench its military occupation, expand its settlements and corral Palestinians in Bantustan-like spaces, humiliated and racially segregated.

Some Palestinians, whether enticed by American handouts or shattered by a lingering sense of defeat, lined up to receive the dividends of the US-Israeli peace – pitiful crumbs of false prestige, empty titles and limited power granted and denied by Israel itself.

However, the Israeli war on Gaza is already changing much of this painful status quo.

Israel’s constant emphasis that its deadly war is against Hamas, against ‘terror,’ against Islamic fundamentalism, and all the rest may have convinced those who are ready to accept the Israeli version of events at face value.

But as the bodies of thousands of Palestinian civilians, thousands of whom are children, began piling up at Gaza hospitals’ morgues and, tragically, in the streets, the narrative began changing.

The pulverized bodies of Palestinian children, of whole families perished together, stand witness to the brutality of Israel, to the immoral support of its allies, to the inhumanity of an international order that rewards the murderer and reprimands the victim.

Of all the biased statements made by US President Joe Biden, the one where he suggested that Palestinians are lying about counting their own dead was perhaps the most inhumane.

Washington may not realize this yet, but the repercussions of its unconditional support for Israel will prove to be disastrous in the future, especially in a region that is fed up with war, hegemony, double standards, sectarian divisions and endless conflict.

But the greatest impact will be felt in Israel itself.

When Palestinian Ambassador to the UN, Riyad Mansour, gave a powerfully emotional speech on October 26, he could not hold back tears. International delegations at the UN General Assembly clapped non-stop, reflecting the growing support for Palestine, not only at the UN but in hundreds of cities and towns and in countless street corners around the world.

When the Israeli Ambassador to the UN, Gilad Erdan, who had spearheaded much of the lies communicated by Tel Aviv, especially in the early days of the war, delivered his talk, not a single person clapped.

The Israeli narrative had clearly crumbled, crashing to a thousand pieces. Indeed, Israel has never been so isolated. This is definitely not the ‘New Middle East’ that Netanyahu had prophesied in his UNGA talk on September 22.

Unable to fathom how the initial sympathy with Israel quickly turned into outright disdain, Israel resorted to old tactics.

On October 25, Erdan demanded the UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres resign for being “unfit to lead the UN.” Guterres’ supposedly unforgivable crime suggests that “the attacks by Hamas did not happen in a vacuum.”

As far as Israel and its American benefactors are concerned, no context is allowed to taint the perfect image that Israel has created for its genocide in Gaza. In this perfect Israeli world, no one is allowed to speak of military occupation, siege, the lack of political prospects, or the absence of a just peace for Palestinians.

Even though Amnesty International has said in its statement that both sides had committed “serious violations of international humanitarian law, including war crimes,” Israel still attacked it, accusing the group of being ‘anti-Semitic.’

Because, in Israel’s thinking, even the world’s leading international human rights group is not permitted to contextualize the atrocities in Gaza or dare suggest that one of the “root causes” of the conflict was “Israel’s system of apartheid imposed on all Palestinians.”

Israel is no longer all-powerful, as it wants us to believe. Recent events have proven that Israel’s ‘invincible army’ – a brand that allowed Israel to become, as of 2022, the world’s tenth-largest international military exporter – turned out to be a paper tiger.

This is what is infuriating Israel the most. “Muslims are not afraid of us anymore,” said former Knesset member Moshe Feiglin in an interview with Arutz Sheva-Israel National News. To restore this fear, the Israeli extremist politician has called for burning “Gaza to ashes immediately.”

But nothing will turn Gaza into ashes, even if the over 12,000 tons of explosives dropped on the Strip in the first two weeks of war have already incinerated at least 45 percent of the housing units in the Strip, according to the UN’s humanitarian office.

Gaza will not die because it is a powerful idea that is deeply entrenched within the hearts and minds of every Arab, every Muslim and millions of people around the world.

This new idea is challenging the long-held belief that the world needs to cater to Israel’s priorities, security, selfish definitions of peace and all other illusions.

The discussion should now return to where it should have always been – the priorities of the oppressed, not the oppressor.

It is time that we speak about Palestinian rights, Palestinian security and the Palestinian people’s right, in fact, obligation, to defend themselves.

It is time for us to speak about justice – real justice – the outcome of which is non-negotiable: equality, full political rights, freedom and the right of return.

Gaza has told us all of this and much more. And it is time for us to listen.

Feature photo | A mother and daughter cry at a rally in Palestine, November 1, 2023 | Sipa via AP

Dr. Ramzy Baroud is a journalist, author and the Editor of The Palestine Chronicle. He is the author of six books. His latest book, co-edited with Ilan Pappé, is ‘Our Vision for Liberation: Engaged Palestinian Leaders and Intellectuals Speak Out’. His other books include ‘My Father was a Freedom Fighter’ and ‘The Last Earth’. Baroud is a Non-resident Senior Research Fellow at the Center for Islam and Global Affairs (CIGA). His website is www.ramzybaroud.net



https://libya360.wordpress.com/2023/11/ ... the-world/

US Naval Build-Up in the Red Sea: A ‘Threat’ to Yemen and Iran
Posted by INTERNATIONALIST 360° on NOVEMBER 7, 2023
Vanessa Beeley

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A picture shared by US Central Command appears to show a guided missile submarine in the Suez Canal passing under the Al Salam Bridge northeast of Cairo.

US Central command has announced on social media that an Ohio-class submarine was entering its area of responsibility. A picture posted with the announcement appeared to show the sub in the Suez Canal northeast of Cairo.

The name of the submarine was not disclosed. However, the US Navy has four Ohio-class guided missile submarines (SSGNs) which are ‘former ballistic missile subs converted to fire Tomahawk cruise missiles rather than nuclear-tipped ballistic missiles”. The following quote is from a CNN article:

Each SSGN can carry 154 Tomahawk cruise missiles, 50% more than US guided-missile destroyers pack and almost four times what the US Navy’s newest attack subs are armed with.

Each Tomahawk can carry up to a 1,000-pound high-explosive warhead.

“SSGNs can deliver a lot of firepower very rapidly,” said Carl Schuster, a former director of operations at the US Pacific Command’s Joint Intelligence Center told CNN in 2021.


In March 2011, the SSGN USS Florida fired almost 100 Tomahawk missiles against targets in Libya. The attack was the first time the SSGNs were used in combat. The missiles effectively crippled Libyan air defence capability giving free rein, under a ‘No Fly Zone’ to NATO war planes to begin pulverising Libya and inhibiting President Muammar Gaddafi’s airforce response to the NATO direct and proxy aggression.

US military rarely announce the movements of their fleet of ballistic and guided missile subs. The nuclear-powered vessels operate almost always in secret. This is an indication the the US wants to use the arrival of the sub as a deterrent to the allies of Palestine in the region, particularly Yemen that has militarily intervened in defence of Palestinian Resistance in Gaza and the West Bank.

CNN – ‘In April, the Navy announced that the USS Florida, one of the two East Coast-based SSGNs, was operating in the Middle East. In June, the Navy publicized the visit of one of its two West Coast-based SSGN’s, USS Michigan, to South Korea as a show of US commitment to its Indo-Pacific allies.’

The X post follows a whistlestop tour of West Asian allies by Anthony Blinken – Israel, Turkey, Iraq, West Bank, Jordan and Cyprus.

On Sunday, Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin spoke with his Israeli counterpart, Minister of Defense Yoav Gallant. The primary reassurance was that the US was committed to deterring ‘any state or non-state actor seeking to escalate this conflict’.

Many would assume he was referring to Iran and Hezbollah – followed by Syria and Iraqi Resistance factions that have been targeting US bases in Syria and Iraq on a daily basis since October 7th.

The submarine crossed the Suez Canal and is believed to be heading towards the Red Sea to join the Eisenhower Carrier Strike Group which has also recently crossed the Suez Canal.

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This Naval build-up includes the US KC-135 Stratotanker heading West also towards the Red Sea.

The KC-135 Stratotanker provides the core aerial refueling capability for the United States Air Force and has excelled in this role for more than 60 years. This unique asset enhances the Air Force’s capability to accomplish its primary mission of global reach. It also provides aerial refueling support to Air Force, Navy, Marine Corps and allied nation aircraft. The KC-135 is also capable of transporting litter and ambulatory patients using patient support pallets during aeromedical evacuations.

While this is being deceptively portrayed as a preemptive ‘defensive’ measure, it must be speculated that the US is preparing to directly engage with the Yemeni Resistance forces and National Salvation government on behalf of Israel to eliminate the threat to Israel from Yemeni ballistic missiles and drones. It also brings the US fleet into dangerous waters of potential direct conflict with Iran.

Remember the headlines in August 2023?

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For those who are misled by the Western media deliberate omission of context around the term ‘Houthis’ which intends to marginalise the role played by a Resistance-aligned coalition movement in Yemen, here is a good summary from a commentator on the X platform.

“Seeing a lot of people confused by these news. “These are Houthis, not the Yemeni government” some people screech. You’re wrong. Here’s a quick crash course on some background history, the political landscape in Yemen & appropriate terminology:

1. The “Houthis” (known officially as the Ansarallah) is a broad grassroots movement with only a few defined political keypoints. This is deliberate, as the movement seeks to incorporate and represent the Yemeni people in its entirety across both Islamic and political differences. The movement has a right-wing, a centre-wing and a left-wing, each organized into separate unions and interest groups. For example, the left-wing is organized into what is called the “Cultural Front Against the Aggression”, just to be very specific.

2. The “Houthis” ceased being a rebel group in late 2014 with the advent of the September 21st Revolution and the signing of the UN-sponsored Peace & National Partnership Agreement.

Prior to 2014, the group could indeed be described as a rebel movement as it fought 6 consecutive wars against the corrupt Saudi-backed government of Ali Abdullah Saleh. In September 2014, when the “Houthis” entered Sana’a to topple said government, more than 2/3rds of the entire Yemeni Armed Forces switched and took their side instead of the side of the government, giving the “Houthis” access to missile stockpiles and heavy weapons. More on that further down.

3. There are currently two competing governments in Yemen, one based in the constitutional capital Sana’a, and one de-facto based in Aden – although the Aden-based government remains unable to exercise its authority there. The “internationally-recognized government” based in Aden doesn’t actually operate from within Yemen, but from a shadow cabinet based in the luxurious Ritz Carlton hotel in Riyadh where they’ve been exiled since February 2015.

Their direct authority is limited to warlord figures and tribal factions doing their bidding, representing less than 15% of Yemen’s total population. In turn, the so-called “Houthi rebels” are part of what is called the Government of National Salvation, which exercises direct authority over 85% of Yemen’s entire population.

4. The forces which have launched drones, ballistic & cruise missiles towards Israel are the forces aligned with the Government of National Salvation. They are far from being a “rag-tag rebel group”, but operates as a truly conventional army. They don’t “represent” the “Houthis”, nor do they wage war on behalf of one party or group against another. They represent all of Yemen, and fight on behalf of all of Yemen without exception. They are the only Armed Force in Yemen loyal to a government with a parliamentary mandate to exercise authority – a mandate the Saudi-backed “government” does not have.

It was indeed the Yemeni Armed Forces which launched the attacks against Israel.

“But aren’t they Iran-backed”?

Sure. Nobody is denying this. But the assistance Iran has been giving the “Houthis” does not even compare with the assistance it has given to Iraqi groups or even Hezbollah. Iranian assistance to the “Houthis” has thus far been limited to technical assistance and political support, such as recognizing the Government of National Salvation as the legitimate government of Yemen and opening a Yemeni embassy in Tehran.

On the technical aspect, the Iranian government has supplied the “Houthis” with blueprints for missiles and drones, as well as technical expertise for assembly and design. All missiles that the “Houthis” currently possess are manufactured locally inside Yemen based on the technical assistance supplied by Iran.

There has been a concerted effort by the US, UK, Saudi Arabia and the UAE to amplify the “Iran-backed rebels” narrative in hopes of stripping the “Houthis” of their national and local agency. In reality, the whole deal is beyond overblown, and senior policy experts with knowledge on Yemen have long agreed that the narrative doesn’t really correspond to reality.


https://libya360.wordpress.com/2023/11/ ... -and-iran/

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Russia's public pivot to Palestine

As the west's support for Israel's Gaza war becomes indefensible, Moscow aligns itself with the global majority in defense of Palestine.


Pepe Escobar

NOV 7, 2023

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Photo Credit: The Cradle

The complex, nuanced issue of Russia’s geopolitical neutrality in the Israel-Palestine tragedy was finally clarified last week, in no uncertain terms.

Exhibit A is Russian President Vladimir Putin addressing - in person, on 30 October - his country's Security Council, top government officials, and heads of security agencies.

Among other notables, his audience included Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin, Speaker of the Duma Vyacheslav Volodin; Secretary of the Security Council Nikolai Patrushev, Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, FSB Director Alexander Bortnikov; and Director of SVR (foreign intel) Sergei Narishkin.

Putin took no time to cut to the chase detailing the official stand of the Russian Federation in the current geopolitical incandescence of two intertwined wars, Ukraine and Israel-Palestine. This was addressed as much to his high-profile audience as to the political leadership of the western Hegemon."

"There is no justification for the terrible events taking place in Gaza now, where hundreds of thousands of innocent people are being killed indiscriminately, without having anywhere to flee or hide from the bombing. When you see blood-stained children, dead children, the suffering of women and old people, when you see medics killed, of course, it makes you clench your fists as tears well in your eyes.”

The US-led coalition of chaos

Then came a preview of the context: “We must clearly understand who in reality is behind the tragedy of peoples in the Middle East and in other regions around the world, who has been organizing this lethal chaos and who benefits from it.”

In no uncertain terms, Putin described “the current ruling elites in the United States and its satellites” as “the main beneficiaries of the global instability that they use to extract their bloody rent. Their strategy is also clear. The United States as a global superpower is becoming weaker and is losing its position, and everyone sees and understands this, even judging by the trends in the world economy.”

The Russian president made a direct connection between the American drive to extend “its global dictatorship” and the policy obsession with promoting non-stop chaos: “This chaos will help it contain and destabilize its rivals or, as they put it, their geopolitical opponents, among which they also rank our country, which in reality are new global growth centers and sovereign independent countries who are unwilling to kowtow and play the role of servants.”

Crucially, Putin made a point to “repeat again” to both his internal and Global South audiences that, “the ruling elites of the United States and its satellites are behind the tragedy of the Palestinians, the massacre in the Middle East in general, the conflict in Ukraine, and many other conflicts in the world – in Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria, and so on.”

It is a vitally important point. By conflating the perpetrators of the Ukraine conflict and the war on Gaza - “the United States and its satellites” - the Russian president has effectively lumped Israel in with the western Hegemon and its agenda of “chaos.”

Moscow aligns with the real ‘international community’

Essentially, what this tells us is that the Russian Federation unequivocally aligns itself with the overwhelming majority of Global South/Global Majority public opinion – from the Arab world to all the lands of Islam and beyond, in Africa, Asia, and Latin America.

Interestingly, Moscow aligns with the analyses by Iranian Leader Ayatollah Khamenei – a strategic partner of Russia - and Hezbollah secretary-general Hassan Nasrallah, in his searing, sophisticated, Sun-Tzu tinged address this past Friday, on “the spider that is trying to entangle the entire planet and the whole world in its cobweb.”

Exhibit B on Russia’s official position, specifically on Israel-Palestine, came from Russia's permanent representative to the UN, Vasily Nebenzya, at a special UN General Assembly session on Palestine two days after Putin’s address.

Nebenzya made it abundantly clear that Israel, as an occupying power, does not have “the right for self-defense” – a fact supported by a UN International Court consultative ruling way back in 2004.

At the time, the court also established, in a 14 out of 15 judicial vote, that Israel’s construction of a massive wall in occupied Palestine, including East Jerusalem, was against international law.

Nebenzya, in legal terms, nullified the endlessly evoked “right to self-defense” argument brandished by Tel Aviv and the whole NATO galaxy. The Hegemon, Tel Aviv’s protector, recently vetoed Brazil’s draft humanitarian UN Security Council just because it did not mention Israel’s “right to self-defense.”

Even as he underscored that Moscow does recognize Israel’s right to ensure its security, Nebenzya stressed this right “could be fully guaranteed only in case of a fair resolution of the Palestinian problem based on recognized UN Security Council resolutions."

The record shows that Israel does not respect any UN Security Council resolution on Palestine.

Lavrov’s priorities in occupied-Palestine

Exhibit C on Russia’s stand regarding Israel/Palestine was provided by Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov in a press conference with Kuwaiti Foreign Minister Sabah Al-Sabah, two days after Nebenzya’s intervention at the UN.

Lavrov reiterated Moscow’s priorities already stressed by Putin and Nebenzya: an urgent ceasefire, humanitarian corridors, and a return to the table to negotiate “an independent Palestinian state, as envisaged by the UN Security Council within the 1967 borders, which would coexist in peace and security with Israel.”

Lavrov stressed once again that several US-Israeli diversionary tactics are being employed “aimed at delaying (if not burying) the UN Security Council's decision to establish a Palestinian state.”

This, says the Russian foreign minister, implies condemning the Palestinians “to an eternal existence without rights. This will ensure neither peace nor security in the region, it will only drive the conflict deeper. And you won't be able to drive it deep. The next ‘grapes of wrath’ will be sown, which will quickly ‘sprout.’”

Lavrov’s analysis, as much as Putin’s, converges with Khamenei’s and Nasrallah’s: “This is not about Gaza, but about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. The State of Palestine is an integral part of that solution.”

Russia is sowing the seeds to exercise the role of trusted mediator for all parties in Israel/Palestine – a role totally unsuitable for the Hegemon, especially after the tacit approval of the current Israeli ethnic cleansing of Gaza.

It’s all here, clearly formulated by Lavrov: “It will be fundamentally important for us to know the unanimous opinion of the Arab world.” That is a message specifically targeting Sunni regimes vassalized by Washington. Then, when they get their act together, “we will support the Arab solution to this very difficult issue.”

Multipolarity's prerequisite: Peace in Palestine

Examined together, Exhibits A, B, and C show how Moscow is way ahead of the game. The overall message – which is being minutely decoded all across the Global South/Global Majority – is that even considering non-stop Empire of Chaos gambits, the immutable, exclusionist Zionist Project is now dead on arrival.

The least bad solution so far is the 2002 Arab Peace Initiative - subscribed by everyone from the lands of Islam to Russia, Iran, and China: an independent Palestinian state, back to the 1967 borders, with East Jerusalem as its capital.

The problem is how to convince out-of-control Zionism to back off. Imperative facts on the ground would have to include severing the Washington-Tel Aviv weaponized/securitized umbilical cord - and expelling from the geopolitical spectrum the neocon Christian Zionist matrix in the US, which happens to be deeply entrenched in silos across the Deep State.

Both of these imperatives are impossibilities – in short, medium, and even long term.

Meanwhile, a simple look at the map shows that for all practical purposes, the two-state solution - from the West Bank to the Gaza Strip - is dead. It may be heart-wrenching for the leaders of multipolarity to admit it. It will take some time, and shifting of public discourse, to recognize that the only viable solution is supreme anathema for the Zionist Project: a one-state with Jews and Arabs living together in peace.

All that brings us to a stark formulation: without a just solution for Palestine, tangible peace across the emerging multipolarity spectrum remains unattainable. The current enabled horror in Gaza shows that peace continues not to be a priority for the Empire of Chaos, and it will take a Russia - with perhaps a China - to shift the game.

https://new.thecradle.co/articles/russi ... -palestine

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Getting Called A Nazi For Opposing A Genocide

It’s the most 2020s thing in the world that there’s an active genocide currently underway and it’s the people who oppose it who are being called Nazis.

Caitlin Johnstone
November 8, 2023

It’s the most 2020s thing in the world that there’s an active genocide currently underway and it’s the people who oppose it who are being called Nazis.




Gaza isn’t one of those issues where you have to respect the other side’s opinions. Supporting a genocidal massacre is not an acceptable opinion for anyone to have. This is worth hurting people’s feelings over. Worth losing friends over. Worth disrupting Thanksgiving dinner over.




Anyone who looks at these numbers and still opposes a ceasefire is saying something significant about who they are as a person. They’re saying their conscience has not formed properly. That they never developed into mature adults. That they have wasted their time on this planet.



Ah shit you guys we gotta let Israel keep murdering thousands of kids, turns out if you squint really hard at the phrase “from the river to the sea” the words transform into “genocide the Jews”.



It is right to call for the abolishment of the murderous apartheid ethnostate of Israel, in the same way it was right to call for the end of apartheid South Africa. Only by the most determined mental gymnastics does calling for all Palestinians to be freed from apartheid, murder and abuse due to their ethnicity sound like a call for the genocide of Jews.



A state whose existence requires the mass murder of children every few years is not a state that should continue to exist.



It’s a crazy coincidence how Israel bombing Hamas in ambulances, hospitals, mosques, schools, refugee camps, water towers and buildings full of children looks exactly the same as what it would look like if Israel was just massacring civilians with bombs.




This belief that it’s fine and good for a government to keep massacring children by the thousands until its enemies give it what it wants is just about the most evil position you can possibly imagine anyone espousing. And it’s very, very mainstream among Israel apologists.



I’ve been writing for years about the murderous foreign policy of the US and its sidekicks Australia and the UK, but when Israel starts massacring children by the thousands its apologists tell me I’ve got a hateful fixation on Israel for writing about it. These people are ridiculous, and do not deserve to be taken seriously.



BREAKING: Sources say some Hamas fighters may have been injured in crossfire from Israeli airstrikes on children and civilian infrastructure.




You don’t understand man, Hamas uses human shields. Really really advanced human shields, the kind where there aren’t even any Hamas members anywhere near them. It’s just 100% human shield with 0% combatant, the most secure kind of shield there is.



Everyone who advocates de-escalation and ceasefire is always accused of treacherous loyalism to the other side. Always, always, always. It happened with Ukraine, and it’s happening again with Gaza.

Ever since the war in Ukraine started those of us who called for peace talks were accused of being Putin lovers and Russian agents. Almost two years and mountains of human corpses later and the US is starting to push Kyiv to accept a peace deal that will almost certainly be worse than the one that was on offer at the beginning of the conflict.

All that death and destruction, for absolutely nothing. The only ones who benefitted from that nightmare were the war profiteers who raked in vast fortunes and the empire managers who used it to advance their geostrategic agendas in Eurasia. Those of us who called for peace negotiations were objectively correct, and those who shouted us down and accused us of treasonous Kremlin loyalism were objectively wrong.

Those calling you an anti-semitic baby-cooking terrorist lover for supporting a ceasefire are wrong in exactly the same way for exactly the same reasons. All the arguments being made against peace right now will only end up serving the rich and powerful, at the cost of unfathomable oceans of human suffering.

You get peace by making peace. That’s how you do it. You stop shooting, you sit down, you have conversations and you make deals. The deals won’t feel perfect, because they won’t be, but they will be better than slaughtering children by the thousands for no justifiable reason and killing off parts of our own humanity in the process. You set your intention toward peace and harmony, and you start walking in that direction, one step at a time.

It really is that simple. Anyone who tells you otherwise is lying for the benefit of the rich and powerful.



I feel sorry for Zelensky. The US abandoning your country for Israel is like your husband leaving you for his first wife.

https://caitlinjohnstone.com.au/2023/11 ... -genocide/
"There is great chaos under heaven; the situation is excellent."

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Re: Palestine

Post by blindpig » Thu Nov 09, 2023 6:33 pm

The Reality of Gaza’s Forced Exodus: Unveiling Israel’s Secret Plan
NOVEMBER 8, 2023

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Illustration showing Israel's forced displacement and land grab plan in Gaza. Photo: MintPress News.

By Jessica Buxbaum – Nov 3, 2023

Last weekend, Israeli newspaper Local Call leaked an official Israeli government document recommending what Palestinians have been saying Israel is already trying to execute with its war on Gaza—the forcible transfer of Gaza’s 2.3 million Palestinian population to Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office acknowledged the Intelligence Ministry’s proposal exists. Still, it dismissed it in a statement to the Times of Israel as a “concept paper, the likes of which are prepared at all levels of the government and its security agencies.”

Yet Israeli actions, circulating information, and international support all signal that this policy on paper is quickly transitioning to the policy on the ground.

From draft policy to reality
The document dated October 13 calls for Israel “to evacuate the [Gazan] civilian population to Sinai” first by establishing tent cities and then building new towns in northern Sinai. Following the resettlement, the paper recommends “to create a sterile zone of several kilometers inside Egypt and not allow the population to return to activity or residence near the Israeli border.”

Netanyahu is already attempting to put this plan into action. Last week, the Israeli prime minister sought to convince European leaders to pressure Egypt into accepting refugees from Gaza, according to the Financial Times. Diplomats from France, Germany, and the UK, however, dismissed the idea, citing Egypt’s strong rejection of the displacement of Palestinians from Gaza.

With that avenue failing, Netanyahu is now reportedly proposing to write off a large chunk of Egypt’s debt through the World Bank to incentivize the country to take in Gaza’s population.

“Everything that has been spelled out in this document in terms of the modalities is everything that we’re seeing right now,” international human rights lawyer Diana Buttu told MintPress News.

The plan’s first phase details Israel’s aerial bombardment of the northern section of the Gaza Strip and the moving of the population of over one million people to the south. The second stage outlines Israel’s ground invasion, beginning in the north and then taking over the whole region.

“Compressing Palestinians to smaller and smaller areas may just be the first of what will ultimately be the fulfillment of these plans on paper,” Adam Shapiro, Israel/Palestine director for rights group Democracy for the Arab World Now (DAWN), told MintPress News.

The controversial Intelligence Ministry document isn’t the only policy paper recommending 2.3 million Gazans’ forcible transfer to Egypt. Israeli security think tank Misgav (or the Institute for National Security and Zionist Strategy) published a paper written by Misgav researcher Amir Weitmann on October 17, entitled, “A plan for resettlement and final rehabilitation in Egypt of the entire population of Gaza: economic aspects.” Weitman is an activist with Netanyahu’s Likud Party and reportedly a close associate of Intelligence Minister Gila Gamliel.

The report calls for “Israel… [to] transfer as many Gazans as possible to other countries; Any other alternative, including PA rule, is a strategic failure. Therefore, Gaza’s population should be transferred to the Sinai Desert and the displaced absorbed in other countries.”

Misgav published the paper on X (formerly known as Twitter) along with a tweet outlining the paper’s central arguments. The post was deleted following widespread backlash.

The original tweet read:

There is currently a unique and rare opportunity to evacuate [sic] the entire Gaza Strip in coordination with the Egyptian government. An immediate, realistic and sustainable plan for the resettlement and humanitarian rehabilitation of the entire Arab population in the Gaza Strip is required which aligns well with the economic and geopolitical interests of Israel, Egypt, the USA and Saudi Arabia.

In 2017, it was reported that there are about 10 million vacant housing units in Egypt, of which about half are built and half are under construction. For example, in the two largest satellite cities of Cairo…there is a huge amount of built and empty apartments owned by the government and private parties, and construction areas sufficient to house about 6 million inhabitants.
The average cost of a 3-room apartment with an area of ​​95 square meters for an average Gazan family consisting of 5.14 people in one of the two cities indicated above is about $19,000. Taking into account the currently known size of the entire population living in the Gaza Strip, which ranges from about 1.4 For approximately 2.2 million people, one can estimate that the total amount required and to be transferred to Egypt to finance the project, will be on the order of $5-8 billion.
Injecting an immediate stimulus of such size into the Egyptian economy would provide a tremendous and immediate benefit to al-Sisi’s regime. These sums, in relation to the Israeli economy, are minimal. Investing a few billion dollars (even if it is $20- or $30-billion) to solve this difficult issue is an innovative, cheap and sustainable solution.
There is no doubt that in order for this plan to be realized, many conditions must exist concurrently. Currently, these conditions are optimal, and it is unclear when another such an opportunity will arise, if ever.


Misgav subsequently published another paper related to Gaza entitled Hamas Enjoys Widespread Support Among Gaza’s Population, written by Misgav fellow Yishai Armoni on October 19.

In this essay, Armoni details the considerable support Hamas enjoys from its constituents, writing:

Despite claims now being made that the majority of the public in Gaza desires peace and is being held captive by Hamas, data and evidence collected over the past two decades consistently demonstrates the opposite. Hamas enjoys widespread support among Gaza’s civilian population.

The paper then concludes “that claims regarding the existence of a clear ideological or political demarcation between the majority of Gaza’s residents and Hamas are entirely unfounded.”

While Armoni makes clear not to conflate civilians with Hamas militants, he does note that Hamas’ popularity among Gaza’s residents should be taken into account with “regards to decisions related to the military campaign, and to post-war arrangements in the Gaza Strip.”

The Misgav Institute did not respond to MintPress News’ requests for comment on these position papers.

Israeli legal advisor Itay Epshtain explained on social media how the views outlined in Misgav’s recent documents are already translating into action.

From the people that orchestrated #Israel annexation of the West Bank and the ancillary "judicial overhaul" come these two position papers, which will likely determine the position on #Gaza. Premeditated grave breaches of international law in two steps: pic.twitter.com/gM6ZG1DnGd

— Itay Epshtain (@EpshtainItay) October 25, 2023

According to leaflets airdropped on northern Gaza from the Israeli military, anyone who doesn’t leave for the south could be considered affiliated with Hamas.

Furthermore, Misgav’s executives already appear integral in crafting government legislation. Misgav is headed by former Netanyahu National Security Advisor Meir Ben Shabbat, an influential figure in the Israeli security sphere and one of the architects of Israel’s normalization deals with the UAE, Bahrain, and Morocco. Misgav is also funded by Kohelet Policy Forum, now notorious for being behind the current Israeli government’s judicial overhaul plans.

The Institute’s founders and former chairs are also entwined with the Israeli government. Former chairman Yoaz Hendel served as Israel’s Minister of Communications. Moshe Yaalon served as Defense Minister under Netanyahu. Moshe Arens also worked as Israel’s Defense Minister and Foreign Affairs Minister. Natan Sharansky served as Interior Minister and as Deputy Prime Minister.

The US is complicit
One of the critical points in the Intelligence Ministry’s document stressed the need for harnessing international support for the expulsion plan—something analysts argue Israel’s Western allies are already doing.

On October 20, the White House sent a $14 billion funding request to Congress for aid to Israel, Gaza, and Ukraine. The letter’s language has come under scrutiny for suggesting the forcible displacement of Gazans to other countries.

The letter reads:

These resources would support displaced and conflict affected civilians, including Palestinian refugees in Gaza and the West Bank, and to address potential needs of Gazans fleeing to neighboring countries… This crisis could well result in displacement across [the] border and higher regional humanitarian needs, and funding may be used to meet evolving programming requirements outside of Gaza.

DAWN slammed the White House request’s language and called on Congress to reject the supplementary funding bill.

“The Biden administration isn’t just giving a green light for ethnic cleansing—it’s bankrolling it,” Sarah Leah Whitson, DAWN’s executive director, said in a statement. “Gaslighting Americans into facilitating long-held Israeli plans to depopulate Gaza under the cover of ‘humanitarian aid’ is a cruel and grotesque hoax.”

While the White House request acknowledged the possibility of Gazans being expelled during the war, US President Joe Biden has previously advocated against this forcible displacement. The White House did not respond to MintPress News’ inquiries for comment on the aid bill.

“The Americans are supporting Israel and creating the conditions on the ground that are catastrophic from a humanitarian perspective,” DAWN’s Shapiro told MintPress News.

So far, the US has repeatedly rejected calls for a ceasefire in Israel’s war on Gaza. However, Biden recently advocated for a “pause” to secure the release of American captives held by Hamas. The US has also sent senior army officials to advise Israel’s military on its ground invasion into Gaza and increased its arms and troops in the Middle East and Eastern Mediterranean regions. This has included shipments of armored jeeps and advanced weaponry to Israel.

משרד הביטחון קלט לפני שעה קלה בישראל מטוס מטען אמריקני עם משלוח ראשון של ג'יפים ממוגנים לצה״ל. הג'יפים מועברים בשעה זו לצה"ל כדי להחליף כלי רכב שנפגעו במלחמה.

להמשך קריאה: https://t.co/IYPTj2lkyZ pic.twitter.com/szUOJzzvvu

— משרד הביטחון (@MoDIsrael) October 19, 2023

מזכיר ההגנה האמריקני, לויד אוסטין, מלווה בידי מנכ"ל משרד הביטחון, אלוף (מיל') אייל זמיר וסגן הרמטכ"ל, אלוף אמיר ברעם, קיבלו לפני זמן קצר בבסיס נבטים של חיל האוויר מטוס מטען אמריקני ראשון, שנחת בישראל מאז פרוץ המלחמה, עם משלוח של חימושים עבור צה"ל.
להמשך>> https://t.co/IYPTj2lkyZ pic.twitter.com/4rgv0u6MuD

— משרד הביטחון (@MoDIsrael) October 13, 2023

משרד הביטחון מפרסם תיעוד מנחיתת מטוס המטען, שהביא לישראל משלוח ראשון של חימושים מתקדמים.
הציוד נרכש והובא לישראל במבצע משותף למנהל הרכש (מנה"ר), משלחת הרכש של משרד הביטחון בארה"ב ויחידת הממונה על השינוע הבינלאומי, אשר גייסה את מטוס המטען, שהביא את החימושים בטיסה ישירה מארה"ב. pic.twitter.com/xZodTxX41y

— משרד הביטחון (@MoDIsrael) October 11, 2023

Footage circulating online has also shown US-manufactured weapons containing white phosphorus being used in Israel’s assault on Gaza. These artillery shells were made by Pine Bluff Arsenal, a chemical weapons manufacturer based in Arkansas known for supplying white phosphorus ammunition.

Barak Mayer "To all those who doubted
when I wrote that Israel uses white phosphorus
in Gaza: this is a shell of white phosphorus
(M825A1, made by Pine Bluff Arsenal, USA)"

[The IDF has claimed it uses white phosphorus
in Gaza not as a weapon, but for illumination/as marker] https://t.co/haiiGwNVbL

— Marian Houk (@Marianhouk) October 30, 2023

תיקון ועדכון חשוב:
קיבלתי מידע שפגזי הזרחן הלבן מסומנים בפס צהוב או אדום ולא חום כמו בתמונה. אני חושב שהמידע מדוייק, אבל מאחר ויש תמונות שפורסמו מהמערכה הנוכחית (צולמו ב-9.10), עם הפגזים המדוברים, המסומנים בפס צהוב, אשאיר את הציוץ עם ההבהרה.https://t.co/KIcvRzi6X7 pic.twitter.com/rHCDipGSkR

— Barak Mayer (@ireallyhateyou) October 30, 2023

“The majority of the world is opposed to this attack on Gaza,” Buttu said. “But still, Western Europe, the United States, and Canada are not.”

Buttu described the US as “totally complicit” in Israel’s displacement of Palestinians in Gaza, saying, “This is an Israeli plan that will be signed off on by the Americans, by the Canadians, by Europe, and so on.”

Israeli policy papers promoting the ethnic cleansing of Gaza simply mirror what many Israeli politicians and media pundits have expressed since the beginning of this war.

A member of Israel’s parliament, Ariel Kallner, called for repeating the ethnic cleansing of Palestinians during Israel’s establishment as a state in 1948, known as the Nakba or ‘catastrophe’ in Arabic, except on a much larger scale.

“Right now, one goal: Nakba! A Nakba that will overshadow the Nakba of 1948,” Kallner wrote on X.

Dror Eydar, Israel’s former ambassador to Italy, called for the complete destruction of Gaza during a live interview with Italian channel Rete 4.

“For us, there is a purpose: to destroy Gaza, to destroy the absolute evil,” he said.

As Israel continues carpet-bombing Gaza and as even a sliver of humanitarian aid struggles to trickle into the besieged enclave, another Nakba—or arguably just another chapter in this genocidal series—is rapidly being carried out.

“This has just been a continuation since ‘48,” Buttu said. “It’s just this slow drip to get people to leave and, in some cases, not a slow drip, but even a faster one.”

https://orinocotribune.com/the-reality- ... cret-plan/

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NOVEMBER 9, 2023 BY M. K. BHADRAKUMAR
Arab-Iran amity is a geopolitical reality

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Palestinians work in the debris of buildings targeted by Israeli airstrikes in Jabalia refugee camp, northern Gaza, Nov 1, 2023

The forthcoming first visit by Iran’s President Ebrahim Raisi to Saudi Arabia on November 13 marks a milestone in the rapprochement between the two countries mediated by China in March. The relationship is fast acquiring a qualitatively new level of solidarity in the context of the Palestine-Israel conflict.

This marks a shift in the tectonic plates in regional politics, which has long been dominated by the United States but no longer so. The latest China-UAE initiative on Monday to promote a ceasefire in Gaza was rounded off with an extraordinary spectacle of diplomacy at the UN headquarters in New York as the two countries’ envoys read out together a joint statement to the media. The US was nowhere to be seen.



The events since October 7 make it abundantly clear that the US attempts to integrate Israel into its Muslim neighbourhood in its terms is a pipe dream — ie., unless and until Israel is willing to turn its sword into plowshares. The ferocity of the Israeli revenge attacks on the people of Gaza — “animals” — smacks of racism and genocide.

Iran knew all along the bestiality of the Zionist regime. Saudi Arabia too must be in a chastened mood following the wake-up call that it must first and foremost learn to live in its region.

Raisi is heading for Saudi Arabia against the backdrop of a historic shift in the power dynamic. King Salman invited Raisi to speak on Israel’s crimes against the Palestinians in Gaza at a special summit of Arab states, which he is hosting in Riyadh. This signifies a profound Saudi realisation that even its willingness to be involved in the Abraham Accords under American persuasion has alienated the Arab public.

There is a fallacy in the western discourse about a Russia-China-Iran axis in West Asia. This is a nonsensical misinterpretation. A consistent three-fold foreign policy principle that Iran pursued right from the Islamic Revolution in 1979 is that, one, its strategic autonomy is sacred; two, the countries of the region must take their destiny into their own hands and solve regional issues themselves without involving extra-regional powers, and, three, foster Muslim unity howsoever long and winding that road might seem.

This principle had severe limitations due to force of circumstances — principally, in the conditions engendered by the colonial policy of divide and rule pursued by the US. Circumstances were even deliberately engineered, such as the Iraq-Iran war, where the US encouraged the regional states to collaborate with Saddam Hussein to launch an aggression against Iran to stymie the Islamic revolution in its infancy.

Another painful episode was the Syrian conflict. There, again, the US actively canvassed among regional states for a regime change in Damascus with the ultimate objective of targeting Iran by using the terrorist groups that Washington incubated in Occupied Iraq.

In Syria, the US brilliantly succeeded in pitting the regional states against each other and the result is plain to see in the ruins of what used to be the throbbing heart of Islamic civilisation . At the peak of the conflict, several western intelligence agencies were freely operating in Syria assisting the terrorist groups to rampage the country whose cardinal sin was that, like Iran, it too consistently put primacy on its strategic autonomy and independent foreign policies through the cold war and post-cold war eras alike.

Suffice to say, the US and Israel met with great success in fragmenting Muslim Middle East by exaggerating the threat perceptions and convincing several Gulf Arab states that they faced direct threats or even attacks by Iranian proxies, as well as alleged Iranian support for dissident movements.

Of course, the US capitalised on it by selling huge volumes of weapons and more importantly, to finesse the petrodollar as a key pillar of the western banking system. As for Israel, it directly benefitted from demonising Iran in order to draw attention away from the Palestine issue, which has all along been the core issue in the Middle East crisis.

Suffice to say, the rollout of the Iran-Saudi-China agreement has reduced the hostility that existed between Riyadh and Tehran for the better part of the recent decades. Both countries sought to build on the momentum generated by the success of the secret Beijing talks with regard to their commitment to non-interference. It must be noted, however, that the relations between Gulf Arab countries and Iran had already improved significantly over the last two years.

What western analysts miss is that the wealthy Gulf states are fed up with their subaltern life as sidekicks of the US. They want to prioritise their national life in directions they choose and with partners who respect them, eschewing any zero-sum mindset, unlike in the Cold War era, for reasons of ideology or power dynamic.

That is why, the Biden Administration cannot accept that the Saudis today work with Russia on the OPEC+ platform to fulfil their commitment to extra voluntary oil supply cuts, while also negotiating with the US on nuclear technology, and at the same time moving on the diplomatic track with Beijing to douse the fire set ablaze in the Levant a month ago from spreading to the rest of the West Asian region.

Evidently, the Saudis are no longer rolling with pleasure at the prospect of a US-Iran confrontation. On the other hand, Saudis and Iranians have a shared concern that their new thinking with primacy on development will dissipate unless there is regional stability and security.

Thus, it is sheer naïveté on the part of Washington to bracket Hezbollah, Hamas and Iran as one grouping — as Blinken did during his latest visit to Tel Aviv on Monday — and juxtapose it with the rest of the region. The canard that Hezbollah and Hamas are “terrorist” movements is about to be exposed. Truth be told, how are they any different from Sinn Féin, which was historically associated with the IRA?

Such naïveté underlines the absurd US-Israeli-Indian venture to create a West Asian QUAD 2 (“I2U2”), which today looks laughable — or the quixotic plot hatched in New Delhi recently during the G20 summit to get the Saudis on board the India-Middle East-Europe Corridor project, with the fond hope that it “integrates” Israel and creates business for Haifa Port, isolates Iran and Turkey, rubbishes Russia-led International North-South Corridor and shows the middle finger to Beijing’s Belt and Road. Whereas, life is real.

Taking all things into account, it is the US Secretary of State Antony Blinken’s regional tour to Israel and his summit with a select group of Arab states in Amman over the last weekend that has turned into a defining moment in the Gaza crisis.

The Arab foreign ministers point blank refused to buy into any of the invidious proposals put forward by Blinken with malicious intentions to preserve Jewish interests — “humanitarian pause” instead of ceasefire; refugee camps for the people from Gaza escaping from Israel’s horrific, brutal attacks that would be funded with Arab money but would eventually lead to Jewish settlements in Gaza; contours of a post-war arrangement for Gaza that will leave the debris to be handled by the Palestinian Authority and reconstruction to be financed by the Gulf states while Israel continues to dominate it in the all-important security sphere; preventing Iran from going to the rescue of Hezbollah and Hamas as they are put into Israeli meat grinders of American make.

It was rank hypocrisy. The Arab foreign ministers spoke up in one voice to articulate their counter proposal to Blinken’s — immediate ceasefire. President Biden seems to see the writing on the wall, finally — although, intrinsically, he continues to be the world’s number one Zionist, as someone once called him, and his motivations are largely borne out of his own political survival as the 2024 election draws closer.

Be that as it may, the high probability is that it is now a matter of time before the global community insists on stopping the Israeli apartheid state on its tracks. For, when Muslim countries unite, they call the shots in the emerging multipolar world order. Their demand that a settlement of the Palestine problem brooks no further delay has gained resonance, including in the Western Hemisphere.

https://www.indianpunchline.com/arab-ir ... l-reality/

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Gaza, the Fragility of Zionism, and the Inevitability of War
08-11-2023
Daniel Lindley

The lamps are going out all over Europe, we shall not see them lit again in our lifetime.

- Sir Edward Grey, on the inevitability of Europe breaking out in war, 1914



The State of Israel currently stands on a precipice. The dilemma presented to it was succinctly articulated in Seymour Hersh’s article, ‘Netanyahu Is Finished’, as the choice of ‘whether to starve Hamas out or kill as many as 100,000 people in Gaza’. To fail to annihilate Hamas would be a devastating defeat for the Zionist colonial project, as it would effectively be an admission that the state cannot protect its population from the kind of violent native uprising that all colonial settlers fear. However, achieving such a goal is probably impossible without, as one EU diplomat put it, ‘massive ethnic cleansing’. Ariel Kellner, a Likud Knesset Member, declared on October 7th that they had ‘one goal: Nakba! A Nakba that will overshadow the Nakba of 48. Nakba in Gaza and Nakba to anyone who dares to join!’

Whilst his forthrightness is illuminating, the crucial dynamic that his and similar threats overlook is that the Middle East has changed a lot since 1948. The Palestinian resistance has never been so well prepared, Israel’s military dominance over the wider region has been diminished and its chief patron the United States is in decline. This means that the days when Israel could just carry out an ethnic cleansing without severe consequences are over. This places us in a historical moment with many similarities to the July Crisis of 1914, when the Austro-Hungarian Empire believed it had to invade Serbia to extract vengeance for the assassination of the Archduke Franz Ferdinand – but doing so inevitably meant Russia would declare war in solidarity with its ally, at which point war across Europe became unavoidable.

Western media reporting on the events of October 7th have focused on the killing of Israeli civilians by Palestinian fighters, the details of which have been rendered murky by several Israeli eyewitnesses reporting civilians being killed by their own troops in a desperate attempt to prevent hostages being taken to Gaza. If the Hamas leadership has embarked on a strategy of calculated escalation, it would be a marked departure from when its political leader Ismail Haniya was endorsing non-violent demonstrations in front of a portrait of Gandhi just 5 years ago amidst the Great March of Return, which saw Israeli marksmen kill 214 Palestinians and wound over 36,100.

What has not been given much attention in Western media reporting, but is likely the more important aspect of October 7th, was the truly shocking collapse of the Israeli Army in the face of a direct assault by Palestinian militants. We know that hundreds of Israeli soldiers were killed in the Hamas-led attack on various military bases and outposts; indeed several Israeli towns were under the military control of Hamas for over two days, an unthinkable scenario barely a month ago. Not since 1948 has any Arab military force been able to capture and hold territory inside Israel’s original borders; that this was achieved by Hamas, one of the militarily weakest forces among Israel’s enemies, is particularly humiliating.

For a settler state like Israel, it is imperative to project an image of dominant military prowess so that its enemies do not even dare challenge it militarily. The then-Chief of Staff of the Israeli Army Moshe Ya’alon explained this logic in 2002:

I defined [victory] from the beginning of the confrontation: the very deep internalisation by the Palestinians that terrorism and violence will not defeat us, will not make us fold. If that deep internalisation does not exist at the end of the confrontation, we will have a strategic problem with an existential threat to Israel. If that [lesson] is not burned into the Palestinian and Arab consciousness, there will be no end to their demands of us. Despite our military might, the region will perceive us as being even weaker.

Scenes of Hamas fighters capturing military bases and driving through settlements unimpeded are a devastating blow to Israel’s deterrence capacity, perhaps a greater blow than any in the state’s existence. Within their logic, the only satisfactory response to this is not just the usual reprisals against civilians before broadly returning to the status quo, but something that would foreclose the possibility of such an attack ever happening again. Israel’s Defence Minister has officially expressed their goal is merely to ‘reach all the Hamas operatives, we will not finish the mission without having annihilated them’ and for this to be the ‘last operation in Gaza, for the simple reason that afterwards there will be no more Hamas’. Given the widespread support for Hamas within the Gaza Strip and Israel’s lack of any plan for who would control Gaza after every member of Hamas has been killed, these goals seem highly impractical – unless they are interpreted to actually mean an intention to ethnically cleanse the Palestinian population of Gaza by driving them into the Sinai. This has been further solidified by the recent leak of an Israeli Intelligence Ministry document dated October 13th that explicitly endorses the permanent expulsion of Gaza’s entire population into the Sinai.

Regional reactionaries and the Resistance Axis set red lines
That Israeli politicians have let slip that this is indeed the real goal is less consequential than the fact that key regional players had already been convinced of Israel’s intentions to do this – and theirs has been a unified response that ethnic cleansing is a red line. Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi has stated that ‘displacing Palestinians to Sinai means dragging Egypt into a war against Israel’. The Egyptian constitution does not allow the President to declare war without Parliamentary approval, however Undersecretary of the Arab Affairs Committee Ayman Mohsab confirmed to CNN that the Egyptian Parliament had ‘agreed to authorise Sisi and the Egyptian army to take all necessary measures to protect Egyptian national security, even if they include waging war’. Jordan’s Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi has also stated that ‘any attempt to displace Palestinians from their homeland is a declaration of war’. These statements should not be interpreted as representing even the slightest keenness from these leaders for war, but rather a sign of the utmost seriousness of the situation; even Israel’s most compliant neighbours will not contemplate appearing to allow it to carry out an ethnic cleansing unopposed. Even if more cynical observers will (correctly) suspect their statements are more about the fear of internal overthrow than principled support for the Palestinian cause, that would make little practical difference to the situation.

But Israel’s chief enemies of course are not the Egyptian and Jordanian states. Rather, it is the coalition known as ‘The Axis of Resistance’, consisting of Iran, Syria, Hezbollah, Hamas, the Yemeni Ansar Allah and Iraqi militias such as the Popular Mobilisation Forces. The Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian has noticeably been extremely busy since October 7th, with almost daily visits to Lebanon, Syria, Iraq and Qatar meeting with allies; an intense itinerary rarely heard of for a foreign minister except in times of crisis. Considering the whole raison d'etre of the Resistance Axis is its opposition to Israel and the US’ presence in the region, the Gaza Crisis is not a matter which they can allow to pass without a serious unified response. This behaviour and the statements released following those meetings illustrated that Iran’s role in the first phases of the war was coordinating with its allies to set in motion a plan to try and deter Israel from drastic action in Gaza by threatening the opening of a northern front, and a coordinated assault on US interests across the region, as ultimately they hold the US responsible as Israel’s primary sponsor.

Hezbollah has already begun attacking Israeli posts on the border with Lebanon, and as of 3rd November could claim having killed or wounded 120 Israeli soldiers, while also suffering 60 of its own fighters killed in action. Israel has also evacuated 42 border-area villages and the town of Kiryat Shmona due to the escalating fighting. Hezbollah’s actions to date are more harassment operations than a serious attempt to inflict casualties on the Israeli Army. Still, it would previously be considered unthinkable for it to so brazenly attack the Israeli Army across the border and force the evacuation of Israeli citizens with barely any response from Israel apart from firing back. The most significant effect is reminding Israel that Hezbollah is right there on the border and is not afraid of a fight, leaving Israelis concerned that if they were to send the bulk of their army into Gaza, they would be leaving their northern border dangerously exposed to the ‘nightmare scenario’ of a second front being opened by Hezbollah.

Away from the Israeli front, the Gaza Crisis is already expanding with the US military coming under attack from Resistance Axis-affiliated groups across the region. We’ve seen incidents such as the Al-Asad US Air Base in Iraq and Al-Tanf garrison in southern Syria being targeted by drones, while the Navy destroyer USS Carney shot down three land-attack cruise missiles and several drones fired by Ansar Allah on October 19th, with further attacks later in the month. As of October 24th, US officials stated that at least 24 US troops had been injured amid the wave of attacks on their bases, with one contractor also dying of a heart attack. Similar to Hezbollah’s attacks on Israel’s northern border, the lack of any retaliation from the US has been glaring, with the US only belatedly initiating airstrikes against Syria on October 27th. Even the relative lack of media coverage suggests the US is trying to avoid having to retaliate. If the reason for the US sending two carrier groups to the region was to deter any allies of Hamas from disrupting Israel’s plans, it does not appear to have worked. We even witnessed the pathetic scene of US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken giving the ‘sternest warning yet’ to Iran that the US will ‘respond decisively’ if Americans are attacked, only for the attacks to continue apace – without any such response. As of writing the most recent escalation has been Yemen’s Ansar Allah government taking responsibility for a ballistic missile attack on Israel and warning that it would continue such strikes ‘until the Israeli aggression stops.’

Fragility of the US’ position in the region
The significance of this is that the United States had reportedly been pressuring Israel to delay its ground offensive into Gaza, as it needed more time to prepare for the inevitable escalation in attacks on its military across the region – with the US building up its military and naval presence in the region.

It is virtually public knowledge that the United States is in a very poor position to fight a regional war in the Middle East at this time. Until the Russia-Ukraine War complicated matters, the main focus of the US foreign policy had been building its military capabilities in the Indo-Pacific in order to contain a rising China. Barack Obama’s foreign policy has come to be defined by the ‘Pivot to Asia’ and his scepticism of protracted wars in the Middle East. This has since been continued with both Trump and Biden Administrations expanding US military bases in and around the South China Sea, and the creation of the new ‘AUKUS’ defence pact with the UK and Australia with the explicit purpose of deterring China.

This new focus however has been disrupted by the Russia-Ukraine War. In July the Commander of US Air Forces in Europe James Hecker warned that the stockpiles of US weapons were running ‘dangerously low’, with the US having provided Ukraine with $41.3bn in military aid since the war with Russia began – much of this coming in the form of transfers of existing munitions stockpiles, rather than new production. It was even publicly reported in January that the US had pledged to supply Ukraine with over one million 155-millimetre shells, with a significant portion of that drawn from stockpiles in Israel and South Korea. The Pentagon is currently also ‘tasked with scouring U.S. stockpiles, searching for ammunition to resupply Israel… as the defence industry and the Pentagon scramble to send weapons to Ukraine and keep U.S. shelves stocked.’ A joint column by Axios CEO and co-founders summarises the general picture thus: ‘Never before have we talked to so many top government officials who, in private, are so worried about so many overseas conflicts at once… U.S. officials say this confluence of crises poses epic concern and historic danger.’

Given the extent to which the American public are suffering from war fatigue – to the point that even Joe Biden made the ending of ‘forever wars’ like Afghanistan such a part of his electoral persona – another protracted Middle East adventure is the last thing any US President wants to offer their electorate. The post-9/11 wars at least had the advantage that the USA had just been directly attacked. A war to defend Israel’s inalienable right to commit ethnic cleansing is not likely to be as popular.

While the United States is particularly ill-prepared to deal with a regional war at present, the opposite can be said of Iran and its allies. Outside of Palestine, the Middle East is currently more peaceful now than it has been in years. A critical moment was the Chinese-mediated restoration of relations between Iran and Saudi Arabia earlier this year. This has coincided with a virtual end to the various proxy wars in Iraq and Syria in particular. Bashar Al-Assad’s readmission to the Arab League was a signal that the Syrian Civil War is considered to be over and his position uncontested. The Saudi assault on Yemen has also subsided, though the US has continued to try and derail any meaningful resolution.

What this means is that there are very large numbers of militiamen who can no longer make a living by fighting in these internecine wars. On the one hand, this surplus of experienced professional fighters provides an opportunity for Iran and its allies to employ them to fight the United States and Israel instead. On the other hand, it also means that Arab rulers less keen on orchestrating direct resistance to the US and Israel now have less incentive to actively try to obstruct it, as it is in their best interests for these fighters to have an external war to fight rather than return home and be potential troublemakers. The Arab regimes surely remember how the end of the Soviet-Afghan War saw thousands of Arab mujahideen returning to their home countries, and the civil wars and bloody insurgencies which followed when they had nothing else to keep them occupied. We have already seen the Iraqi ‘celebrity militant’ Abu Azrael posting videos of himself on the Lebanon-Israel border and reports that Iraqi Popular Mobilization Forces militia have begun entering Lebanon. Even if these movements are probably more about deterring Israel from ethnic cleansings, once these troops have been physically mobilised and a certain amount of ‘war fever’ catches on, it may be difficult to hold them back, even if for example Iran were to attempt such a thing.

People should never forget how emotive an issue Palestine is across the Middle East, and the centrality of Palestine to the Resistance Axis. The Palestinians have had the advantage of having 75 years of struggle to build links of solidarity over the Arab World; to let them suffer a second Nakba without a fight would be a calamitous blow to the legitimacy of the Resistance Axis. Even where there have been reports alleging disagreements among Axis groups on how to proceed at the moment – namely among certain Iraqi factions – what is most revealing is that they have still made statements such as ‘We will not intervene unless Israel carries out its threat to invade Gaza by land, and then we will be at the command of [Lebanese] Hezbollah, not Hamas.’

Nobody is saying a full Israeli ground attack on Gaza can mean anything other than war.

The inevitability of war
Those most preoccupied with preventing the Gaza Crisis from sparking a regional war should be concerned that, amidst the Iranians’ busy coordination of their coalition, and with these lines being drawn in the sand, the West appears to have completely abandoned any serious diplomacy in the region. Partly, this is due to the United States no longer being welcome in Arab capitals. On October 15th Anthony Blinken was thoroughly humiliated visiting Saudi Arabia, where Muhammad bin Salman reportedly kept him waiting all night for a meeting set for that evening, didn’t turn up till the next morning – upon when he effectively issued Blinken with a set of demands to get Israel to stop attacking Gaza, and left. The situation had only worsened by the time Joe Biden arrived for a tour of the Middle East, in the end speaking to no one except the Israeli government as the Palestinian, Egyptian and Jordanian governments all abruptly cancelled their meetings with him in the aftermath of Israel's bombing of the Al-Ahli hospital. A US President visiting the Middle East without a single Arab leader wishing to host him is quite the historical development. Blinken’s second diplomatic tour of the region offered scarcely more reason for optimism for his government.

In such circumstances one would think responsible allies of the US would try to step in and mediate, but of course this isn’t happening. Instead we’ve been subjected to sickening scenes of EU leaders visiting Israel and pledging their solidarity with it as it kills thousands of civilians in Gaza, starves them of food, water, fuel and electricity and contemplates launching an even more deadly land invasion that threatens to set the whole region on fire.

When states have boxed themselves into a course of action that appears to guarantee either regional war or humiliating climbdowns, then the only realistic road out of that is through diplomacy. That the Western and Middle Eastern groupings appear to have totally ceased communication at the top levels does not bode well for how this crisis will go, as the main avenue for de-escalation has now also been closed.

This is certainly not ruling out some kind of reprieve. Israel has many good reasons not to attempt an ethnic cleansing of Gaza. As evidenced since Israeli tanks began manoeuvring on Gaza, the resistance will be fiercer than anything their army is used to, Defence Minister Yoav Gallant has already warned that their ground offensive may take months, and the Israeli war machine simply isn’t built for long wars, even if the fighting were to be restricted to Gaza – which it likely wouldn’t be. A possible scenario is that Israel declares a full ground invasion in order to save face, which in reality amounts to another incursion similar to 2014's Protective Edge whereby they pick a Hamas battalion to fight, destroy some tunnels, return to Israel and declare victory. This would probably destroy Netanyahu politically, and whether he’d take that fall for the good of the Zionist project is difficult to judge.

Another potential factor is that throughout all this dithering and delay over launching a full ground offensive, Gaza is still being heavily bombed and placed under siege. Before long huge numbers of Palestinians are going to start dying of dehydration and disease. The anonymous Israeli official who described their current trajectory as the ‘Leningrad approach’ is surely aware of the implications of continuing the total siege indefinitely. Therefore there may not even need to be a full ground invasion before the pressures on the Resistance Axis to intervene more directly grow too strong. But if there is a full ground invasion and Israel begins ethnic cleansing, long may the lamps of the Middle East be unlit.

Daniel Lindley

https://www.ebb-magazine.com/essays/gaz ... ity-of-war

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Israeli Army Kills 8 Palestinians During Raid in Jenin

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Israeli excavators destroying a roundabout in Jenin, West Bank, Nov. 9, 2023. | Photo: X/ @NationalIndNews

So far this year, the Israeli army has murdered 381 Palestinians in this territory. Among the victims are 84 minors.

On Thursday, Israeli occupation forces carried out a raid in the city of Jenin that left 8 Palestinians dead and 14 people injured.

"Forces of the occupation army broke into the Jenin refugee camp and their snipers climbed to the roofs of several buildings, while bulldozers destroyed the streets and infrastructure," the WAFA news agency reported.

Israeli forces also surrounded the Khalil Suleiman government hospital in Jenin and opened fire "on everything including ambulances," it added.

Through a statement, the Israeli army acknowledged that its aviation accompanied the actions in Jenin, attacking "armed men who endangered our forces."


During the last 18 months, Israeli raids in the West Bank have left 173 Palestinians dead and over 1,430 people detained, of which 900 are "suspected" of having links to Hamas, according to the Israeli Army.

The West Bank is experiencing its highest spike in violence since the Second Intifada (2000-05). So far this year, the Israeli army has murdered 381 Palestinians in that occupied territory. Among the victims are 84 minors.

Similar to other occasions, "Israeli occupation soldiers shatter surveillance cameras as they storm homes in the Jenin refugee camp," Quds News Network reported and posted videos showing those actions.

https://www.telesurenglish.net/news/Isr ... -0004.html

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Axis of Resources: Gaza war spells disaster for Europe’s energy security

Israel’s war on Gaza looks set to escalate into a region-wide conflict in West Asia, Europe's primary source of oil and gas since severing its Russian supply. Any regional conflagration will drive energy prices through the roof, particularly when the conflict leaks into the waterways of the Persian Gulf.

Mohamad Hasan Sweidan

NOV 8, 2023

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Photo Credit: The Cradle

Following the outbreak of conflict in Ukraine almost two years ago, Europeans imposed a limited embargo on Russia, which holds six percent of the world's oil reserves and a significant 24 percent of global gas reserves.

This strategic decision forced Europe to hurriedly seek out alternative energy sources, including in West Asia and North Africa, regions that collectively contain approximately 57 percent of the world's oil reserves and 41 percent of the world's proven gas reserves.

The replacement of Russian natural gas with other, more expensive, and more logistically problematic gas imports came at a high cost for Europeans. But today, even these secondary energy sources may be seriously jeopardized if Israel’s indiscriminate bombing of Palestinians in Gaza escalates further and embroils other countries in the energy-rich region.

Energy in West Asia and North Africa

West Asia and North Africa have long been pivotal players in the global energy scene. According to data released by the International Energy Agency in 2022, this region accounted for roughly 50 percent of global oil exports and 15 percent of natural gas exports.

Consequently, when the European Union resolved to reduce its dependence on Russian gas, it viewed West Asia and North Africa producers as potential saviors in meeting the continent's energy needs.

In 2021, Saudi Arabia (14.5 percent of global oil exports), Iraq (7.57 percent), the UAE (6.15 percent), and Kuwait (4.21 percent) emerged as the most significant oil exporters in the West Asia-North Africa region. As for natural gas exports in 2022, the top players included Qatar (136.3 BCM/yr), Algeria (38.4 BCM/yr), Iran (17.7 BCM/yr), Oman (11 BCM/yr), and Egypt (8.9 BCM/yr).

The conflict in Ukraine led to a 2 percent increase in Europe's oil consumption compared to usage in the pre-war period. Data from the EU’s oil imports in the second quarter of 2023 revealed that Saudi Arabia, Libya, Iraq, and Algeria were the leading oil-exporting countries to the European Union, collectively supplying over a quarter of the union's oil needs.

Conversely, gas consumption in Europe fell by 15 percent in the same period. The figures from the EU’s gas imports in the second quarter of 2023 showed that Algeria, Qatar, Oman, Libya, Turkiye, and Egypt were the primary gas suppliers to the EU, whether in liquid or pipeline form. These countries together accounted for more than a third of the union's gas needs.

Europe's vulnerability to war in West Asia

Historically, any significant tension or war in West Asia impacts energy markets by reducing regional oil supply and driving up global energy prices. In 2019, for instance, when Yemen’s Ansarallah-led forces targeted Saudi Arabia's Aramco facilities, Saudi oil exports plummeted by nearly 5.7 million barrels per day.

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Following the launch of the Palestinian resistance's Al-Aqsa Flood attack on Israel on 7 October, natural gas prices in Europe spiked by 35 percent. This surge was attributed to the closure of a gas field off the occupied-Palestinian coast for security reasons and the explosion of a pipeline in the Baltic Sea. In short, the Ukrainian conflict and the war in Palestine collided, resulting in adverse effects on energy prices in Europe.

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In the aftermath of Al-Aqsa Flood, the World Bank conducted a geopolitical risk analysis study to gauge the impact of this Palestine-Israel conflict on global oil prices. The study categorized the escalation of tension into three levels: small, medium, and large.

In a "small tension" scenario similar to the 2011 war in Libya, the World Bank projects a global oil supply reduction of 0.5 to 2 million barrels per day, leading to an initial oil price increase of 3 percent to 13 percent - between $93 and $102 per barrel.

In a "medium tension" scenario, akin to the 2003 Iraq war, the World Bank anticipates a global oil supply contraction of 3 to 5 million barrels per day, triggering an initial oil price surge of 21 percent to 35 percent, or costs of between $109 and $121 a barrel.

Finally, in a "high tension" scenario resembling, for instance, the 1973 Arab oil embargo, the World Bank foresees a global oil supply reduction of 6 to 8 million barrels per day, resulting in an initial oil price escalation of 56 percent to 75 percent, with costs skyrocketing to between $140 and $157 a barrel.

Any such increase in oil prices would spell disaster for Europe, which is already grappling with the burden of purchasing energy sources at inflated prices to compensate for its reduced imports from Russia.

While the study did not delve into the impact of escalating tensions on natural gas prices in West Asia, it did underline the interconnected nature of energy sources. As oil supplies decline, the ripple effect extends to other energy sources, with gas prices being particularly affected.

Shifting gas dependency

Europe stands out as the continent most likely to witness a significant rise in gas prices due to its shift away from Russian pipeline gas, leading to considerably increased dependence on liquefied natural gas (LNG) transported by the US.

In addition to the immediate repercussions of escalating tensions and the looming regional war driving up oil and gas prices worldwide, Europe faces a multitude of other factors that could profoundly influence energy exports from the Arab world.

A full-scale regional conflict involving the Axis of Resistance countries, such as Iran, Yemen, Iraq, Syria, and Lebanon, could have dire consequences. These countries, all possessing access to seas and straits, could potentially disrupt trade routes to Europe, including the movement of oil and liquefied gas.

The Strait of Hormuz, situated between Oman and Iran, holds immense significance as the world's primary energy corridor, with over a fifth of the global oil supply and a third of total LNG supply passing through.

Major oil-exporting countries, including Saudi Arabia, Iran, the UAE, Kuwait, and Iraq, rely on this passage. Additionally, Qatar, the largest LNG exporter worldwide, ships the majority of its LNG exports through the strait. With roughly 20 percent of global LNG flows traversing the strait annually, any closure by Iran or its allies could severely impact Europe's oil and gas supply.

As Palestine bleeds, Europe will feel the pinch

Another potential scenario involves the closure of the Bab al-Mandab Strait, the strategic passage overlooking Yemen which acts as a linchpin in the maritime trade route connecting the Mediterranean and the Indian Ocean through the Red Sea and the Suez Canal.

Most LNG exports from the Persian Gulf navigate this route, and in 2017, nearly 9 percent of all oil and refined products transported by sea passed through the strait, with over half destined for Europe. A shutdown of the Bab al-Mandab Strait could force tankers from the Persian Gulf to divert around the southern tip of Africa, leading to increased transit times and shipping costs.

Europe would be left with a stark choice: accept exorbitant prices for a continuous flow of oil and gas that causes severe economic strain - or reconsider its stance on Russian gas, which will be viewed internationally as a humiliating backtrack.

The EU initially turned to West Asia to compensate for its dwindling Russian gas supply, even if it meant higher costs. However, the growing prospect of the Palestine war morphing into a region-wide conflict now casts serious doubt on the reliability of West Asian oil and gas deliveries to Europe. Any escalation of the conflict will likely result in skyrocketing energy prices and deal a devastating blow to key sectors of European economies, notably Germany.

In anticipation of the looming crisis, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz quietly began seeking out alternative energy sources: just last week, he visited Ghana and Nigeria in the hope of plumbing new sources of energy for Europe.

As Israel ramps up its bombardment of Gaza with US and European weapons, it risks the emergence of new battlefronts being opened by more militarily sophisticated elements of the region's Resistance Axis, threatening massive escalations throughout West Asia and potentially plunging Europe into an economic sinkhole.

The days of Europe enjoying continuous prosperity while West Asia suffers the consequences of western-Israeli policies are long gone. The Axis of Resistance - in conjunction with the growing clout of multipolar powers like Russia and China - now possesses the capabilities and options that could challenge the western axis, from Washington to Brussels and Tel Aviv, and fundamentally reshape the global energy market as we know it.

https://new.thecradle.co/articles/axis- ... y-security
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Re: Palestine

Post by blindpig » Fri Nov 10, 2023 1:30 pm

What's happening in Palestine and Israel: chronicle for November 9
November 9, 2023
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The Israel Defense Forces continue to advance in the Gaza Strip south of the city of the same name and in a northwest direction. Hamas militants , in turn, regularly try to counterattack: several such attacks were launched in the Sheikh Radwan area in the north and Juhr al- Dik in the south. Meanwhile, photographs of Israeli armored vehicles on a section of Ar-Rashid Street near the intersection with Highway No. 10 are being actively distributed online , which, at a minimum, confirms the IDF’s access to the Mediterranean coast south of Gaza. However, whether the military personnel managed to finally gain a foothold there is still unknown.

Today, the situation in the West Bank has escalated again: in the morning, IDF drones struck one of the houses in the Jenin camp , where terrorists allegedly lived. After this, the fighters were attacked by armed Palestinians. Clashes broke out in the settlement and lasted throughout the day: 11 people were killed and more than 20 were injured. Traditionally, the IDF indiscriminately labeled all Arab victims as terrorists.

For several days in a row there have been rumors about a possible three-day ceasefire in the Gaza Strip. This is indirectly evidenced by the intensification of negotiations between American , Israeli , Egyptian and Qatari intelligence services, as well as the arrival of high-ranking members of the Hamas Politburo in Cairo . At the same time, the information received in the evening from the American authorities that Israel has pledged to observe a daily ceasefire in the north of the enclave has nothing to do with this - in this case we are talking about the continuation of the work of the humanitarian corridor for refugees along the Salah ed-Din highway, which is operating last days.

In addition, the south of Israel was again attacked by the Yemeni Houthis , but unlike previous attempts, this time they managed to achieve their goal: a kamikaze UAV hit one of the schools in the city of Eilat .

Progress of hostilities
Gaza Strip

In the Gaza Strip, Israeli troops continue to consolidate in previously occupied positions south of Gaza City and on the Mediterranean coast . Telegram circulated footage of the presence of Israeli armored vehicles on the Al-Rashid highway , which connects the south and north of the Palestinian enclave. Meanwhile, militants carried out several incursions into IDF positions near the Sheikh Radwan area in the north-west, and at Juhr ed-Dik south of Gaza.

Meanwhile, videos are actively circulating online showing accumulations of four dozen Israeli armored vehicles in a tiny spot in the Gaza Strip. This indirectly suggests that Hamas is clearly in short supply of artillery and attack UAVs. Otherwise, it is very difficult to logically explain why the IDF is not at all afraid to park such a mass of vehicles side by side in the open air.


In general, it is somewhat funny to observe such pictures through the prism of information coverage of North Military District events. When footage of Russian armored groups marching in a column through a narrow passage in minefields surfaced on the Internet, the same Western media were very fond of passing this off as “signs of the backwardness of Russian military thought.” Apparently, gathering almost fifty Israeli Merkavas and Namers in one place for the same foreign military experts is simply different.

However, the Palestinian groups are trying to compensate for the obvious lack of firepower with engineering research and high-quality camouflage. In the video below, an IDF soldier shows (using the example of an improvised playground) what the entrance to one of the underground Hamas tunnels looks like, equipped in the skeleton of a wrecked car. It is very difficult to track such an elegantly designed portal to the dungeon from the air, especially in such an inconspicuous place.


The Israelis also draw attention to the fact that part of the Palestinian communications are equipped not only with food supplies and weapons, but even with oxygen cylinders to allow them to stay underground for a long time in defense. The actions of Hamas and Islamic Jihad themselves are a clear example of asymmetric warfare: they are trying to respond to the IDF’s obvious superiority in firepower, technical means and resources with all possible non-standard measures, including the construction of a network of underground holes.

The bombing of the Gaza Strip also continues : according to representatives of the Israel Defense Forces, today in one of the strikes they managed to eliminate the commander of the Hamas anti-tank unit Abu Mazib.

South direction
Palestinian groups continue to attack Israeli settlements: today Ashdod , Reim and other settlements bordering the Gaza Strip , where IDF soldiers are based, came under attack. In addition, in the very south of the country, a kamikaze drone attacked a school in the city of Eilat near the border with Egypt . According to preliminary data, the UAV belonged to the Yemeni Houthis, and the school became the first confirmed object in Israel that they were able to hit.


In addition, the Houthis from the Ansarallah group did not wait long and presented evidence of yesterday’s destruction of an American MQ-9A Reaper drone off the coast of Yemen . The Houthis have plenty of air defense equipment - the Saudis can confirm with more than a dozen downed UAVs. And for some reason the Americans decided to conduct reconnaissance right in the affected area, knowing about all this. They paid for such negligence.


Apparently, they thought that the Ansaral fighters would not agree to such insolence. However, both the Houthis and the Iranians who support them have always acted in a timely manner in this matter. Drones conduct reconnaissance, which means they pose a danger. I would like to see something similar in countering American drones in the Black Sea, where they regularly direct the Ukrainian Armed Forces to strike Crimea and other territories.

Border with Lebanon

There are no significant changes on this section of the front: Hezbollah fighters are attacking IDF strongholds along the entire Lebanese-Israeli border with ATGMs. Margaliot, Metula, Shomera , Mitzgav Am and other Israeli settlements came under attack , while in Metula, representatives of the pro-Palestinian group claim the destruction of two IDF tanks. The military in turn responds with artillery fire and drone strikes in southern Lebanon .

West Bank

In the West Bank, the situation in the Jenin camp escalated sharply : in the morning, Israeli drones struck one of the local houses where Palestinian militants allegedly lived, and as a result, several people were killed. Later, the Israelis began to destroy the house with bulldozers, but one of the IDF columns in the settlement was attacked by armed Palestinians and a firefight ensued, after which the clashes spread to the entire settlement and continued throughout the day. As a result of the fighting, at least 11 people were killed and another 20 were injured. According to the Israeli command, all those killed are terrorists, which, given the scale of the fighting in the populated area, is unlikely.

Clashes in Jenin led to an escalation of violence in other populated areas: violent clashes broke out in the Balata camp near the city of Nablus , which also included Israeli security forces. Clashes are also taking place in Qalqiliya, Tulkarm, Tubas, Tabqa and others.

Actions of pro-Iranian formations in the Middle East
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Pro-Iranian groups maintain their activity in other countries of the Middle East: today the American base of Ain al-Assad in Iraq came under fire three times , as well as the Harir base and Erbil airport .

In Syria , Shiite formations attacked the positions of the US Armed Forces near the Al-Omar field, to which the Americans responded with airstrikes on one of the suburbs of Deir ez-Zor, where the strongholds of Iranian proxies are supposedly located. In addition, the Israelis launched a series of airstrikes against pro-Iranian forces on the southern outskirts of Damascus and the villages of Tall Kalib and Tall Masih in the province of Es-Suwayda.

Political-diplomatic background
CIA Chief William Burns's visit to Egypt


Amid the escalation in the Gaza Strip, CIA Director William Burns visited Egypt on November 7 for talks with President Abdel Fattah Al-Sisi and Director of General Intelligence Abbas Kamil. At the end of the meeting, neither side disclosed the essence of the negotiations, except for the one on duty: “the parties discussed regional and international problems.”

However, as our Egyptian colleague The Mediterranean Men reported , the purpose of Burns's visit was to put pressure on Egypt to join the occupation regime in the Gaza Strip in the event of the defeat of Hamas . President El-Sisi rejected the proposal and stated that his country will not become part of the occupation forces and will not allow the elimination of the Palestinian Authority in the Gaza Strip, which could become a catalyst for the elimination of Palestine in the West Bank.

According to Egyptian sources, the United States is already working on creating a full-fledged “coalition” to solve the “Gaza Strip problem” and is gradually developing plans for post-war actions. In the US strategy, Egypt rather acts not as an “influential regional actor”, but as a “scapegoat” on which some of the problems can be blamed, as well as forcing the government in Cairo to make concessions to Israel and accept Netanyahu’s plan to resettle Palestinians in the Sinai Peninsula . Meanwhile, Abdel Fattah El-Sisi is trying to carefully disown such undertakings, since participation in them could seriously damage his image both in Egypt on the eve of the December elections and in the international arena among other Arab countries.

Rumors of a possible ceasefire in the Gaza Strip

Rumors continue to circulate online about a possible ceasefire between the IDF and Hamas in order to free the hostages. The emir of Qatar will arrive in Egypt tomorrow for the purpose of negotiations ; earlier, high-ranking members of the Hamas politburo, including Ismail Haniyeh, Khaled Mashaal and Khalil al-Hay , arrived in Cairo . According to rumors, a three-day truce had previously been discussed between CIA chief William Burns , representatives of the Mossad , as well as senior Qatari officials. The condition for a ceasefire should be the release of one and a half to two dozen hostages and, possibly , the supply of fuel to the Gaza Strip. However, in the public space, the authorities of the United States and Israel say that they do not seek a truce and the only condition for it can be the release of all hostages.

At the same time, the evening information from the American administration that Israel has agreed to observe a ceasefire in the north of the Palestinian enclave has nothing to do with this: in this case, we are talking about the daily opening of a humanitarian corridor from the northern part to the south along the Salah ed-Din highway for civilians, which has been in effect for the last few days.

Another pro-Palestinian speech by Erdogan

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan spoke at the Economic Cooperation Organization summit in Tashkent . From the podium, he accused the West of “...hypocrisy and silent observation of the massacre in the Gaza Strip.” Everything about this quote is perfect:

“Western countries, led by the United States, have limited themselves to silently observing the massacre in Gaza from a distance. They are too weak to call for a ceasefire. Those who turn a blind eye to the burning of the Holy Quran cannot stand the Palestinian flag. The examples of hypocrisy that we have seen since October 7th can be multiplied. If we […] as representatives of the Muslim world do not raise our voice today, when else will we be able to do so?”

Who would talk about hypocrisy while American planes take off from the 39th Air Force Wing of the US Air Force Incirlik in Turkey , helping the Israeli Air Force bomb the Gaza Strip, and oil from Turkey to Israel continues to flow through the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline ?

Protests by Palestinian supporters in the UK

The Palestinian-Israeli conflict continues to make noise in British domestic political life. Palestine supporters have planned another rally in London on November 11 calling for an immediate stop to the fighting. It is comical that the date of the march coincides with Remembrance Day, which is intended to immortalize all Commonwealth soldiers who died in armed conflicts. For this reason, the metropolitan police tried to dissuade demonstrators from holding the rally. Ultimately, however, commissioner Mark Rowley stood down and said: “The laws made by Parliament are clear, there is no power to ban protests, and demonstrators are committed to staying away from the Cenotaph on Whitehall Street and have no intention of disrupting national commemorations.”

It seems that everything should have ended there (at least until Saturday), but then the Minister of the Interior, Suella Braverman, intervened in the matter . She said the rallies were not a cry for help for Gaza but an assertion of the superiority of certain groups, especially Islamists of the type seen in Northern Ireland, and accused police of being biased in favor of left-wing demonstrators. Braverman was then accused of encouraging extremists and undermining the authority of thousands of police officers, while the Labor Party , Scottish National Party and Liberal Democrats called for the minister's sacking. Such statements are hardly accidental and, first of all, are aimed at defusing social tension and distracting from internal political problems.

https://rybar.ru/chto-proishodit-v-pale ... -noyabrya/

What's happening in Syria: chronicle for October 28 - November 9, 2023
November 9, 2023
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All confrontations in Syria are in the escalating stage: in Greater Idlib, the Syrian Arab Army, with the support of the Russian Aerospace Forces, is attacking the targets of Hayat Tahrir al-Sham and its allied groups, whose militants respond with forays into the positions of pro-government troops.

In the zone of Turkish occupation, the same HTS is preparing to forcefully regain control over a number of areas - most likely, we will be talking about the city of El Bab.

The Turkish Armed Forces are attacking populated areas in the border areas, trying to cover the positions of the Syrian Democratic Forces, and pro-Kurdish forces are making forays into the positions of the Syrian National Army, which is loyal to Turkey.

In Deir ez-Zor, after attacks by tribal militias, the Syrian Democratic Forces are trying to strengthen themselves, and this does not suit the local population at all.

In Es-Suwayda, the population's dissatisfaction with the difficult situation has become a reason for political games that threaten to turn into an armed uprising.

With the escalation of the Palestinian-Israeli conflict, pro-Iranian forces opened another front, attacking US military targets (mainly with drones). As a response - and Syria was the only country where a response was given - the American and Israeli armed forces carried out not very selective airstrikes.

Mutual strikes in “Greater Idlib”
The Russian Aerospace Forces covered underground shelters, warehouses with UAV components and strongholds of groups involved in shelling positions of the Syrian Arab Army. Artillery also joined in the shelling. The targets of Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, Ansar al-Tawhid, the Turkistan Islamic Party and Ajnad al-Kavkaz in rural areas in southern Idlib, western Aleppo and northern Latakia were hit. The data about “at least 200 eliminated terrorists, including 34 field commanders” is most likely greatly exaggerated, but there are deaths among the militants, and among them are at least two foreigners: Muawiya al-Galmani and Abu Rafiq.

The news of the death of war correspondent Muhammad Usman, associated with HTS, during the same shelling, received some resonance . He began his career as a media activist during the civil war, and soon became a field journalist in a war zone. During an artillery shelling of the central part of the city of Idlib, Usman was injured and was taken to hospital. Further opinions in the media differed: some claim that he died in Idlib, while others claim that he was transported for treatment to Turkey, where he died two days later. Hayat Tahrir al-Sham and the Government of Salvation expressed their condolences.

The Muawiyah ibn Abi Sufyan Brigade decided to respond to the attacks. This brigade, one of the 13 “named” HTS brigades, is known for its operations to infiltrate enemy positions and has already caused a lot of trouble for pro-government forces with this tactic in northern Latakia. The militants tried to use this trump card again and penetrate the SAA positions near the Al-Bayda area, but after fierce clashes they retreated to their original positions. As usual, the result of the HTS attack was presented in the style: “The enemy suffered twice as many losses as we did.” The wildest guess is that 18 people were killed. Further, this figure, by adding up all attacks since mid-October, increased to 30.

Zone of Turkish occupation in northwestern Syria
According to opposition Syrian sources, militants from Hayat Tahrir al-Sham and its allied association Tajamuah al-Shahba are preparing a new attempt to take control by force of areas controlled by pro-Turkish groups.

"Tajamua al-Shahba" - its conduit of HTS influence in the "Euphrates Shield" - consists of the following groups: 50th division (known as "Ahrar al-Tawhid" led by Abu Tawfik Tell Rifaat, the de facto head of the entire association), eastern sector " Ahrar al-Sham, Harakat Nur ad-Din al-Zinki, Azaz Falcons Brigade, al-Muthanna Brigades, Martyr Ibrahim Radwan Brigade and Musab Abu al-Zubair Brigade.


Abu Tawfik, when his 50th division was part of the Third Corps of the SNA along with the Levantine Front and Jaysh al-Islam, refused to engage in hostilities against HTS, and acted as a mediator in the negotiations.

Now an entire operational headquarters “United Force” (“Al-Quwa al-Muwahhida”) has been formed, which, in addition to the HTS-allied association “Tajamua al-Shahba”, will also include the previously hostile “independent” factions of the “Syrian National Army” “Al-Jabhat ” al-Shamiya" and "Al-Muatasim Division".


These groups refused to provide support to the “Sultan Murad Division” and other Turkmen groups of the “Second SNA Corps” during the September inter-rebel clashes , for which the “Turkish allies” once again reduced the already delayed payments - possibly thereby losing an instrument of control.

Many signs of an impending conflict are already visible: militants loyal to HTS are erecting barriers, strengthening their positions in areas of Turkish counter-terrorism operations, carrying out provocations and conducting targeted operations against unwanted “revolutionaries.” The likely target is the city of El-Bab, for which there have already been battles, and its surroundings - mainly villages under pro-Turkish groups like the Sultan Murad Division.

Border territories
The Turkish Armed Forces have already routinely attacked the positions of the Syrian Democratic Forces with artillery and UAVs. A number of settlements in the areas of Tell Rifaat, Menbij, Al-Qamishli and Al-Hasakah came under fire.

In response, pro-Kurdish forces carried out “infiltration operations” in the vicinity of the cities of Kafr Hasher in northern Aleppo and Ras al-Ain in northern Al-Hasakah, as a result of which militants of the Turkish-backed Syrian National Army suffered losses.

Activities of the IDF and pro-Iranian formations
The pinpricks—that is, of course, yet another successful attack on American military targets—continue. The “Islamic Resistance in Iraq” used homemade drones to attack US bases in al-Tanf, al-Shaddadi, Tell Beidar and al- Akhdar and even dared to fire rockets in the area of ​​the Conoco gas processing plant and the Khurab al-Jair airbase. The results of the attacks are unknown.

In response, the American Air Force bombed a convoy of trucks coming from Iraq in the area of ​​the border crossing near the city of Al Bukamal, and the Israeli Air Force bombed the countryside of Daraa province, from where missiles were launched in the direction of the Golan Heights. The next day, launches resumed routinely .

While the “Resistance” carries out attacks on targets of the International Coalition led by the United States, which are questionable in terms of practical results, the latter continues to strengthen them, daily delivering weapons and logistics to Syria through the Al-Walid crossing on the border with Iraq.

The coalition is not limited to military operations, also conducting information attacks: the Bloomberg news agency is spreading information that Israel has become less likely to inform Russia about its attacks on Syrian territory, creating the appearance that these attacks were, in principle, coordinated with the Russian side. Noticing which way the wind was blowing, Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Mikhail Bogdanov quickly emphasized that Tel Aviv, not only now, but also previously, had not coordinated this issue with Moscow.

Against the backdrop of attacks on the city of Jassim in the south of the country, Syrian security services, working in conjunction with civilian informants, very efficiently covered an underground warehouse in the farm area. A large number of Israeli and Western-made weapons were seized : automatic and sniper rifles, pistols, RPGs, machine guns, anti-tank shells, hand grenades, etc. Coupled with the far from highly accurate Israeli strikes on Syria, shedding light on the connection between the “moderate” gangs in Daraa and Israel will further tarnish their image in the eyes of the local population. By the way, in the same area not long ago an Islamic State cell was busted.

Conflict between Arab tribes and SDF in Deir ez-Zor
The conflict between tribal militias and Kurdish forces, which the local Arab population considers outsiders, which actually began at the end of August 2023 , forces the latter to more closely monitor the problem of the penetration of groups associated with official Damascus and Tehran into the region. To this end, the SDF deployed additional reinforcements from Ar-Raqqa to create observation posts along the banks of the Euphrates.

The possibility of aggravation is directly indicated by the recent clashes of the Syrian Democratic Forces with fighters of tribes loyal to the Syrian government, who penetrated to the opposite bank of the river and unexpectedly attacked the targets of pro-Kurdish detachments. Reports of the participation of pro-government forces in the tribal uprising in Deir ez-Zor had appeared before, but at the time it was considered a propaganda campaign by the Kurds in an attempt to gain support from the neutral American allies.

At the same time, demonstrations by the local population are taking place in the settlements of Al-Jardi and Abu Hamam. Residents of the districts demand the release of their detained relatives, as well as that members of the SDS leave civilian schools equipped as military accommodation centers.

Protests in Suwayda province
For more than two and a half months, protests against the difficult socio-economic situation have continued in the Druze-populated Es Suwayda , where demonstrators demand the overthrow of the legitimate government and the implementation of UN Security Council Resolution 2254.

Several protesters closed the main center of the Syriatel telecommunications company in the city and, for a second time, used burning tires to block access to a branch building of the ruling Baath Party. These, in their opinion, are methods of nonviolent protest.

The leader of the Druze armed group Ahrar Jabal al-Arab, Sheikh Suleiman Abdel Baki, is so in favor of a peaceful solution to the issue that, in principle, he is ready to start an armed uprising. And for starters, he threatens to expel Governor Bassam Barsik. Baki accuses Barsik of cutting off the water supply to a number of settlements in order to sabotage the anti-government movement, and also allegedly as a measure of collective punishment. Probably, the “water games” are happening because the irreconcilable sheikh does not recognize the government in Damascus, has a strictly negative attitude towards the Iranian presence, and does not trust Russian negotiators.

Bottom line
In general, the degree of tension in Syria has been growing for a long time and steadily, fortunately, there are a sufficient number of various actors with opposing interests, both inside and outside the country. Escalation can start almost anywhere. Now the Israeli-Palestinian conflict has made it possible to somewhat shift attention and direct popular anger externally, but this will not work for long. The transition from guerrilla attacks and mutual shelling to full-scale military operations is most likely a matter of the very near future.

https://rybar.ru/obstanovka-v-sirii-za- ... brya-2023/

Pegasus - the Trojan horse of the Israeli intelligence services
November 9, 2023
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Against the background of the next round of Arab-Israeli confrontation, and especially after the surprise attack by Hamas on October 7, the issues of prompt access to enemy devices and obtaining confidential information have become even more pressing.

In our material we look at how Pegasus, the most famous Israeli development in the field of cyber espionage, works and what capabilities it has.

Who created Pegasus?
The creator of Pegasus is the cyber espionage company NSO Group, which was founded in 2010 by former Israeli intelligence officers : Niv Karmi, Shalev Hulio, Omri Lavie. The first letters of their names are in the name NSO.
NSO Group management managed to attract venture funding in 2014 from the American investment company Francisco Partners . The controlling stake at that time was estimated at $120 million. In 2019, the investment fund Novalpina Capital , together with Shalev Hulio and Omri Lavie, bought a controlling stake. Niv Karmi left the project at an early stage.

Pegasus is the flagship product of the Israeli NSO Group . NSO's technology allows its clients, who the company says are always governments rather than private individuals , to target specific phone numbers and infect the corresponding devices with Pegasus code.

But instead of trying to eavesdrop on data sent between two devices, which will likely be encrypted, Pegasus allows users to take over the device itself , gaining access to everything on it.

Pegasus tracks keystrokes on the infected device - all written messages and web searches, even passwords - and returns them to the client, and also gives access to the phone's microphone and camera, turning it into a mobile tracking device that the victim unwittingly carries with him.

When a phone is hacked, it is done in such a way that NSO Group clients and specialists gain administrative privileges on the device. This allows you to do almost anything on your phone.

A tool such as Pegasus, which allows unlimited access to communications and movements of subscribers of infected devices, is in great demand by governments. Among NSO Group's clients are the governments of such countries as: Mexico, Saudi Arabia, UAE, Morocco, Spain, India, Panama, Togo, Rwanda, Azerbaijan, Bahrain, Hungary, Kazakhstan, Kenya.

And the list of clients is constantly growing. Even the European Parliament became concerned about the use of Pegasus and released a report indicating which governments in the EU bought Pegasus and against whom these technologies were used. To maintain access to infected devices, the NSO Group team must continually update its technology to stay ahead of companies like Apple and Google that release patches to address vulnerabilities. In recent years, Pegasus has evolved from a relatively crude system based on social engineering to a program that can compromise a phone without having to click a link.

From social engineering to modern exploits

At one time, Pegasus hacking attacks required the active participation of the victim. Pegasus operators sent text messages with a malicious link to the victim’s phone. When you clicked on it in the browser, a page opened on which malware was downloaded and executed, infecting the device.

NSO Group clients have used a variety of tactics to increase the likelihood of a click.

For example, clients would send spam to frustrate the target, and then send another message asking them to click a link to stop receiving spam.

Social engineering techniques helped manipulate the target into clicking on a link. The links themselves were developed based on the fears or interests of the victim.

The messages could contain news of interest to the recipient, or promotions that might interest him - perhaps a gym membership or links to sales.

This crude approach quickly ran its course. Targets quickly learned to recognize malicious spam. Something more subtle was required.

Looking for vulnerabilities
Among other things, Pegasus software allowed the following vulnerabilities to be exploited:

CVE-2016-4655 - iOS kernel vulnerability;

CVE-2016-4656 - iOS kernel vulnerability (memory corruption);

CVE-2016-4657 is a vulnerability in WebKit;

FORCEDENTRY ( CVE-2021-30860 ) for iOS ( patch released in September 2021).

Apple's iMessage is known to be hackable too. Matt Green, a cryptographer and security expert at Johns Hopkins University, told reporters that iMessage's vulnerability has increased since Apple made the software more complex. This has led to new opportunities to find errors in code. Apple regularly releases updates to address such vulnerabilities, but the spyware industry is always at least one step ahead.

Pegasus is capable of infecting the latest versions of iOS . Much more time and money is spent searching for these bugs in the code than preventing and eradicating them.

Software testing is work put on stream. For testing, narrow specialists who do not have deep programming skills and creativity are often hired. And the most talented and creative programmers are hired to find vulnerabilities. Attackers are always ahead because they have a serious material incentive.

Apple representatives naturally deny the benefits of spyware. According to them, NSO Group's exploits are highly targeted, cost millions of dollars to develop, and often have a limited shelf life. Allegedly, these financial restrictions prohibit the development of new exploits.

Zero click exploits

The solution was to use so-called zero-click exploits. These vulnerabilities do not require any user action for Pegasus to compromise their device. This is the attack method of choice for governments using Pegasus over the past few years.

Zero-click exploits rely on bugs in popular apps like iMessage, WhatsApp and FaceTime that receive and sort data, sometimes from unknown sources .

Once Pegasus detects a vulnerability, it can penetrate the device using the application's protocol. In this case, the user does not need to follow the link, read the message or answer the call - he may not even see the missed call or message.

Zero-click exploits account for the majority of device compromises recorded since 2019 . According to Timothy Summers, a former cyber engineer for one of the US intelligence agencies, Pegasus connects to most messaging systems, including Gmail, Facebook, WhatsApp, FaceTime, Viber, WeChat, Telegram and Apple's built-in messaging and email applications.

Network attacks
In addition to zero-click exploits, NSO Group clients can use network attacks to surreptitiously access a target's device. With this method, the victim can be open to attack while browsing the web without having to click on a specially designed malicious link. This approach involves waiting for the target to visit a site that is not fully secure during normal Internet browsing . After clicking on a link to an unprotected website, the NSO Group program gains access to the phone and starts the infection process.

This is an extremely effective way to seize control of the device. The delay between visiting an unprotected site and becoming infected by Pegasus can be a matter of milliseconds. Devices are infected through a network of fake sites that cybersecurity experts have dubbed Stealth Falcon .

However, this method is more difficult to implement than attacking a phone using a malicious URL or zero-click exploit, since it is necessary to monitor the victim's mobile phone usage until the point where its Internet traffic becomes unsecured. This is usually done through a mobile phone operator, which some states have access to or control. However, such dependence makes it difficult or impossible for governments to attack people outside their jurisdiction. Zero-click exploits do not have such restrictions, which is why they are so popular.

How much does a Pegasus subscription cost?
According to the New York Times, a tool that allows you to monitor 10 iPhone users will cost $650 thousand and $500 thousand for installation. This is the minimum package of services. One standard Pegasus module can monitor up to 500 phones over the course of a year, but only 50 at a time. A license for such a module costs approximately $7-8 million per year. These are estimated figures, since the technology is constantly being improved and the cost of new add-ons developed for customer needs is not disclosed for obvious reasons. According to NSO Group, its revenue amounted to $243 million in 2020. This is approximately 25-30 clients.

What will official justice say?
Naturally, the sale of a tool of censorship and total control to governments around the world could not go unnoticed by law enforcement agencies.

Back in 2019, WhatsApp sued NSO Group in the US, alleging that the Israeli company exploited the vulnerability to infect more than 1,400 devices. WhatsApp says the victims included journalists, lawyers, religious leaders and political dissidents. A number of other well-known companies, including Microsoft and Google, presented their arguments in support of the case.

The US Supreme Court recently allowed WhatsApp, owned by Meta Platforms Inc, to proceed with a lawsuit accusing Israeli company NSO Group of exploiting a bug in the WhatsApp app to install spyware that could spy on 1,400 people, including journalists, human rights activists and dissidents.

The judges rejected NSO Group's appeal of a lower court ruling that the lawsuit could continue. NSO Group argued that it was immune from prosecution because the company was acting as an agent of unknown foreign governments in installing the Pegasus spyware.

Joe Biden's administration urged the judges to reject NSO Group's appeal, noting that the US State Department has never before granted immunity to a private organization acting as an agent of a foreign government. Meta, the parent company of WhatsApp and Facebook, in a statement welcomed the court's decision to reject NSO Group's “baseless” appeal.

Judging by the fact that in 4 years the claim was only considered and the appeal was rejected, the case is moving extremely slowly. Rather, it resembles a discussion in a “warm, friendly atmosphere.” The trial is ongoing, sales of Pegasus software are not blocked, governments around the world are actively using it, and the impartial American Themis is watching.

The struggle for control over NSO Group

In 2021, NSO Group became the subject of a large-scale journalistic investigation . Representatives of the company were accused of selling spyware to authoritarian governments and spying on journalists and public figures. As a result, the Biden Administration added NSO Group to the Entity list of companies prohibited from supplying [exporting] American technology. This was more of an image move aimed at creating financial problems for NSO Group with a view to its further purchase.

Shortly after the investigation, representatives of one of the Pentagon's main contractors, L3Harris , informed their colleagues from the NSO Group that they had received the blessing and support of the government and US intelligence to acquire the company if the Pegasus source code and cache of discovered vulnerabilities were transferred to other intelligence agencies of the Anglo-Saxon intelligence community Five Eyes .

Formally, adding a company to the Entity list imposes a ban only on export operations related to the supply of technology. But it does not apply to import transactions or acquisitions. This is exactly what L3Harris representatives were counting on.

But other players got involved in the process. Lenders including Credit Suisse and Senator Investment Group foreclosed on parent company NSO Group in early 2023. The acquisition saw a change in NSO's ownership, including a private equity fund founded by Novalpina Capital , which acquired the company in a deal valuing it at approximately $1 billion in 2019.

Currently, Dufresne Holdings , controlled by NSO Group co-founder Omri Lavie, is listed in corporate documents as the sole shareholder of NSO Group's parent company. Representatives of this company take an active part in the management of NSO Group. On their initiative, some employees were fired. Meanwhile, NSO Group's creditors are cooperating with Lavie and have agreed not to force NSO to default on its debts.

According to a company spokesman, NSO Group is managed directly by CEO Yaron Shohat, and its creditors are currently restructuring shareholders' stakes.

Now, in essence, the assets are being re-registered to a new legal entity and the company is being optimized , which is necessary to attract new investments and obtain clean registration documents without mention of blacklisting. In any case, NSO Group, even in a new shell, will remain under the control of large banks.

The role of Pegasus in the current confrontation with the Arab world
The Pegasus product is a convenient monitoring and control tool that has proven its effectiveness and is in great demand by governments in many countries. With the beginning of the active phase of the current Arab-Israeli conflict, a lot of criticism of Israeli intelligence appeared in the media, which allegedly was unable to determine in advance preparations for an attack by Palestinian groups. There were even unsubstantiated reports that Palestinian groups had been using wired telephones for two years and therefore had become “invisible” to Israeli intelligence services.

In our opinion, this is not true. The connection between Mossad and NSO Group makes it possible to effectively combine technical and human intelligence methods . A closed ecosystem has already been created based on Pegasus software, which includes cellular operators. Therefore, the arguments regarding a “surprise attack” look extremely doubtful.

The current conflict could be used to legalize government methods of subscriber control. Naturally “for security reasons.” This fits very well with the globalists' agenda. Moreover, the war, with a large number of casualties, especially among the civilian population of Gaza, is an excellent cover. Public attention is naturally focused on this humanitarian catastrophe, which can significantly facilitate the adoption of appropriate laws.

The growing influence of radical groups in the Middle East region may push even some Muslim countries to cooperate with Israel. For example , Azerbaijan , within the framework of military-technical cooperation with Israel, gained access to the Pegasus system. Let us remember that Azerbaijan currently covers about 40% of Israel’s needs for oil and petroleum products. In return, the Azerbaijani authorities received access not only to Pegasus, but also to high-tech weapons, as well as satellite intelligence data , which was a determining factor in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

We have no doubt that Israel will not abandon its attempts to build a dialogue with other Muslim countries in the region in a similar vein. Governments of countries that do not enjoy much trust among the population may compromise and become clients of NSO Group in order to remain in power.

Representatives of the Mossad and the IDF have a good idea of ​​the situation in the region, and probably count not so much on the power of the American AUG, but on the opportunity to cause a split in the bloc of Arab states, using a variety of tools and methods.

Pegasus software is one of the most effective means of conducting modern multi-domain warfare, and requires careful study for the purposes of defense and counteraction.

https://rybar.ru/pegasus-troyanskij-kon ... -izrailya/

Google Translator

*********

“....exceeding 10 kilograms of explosives per individual”

The November 2, 2023 edition of The Wall Street Journal acknowledges that “the three-week-long air campaign by Israel… is the most intense in its history and rivals any aerial bombardment this century,” according to “military analysts”. The Israelis have “hit more than 11,000 targets, with missiles, bombs, and artillery, in Gaza, an area that is half the size of New York City that is home to about two million people.”



Reporting only one week after the war began, the Turkish state-run news agency takes note of the following comparisons:



The Washington Post, citing Marc Garlasco, a military adviser at the Dutch organization PAX for Peace, reported that Israel is “dropping in less than a week what the US was dropping in Afghanistan in a year, in a much smaller, much more densely populated area, where mistakes are going to be magnified.”



Garlasco, who is also a former UN war crimes investigator in Libya, told the daily, citing records from the US Air Force Central Command, that the highest number of bombs dropped in a year for the war in Afghanistan was just over 7,423. According to the UN, during the entire war in Libya, NATO reported dropping more than 7,600 bombs and missiles from aircraft, the daily reported…



Charles Lister, a senior fellow and director of the Extremism and Counterterrorism Program at the Middle East Institute, was also surprised by the figure.



WOW -- 6,000 bombs in 6 days, in 365 km2 #Gaza,” Lister said on X.



“For comparison, the international anti-#ISIS coalition dropped an average of ~2,500 bombs **per month, across 46,000 km2 in #Syria & #Iraq.**”



In a release on November 2, Euro-Med Human Rights Monitor reports:



Geneva - Israel has dropped more than 25,000 tons of explosives on the Gaza Strip since the start of its large-scale war on 7 October, equivalent to two nuclear bombs, Euro-Med Human Rights Monitor said in a press release issued today.



According to the Geneva-based human rights organisation, the Israeli army has admitted to bombing over 12,000 targets in the Gaza Strip, with a record tally of bombs exceeding 10 kilograms of explosives per individual. Euro-Med Monitor highlighted that the weight of the nuclear bombs dropped by the United States on Hiroshima and Nagasaki in Japan at the end of World War II in August 1945 was estimated at about 15,000 tons of explosives.



Due to technological developments affecting the potency of bombs, the explosives dropped on Gaza may be twice as powerful as a nuclear bomb. This means that the destructive power of the explosives dropped on Gaza exceeds that of the bomb dropped on Hiroshima, Euro-Med Monitor said, noting that the area of the Japanese city is 900 square kilometres, while the area of Gaza does not exceed 360 square kilometres.



The rights group’s statement underlined that Israel uses bombs with huge destructive power, some of which range from 150 to 1,000 kilograms, and cited a recent statement by Israeli War Minister Yoav Gallant that declared that more than 10,000 bombs have been dropped on Gaza City alone.



Israel’s use of internationally banned weapons in its attacks on the Gaza Strip has been documented, said Euro-Med Monitor, especially the use of cluster and phosphorus bombs, which are waxy toxic substances that react quickly to oxygen and cause severe second- and third-degree burns.



While comparisons are rough, they give some sense of the scale of the Israeli assault on Gaza which is lost in much of the media coverage. The assault on the civilian population of Gaza is savage. The immediacy of this catastrophe on the civilian population of Gaza vastly overshadows the questions that occupy the media, the punditry, and the politicians. They, and others, who fail to recognize this human disaster and fail to call for its ending will be judged harshly by history.



The world-wide outrage voiced by the people is in sharp contrast to the complacency of the elites. Despite the best efforts of elites to minimize and distort the facts and to threaten and ostracize resistance, millions have emphatically called for a ceasefire. The shameful attempt to stifle this resistance should not be forgotten when future political options are weighed.



The effectiveness of global resistance has forced the US State Department warmongers-- the slavish apologists for Israeli policies-- to call for a “humanitarian pause,” a tepid, cowardly attempt to save face in the wake of mass slaughter. Predictably, the extremist Israeli government has turned down this feeble request.



As civilian deaths in Gaza climb obscenely, there is only one honest demand: Cease fire! End the war now!



*****



Like the war in Ukraine, the conflict in Gaza-- in the entire Middle East, for that matter-- can neither be understood nor judged without delving into its history. Simplistic accounts that place ethnicity, religion, or ideology ahead of the machinations of imperialism miss the point. Since the politics of oil has dominated great power interests in the Middle East, the traditional relations of the various peoples and their fate have been largely determined by those powers. Beginning with the Balfour Declaration and the Sykes-Picot agreement, the people of the region have been largely side-line observers of British and French imperial designs.



Matters changed after World War II with the upsurge in nationalism, both narrow nationalism and progressive national liberation. The Zionist “victory” over British rule in Palestine and the subsequent purging of Palestinian villages and residents led to a narrow nationalist, theocratic regime in Israel that quickly became a watchdog for US and NATO imperialism, joining in the suppression and manipulation of popular risings in the Middle East.



At the same time, popular, secular, Arab nationalist, independent, proto-socialist movements arose, alongside existing worker and Communist parties, targeting both backward, feudal, and fundamentalist regimes installed or sustained throughout the Middle East by the West, as well as their Western puppeteers.



Arab nationalism and the inspiration of socialism-- encouraged by the 1952 revolution in Egypt-- grew into a powerful movement that, despite relentless efforts to undermine them, lingers to this day. The Ba’ath Party, Yasser Arafat’s PLO, and Quaddafi’s Socialist People's Libyan Arab Jamahiriya were modern-day remnants of the 1952 revolution’s legacy.



Wherever these secular movements rose in stature, the Western powers and Israel sponsored anti-Communist, religious fundamentalists as a bulwark against secularism, progressive nationalism, and tolerance.



Famously, this sponsorship has often backfired on the sponsor-- what Chalmers Johnson cleverly dubbed “blowback” -- as it did when the US courted the mujahideen in Afghanistan. Opportunistically using Islamic fundamentalism to combat Afghani revolutionaries and Soviet assistance, the US enabled a powerful new reactionary force in the Middle East that led directly to the infamous jihadist attack on September 11, 2001.



Hamas is a similar creature. Nourished and encouraged by Israel as an alternative to the secular PLO, it turned on its masters. As Avner Cohen, a former Israeli intelligence officer affirmed recently in The Wall Street Journal:



Instead of trying to curb Gaza's Islamists from the outset, says Mr. Cohen, Israel for years tolerated and, in some cases, encouraged them as a counterweight to the secular nationalists of the Palestine Liberation Organization and its dominant faction, Yasser Arafat's Fatah.



Since October 7, the regarded Israeli newspaper, Haaretz, has posted a series of articles chronicling the Israeli government’s efforts to strengthen Hamas in order to ensure that Palestinian governance would be divided between the West Bank and Gaza: divide and conquer.



The great tragedy of the Palestinian people is brought forth by today's massacre at the hands of Zionist zealots: the death of thousands of civilians and the injury of many more. But its roots lie in the machinations of Western imperialism, the indifference, even hostility, of many Arab states, and the failings of the left.



Kemal Okuyan, General Secretary of the Turkish Communist Party addresses the failing in a recent speech:



Because today, political Islam has turned into an effective tool in the hands of the ruling classes not only to attack, divide or control the workers but also to gain advantage in the competition within the imperialist system. When its class-based characteristics is missed, in Europe and North America, political Islam is either viewed with an orientalist approach as "an anti-imperialist, even revolutionary revolt of the backward world," or, as in the case of ISIS, as a medieval barbarism. I regret to say that both approaches lead us to mistakes. It must be recognized that political Islam is an important reality of the modern world, it is fundamentally a class phenomenon and a problem that cannot be overcome by romanticism or feelings of terror. We will not allow the Palestinian resistance to be reduced to Hamas. But we need to answer the question why religion has become decisive in social dynamics of the Islamic world.



Comrades, the regression in the Middle East is ultimately due to the same reason as the decline of the working-class movement in the rest of the world today. This reason can be summarized as the abandonment of the class positions and the perspective of revolution. One of the most important, if not the only, reasons for the rise of right-wing populism or the far right in Europe today is the gaps left by the left. Capitalism constantly generates problems that require radical responses. The same mechanism is also at work in the Middle East, which has a very different historical, cultural and political background. Politics does not tolerate any gaps. The truth is that they are stealing the anger of the poor and they are stealing it from us. We cannot accept this. The moment we put aside the actuality of the revolution; we commit mistakes. Anti-US positions without the goal of socialism leads us to consider political Islam or the so-called national bourgeoisies as allies; putting democracy before socialism often leads us to co-operate with the US or the EU or other bourgeois forces. This is a vicious circle. This vicious circle traps us in Europe, Latin America or North America as much as it does in Iraq, Afghanistan, Iran, Turkey, Egypt or Palestine.



The power of Okuyan’s analysis lies in underscoring the legitimacy of the Palestinian resistance while insisting that Palestinian liberation requires different options, revolutionary options that will better serve the interests of the Palestinian masses.



Whatever else the Hamas attack has done, Israeli reaction has exposed the brutality of the Israeli regime to millions of people who were unaware or in denial of the oppression, abuse, and destruction of the Palestinian people in their historic homeland and in Gaza. Even the Western media has, to some extent, been forced to acknowledge the horrors of life in Gaza under Israeli attack, leaving their political patrons exposed for their sheer indifference and their lack of moral principle. Leaders of Arab countries are forced to face their unprincipled relations with Israel or face their outraged populations.



Yet the political strata continue to escalate both their support for Israel and their suppression of domestic resistance. They will pay dearly for this, as the Israeli government further shows its brutal face to the world.



The people of the world must demand the end of the Israeli attack on Gaza. That victory might begin the march to restoring dignity to the long-suffering Palestinian people.



Greg Godels

zzsblogml@gmail.com

http://zzs-blg.blogspot.com/2023/11/exc ... sives.html

*******

PFLP: The Situation in Gaza is Catastrophic Amidst the Complicity of the International Community and Arab Silence
Posted by INTERNATIONALIST 360° on NOVEMBER 8, 2023

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Al-Shaabi warns: the situation in the Gaza Strip is catastrophic and the risk of famine is approaching and we hold the international community and the Arab silence responsible

The Popular Front for the liberation of Palestine (PFLP) has warned that the current living conditions in the Gaza Strip as a result of the continuation of the genocidal war. The brutal bombing and the siege have reached the brink of total collapse, which portends a real catastrophe, especially in the northern Gaza Strip and Gaza City.

The front stressed that the continuation of the criminal occupation siege of the Gaza Strip by land, air and sea, the closure of crossings, the denial of entry of medicine, medical supplies and fuel, the systematic and criminal cutting off of water and bombing desalination plants, targeting gas stations, solar energy, bakeries, hospitals and shelter centers, brings the Gaza Strip to the risk of famine, the spread of epidemics and diseases, and to an environmental disaster as a result of thousands of tons of explosives and white phosphorus thrown on the Strip under the shadow of international complicity and Arab silence.

The front added that our people in the sector, especially thousands of displaced people in shelter centers and homes, have become unable to obtain safe drinking water as a result of water scarcity and desalination plants have stopped working as a result of electricity cuts, and the continued fuel ban threatens thousands of patients, especially those suffering from chronic diseases such as kidney and cancer, and threatens the lives of thousands of unborn children.

The front holds the international community and the so-called free world and the Arab silence responsible for the deterioration of the humanitarian situation in the Strip as a result of its complicity or inability to stop the aggression, or at a minimum the opening of crossings for the introduction of medicine, relief materials and fuel to the Strip. The Strip is going through an unprecedented humanitarian disaster that requires urgent intervention, imposing the opening of crossings around the clock, and ensuring the flow of all aid without restrictions from the occupation to avoid a real disaster.

“It is a shame that the inability of the Arab brothers and their inability to save the children of Gaza from hunger and the sick from death continues through serious steps leading to breaking the blockade and the introduction of aid, and strengthening the ability of the people of Gaza to withstand the Zionist war machine of death supported by the United States .

It is also a shame that fuel is being withheld from the Gaza Strip at a time when the Arab countries are the largest oil exporters in the world, and it is reprehensible that the Arab countries continue to supply oil and natural gas to Western partner countries in the aggression on Gaza, while fuel is being withheld from the bereaved in the Gaza Strip!!”.


The front concluded its statement by affirming that the war of starvation practiced by the Zionist enemy, in full partnership with the American enemy, will not break the will and steadfastness of our people, and will not raise the white flag, even if it is subjected to hunger and extermination, and will inevitably prevail over this criminal enemies and all the system complicit with them.

https://libya360.wordpress.com/2023/11/ ... b-silence/

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Israel will kill journalists
colonelcassad
November 10, 9:01

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Israel has promised to kill journalists who filmed the attack on Israel on October 7.
This also applies to journalists from Western publications.
Several dozen journalists, including those working for Western media, have already been killed in the Gaza Strip itself.
This is what “rules-based order” looks like now.

https://colonelcassad.livejournal.com/8756872.html

Google Translator
"There is great chaos under heaven; the situation is excellent."

User avatar
blindpig
Posts: 14838
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Re: Palestine

Post by blindpig » Sat Nov 11, 2023 3:03 pm

What is happening in Palestine and Israel: chronicle for November 10
November 10, 2023
Rybar

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Fighting continues in the Gaza Strip . The IDF is advancing into urban areas with massive artillery and air support. Palestinian forces are gradually retreating, although they periodically counterattack, carrying out incursions through tunnels.

The humanitarian crisis is getting worse. Hospitals lack medicine, the flow of wounded is growing, and the combat area is steadily approaching the medical facilities themselves. There are sporadic shootings near Al-Quds , Shifa and An-Nasr hospitals . IDF tanks were spotted near Rantisi Children's Hospital.

In the West Bank, mass arrests of Palestinians who, according to Israel, are associated with Hamas continue. Israeli raids lead to equally massive clashes with security forces. The degree of confrontation in the autonomy has decreased somewhat, but hardly for long given the development of the situation in Gaza.

Progress of hostilities
Gaza Strip

The IDF continues to move into urban areas northwest of Gaza along the coastline. From the south, the Israelis apparently gained a foothold at the intersection of Route 10 and the Al-Rashid coastal highway , after which they turned north. According to some information, during the day clashes took place near the Al-Quds hospital and the Al-Ansar complex .

The counter wedge of the IDF from the north is developing an offensive in the Al-Shati region , while simultaneously moving deeper into the Rimal region. Palestinian journalists reported clashes and airstrikes in the area of ​​An-Nasr Hospital and Rantisi Children's Hospital . IDF tanks were seen near this hospital. IDF artillery worked towards the southeast, striking Al-Jala Street .

Gaza is covered in the “fog of war” and it is difficult to reliably determine the IDF’s progress, especially given the chaos of urban fighting and sudden Hamas raids from tunnels. At the same time, the number of attacks on the rest of the autonomy decreased slightly. The reason is likely to be the concentration of fire in support of advancing ground forces. Moreover, the Palestinians periodically make attempts to strike the flank of the advancing Israelis, in the hope of, if not cutting off, then disrupting supplies.


In addition, civilians continue to leave the enclave capital. Footage from the Salah al-Din highway , where the IDF checkpoint is set up at the Kuwait roundabout , shows large columns of people with white flags. To the south, outside the zone of Israeli control, not far from the Nuseirat camp , a blow was struck against the refugees, for which Hamas and the IDF traditionally blamed each other, without, however, burdening themselves with any evidence.

South direction
Compared to Gaza in the south, the situation remains stable. Palestinian forces attacked several kibbutzim and military bases, but with unknown results. Kisufim , Nirim , Miftahim and the Reim military base came under fire .

Border with Lebanon

There remains a high degree of tension on the border between Israel and Lebanon. Hezbollah, as before, carries out targeted strikes on military installations of Israeli border guards, disabling cameras and equipment. The border points of Idmit , Birkat Risha , Tsiklamen and Manara were attacked using anti-tank systems . In addition, the Lebanese announced a strike against IDF positions in the forests near Shtula .

In response, the IDF launched multiple strikes along the entire length of the border. At least 22 settlements were subjected to artillery and air strikes. In Meis al-Jabal, incendiary ammunition was fired at a grove from where an anti-tank missile was allegedly fired at IDF positions in the area of ​​the Cyclamen observation point. In Aita al-Sha'b, an Israeli UAV struck the upper floors of several houses. Probably, according to the Israelis, there could also be positions of Hezbollah ATGM operators there.

West Bank

In the Palestinian Authority in the West Bank, everything is also stable. The IDF again carried out mass detentions, arresting over 60 people in Nablus , Askar , Jalazun and several other villages and refugee camps. Most of all, 18 people were detained in the Al-Arrub refugee camp . From there, footage appeared where during the clashes an Israeli security officer used a detainee as a human shield.


Despite this, Palestinians continue to engage in clashes with the Israeli military and hold rallies in support of Gaza and Hamas. In Hebron , local youth clashed with the IDF at night, and during the day a large pro-Hamas rally took place. In Jerusalem, Arab believers were once again not allowed into the Al-Aqsa Mosque and dispersed with tear gas while trying to pray on the street

Actions of pro-Iranian formations in the Middle East

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In the afternoon, pro-Iranian Iraqi formations reported on the launch of a UAV at the US base in At-Tanf and published footage of UAV launches that had already become traditional.

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At the same time, Syria still remains one of the epicenters of events: either the Russian Aerospace Forces are striking at pro-Turkish formations, or the Turks are striking at the Kurds in the north of the country. And recently, both the Israelis and the Americans carried out a targeted operation. On the night of November 7-8, four Israeli Air Force F-16I fighters from Ramon Air Base launched eight guided missiles from Lebanese airspace at targets in southwestern Syria. Guidance was provided by two Heron-1 UAVs from Palmachim Air Base operating over the Golan Heights .

In this raid, you should pay attention to the selected targets: out of eight missiles, only one was shot down by Syrian air defense systems. Four hit electronic jamming stations in the provinces of Damascus and Es-Suwayda , one destroyed an antenna from the GYL-1 radar, and two more flew into the building of pro-Iranian groups near Damascus .

Despite being busy in the Gaza Strip, the Israelis continue to strike Syrian territories. And the emphasis is not only on the defeat of Iranian forces at its borders, but also on the destruction of the combat potential of the Syrian Armed Forces in the field of air defense, which is confirmed by the destruction of electronic warfare and air defense systems of the Syrian Armed Forces. And on the night of 8-9, the Americans sent a pair of F-15s and F-16s from the Al-Salti airbase in Jordan to the Al Bukamal border crossing , where attacks were carried out on Iranian proxy warehouses in the east of Deir ez-Zor and in vicinity of Al Mayadin .

The attacks were carried out in response to attacks by Shiite groups on American bases in the area of ​​the Al-Omar and Conoco oil fields . As a result, at least nine members of Iran-allied forces were killed. The surveillance was carried out by two Reapers from the same base. As in previous times, attacks on the positions of pro-Iranian groups should not be considered as a step towards further escalation. At the current stage, this can be called a kind of parity, where one or the other maintains the desired degree of tension with mutual attacks.


Political-diplomatic background
On the evacuation of Russian citizens from the Gaza Strip

The evacuation of Russians through the Rafah checkpoint will take a maximum of three days, said Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Mikhail Bogdanov. According to the official, the work of the checkpoint was blocked today, but this problem will be resolved. Russia is solving the problem in contact with Egypt, Israel and Palestine. In addition, a video appeared with Russian citizens waiting to leave the combat zone. The women spoke about the IDF strikes and the terrible humanitarian situation, and also thanked everyone involved in the evacuation for their help.

About Netanyahu's plans for Gaza

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said that after the “victory over Hamas,” the IDF will retain control over the Gaza Strip and will engage in demilitarization of the enclave.

According to the Ynet portal, the heads of municipalities located near the Gaza Strip asked at a meeting with the Israeli Prime Minister what would happen to the enclave after the end of the IDF operation. Netanyahu told them that the army would maintain control over this territory and would not give it up to outside forces.

https://rybar.ru/chto-proishodit-v-pale ... -noyabrya/

Google Translator

Tries too hard at being 'even-handed'...See Johnstone's piece I posted this morning.

********

Arab Normalizers Turn Their Cheek as ‘Another Hiroshima’ Unfolds in Gaza
Posted by INTERNATIONALIST 360° on NOVEMBER 10, 2023
Khalil Harb

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While Israel has dropped the equivalent of two nuclear bombs on Gaza – and mulls over the prospect of deploying an actual one – normalized Arab regimes are quietly protecting their commitment to support Tel Aviv over Tehran.

“The world cannot see another Hiroshima. If the world sees 100,000 people dead, that means you are in a war with the rest of the world.”


So spoke Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince and de facto ruler Mohammed bin Salman (MbS) in a first-ever English-language interview with Fox News, as recently as September, 2023.

Yet in what can only be described as the “another Hiroshima,” the Gaza Strip is now the target of a genocidal onslaught that the Saudi royal explicitly stated should be avoided for world peace.

Normalization still on the Saudi table

For over a month now, Israel’s aggression has resulted in the deaths and injuries of more than 40,000 people in the densely populated enclave. In fact, the US-backed occupation army has dropped over 25,000 tons of explosives on the Gaza Strip since 7 October, the equivalent of two nuclear bombs.

In a press release issued by Euro-Med Monitor on 2 November, the Geneva-based NGO said: “This means that the destructive power of the explosives dropped on Gaza exceeds that of the bomb dropped on Hiroshima.”

Despite this, MbS has not backtracked from his controversial statement about Riyadh’s increasingly close ties to Israel’s most right-wing government: “Every day we get closer.” This was most recently confirmed by Saudi Minister of Investment Khalid bin Abdulaziz al-Falih, who said, “This matter [normalization] was on the table, and it is still on the table.”

It is important to note, however, that the MbS interview was aired just two weeks before the 7 October Al-Aqsa Flood operation by the Palestinian resistance. Also interesting is that the crown prince’s statement wasn’t directed at Israel; it was in response to a question about the dangers of Iran acquiring a nuclear bomb.

What becomes clear is that not only Saudi Arabia, but also the five other Arab states – Egypt, Jordan, the UAE, Bahrain, and Morocco – that already have peace treaties with Tel Aviv have shown no signs of reconsidering these agreements, even in the face of mounting public pressure against Israel’s ongoing massacres in Gaza. Although reports suggest that some lawmakers in Bahrain are calling for a reversal of Manama’s normalization agreement, amid suspended economic ties and the recalling of its ambassador from Tel Aviv.

Arab countries that have pursued “peace treaties” with the occupation state have long marketed these agreements to their people as pathways to security, prosperity, and regional stability. MbS himself has touted these benefits when he told Fox News that a potential Saudi-Israeli deal brokered by the Biden administration would be a historic milestone, potentially the largest since the end of the Cold War in 1991.

Resistance delaying Riyadh’s moves

US President Joe Biden, the official protector of Israeli aggression, believes that the Hamas-led operation was an attempt to disrupt his negotiations with Saudi Arabia about normalization. His Secretary of State Antony Blinken has been even more direct in his assessment, stating that one motive behind the Hamas attack was to hinder efforts to bring Saudi Arabia and Israel closer, “along with other countries that are not interested in it,” likely referring to key resistance supporter Iran.

Though there hasn’t been an official Saudi position from either MbS or his foreign ministry, carefully leaked reports by “informed sources” and a “source in the Saudi government” were published by Reuters on 13 October and then by AFP the following day, suggesting that Saudi Arabia had decided to freeze or suspend normalization talks and had communicated this to US officials.

Publicly, Israel seemed unfazed by this implicit threat. As for Saudi Arabia, following its initial call for immediate de-escalation and civilian protection, it continues to emphasize its condemnation of civilian targeting. The Saudis use careful phrasing to placate Washington, which demands that its regional allies condemn the killing of Israeli “civilians” despite evidence of direct Israeli military responsibility for many of those deaths.

Because Saudi Arabia hasn’t yet entered into a normalization agreement with Israel, this theoretically frees it from any diplomatic obligations with Tel Aviv. However, what raises eyebrows is Riyadh’s clear hesitation to leverage its significant political and oil influence to pressure for a ceasefire in Gaza. If anything, the Saudis dilly-dallied until 30 October to announce an “emergency” Arab summit scheduled for 11 November in Riyadh.

This inaction may suggest that the path of normalization with Israel has progressed further than we’re aware, considering that in September, Saudi Arabia hosted Israeli Tourism Minister Haim Katz and Israeli Communications Minister Shlomo Karhi, the latter even broadcasting himself performing the Jewish morning prayer and celebrating Sukkot in Riyadh just days before Al-Aqsa Flood unfolded.

Arab ‘warm’ and ‘cold’ peace with Israel

The UAE, which helped spearhead the Arab normalization drive, has been far more vocal in its support for Israel. Reem al-Hashemi, the Emirati minister of state for international cooperation, delivered a stinging speech at the UN Security Council in New York, in which she condemned the “barbaric and heinous attacks” launched by Hamas.

Hashemi called for the immediate and unconditional release of “hostages” and an end to the ongoing bloodshed, while also criticizing “Israel’s policy of collective punishment toward the Gaza Strip.”

Alongside its neighbor Bahrain, the UAE has maintained two peace agreements with Israel since the September 2020 signing of the Abraham Accords. The status of the Israeli embassy in Abu Dhabi remains unchanged, and the UAE Ministry of Foreign Affairs has not even bothered to summon the Israeli ambassador for a perfunctory dressing down, which is the most minimal form of diplomatic censure expected – especially given the expanding bombing of Gaza.

Egypt holds the distinction of being the first Arab country to openly normalize relations with Israel in 1978, a peace brokered by the Americans. In the years following, Washington has relentlessly taken the global lead in advancing normalization with Tel Aviv, succeeding in the signing of the 1994 Wadi Araba Agreement with Jordan, and then in 1993 with the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO).

However, since the 2020 Trump administration-sponsored Abraham Accords between Israel and Morocco, the UAE, Sudan, and Bahrain, questions persist about the motivation behind normalization for Arab states that are neither immediate neighbors to Palestine nor directly involved in the conflict. Particularly vexing for detractors is the trend among some Arab regimes to formalize peace deals with Israel without connecting this concession to demands for Palestinian rights.

Opposing another Nakba

The peace talks with Palestinians, the principal party in conflict with Israel, have been at a standstill since April 2014 due to various factors, including the suffocating Gaza siege and the gradual expansion of settlements in the West Bank, rendering the “two-state solution” dead for all practical purposes.

In Jordan, where Palestinians make up a slight majority of the population, public anger over Gaza has been palpable. Authorities in Amman initially coordinated with their counterparts in Cairo, both strongly rejecting Israeli proposals to displace Palestinians from the West Bank to Jordan and from Gaza to Egypt.

Under significant domestic fire, Amman later took the significant step of recalling its ambassador from Tel Aviv and refusing to welcome back the Israeli ambassador who had left the kingdom. Jordan is faced with a heightened sense of danger: Israel’s Gaza offensive coincides with a sharp spike in Israeli army and settler attacks on West Bank Palestinians, which fuels Amman’s long-standing fears that Israel aims to ethically cleanse and annex the West Bank.

Jordanian Prime Minister Bisher Khasawneh has gone so far as to explicitly state that any attempt to displace Palestinians from the West Bank or Gaza will be viewed as a declaration of war.

The Kingdom of Morocco – which, unlike other Arab states, “resumed” pre-existing relations with Israel in 2020 – has issued statements condemning the Gaza bombings and criticizing western inaction, but has otherwise taken no concrete actions. This is despite King Mohammed VI’s role as the head of the “Al-Quds Committee,” established in 1975 by the Organization of the Islamic Conference and headquartered in Rabat.

Normalizing genocide, but facing resistance

As the “emergency” Arab summit convenes in Riyadh today, it remains to be seen whether countries like Saudi Arabia, along with other Arab states and those engaging with the genocidal government in Israel, will attempt to address their political and public failures during the month-long war against Gaza.

This situation has given rise to an unsettling reality in which the “other Hiroshima” that MbS once feared – from, ironically, Iran – has instead been threatened by Israel in Gaza when Israeli Heritage Minister Amichai Eliyahu suggested the possibility of nuclear strikes.

What is clear at this stage is that those Arab states that have normalized with Tel Avivl show no inclination to reverse these agreements. Their pacts, after all, were not peace treaties ending a state of war that never existed with Israel; they are alliance agreements encompassing various facets of diplomacy, military cooperation, security, finance, and trade.

If anything, following the 7 October events, the normalization Arab regimes look to be banking on their Israeli alliance to prevail over their regional adversaries in the Axis of Resistance. They perceive the events in Gaza, much like the US and Israelis, as a threat to Israel and, by extension, their own regional interests.

Their goal is to transform this threat into an opportunity to eliminate resistance in Gaza – much as they redirected the 2011 Arab uprisings to cripple their Resistance Axis foes. If their bet on Tel Aviv succeeds, they can tuck away the thorny Palestinian issue and pave the way for a new regional order with Israel at its core.

This vision has been articulated by MbS and other officials supporting normalization, culminating in discussions at the G20 summit in New Delhi last September when a project was announced to enhance transportation and communication between India and Europe via the Persian Gulf states, with Israel as a central hub.

The US-Israeli alliance, along with the Arab normalization states, is actively pursuing this regional rearrangement while Gaza burns. However, their progress is hindered by the fact that Israel faces significant challenges in defeating the resistance in Gaza, and potentially, the entire Axis of Resistance in West Asia.

https://libya360.wordpress.com/2023/11/ ... s-in-gaza/

Interview With Khaled Barakat: ‘Gaza Demands End of Genocide, Not ‘Ceasefire’
Posted by INTERNATIONALIST 360° on NOVEMBER 10, 2023
Orinoco Tribune



Orinoco Tribune interviewed Palestinian activist and author Khaled Barakat about Palestine and the Palestinian struggle in the context of the Israeli occupation’s genocidal aggression against Gaza following the Palestinian Al-Aqsa Flood Operation on October 7. The ongoing genocidal attack on Palestine has killed more than 10,000 Palestinian civilians in the Gaza Strip and wounded over 25,000, with 40% of the dead being children.

Barakat, when consulted about the pertinence of the “Ceasefire Now!” slogan used by people sympathetic with the Palestinian Liberation cause worldwide as well as by many governments around the world, commented that no one in Gaza demands ceasefire because that plays into the narrative of two equal forces in a battlefield, when in reality the Palestinian Resistance can not be equated to the Israeli occupation in any way militarily, politically, or morally.

However, he added that we have to look at who are demanding ceasefire in Gaza. “There are those who want this massacre to end; they want this genocide to stop,” he commented, referring to the demonstrations held worldwide in solidarity with the Palestinian people in recent days. “On an international level, in demonstrations, when someone chants ceasefire and people repeat that, our role, I think, is actually not to say we don’t want ceasefire, but to explain that the content of this is to stop the aggression, the Israeli aggression, and to ensure that the Palestinian resistance comes out victorious.”

“For national liberation movements, for people being subjugated to ethnic cleansing and genocide, if you ask them to stop their fire, it’s just misleading,” Barakat continued. “And to be honest with you sometimes some groups that would adopt the ceasefire slogan, I think they care about the Israelis captured in Gaza. If there were no Israelis captured in Gaza, they would probably not demand ceasefire. Then again, some groups want ceasefire because they really want ceasefire. They’re buying into this ceasefire narrative… It depends who is saying this and how they are saying this. But as a movement, I won’t adopt or condone this slogan.” Additionally he pointed out “we cannot adopt slogans that don’t have content and meaning… we have to start giving content to these slogans.”

Barakat is a Palestinian activist and thinker currently based in Canada. A leftist and revolutionary voice on Palestine, he has been the target of numerous smear campaigns in the West, aimed at silencing and criminalizing him and others like him fighting for Palestinian rights in the diaspora. In 2019, he was deported from Germany for his activism. In Canada also, he has been a target of threats and harassment coming from various quarters, including the parliament. On November 5, he was interviewed by Orinoco Tribune on the Palestinian Resistance’s Al-Aqsa Flood operation and its aftermath, the ongoing aggression of the Zionist entity on Palestinians in Gaza as well as in the West Bank and the 1948 Occupied Territories, and how the current situation in Palestine may impact the global geopolitical scenario. The interview was conducted by Orinoco Tribune co-editor Saheli Chowdhury and contributor Dalal.

Palestinian Resistance: From 2006 to Al-Aqsa Flood

According to Barakat, the Al-Aqsa Flood operation is a natural outcome of the way the Palestinian Resistance has developed since 2005-06, since “the end of the Arafat era and the beginning of… a reactionary, puppet Palestinian Authority led by Mahmoud Abbas.”

“It was a new era that called for elections of the Palestinian Authority, in which Hamas participated, and won,” Barakat explained, referring to the general elections of 2006 in which Hamas won with overwhelming majority in the Gaza Strip. He went on to describe that the United States and its satellite states did not recognize the election results, they “wanted Hamas to become a security agency” like the Palestinian Authority, “to commit to Oslo agreements” and “recognize Israel.” When Hamas refused to cede to the Western demands, “they waged a war against our people and against the resistance, and Gaza was immediately put under siege.” Gaza has been under a total blockade since then.

“In my view, the resistance did the right thing when they ended the Oslo team in Gaza and fully controlled Gaza,” continued Barakat, “because it meant that the resistance now had, I don’t want to say a liberated land in Palestine… but it’s semi-liberated. I have been in Gaza after that, and you can actually go from Rafah all the way to Beit Hanoun without any checkpoint. If you try to do that in the West Bank, go from one village to another, you face an Israeli checkpoint.”

Barakat also gave a view of how the Palestinian resistance works in Gaza. “Gaza is very small, it is 2.1 million Palestinians living in less than 360 km². So the idea was to build another Gaza under Gaza,” he explained. “These networks of tunnels extend almost 360 miles under Gaza because that’s the only way Palestinian resistance can actually defend itself, store their arms, do their programs and their training and at the same time be able to fight back.”

According to the activist, the Palestinian resistance has analyzed the aspects of every Israeli aggression starting from 2008 till today. “In 2019, they adopted the strategy to defend Gaza, which included the scenario that Israel would do something like a ground invasion… cutting Gaza into three parts and then trying to encircle the city, as they are doing now,” he explained. “They developed a strategy and they did three major military trainings on this strategy. So every scenario that the Israeli commanders now are thinking to use, the Palestinian commanders know exactly how they can counter that.”

The activist, however, emphasized that despite this preparation, the resistance in Gaza does not have the air defense systems to respond to the aerial bombardment of the occupation forces.

As for the relation between the Palestinian people and the Palestinian resistance, he described it as “the relationship between the blood and the flesh to the body.” “If you try to separate them, they’ll bleed. If you try to separate the resistance from the people, they’ll bleed,” he said. “When we talk about the steadfastness of Gaza, we’re not just talking about the steadfastness of the armed resistance, we are talking about the fishers, the farmers, the workers, the teachers, the doctors. These are the popular classes that are actually carrying out the tasks of the sumud or steadfastness.”

“October 7 was kind of the accumulation of all of this experience,” he concluded. “It’s not just a military operation for us; October 7 has created a new stage for us. It carries many strategic consequences, as a heroic act by the Palestinian resistance.”

This is not a conflict between Israel and Hamas

Barakat condemned the Western media narrative of “conflict between Israel and Hamas.” “What is happening in Gaza is a total war waged by Israel against the Palestinian people in Gaza,” he stressed. “When they say this is a war between Israel and Hamas, it is a very classic and clear Zionist distortion of the real situation.”

“When we hear a Zionist say, we have no problem with Palestinians, we are just fighting Hamas, we know they mean to tell us that Palestinians have no rights and no cause,” he continued. “This is an attempt to ignore our existence… and to give the Zionist Occupation Forces, and the US-European so called international community, the license to murder and kill as many Palestinians as they wish.”

“If Israel’s issue is with Hamas, and if the war is with Hamas, then why do we have 10,000 people killed and over 3000 under the rubble, and mostly children and women who are not members of Hamas?” he wondered. “If that’s true, why Israel is waging war against our people in the West Bank and Jerusalem and inside 1948 Occupied Territories? If the war is against Hamas, then why are they targeting Palestinian nationalists and leftists? There are over 10,000 Palestinian political prisoners, over 50% of them are nationalists. Israel is waging a war against all Palestinians…but they are trying to strip the Palestinian people from their cause as a national liberation organization.”

He further explained that this is nothing new. During 1967-1973, the Zionist entity claimed that “we have no problem with the people of Gaza, our issue is with the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine—the PFLP, when the Front was leading the armed struggle in Gaza,” Barakat stated. “They also used that excuse to invade Lebanon and destroy the country, claiming their problem is with the PLO [Palestinian Liberation Organization], not with the Palestinian refugees.”

“This is not limited to the Palestinian experience. I think the colonizers always use this line,” he commented, connecting the Palestinian experience with that of colonized peoples around the planet. “If you ask the people of South Africa, India, Ireland, Algeria, the native people here in Turtle Island [US-Canada], they have heard this from their oppressors in one way or another.”

Barakat also responded to the narrative coming from certain quarters, especially from Western liberals, that Hamas was originally created by Israel to divide the Palestinian movement and to weaken the PLO. “Israel did not create Hamas. Hamas was founded on December 9, 1987, in the First Intifada,” he stated. “Since then, Israel has been targeting Hamas, killing its leaders, assassinating their commanders, killing and imprisoning their members… If Israel created Hamas, then why don’t we have not even one document that shows this?”

He explained that Hamas originated from the Muslim Brotherhood movement which was established in 1928, 20 years before Israel was established. Israel did try to create a religious movement to replace the PLO but failed in the attempt.

“Today the PLO and the Palestinian Authority leadership are traitors and tools in the hands of Israel,” he continued. “And Hamas is leading the Palestinian resistance, but not just the armed resistance. If you look at elections, let’s say the student movement elections or labor elections or any kind of really popular assembly elections, Hamas will win with majority. Palestinian people are voting for Hamas in the most prestigious Palestinian liberal universities, like Birzeit University, Hamas will win student council elections. Even in Christian universities, Hamas will win by Christian votes. Does that mean that the Palestinian people don’t understand Hamas? And these Western liberals understand the situation more than we do?… I do not think it is naive or ignorant when they [repeat this] it is a calculated distortion.” He continued “the idea behind these allegations is to say that Palestinians are not capable of creating their movement [and] someone else must have done this for them.”

Barakat emphasized that Hamas is a national liberation movement of the Palestinian people. He recalled that Western media never mentions that Hamas was actually elected by Palestinians. “They say things like Hamas controls Gaza or Hamas did a coup, as if an elected government is going to do a coup against itself,” he said. “It’s just garbage that Western media put out to mislead people.”

When consulted about the rejection expressed by some sections of the Western left towards anti-imperialist movements that have a religious base, such as Hamas, Barakat called it “an extension of a colonialist mindset.” “They want a Palestinian resistance that fits their image and their criteria, and not how reality is and how Palestinians are,” he said. He added that the same sectors used to criticize the Marxist-Leninist PFLP when it lead the armed struggle during the 1960s-70s, calling the organization “too extreme.”

In this regard, he traced the history of the origin of Islamist anti-imperialist trends in the region. “In the 50s our people were shouting slogans for socialism,” he commented. “They supported Nasser in Egypt… And there were no religious groups anywhere in the movement carrying out any kind of national liberation tasks. Being affected by the situation worldwide—Vietnam, Cuba, Algeria, national liberation movements across Asia and Africa, Palestinians founded the PFLP, the DFLP, and other progressive forces. But that changed. And the reason that things change is not because people are wrong, but because these political parties or these political entities haven’t delivered what they were supposed to deliver. Whether it’s Gamal Abdel Nasser and the Arab national movements that were defeated in 1967, or whether the socialist organizations and political parties retreated in 1990 with the collapse of the Soviet Union and the socialist bloc.”

“The popular classes and the working classes are not going to rest until the left rebuilds itself,” Barakat stressed. “They’re going to support the forces that are still fighting. And when there is a vacuum, someone needs to fulfill the vacuum. In that atmosphere, with the 1979 Great Revolution of Iran, a new era began in the region,” and religious movements took up the task of the Palestinian resistance.

He called out the inherent Islamophobia in the “anyone but Hamas” view, and stated, “We are part of the discourse of Liberation Theology. It’s not just churches, mosques can be revolutionary too… If a mosque is calling for the liberation of Palestine and for equality and for supporting the marginalized and the workers, then this mosque is playing a good role, a positive role. But if a mosque is calling for supporting the Saudi prince and extend the life of bin-Salman of Saudi Arabia, that’s a reactionary mosque and a reactionary imam. The way we look at churches, we should look at mosques with the same objectivity and the same way.”

“Those who want to see the left rising and having military capabilities, they should go and support the left instead of saying they don’t like Hamas,” he advised. “It’s just a very bad position and not one Palestinian would respect that position, including any revolutionary leftist.”

There are no ‘both sides’

When questioned about the issue of Hamas killing “Israeli civilians,” Barakat stressed that it is important to clarify what that term means. “When we talk about Israeli settlers, we are talking about settlers who are armed,” he explained. “I describe them as paramilitary, and they act under the full cover and support of the Israeli official army. An Israeli settler could enter his settlement and in ten minutes come out with his full military fatigues and his rifle… They are attacking Palestinians, burning their farms, burning homes, doing all that [the] Israeli army does, except they’re more dangerous because they have no official responsibility. They’re now distributing leaflets across the West Bank saying to Palestinians, ‘Wait for your Nakba.’ So, to distinguish between a civilian settler and an army is just a joke. Every Israeli settler in our homeland is a legitimate target for our resistance, and this has to be very clear.”

“Some people, when they say ‘both sides committed violence,’ when they say that the colonizer is the same as the colonized, it is literally saying that the person who is torturing the prisoner and the prisoner are the same, and so let us just blame them both,” Barakat continued. “If Palestinian prisoners tomorrow have a riot in Israeli prisons, they’ll probably be condemned for using violence. This is a very narrow minded sectarianism.”

Palestinian Resistance Frustrates Israeli Advance into Gaza

“They don’t understand the reality of the Palestinian people, and they speak from their very comfortable zones and try to judge the Palestinian struggle,” he stated further. “Those people usually condemn all resistance, whether it’s by Hamas or not Hamas. Their idea is that they want to blame the victim and at the same time blame Israel. But in reality, everyone blames Israel because it is the occupier. So if we take this case to the United Nations, to the General Assembly, to any people’s forum, they’ll blame Israel, because Israel is the aggressor, the oppressor, the occupying force. But to blame the victim is a very cowardly position.”

“Israelis don’t differentiate between a Hamas fighter or a Palestinian leftist fighter or a nationalist fighter,” he pointed out. “They will target any Palestinian resistance. That is why the Palestinian armed resistance is very unified, despite the very harsh economic conditions, social conditions, even despite our differences.”

Consequences of Al-Aqsa Flood
According to the Palestinian activist, the success of the Al-Aqsa Flood operation shattered the myth that the Israeli army was well organized and invincible. “The Palestinian resistance surprised everybody, and particularly the enemy, because the Israelis did not anticipated this offense,” Barakat said.

He added that the resistance was even surprised to see how the Israeli military system was collapsing so easily. “In fact, they only used 1200 fighters in this offensive and against one of the most well equipped Israeli division called Gaza Battalion,” he explained. “The Gaza Battalion is a small Israeli army surrounding Gaza; it has military intelligence, elite units, all sorts of weapons, tanks, military bases… and they collapsed in hours.”

“We see that in the last two weeks after the ground invasion, the Israelis stayed in their tanks,” he added. “They’re not willing to leave their tanks, and they get attacked by the Palestinian resistance. I mean, they (the Israelis) are not fighters. They throw them there without strategy and without specific military tasks…The (occupation) is very confused and there is mistrust in their ranks and there is a mistrust between the military leadership and the political leadership.”

According to Barakat, the ongoing Israeli destruction and genocide in Gaza is a sign of the occupation entity’s recklessness in the face of defeat. It is also the “imperialist camp’s” response to their defeat. “This is the US’ doing. This is Germany, UK, France and others, it is not just Israel,” he pointed out. “Israel is committing the war crimes, but when you look at the weapons used, when you look at the support they’re getting, when you look at the political and media support, there is an entire imperialist camp standing behind Israel.”

He also pointed out Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu’s own personal interests in the war. “If this ends now, Netanyahu will fall tomorrow,” he said. “I think, 76% of Israelis in the latest polls don’t want him as the prime minister and they think that he should resign. When a leader is leading a war with these kind of figures, then he is weak and defeated, and his internal front is very fragile and so Israel is going to be defeated for sure in this battle. The only thing they can do is they can kill more Palestinians, and that is what they are doing and they are doing it around the clock… They know they were defeated on October 7, and they are being defeated on the ground and they are being defeated morally because there is nothing brave about an Israeli pilot going into his F-16 and throwing bombs at children.”

“So the US is trying to tell Israel to try to think of a way to come out defeated, but not defeated totally,” he added. “They’re trying to pressure the Palestinian Resistance to give some concessions.” However, in Barakat’s opinion, the Resistance will not settle for less than achieving its original objectives which includes the release of Palestinian political prisoners, ending the siege of Gaza, and stopping the desecration of Muslim and Christian religious sites by Zionist settlers.

According to Barakat, another success of Al-Aqsa Flood was linking the struggle of the people in Gaza with the Palestinians in the West Bank, Jerusalem, the 1948 Occupied Territories, as well as Palestinians in the diaspora, especially the younger generations.

Regarding the Israeli’s captured by the Resistance, Barakat stated “the reason Israel wants to kill them is because [Israel] is scared of what will say about the resistance. How they were treated fairly, how they were treated with respect, how they were not tortured.” On the other hand, he pointed out “you see how they torture our prisoners.”

The operation also exposed the defeat of the Palestinian Authority, which is nothing but “an Israeli authority with a Palestinian face,” Barakat pointed out. “There are studies from before October 7 that gave Mahmoud Abbas [PA president] 8% or 10%… Most polls are giving pro-Palestinian resistance factions in any elections overwhelming majority up to 80%; so the situation internally has changed.”

“Now Mahmoud Abbas has no legitimacy,” Barakat said in the same vein. “This authority does not represent the Palestinian people. They were not elected by the Palestinian people, and they are trying to wait and see the outcome of this Gaza war, hoping they can come back now riding an Israeli tank or an American tank. That is not going to happen. Everyone knows that the PA is a puppet of Israel, and as long as the PA is serving the US and Israel, they’ll keep it. But if it stopped or ceased to be a useful tool for Israel and the US, they will end it and create some different entity.”

Barakat went on to describe Palestine’s role in the regional geopolitical situation. “Our people in West Asia is one contingent facing imperialism directly, and Palestine is at the forefront of that,” he expressed. “I can’t look at the solidarity movements in Iran or Lebanon or Pakistan as the same as the solidarity movement in Switzerland… They’re fighting for Palestine because Palestine is actually their cause. It is not just an idea for them, but it is connected to their lives and the destiny of their people and their country and the future of their country… For example, in Algeria, it is not just that the people of Algeria are supporting their Palestinian brothers and sisters, but Palestine is an Algerian national issue.”

“Take into consideration that we are living in an interim period, we’re moving from one world to another, a world that is dominated by the United States to a multipolar system,” he continued. “Usually in these kind of interim periods, a lot of things gets hazy… I think that the situation after October 7 has changed drastically to our side, to the Palestinian side, to the revolutionary side, and to those who are willing to accept pluralism within revolution, within the camp of resistance.”

What about the ‘Two State Solution’?
Barakat branded the Two-State Solution as “aggression against the Palestinian people” and a legitimisation of colonialism.

“The two-state solution is not something that was created after Oslo,” he said. “It was created with the partition of Palestine in 1947-1948, when the colonizers said a Jewish state and an Arab state of Palestine. At that time they just wanted to divide countries south and north and they thought that Palestine is the same. Well, we didn’t have civil war in Palestine to divide Palestine south and west. What we had was a colonialist settler movement supported by imperialist powers, and they wanted to displace the Palestinian people and establish this racist regime in Palestine in order to dominate the region. Not in order to dominate Palestine. Palestine is under occupation, but what they wanted Israel to do is to be a base to threaten the region… Whether Palestinians fight or not, the Zionist regime is in contradiction with the Lebanese people, the Syrian people, the people of Pakistan, of Iran, and so on.”

Due to this reason, “Hezbollah, Ansarullah, Algeria, Iran, the people of the region understand very well that Palestine is their cause,” Barakat opined. “For the people in the region to have development, to have freedom, to have democracy, to have renaissance, we must look at what is the obstacle that is making us not being able to move forward in our economic development, our wealth, our resources. It is imperialism and Zionism. It is the US and Israel, and of course the reactionary Arab regimes that are the advocates of the two-state solution.”

As for those who support the Palestinian cause and yet advocate for the two-state solution, Barakat took the example of China. “When we ask our comrades in the Chinese Communist Party, are you willing to divide Taiwan or give any inch of Taiwan, they say no, we have a One China policy,” he explained. “Well, we have a One Palestine policy too. Why should we donate 80% of our land to Zionist racist settlers?”

He further explained that even Israel does not want to implement the two-state solution. “Before October 7, they were trying to convince the Palestinian Authority to accept self-rule government and declare the two-state solution is no longer viable,” he stated. “The two state solution becomes a very high ceiling for Israel and Western powers and reactionary Arab regimes.”

According to Barakat, even if the two-state solution were viable, it is not possible to implement it. “Where are you going to have these two states?” he asked. “There is no West Bank anymore; Zionists took the entire West Bank for settlements and colonies. Gaza is under siege.”

“Even if the settlers leave the West Bank, even if they agree to dismantle all their colonies in the West Bank, even if they lift the siege on Gaza, the two-state solution will not be a viable solution for our people,” Barakat emphasized. “If they want to have Israel they can have it in Australia or in the US. In Canada. They can give some land in France, maybe Holland could donate some land and create Israel there. But in Palestine there is no place for Israel, there is no place for Zionism.”

“Liberation of Palestine is the goal, and it is a noble goal,” he stated. “And it is not only liberation of Palestinians, it is also the liberation of everyone in Palestine. Because the only way we can liberate Zionists from their racist ideology is to defeat them. You cannot teach colonizers equality theoretically or through dialogue. You have to defeat them first and then they will understand.”

Barakat concluded that “the resistance gets stronger after every battle and those who claim that the resistance have not achieved victory get weaker and become more irrelevant. … Resistance is not just about fighting Israel but about creating hope and creating an alternative path to the one [enforced on] us since 1948.” And “surrendering doesn’t lead to development, but resistance can; surrendering doesn’t lead to pluralism and democracy, resistance can. So the path of resistance is the path that imperialists and zionists are afraid of because it could lead to an entire new world. That’s why the liberation of Palestine is not an easy task because it means a change in the region and a change in the world."

https://libya360.wordpress.com/2023/11/ ... ceasefire/

*********

Heads Up

Just in:

Elijah J. Magnier 🇪🇺 @ejmalrai - 7:21 UTC · Nov 11, 2023
This is THE most serious attack and escalation for many years & its consequences are critical, much more than what the eye can see:

#Israeli warplanes attack a truck in Zahrani, south of Lebanon, 40 kilometres from the border, breaking all red lines in #Lebanon after #Syria.

The escalation between #Israel and #Hezbollah has started TODAY (you may disagree if you don't see the full picture).

It seems the occupation of north of #Gaza won't take too long and @netanyahu doesn't mind starting a war on another front.

The next hours/days are crucial.


---
Can you imagine

to live or even sit next to this sniper?

One person killed, many children wounded after Israeli snipers target al-Quds hospital, according to Palestinian Red Crescent
The Red Cross statement calling for the protection of patients, healthcare workers, medical facilities in Gaza comes as the Palestinian Red Crescent Society (PCRS) said Israeli forces opened fire on the intensive care unit at al-Quds hospital in Gaza City.

One person was killed and 28 others were wounded in sniper fire by Israeli forces at the hospital, the organisation said.

The majority of the injured were children, it said, two of whom are in critical condition.


Posted by b on November 11, 2023 at 7:38 UTC | Permalink

https://www.moonofalabama.org/2023/11/h ... l#comments

Hard to say who authorized the strike deep in Lebanon. Normally I say the tail don't wag the dog but given the cast of characters, Nutty and The World's Greatest Zionist, I could see an exception to that rule, Nutty is desperate and Sleepy Joe could easily be led to where he wants to go anyway ...These guys and Zelensky, all they got is war.
"There is great chaos under heaven; the situation is excellent."

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Re: Palestine

Post by blindpig » Sat Nov 11, 2023 6:49 pm

Ethnic Cleansing Is Not a War
NOVEMBER 9, 2023

Image
Children and woman crying following the Zionist massacre at Al-Ahli Hospital in Gaza on Tuesday, October 17, 2023. Photo: Ali Jadallah/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images.

By Agonas – Nov 6, 2023

Ethnic Cleansing Beyond the Battlefield of Imperialism

One of the most tragic violent aspects of ethnic cleansing is the intentional targeting of children, as they represent the future of the targeted group. The example of Indigenous residential schools in Canada serves as a stark reminder of the devastating impact of such policies on children, their communities, and the enduring struggle for healing and justice. Understanding and acknowledging the historical and contemporary instances of ethnic cleansing is crucial to ensure such atrocities are not repeated in the future.

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These young individuals are seen as the bearers of culture, identity, and the future of their ethnic group. By disrupting their lives, culture, and education, the perpetrators aim to weaken the continuity of the targeted group. Children may be subjected to death, assimilation, abuse, sexual abuse, and the stripping of their cultural heritage, leaving deep and lasting scars.
Ethnic cleansing involves a deliberate and coordinated effort to displace, subjugate, or eliminate an ethnic or racial group from a particular territory. It can encompass various forms of violence, including forced relocation, discrimination, violence, and genocide. The goal is to alter the demographic composition of an area by eliminating or assimilating the targeted group.

Indigenous and Western worldviews are quite different. Indigenous views value nature and community harmony, while Western ideas prioritize humans over nature and resource use. Western thought sees humans as superior to everything else in the environment.

White supremacy has served as a foundation, upholding capitalist systems and enabling exploitation, all while severing our connection to both culture and the Earth. Rooted in colonization, this toxic ideology has been used to justify the domination of Indigenous lands and the extraction of resources for profit. It has created a hierarchical structure that benefits a privileged few at the expense of marginalized communities. This separation from culture is deliberate, as it weakens collective resistance and allows for preserving a system that prioritizes economic gain above all else.

Ethnic cleansing is intertwined with the forces of capitalism and imperialism throughout history. Economic interests and imperial ambitions fueled the desire to control and reshape territories, leading to the displacement or elimination of indigenous or minority populations.

Capitalism’s pursuit of resources, labor, and markets often results in the colonization of foreign lands, where indigenous people may be viewed as obstacles to economic exploitation. Imperial powers, driven by expansionist goals, have used ethnic cleansing as a means to consolidate their control over conquered territories, enabling the extraction of wealth and resources.

In Canada, from the late 19th century until the 1990s, the Canadian government and Christian churches ran these institutions. Hundreds of thousands of Indigenous children were killed, abused, forcibly taken from their families and communities, forbidden to speak their native languages or practice their cultures, and subjected to physical and emotional abuse.

The impact on children was profound. Many suffered physical and psychological trauma, and the loss of their cultural identities left lasting scars. These schools aimed to assimilate Indigenous children into Western culture, effectively erasing their Indigenous heritage. This policy amounted to a form of ethnic cleansing, as it aimed to alter the demographics and cultural fabric of Indigenous communities.

The majority of Palestinian children in the West Bank and Gaza Strip are living below the poverty line, deprived of essential services like education and healthcare due to conflict-related disruptions. In East Jerusalem, the forced eviction of Palestinian families from their homes further exacerbates the trauma experienced by children, pushing them into a cycle of displacement and insecurity. Israel has arrested approximately 7,000 Palestinian children. Children make up about half of Gaza’s 2.3 million population. 40 percent of Palestinians killed in Gaza are children. Israel is the only country in the world that systematically prosecutes children in military courts, and this applies exclusively to Palestinian children.

Our report reveals the true extent of Israel’s apartheid regime. Whether they live in Gaza, East Jerusalem and the rest of the West Bank, or Israel itself, Palestinians are treated as an inferior racial group and systematically deprived of their rights. We found that Israel’s cruel policies of segregation, dispossession and exclusion across all territories under its control clearly amount to apartheid. The international community has an obligation to act

Agnès Callamard, Amnesty International’s Secretary General

Imperialism, articulated as the final stage of capitalism by Lenin, has historically been intertwined with ethnic cleansing. Imperial powers, driven by economic interests, sought to expand their influence and control over foreign territories, often resulting in the displacement, subjugation, or elimination of indigenous or minority populations. The pursuit of resources, cheap labor, and new markets has led to the colonization of lands inhabited by vulnerable communities.

Ethnic cleansing, becomes a tool of domination, as imperialist forces attempt to reshape the demographic and cultural landscape to serve their economic objectives. Recognizing the link between ethnic cleansing, capitalism, and imperialism is crucial for understanding the root causes of such atrocities and working towards a more just and equitable global future. The intersection of imperialism, capitalism, and ethnic cleansing has created a legacy of suffering, dispossession, and injustice in various regions of the world, underscoring the urgent need for global awareness and action to abolish capitalism and move into a multipolar Indigenous-led world.

https://orinocotribune.com/ethnic-clean ... not-a-war/

The Genie Has Escaped the Bottle; The Zionists Don’t Know It Though!
NOVEMBER 10, 2023

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Hamas’ armed wing, the Izz ad-Din al-Qassam Brigades hold a Palestinian flag as they destroy a tank of Israeli forces in Gaza City, Gaza on October 07, 2023. Photo: Hani Alshaer – Anadolu Agency.

By Saurabh Kumar Shahi – Nov 8, 2023

Right in front of our eyes, a great churn has begun. Those who are part of it often fail to perceive the churn. It is called a boiling-frog syndrome. However, zoom a bit out and you will realise that the old order is crumbling. Someone once rightly said that the collapse of the Western Order is quite a bit like the collapse of the Roman Empire but with the luxury of watching it on the internet in real-time.

As I write this, the Settler Colonial regime in Occupied Palestine has started its ground invasion. However, it has failed to confirm the invasion officially; only calling it “the expansion of ground attack.” This is a tad disingenuous in that the Zionists know that they need an exit strategy if and when this invasion fails to achieve its stated goals. They can then always deny that a “proper” ground invasion of Gaza was ever attempted.

However, let us look at the bigger picture. I will return to the smaller picture later in this article.

The United States-led international order is in its dying throes. NATO has fought Russia with some fervour in Ukraine often at the cost of common Ukrainians. That war is now all but lost. It will ensure that the so-called deterrence of the Western Power can never be established in Eurasia. In a few years, the alliance will be marred by fratricide and will turn into a rump.

However, that is not all. The same fate awaits it in the Middle East. Biden Administration is under the impression that everything shall be hunky dory after the operations in Gaza. It will be anything, but. First of all, the Resistance in Gaza is not the same entity as it was 15 years or even nine years ago. This new Hamas is sharp, perceptive, calculative and forward-thinking. It has been trained by those who are among the experts of resistance. Those rooted in the Revolutionary Ideology of 1979.

Hamas, in many ways, is like Hezbollah now; disciplined and unemotional. Take for example the raids Hamas did inside Occupied Palestinian lands on 7th October. It was not merely a raid to kill and capture soldiers. It was a raid to blind the Zionist Regime. The famed Gaza Division that had put a stranglehold on the population of Gaza for years got a bloody nose it will scarcely recover from. Sources say that the attack was meant to destroy this Division’s intelligence and kinetic capabilities. It becomes obvious when one takes so much as even a cursory glance at the numbers. For example, IDF’s losses inside Signal Intelligence units were paralysing. Unit 414, the Nesher Battalion, lost 19 persons Killed in Action (KIA) and around 30 soldiers wounded and captured. Their intelligence apparatus at Camp Urim was laid to waste. Its Signal Battalion Commander was liquidated at Camp Reim along with the commander of the Ghost Unit.

The story was the same with the 933rd Nahal Infantry Brigade where the commander and his two deputies were liquidated along with a couple of dozens of soldiers. This has now blinded the Division as these were the guys who knew the geography of Gaza and maintained human intelligence assets.

On the kinetic capability front, the premier Special Operations Forces unit Sayerat Matkal, Shayetet 13 Naval Special Forces and Shaldag Air SOF all lost various commanders KIA. In no previous conflict did the regime suffer such blowback. It will never recover from it.

Palestinian Resistance Frustrates Israeli Advance into Gaza


Returning to the larger picture, the whole deterrence that the regime and the US thought it could implement is gone. Sample this. The US sent the strongest of possible warnings to Ansarullah in Yemen. It did not dither and has all practical purposes declared war on the Zionist Regime. France, Germany and the US all warned Hezbollah to sit quietly. It has responded by liquidating over 130 soldiers and destroying several intelligence-gathering bases of the apartheid regime worth scores of billions of dollars. The US also warned the Resistance groups inside Syria and Iraq to abstain and they have responded with as many as 34 attacks on the US’ illegal bases in both countries.

The biggest loss for the US and the Zionist Regime is this absolute mockery of deterrence that the Resistance Axis has made. There is no going back from here.

Talking of the larger picture, the Resistance has also permanently destroyed the conspiracy by some of the Arab elites and collaborators to maintain a status quo ante where they collaborate and expand their relationship with the Zionist Regime at the cost of the occupation of the Palestinians. The Western hubris is broken now. The massive pro-Palestine protests across the United States and Europe symbolise that the ruling elites here cannot continue to put the interests of the Zionist Lobby over the will of their population. And while it will take time to break the stranglehold of the Zionist Lobby, one thing is sure there is no going back to the old ways now. We will slowly start to see the clamour grow inside the Western elites to bring justice to the Palestinians.

The iron grip of the Zionist Lobby has already started to develop fissures. The way some of the current and previous ministers and officials from European Countries have come out in support of the Palestinian cause—including but not limited to Spain, Greece and Ireland—has rattled the lobby. They realise that whatever the endgame in Gaza; whatever the operational realities of the invasion, the status quo ante cannot be maintained now.

The men and material damage to the interests of the United States will further hasten this process. The Americans must feel the pinch. Luckily, the Resistance in both Syria and Iraq is capable of serving it to them.

However, the time has also come for the financial blow. Years of dollar-printing have saddled the American Economy. However, rather than managing it, the Americans have become addicted to it. It should also be mentioned that the US Govt. will add another $10 trillion on top of its $34 trillion debt within 3 years at current deficit levels. Annual interest costs will reach $1.5+ trillion while major economies move away from the US dollar in trade. There’s no soothing this pain. The US is doomed.

Understandably, many people are not perceptive enough to see all these changes happening around them. This brings me to what I mentioned in the first paragraph; the boiling frog syndrome. If you put a frog in the boiling water, it will jump out. However, if you put it in cold water and then slowly bring it to a boil, the frog doesn’t perceive the temperature rise and dies. The United States and the Zionist Regimes are that frog.

https://orinocotribune.com/the-genie-ha ... it-though/

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Blinken trip to the Middle East leads to nowhere, as expected
China Daily | Updated: 2023-11-10 08:18

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A handout picture released by Iraq's Prime Minister's Media Office on Nov 5, 2023 shows Prime Minister Mohamed Shia al-Sudani (R) meeting with US Secretary of State Antony Blinken in Baghdad. [Photo/VCG]

United States Secretary of State Antony Blinken ended his four-day trip to the Middle East on Monday and returned with, what all parties called, "empty hands".

His last stop on Monday was Turkiye where he received a cold shoulder. Not only were there no senior officials to welcome him at the airport, even Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan "avoided "meeting him.

The cold shoulder from Erdogan epitomized the reception Blinken received across the region. When Blinken arrived in Israel, the US' staunch ally in the Middle East, he showed "absolute support" for Israel and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and hoped Netanyahu would agree to his "humanitarian temporary cease-fire" plan to allow humanitarian supplies to enter Gaza, but Netanyahu rejected the plan.

Blinken's trip comes in the backdrop of unprecedented discontent with the US around the world. As Israel is targeting Gaza and the whole of Palestine directly, the ground offensive it has launched is causing heavy civilian casualties in Gaza, giving rise to mounting discontent against the US and Israel around the Arab world, while also causing the US' allies in the West and around the world to distance themselves from it.

Under mounting pressure from right-wing Jewish lobbyists and Republicans, the divisions within the Democratic Party and unfavorable polling in several "battleground states" with high concentration of immigrants from Middle East countries, the Joe Biden administration was forced to send Blinken on a hasty trip to the Middle East. There was a paradox though. The mission was not only meant to show the US' "unreserved support "to Israel, but also to try and appease growing discontent among Middle East countries.

According to veteran US diplomats, Blinken received a cold shoulder even in pro-US countries because while the US tried to show off its dominant influence over Israel, it also showed that it either does not have or does not intend to use this influence to meet the demands of local non-Jewish nations in the region.

As Blinken wrapped up his awkward trip to the Middle East, several countries recalled their ambassadors to Israel. As the casualties inflicted by the Israeli offensive in Gaza increase, international discontent with Israel will continue to rise, and the spillover effects will unavoidably implicate the US. All this shows that such paradoxical missions of the US will lead to nowhere.

http://global.chinadaily.com.cn/a/20231 ... ed719.html

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Historic meeting today in Riyadh of Iranian president Raisi and Saudi Prime Minister Mohammed bin Salman (MbS) about which mainstream is telling you nothing
November 11, 2023

Once again it would appear that mainstream Western media outlets are waiting for Washington to hand them the press release on what to say before they report on one of the most remarkable international news developments of the day. This is all the more striking given that the news report being used by non-Western media outlets for their coverage was issued by…Agence France Presse.

See https://www.ndtv.com/world-news/gaza-in ... ia-4565957

For those unfamiliar with Indian media, ndtv.com is a Hindi language broadcaster owned by the largest business conglomerate in India, the Adani Group. Europeans are most likely to have heard of Adani in connection with its seaport management subsidiary which plans to expand its presence in Greece.

The link above was sent to me early this morning by WION, India’s global English-language broadcaster, when they requested an interview to discuss the significance of the events that are playing out today in Riyadh, where leaders of the Arab League and of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) are sitting down together and discussing what to do about the Hamas-Israeli war. As regards WION itself, I direct your attention to the studio location of the hosts of this show – Durban, South Africa. Like China’s CGTN, or like the originators of all such global news broadcasters, CNN and the BBC, WION has studios in various countries around the world, not only in Mumbai.

When my video interview is posted on the internet by WION on youtube, I will add it below. It appears to be available now on Facebook under the following identification: Iran’s President Ebrahim Raisi in Saudi Arabia Alyson Le Grange joins Dr Gilbert Doctorow, In the meantime, not to lose the “scoop” value of what I am about to say, I set out here the main points.

The WION presenter described the meeting in Riyadh today as “historic,” noting that it is the first visit to Saudi Arabia by an Iranian leader in 11 years. To be sure, President Raisi’s arrival comes within the fold of the OIC, of which Iran is a member. It is unclear whether there will be any side meeting between Raisi and MbS. However, the very fact of his being welcomed in Riyadh makes the day memorable given the history of intense competition between Iran and Saudi Arabia for leadership in the Middle Eastern region, and given that the beneficiary of the outbreak of war between Israel and Hamas was Iran, at the expense of the Saudis, whose near completion of normalization of relations with Israel was wrecked by the Hamas attack of 7 October.

You will note in the article cited above skepticism expressed by a spokesman of the Islamic Jihad that anything of practical value can be achieved by today’s meeting in Riyadh. That is perfectly true if by ‘practical value’ one means agreement on military measures to be taken jointly against Israel for the purpose of ending its deadly rampage in Gaza. All of the state players in the region, and even the non-state Hezbollah in Lebanon, are on record as opposing an escalation to a wider, regional war.

This is precisely where the presence of Raisi at the meeting can redirect the anger of all the Muslim states in the region over the slaughter of their Palestinian brethren by the Israeli Defense Force from hard power to soft power. Raisi a week ago proposed that Middle Eastern oil and gas exporters declare an embargo on shipments to all countries which are now supporting Israeli aggression. In this sense, he was taking a page out of the American playbook, which has used economic and trade sanctions very widely as a substitute for hot war to destroy those countries whose policies the U.S. does not like.

Yes, you may object, an embargo on shipments to the United States would have little meaning given that the country is now an exporter rather than importer of hydrocarbons. However, such an embargo could have devastating effects on EU member states, which already are short on supplies due to their sanctions on Russia. At a minimum, the very threat of an embargo could serve to widen the gap between EU member states that are content to follow Ursula van der Leyen on her ideologically driven path to hell versus those EU member states that still have an understanding of objective reality.

Watch this space!

©Gilbert Doctorow, 2023

********

Nasrallah's Second Speech On Gaza

This afternoon Beirut time Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah delivered a speech on the occasion of Hizbullah's Martyr's Day.

(Rough transcript from listening to the English translation of the speech by Press TV)

---Begin of speech---

In the first part Nasrallah explains why the date for Martyr Day was chosen. It goes back to a successful attack on the Israeli occupation troops in Beirut on November 11 1982. He goes on to explain the role and importance of martyrs and their relation with god. He congratulates the families of the martyrs. He also congratulates those who sacrifice for Gaza.

Nasrallah then turns to events in Gaza.

The first issue is the attack of Israel on civilians. The second is the resistance there.

He describes the crimes of Israel against helpless civilians in full view of the world. It is relentless revenge. But there is a second aspect in the word of Israeli politicians. They say that all of this killing has a goal. One is to force the people of Gaza and people of the region to surrender. To give up on resistance because the costs are too high. The other is to make them surrender all their rights. To make them hopeless. After Gaza and the West Bank they will aim at Lebanon.

Israel is mistaken. Its aims will not be achieved.

We know that they did not achieve their aims in Lebanon in the 1982 invasion and the 2006 war despite all their killing and destruction of homes. The Lebanese peoples' support for resistance only grew. Their choice was not to surrender but to increase their resistance.

That is also why we should resist normalization with Israel.

The Israeli brutality is increasing the resistance against it. There are also protest everywhere and it puts pressure on politicians to call for a ceasefire. This will limit the time for Israel's operation. The U.S. administration can stop the war. It must be pushed towards that.

Today there is a summit of 57 Arab and Islamic nations. The Palestinians are not asking the summit to fight a war against Israel. They ask it to put serious pressure on the U.S. to end the aggression against them.

We must draw attention to the resistance in Gaza. They demonstrate the weakness of the Israeli forces. The Israelis have many casualties, more than they admit. The Israelis can not show any victory or even a small success.

The West Bank is critical for the resistance. It can draw Israeli troops away from other fronts.

The Yemeni army has taken a decision to attack Israel. It has great significance. It is a great moral support for the resistance even if its missiles and drones do not always hit Eilat. The Yemenis did not listen to the U.S. threats against them. They have made south Israel less secure and pushed Israel to move air-defenses down south.

The Iraqi resistance is attacking U.S. positions in Iraq and Syria. Before October 7 those fronts were relatively calm. They were re-opened in solidarity with Gaza. Now they challenge U.S. forces. The U.S. sends threats to governments to suppress the resistance. The resistance says you can only end these attacks if you put pressure on Israel.

Syria, within the resistance axis, is taking a great burden. It is supporting the resistance and suffering repercussions for that. In Syria the U.S. is supporting ISIS against the Syrian troops.

Iran is another front of the resistance. Its limitless support for the resistance is not longer hidden. The strength of the resistance in the region is based on the firm stance of Iran. They spared no funds, weapons or training. Iran is not changing its stand. It does not decide for the resistance but will always support it.

Now to Lebanon. The resistance operations continue on a daily basis. Despite all the precautions the Israeli army takes it gets attacked by the resistance. There are every day brave martyr attacks on Israel.

Last week the resistance came to a new level. For the first time it used attack drones. We also used new missiles to target Israeli bases. They carry warheads of 300 to 500 kilogram of explosives. The operations carried out yesterday also get to deeper depths. Yesterday a Israeli medical official from one hospital in the north said that had receive some 300 casualties. The Israeli government does not admit that.

The resistance responds to every Israeli attack. We will not tolerate any attack on our civilians. We have reconnaissance drones over all of north Israel. Some came back, some are shot down. They draw away Israeli air defenses from other fronts.

We will continues with this. We will increase the quantity, quality and depths of our operations. The people in Lebanon support the resistance. This helps to be an effective influential front.

What happens on the battlefield is more important than my speech. Time is important for the resistance. It helps to grow until the enemy admits defeat.

When all the pressure comes together the enemy will have to settle. Netanyahoo is changing his aims on an hourly basis. It shows the pressure Israel is under. Its military failure on the ground and the protests are all pressing on it. The time for it is limited.

The resistance will achieve victory and Israel will not achieve its aims.

I ask you to pray for the martyr's and for our success. We pledge to continue on our paths. The finally victory will come - god willing.

Israel after October 7 is no longer what it was. Its strategic position and its security is diminished.

We must continue on our paths.

May you all be blessed.

--- End of Nasrallah's speech ---

Posted by b on November 11, 2023 at 14:52 UTC | Permalink

https://www.moonofalabama.org/2023/11/n ... .html#more

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Blades of Grass
November 10, 2023

Israelis joke about needing to decimate each generation of Palestinian militants as “mowing the grass,” an ugly metaphor that’s penetrated think-tanks in Official Washington, Elizabeth Murray first reported in 2012.

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A blade of grass being brought to Indonesian Hospital in Jabalia, Gaza on Oct. 9, 2023.
(Wafa (Q2915969) in contract with a local company APAimages/Wikimedia Commons)

By Elizabeth Murray
Special to Consortium News
Nov. 16, 2012

In early 2010, one of Washington’s most prestigious think tanks was holding a seminar on the Middle East which included a discussion of Israel’s December 2008-January 2009 assault on Gaza which killed about 1,300 Palestinians.

When the death toll was mentioned, one expert on the panel smiled enigmatically and intoned: “It’s unfortunate, but every once in a while you have to mow the lawn.”

The remark, which likened killing hundreds of men, women and children many of them noncombatants with trimming the grass, was greeted with a light tittering around the room, which was filled with some of Washington’s most elite, highly educated and well-paid Middle East experts. Not a single one objected to the panelist’s black humor.

On the contrary, several analysts and experts were grinning at the reference to Israel’s strategy of mounting periodic attacks on the Palestinians to cull each new generation of militants. Such is the nonchalance of Washington’s policy-advising cognoscenti toward the ongoing and systematic genocide of Gaza’s oppressed population.

The cavalier language is symptomatic of the policymaking community’s increasingly pervasive tendency to disregard and disparage the humanity of Palestinian victims of Israeli attacks, which are often waged by Israel’s high-tech drones and U.S.-supplied F-16’s. There is also a tendency to ignore or downplay Israeli war crimes.

This dangerously sociopathic attitude is prevalent whether cloaked in a cheap joke or reflected in the failure by the State Department spokesman to condemn or even acknowledge the criminality of Israel’s latest aerial and sea-based bombardment of Palestinian civilians, at least 18 of whom have been killed in the past 48 hours. Three Israelis also have died in retaliatory rocket fire.

After the latest attacks, the State Department’s statement justified Israel’s bombardment of Gaza as Israel’s “right to defend itself” against the launching of relatively primitive rockets, mostly by radical groups, from inside Gaza.

Yet, while the State Department urged both sides to avoid civilian casualties, nowhere was there mention of the Palestinians’ right to defend themselves from various attacks by Israel. Apparently only one side is granted that privilege, according to the U.S. statement.

The relegation of Palestinians to a less-than-human status by Israel and the United States especially the inhabitants of Gaza who are perpetually locked into an open-air prison and subject to an Israeli blockade was noted by MIT professor Noam Chomsky after a visit to Gaza to attend an academic conference. In comments broadcast by Democracy Now on Nov. 14, [2012] Chomsky remarked:

“It’s kind of amazing and inspiring to see people managing somehow to survive as essentially caged animals subject to constant, random, sadistic punishment – only to humiliate them – no pretext. They [the Palestinians] would like to have dignified lives, but the standard Israeli position is that they shouldn’t raise their heads.”



A Preference for Conflict

Instead of a serious effort to reach a peace acceptable to both sides, Israel seems to prefer a state of endless conflict with the Palestinians. After all, the prospect of peace might require the Israeli government to treat their neighbors as equals and withdraw from territory occupied since 1967.

So, rather than making meaningful concessions, some Israeli hardliners simply promote the idea of periodically “mowing the grass,” i.e. killing the latest generation of Palestinian militants who sprout up from the injustice all around them. Perhaps that is why Israel broke an informal ceasefire on Wednesday [Nov. 14, 2012] by assassinating Hamas military commander Ahmed Jabari in an air strike.

Jabari was killed hours after he received the draft of a permanent truce agreement with Israel, which included mechanisms for maintaining the ceasefire, according to Israeli peace activist Gershon Baskin, who helped mediate talks between Israel and Hamas for the release of Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit.

Jabari was a key Palestinian interlocutor in the release of Shalit, and an important intermediary for truce negotiations with groups such as the PFLP and Islamic Jihad. Such a relatively moderate figure may have been perceived as a threat to Israeli leaders who prefer to portray Hamas as rejectionist toward any peace.

These developments and the U.S. response to them are a chilling omen for those who had hoped for a change in U.S. Middle East policy after the U.S. presidential election – namely, increased pressure on Israel to halt its cruel oppression of Palestinians and obey international law.

There is still a window of opportunity for the U.S. to shift its approach before the violence spirals out of control. One also can hope that President Barack Obama is working the phones to rein in Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. But Obama’s eerie and reprehensible silence during the Israeli assault on Gaza in December 2008-January 2009 must not be repeated.

https://consortiumnews.com/2023/11/10/blades-of-grass/

Placing hope in Obomber? You gotta be kidding.

*******

Does a Now Not So Secret U.S. Military Base in Israel Portend a Wider U.S. War in the Middle East?
By Jeremy Kuzmarov - November 10, 2023

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U.S. Air Force Airmen assigned to Ramstein Air Base, Germany, hand off cargo to the Israeli military, at Nevatim Base, Israel, Oct. 15, 2023. The mission provided the Israel Defense Forces with additional resources, which includes vital munitions, and emphasized the United States’ unwavering and ironclad support for both the Israel Defense Forces and the Israeli people. (U.S. Air Force Photo by Senior Airmen Edgar Grimaldo)
[Source: theintercept.com]

In August, two months before the Tribe of Nova Music Festival massacre, the Pentagon awarded a $35.8 million contract to build U.S. troop facilities for a secret base it maintains deep within Israel’s Negev desert, just 20 miles from Gaza, code-named “Site 512.”

Procurement records describe the secret base, located off Mt. Qeren, as a “life support area,” typical of the kind of language the Pentagon uses for U.S. military sites that it wants to conceal.

Image
[Source: jewishpress.com]

According to The Intercept, Site 512 has been established to help Israel defend itself from Iranian long range missiles and may be used for secret operations in the Middle East, including Iran, which the neo-conservatives have long targeted for regime change.

The U.S. is already closely assisting Israeli military operations in Gaza, providing Israel with billions of dollars in weapons, including smart bombs, as U.S. Special Operations forces directly assist Israel’s military planning and intelligence, according to defensenews.com.[1]

The Pentagon’s contract for building Site 512—which is supposed to be completed by 2026—went to Bryan Construction of Colorado and an Israeli firm, Y.D. Ashush, which previously built a Jewish settlement on stolen Palestinian land, according to The Intercept.

In 2020, members of the settlements were accused of deliberately dumping their sewage into the farmlands of nearby Deir Ballut, preventing its olive harvest and destroying trees, some of which date back to Roman times.

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The Israeli settlement of Leshem built by Y.D. Ashush which also was awarded part of a Pentagon contract for building a secret U.S. military base in the Negev desert. [Source: theintercept.com]

Expanding U.S. Military Presence in the Middle East
The building of Site 512 reflects an expanding U.S. military presence in the Middle East. Following the October 7 Tribe of Nova massacre, the U.S. doubled the number of fighter jets in the region, deployed two aircraft carriers off the coast of Israel, including the USS Eisenhower, and sent teams of U.S. Special Forces into Israel.

Image
USS Eisenhower on its way to the eastern Mediterranean. [Source: nytimes.com]

The New York Times reported on October 15 that “The Pentagon is rapidly doubling the amount of American firepower deployed in the Middle East in an effort to deter a wider regional war and to carry out possible airstrikes to defend American interests.” The Times noted that the U.S. Air Force is sending land-based attack planes to the Persian Gulf, in addition to the Fifth Fleet’s aircraft carriers already there. The Air Force is doubling the number of F-16, A-10, and F-15E squadrons on the ground, which, combined with the four squadrons of F/A-18 jets aboard each carrier, form “an aerial armada of more than 100 attack planes.”

In June, the White House had revealed that the U.S. maintains combat troops in Yemen that trained and advised Yemeni forces to counter the Houthi who fought against the Saudi-installed proxy regime in Yemen and were allied with Iran.

The largest U.S. military base in the Middle East—the Al Udeid Air Base—is west of Doha, the capital of Qatar. It hosts the U.S. Air Force Central Command, which coordinates U.S. bombing operations in Iraq, Syria, Afghanistan and elsewhere, and some 11,000 U.S. military personnel.

Image

Aerial view of Al Udeid Air Base west of Doha. [Source: wikipedia.org]
Construction of the $60 million facility, which the Air Force says “resembles the set of a futuristic movie,” was completed in 2003.

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The U.S. Combined Air Operations Center (CAOC) at Al Udeid Air Base in Qatar provides command and control of air power throughout Iraq, Syria, Afghanistan and 17 other nations. [Source: cnn.com]

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Emblem of the Prince Sultan Air Base. [Source: wikipedia.org]

At that time, the U.S. moved the Air Force Central Command from Saudi Arabia’s Prince Sultan Air Base where, since 1997, it had overseen operations during the war in Iraq.

The U.S. currently hosts at least 10 military bases in Saudi Arabia, according to a 2021 report by Al Jazeera. This is in addition to 10 bases in Kuwait, 12 bases in Bahrain, at least 12 bases in Iraq, 6 bases in Oman, 2 bases in Jordan, 4 bases in Syria, 2 bases in Turkey, one in Egypt, and three bases in the United Arab Emirates (UAE).

Image
[Source: aljazeera.com]

According to the same report, the U.S. hosts 3,731 of its troops in Bahrain, 2,169 in Kuwait, 2,500 in Iraq, and 600 in Syria. Overall, the U.S. has 40,000 troops stationed across the Middle East, according to Axios, and on October 31, announced the deployment of an additional 900 troops to the region.

One reason why the U.S. is interested in building bases in Israel is that, if U.S. relations sour with countries like Saudi Arabia and Turkey, and if the U.S. military is kicked out of Syria, the bases in Israel will allow its military to maintain a foothold in the oil-rich Middle East.

Plans for Wider War on Iran
One country notably absent from those hosting U.S. military bases is Iran, which has forged an independent path since the 1979 Iranian Revolution.

A 2009 Brookings Institution report, Which Path to Persia?, written by such neo-conservative war hawks as Kenneth Pollack, CIA operative Bruce Reidel and Martin Indyk, a Special Assistant to President Bill Clinton and former U.S. ambassador to Israel, specified that Iran’s leaders had “worked assiduously to undermine American interests and influence throughout the Middle East” since the 1979 revolution and so were a menace to the U.S.

The authors in turn explored the potential for successful military invasion or regime change by attempting to trigger a popular revolution, supporting an insurgency (ethnic or political) against the regime and aiding a military coup.[2]

Image
[Source: scribd.com]

One of the figures the report contemplated elevating to power was Reza Pahlavi, the son of Mohammad Shah Reza Pahlavi, who was installed following the 1953 CIA-backed coup against Mohammad Mossadegh, who had wanted to nationalize Iran’s oil industry.

Image
Iranian Revolutionary Guard soldiers look at an exhibition at a former prison run by the pre-revolution intelligence service, SAVAK, now a museum, where wax mannequins of an interrogator and a prisoner being tortured, are on display, in Tehran, Iran. Portraits of the shah, Queen Farah and his son, Crown Prince Reza Pahlavi, who now lives in exile in the US, hang above the scene, January 7, 2019. (AP Photo/Ebrahim Noroozi)

Museum displaying torture methods by SAVAK agents of the Shah at Evin Prison in Tehran. The CIA helped in the creation of the Shah under the cover of USAID’s Office of Public Safety (OPS). [Source: timesofisrael.com]
Which Path to Persia? was characteristically dishonest in accusing Iran of carrying out terrorist attacks—such as the 1996 attack on the Khobar Towers in Saudi Arabia that killed 19 U.S. soldiers—which independent investigators said they were not responsible for. The report also played up the threat of a non-existent nuclear weapons program.[4]

Image
1996 Khobar Towers bombing in Saudi Arabia that left 19 U.S soldiers dead. Iran was accused of masterminding the attack—despite al-Qaeda claiming responsibility. An independent investigation by D. Gareth Porter absolved Iran. [Source: wikipedia.org]

More recent disinformation on Iran has centered on the alleged brutalization by morality police of a young woman, Mahsa Amini, who was featured on a video collapsing independently at a Tehran police station. Amini had had brain surgery as a youth and was judged by Iranian authorities to have died from cardiac arrest, according to a report in The Tehran Times.

Image
[Source: kristianstadsbladedet.se]

While one cannot be one hundred percent certain about what happened to her since all governments lie, it is clear that the U.S. was intent on using her death to fulfill the strategy advanced in the Which Path to Persia report by triggering mass protests that it was hoped would lead to the Ayatollah‘s downfall.

Following the Tribe of Nova massacre, The Wall Street Journal claimed that Iran was involved in conspiratorial plotting with Hamas, though no evidence was provided and independent analysts find this claim to be implausible.

https://i0.wp.com/covertactionmagazine. ... C682&ssl=1[/img]
[Source: news.yahoo.com]

The current conflict in Gaza can easily escalate into a wider war if Israel continues to bomb Lebanon and Syria, drawing the Iranians in.[5]

Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi tweeted that Israel’s actions in Gaza have “crossed the red lines, and this may force everyone to take action,” adding that “Washington asks us to not do anything, but they keep giving widespread support to Israel.”


Washington further upped the ante when it bombed military facilities linked to Iran-backed militias in eastern Syria. This could be the start of the war with Iran that has long been planned for and would be a catastrophe for all humanity.


1.Consortium News reported on how the National Security Agency’s Pine Gap facility in Australia is monitoring the Gaza Strip and surrounding areas with all its resources, and gathering intelligence assessed to be useful to Israel and providing that intelligence to the IDF. Pointing to the unpopularity of U.S. foreign policies, when conservative Kentucky Republican Thomas Massie polled 49,000 people from his impoverished state, they registered overwhelming opposition to sending these billions of dollars for Israel’s daily slaughter of the civilians in Gaza, nearly half of whom are children. ↑

2.Kenneth M. Pollack, et al., Which Path to Persia? Options for a New American Strategy Toward Iran, Analysis Paper No. 20, Saban Center for Middle East Policy, Brookings Institution, June 2009. ↑

3.See Jeremy Kuzmarov, Modernizing Repression: Police Training and Nation Building in the American Century (Amherst, MA: University of Massachusetts Press, 2012), ch. 8. ↑

4.For debunking of the disinformation, see D. Gareth Porter, Manufactured Crisis: The Untold Story of the Iran Nuclear Scare (Charlottesville, VA: Just World Books, 2014); Gareth Porter, “Who Bombed Khobar’s Towers? Anatomy of a Crooked Terrorism Investigation,” Truthout, September 1, 2015, https://truthout.org/articles/who-bombe ... tomy-of-a- crooked-terrorism-investigation/ Osama bin Laden publicly claimed responsibility for the Khobar attacks. Saudi secret police had tortured suspects to gain false confessions that would implicate the Iranians. ↑

5.Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu threatened Lebanon with “devastation” if Israel is attacked from its territory. If Hezbollah is in danger of destruction, Iran could send in troops from the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps to fight alongside its ally. At that point, Israel might decide to strike the IRGC in Iran, as well as in Lebanon. ↑

https://covertactionmagazine.com/2023/1 ... ddle-east/
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Re: Palestine

Post by blindpig » Sun Nov 12, 2023 3:27 pm

What's happening in Palestine and Israel: chronicle of November 11
November 11, 2023
Rybar

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Heavy clashes continue north and northwest of Gaza . The representative of the Hamas military wing Kataib Izz al-Din al-Qassam, Abu Ubaida, announced the destruction and damage of several pieces of equipment and clarified that since the start of the offensive, more than 160 pieces of armored vehicles and bulldozers have been hit. The Palestinians are counterattacking, but there is no talk of regaining control; small groups with RPGs only cause damage and slow down the advance of the IDF.

There is an exchange of blows on the Lebanese-Israeli border ; in response to Hezbollah’s anti-tank missile launches, the IDF is striking with artillery and tanks. No one is trying to cross the border, which, however, does not cancel the growth of tension.

The main attention was focused on the extraordinary summit of Arab states in Saudi Arabia, where important statements for the Gaza Strip and Palestine as a whole were expected, but in the end everything was limited to words of support for the Palestinians and condemnation of Israel’s actions. No “hawkish” measures were taken; no one is in a hurry to sever relations and trade with Israel.

Progress of hostilities
Gaza Strip
The IDF's operation to encircle Gaza is still ongoing. The cutting off of Gaza from the southern part of the enclave has been reliably confirmed , but the Palestinians still have access to the sea, although it does not make much sense.

Clashes continue in the Al-Shati refugee camp, and the IDF carried out several airstrikes supporting the infantry. The main clashes, based on reports from Palestinian sources, are taking place in the area of ​​Al-Shifa Hospital and Al-Quds Hospital . IDF tanks were seen near the latter.


Media resources of the Hamas military wing Kataib Izz ad-Din al-Qassam published a video of one of their attacks on IDF soldiers north of Beit Hanoun .

The footage shows that some Israelis, to put it mildly, are careless about the fighting. Looming waist-deep in windows is not a good idea, especially in the gray zone and given the danger of being close to Hamas tunnels.

However, judging by other official footage from the IDF, Israeli infantry and armored vehicles move and stop in very dense groups, which is unacceptable during combat operations. Yes, Hamas has a limited supply of weapons other than rockets to fire towards Israel and RPG ammunition, but a better-equipped enemy would hardly fail to take advantage of such opportunities.

To the west of the Erez checkpoint, according to statements from Kataib Izz ad-Din al-Qassam, IDF concentrations were covered with mortars, but no evidence was provided for this. However, judging by the main directions of IDF attacks, there is no offensive on Gaza from the eastern side, except that fighting continues in the Beit Lahia area and the Jabaliya area

South direction

In the southern direction everything is the same. Palestinian factions attacked Kibbutz Kissufim, and Israeli aircraft carried out several airstrikes on populated areas in the south of the enclave, including Khan Yunis and Rafah .

Border with Lebanon
Against the backdrop of a speech by Hezbollah Secretary General Hassan Nasrallah, the situation continued to escalate. Hezbollah struck at least 10 strongholds and population centers in northern Israel, traditionally using anti-tank systems and mortars. The IDF responded with massive artillery and air strikes.

In the Labune forests, the IDF continues to burn flora south of An-Nakura , and the Israelis have also attacked the mountains between Ad-Dahira and Teir Harfa . In addition, the IDF UAV struck at its greatest depth since the outbreak began in the Zahrani area , where a truck was burned on a banana plantation.

West Bank
In the Palestinian Authority on the West Bank, protests continued in major cities and clashes between Arab youth and Israeli security forces. However, in general, there is a routinization of the conflict and a decrease in the activity of both Palestinians and Israelis. However, the reduction in tension is very conditional and large-scale clashes may resume.

Actions of pro-Iranian formations in the Middle East

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Pro-Iranian formations in Iraq reported the launch of a kamikaze UAV at the Rumeilan base in Syria. There is no evidence or additional information yet. As before, the strikes are very limited in nature and do not cause much harm, although they provoke the United States to expand its presence and activity in carrying out strikes.

Political-diplomatic background
About Macron's statement

The French President called Israel's attacks on the Gaza Strip unjustified. Emmanuel Macron said that Israel is “bombing civilians... children, women, old people.” Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, responding to Macron's words, said that Hamas bears responsibility for civilian casualties.

Arab Summit in Saudi Arabia

Representatives of the League of Arab States and the Organization of Islamic Cooperation took part in the summit in Riyadh, during which they discussed Israel's ground invasion of Gaza and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict in general.

It is noteworthy that Iranian President Ibrahim Raisi was present at the meeting: he visited Saudi Arabia for the first time since the restoration of diplomatic relations between the two countries earlier this year.

In general, nothing noteworthy was said by either side: the Arabs complained about Israeli cruelty and spoke of the need to create a Palestinian state. Raisi also accused the United States of participating in the conflict, and also called for arming the Palestinians and paying attention to the Israeli nuclear program.

In fact, you shouldn’t expect any real results from this meeting - the parties, in order not to lose face somehow, expressed their concern, but do not intend to do anything, including, apparently, Iran. Some practical steps should rather be expected when the post-war structure of the Gaza Strip and Israel's role in controlling the Palestinian enclave are decided. Well, the Palestinians, as always, should not hope for anything other than warm words of support.

Speech by Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah

Almost immediately after the summit in Riyadh, Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah spoke, in which he again threatened Israel, supported the Palestinians with words, and in general rather echoed the speech of the Iranian president at the last summit.

This may probably be followed by some kind of aggravation on the Israeli-Lebanese border, but it will not affect the course of the conflict globally. Everything indicates that Hezbollah is trying to minimize its interference in what is happening in the Gaza Strip.

https://rybar.ru/chto-proishodit-v-pale ... -noyabrya/

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Israel, the US Army, ISIS, and Al Qaeda Bomb Syria in 24 Hours
NOVEMBER 10, 2023

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US Army illegally operating in Syria to steal Syrian oil. Photo: Syria News/file photo.

The unholy ‘defensive’ alliance of the US-led war criminals and terrorists all bombed Syria on four different fronts within the same day, ISIS ambushed a Syrian Arab Army column in the Syrian desert, Al Qaeda fired many drones against the Syrian Arab Army in the northwestern region, Israel bombs Syrian Arab Army posts in the southern region, and the US Army bombs Syrian Arab Army posts in Deir Ezzor in the northeast.

At first, it was the ambush at dawn by the US-created, funded, trained, armed, and commanded ISIS terrorists to the north of the Syrian desert city of Al Sukhna murdering 21 soldiers and injuring 7 others. The heinous terrorist attack was definitely supervised by the US Army who remnants of ISIS terrorists feel safe to operate out of the vicinity of the US illegal military bases in the country.

This ISIS terrorist attack was followed a couple of hours later by a swarm of kamikaze armed booby-trapped drones fired by the US-led NATO Turkey-sponsored Al Qaeda terrorists, a so-called Fatah Mubin group loyal to the Turkish madman Erdogan, against the towns, villages, and Syrian Arab Army (SAA) posts in the Latakia northern countryside.

The SAA units in the region managed to shoot down the incoming drones foiling its terrorist attack.

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Some of the NATO Turkey-sponsored Al Qaeda drones shot down by SAA
If that was not enough, the British-created US-led Western-sponsored Israel bombed posts in the Sweida province in the southern region.

A statement by a Syrian military spokesperson conveyed by SANA read:

“At approximately 10:50 pm today, the Israeli enemy carried out an air attack from the direction of Baalbek in Lebanon, targeting some military points in the southern region,” adding: “The aggression led to some material losses.”

Local sources told Syria News that the Israeli aggression targeted a Syrian Arab Army air defense battery in the countryside of Sweida province in the south of the country.

The US-led Axis of Evil, Terrorism, Genocide, and Depravity concluded its coordinated war of terrorism against Syria by the leading force in this axis, the US Army bombing SAA posts on the outskirts of the city of Deir Ezzor, and the outskirts of Deir Ezzor Military Airport in the northeastern province.

The Pentagon’s USCENTCOM had the audacity to issue a statement claiming responsibility for its terrorist bombing in Syria, claiming they attacked a facility used by the Iranian IRGC boogyman they usually use to justify their war crimes in Syria and Iraq, and that their terrorist attack is to ‘defend their people’ in our country!

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Statement by the US-CENTCOM admitting their war crime in Syria

The US Army in Syria is illegally deployed without the concession of the Syrian government which rightly calls the US military presence in the country as an occupation force. The US Army breaches Syrian sovereignty and territorial integrity without a mandate of the United Nations Security Council thus exposing its double face when it mobilized dozens of countries to support the junta in Kiev against the Russian Army which entered the eastern and southern Ukrainian provinces to protect the majority of the people there of Russian origins oppressed by NAZI armed groups and the part of the Ukrainian Army loyal to the Globalists under the narrative it stands for the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Ukraine, the aggressor.

Occupying forces whether the US Army or Israel which occupies the Syrian Golan have no right to self-defense as per International Law, they only enjoy the right of getting bombed until they leave the land they occupy.

We anticipate proper retaliation against the illegal US Army bases in Syria after these coordinated terrorist attacks, the Syrian Resistance has set the rule earlier to bomb the US force in the country each time Israel bombs Syria, and since the US Army admitted to also carrying out bombing of posts within Syria, they have to expect to be bombed more intensively now.

Watch the US commander-in-chief and a Pentagon official stating the tasks assigned to the US Army illegally deployed in Syria:

(Video at link.)

https://orinocotribune.com/israel-the-u ... -24-hours/

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MORE THAN 40 JOURNALISTS KILLED IN THE FIRST MONTH OF BOMBINGS ON PALESTINE
Nov 10, 2023 , 12:12 pm .

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Several people carry the bodies of two Palestinian journalists (Photo: AFP)

Since October 7, 41 journalists have died in the war that Israel has imposed on Palestine. Among them, 36 are Palestinian journalists killed by Israeli attacks in the Gaza Strip.

This territory has become an unsafe place for correspondents who are covering the conflict, which is why Reporters Without Borders (RSF) calls for protection for those who are still there. Not only are Palestinian civilians trapped in a territory of approximately 45 square kilometers, but journalists are also under constant pressure from air, land and sea attacks everywhere by Zionism.

More than 50 media outlets have been totally or partially destroyed by Israeli attacks. The last one was the Agence France-Presse (AFP) office on November 3.

On the other hand, on October 28, an information blockade imposed by Israel was carried out during a ground operation by the Israel Defense Forces (IDF). That day they notified AFP and the Reuters news agency that they could not "guarantee the safety of their journalists in Gaza."

Israeli authorities have repeatedly said that their armed forces "are not attacking journalists." However, the fact that so far 36 reporters have been killed in the bombings suggests that there is no interest in protecting them.

"What is happening in the Gaza Strip is a tragedy for journalism: more than one journalist per day has been murdered since October 7. The number of media professionals murdered, along with thousands of civilians, grows by the day. day by day. With their arbitrary airstrikes, the Israeli armed forces are eliminating journalists one after another without restrictions, while their unacceptable comments reveal an open disregard for International Humanitarian Law. The situation is urgent. We call for the protection of journalists in the Gaza Strip and that foreign journalists be allowed to enter the territory so that they can work freely," said Jonathan Dagher, head of RSF's Middle East bureau.

https://misionverdad.com/mas-de-40-peri ... -palestina

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UN vote on Israeli occupation
November 12, 3:30

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The UN voted to declare illegal Israeli settlements in the occupied Palestinian territories, including East Al-Quds (Jerusalem) and the occupied Golan Heights: In favor

- 148
Abstained - 18
Against - 7

Earlier, Arab countries reported that they adhere to the position on the need to create a Palestinian state within the borders of 1967 with its capital in East Jerusalem with the end of Israel's occupation of the Palestinian territories. Actually, Russia and China adhere to this position.
Israel continues to declare that it is going to occupy the Gaza Strip, simultaneously threatening war with Lebanon if Hezbollah interferes even more actively in the conflict.

https://colonelcassad.livejournal.com/8759628.html

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Death toll crosses 11,000 in Gaza on the 35th day of Israeli bombings

With the rising death toll several hospitals in Gaza are offering refuge to the thousands displaced by Israel’s indiscriminate airstrikes

November 11, 2023 by Peoples Dispatch

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Photo: Wafa News Agency

Israel’s genocidal bombardment in Gaza entered its 35th day on November 10, Friday, as Israeli ground troops started penetrating deeper into besieged Gaza, raising fears of further killings, destruction and human suffering.

Meanwhile, Israeli airstrikes continued to target civilian infrastructure, including hospitals in Gaza where tens of thousands of Palestinians have taken refuge to escape being killed or injured.

The death toll Palestinians killed by Israeli airstrikes has crossed 11,000, of whom more than 4,400 were children, over 2,900 women, and over 600 elderly. Around 27,000 Palestinians have been wounded in the Israeli airstrikes, and over 3,000 are reported missing. Despite repeated calls for a ceasefire, Israeli forces have continued its assault on the densely populated civilian territory.

As per latest reports, Israeli forces on Thursday and in the morning on Friday bombed the Al-Shifa hospital in central Gaza, the largest medical complex in the Palestinian territory. The airstrikes have resulted in multiple casualties, with reports stating that at least six people have been killed, and several others, including children have been injured.

One of the airstrikes reportedly hit an area of the hospital where journalists were stationed, injuring several. Palestinian health ministry spokesperson, Ashraf al-Qudra, told news outlets that “Israel is now undertaking these dangerous steps against the hospitals to put them completely out of commission and subsequently displace the people sheltering in them, as well as the patients and medics.”

Al-Qudra further noted that Israeli airstrikes also struck two children’s hospitals, al-Rantisi and al-Nasser on Friday. Several other hospitals were also targeted in the past two days, including the Indonesian and the Al-Quds hospitals, with reports estimating that the number of hospitals now operating in Gaza has come down to 18 from a total of 35.

Moreover, journalists covering the situation in Gaza have also faced attacks from Israel’s indiscriminate bombings. The Committee to Protect Journalists has documented that 39 journalists were confirmed to have been killed between October 7 and November 9. Moreover 8 journalists were reported to have been injured, 13 arrested and three missing.

On Thursday, November 9, more than 750 journalists from dozens of new paltforms signed a letter harshly criticizing the Western media coverage of the war and Israel’s continued killing of journalists in Gaza.

Reports have also noted that as the war in Gaza rages on, Israeli security forces have intensified their illegal and violent raids and violence in the occupied West Bank. In a raid in the refugee camp in the city of Jenin yesterday, Israeli forces reportedly killed at least ten Palestinians, besides wounding at least 20 others.

Raids have also been taking place elsewhere in the occupied West Bank, including in Ramallah, Bethlehem, Nablus, Hebron, Tubas, among others. Israeli forces claim that they are conducting the raids to apprehend Palestinian fighters who take part in armed resistance against the Israeli occupation.

The occupied West Bank, along with East Jerusalem, were already suffering from these increasingly regular and violent raids, even before the Israel offensive in Gaza began on October 7. The raids have only intensified manifold ever since, with reports estimating that close to 2,500 Palestinians have been arrested in these sweeping raids.

Before October 7, Israeli security forces and settlers had already killed more than 200 Palestinians this year, and since October 7, an additional 174 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli forces as they try to crackdown on protests, demonstrations and other acts of resistance organized in the occupied West Bank to express support and solidarity with Palestinians in Gaza.

https://peoplesdispatch.org/2023/11/11/ ... -bombings/

Israel wages war against Gaza’s remaining hospitals

The Al-Shifa hospital ran out of fuel due to the ongoing siege by Israeli forces. Occupation snipers and drones have been positioned all around the hospital complex, opening fire at any sign of movement.

November 11, 2023 by Tanupriya Singh, Ana Vračar

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Palestinians injured by Israel being treated at the Al-Shifa hospital.

The Al-Shifa hospital in Gaza, the largest medical facility in the besieged strip, was forced to suspend its operations on the morning of November 11 after it ran out of fuel. Patients have already begun to die as Israeli occupation forces have laid siege to the hospital.

Israeli snipers and drones positioned all around the hospital have opened fire at any sign of movement.

Abed Ghazal, a health activist from Palestine with the People’s Health Movement, said on Saturday, that it is “astounding that hospitals are being treated as legitimate targets.” As Ghazal provided updates, the people working at Al-Shifa, as well as those sheltering there, remained under direct attack.

Health workers at Al-Shifa are now forced to provide care with access to virtually no medical supplies at all, and patients are forced to cram in the corridors, Ghazal said. As many nurses and doctors have spent weeks in the hospitals without stopping, with little news about families and friends, the pressure is now getting worse.

While Al-Shifa’s health workers vowed to remain as long as patients needed care, they have criticized the international response to what has been happening around the hospital. The international reaction to the attacks on Al-Shifa and other hospital complexes in Gaza is far from enough, Ghazal said, and it should be denounced for what it is.

Speaking to Al Jazeera, Al-Shifa’s director, Muhammad Abu Salmiya had said, “Patients are dying by the minute, victims and wounded are also dying”, confirming that one baby in an incubator had died, as well as a young man in the intensive care unit.

Gaza’s Deputy Health Minister, Dr. Youssef Abu Alreesh later told the news publication that all generators and power sources in the hospital were off. There are 39 newborn babies in incubators at Al-Shifa, now kept alive by manual support as both generators and solar panels have become non-operational.

Shortly after the power blackout on Saturday, Al-Shifa’s yard was also struck by shelling, causing a fire. Ambulances have been prevented from entering or leaving the hospital complex.

The IOF has cordoned off the hospital complex, while buildings in its vicinity have been shelled non-stop for over 12 hours as of Saturday morning. “Any moving person within the compound is targeted”, Salmiya said, adding that one member of the medical personnel had been shot and killed by a sniper as he tried to reach the babies in the incubator.

“A few families tried to leave but they were targeted, now they are lying dead outside the hospital”, Alreesh told Al Jazeera, adding that the hospital’s intensive care unit had also been hit by mortar fire.

Al-Shifa no longer has electricity and internet, and has been left without fuel, food, water, and medical supplies. Doctors Without Borders (MSF) stated early on Saturday that it was unable to contact any of its staff inside Al-Shifa, adding that there were patients in the hospital who were in critical condition and unable to move.

Tens of thousands of people displaced by the Israeli bombardment who were seeking shelter in the hospital yard are currently also trapped.

Shifa Hospital today. A camp for the internally displaced, over 50 thousand pic.twitter.com/HAJyHJmCQj

— Ghassan Abu Sitta (@GhassanAbuSitt1) November 9, 2023

Palestinian Health Ministry’s Director-General, Mounir Al-Barsh has stated that a mass grave would have to be dug at Al-Shifa on Saturday to bury the bodies of 100 people who have died at the hospital– “We cannot move within or outside the perimeter of the hospital. We are surrounded, we cannot bury our dead.”

Israel had bombed the Al Shifa Hospital at least five times between November 9 and 10, as confirmed by the spokesperson of the Palestinian Health Ministry, Ashraf al-Qudra. At least 13 people were killed after Israel bombed Al-Shifa’s obstetrics department and courtyard early on Friday.

The Israeli forces also dropped internationally-banned white phosphorus bombs on neighborhoods around Al-Shifa on Friday, the Wafa News Agency reported.

Two people were also killed in an attack in the vicinity of the Al-Nasr Medical Center. The attack forced the closure of the facility’s children’s hospital which is the sole remaining specialized pediatric care unit in North Gaza, according to the World Health Organization.

In a separate statement on Friday night, the Palestinian Red Crescent Society (PRCS) condemned a direct attack by occupying forces on Al-Quds hospital, including the direct firing of live ammunition at its intensive care unit (ICU). The attack killed one displaced person and injured 28 others.

As of Friday, the hospital had remained isolated for the fifth consecutive day amid shortages of food, water and medical supplies, due to continuous Israeli shelling destroying buildings and streets in the vicinity, and cutting off access routes to Al-Quds.

The head of the Al-Nasr hospital and the Al Rantisi Pediatric Hospital, Mustafa al-Kahlout, told CNN that the facilities were “completely surrounded” and that Israeli tanks were positioned outside. Al-Rantisi Hospital was also directly hit on November 9, which caused fires and damage, according to an update by the UN OCHA. The Al Awda hospital in Jabalia was also bombarded on November 10, in what is being called a “day of war against hospitals”.

According to an update published by the UN OCHA on November 10, 20 out Gaza’s 36 hospitals are no longer functioning because of Israel’s attacks. Israel has killed at least 11,078 Palestinians since the start of its genocidal bombardment of Gaza on October 7. Another 27,490 people have been injured during this period.

https://peoplesdispatch.org/2023/11/11/ ... hospitals/

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Biden Could End All This With One Phone Call

Biden could end this with one phone call. With. One. Phone call. Anyone who tells you otherwise is either lying or ignorant. This mass slaughter is happening because Washington wants it to happen.

Caitlin Johnstone
November 11, 2023

Top ten most popular arguments used to defend Israel’s actions in Gaza:

1. You hate Jews!

2. You love terrorists!

3. But October 7!

4. Hamas would cut your head off you stupid leftist!

5. It’s kind of good to kill Muslims actually.

6. THEY DECAPITATED BABIES

7. THEY COOKED A BABY

8. Israel is killing babies in self-defense.

9. It’s actually very complicated, both sides are bad, objective morality does not exist, all things are exactly the same as all other things, the universe is made of lukewarm gray mush.

10. Hahaha nuke the Arab vermin!



Saying “from the river to the sea” is genocide, but actually committing genocide is not genocide. Genocide is more of a feeling that you feel inside. Like everything else in the universe, it’s about you and how your personal feelings feel.

If ethnic cleansing and mass killing don’t make your feelings feel uncomfortable, then it’s not genocide. If someone saying they want all Palestinians to be free in their homeland makes your feelings feel uncomfortable, it’s genocide. That’s how the world works.



You want to know how morally bankrupt Democrats are? Democrats are so morally bankrupt that right now they are angrier at people who say they refuse to vote for Biden because of his support for the Gaza massacre than they are at Biden for supporting the Gaza massacre.



Biden could end this with one phone call. With. One. Phone call. Anyone who tells you otherwise is either lying or ignorant. This mass slaughter is happening because Washington wants it to happen.

When Israel completely cut off Gaza’s communications last month, Washington called and ordered them to restore it, and connections were immediately restored. It’s always been this way; in 1982 Israel’s assault on Lebanon was halted with a phone call from President Reagan.

They can end this assault just as easily. Don’t let the White House frame itself as a passive witness to this butchery.



Both Zionists and far-right Jew haters want you to believe all this killing is about Jews and Judaism when it’s really about land. It’s one group wanting all the land that an indigenous population was living on. We’ve seen this exact same script played out many times with non-Jews as the perpetrators.

It’s the exact same script, and it’s not even an entirely different cast. Like so many other problems, this one was started by the British.



It’s such an insult to everyone’s intelligence to talk about the mass displacement in Gaza like it’s a temporary arrangement. As though Israel has a history of allowing Palestinians to return to land they’ve driven them out of.




Atoning for the holocaust by backing a genocide. Atoning for Nazism by supporting ethnic cleansing. Atoning for fascism by silencing the critics of state power. Atoning for the racist murderousness of the past by facilitating the racist murderousness of the present.



Ignore their words and watch their actions. If you mentally mute the narratives and verbiage about how Washington wants peace and a two-state solution, and look solely at concrete actions, it just looks like the US helping Israel murder and oppress Palestinians for generations.

Ignore their words and watch their actions is sound advice for any time you feel like someone’s manipulating you, by the way. It applies as much to interpersonal relationships as it does to empires.

https://caitlinjohnstone.com.au/2023/11 ... hone-call/
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Re: Palestine

Post by blindpig » Mon Nov 13, 2023 12:22 pm

What's happening in Palestine and Israel: chronicle for November 12
November 12, 2023
Rybar

Image

The IDF's ground operation in the Gaza Strip continues. The main battles are taking place in the Al-Shati refugee camp , as well as in the vicinity of Al-Shifa, An-Nasr and Rantisi hospitals . In addition, today the Israelis published footage from the Square of the Unknown Soldier in the west of the capital of the enclave, which also confirms the successful advance of the IDF.

Due to the fact that clashes are taking place directly near hospitals, the Israeli command announced a new evacuation route along Al-Rashid Street along the Mediterranean coast. It is noteworthy that a little later, Hamas representatives thanked the doctors for refusing to leave the facilities, but whether the doctors’ decision to stay was voluntary is a debatable issue.

In the northeastern sector, the Israelis carried out a local operation in the Al-Karama area near the city of Beit Hanoun. Command representatives announced the destruction of several militant missile launchers, their tunnels and strongholds. Palestinian groups, in turn, announced a successful attack on IDF positions in this territory.

On Israel's northern borders, regular clashes with Hezbollah continue, as before . Today, the group’s fighters launched an ATGM attack on Dovev , Menara , several IDF strongholds, and also tried to fire rockets at Kiryat Shmona and Nahariya . In the case of Dovev and Menara , they managed to wound more than a dozen people: Hezbollah says military personnel were killed, while the Israelis say only civilians were wounded. The IDF, in turn, continues to continuously shell the territory of southern Lebanon .

Progress of hostilities
Gaza Strip

The IDF's ground operation in the Gaza Strip continues. The main clashes, as before, are taking place in the north and south of Gaza City . Today, footage of the assault on the Al-Karama area between Beit Hanoun and Jabaliya in the northeast of the Palestinian enclave appeared online . In the video, the fighters operate among low-rise buildings in a relatively open area, which makes their work easier and confirms the fact that in this area the IDF tries to avoid unnecessarily entering dense urban areas.


On the southern flank, the main battles are taking place on the southwestern and western outskirts of Gaza: the IDF is storming the positions of Palestinian groups around the Al-Shifa hospital. In addition, the Israelis at least managed to enter the Square of the Unknown Soldier in the capital of the enclave. It is located in the Zeitoun district , slightly south of the above-mentioned hospital, right next to the square is the local parliament building. At the moment, we can say with confidence that the IDF still managed to close the encirclement of Gaza, cutting a wedge through the territory of the enclave. It is also known that the Israelis are operating in the Al-Shati camp, and if control over it is ensured (which is likely to happen soon), then the blockaded capital of the sector will be completely cut off from the Mediterranean Sea.


Amid the ongoing active hostilities near the largest hospitals in the southwestern part of Gaza City, the Israelis announced the evacuation of Al-Shifa , Rantisi and An-Nasr hospitals. For this, in addition to the Salah ed-Din highway, the Ar-Rashid highway along the coastline was opened for the movement of refugees. Today the evacuation routes were in effect for 7 hours: from 09.00 to 16.00. However, Hamas said that the doctors refused to evacuate, thanking them for this. Whether this decision of the doctors was voluntary remains an open question.

In addition, the IDF command claims that at night the military tried to transfer more than 300 liters of diesel fuel to the Al-Shifa hospital for the needs of the medical institution, but Hamas allegedly prevented it from being accepted. To confirm their words, the press service of the Israel Defense Forces posted a video of the transmission, but whether it really took place is unknown.


South direction
At night, pro-Iranian groups launched several kamikaze drones at Eilat , but there was no information about the results of the attack: apparently, the drones simply did not reach Israel or were intercepted on approach to the city. The exact launch location is currently unknown, but most likely the devices took off from Yemen .

Otherwise, the situation remains virtually unchanged: Palestinian groups are attacking kibbutzim and strongholds near Gaza, where IDF soldiers are based. Kholit and Kissufim came under attack , and Israeli air defenses intercepted two militant drones over Sderot .

Border with Lebanon
On the Israeli-Lebanese border, the situation has essentially remained unchanged for the past few weeks, the only difference being the number of casualties on both sides and the intensity of Hezbollah’s attacks on Israel . Today, the group’s fighters managed to hit a van in Doveve , injuring more than five people. Information about who these people were varies depending on the side of the conflict: Hezbollah representatives claim that several IDF soldiers were killed and 6 more were wounded, while the Israelis, on the contrary, say that only civilians were affected . In addition, several rockets were launched at Kiryat Shmona , Shlomi , Nahariya and Haifa , but were intercepted by air defenses.


IDF strongholds along the border also came under attack again: Arab sources write that as a result of the raid on Menara , 6 Israeli fighters were wounded. Israeli troops, as before, responded with massive fire into southern Lebanon . The largest number of attacks occurred in the southeastern part of the country, but Yaroun , Aita al-Shaab and other Lebanese settlements in the border area were also seriously hit.


West Bank
In the West Bank, the situation is also unchanged: Israeli security forces are storming Arab settlements in search of militant supporters and Hamas members , and the Palestinians are responding with attacks (often armed) and mass protests. Over the past 24 hours, either the number of collisions themselves or the number of reports about them on the Internet has decreased. The IDF is known to have stormed Qalqilya , Beit , Tubas , Bilin , Khalhoul and other populated areas.

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Actions of pro-Iranian formations in the Middle East

At night, pro-Iranian groups operating in Syria shelled the territory of the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights . The shells fell near Eliad , Nov and Avnei Eitan , but probably did not reach their target. The IDF responded by striking the outskirts of the city of Nawa in the south of Daraa province , from where the shelling allegedly originated. In addition, air defense systems of “one of the Arab countries” ( Saudi Arabia ) intercepted a projectile launched from Yemen towards the south of Israel.

Political-diplomatic background
Issues of control over Gaza after the end of hostilities

With the development of the Israeli ground operation in the Gaza Strip , questions about the future of the enclave are becoming increasingly pressing. And, if just a couple of days ago American politicians were arguing that the Palestinian National Authority , led by Mahmoud Abbas , should take control over it , today the first information has appeared about what the far-right government of Israel thinks about this.

According to the country's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu , control "in the security sphere" will be carried out by the Israelis until the Gaza Strip is completely demilitarized. At the same time, the voices of radicals in the government are becoming increasingly louder: including Minister of National Security Affairs Itamar Ben-Gvir , who called for the return to the enclave of Jewish settlements withdrawn from there after the unilateral disengagement of 2005.

Evacuation of Russians from the Gaza Strip

In the Gaza Strip , the evacuation of Russians who were there began. Russian citizens leave the enclave through the Rafah checkpoint in the south, through which humanitarian aid convoys periodically pass. The checkpoint is staffed by employees of the Ministry of Emergency Situations of the Russian Federation, who provide people with the necessary medical and psychological assistance, and also provide food and water. After leaving the checkpoint, Russian citizens are transported to Cairo, where the operational headquarters of the Ministry of Emergency Situations is deployed. And from there, after completing all the necessary documents, the Russians will finally be able to return home. According to the latest data, more than 70 citizens of the Russian Federation have already managed to leave the enclave.


Propaganda works against the backdrop of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict

Against the backdrop of the events in Gaza, it is quite interesting to observe the evolution of the propaganda theses of both sides. And if the Palestinians and their sympathizers have the same ideas as in previous years, then in Israel they made a knight’s move: the main narrative there was chosen to be the statement “Hamas is ISIS.” How true is it? It would seem that the whole world saw the atrocities of the group from the Gaza Strip, and the movement never hid political Islam in its ideology. But Hamas never planned to build a caliphate, and its ambitions and area of ​​activity were “limited” to the territory of Israel and Palestine . Moreover, the movement opposed the Islamic State and fought it in the enclave. So, despite all the real terrorist attacks by Hamas, its complete identification with the Islamic State is simply incorrect. However, such a simple technique allows the Israelis to advantageously portray themselves as the main fighters not only against radical Islamism, but in general against any Islamism, which resonates with the residents of the countries affected by it.

It also gives the Israelis the opportunity to use a long-familiar technique: whoever does not support Israel is designated as an anti-Semitic supporter of IS terrorists. Even if the person himself is opposed to Hamas and only criticizes the IDF for the deaths of children in Gaza. There is also a funny thing about the exploitation of the theme of the fight against the “Islamic State” by Israeli state propaganda: the fact is that Israel did not really fight with the Islamic State. Even when the faction affiliated with it, Jaysh Khalid ibn Walid, captured part of the border territories of Syria, the IDF almost did not strike at it. It was the Syrian army that later expelled the militants from there. In this regard, the slogans found on Israeli social networks: “Let’s defeat Hamas, just like we defeated IS!” sound somewhat symbolic.

Problems of pro-Palestinian marches in Great Britain

Yesterday a demonstration took place in London in honor of Remembrance Day, which is intended to immortalize all Commonwealth soldiers who died in armed conflicts. Some participants in the event clashed with police. The parties exchanged pleasantries in the form of blows with batons and throws of plastic bottles. Someone was planning to “attack” participants in a pro-Palestine march that was taking place later. The attempt was unsuccessful; police detained at least 82 people.

After some time, a pro-Palestinian march began calling on the Israeli leadership to stop hostilities in the Gaza Strip. According to the organizers, 500 thousand people took part in the march. Police representatives say there are 300 thousand demonstrators. Of course, all this “unrest” will not provoke mass unrest, and listening to hysterics about yet another pro-Palestinian rally that will not change anything is quite tiresome. Because from the very beginning it was clear that such events would be used, first of all, to relieve social tension and as a reason to tighten the screws.

https://rybar.ru/chto-proishodit-v-pale ... -noyabrya/

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The ‘Hamas Human Shield’ Justification for Israeli War Crimes
Posted by INTERNATIONALIST 360° on NOVEMBER 9, 2023
Vanessa Beeley

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What separates Israel, the United States and other democracies when it comes to incredibly difficult situations like this is our respect for international law and, as appropriate, the laws of war. We do everything we can, in these situations, to avoid civilian casualties.

That is in direct contrast with Hamas which uses people as human shields. It [Hamas] actually seeks to put Palestinian civilians in situations where they could be harmed. This is very much part of the game plan. We know Israel will take all the precautions it can, just as we would, again that is what separates us from Hamas and terrorist groups that engage in the most heinous kind of activities

US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken


Zionist projection is the default Hasbara strategy

If you actually listen to the clip of Blinken justifying Israeli brutality you will hear how he stumbles over his words. He knows he is lying in my opinion. The 4000 plus dead children, 10,328 dead civilians, 26000 injured and 2300 missing believed buried under the rubble of Israeli bombs does not substantiate Blinken’s claims of adherence to international law.

The Israeli bombing of humanitarian convoys, ambulances, paramedics, Civil Defence headquarters, journalists – 50 killed so far, hospitals, makeshift refugee centres, places of worship – mosques and churches, schools, UNWRA facilities, humanitarian aid supplies including essential bottled water supplies, sewage treatment plants, bridges, solar panels, electricity and internet, media buildings, fisherman’s boats, flour stores, burning of food crops – all these targets are in direct violation of any rule of war or human rights conventions.

The deliberate policy of starvation and the cutting off of water, food, fuel and electricity supplies is a genocidal policy:

According to Euro-Med Monitor, the Israeli war of starvation has taken very dangerous turns, including cutting off all food supplies to the Northern half and bombing and destroying factories, bakeries, food stores, water stations, and tanks throughout the entire enclave.

Soaring malnutrition cases especially among pregnant women and children. A Euromed report confirms that “women and children in Gaza are disproportionately suffering from the effects of Israel’s war. Approximately 52,500 infants in Gaza are currently at risk of starvation, death, dehydration, and other health hazards due to overcrowding, in addition to 55,000 pregnant women, of whom 5,500 are expected to give birth this month.”

“According to Euro-Med Monitor, getting bread in the Gaza Strip has become an existential challenge, since Gaza’s sole mill there is still unable to grind wheat because of a shortage of fuel and electricity. Since October 7, 11 bakeries have been bombed and destroyed, while the ones that are still operating face tremendous difficulties due to fuel and flour shortages.”

Israel has been blatant about its genocidal policies. Blinken disappears the ethnic cleansing of Palestinians from West Bank and Gaza in his statement. Israeli Heritage Minister, Amichai Eliyahu, has not only described the bombing of Gaza as “amazing”, he has recommended nuking Gaza and sending Palestinians to Ireland or the desert. According to a Times of Israel article:

Eliyahu also voices his objection during the interview to allowing any humanitarian aid into Gaza, saying “we wouldn’t hand the Nazis humanitarian aid,” and charging that “there is no such thing as uninvolved civilians in Gaza.”

“They can go to Ireland or deserts, the monsters in Gaza should find a solution by themselves.”

He says the northern Strip has no right to exist, adding that anyone waving a Palestinian or Hamas flag “shouldn’t continue living on the face of the earth.”

Corpses rotting under rubble, shallow and hastily dug mass graves. Chemicals believed to be used by Israel in the bombing campaigns including White Phosphorous – all these factors spell disaster when the rains come.

Gaza is a strip of land the size of the Isle of Wight ( 40km X 12km) with a population of 2.2 million civilians. With the forced evacuation by Israel from the north to the south – you will have 2.2 million civilians living in an area half its original size.

Israel has destroyed Gaza’s ability to desalinate water to provide clean drinking water or to effectively pump sewage out of the strip. When the rains come, disease will be rife with sewage, decaying bodies, chemicals, disease flooding the enclave.

Even in so-called peace time children are used to wading through sewage to get to school. Children are forced to swim in raw sewage in the sea off the Gaza coast. This pollution will be exponentially increased by the latest Israeli aggression.

Added to this, the targeting of hospitals and health centers will result in chronic illness patients dying from lack of available treatment. Euromed – “more than 2,000 cancer patients, more than 1,000 patients in need of dialysis to survive, 50,000 cardiovascular patients, and over 60,000 diabetics—urgently need access to basic healthcare services considering the severe shortage of medications, medical supplies, fuel, food, and clean water.” These patients are not given priority because of the massive influx of emergency cases from the Israeli bombing raids. As Euromed Monitor reports:

Eighteen out of 35 hospitals in the Gaza Strip have stopped operating so far, according to local health officials there. Overall, 120 health institutions have been targeted, while more than 48 primary care centres (70%) are now out of service due to the ongoing Israeli raids and the fuel crisis.

The Hamas Human Shield trope

The claim that Hamas or as I prefer to call it, the Palestinian Resistance coalition, use Palestinian civilians as human shields is consistently used to justify the Israeli bombing of civilian targets as mentioned above. The bombing of an ambulance carrying wounded for evacuation at the Egyptian Rafah border was justified by the Israeli claim that Hamas fighters were on board. Claims that are never substantiated or investigated.

In my experience in both Gaza during Israeli aggression 2012 and in Syria on various frontlines – it is normal for the injured or civilian evacuees to be escorted for their safety by military, in Syria by the Syrian Arab Army. I do not know if this was the case in Gaza but it is a legitimate reason for military escort. The civilian bodies that were brought from the ambulance into hospital however contradict Israeli claims. Israel has, so far, failed to provide evidence of its claims that resulted in the deaths of civilians including children.

Gaza is a strip of land 40km by 12km. It is a densely populated enclave with buildings arranged in close proximity, schools, hospitals, residential areas all on top of each other. Israel claims that the Palestinian Resistance is using their own families, children and civilians as “human shields” while carpet bombing entire residential areas to allegedly wipe out ‘Hamas’.

The denials of Hamas using human shields

2014 – BBC’s Jeremy Bowen wrote for the New Statesman – ‘I saw no evidence of Hamas using Palestinians as human shields’. Bowen described his experience in Gaza:

I saw no evidence during my week in Gaza of Israel’s accusation that Hamas uses Palestinians as human shields. I saw men from Hamas on street corners, keeping an eye on what was happening. They were local people and everyone knew them, even the young boys.

Also in 2014 a Truthout article was published – ‘Congress utilizes myth of human shields to justify [Israeli] war crimes’

According to the report ‘no Gaza eyewitness found evidence of Hamas using human shields’ during the 2014 Israeli aggression against the Gaza strip which followed a similar pattern to the ongoing 2023 mass bombing of civilian infrastructure – a war crime in itself. From the report:

Human Rights Watch cited evidence of Israel “blatantly violating the laws of war designed to spare civilians,” including attacks on heavily-populated neighborhoods and shooting at fleeing civilians. Similarly, the Israeli human rights organization B’Tselem challenged its government’s claims that they had “no intention of harming civilians,” noting how after “weeks of lethal bombardments by Israel in the Gaza Strip which have killed hundreds of civilians and wiped out dozens of families, this claim has become meaningless.” United Nations officials in the Gaza Strip also charged Israeli forces with engaging in serious violations of international law, following a series of attacks against six UN schools where Palestinians were seeking refuge, and where no Hamas weaponry or fighters were present, killing 46 civilians.

None of the claims by the US State Department or individual Representatives that Hamas used civilians as human shields have been evidenced according to the Truthout report.

Again in 2014 the Belfast Telegraph correspondent, Kem Sengupta, based in Khan Younis, southern Gaza reported on the ‘myth of Hamas’ human shields’ – Gazans deny being put in the line of fire. Sengupta writes:

What used to be a three-storey house had been turned into debris sunk into a deep crater with twisted steel rods jutting out. Twenty-six people were killed in the mostly deadly air-strike so far in this bloody conflict. Twenty-four of them were from one family, the Abu Jamaa.

Around the same time that attack was taking place on Sunday evening, Benjamin Netanyahu was charging Hamas on TV with using “human shields” to gather “telegenically dead Palestinians for their cause”.

Amnesty International, following an extensive investigation after the 2014 war, found no evidence that “Palestinian civilians have been intentionally used by Hamas or Palestinian armed groups during the current hostilities to ‘shield’ specific locations or military personnel or equipment from Israeli attacks.”

In 2018 the Independent ran a headline – ‘Israeli army edits video of Palestinian medic its troops shot dead to misleadingly show she was ‘human shield for Hamas’

The edited clip was condemned by Palestinians and rights activists as attempt to ‘justify’ 21-year-old Razan al-Najjar’s death – an IOF sniper shot her in the chest during protests on the Gaza-Israel border on 1st June 2018 as she attended to wounded and unarmed protestors also targeted by IOF snipers.

Israeli government and military officials tweeted out a video labelled ‘Hamas use of human shields must stop’ showing an excerpt of an interview with Al Najjar. The reality is that the young nurse does not mention Hamas and states clearly that she was there to save the wounded at the front lines.

“The IDF always accuses Palestinians and Israeli human rights orgs of editing documentation of it human rights abuses. But it edited this video of Razan al Najjar to discredit her after murdering her. Absolutely despicable and hypocritical,” Israeli-American writer Mairav Zonszein said on Twitter.

From personal experience, Hamas officials have always been very against civilians protesting at the border areas because of the high risk of injury and sniping by the IOF.

In 2013 I went with protestors to Beit Hanoun, north-east Gaza, to confront the IOF prison guards who encircle the Gaza strip with apartheid walls and barbed wire – converting the enclave into an open air concentration camp.

The automatic gun turrets that are found along the walls are set to fire at a varying distance. Israel changes the distance without ever informing Gazan farmers -so one day the safe distance is 4 meters, some days it is 6 meters – when farmers cross the red line, they are fired upon by the automatic machine gun turrets.

We stood on high ground next to the wall. We could see the IOF vehicles and guns trained on us. After about an hour of protests, Hamas cars arrived and asked us to leave the area for our own safety.

Razan Al Najjar was shot in the chest deliberately by the IOF. She presented no danger to the IOF. She was attending to the wounded during the Great March of Return that began in March 2018. The peaceful march demanded the end of the blockade on Gaza and the right to return for Palestinian refugees.

The IOF responded to these unarmed civilian demonstrations with the use of tear gas, rubber-coated bullets and live ammunition. ‘Among the casualties of the first year are 227 UNRWA students who were injured and 13 who were killed.’

Watch this video – Great March of Return, a mother’s perspective:



6 months after the start of the Great March protests, Amnesty International reported:

According to the Al Mezan Center for Human Rights, since the start of the protests, over 150 Palestinians have been killed in the demonstrations. At least 10,000 others have been injured, including 1,849 children, 424 women, 115 paramedics and 115 journalists. Of those injured, 5,814 were hit by live ammunition. According to Israeli media, one soldier was moderately injured due to shrapnel from a grenade thrown by a Palestinian from inside Gaza and one Israeli soldier was killed by Palestinian sniper fire near the fence that separates Gaza and Israel outside of the context of the protests.

Legitimate calls for Israeli authorities to lift their 11-year illegal blockade on Gaza and to allow Palestinian refugees to return to their villages and towns have not been met.

The claim that Al Najjar was a Hamas human shield is a cynical ploy by the Zionist forces to provide justification for their targeting of unarmed civilians who have a legally justified cause to protest under international law. Those that so often call for Palestinians to protest peacefully should understand that there is no effective ‘peaceful’ protest against the IOF.

In 2021 Law4Palestine – ‘Under Scrutiny: Allegations of Use of Human Shields by Palestinian Armed Groups and the International Criminal Court Investigation’

What is certain, so far, is that the allegation that the armed groups are using human shields is unsubstantiated, and even the Prosecutor’s Office does not seem to have evidence on this regard, because the evidence at our disposal is the same as that which was available to the Prosecutor’s Office at this stage of the investigation.

Israel will try to defend itself – whether through the Court or through its political discourse – regarding the commission of war crimes by claiming that the PAGs are terrorist groups and that the war on Gaza was a war on terror where terrorists do not shy away from using civilians as human shields. However, it will face obstacles relating to the characteristics of the Palestinian situation in the Gaza strip and the possibilities of taking “all the possible limits of necessary measures and precautions” to protect civilians and spare them from military attacks.


Detailed investigations following the 2008-2009 and 2014 conflicts by Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International, the United Nations Human Rights Council, and others have failed to find a single documented case of any civilian deaths caused by Hamas using human shields.

Not one.

The following video by journalist Abby Martin demonstrates the hypocrisy of ‘human shield’ claims by Washington and Tel-Aviv:



Now let’s look at Israel’s proven use of Palestinian children and civilians as human shields

So not only is the Palestinian use of human shields a myth lacking any evidence, it is in fact Israel who is infamous for using human shields in its oppression of the Palestinians. Examples of this are incredibly easy to find even with the most rudimentary of research. Like much Israeli propaganda, it seeks to turn reality upside down and accuse the Palestinians of the crimes that Israel so often commits. This is a prime example of baseless dehumanization that many eagerly embrace because they have come to internalize a demonized image of Palestinians based on Israeli propaganda.

Decolonize Palestine


The evidence of Israel using Palestinians as human shields is voluminous, I will cite a number of cases and then offer links to additional reports.

May 2023 in Ramallah – a report by Defence for Children (DCI) claims that Israeli forces have used at least five Palestinian children as human shields so far this year, including two toddlers.

Israeli forces then threatened his sons Nidal, 9, and Karam, 11, in addition to his twin nephews, Ahmad and Mohammad, both two years old, and forced them to stand in front of Israeli military vehicles while Israeli forces fired tear gas canisters, stun grenades, and live ammunition at Palestinians confronting the group of soldiers.

Israeli special forces forced Anas to stand and walk in front of them for several minutes while handcuffed as they confronted two Palestinian men and fired live ammunition. Before killing the two Palestinian men, Israeli forces forced Anas to sit on the floor of a house next door, blindfolded.


“International law is explicit and absolutely prohibits the use of children as human shields by armed forces or armed groups,” said Ayed Abu Eqtaish, accountability program director at DCIP. “Israeli forces intentionally putting a child in grave danger in order to shield themselves constitutes a war crime.”

While Israeli forces used the Shalloun family as human shields in Aqbat Jabr refugee camp, one soldier ordered mother Samia to put her two-year-old nephew Mohammad on the ground and raise her hands. Mohammad cried as an Israeli military dog approached him, and as Samia lowered her hands to move him away from the dog, the Israeli soldier put his gun to Mohammad’s head, saying, “Move again and I’ll shoot him.”

Since 2000, DCIP has documented at least 31 cases involving Palestinian children being used as human shields by the Israeli army. Last year, Israeli soldiers forced 16-year-old Ahed Mohammad Rida Mereb to stand in front of an Israeli military vehicle in Jenin as armed Palestinians fired heavily in their direction.

A 2013 report by the U.N. Committee on the Rights of the Child describes a litany of abuses of children by the IOF and security forces including their use as human shields:

Almost all those using children as human shields and informants have remained unpunished and the soldiers convicted for having forced at gunpoint a nine-year-old child to search bags suspected of containing explosives only received a suspended sentence of three months and were demoted.

Further details of this case can be found in this Guardian report.

Two Israeli soldiers who used a nine-year-old Palestinian boy as a human shield were given suspended sentences and demoted after being convicted of “inappropriate conduct”.

The unnamed soldiers, from the Givati Brigade, ordered Majeh Rabah, from the Tel al-Hawa neighbourhood in Gaza City, to check bags for explosives in January 2009, towards the end of Israel’s three-week offensive.


Also in the report from Human Rights Watch.

2014 – a report from ReliefWeb based on the original report by DCI Palestine:

Ramallah, August 21, 2014—Israeli soldiers repeatedly used Ahmad Abu Raida, 17, as a human shield for five days while he was held hostage during Israel’s ground invasion of the Gaza Strip.

Ahmad, from Khuza’a, near the southern Gaza town of Khan Younis, was just 16 years old when he was taken from his family on July 23. He was forced at gunpoint to search for tunnels for five days, during which time he was interrogated, verbally and physically abused, and deprived of food and sleep. Ahmad told DCI-Palestine in a sworn testimony that Israeli soldiers attempted both to extract information from him regarding Hamas members, and recruit him as an informant, before releasing him on July 27.

“The Israeli military has consistently accused Hamas of using civilians – particularly children – as human shields, but this incident represents a clear case of their soldiers forcing a child to directly assist in military operations,” said Rifat Kassis, executive director of DCI-Palestine. “Israeli officials make generalized accusations while Israeli soldiers engage in conduct that amounts to war crimes.”


A report in Mondoweiss at the same time records accounts of Israeli forces using civilians as human shields:

Ayman Abu Toaimah, 32, a resident of Khuza’a recalls, “As Israeli invading troops advanced to the village they besieged it and used residents as human shields. When the Israeli army arrested people and then released some of them, they were told they are free to go back to the village, but as they were fleeing they came under fire and some of them shot dead. These people were used as human shields.”

Abu Saleem, 56, a resident of Khuza’a echoed Abu Toaimah, “Israelis claim that Hamas is using us as human shields– how? This is a lie, we do not see fighters in the streets. It’s them, the Israelis who used us as human shields in Khuza’a and Shuja’iyeh. They turned our houses into military posts, terrified residents in the houses. They attacked innocent civilians with their bombs, and missiles, they attacked chicken farms, they burned our crops, they have no mercy.”


May 2022 a Palestinian teenage girl was used by the IOF as a human shield during a military raid in Jenin:

According to DCIP, during a raid on the morning of May 13th, Israeli soldiers forced 16-year-old Ahed Mohammad Rida Mereb, to stand in front of an Israeli military vehicle for two hours as the vehicle came under fire from Palestinian gunmen, while Israeli soldiers sat inside the vehicle.

Breaking the Silence documents abuses of Palestinians by the IOF based on accounts from former IOF soldiers. A ‘moving human shield’ is one such report:

Apparently, that captain had gone to Takua, which is a pretty hostile village—they were throwing stones at the jeep. So he just stopped a Palestinian guy who was passing, forty-something years old, and tied him to the hood of the jeep, a guy just lying on the hood, and they drove into the village. No one threw any more rocks. A human shield. Yes. But not just a human shield—first of all, a human shield is bad enough—this was a moving human shield. Tied to the hood of the jeep and they drove with him tied there. Drove with him through the village, it’s horrific.
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22nd April 2004, a 13 year old boy called Mohammed Said Essa Badwan/Badran was used as a human shield. Mohammed was peacefully taking part in spontaneous demonstration in Biddo against the building of the Annexation Wall. Around noon, following the launch of sound bombs and teargas canisters by the soldiers, some nearby youth started throwing stones. At this point, two Israeli Border Guards arrested Mohammed, beat him and forced him to sit on the hood of their jeep, tying his arm to the windshield screen and then using him as a human shield.

Rabbi Arik Ascherman, who heads the organisation Rabbis for Human Rights, was present and tried to intervene for the release of the child but was instead arrested and beaten. Mohammed was reported to have been repeatedly hit by the soldiers while he was tied to the vehicle. Although he begged them to release him because he was scared and in pain, they would not. He also reportedly suffered from exposure to the teargas used by the soldiers, since he could not move nor was he given any protection. After about four hours, Mohammed was untied, forced into the jeep and taken first to Al-Sahl, an area in which the Annexation Wall is being constructed. He was then questioned by a military officer. Finally the child was released in the neighbouring village of Al-Kalaileh where he had to wait, alone and in the dark, for a relative to come and pick him up.


Ramallah June 4th 2013 – ‘Israeli soldiers proudly paraded the handcuffed teen up and down the street, making a public spectacle of him in the occupied West Bank town of Abu Dis.’

Armed with live ammunition, rubber-coated metal bullets and tear gas, on Friday, April 19, at least 10 Israeli soldiers confronted the crowd of protesters using 17-year-old Muhammad Rabea as a human shield. They forced him to walk at gunpoint with his hands raised in the air as they approached the protesters.

Prior to being abused as a human shield, Muhammad had been savagely beaten by the IOF forces that had grabbed him from the streets. He was hit on the forehead with a rifle stock, kicked repeatedly on the legs, hit at the base of his neck by steel helmets. He was bundled in the back of the military jeep, verbally and physically abused, his hands tied by plastic cords. He was forced to sit in a revolving chair while IOF soldiers kicked him as the chair spun in the back of the jeep.

“One of the soldiers sprayed the keffiyeh (scarf) I was wearing with pepper spray before tying it tightly over my eyes, burning them,” he says. “Each time I coughed, he told me to shut up and kicked me. I wasn’t allowed to cough.”

At the military camp, soldiers forced him to stand facing a metal pole. Muhammad said the soldiers ripped his jacket and searched him, while an army dog clawed his back and calves. Following the search, soldiers knocked him down on the ground where he laid for two hours in pain as they continued to kick him in his legs, back and stomach. One of the soldiers removed the keffiyeh over his eyes and poured gasoline on it, burning it in front of him. The soldiers re-blindfolded him with a black piece of cloth and continued to hit him on the head with their helmets.


Btselem (The Israeli Information Center for Human Rights in the Occupied Territories) 2017:

Since the beginning of the occupation in 1967, Israeli security forces have repeatedly used Palestinians in the West Bank and in the Gaza Strip as human shields, ordering them to perform military tasks that risked their lives. As part of this policy, soldiers have ordered Palestinian civilians to remove suspicious objects from roads, to tell people to come out of their homes so the military can arrest them, to stand in front of soldiers while the latter shoot from behind them, and more. The Palestinian civilians were chosen at random for these tasks, and could not refuse the demand placed on them by armed soldiers.

Using civilians to get wanted persons out of a house is known as “neighbor procedure.” This procedure does not differ significantly from other ways in which the military has used Palestinian civilian. It, too, too, constitutes illegal exploitation of civilians to perform military tasks and places them in real danger. This was made irrefutably clear in an incident that took place in 2002. On 14 August, soldiers sent Nidal Abu Mukhsan, a 19-year-old from the village of Tubas, to the home of Nasser Jarar, a Hamas activist, and ordered him to get Jarar out of the house. When Abu Mukhsan approached the house, Jarar, apparently thinking that the person knocking at the door was a soldier, shot and killed him.


2012 report from the Institute for Middle East Understanding:

In 2007, B’Tselem releases a report documenting 14 cases in which Israeli soldiers have used Palestinian civilians – including boys and girls as young as 11-years-old – as human shields to protect themselves in dangerous situations. In one case, a 14-year-old girl in Gaza is shot in the stomach and leg after soldiers used her as a human shield during an incursion.
In May 2011, two dozen former Israeli soldiers come forward to provide eyewitness accounts of the abuse of Palestinian civilians by the Israeli military, including their use as human shields.
2021 – Human Rights Watch – A Threshold Crossed, Israeli Authorities and the Crimes of Apartheid and Persecution.

When Palestinians Became Human Shields: Counterinsurgency, Racialization, and the Great Revolt (1936–1939) – Cambridge University Press

Using Palestinians as human shields began under the British Mandate in Palestine that ended in 1947. In frustration at the relative success of Palestinian rebels who rejected the influx of European Jews to dispossess Palestinians of their land, the British turned to the use of human shields to defuse Palestinian guerilla military campaigns from 1936-38.

The regularization of human shielding served as proof of “the dark path of repression” foreseen and warned against by the Peel Commission. Footnote125 It was also elemental to an ongoing process of colonial racialization that robbed the Palestinians of their humanity, stripped them of any figment of legal rights or protections, and denuded them of the most basic security of life. Indeed, with the systematic use of human shields, the colonial regime veered towards the “negation of all law” so feared by top civilian officials and took Palestinian society with it into the ensuing abyss.

Conclusions

US law requires Biden to impose sanctions on Hamas for using human shields.

The Hill

According to a report in The Hill, the “Sanctioning the Use of Civilians as Defenseless Shields Act” passed both houses of Congress unanimously in 2018. The Shields Act, as it is known, specifically requires the president to submit to Congress a list of persons he determines to be involved in the use of human shields.

Biden should move swiftly to impose the sanctions already required by his determination that Hamas is using human shields.

There is no evidence of Hamas using civilians as human shields – there is a plethora of evidence that Israel has historically exploited Palestinians as human shields putting the lives of children at risk on multiple occasions, torturing and traumatising them in the process. This is completely ignored by Washington. No sanctions on Israel?

It can be argued that Israel has deliberately put its own civilians in danger as human shields by facilitating settlement in contested zones beyond the green line – as for example in the case of the Kibbutz Be’eri when it is now proven that Israeli civilians were not only killed by the IOF gunfire during battles with Palestinian Resistance factions but were also shelled by Israeli tanks two days after the 7th October when the IOF took a decision to eliminate their own civilians alongside Resistance militants.

They [Israelis] are directly put in danger as a sacrifice to Israel’s expansionist colonial designs, which they can then blame on Palestinians to further accelerate this same project.

Decolonize Palestine


‘Israel justifies its violent attacks by continuously accusing Hamas of using human shields, desperately hoping to stir moral indignation while also trying to muster a legal defence for the indefensible.’

The subtext is that civilised people protect their children while Palestinians sacrifice them.

Under this pretext all Palestinians become legitimate targets and Israel can be exonerated of all blame. It is a criminal manipulation of reality to enable justification of genocide and the US and UK are upholding it – thus they are complicit in genocide.

The director of the New York Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, Craig Mokhiber, resigned on Tuesday, writing:

“As a human rights lawyer with more than three decades of experience in the field, I know well that the concept of genocide has often been subject to political abuse. But the current wholesale slaughter of the Palestinian people, rooted in an ethno-nationalist settler colonial ideology, in continuation of decades of their systematic persecution and purging, based entirely upon their status as Arabs, and coupled with explicit statements of intent by leaders in the Israeli government and military, leaves no room for doubt or debate. In Gaza, civilian homes, schools, churches, mosques, and medical institutions are wantonly attacked as thousands of civilians are massacred. In the West Bank, including occupied Jerusalem, homes are seized and reassigned based entirely on race, and violent settler pogroms are accompanied by Israeli military units. Across the land, Apartheid rules.

“This is a text-book case of genocide. The European, ethno-nationalist, settler colonial project in Palestine has entered its final phase, toward the expedited destruction of the last remnants of indigenous Palestinian life in Palestine. What’s more, the governments of the United States, the United Kingdom, and much of Europe, are wholly complicit in the horrific assault. Not only are these governments refusing to meet their treaty obligations ‘to ensure respect’ for the Geneva Conventions, but they are in fact actively arming the assault, providing economic and intelligence support, and giving political and diplomatic cover for Israel’s atrocities.”


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See full letter, news report and interview from Wednesday morning with Mokhiber.
Journalist Sam Husseini wrote on X – I asked the State Dept on Tuesday about the recent DAWN MENA report documenting the Biden administration’s efforts to pay for Israeli plans to “ethnically cleanse” Palestinians to Gaza. The spokesperson refused to comment on the funding request:

If you really want to understand Washington’s defence of Israeli war crimes and human rights abuses including a de facto genocide of the Palestinian people, you need look no further than this extraordinary admission by Robert F. Kennedy Jr:
Robert F. Kennedy Jr.:

Israel is a bulwark for us... It’s almost like having an aircraft carrier in the Middle East. It's our oldest ally.

If Israel disappears, Russia, China, and BRICS+ countries will control 90% of the oil in the world and that would be cataclysmic for US… Show more
Palestinian life is expendable if it ensures US unipolar supremacy. Heck, even the lives of Israelis are superfluous when faced with US protection of its global hegemony. If it is not yet clear that tropes such as “Hamas atrocities” and “Hamas human shields” are nothing more than fig leaves for US proxy war crimes in defence of US global military adventurism – then we are headed for a very ominous future.



Hasbara Strategy: The ‘Human Shield’ Justification with Vanessa Beeley[/img]

https://libya360.wordpress.com/2023/11/ ... ar-crimes/

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What Would It Look Like If You Were Standing On The Wrong Side Of History?

If there were a mass atrocity taking place presently which history will end up judging harshly in the future, and you were supporting the wrong side of it, what signs might you expect to see that that’s the case?

Caitlin Johnstone
November 12, 2023

What would it look like if you were standing on the wrong side of history? If there were a mass atrocity taking place presently which history will end up judging harshly in the future, and you were supporting the wrong side of it, what signs might you expect to see that that’s the case?

Well, I imagine you’d probably be seeing terrible news about what’s happening coming out every day that under normal circumstances would cause you to cry out in horror, but then you’d be getting a bunch of words and stories from your side explaining why those self-evidently terrible things are actually not what they appear to be.

If you found out thousands of children were being violently killed by your side in this mass atrocity, for example, you’d normally view that information as self-evidently terrible by itself, but then a bunch of narrative framing would come in explaining to you why that information isn’t damning for your side. Blame for the deaths of those children would be placed on other parties. If your side was undeniably responsible for their deaths, their deaths would be framed as accidental tragedies which are the unavoidable consequence of military action, and are still indirectly attributable to the actions of the other side.

You’d see the raw data of what’s happening, and then an overlay of narrative would be rolled out on top of what you’re seeing to alter your perception of that data. And every time, the unaltered data would make your side look bad, while the data filtered through the narrative overlay would make your side look much better.

Over and over again you’d see this take place: information which at a glance makes it look like you’re on the wrong side of history, then a deluge of narratives helping you to understand that your eyes deceived you at first actually, and you’re on the right side of history after all. Day after day after day this would happen: new terrible information that would normally make you feel bad about your position, followed by narrative framing which makes you feel better about your position.

We may be sure we could expect to see this because we live in a civilization that is dominated by narrative control. Powerful manipulators figured out a long time ago that because human consciousness is dominated by mental stories, if you can control the stories in their heads, you can control the humans. They do this via propaganda and spin, with the wealthiest and most powerful people having the ability to exert the most control over the dominant narratives in our society.

In a sense this leaves us living in two worlds: the real world and the narrative world. The world of unfiltered sensory input controlled by no one, and the world of easily-manipulated mental stories controlled by the rich and powerful. Maturity is waking up out of the narrative world and learning to perceive reality as it’s actually happening.

Because the powerful are continuously working to insert narratives about the world into our minds and manipulate our stories about what’s happening, it’s a safe assumption that if something terrible was being done by powerful people and we were on the wrong side of it, we’d be experiencing a continuous feed of narratives readjusting our perception and understanding of the thing that is happening. This would ensure that we remain supportive of the agendas of those powerful people, even if it leaves us on the wrong side of history.

Anyway, that’s just something to keep in mind in case you see anything like that happening in the future. Or who knows? Maybe even in the present.

https://caitlinjohnstone.com.au/2023/11 ... f-history/
"There is great chaos under heaven; the situation is excellent."

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Re: Palestine

Post by blindpig » Tue Nov 14, 2023 1:52 pm

What is happening in Palestine and Israel: chronicle for November 13
November 13, 2023
Rybar

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Israeli soldiers managed to close the ring around Gaza during a ground operation . Palestinian groups are making forays into IDF positions in the Sheikh Radwan area, near Al-Quds and Al-Shifa hospitals , but there is no talk of regaining control over this territory: the best they can do is hit Israeli personnel and equipment.

In the northern sector, clashes continue at Beit Hanoun and Beit Lahia, which are still not under IDF control. It is likely that at the moment the IDF does not yet have the task of getting involved in urban battles in densely built areas in this direction. Militants regularly attack Israelis, but in general the intensity of clashes in the north is significantly lower than to the west of Gaza.

At the same time, the situation on the Israeli-Lebanese border has somewhat worsened: Hezbollah attacks are occurring more and more often and are no longer aimed only at border settlements, but also deep into the country. Meanwhile, some Israeli politicians and security officials regularly talk about the inevitability of scaling up hostilities in the north.

Today, footage of IDF reinforcements moving towards the border with Lebanon was distributed in the Israeli segment of the network . However, it is extremely unlikely that in the coming days the fighting in the north will turn into the format of full-scale ground clashes between the parties.

Progress of hostilities
Gaza Strip
In the Gaza Strip, Israeli units have effectively closed the encirclement ring around Gaza . Clashes continue in the area of ​​Al-Quds, Al-Shifa hospitals and the vicinity of Sheikh Radwan , but the presence of the IDF in these areas has been recorded for several days. Palestinian groups regularly carry out incursions, but there is no talk of any return of territory: the maximum that the militants can achieve is the destruction of Israeli personnel and armored vehicles.

In addition, during the day, local sources reported that the IDF was advancing deeper into the encircled city: their armored vehicles headed towards the Al-Wafa hospital, which is located east of the positions where the Israelis have been present for the last few days.

On the northeastern outskirts of the Gaza Strip, Hamas once again attacked Israeli soldiers in the Beit Hanoun area. The militants reported the destruction of several Israeli tanks, but there is no detailed information about the clash.


Fierce bombing of the sector continues: today the IDF command reported on the liquidation of the former head of Hamas military intelligence in Khan Yunis during one of the air raids. Judging by information from local sources, the Israelis quite logically concentrated on bombing targets in the enclaved capital of the enclave in order to facilitate their further ground operation. However, Rafah , the Nuseirat camp , and other settlements in the south of the enclave are periodically attacked .


South direction
The situation in this area remained stable: within a day, militants shelled Kissufim and several other settlements bordering the Gaza Strip. In the evening, several rockets were launched towards Ashkelon and Gush Dan , but they did not reach their target.

Border with Lebanon
The situation on Israel's northern borders has worsened: the intensity of Hezbollah's attacks on border settlements and strongholds of the Israel Defense Forces has increased significantly. The group's fighters today attacked Biranit, Netau, Arab al-Aramsh, the outskirts of Menara and Margaliot , as well as Israeli settlements in the occupied Golan Heights. Several people were injured during the clashes. In addition, Hezbollah attacks are increasingly aimed deep into Israel: if yesterday air defense systems intercepted shells in the area of ​​​​Kiryat Shmona and Nahariya , today a missile was intercepted over Safed .


The Israelis, as before, respond with massive artillery and air fire across southern Lebanon: several civilians were killed in the village of Aainata , and a group of Lebanese journalists came under attack in Yaroun . The IDF command announced the liquidation of 6 anti-tank crews of the pro-Palestinian group.


Meanwhile, from the Israeli side, voices are increasingly heard about the inevitability of a war with Hezbollah: this is being talked about not only in the far-right government, but also among opposition leaders - the country’s former Prime Minister Yair Lapid spoke about the need to give a tough response to the group . At the same time, security officials believe that Hezbollah’s attacks will be increasingly widespread and aimed deep into Israel, and not just at border bases and populated areas.

Against this background, videos with columns of military and construction equipment allegedly moving towards the borders with Lebanon began to be circulated in the Israeli segment of the network . However, so far there are no signs that the situation will move into the phase of full-scale ground clashes in the coming days.


West Bank
In the West Bank, the situation has remained virtually unchanged throughout the escalation of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Israeli security forces are storming Palestinian cities and en masse arresting the local population suspected of sympathizing with and collaborating with Hamas. The Arabs often respond with armed attacks and bombing of IDF vehicles. Today one car was blown up in Qalqilya . Clashes also continue in Hebron, Bethlehem, Yatta, Aqabat Jaber , the vicinity of Nablus and other localities. During the day, an unknown person attacked an IDF stronghold near the Anatot military base , managed to wound one person, and then successfully escaped.


Actions of pro-Iranian formations in the Middle East

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Pro-Iranian formations once again attacked the positions of the US Armed Forces in Syria : bases near the Al-Omar and Konoko fields came under attack , as a result of which (as representatives of the groups claim in any case) four servicemen were allegedly killed.

In response that night, American F-16 aircraft from Al-Salti airbase in Jordan carried out several strikes on paramilitary targets in the Al-Mayadeen and Al-Bukamal areas along a standard route . Guidance was again provided by the MQ-9A Reaper drone. There is no reliable data on the results, however, open sources report multiple detonations upon impact, which may indicate an arrival at the warehouse with a BC.

Be that as it may, American attacks on targets of Iranian -affiliated organizations do not foreshadow a serious escalation. Strikes by the US Air Force, as well as attacks on US military bases by Shiite groups, only maintain the desired degree of tension, beneficial to both sides.


In addition, our team has more detailed information about Israeli air raids on Syria on the night of November 11-12:

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Close to midnight on November 11, Israeli Defense Forces artillery crews from positions on the Golan Heights, in response to attacks by pro-Iranian forces, launched seven strikes on the outskirts of Nawa and Tasil in Daraa province . And a few hours later, two F-15 aircraft from the Tell Nof airbase from the airspace above the Golan Heights struck with four GBU-39 guided aircraft ammunition at the positions of the 175th artillery regiment of the 5th division of the 1st AC of the Syrian Armed Forces, as a result of which one M-46 gun was hit , and three servicemen were injured.

The goal of such Israeli attacks is to reduce the combat potential of both the Lebanese Hezbollah and the Syrian army near their borders amid tensions in the north of the country.

Political-diplomatic background
Diplomatic pressure on Israel

Israeli Foreign Minister Eli Cohen said that Western countries are increasingly putting pressure on them to achieve a ceasefire in the Gaza Strip due to the catastrophic number of casualties among civilians in the Palestinian enclave. According to his assessment, the ability of the Israelis to conduct the operation in Gaza in the format in which it is currently taking place will last another two or three weeks, after which the pressure will increase many times over.

https://rybar.ru/chto-proishodit-v-pale ... -noyabrya/

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Hopeful Pathologies in the War for Palestine: a Reply to Adam Shatz
NOVEMBER 13, 2023

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This frontispiece from the 1802 novel, “’Incendie du Cap, ou Le règne de Toussaint-Louverture” (“The Burning of the Cap, or the Reign of Toussaint-Louverture”) by French novelist René Périn, has become one of the most recognizable depictions of the Haitian Revolution, becoming a piece of propaganda that deligitimized the revolution and attacked its leader, Toussaint Louverture, who Périn described as an “atrocious negro” of whom he wished to “offer a portrait upon which, reader, you may be forced to shed many tears!!!” The illustration depicts a well-dressed Toussaint-Louverture presiding over the merciless massacre of innocent whites, many of them women and children. Photo: Race.Ed/University of Edinburgh.

By Abdaljawad Omar – Nov 8, 2023

When Western intellectuals express dismay at the “vengeful pathologies” of Palestinian violence on October 7, they ignore its underlying military, tactical, and political precipitants.

In Adam Shatz’s widely disseminated London Review of Books article, “Vengeful Pathologies,” a narrative unfurls intricately interweaving historical analogies and spurious comparisons in an endeavor to undermine the principles of decolonization and its accompanying tumult. Shatz lays out three major points of contention. The first is the assertion that vengeance has become the primary mode of interaction between Israelis and Palestinians, wherein the “vengeful pathologies” of both sides mirror the same primordial instincts. The second point is a critique of what he describes as the “decolonial left,” accusing it of willfully turning a blind eye to the “crimes” committed by the colonized and the childlike celebration of civilian deaths. The third and perhaps most important point involves his employment of historical analogies to underscore the veracity of the events of October 7, pinpointing the similarity between these events and a forgotten event in the Algerian war for liberation — the battle of Philippeville — in exacerbating the rise of fascism in the West.

The essay is an embodiment of a more expansive intellectual labyrinth that haunts Western intellectuals. It characterizes the Palestinians as “necessary and inevitable victims,” rendering them visible only as archival footnotes in yet another efficacious settler colonial enterprise. Is it not curious, one might ask, that the very sympathy shown to Palestinians appears directly proportional to their perceived inability to confront the uniform machinery of settler colonialism? There is a hidden gratification in witnessing this tragic narrative from afar. Israel’s persistent upper hand serves as a powerful catalyst for Western intellectuals’ feel-good sympathy, a kind of pseudo-solidarity that whispers to Palestinians: “We are with you, but only so long as you remain tragic victims sinking graciously into your own abyss.” One might even argue that this sympathy is contingent upon the Palestinians’ maintenance of their tragic status quo.

There’s a safety in this for those intellectuals: the Palestinian experience, as heart-wrenching as it is, remains comfortably distant, a spectacle to be consumed. This pre-inscribed script becomes an eerie marker of the limitations of critical intellectual engagement with Palestine and the Palestinians.

As a result, when Palestinians dare to rebel and challenge their imposed fate after years of oppression, the responses are predictably schizophrenic. The same intellectuals who once sobbed at our plight are now torn. Many become moral policemen, quickly brandishing the baton of condemnation, but even more importantly, readily “adopting” with full intensity Israel’s curated and sensationalized version of the events of October 7 in the so-called Gaza envelope (the Israeli settlements bordering Gaza).

Others, cloaked in a shroud of indifference, offer nothing but silence, many of whom are Palestinian intellectuals and historians. The collective voice, which once resonated with sympathy, now echoes with cautionary tales that warn against the wrath of the oppressed, which is barbaric, primordial, and awakens right-wing fascism. When some do speak up, like Joseph Massad, they are subjected to a witch hunt meant to make an example of them and cow the rest into silence.

Israel’s vengeful pathology and breaking through the Iron Wall

When one delves into the maze of Israel’s historical narrative, it becomes evident that vengeance is not just an abstract, fleeting emotion but is almost insidiously embedded in the very nerve center of Israeli militarism. Reflect upon events like the burning of Turmusayya and Huwwara: they are not mere blips in Zionist history but indications that vengeance is its modus operandi. Here, the real paradox in Shatz’s narrative is his mistaken understanding of how Zionist vengeance works — it doesn’t simply react to Palestinian actions, provocations, or even their capacity to invoke terror, but goes beyond the conventional realm of cause and effect and seeks to punish the audacity of mere Palestinian existence. Even a Palestinian like President Mahmoud Abbas, who allows Israel to continue expanding its settler colonies in the West Bank and serve its security and financial interests, is an affront to the settlers. All that the Palestinian Authority (PA) has received in return for its security and civil cooperation with Israel is financial sanctions and a hidden desire to get rid of Israel’s dependency on the PA’s security cooperation.

We are bearing witness to this genocidal manifestation in the Israeli social fabric — not only in the radical right but within state policy, and even among its liberal streams. The unraveling of this moment of truth touches upon the very essence of the Zionist problem. It is a moment in which the collective unconscious of Zionism, largely uttered by the likes of Bezlalel Smotirtich and Itamar Ben-Gvir, becomes the collective consciousness of the state in its various streams.

Shatz, in his myopia, might have overlooked the compelling transformation of the esteemed Haaretz (which he fawns over as “Israel’s extraordinary daily newspaper”) into a propaganda mouthpiece as it resounded with cries for retribution and conflict. Israel, after 75 years, obstinately reiterates its foundational transgression: the very obliteration of Palestinians. Raining down 18,000 tons of explosives upon one of the world’s most densely populated regions surpasses mere reaction to the events of October 7; it signifies Israel’s weaponization of madness and assault on a world that dares to challenge the prevailing status quo of expansive settler colonialism and military occupation.

The sinister chants of “death to the Arabs” have not just manifested in state doctrine but have intriguingly resonated with American geopolitics. Shatz, blinded perhaps by his own prejudices or his genuine affinity for Haaretz, has tragically missed the intricate interplay of Israel’s politics and identity. He errs by situating the Palestinian response as the progenitor of this systemic erasure. In reality, Palestinian resistance, in its myriad manifestations, emerges as a dialectical antithesis to prolonged suppression but is not necessarily a mirror image of Israel’s worst propensities. A better understanding of these dynamics requires that we look to Zionism’s core ethos with respect to the “Arab problem.”

The founding fathers of Zionism, such as Ze’ev Jabotinsky, held lucid views regarding the “necessary evils” Israel would need to commit to establish a state at the expense of Palestinian Arabs. Jabotinsky’s “Iron Wall,” in fact, mirrors Israel’s current military doctrine, which is a profound commitment to military strength by erecting an “Iron Wall” with which Arabs would eventually be forced to reconcile.

The Iron Wall doctrine leads to the realization that Zionism culminates in a “zero-sum” game toward the natives — an existential equation of “either us or them.” To break free from this cycle, it becomes imperative to dismantle this wall — to challenge Israel’s confidence in perpetually crafting a “military solution” to a systemic and political predicament. Regardless of whether we condone or condemn, this is precisely what Palestinians set out to achieve on October 7.

Palestinian profanity and Israel’s ‘logical madness’

We must take into account the pre-existing rules of military engagement, many of which Israel had already established during its 16-year Gaza blockade and counterinsurgency campaign, when evaluating the events of October 7. We must also consider the collection of political and social factors that also form the backdrop for the same event. Shatz refers to some of these factors in his narrative, but he seemingly casts them aside in favor of imputing to Palestinians a sort of primordial vengefulness motivating their actions.

In Shatz’s argument, we encounter the notion that had Palestinian fighters confined their attacks to solely military targets, they might have achieved a semblance of “legitimacy.” This strategy could, perhaps, prevent the intense condemnation that typically accompanies the image of the profane Palestinian fighter in the Western collective imaginary, which Israel and the U.S. attempted to conflate with ISIS. But we should treat Shatz’s suggestion with skepticism because it overlooks several crucial junctures in the history of Israel’s military engagement with resistance.

Consider, for instance, Israel’s 2006 ground incursion into Lebanon, where the distinction between military and civilian targets quickly disintegrated, leading to substantial Lebanese civilian casualties and more than 1,200 lives lost. And what was Israel responding to? The targeting of an Israeli military unit — a legitimate military target in Shatz’s view.

Similarly, the kidnapping of Corporal Gilad Shalit in Gaza triggered a retaliatory military response that caused direct damage to Palestinian civilians, resulting in nearly 1,200 deaths. These instances underscore the intertwining of military targets and civilian populations within the theater of conflict. Neither the history of the conflict nor American and Israeli discourse has ever made these distinctions matter, and Hezbollah and Hamas remain terrorist organizations, whether they target soldiers or civilians. Nor is the intensity of the response truly different — the so-called “Dahiya doctrine,” after all, was formulated in response to Hezbollah’s capture and killing of Israeli soldiers.

The Dahiya doctrine is evident in Gaza today. Israel has declared that any attack on it that it deems significant will result in the comprehensive destruction of both civil and governmental infrastructure, including bombing villages, cities, and towns back into the “stone age” through wholesale destruction. In other words, any form of resistance, regardless of the target, will be met with no less than a scorched earth policy from the air.

But what’s more significant in all of this is not so much the disproportionate Israeli military response (which remains the same even when fighters attack “legitimate” targets) as it is in the evolution of Israel’s style of warfare and counterinsurgency. These rules of military engagement, predominantly set by Israel, should form the crucial backdrop to any assessment of October 7.

In the past two decades, Israel has moved toward a form of warfare that attempts to remove the battle from the war, in which Israel has opted to keep its soldiers and army at a distance while relying on its potent airpower as a means of offensive action. It has employed this strategy during its past wars in Gaza with the effect of preserving the lives of its soldiers while killing hundreds of Palestinians, mostly civilians. In 2021, Israel actually tried to deceive Palestinian fighters by announcing a ground operation, aiming to target underground tunnels and eliminate numerous Palestinian fighters. The so-called “metro operation” failed partially due to Palestinian disbelief that Israel would actually enter the Gaza Strip. For years, the reliance on airpower alongside intelligence turned Israel into a one-dimensional army that uses air control for counterinsurgency operations, with all its operational limitations and limited efficacy in targeting fighters, while wreaking havoc in Palestinian civilian spaces.

Israel has chosen a mode of killing without the peril of being killed. This strategy has spurred its adversaries to develop alternatives in response to Israel’s apparent reluctance for ground engagements — if you won’t come to us, we’ll come to you. War, as Clausewitz suggests, is inherently dialectical, akin to a “duel” in which each side employs technical expertise, determination, organizational structure, command and control, and intelligence to secure an upper hand. This is what happened on October 7; it was a Palestinian response to the tactical status quo that Israel had imposed.

It is crucial to understand that Palestinian resistance in the Gaza Strip initiated the planning for this operation in 2022, merely a year after Israel’s “metro operation” failed to achieve its intended outcomes. Palestinian military planners took into account several significant factors in their planning. One of them was Israel’s recurrent reluctance to engage directly in Gaza, but there were also political and social pressures that pushed in the direction of October 7. They included the sluggish and limited improvements in living conditions on the strip and the absence of a clear political path forward. In other words, it was the exhaustion of political, diplomatic, and legal avenues.

Furthermore, Israel’s deliberate efforts to delegitimize the PA by imposing financial sanctions have exacerbated the turn toward military solutions. The empowering of Israel’s right-wing factions, as well as the attempts of hardline settlers to alter the status quo in Jerusalem and the expansion of illegal settlements in the West Bank, have added fuel to the fire. And when Palestinians engaged in demonstrations without posing a genuine threat during the Great March of Return, they were met with a disproportionate and deadly response, as hundreds of demonstrators fell victim to sniper fire that debilitated them for life.

Shatz mentions some of these contextual circumstances without truly comprehending their implications. These circumstances highlight the audacity of expecting Palestinians to remain nonviolent given Israel’s global status — a state seemingly able to practice symbolic, structural, and physical violence with impunity. A few years ago, the U.S. warned the ICC against pursuing any criminal claims against Israeli leaders accused of war crimes. Europe has neither recognized the state of Palestine nor imposed any sanctions on Israel. The world has sent a clear message to the Palestinians: there will be no legal respite, no political relief, only limited support for nonviolence, and occasional condemnations when and if Israel is perceived to commit crimes. In fact, there is violence in this insistence on nonviolence by the international community because it is effectively an invitation for Palestinians to lie down and die.

The question of civilian death

One might be generous to Shatz in assuming that he does not necessarily share in this dogmatic injunction against political violence and that his qualms lie more in the choice of target — civilians — and perhaps in the manner in which they were massacred. But here, Shatz already concedes too much to the official Israeli narrative, and more importantly, he ignores another set of contextual elements in the military planning for the Al-Aqsa Flood.

One of those elements pertains to Israeli society’s distinct character. The various layers of Israel’s defensive structure include the geographic proximity of its military installations and its civilian settlements, including the wide presence of military-trained police forces in civilian areas. The wide ownership of guns, specifically in frontier areas like the Gaza envelope, would also be an important consideration for any military planning or offensive operation.

This observation does not mean that all Israelis are soldiers and therefore legitimate targets. However, it plays a significant role in dictating a policy of “not taking chances” — a policy that many military organizations, whether West or East, civilized or barbaric, share in the conduct of their military operations. Israel’s scorched earth policy, which includes the use of its multilayered firepower in its offensive maneuvers, creating “firebelts,” and moving slowly to avoid the death of its own soldiers, tells us as much.

The prevailing Israeli narrative holds that there was no underlying strategic objective for the October attack beyond mere vengeance and wanton bloodshed. At times, it seems that, in spite of himself, Shatz has internalized this narrative. A more sober appraisal is needed.

With the available information, we can surmise that the operation had three main tactical goals: capturing Israeli soldiers in exchange for prisoners, getting information or weapons from Israel’s many military bases, and making it hard for any police or military force to easily clear and retake the Gaza envelope (which they would probably do by negotiating over hostages they held in the seThis, of course, doesn’t imply that many fighters didn’t exceed their orders or that all Palestinian fighters acted in unison, but it does suggest that the Palestinian military strategy aimed to delay and postpone, while Israel’s strategy focused on the rapid recovery and reclamation of its territory. And it is highly unlikely that this policy did not at least exacerbate the extent of the civilian casualties. Numerous testimonies from Israeli survivors indicate that Israeli military and police units may not have exercised caution in the battles around the Gaza envelope. This evidence has encouraged a group of Israelis to write an open letter encouraging their fellow citizens to demand the truth of the events of October 7.
ttlements inside the Gaza envelope).

This meant that fighters set up camp inside Israeli settlements to try to delay the recapture of the envelope. They did this by fighting or negotiating for a long time to free the hostages while stopping civilians from resisting the deep maneuver within Israeli territory. The problem is that growing evidence shows that Israel wasn’t interested in negotiating over hostages and instead prioritized retaking the Gaza envelope by shelling its own settlements, killing the fighters, and perhaps leading to the death of its own civilians.


The primary difference, then, between when Israel commits its crimes against Palestinian civilians and when Palestinians do it stems from an international network that legitimizes, clarifies, and codifies the logic behind Israeli military actions. This gives it an appearance of respectability, even when the underlying rationale appears deeply flawed or seemingly justifies the large-scale killing of Palestinian civilians in Gaza. When reviewing the literature of any Western and Israeli military think tank, it becomes evident that urban warfare, for example, is inherently complex. Such combat scenarios frequently lead to numerous civilian casualties and might necessitate striking civilian facilities, including hospitals, as highlighted in certain research papers. Israel has often used this to prepare international audiences for the mass killing of Palestinians. These military justifications then trickle down to the mainstream media, where they are often cloaked in narratives that fault Palestinians for Israel’s systematic lethal actions. This is also echoed by American spokespersons who shrug off these massacres by repeating the mantra that “war leads to civilian deaths” in Palestine, yet are horrified by the same conduct in the context of Russia’s war on Ukraine.

Hamas can remain barbaric, and Israel can remain a strong “democratic and liberal” ally of the United States. The first engages in a mindless act of profane violence, while the second engages in calculated and methodical strikes, a sacred form of violence. And the whole dichotomy forestalls the question of whether there was any operative military rationale in the Palestinian offensive maneuver on October 7.

Adam Shatz, by not delving into the military logic of the attack, exemplifies an aversion to confronting the reality of violence and the logics that animate it, an avoidance that is endemic among certain intellectuals. It’s not just about the refusal to bring these topics to light, but about what this refusal signifies about the problematics of dealing with the logic of Palestinian violence, especially in an environment that simply casts it as profane, detestable, and morally degraded. This is why Shatz’s essay is all the more surprising: it attempts to decode Palestinian violence, often mentioning some of the political and social context, yet circles back to the instinctual desire for vengeance.

Perhaps what is central to any moral judgment is that these judgments need to be rigorously subjected to evidence, especially when Israel refuses to share much of the evidence it has. Did Hamas issue orders for the killing of civilians, or was the killing of civilians an excess on the part of the fighters? How many of the Israelis were killed in the exchange of fire with fighters? Did the Israeli military effort to retake the Gaza envelope take into consideration the presence of Israeli civilians? These questions are important, not only because they will provide us with a clearer picture, but because the official Israeli version of events was employed to justify the Dresden-like air campaign against Gaza and the mass murder of Palestinians. It goes beyond mere moral adjudication. It is about the weaponization of moral injury to commit massacres.

Delving into the military logic of the attack would also suggest that Shatz’s historical analogy — equating Palestinian offensive actions with the Battle of Philippeville in French Algeria — isn’t entirely accurate. The main objective of the Battle of Philippeville was the targeting of civilians, and to assume that this was the main objective of October 7 simply ignores the facts of what happened. Again, this does not mean that civilians were not killed, nor does it mean that Palestinian fighters did not engage in the outright killing of civilians, but it does tell us something about how their actions were received: Shatz seems to have internalized the widespread perception that Palestinian fighters are detestable, which is what prompted him to draw the comparison with Philippeville in the first place.

One of the most important consequences of the Battle of Philippeville was that it ended the prospects for a “third way” movement that bound Algerian Arabs with French settlers. In Palestine, that “third way” ended two decades ago, becoming a highly feeble coalition sustained by some human rights organizations and minoritarian voices in Israel with no real political impact. Nothing demonstrates this better than the marked absence of any mention of Palestinians during the Israeli protest movement against the right-wing judicial overhaul.

Moreover, every war or battle is a unique event within its own historical conjuncture, and analogies to the past reveal more about those drawing such comparisons than they do facilitate a reading of the present.

The fallout from October 7

Even Shatz must recognize that, after being dismissed for years as a non-issue in centers of power, including Biden’s policy of non-engagement, Palestine has now returned to the international stage as a pressing matter. In addition, the way alliances now work makes it likely that there will be both regional and international conflict, as well as a severe economic backlash that could make it harder for the world economy to recover from inflationary pressures. Not to mention that Biden’s rhetoric might manage to alienate enough under-thirty voters in his upcoming elections.

Biden might be unaware that, when it comes to Palestine, there is no consensus on a long and bloody war. Palestinians have built a network of support that includes civil society organizations, political movements, and various forms of intersectional struggles in the U.S. among progressives and the left — and even occasionally on the conservative right. These coalitions are beginning to create dissensus in Western countries in a way that does not exist for the Western consensus on supporting Ukraine, for example.

Yet all we get from Shatz on this score is an email comment from Shatz’s correspondence with Palestinian scholar Yezid Sayigh, who has historically downplayed the Palestinian struggle and suggested its incapability of significantly impacting the international system. Sayigh’s email to Shatz intimates his fears that the fallout from October 7 will accelerate fascist trends, likening it to Sarajevo 1914 or Kristallnacht 1938. There is no question of how fascism is rising in the West in the first place, or perhaps more importantly, of how everyday life under an outright fascist government — whose Finance Minister publicly announced a “decisive plan” for Palestinians that amounted to ethnic cleansing long before October 7 — has brought us to this point.

But the glaring contradiction in Shatz’s essay is obvious, yet he seems blind to it: you can see it when he starts his essay by identifying the political objectives of the Palestinian offensive, but then diminishes them to mere “vengeful” pathologies. He dismisses specific historical analogies, such as the Tet Offensive in Vietnam, without explaining his rationale other than his aversion to violence. These observations are incongruous; either Palestinians had political objectives and indeed opened up a political space that had been shut for years, or they are irrational and barbaric actors driven by an overwhelming surge of emotion.

The meticulous planning, strategic “trickery,” and successful bypassing of Israel’s defenses all point to a more deliberate maneuver (which Shatz admits when decrying the “chilling” quality of the methodical nature of fighters’ excesses). The alliance system of Palestinian resistance provides significant leverage, complicating both the Israeli response and America’s position in the region. In fact, a prominent emerging perspective is that Israel’s reputation as a calculated, rational, and competent strategic actor is facing severe scrutiny. The country is fighting to rebuild its image and is becoming increasingly reliant on NATO assets and power, which will also place it in a position where its U.S. ally, which does not share its exact interests vis-a-vis a regional escalation, can influence its policy decisions. As of now, it appears that Israel has not identified any specific goal other than “revenge.” Blinken’s visit a few days ago confirmed as much when the U.S. Secretary realized that Netanyahu has no exit strategy.

Finally, why wouldn’t an assault on Israel’s primary nerve — its deterrence and military power — not lead to a humbling experience that might open new avenues for a new political solution? While such prospects seem distant in the heat of battle and in light of Israel’s genocidal intent, the actual battle on the ground is what will decide the future. Shatz is particularly unconvincing here, since he already chooses to foreclose possibilities that might emerge from the aftermath of October 7.

By skirting their political utility and military logic and confining them to mere “vengeance,” Shatz ignores the fact that all wars and battles, no matter how horrific, bloody, and tragic, might ultimately create the space for new possibilities — even hopeful ones. He remains faithful to a dystopian interpretation, providing a darker undertone to the futurity of Palestine and the world. Perhaps he is right in this — that, ultimately, all will be losers, and that the metropole is not ready to deconstruct its ethno-religious and national power. Perhaps Shatz’s essay itself is a sign of this. Maybe the insistence on maintaining dominance and hegemony will exacerbate the echoes of fascism across the West. But this line of thinking also ignores the world as Palestinians experience and perceive it — that is, as long as Israelis live in this assured certainty of their all-encompassing power, the will to change the reality of the Palestinians will remain absent.

And even if the Palestinian resistance fails to snatch a relative victory in this battle, the alternative would have been a slow death.

Violence and Fanon

It would be remiss not to also mention Shatz’s treatment of Fanon with respect to Palestinian violence. In The Wretched of the Earth, Fanon famously observes that violence on the part of the colonized results in a form of catharsis and self-recognition — “disintoxication,” as Shatz highlights — wherein violence isn’t just raw brutality, but a transformative rite that cleanses the stains of subjugation. Yet Shatz is quick to point out that Fanon did not necessarily celebrate this prospect, given the looming nightmare of a post-colonial future where the liberator becomes the oppressor, and patterns of colonial hierarchy are recreated within the nascent postcolonial state. Shatz is correct to point out Fanon’s nuanced treatment of the role of violence within decolonization, which cautions against nihilistic celebrations of the psychological utility of violence, as it risks papering over the detrimental effect that violence has upon those who exercise it.

But even as Shatz rightly points this out, he does not remain entirely faithful to the scope of Fanon’s work. Fanon not only warned of the mirages of national consciousness but also championed a dialectical shift to a broader humanistic and socialist horizon. Regardless of the shadow cast by violence, Fanon ultimately viewed violence as a necessity within the confines of colonial oppression, and as a strategic and political tool that was indispensable for the dismantling of colonial structures. Shatz is undoubtedly aware of this, but he does not translate it to his reading of the Palestinian predicament.

Central to Fanon’s discourse on liberation was that it was deeply rooted within the movement to which he genuinely belonged. He was not an outsider passing judgment or casting aspersions on the fighters with whom he interacted. His was an internal critique that was able to identify the potentials and pitfalls within the anti-colonial movement. More significantly, Fanon also wagered on the colony’s ability not only to liberate itself from settler colonialism but to liberate the metropole from itself. This is where his ultimate radical imaginary lies.

This is the kind of genuine critical engagement with the Palestinian resistance that we require. It isn’t solely about Palestine’s stance against ethnic cleansing, or its own fight to reclaim Palestine — rather, it is a liberation movement with global resonance that represents a universal struggle. While figures like Yezid Sayigh and Adam Shatz believe that the violence of October 7 will fuel fascism, it also has the potential to pave the way for a broader human horizon. Palestinian movements, despite their imperfections, require more than just passive critique, and the disengagement and harsh condemnations demonstrated by intellectuals often mask deeper reservations or outright rejections toward the Palestinian liberation struggle, if not simple disdain.

Should Palestinians simply accept the predetermined fate laid out for them by intellectuals in the West? If so, intellectuals should have the courage to state it outright. If their suggestion is the political annihilation of Palestine or its reduction to footnotes in articles and scholarly critiques of Israel, it should be said with conviction.

Perhaps the perception that the events of October 7 were nothing more than an expression of intra-Palestinian necrosis is more an indication of what intellectuals secretly wish for us. But we in Palestine desire and fight for a world that includes us, and a world that includes everyone else. Mourn us if you want, or don’t. Condemn us, or don’t. It’s not like we have not heard the cries of condemnation before.



(Mondoweiss)

https://orinocotribune.com/hopeful-path ... dam-shatz/

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Israeli War Crimes and Propaganda Follow US Blueprint
Posted on November 14, 2023 by Yves Smith

Yves here. It may seem disheartening to see so many chronicle the deliberate extermination of Palestinians as part of a purported Hamas clearing operation in Gaza yet see no change in its apparent trajectory. But as some observers who are watching the action closely (see for instance Alastair Crooke’s latest talk on Judge Napolitano), various Arab interests are increasing their attacks on Israel. And military experts (Douglas Macgregor, and informed commentators like Larry Johnson) point out, Israel cannot afford a long war, geopolitically or economically, and is not very far along at all with rooting out Hamas. It may be flattening Gaza but has yet to engage meaningfully on the ground, which is necessary to meet the aim of “defeating Hamas.”

This is a long winded way of saying that Israel is turning itself into a world pariah in a war it cannot win on its own terms. Relentlessly focusing on that could save at least some Palestinians by increasing the cost to Israel of continuing the carnage. So the continued documentation and criticism is productive, even if it does not feel like it (and is deeply distressing, to seem so unable to force a halt to the slaughter).

This article focuses on the propaganda war and minimization of Israel’s brazen behavior. I wish it used the word censorship more, because that is a key part of this US/Israel media strategy. Likely due to the editorial choice of making a concise case, it omitted a key point that I believe bears repeating:
International Law and treaties are clearly In favour of the occupied Palestinians’ “right to defend itself” not the occupier Israel. It’s clear as day…
And Israel’s pretext for the destruction of the Rantisi hospital comes up short. No Hamas bunkers or weapons caches:
The Israeli army has failed to find tunnels or weapons stockpiled in Rantisi hospital. Instead, it has turned up a pack of diapers and a calendar listing the days of the week. The presentation has become a laughingstock, except among the cretinous and narrowing base of support…
By Medea Benjamin and Nicolas J. S. Davies, the authors of War in Ukraine: Making Sense of a Senseless Conflict, published by OR Books in November 2022. Medea Benjamin is the cofounder of CODEPINK for Peace, and the author of several books, including Inside Iran: The Real History and Politics of the Islamic Republic of Iran. Nicolas J. S. Davies is an independent journalist, a researcher for CODEPINK and the author of Blood on Our Hands: The American Invasion and Destruction of Iraq

We have both been reporting on and protesting against U.S. war crimes for many years, and against identical crimes committed by U.S. allies and proxies like Israel and Saudi Arabia: illegal uses of military force to try to remove enemy governments or “regimes”; hostile military occupations; disproportionate military violence justified by claims of “terrorism”; the bombing and killing of civilians; and the mass destruction of whole cities.

Most Americans share a general aversion to war, but tend to accept this militarized foreign policy because we are tragically susceptible to propaganda, the machinery of public manipulation that works hand in hand with the machinery of killing to justify otherwise unthinkable horrors.

This process of “manufacturing consent” works in a number of ways. One of the most effective forms of propaganda is silence, simply not telling us, and certainly not showing us, what war is really doing to the people whose homes and communities have been turned into America’s latest battlefield.

The most devastating campaign the U.S. military has waged in recent years dropped over 100,000 bombs and missiles on Mosul in Iraq, Raqqa in Syria, and other areas occupied by ISIS or Da’esh. An Iraqi Kurdish intelligence report estimated that more than 40,000 civilians were killed in Mosul, while Raqqa was even more totally destroyed.

The shelling of Raqqa was the heaviest U.S. artillery bombardment since the Vietnam War, yet it was barely reported in the U.S. corporate media. A recent New York Times article about the traumatic brain injuries and PTSD suffered by U.S. artillerymen operating 155 mm howitzers, which each fired up to 10,000 shells into Raqqa, was appropriately titled A Secret War, Strange New Wounds and Silence from the Pentagon.

Shrouding such mass death and destruction in secrecy is a remarkable achievement. When British playwright Harold Pinter was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2005, in the midst of the Iraq War, he titled his Nobel speech “Art, Truth and Politics,” and used it to shine a light on this diabolical aspect of U.S. war-making.

After talking about the hundreds of thousands of killings in Indonesia, Greece, Uruguay, Brazil, Paraguay, Haiti, Turkey, the Philippines, Guatemala, El Salvador, Chile and Nicaragua, Pinter asked: “Did they take place? And are they in all cases attributable to US foreign policy? The answer is yes, they did take place and they are attributable to American foreign policy,”

“But you wouldn’t know it,” he went on.”It never happened. Nothing ever happened. Even while it was happening it wasn’t happening. It didn’t matter. It was of no interest. The crimes of the United States have been systematic, constant, vicious, remorseless, but very few people have actually talked about them. You have to hand it to America. It has exercised a quite clinical manipulation of power worldwide while masquerading as a force for universal good. It’s a brilliant, even witty, highly successful act of hypnosis.”

But the wars and the killing go on, day after day, year after year, out of sight and out of mind for most Americans. Did you know that the United States and its allies have dropped more than 350,000 bombs and missiles on 9 countries since 2001 (including 14,000 in the current war on Gaza)? That’s an average of 44 airstrikes per day, day in, day out, for 22 years.

Israel, in its present war on Gaza, with children making up more than 40% of the more than 11,000 people killed to date, would surely like to mimic the extraordinary U.S. ability to hide its brutality. But despite Israel’s efforts to impose a media blackout, the massacre is taking place in a small, enclosed, densely-populated urban area, often called an open-air prison, where the world can see a great deal more than usual of how it impacts real people.

Israel has killed a record number of journalists in Gaza, and this appears to be a deliberate strategy, as when U.S. forces targeted journalists in Iraq. But we are still seeing horrifying video and photos of daily new atrocities: dead and wounded children; hospitals struggling to treat the injured; and desperate people fleeing from one place to another through the rubble of their destroyed homes.

Another reason this war is not so well hidden is because Israel is waging it, not the United States. The U.S. is supplying most of the weapons, has sent aircraft carriers to the region, and dispatched U.S. Marine General James Glynn to provide tactical advice based on his experience conducting similar massacres in Fallujah and Mosul in Iraq. But Israeli leaders seem to have overestimated the extent to which the U.S. information warfare machine would shield them from public scrutiny and political accountability.

Unlike in Fallujah, Mosul and Raqqa, people all over the world are seeing video of the unfolding catastrophe on their computers, phones and TVs. Netanyahu, Biden and the corrupt “defense analysts” on cable TV are no longer the ones creating the narrative, as they try to tack self-serving narratives onto the horrifying reality we can all see for ourselves.

With the reality of war and genocide staring the world in the face, people everywhere are challenging the impunity with which Israel is systematically violating international humanitarian law.

Michael Crowley and Edward Wong have reported in the New York Times that Israeli officials are defending their actions in Gaza by pointing to U.S. war crimes, insisting that they are simply interpreting the laws of war the same way that the United States has interpreted them in Iraq and other U.S. war zones. They compare Gaza to Fallujah, Mosul and even Hiroshima.

But copying U.S. war crimes is precisely what makes Israel’s actions illegal. And it is the world’s failure to hold the United States accountable that has emboldened Israel to believe it too can kill with impunity.

The United States systematically violates the UN Charter’s prohibition against the threat or use of force, manufacturing political justifications to suit each case and using its Security Council veto to evade international accountability. Its military lawyers employ unique, exceptional interpretations of the Fourth Geneva Convention, under which the universal protections the Convention guarantees to civilians are treated as secondary to U.S. military objectives.

The United States fiercely resists the jurisdiction of the International Court of Justice (ICJ) and the International Criminal Court (ICC), to ensure that its exceptional interpretations of international law are never subjected to impartial judicial scrutiny.

When the United States did allow the ICJ to rule on its war against Nicaragua in 1986, the ICJ ruled that its deployment of the “Contras” to invade and attack Nicaragua and its mining of Nicaragua’s ports were acts of aggression in violation of international law, and ordered the United States to pay war reparations to Nicaragua. When the United States declared that it would no longer recognize the jurisdiction of the ICJ and failed to pay up, Nicaragua asked the UN Security Council to enforce the reparations, but the U.S. vetoed the resolution.

Atrocities like Hiroshima, Nagasaki and the bombing of German and Japanese cities to “unhouse” the civilian population, as Winston Churchill called it, together with the horrors of Germany’s Nazi holocaust, led to the adoption of the new Fourth Geneva Convention in 1949, to protect civilians in war zones and under military occupation.

On the 50th anniversary of the Convention in 1999, the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), which is responsible for monitoring international compliance with the Geneva Conventions, conducted a survey to see how well people in different countries understood the protections the Convention provides.

They surveyed people in twelve countries that had been victims of war, in four countries (France, Russia, the U.K. and the U.S.) that are permanent members of the UN Security Council, and in Switzerland where the ICRC is based. The ICRC published the results of the survey in 2000, in a report titled, People on War – Civilians in the Line of Fire.

The survey asked people to choose between a correct understanding of the Convention’s civilian protections and a watered-down interpretation of them that closely resembles that of U.S. and Israeli military lawyers.

The correct understanding was defined by a statement that combatants “must attack only other combatants and leave civilians alone.” The weaker, incorrect statement was that “combatants should avoid civilians as much as possible” as they conduct military operations.

Between 72% and 77% of the people in the other UNSC countries and Switzerland agreed with the correct statement, but the United States was an outlier, with only 52% agreeing. In fact 42% of Americans agreed with the weaker statement, twice as many as in the other countries. There were similar disparities between the United States and the others on questions about torture and the treatment of prisoners of war.

In U.S.-occupied Iraq, the United States’ exceptionally weak interpretations of the Geneva Conventions led to endless disputes with the ICRC and the UN Assistance Mission for Iraq (UNAMI), which issued damning quarterly human rights reports. UNAMI consistently maintained that U.S. airstrikes in densely populated civilian areas were violations of international law.

For instance, its human rights report for the 2nd quarter of 2007 documented UNAMI’s investigations of 15 incidents in which U.S. occupation forces killed 103 Iraqi civilians, including 27 killed in airstrikes in Khalidiya, near Ramadi, on April 3rd, and 7 children killed in a helicopter attack on an elementary school in Diyala province on May 8th.

UNAMI demanded that “all credible allegations of unlawful killings by MNF (Multi-National Force) forces be thoroughly, promptly and impartially investigated, and appropriate action taken against military personnel found to have used excessive or indiscriminate force.”

A footnote explained, “Customary international humanitarian law demands that, as much as possible, military objectives must not be located within areas densely populated by civilians. The presence of individual combatants among a great number of civilians does not alter the civilian character of an area.”

UNAMI also rejected U.S. claims that its widespread killing of civilians was the result of the Iraqi Resistance using civilians as “human shields,” another U.S. propaganda trope that Israel is mimicking today. Israeli accusations of human shielding are even more absurd in the densely populated, confined space of Gaza, where the whole world can see that it is Israel that is placing civilians in the line of fire as they desperately seek safety from Israeli bombardment.

Calls for a ceasefire in Gaza are echoing around the world: through the halls of the United Nations; from the governments of traditional U.S. allies like France, Spain and Norway; from a newly united front of previously divided Middle Eastern leaders; and in the streets of London and Washington. The world is withdrawing its consent for a genocidal “two-state solution” in which Israel and the United States are the only two states that can settle the fate of Palestine.

If U.S. and Israeli leaders are hoping that they can squeak through this crisis, and that the public’s habitually short attention span will wash away the world’s horror at the crimes we are all witnessing, that may be yet another serious misjudgment. As Hannah Arendt wrote in 1950 in the preface to The Origins of Totalitarianism.

“We can no longer afford to take that which was good in the past and simply call it our heritage, to discard the bad and simply think of it as a dead load which by itself time will bury in oblivion. The subterranean stream of Western history has finally come to the surface and usurped the dignity of our tradition. This is the reality in which we live. And this is why all efforts to escape from the grimness of the present into nostalgia for a still intact past, or into the anticipated oblivion of a better future, are vain.”

https://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2023/11 ... print.html

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From Gaza.
Looks like a photo of IDF's burned armor in Gaza.

Image

Looks like the column got ambushed and was destroyed. The data pouring from Gaza is very contradictory, but one fact which is undeniable is a large number of IDF tanks (Merkavas) lost to Palestinian fire. Some say the number is around 100, others say it is 135 and counting--doesn't matter, it is large and there goes another myth of Merkavas being the best tanks in the world. Didn't we hear this tune before? Leopard II was the "best" tank--not anymore, Challenger was the "best" tank--not anymore, where is Abrams when one needs to prove itself? Well, you know the answer--NATO knows it and it doesn't like this answer at

http://smoothiex12.blogspot.com/2023/11/from-gaza.html
"There is great chaos under heaven; the situation is excellent."

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