Palestine

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blindpig
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Re: Palestine

Post by blindpig » Thu May 29, 2025 2:20 pm

Jonathan Cook: Israel Is Lying About ‘Hamas Stealing Aid’
May 29, 2025
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Western journalists — having promoted Israel’s claims for more than a year and half — have grown entirely insensible to their active collusion in genocide.

Image
Gaza 2023-2025 by Jaber Jehad Badwan, undated. (Wikimedia Commons / CC BY-SA 4.0)

By Jonathan Cook
Jonathan-Cook.net

Israel’s claim that Hamas is “stealing aid” is so preposterous no serious journalist or politician ought to give it any kind of airing – yet there it is continuously cropping up in the coverage of Gaza.

How do I know Israel’s claim is utterly worthless? For this simple reason:

Israel has a fleet of surveillance drones constantly hovering over the tiny strip of land that is Gaza, monitoring every inch of the territory. The incessant whine you hear every time you watch someone there being interviewed is from one of those drones.

They are Israel’s eyes on the enclave. If you are outside in Gaza, you might as well be living in the Truman Show.

Were Hamas stealing aid in Gaza, Israel would easily be able to document it. It would have the video footage from its drones.

The fact that it has not provided any footage showing Hamas’ theft of aid — its ransacking of aid trucks, or its fighters smuggling themselves into aid warehouses — is confirmation enough that Israel has simply invented this claim to rationalise its plans to starve the people of Gaza to death through months of an aid blockade or force them to flee into neighbouring Sinai, whichever comes first.

“If you are outside in Gaza, you might as well be living in the Truman Show.”

Without its disinformation campaign about “Hamas stealing aid,” Israel knows popular revulsion at its starvation campaign would grow quickly and Western governments would further struggle to keep opposition in check.

There are lots of others reasons, of course, to reject Israel’s lies about “Hamas stealing aid.” Not least of these is because every single charity and aid agency dealing with Gaza says that aid is not being stolen by Hamas.

But also because, were Hamas fighters doing so, they would be stealing from their own families: from their children and grandparents, who are much more vulnerable to Israel’s starvation campaign than they are.

“Every single charity and aid agency dealing with Gaza says that aid is not being stolen by Hamas.”

The idea that Hamas is stealing aid makes sense only to a racist, European colonial mindset in which Hamas fighters are viewed as bogeymen figures indifferent to the deaths of their own children, wives and parents.

What undoubtedly is happening is that Israel is allowing the strongest extended families in Gaza — often crime families with significant private arsenals — to loot the aid. That has become a serious problem since Israel killed off Gaza’s civilian police force (in violation of international law), leaving no one to enforce public order.

When everyone’s starving, the most powerful families mobilise their strength to grab an unfair share of the aid. That was an entirely predictable outcome of Israel’s policy to smash all of Gaza’s institutions, including its hospitals, government offices and police stations, on the bogus pretext that they were “Hamas.”

“Israel is allowing the strongest extended families in Gaza — often crime families with significant private arsenals — to loot the aid.”

Note too that Israel has long cultivated close ties to Palestinian crime families, because they provide a potential alternative, and more co-optable, power base to the Palestinian national movements and are a good source of collaborators.

The evidence suggests Israel is encouraging these crime families to loot the aid precisely to justify its dismantling of an existing aid system that works remarkably well, given the catastrophic circumstances in Gaza, and replace it with its own militarised, completely inadequate “aid distribution” system, which is designed only to herd Palestinians into the southern-most tip of Gaza, ready to be expelled into Sinai.

No journalist ought to be repeating Israel’s transparent disinformation. To do so is to collude in the promotion of lies to justify genocide.

But the Western media class have been doing that now for more than a year and half. They have grown entirely insensible to their own active collusion in the genocide.

https://consortiumnews.com/2025/05/29/j ... aling-aid/

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GHF says operating 'without incident' in south Gaza as Israeli army guns down aid seekers

UN officials lambasted the 'symbolic and superficial' US-Israeli aid mechanism for failing to deliver sufficient aid to starving Palestinians

News Desk

MAY 28, 2025

Image
(Photo credit: AFP)

The controversial US and Israeli-led Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) said on 28 May that it was continuing operations “without incident.”

The statement came amid continued violence against starving Palestinians by Israeli forces, one day after chaos broke out in the southern strip due to the mechanism’s failure to properly deliver aid to starving Palestinians.

The foundation stated it is “continuing its operations today, opening another Safe Distribution Site and distributing aid without incident.”

“The situation remains urgent. But every hour, more people are fed,” the statement added.

GHF said two distribution centers were now up and running and that it delivered “all available aid without incident – approximately eight trucks worth” on Wednesday.

Earlier on Wednesday, it was reported that distribution had been temporarily halted, and that efforts were underway to resume operations.

Two more distribution centers are set to be opened. GHF said it has distributed “approximately 14,550 food boxes,” equaling 840,262 meals across the two open distribution sites. It added that each box feeds an average of “5.5 people for 3.5 days.”

“Operations will continue scaling across all four sites, with plans to build additional sites across Gaza in the weeks ahead.”

While the US State Department announced that 8,000 food boxes, equal to 462,000 meals, were distributed on Tuesday through GHF, Gaza humanitarian coordinator Eyad Amawi told DropSiteNews that only 7 trucks arrived – barely enough for a single camp.

“Eight thousand food boxes would require more than 7 trucks to deliver,” he said.

Amawi called the effort “symbolic and superficial,” adding that Gaza needs at least 600 aid trucks daily to meet the needs of over 2 million people.

The Euro-Mediterranean Monitor for Human Rights said six people were killed on Wednesday while attempting to receive aid in the southern city of Rafah, contradicting the GHF statement. The monitor also said one person was killed during the chaos on Tuesday, adding that seven other Palestinians remain missing.

“Israeli forces directed citizens to receive aid without proper guidance in dangerous areas and then targeted them with bullets and shells. Targeting starving civilians is a double crime that embodies the use of aid as a weapon of humiliation, subjugation, destruction, and murder,” it said.

At least 47 Palestinians have been injured in the violence.

Hours after GHF launched operations on 27 May and following days of delays and concerns about the feasibility of the plan, chaos erupted in south Gaza.

US mercenaries hired to manage the distribution sites abandoned their posts shortly after the Israeli military started firing on starving Palestinians who desperately crowded around the sites.

GHF denied that any shots were fired and that the distribution center was overrun. It also denied reports that people were detained during the chaos.

The new aid plan has been repeatedly condemned by the UN and other international humanitarian groups for being designed to reinforce further displacement of the Palestinian population in Gaza.

Most of the distribution centers are located in southern Gaza, with one in the center near the Netzarim Corridor. Palestinians are forced to travel long distances under bombardment and the risk of death.

As a result, the UN has stated that it will not participate, and the initiative’s director, Jake Wood, resigned ahead of the distribution launch, citing ethical reasons.

Jonathan Whittall, head of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) in the occupied West Bank and Gaza, said on Wednesday that “The new food distribution does not meet the needs.”

“There are four centers, most of them in the south, and one that is supposed to operate in central Gaza. We do not consider this humanitarian. Humanitarian means providing aid wherever people are,” the statement said.

https://thecradle.co/articles/ghf-says- ... id-seekers

*****

Image

If This Is What Israel Does, Then Israel Shouldn’t Exist

If what we are seeing in Gaza is what it means for Israel to exist, then it shouldn’t.

Caitlin Johnstone
May 29, 2025

Gaza’s youngest social media influencer has been killed by Israeli forces after touching tens of thousands of lives with her stories of survival in the besieged Palestinian territory. Her name was Yaqeen Hammad. She was 11 years old.

Israeli forces fired upon starving civilians in Gaza on Tuesday when they rushed inside a facility holding aid, reportedly killing three and wounding dozens more. The facility was operated by the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, the latest US-Israeli scheme to bypass normal UN aid distribution and lure Gaza’s population into specific concentrated locations.

A new report from the Associated Press confirms that Israeli forces have been using Palestinians as human shields in Gaza as a matter of policy. This is actually using human shields in the very real sense of deliberately forcing civilians between yourself and potential enemy fire, not in the fake sense of being somewhere near civilians as per the made-up “human shields” narrative that Israel uses to blame its daily massacres on Hamas.

A survey of Jewish Israelis conducted by an Israeli polling firm has found that 82 percent of respondents support the total ethnic cleansing of Gaza, and 47 percent believe Israeli forces should kill every man, woman and child in every city they capture there.

Haaretz reports on the poll’s findings:

“Sixty-five percent said they believed in the existence of a modern-day incarnation of Amalek, the Israelite biblical enemy whom God commanded to wipe out in Deuteronomy 25:19. Among those believers, 93 percent said the commandment to erase Amalek’s memory remains relevant today.”


These are just a few reports from the past few days, on top of all the other staggeringly evil things that Israel has been doing this whole time.

If this is Israel, then Israel should not exist. If what we are seeing in Gaza is what it means for Israel to exist, then it shouldn’t.

People scream bloody murder when you say this, but it shouldn’t be a controversial position. I’m not saying Jews shouldn’t exist, I’m saying a genocidal apartheid state should not exist. A state is an artificial construct of the human mind, held together by human actions. If the actions we are witnessing in Gaza are the product of the artificial construct of the Israeli state, then that artificial construct should be dismantled, and those actions should cease.

I would say this about any other man-made construct that is doing the things Israel is doing. If some scientists built a robot that spends all day every day massacring children, then I would say the robot should be unmade. If you drew a Star of David on the robot’s head, it wouldn’t suddenly make me an evil antisemite to say that the child-murdering robot should be dismantled.


Dismantling the apartheid state of Israel would mean granting everyone citizenship and equal rights, allowing right of return, denazifying apartheid culture, paying extensive reparations, and righting the wrongs of the past. You could still call what remains “Israel” if you wanted to, but it would be nothing like the state that presently exists under that name.

Would this upset the feelings of some Jewish people? Yes. Would it inconvenience the lives of some Jewish people? Certainly. But that would be infinitely preferable to the daily massacres, genocidal atrocities and reckless regional warmongering we are witnessing from the state of Israel. Advocating the end of this genocidal state doesn’t make someone a monster, advocating its continuation does. The only way to believe otherwise is to take it as a given that Palestinian lives are worth less than Jewish feelings.

Israel is currently presenting nonstop arguments for its own cessation. Every video that comes out showing Israelis acting in monstrous ways and innocent Palestinians being murdered, tortured and abused in the most horrific ways imaginable is an argument for which there is no verbal counter-argument. Every day that goes by, the genocidal apartheid state of Israel is proving to the world that it should not exist.

https://caitlinjohnstone.com.au/2025/05 ... dnt-exist/

The 'Two-State Solution' was always misdirecton by the Zionists. There can only be a One-State Solution': Palestine.
"There is great chaos under heaven; the situation is excellent."

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Re: Palestine

Post by blindpig » Fri May 30, 2025 2:21 pm

Israel greenlights 22 new illegal West Bank settlements to 'block Palestinian state'

Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich says Israel is seeking to expand its borders and eliminate the indigenous Palestinian population

News Desk

MAY 29, 2025

Image
(Photo credit: Maya Alleruzzo, AP)

Israel's government approved 22 new Jewish settlements in the occupied West Bank on 29 May as part of its ongoing effort to expropriate, colonize, and annex Palestinian lands.

Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz stated, “We will establish 22 new settlements in the West Bank as a strategic step to prevent the creation of a Palestinian state.”

Katz added that the settlement decision “strengthens our hold on Judea and Samaria,” using the biblical term for the occupied West Bank.

Writing on X, Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich called the decision “historic.”

“The next step – sovereignty!” he stated, referring to annexing the West Bank.

Smotrich earlier stated that Israel was expanding its borders as part of the Greater Israel project.

“We are being blessed with the opportunity, thank God, of seeing an expansion of the borders of the Land of Israel on all fronts. We are being blessed with the opportunity to blot out the seed of Amalek, a process which is intensifying,” he said.


Amalek is a reference to the people inhabiting ancient Palestine who were exterminated by the Hebrews entering the region from Egypt, according to the Torah.

Israeli media cited the Defense Ministry as saying that among the new settlements, existing “outposts” would be legalized, and new settlements would also be built.

Israeli outposts and settlements in the occupied West Bank are illegal under international law, which bars the conquest of new territory through war. Israel conquered the West Bank and East Jerusalem during the Six-Day War in 1967, and since then has been systematically stealing Palestinian land to build Jewish settlements there.

Around 700,000 Israeli settlers live among 2.7 million Palestinians in the occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem.

Nabil Abu Rudeineh, a spokesperson for Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, urged the US government to intervene and condemned efforts to prevent a Palestinian state.

“This extremist Israeli government is trying by all means to prevent the establishment of an independent Palestinian state,” he told Reuters.

Hamas official Sami Abu Zuhri told Reuters that the decision was part of “the war led by Netanyahu against the Palestinian people,” which includes Israel's ongoing destruction of Gaza and efforts to ethnically cleanse its inhabitants to make way for Jewish settlement.

After the announcement, the Israeli human rights group B'Tselem accused the government of advancing “Jewish supremacy through the theft of Palestinian land and the ethnic cleansing of the West Bank.”

In a statement, B'Tselem also criticized the international community for “enabling Israel's crimes.”

https://thecradle.co/articles/israel-gr ... nian-state

******

As US Role in Gaza Intensifies, Expect Violent Responses in the West
Posted on May 29, 2025 by Yves Smith

Yves here. The idea that the continued extermination in Gaza will generate more terrorism in the West seems entirely logical. I’m actually surprised we have not seen more given that the vividness and level of horror has only increased, along with the frequency of Zionist celebrations of cruelty.

However, this post oddly does not contemplate what would follow.

In the US, given the conflation of criticism of Israel, even by Jews, with anti-Semitism, terrorism will similarly be conflated with criticism, as in if you engage in the latter, you are promoting the former. So expect more concerted efforts to round up Muslims and boot them out of the US, particularly students. The Trump Administration would if it could set up internment camps for Muslim citizens a la the treatment of the Japanese in World War II. The Trump Administration would similarly use any rise in violence that could be depicted as related to Israel to further clamp down on free speech, engage in intrusive searches, and intimidate journalists. The FBI has taken to showing up a journalists’ doors without a warrant. In this case, the suspect in the Israeli embassy shootings, Elias Rodriguez, was already in custody, so it’s not as if the FBI needed information urgently so as to bring him in.



An additional point is that there is a real possibility of a false flag operation to justify US support of an Israeli attack on Iran. Mind you, expert commentators like Larry Wilkerson have raised this as a possibility, particularly in light of the fact that Israel has strike packages ready to go and is being restrained by Trump, who recognizes that war with Iran would be a seriously bad idea.

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

Conditions for Palestinians are getting progressively worse as Israel’s effort to control Gaza intensifies. Aware that his war can continue only as long as he has the backing of a highly unpredictable US president, Israeli prime minister Binyamin Netanyahu is ramping up efforts to bring the territory under total control as quickly as possible, whatever the human cost.

The vast majority of Gaza’s population of more than two million are now being forced into three small areas, where the Israeli Defence Force (IDF) is imposing tight security and limiting the flow of desperately needed food, fuel, medical supplies, and water.

In this context, the murder of two young Israeli Embassy staff, Sarah Milgrim and Yaron Lischinsky, outside Washington’s Capital Jewish Museum last week is especially significant.

Despite the best efforts of the Israeli government’s well-resourced public relations system, Israel has steadily decayed into pariah status across the world as its war on Gaza has intensified. That status will persist until the bombing and killing of Gazans stops, and given the sheer intensity of the current attacks, it will probably grow. Does that mean the Washington attack is a sign of things to come?

We have been here before, especially in the decade after 9/11, when the US-led wars in Afghanistan and Iraq sparked scores of attacks on Western targets.

Take, for example, the 7/7 train and bus bombings in London that killed 56 people in July 2005. At the time, prime minister Tony Blair’s government was utterly insistent that the attack had nothing to do with the UK’s involvement in the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, a stance undermined when it was revealed that one of the bombers had said precisely the opposite in a video recorded before the attacks.

Other attacks carried out in protest of the US-led Western ‘war on terror’ include the bombings of trains in and near Madrid’s Atocha rail terminus in March 2004, killing 191 people, and the targeting of two nightclubs and the US embassy in Bali in October 2002, killing 202 people, including 88 Australians.

Another such attack killed more than 50 people at two synagogues and the British Consulate in Istanbul in 2003, while another targeted US-owned hotels in Jordan’s capital of Amman, killing 60. Similarly, 55 people died when the Marriott hotel in the Pakistani capital of Islamabad was bombed in 2008; German tourists lost their lives when a historic synagogue was bombed in Tunisia in 2022; and holiday resorts frequented by Israelis in Egypt and Kenya were attacked in the mid-2000s.

Few if any of the attacks were organised solely by al-Qaida from Afghanistan or Pakistan. Many were organised locally, albeit sometimes involving connections to and no doubt inspiration from al-Qaida.

There was something of a pause on these attacks as the Iraq War eased in the early 2010s, but they resumed amid the four-year US-led air war on ISIS from 2014.

To name just a few of the attacks that took place, mostly across Europe, in the mid-2010s, 130 people lost their lives in a series of coordinated bombings across Paris in November 2015; the following year, a truck was used to kill 86 people and injure hundreds in a Bastille Day crowd in Nice, in the south of France, and 12 died in a similar attack on a Christmas market in Berlin.

So far, there is little direct comparison between these many attacks over two decades and what is happening now in relation to Gaza, but that might be about to change.

This week has seen the start of the US-organised distribution of food in Gaza through the controversial Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), which is run in close association with the IDF and intended to replace the hugely experienced UN organisations that have been distributing aid for decades.

The GHF, a US-backed organisation that was founded in Delaware in February but is based in Geneva, Switzerland, is establishing four major distribution hubs in southern Gaza. It will use these to distribute aid to families that have somehow been screened for any connections to Hamas.

The hubs will be guarded by armed US private security contractors and their locations will do much to enable the relocation of Palestinians to the three small zones determined by the IDF.

In other words, a US-backed organisation employing US security guards is enabling the Israeli government’s plan to clear most of Gaza’s population into what are essentially small holding pens before they can be forcibly relocated overseas.

This has led the GHF’s executive director, Jake Wood, to resign this week. Wood said it had become “clear that it is not possible to implement this plan while also strictly adhering to the humanitarian principles of humanity, neutrality, impartiality, and independence”.

Right across the Middle East, the war in Gaza is commonly seen as an Israeli/US operation, with Washington providing a huge array of weapons and US Army personnel operating radar systems within the country.

From this week, there will also be an armed US organisation directly involved in the mass movement of Palestinians in a new Nakba. That alone increases the chances of further attacks like last week’s killings in Washington.

https://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2025/05 ... -west.html

******

Image

Gaza’s Hospitals ARE The Target

We’ve seen multiple reports from doctors documenting Israeli forces actually entering hospitals they’ve attacked and destroying all the individual pieces of medical equipment in those facilities, one by one.

Caitlin Johnstone
May 30, 2025


It’s a relatively well-known fact that Israeli forces have attacked the overwhelming majority of hospitals in Gaza and have launched hundreds upon hundreds of strikes on medical services in the enclave.

Whenever anyone mentions this fact publicly they’ll get Israel apologists babbling about “human shields” and absurdly trying to claim that there are Hamas bases in all the hospitals. But these talking points are invalidated by the fact that we’ve seen multiple reports from doctors documenting Israeli forces actually entering hospitals they’ve attacked and destroying all the individual pieces of medical equipment in those facilities, one by one.

The latest of such reports appears in the Greek outlet Efimerida ton Syntakton from a specialist surgeon named Christos Georgalas, who was at Nasser Hospital in Khan Yunis in southern Gaza from April to May of this year.


According to machine translation, Georgalas calls Israel’s onslaught “a war mainly against children,” and describes horrific injuries that Israeli munitions have been inflicting upon young Palestinians.

Georgalas also describes repeated Israeli attacks on the hospital where he was working, which include the following:

“A Spanish colleague told me that when the Israelis came to the hospital where the MRI machine was, they tried to destroy everything. But the MRI machine is a huge machine. It’s like a car. Even if you shoot it, it can be repaired. So they brought in a specialist engineer to permanently destroy it. Because even if a bomb went off next to it, it could still be repaired. They had to bring in a specialist who knew the heart of the machine to make it non-functional. And that’s exactly what he did last February.

“In our hospital, the Israelis went through the wards that were the incubators and systematically broke them one by one. The incubators with the crowbar! This has been recorded by my colleagues. The hospital where I worked was occupied by the Israelis for two months, in February and March 2024. The doctors who had remained in the hospital were tortured. They were lined up one by one and beaten. A total of around 80 of them were kidnapped. Of these, we do not know where 40 are or if they are alive. They killed many on the spot.”


Because Israel has been blocking journalists from entering the Gaza Strip, doctors have largely become the de facto reporters on the ground there.

We saw another report documenting Israel’s pattern of systematically destroying individual pieces of medical equipment back in February of this year, this time at the Indonesian Hospital in northern Gaza. Doctors Without Borders emergency coordinator Caroline Seguin reported the following:

“There is no health system anymore in the northern part of Gaza. Kamal Adwan hospital has been razed, while Al Shifa, Al Awda and Indonesian hospitals are seriously damaged and only partially functioning. We were utterly shocked to observe that in Indonesian hospital every medical machine seemed to have been deliberately destroyed; they were smashed to pieces, one by one, to make sure no medical care could be provided anymore. You have to ask: What is the motivation of such action? These machines are made to save people’s lives, mothers, fathers, children. It’s devastating to see the state of these hospitals.”

In April of this year Seguin’s report on the Indonesian Hospital was corroborated by an emergency physician named Clayton Dalton, who wrote the following for The New Yorker:

“Sultan led me upstairs, to the I.C.U., where wind blew through broken windows. He wanted to show me something that he had discovered after Israeli forces left the hospital. He pointed to a cardiac monitor near a wall. It appeared to have a bullet hole in its screen. Next to it was an EKG machine whose screen had been smashed.

“We entered a large storage room in the corner of the I.C.U. which was crammed with medical devices: ultrasound machines, I.V. pumps, dialysis machines, blood-pressure monitors. Each had apparently been destroyed by a bullet — not in a pattern one would expect from random shooting but, rather, methodically. I was stunned. I couldn’t think of any possible military justification for destroying lifesaving equipment.”

Indeed, there is no possible military justification for destroying lifesaving medical equipment. They were destroyed so that they could not be used to save lives. Israel has been systematically destroying Gaza’s healthcare infrastructure with the goal of making it uninhabitable, so that the territory can be seized by Israel.

That’s three separate accounts describing Israeli forces systematically destroying medical equipment in Gaza, from doctors who’d stand nothing to gain from lying about such a thing. The evidence is too overwhelming to deny.

There were no Hamas fighters hiding in the MRI machine. There were no tunnels in the incubators. No arms stockpiles in the EKG machine. Israel has been lying about Hamas hiding in hospitals this entire time. Hamas was never the target. Hospitals are the target. Healthcare is the target. That’s established far beyond any reasonable doubt by now.

https://caitlinjohnstone.com.au/2025/05 ... he-target/
"There is great chaos under heaven; the situation is excellent."

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Re: Palestine

Post by blindpig » Fri May 30, 2025 2:21 pm

Israel greenlights 22 new illegal West Bank settlements to 'block Palestinian state'

Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich says Israel is seeking to expand its borders and eliminate the indigenous Palestinian population

News Desk

MAY 29, 2025

Image
(Photo credit: Maya Alleruzzo, AP)

Israel's government approved 22 new Jewish settlements in the occupied West Bank on 29 May as part of its ongoing effort to expropriate, colonize, and annex Palestinian lands.

Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz stated, “We will establish 22 new settlements in the West Bank as a strategic step to prevent the creation of a Palestinian state.”

Katz added that the settlement decision “strengthens our hold on Judea and Samaria,” using the biblical term for the occupied West Bank.

Writing on X, Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich called the decision “historic.”

“The next step – sovereignty!” he stated, referring to annexing the West Bank.

Smotrich earlier stated that Israel was expanding its borders as part of the Greater Israel project.

“We are being blessed with the opportunity, thank God, of seeing an expansion of the borders of the Land of Israel on all fronts. We are being blessed with the opportunity to blot out the seed of Amalek, a process which is intensifying,” he said.


Amalek is a reference to the people inhabiting ancient Palestine who were exterminated by the Hebrews entering the region from Egypt, according to the Torah.

Israeli media cited the Defense Ministry as saying that among the new settlements, existing “outposts” would be legalized, and new settlements would also be built.

Israeli outposts and settlements in the occupied West Bank are illegal under international law, which bars the conquest of new territory through war. Israel conquered the West Bank and East Jerusalem during the Six-Day War in 1967, and since then has been systematically stealing Palestinian land to build Jewish settlements there.

Around 700,000 Israeli settlers live among 2.7 million Palestinians in the occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem.

Nabil Abu Rudeineh, a spokesperson for Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, urged the US government to intervene and condemned efforts to prevent a Palestinian state.

“This extremist Israeli government is trying by all means to prevent the establishment of an independent Palestinian state,” he told Reuters.

Hamas official Sami Abu Zuhri told Reuters that the decision was part of “the war led by Netanyahu against the Palestinian people,” which includes Israel's ongoing destruction of Gaza and efforts to ethnically cleanse its inhabitants to make way for Jewish settlement.

After the announcement, the Israeli human rights group B'Tselem accused the government of advancing “Jewish supremacy through the theft of Palestinian land and the ethnic cleansing of the West Bank.”

In a statement, B'Tselem also criticized the international community for “enabling Israel's crimes.”

https://thecradle.co/articles/israel-gr ... nian-state

******

As US Role in Gaza Intensifies, Expect Violent Responses in the West
Posted on May 29, 2025 by Yves Smith

Yves here. The idea that the continued extermination in Gaza will generate more terrorism in the West seems entirely logical. I’m actually surprised we have not seen more given that the vividness and level of horror has only increased, along with the frequency of Zionist celebrations of cruelty.

However, this post oddly does not contemplate what would follow.

In the US, given the conflation of criticism of Israel, even by Jews, with anti-Semitism, terrorism will similarly be conflated with criticism, as in if you engage in the latter, you are promoting the former. So expect more concerted efforts to round up Muslims and boot them out of the US, particularly students. The Trump Administration would if it could set up internment camps for Muslim citizens a la the treatment of the Japanese in World War II. The Trump Administration would similarly use any rise in violence that could be depicted as related to Israel to further clamp down on free speech, engage in intrusive searches, and intimidate journalists. The FBI has taken to showing up a journalists’ doors without a warrant. In this case, the suspect in the Israeli embassy shootings, Elias Rodriguez, was already in custody, so it’s not as if the FBI needed information urgently so as to bring him in.



An additional point is that there is a real possibility of a false flag operation to justify US support of an Israeli attack on Iran. Mind you, expert commentators like Larry Wilkerson have raised this as a possibility, particularly in light of the fact that Israel has strike packages ready to go and is being restrained by Trump, who recognizes that war with Iran would be a seriously bad idea.

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

Conditions for Palestinians are getting progressively worse as Israel’s effort to control Gaza intensifies. Aware that his war can continue only as long as he has the backing of a highly unpredictable US president, Israeli prime minister Binyamin Netanyahu is ramping up efforts to bring the territory under total control as quickly as possible, whatever the human cost.

The vast majority of Gaza’s population of more than two million are now being forced into three small areas, where the Israeli Defence Force (IDF) is imposing tight security and limiting the flow of desperately needed food, fuel, medical supplies, and water.

In this context, the murder of two young Israeli Embassy staff, Sarah Milgrim and Yaron Lischinsky, outside Washington’s Capital Jewish Museum last week is especially significant.

Despite the best efforts of the Israeli government’s well-resourced public relations system, Israel has steadily decayed into pariah status across the world as its war on Gaza has intensified. That status will persist until the bombing and killing of Gazans stops, and given the sheer intensity of the current attacks, it will probably grow. Does that mean the Washington attack is a sign of things to come?

We have been here before, especially in the decade after 9/11, when the US-led wars in Afghanistan and Iraq sparked scores of attacks on Western targets.

Take, for example, the 7/7 train and bus bombings in London that killed 56 people in July 2005. At the time, prime minister Tony Blair’s government was utterly insistent that the attack had nothing to do with the UK’s involvement in the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, a stance undermined when it was revealed that one of the bombers had said precisely the opposite in a video recorded before the attacks.

Other attacks carried out in protest of the US-led Western ‘war on terror’ include the bombings of trains in and near Madrid’s Atocha rail terminus in March 2004, killing 191 people, and the targeting of two nightclubs and the US embassy in Bali in October 2002, killing 202 people, including 88 Australians.

Another such attack killed more than 50 people at two synagogues and the British Consulate in Istanbul in 2003, while another targeted US-owned hotels in Jordan’s capital of Amman, killing 60. Similarly, 55 people died when the Marriott hotel in the Pakistani capital of Islamabad was bombed in 2008; German tourists lost their lives when a historic synagogue was bombed in Tunisia in 2022; and holiday resorts frequented by Israelis in Egypt and Kenya were attacked in the mid-2000s.

Few if any of the attacks were organised solely by al-Qaida from Afghanistan or Pakistan. Many were organised locally, albeit sometimes involving connections to and no doubt inspiration from al-Qaida.

There was something of a pause on these attacks as the Iraq War eased in the early 2010s, but they resumed amid the four-year US-led air war on ISIS from 2014.

To name just a few of the attacks that took place, mostly across Europe, in the mid-2010s, 130 people lost their lives in a series of coordinated bombings across Paris in November 2015; the following year, a truck was used to kill 86 people and injure hundreds in a Bastille Day crowd in Nice, in the south of France, and 12 died in a similar attack on a Christmas market in Berlin.

So far, there is little direct comparison between these many attacks over two decades and what is happening now in relation to Gaza, but that might be about to change.

This week has seen the start of the US-organised distribution of food in Gaza through the controversial Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), which is run in close association with the IDF and intended to replace the hugely experienced UN organisations that have been distributing aid for decades.

The GHF, a US-backed organisation that was founded in Delaware in February but is based in Geneva, Switzerland, is establishing four major distribution hubs in southern Gaza. It will use these to distribute aid to families that have somehow been screened for any connections to Hamas.

The hubs will be guarded by armed US private security contractors and their locations will do much to enable the relocation of Palestinians to the three small zones determined by the IDF.

In other words, a US-backed organisation employing US security guards is enabling the Israeli government’s plan to clear most of Gaza’s population into what are essentially small holding pens before they can be forcibly relocated overseas.

This has led the GHF’s executive director, Jake Wood, to resign this week. Wood said it had become “clear that it is not possible to implement this plan while also strictly adhering to the humanitarian principles of humanity, neutrality, impartiality, and independence”.

Right across the Middle East, the war in Gaza is commonly seen as an Israeli/US operation, with Washington providing a huge array of weapons and US Army personnel operating radar systems within the country.

From this week, there will also be an armed US organisation directly involved in the mass movement of Palestinians in a new Nakba. That alone increases the chances of further attacks like last week’s killings in Washington.

https://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2025/05 ... -west.html

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Gaza’s Hospitals ARE The Target

We’ve seen multiple reports from doctors documenting Israeli forces actually entering hospitals they’ve attacked and destroying all the individual pieces of medical equipment in those facilities, one by one.

Caitlin Johnstone
May 30, 2025


It’s a relatively well-known fact that Israeli forces have attacked the overwhelming majority of hospitals in Gaza and have launched hundreds upon hundreds of strikes on medical services in the enclave.

Whenever anyone mentions this fact publicly they’ll get Israel apologists babbling about “human shields” and absurdly trying to claim that there are Hamas bases in all the hospitals. But these talking points are invalidated by the fact that we’ve seen multiple reports from doctors documenting Israeli forces actually entering hospitals they’ve attacked and destroying all the individual pieces of medical equipment in those facilities, one by one.

The latest of such reports appears in the Greek outlet Efimerida ton Syntakton from a specialist surgeon named Christos Georgalas, who was at Nasser Hospital in Khan Yunis in southern Gaza from April to May of this year.


According to machine translation, Georgalas calls Israel’s onslaught “a war mainly against children,” and describes horrific injuries that Israeli munitions have been inflicting upon young Palestinians.

Georgalas also describes repeated Israeli attacks on the hospital where he was working, which include the following:

“A Spanish colleague told me that when the Israelis came to the hospital where the MRI machine was, they tried to destroy everything. But the MRI machine is a huge machine. It’s like a car. Even if you shoot it, it can be repaired. So they brought in a specialist engineer to permanently destroy it. Because even if a bomb went off next to it, it could still be repaired. They had to bring in a specialist who knew the heart of the machine to make it non-functional. And that’s exactly what he did last February.

“In our hospital, the Israelis went through the wards that were the incubators and systematically broke them one by one. The incubators with the crowbar! This has been recorded by my colleagues. The hospital where I worked was occupied by the Israelis for two months, in February and March 2024. The doctors who had remained in the hospital were tortured. They were lined up one by one and beaten. A total of around 80 of them were kidnapped. Of these, we do not know where 40 are or if they are alive. They killed many on the spot.”


Because Israel has been blocking journalists from entering the Gaza Strip, doctors have largely become the de facto reporters on the ground there.

We saw another report documenting Israel’s pattern of systematically destroying individual pieces of medical equipment back in February of this year, this time at the Indonesian Hospital in northern Gaza. Doctors Without Borders emergency coordinator Caroline Seguin reported the following:

“There is no health system anymore in the northern part of Gaza. Kamal Adwan hospital has been razed, while Al Shifa, Al Awda and Indonesian hospitals are seriously damaged and only partially functioning. We were utterly shocked to observe that in Indonesian hospital every medical machine seemed to have been deliberately destroyed; they were smashed to pieces, one by one, to make sure no medical care could be provided anymore. You have to ask: What is the motivation of such action? These machines are made to save people’s lives, mothers, fathers, children. It’s devastating to see the state of these hospitals.”

In April of this year Seguin’s report on the Indonesian Hospital was corroborated by an emergency physician named Clayton Dalton, who wrote the following for The New Yorker:

“Sultan led me upstairs, to the I.C.U., where wind blew through broken windows. He wanted to show me something that he had discovered after Israeli forces left the hospital. He pointed to a cardiac monitor near a wall. It appeared to have a bullet hole in its screen. Next to it was an EKG machine whose screen had been smashed.

“We entered a large storage room in the corner of the I.C.U. which was crammed with medical devices: ultrasound machines, I.V. pumps, dialysis machines, blood-pressure monitors. Each had apparently been destroyed by a bullet — not in a pattern one would expect from random shooting but, rather, methodically. I was stunned. I couldn’t think of any possible military justification for destroying lifesaving equipment.”

Indeed, there is no possible military justification for destroying lifesaving medical equipment. They were destroyed so that they could not be used to save lives. Israel has been systematically destroying Gaza’s healthcare infrastructure with the goal of making it uninhabitable, so that the territory can be seized by Israel.

That’s three separate accounts describing Israeli forces systematically destroying medical equipment in Gaza, from doctors who’d stand nothing to gain from lying about such a thing. The evidence is too overwhelming to deny.

There were no Hamas fighters hiding in the MRI machine. There were no tunnels in the incubators. No arms stockpiles in the EKG machine. Israel has been lying about Hamas hiding in hospitals this entire time. Hamas was never the target. Hospitals are the target. Healthcare is the target. That’s established far beyond any reasonable doubt by now.

https://caitlinjohnstone.com.au/2025/05 ... he-target/
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Re: Palestine

Post by blindpig » Sat May 31, 2025 1:45 pm

Israeli blockade leaves '100 percent' of Gaza's population at risk of famine: UN

Israel allowed only a 'trickle' of food into the strip this week after three months of a complete blockade, while killing seven Gaza police officers seeking to prevent the looting of aid

News Desk

MAY 30, 2025

Image
(Photo credit: Rizek Abdeljawad/Xinhua/Getty Images)

The entire population of Gaza, over 2 million people, is at risk of famine, the UN stated on 30 May, after nearly three months of Israel's near-total blockade of the strip.

“Gaza is the hungriest place on Earth,” said Jens Laerke, a spokesman for the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA).

“It's the only defined area – a country or defined territory within a country – where you have the entire population at risk of famine. One hundred percent of the population at risk of famine,” he said, rejecting claims to the contrary by Israeli authorities.

On 2 March, Israel reimposed a total blockade on Gaza, preventing all food and humanitarian aid from entering, creating severe shortages of food and medicine.

In recent days, Israel has allowed just a trickle of aid to enter the strip amid international criticism of its use of starvation as a weapon of war.

Laerke said 900 trucks of humanitarian aid had been authorized by Israel to enter, but only 600 have been offloaded on the Gaza side of the border. Even fewer have been picked up, and their contents distributed due to multiple security limitations.

“This limited number of truckloads that are coming in ... it's a trickle,” Laerke said, describing it as “drip-feeding food.”

He said the mission to deliver aid was “in an operational strait-jacket that makes it one of the most obstructed aid operations not only in the world today, but in recent history.”

At least 500 trucks of aid and food entered Gaza each day to feed the population before the war began in October 2023.

On Thursday, the Gaza Interior Ministry stated that seven of its police officers deployed to a market in Gaza City were killed by an Israeli air strike as they attempted to restore order and confront looters stealing aid.

Israel is seeking to replace the UN with a private foundation as the chief distributor of aid to Gaza in an effort to better control the Palestinian population of the strip and herd them into concentration camp-style “humanitarian bubbles.”

A US-based Israeli-approved organization, the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), began distributing aid in Gaza this week. The new aid plan has been repeatedly condemned by the UN and other international humanitarian groups for being designed to reinforce further displacement of the Palestinian population in Gaza.

The GHF said it would coordinate with the Israeli army while security would be provided by private military contractors.

Just hours after the aid scheme was launched on 27 May, chaos broke out near aid distribution centers. According to local reports, US mercenaries hired to manage the distribution sites abandoned their posts shortly after the Israeli military started firing on starving Palestinians who desperately crowded around the sites.

One witness who had gone to a GHF aid distribution center in Rafah told the BBC that thousands of desperate people had gathered in the area in the early morning to receive food.

“At 08:00 local time, the Israeli military issued a warning via a quadcopter drone instructing people to head to the distribution center, and that they began moving in an orderly way towards the area,” the witness stated.

“For exactly 10 minutes, things were organized, but then the crowd broke through the gate and rushed into the courtyard.”

“People grabbed boxes and sacks of flour and left, all under the surveillance of the Israeli quadcopter.”

Umm Mohammed Abu Hajar told the BBC she had heard there was aid being distributed in the area, so she took her ID and went to see what she could get.

“I found all the people hungry,” she said. “So, I couldn't get anything. I left like this ... empty-handed.”

UN humanitarian chief Tom Fletcher criticized the GHF at the Security Council last week, stating that it “restricts aid to only one part of Gaza while leaving other dire needs unmet … It makes aid conditional on political and military aims. It makes starvation a bargaining chip. It is a cynical sideshow. A deliberate distraction. A fig leaf for further violence and displacement.”

In the longer term, Israeli officials are seeking to forcibly expel the entire population, making them refugees in third countries to pave the way for the Jewish settlement of Gaza.

On 6 May, Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich said that within half a year, the population of Gaza would be confined to just a narrow swath of land, with the remainder of the enclave “totally destroyed.”

“Within a few months, we will be able to declare that we have won. Gaza will be totally destroyed,” Smotrich said. “In another six months, Hamas won't exist as a functioning entity.”

On 13 May, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu revealed to the Knesset's Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee that Israel is “destroying more and more houses [in Gaza and Palestinians accordingly] have nowhere to return,” according to quotes from the session leaked to the media.

https://thecradle.co/articles/one-hundr ... rvation-un

Blasts reported near GHF site as Gaza aid seekers targeted by Israeli army

US mercenaries operating the aid distribution site also opened fire at Palestinians with stun grenades

News Desk

MAY 29, 2025

Image
(Photo credit: AP)

The sounds of explosions were heard near the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) distribution site in central Gaza on 28 May, coinciding with continued chaos, violence against aid seekers, and the failure of the US-Israeli mechanism to meet the desperate needs of starving Palestinians.

Al Jazeera reported on Thursday afternoon that “there have been multiple explosions near a food distribution point” near the Netzarim corridor in central Gaza.

Multiple explosions have been reported near a food distribution point operated by the US-Israeli 'Gaza Humanitarian Foundation' in the center of the Strip.

This comes after Israeli forces fired shots near one of the foundation’s aid points in the south on Wednesday. pic.twitter.com/HKZAiownPP

— The Cradle (@TheCradleMedia) May 29, 2025
Around the same time, local media outlets reported that US military contractors operating the distribution site fired stun grenades at Palestinians seeking aid.

Video footage showed Palestinians running as stun grenades and what looked like tear gas popped behind them.

WATCH | US 'aid' mercenaries operating under the GHF fire stun grenades at Palestinians seeking aid, according to a circulating video and local reports from Gaza. pic.twitter.com/cmQZ3ez44l

— The Cradle (@TheCradleMedia) May 29, 2025
Palestinian media, as well as RT correspondent Said Sweki, had said hours earlier that intense gunfire and shelling by Israeli forces targeted citizens heading to the GHF's aid distribution center in the Netzarim Corridor.

The renewed chaos came after two days of violence and multiple casualties at the distribution center in southern Gaza’s Rafah.

The Government Media Office in Gaza said in a statement on Wednesday evening that Israel has killed 10 Palestinian civilians seeking aid and injured 62 others at the aid distribution site in Rafah since the initiative was launched on 27 May.

Meanwhile, the amounts of aid being delivered are barely enough.

While the US State Department announced that 8,000 food boxes, equal to 462,000 meals, were distributed on Tuesday through GHF, Gaza humanitarian coordinator Eyad Amawi told DropSiteNews that only 7 trucks arrived – barely enough for a single camp.

The new aid plan has been repeatedly condemned by the UN and other international humanitarian groups for being designed to reinforce further displacement of the Palestinian population in Gaza.

Most of the distribution centers are located in southern Gaza, with one in the center near the Netzarim Corridor. Palestinians are forced to travel long distances under bombardment and the risk of death.

As a result, the UN has stated that it will not participate, and the initiative’s director, Jake Wood, resigned ahead of the distribution launch, citing ethical reasons.

https://thecradle.co/articles/blasts-re ... raeli-army

Palestinians flee intensified Israeli attacks after mass displacement orders in north Gaza

Israel has ordered the evacuation of almost all of Gaza City and other areas of the north, where around one million Palestinians reside

News Desk

MAY 30, 2025

Image
(Photo credit: X)

Israel intensified its aerial attacks and ground operations in northern Gaza on 30 May, as Palestinians began fleeing due to the massive-scale evacuation orders issued by the Israeli army the night before.


Al Jazeera reported that “families were forced to wait until sunrise to begin escaping” due to the continuous attacks early on Friday, which began shortly after the order was issued.


Since the early morning hours, Israel has been targeting homes and high-rise residential buildings in Jabalia al-Balad, Shujaiya, and Al-Tuffah, Palestinian media outlets reported.

A woman was killed and several people injured in an Israeli airstrike on a house in Jabalia al-Balad.

Three people were also killed in an Israeli airstrike on the Saftawi area, north of Gaza City. In total, at least 18 people have been killed across Gaza since dawn.

“There’s no safe place at all. Where can we go? We’re better off dying here than being displaced again, because death is more merciful than that. There’s bombing everywhere,” a Gaza City resident told Al Jazeera.

Israel’s latest evacuation orders were issued late on 29 May for almost all of Gaza City and other areas in the north.

Around one million people who have already been displaced multiple times across the area are now being forcibly uprooted once again.

“To all residents of the Gaza Strip located in the areas of Al-Atatra, Jabalia Al-Balad, Shujaiya, Al-Daraj, and Al-Zaytoun. Terrorist organizations continue their subversive activity in the region, and therefore the IDF will expand its offensive activity in the areas where you are present to destroy the capabilities of the terrorist organizations,” Israeli army spokesman Avichay Adraee said.

“From this moment on, the mentioned areas will be considered dangerous combat zones. These areas have been warned several times. For your safety, you must evacuate immediately to the west,” he added.

Israel is planning to take control of 75 percent of the Gaza Strip and confine the population to a mere 25 percent of the territory as part of its new Gideon’s Chariots operation.

As the operation continues, starving Palestinian aid seekers are being shot dead while trying to receive food packages under a new US-Israeli aid mechanism, the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), which the UN refuses to participate in due to its reinforcement of Israel’s mass displacement goals.

US special envoy to West Asia Steve Witkoff has put forward a new “ceasefire” proposal which gives Israel the option to resume fighting once captives are released.

https://thecradle.co/articles/palestini ... north-gaza

Israeli war chief vows to build ‘Jewish state’ in occupied West Bank

Katz was firing back at French President Emmanuel Macron, who called Palestinian statehood a ‘moral duty’ and warned of a tougher European stance against Israel over the Gaza war

News Desk

MAY 30, 2025

Image
(Photo credit: Ariel Hermoni/Israeli Defense Ministry)

Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz vowed on 30 May that Tel Aviv will build a “Jewish Israeli state” in the occupied West Bank, while affirming the rejection of Palestinian statehood in a “clear message” to French President Emmanuel Macron.

“They will recognize a Palestinian state on paper – and we will build the Jewish-Israeli state on the ground. The paper will be thrown in the trash can of history and the State of Israel will flourish and prosper,” the defense minister said.

“This is a historic moment for settlement in Judea and Samaria, which will bolster it as Israel’s protective wall, and will also strengthen security in this region,” he added, referring to new illegal settlement projects in the occupied West Bank.

Katz added that this was a “crushing response” to “terrorists” trying to “harm and weaken our hold on this region of the country,” and a “clear message to Macron and his friends.”

“Do not threaten us with sanctions because you will not bring us to our knees. The State of Israel will not bow its head in the face of threats. We are a people with a long and glorious history. We will stand tall and continue to lead the State of Israel on a safe and strong path, until victory,” he said, firing back at Macron.

The Israeli Foreign Ministry also released a statement accusing France of launching a “crusade against the Jewish state.”

The French president had said on Friday that European states should take a firmer stance against Israel for its actions in Gaza. He warned that if the humanitarian situation in Gaza does not improve soon, France will consider applying sanctions on Israel – signaling a tougher “collective position” from the EU.

Macron also said recognizing a Palestinian state is a “moral duty” and a “political necessity.”

France has increasingly been signaling support for recognizing Palestinian statehood recently. The country has also been among the EU states that have strongly condemned the brutal new Israeli operation – dubbed Gideon's Chariots – in Gaza and the continued prevention of sufficient amounts of aid from entering the besieged strip.

Next month, Paris and Riyadh will co-chair a UN conference aimed at resurrecting the idea of the two-state solution.

Tel Aviv and Washington are leading a controversial new aid mechanism that is hardly meeting the needs of the population in Gaza. The plan is designed to further displace Palestinians and advance Israeli goals for greater control of the strip. In the first few days since its launch, US contractors and Israeli forces have opened fire at Palestinians seeking aid. Dozens have been killed and injured.

In the occupied West Bank, Tel Aviv is accelerating plans for annexing the territory – which the Israeli army illegally occupied during the 1967 war.

Israel's government approved 22 new Jewish settlements in the occupied West Bank on 29 May, following a recent surge in land grabs, forced displacement, and settler violence against Palestinians in the territory.

Earlier this month, the Israeli cabinet voted to take full responsibility for land registration in Area C of the occupied West Bank – an area comprising around 60 percent of the territory and home to the vast majority of Israeli settlements.

https://thecradle.co/articles/israeli-w ... -west-bank
"There is great chaos under heaven; the situation is excellent."

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Re: Palestine

Post by blindpig » Mon Jun 02, 2025 2:16 pm

PFLP: U.S.-Zionist ‘Aid-Distribution Centers’ Are Mass-Death Traps and a Tool for Forced Displacement
Posted by Internationalist 360° on May 29, 2025

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The Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine affirms that the occupation’s announcement of opening “humanitarian aid-distribution centers” in various areas of the Gaza Strip—run directly by the Zionist occupier and financed and sponsored by the United States—amounts to setting up collective death traps. These sites serve as arrest points and instruments for entrenching racist policies, marketed under a “humanitarian” veneer while actually forming part of the genocidal war and Holocaust being waged against our people. They come amid a continuing siege and extermination campaign that targets civilians—especially children, women, and the elderly—and function as one of the occupation’s displacement schemes.

The Front views these centers as components of an integrated political-military apparatus aimed at emptying the Strip of its inhabitants and separating them from their homes, camps, and cities through direct humanitarian pressure: blocking aid from reaching residential areas to force people to converge on specific, fully occupation-controlled points. These spots then become gateways for mass expulsion and detention, a soft-focus remake of Nazi concentration camps that Netanyahu is trying to replicate.

The Popular Front warns our people against falling into these disguised traps and urges the masses to exercise extreme caution and not be lured by any false “humanitarian” slogans issued by killers and their backers.

The Front also calls on international and human-rights organizations to investigate immediately the purpose and role of these centers, to end silent complicity in the occupation’s crimes, to expose this new tool in its dirty war, and to insist that the proper alternative remains the UN agencies operating in Gaza—foremost UNRWA—which possess the manpower, logistics, effectiveness, and legal mandate to handle aid delivery.

Our people’s struggle for dignity and freedom cannot be reduced to a loaf of bread, nor to distribution points controlled by the occupier.

We reiterate: national dignity comes before all else. Our people will not submit and will not be dragged into the occupier’s attempt to engineer new field and demographic realities under the pretext of “aid.”

Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine
Central Media Department
27 May 2025

https://libya360.wordpress.com/2025/05/ ... placement/

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Israel kills over 50 aid seekers at GHF sites in one week since launch

Aid groups have called the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation scheme 'ineffective and dehumanizing'

News Desk

JUN 2, 2025

Image
(Photo credit: Hatem Khaled, Reuters)

At least 52 starving Palestinian civilians have been killed near aid distribution centers operated by the US-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) since the start of its operations on 27 May, according to the Gaza Government Media Office.

The attacks carried out near Rafah and the Netzarim Corridor in central Gaza have also injured more than 340 people.

On Monday alone, three Palestinians were killed and at least 35 were injured while attempting to access aid west of Rafah. The wounded were transferred to the Red Cross field hospital and the Nasser Medical Complex in Khan Younis.

A day earlier, Israeli strikes near another GHF-backed aid point killed 32 and injured 200.

The Media Office accused Israel of enforcing “a policy of starvation and systematic targeting of civilians” for the past 93 days, adding that humanitarian aid trucks remain stuck at the borders while children and families die of hunger.

These developments come amid ongoing allegations that Israel, with US support, is weaponizing aid as part of its broader military campaign in Gaza.

Human rights groups say the repeated strikes near food lines demonstrate an intentional strategy to target desperate civilians.

Since 7 October 2023, Israel's assault has killed or wounded over 175,000 Palestinians, most of them women and children. More than 11,000 remain missing under the rubble.

Doctors Without Borders (MSF) harshly condemned the Israeli-US aid mechanism, with MSF Secretary-General Christopher Lockyear describing the system as “ineffective and dehumanizing,” accusing Israel of using aid to forcibly displace civilians and deny access to the most vulnerable.

MSF warned that such practices may amount to crimes against humanity and called for a permanent ceasefire and unrestricted humanitarian access.

❗️“I came from under death,” says 12-year-old Palestinian girl Rahaf Abu Arar, after returning empty-handed from the chaotic Gaza Humiliation (Humanitarian) Foundation aid distribution camp. Her 19-year-old brother was killed by Israeli occupation bombing during the genocide, and… pic.twitter.com/zElafrrLwu

— Translating Falasteen (Palestine) (@translatingpal) May 31, 2025


Meanwhile, the GHF claimed it had distributed nearly six million meals in its first week and plans to expand operations, including opening a new site in northern Gaza. On Monday, it said that 21 truckloads of aid were delivered, totaling 18,720 boxes – enough for over a million meals.

GHF has rejected claims of Israeli attacks at its distribution points, providing security footage showing what it described as calm, orderly scenes. The foundation accused Hamas of spreading "false and fabricated" reports and dismissed media headlines from CNN and BBC as inaccurate.

BBC reported Saturday that the scene at the GHF distribution centers was one of “total chaos.” Videos showed a distribution center overrun by desperate civilians trampling over toppled barriers; people flinched as sounds of gunshots rang out.

When the UN had been delivering aid before Israel's humanitarian blockade, there were 400 distribution points spread across Gaza. Under the present GHF distribution system, there are currently four sites.

“By and large, it's designed to dramatically increase the concentration of the population by having the only sources of food remaining in a very small number of places,” Chris Newton, a senior analyst at the Brussels-based think tank Crisis Group, told the British broadcaster.

“You either follow all their rules and probably survive in a small radius around these sites, or you are very unlikely to survive.”

https://thecradle.co/articles/israel-ki ... nce-launch

Arab ministers call for end to Gaza genocide, recognition of Palestine at Amman conference

Members of the ministerial committee of the Joint Extraordinary Arab-Islamic Summit met in the Jordanian capital a day after Israel blocked their entry to the occupied West Bank

News Desk

JUN 1, 2025

Image
(Photo credit: EPA Images)

Arab foreign ministers gathered in the Jordanian capital on 1 June for a meeting of the ministerial committee of the Joint Extraordinary Arab-Islamic Summit, stressing the need to end Israel’s genocide of Palestinians in Gaza and to establish a Palestinian state in the occupied West Bank.

The conference in Amman, which was attended by Jordanian King Abdullah II, focused on the latest developments in the Gaza Strip and efforts to support an end to Israel's brutal assault and ongoing aid blockade.

The ministerial committee included Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan, Bahraini Foreign Minister Abdullatif bin Rashid Al Zayani, Egyptian Foreign Minister Badr Abdel Aty, Arab League Secretary-General Ahmed Aboul Gheit, and Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi.

The Saudi Foreign Minister emphasized the importance of European countries recognizing the State of Palestine. Prince Faisal bin Farhan said that European positions on Israel are not sufficient, stressing that the genocidal war must stop.

Jordanian Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi stressed the importance of the international community taking practical steps towards a two-state solution.

Egyptian Foreign Minister Badr Abdel Aty said that Arab countries want peace, but that Israel is not a true partner for peace. He added that Egypt and Jordan will continue to forcefully confront all plans to displace Palestinians from their land.
The top diplomats also held a video conference meeting with Palestinian Authority (PA) President Mahmoud Abbas, his deputy, Hussein al-Sheikh, and Mohammad Mustafa, the prime minister and minister of foreign affairs.

A day earlier, Israel blocked a scheduled visit by a delegation of Arab foreign ministers from the ministerial committee to Ramallah in the occupied West Bank, where they intended to discuss support for the establishment of a Palestinian state with Abbas.



"Israel's refusal of the committee's visit to the West Bank embodies and confirms its extremism and refusal of any serious attempts for (a) peaceful pathway … It strengthens our will to double our diplomatic efforts within the international community to face this arrogance," the Saudi foreign minister said during a joint press conference at the summit on Sunday.

The Israeli army controls all borders and entry points to the occupied West Bank, including from neighboring Jordan, making entry to and exit from the Palestinian territories contingent on Israeli authorities.

Ministers from Egypt, Jordan, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE had been expected to enter the occupied West Bank for the meeting, which an Israeli official described as “provocative.”

"Such a state would undoubtedly become a terrorist state in the heart of the land of Israel," the official said. "Israel will not cooperate with such moves aimed at harming it and its security."

Jordanian Foreign Minister Safadi said on Sunday that the prevention of the joint delegation's visit to the West Bank is evidence of the Israeli government's arrogance and disregard for international law. He said, "The extremist Israeli government, which kills children, is the one that prevented the delegation from visiting Ramallah."

Israel conquered the West Bank in 1967 and has slowly stolen more and more Palestinian land to establish Jewish settlements, which are illegal under international law.

Sunday's summit in Amman precedes an international conference, co-chaired by France and Saudi Arabia, scheduled for 17-20 June in New York. Delegates are expected to discuss the issue of Palestinian statehood.

Israel has come under increasing pressure from the UN and European countries to agree to allow for the establishment of a Palestinian state.

French President Emmanuel Macron said on Friday that recognizing a Palestinian state was not only a "moral duty but a political necessity."

On 29 May, Israel's government approved 22 new Jewish settlements in the occupied West Bank as part of its ongoing effort to expropriate, colonize, and annex Palestinian lands.

Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz stated, “We will establish 22 new settlements in the West Bank as a strategic step to prevent the creation of a Palestinian state.”

Katz added that the settlement decision “strengthens our hold on Judea and Samaria,” using the biblical term for the occupied West Bank.

https://thecradle.co/articles/arab-mini ... conference

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Poll: 82% of ‘Israelis’ Want To Expel Palestinians From Gaza; 47% Want To Kill Every Man, Woman, Child
May 31, 2025

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Children in Gaza, February 2025. Photo: Palestine News & Information Agency, WAFA.

By Ben Norton – May 29, 2025

A poll found that 82% of full citizens of Israel want to expel Palestinians from Gaza. 47% want to kill every single man, woman, and child in Gaza. Former Prime Minister Ehud Olmert wrote that Israel is waging a “war of extermination: the indiscriminate, unrestrained, cruel, and criminal killing of civilians”.

Support for genocide, mass murder, and ethnic cleansing is widespread in Israel.

Israel’s former Prime Minister Ehud Olmert admitted that his country is waging a “war of extermination: the indiscriminate, unrestrained, cruel, and criminal killing of civilians”.

Meanwhile, the vast majority of Israelis want to expel Palestinians from Gaza, and roughly half want to kill every single man, woman, and child in the besieged strip.

This is according to a poll that was published by the major Israeli newspaper Haaretz.

It found that 82% of Israelis want to expel Gazans, and 47% support killing all Palestinians in Gaza.

The more religious an Israeli is, the more likely they are to support genocide and ethnic cleansing.

The survey was conducted in March by Israeli scholar Tamir Sorek, a professor at Pennsylvania State University. He worked with the Israeli polling firm Geocartography Knowledge Group.

poll Israelis expel Palestinians Gaza kill everyone Haaretz

A March 2025 poll of Israeli public opinion, commissioned by Pennsylvania State University and published by the Israeli newspaper Haaretz

Most Israelis want to expel Palestinian citizens
Roughly 21% of citizens of Israel are Palestinians, although they are not considered to be fully Israeli. They are third-class citizens, and are denied equal treatment by the Israeli regime.

“Israel is not a state of all its citizens”, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu declared with pride in 2019.

“According to the basic nationality law we passed, Israel is the nation state of the Jewish people – and only it”, Netanyahu stressed, making it clear that Palestinians are not truly considered to be Israelis.

The March 2025 poll commissioned by Pennsylvania State University found that 56% of Jewish Israelis — who are the only ones considered to be true, full citizens — want to expel all Palestinian citizens. This includes 66% of Israelis under the age 40.

The younger an Israeli is, the more likely they are to be a far-right extremist, the survey showed.

Image

How the political systems of Israel and the USA promote far-right extremism
Professor Tamir Sorek, the Israeli scholar who conducted the poll, noted that some prominent religious leaders in Israel have advocated for the mass murder of Palestinian civilians.

As an example, Sorek cited Rabbi Yitzchak Ginsburgh, an influential Israeli settler leader in the West Bank, which according to international law is Palestinian territory that has been illegally occupied by Israel since 1967.

Ginsburgh, who wants to eliminate Palestinians and establish a theocratic monarchy in Israel, is also an American. He was born and raised in the United States, and did not move to Israel until he was in his 20s.

Sorek wrote that the attack on Israel on 7 October 2023 “only unleashed demons that had been nurtured for decades in the media and the legal and educational systems”.

In Haaretz, Sorek wrote (emphasis added):

Zionism, besides being a national movement, is also a movement of immigrant-settlers, seeking to displace the local population. Settler-immigrant societies always encounter indiscriminate violent resistance from indigenous groups. The desire for absolute and permanent security can lead to an aspiration to eliminate the resisting population. Therefore, virtually every settlement project has the potential for ethnic cleansing and genocide, as indeed happened in North America in the 17th through 19th centuries or in Namibia in the early 1900s.

Sorek warned in another article in April that, “In Israel, calls for genocide have migrated from the margins to the mainstream”.

A clear example of how fascism has become mainstream in Israel is the country’s extreme-right Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich, a member of the government’s powerful security cabinet.

Smotrich described himself as a “fascist homophobe”. The top Israeli official has called for the “total annihilation” of Gaza, and he argued it would be “justified and moral” to starve to death all 2.1 million Palestinians in the strip.

Former Prime Minister Ehud Olmert says Israel is waging a “war of extermination” in Gaza
Israel’s former Prime Minister Ehud Olmert has accused his country of committing war crimes and waging a “war of extermination” in Gaza.

Olmert led the Israeli regime from 2006 to 2009. He was previously a decades-long member of Netanyahu’s right-wing political party, Likud.

He made these frank admissions in a Hebrew-language article in Haaretz in May. (The following quotes are from Google Translate.)

“What we are doing in Gaza is a war of extermination: the indiscriminate, unrestrained, cruel, and criminal killing of civilians”, Olmert stated.

He made it clear that this is the “result of a policy dictated by the government, knowingly, intentionally, viciously, maliciously, recklessly”.

Image
Israel’s Prime Minister Ehud Olmert with US President George W. Bush in the White House in 2006

Olmert explained that, in 2023 and 2024, he denied that the Israeli regime was intentionally committing war crimes, but he now realizes that he was wrong.

“There are too many cases of brutal shooting of civilians, of destruction of property and homes”, the former Israeli prime minister said. “Looting of property, thefts from homes, which in many cases IDF soldiers have also taken pride in and published in personal posts. We are committing war crimes”.

Olmert stated in no uncertain terms that Israel is using hunger as a weapons: “Yes, we are depriving the residents of Gaza of food, medicine, and minimal means of subsistence as part of a declared policy”.

He referred to the Israeli regime as a “gang of criminals”, and wrote that “the ministers of the Israeli government, led by the head of the gang, Netanyahu, are actually adopting, without forethought, without hesitation, a policy of starvation and humanitarian pressure whose outcome could be catastrophic”.

Israel officially calls its war in Gaza “Operation Gideon’s Chariots”. Olmert said this is an “illegitimate military campaign”, in which Israeli soldiers have gone on a “rampage”, and have turned Gaza into a “humanitarian disaster zone”.

The army is acting “recklessly, carelessly, and excessively aggressively”, he added.

The large number of Palestinian civilians killed in Gaza is “unreasonable, unjustifiable, unacceptable”, he wrote.

Olmert also admitted that Israelis “massacre Palestinian civilians in the West Bank as well”, and “commit heinous crimes every day in the West Bank”.

In an interview with ABC News, the former Israeli prime minister acknowledged, “We have destroyed Gaza”.

https://orinocotribune.com/poll-82-of-i ... man-child/
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Re: Palestine

Post by blindpig » Tue Jun 03, 2025 3:07 pm

West Bank settler attacks reach 20-year high, over 220 Palestinians injured in 2025

Jewish Israeli settlers recently kidnapped and tortured two US-Palestinian brothers, leaving them hospitalized after their release

News Desk

JUN 2, 2025

Image
(Photo credit: Dawn)

Israeli settler violence against Palestinians in the occupied West Bank has reached unprecedented levels in 2025, according to the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA).

In its latest weekly report, OCHA documented over 220 Palestinian injuries so far this year – an average of 44 per month – marking the highest monthly attack rate in the past 20 years.

The report highlighted the forcible displacement of the entire Bedouin community of Maghayer ad Deir – roughly consisting of 120 people – following the establishment of a fourth unauthorized Israeli settler outpost nearby.

In addition to settler violence, Israeli military operations have intensified across the occupied West Bank. Israeli forces carried out punitive demolitions that displaced 80 Palestinians since January. Since the start of this year, Israeli occupation forces have been carrying out a deadly military operation and siege against several West Bank cities. The operation began on 21 January and was dubbed Iron Wall.

In May alone, 50 homes were destroyed in the Nour Shams Refugee Camp. In one case, residents of the Tulkarem Camp were given just a three-hour notice before the demolition of 20 buildings, the OCHA reported.

The UN Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) reports that over 33,000 Palestinians remain displaced from the Jenin, Nour Shams, and Tulkarem refugee camps and are unable to return home. Movement restrictions imposed by Israeli occupation forces in the Salfit governorate have also severely impacted nearly 90,000 Palestinians’ access to healthcare, education, and employment.

Meanwhile, Jewish Israeli settlers kidnapped and tortured two US-Palestinian brothers, Ghassan and Imad Jaber, in Burqa village near Ramallah. The brothers were eventually released and hospitalized, according to local sources and Palestinian state media.

The spike in violence comes as Israel has begun applying “Gaza-style” tactics to the occupied West Bank. Since the onset of its war in Gaza on 7 October 2023, Israeli occupation forces and settlers have killed around 1,000 Palestinians in the occupied West Bank, according to Palestinian sources.

The International Court of Justice (ICJ) ruled last July that Israel’s occupation of Palestinian territories, including the West Bank and East Jerusalem, is illegal and called for the evacuation of all settlements. Despite this, approximately 700,000 Israeli settlers now live in these territories, defying international law and deepening the humanitarian crisis.

https://thecradle.co/articles/west-bank ... ed-in-2025

GHF denies involvement after Israel commits new massacre near Gaza aid site

At least 27 Palestinians were shot dead and nearly 100 others injured in a new Israeli attack on the GHF distribution site in Rafah

News Desk

JUN 3, 2025

Image
(Photo credit: Telegram)

The Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) has denied any involvement or responsibility for the new massacre near its distribution site in the southern city of Rafah, which saw Israeli army troops gun down dozens of Palestinian aid seekers on 3 June.

Death toll from NEW massacre by Israel on Rafah aid site this morning rises to 27

Gaza’s Health Ministry has announced that the number of Palestinians killed this morning in an Israeli attack on an aid distribution site operated by the US-Israeli Gaza Humanitarian Foundation… pic.twitter.com/zg1R1poOJd

— The Cradle (@TheCradleMedia) June 3, 2025


In a statement, the GHF insisted its deliveries were “conducted safely and without incident.”

“We don’t control the area outside of our distribution sites … and have no knowledge regarding IDF activities beyond our perimeter,” GHF said, adding that the incident occurred “well beyond our secure distribution site and operations area” and referring further questions to the Israeli military.

At least 27 Palestinians were killed on Tuesday morning after Israeli forces opened fire at a group of civilians near the GHF site in Rafah. Over 90 others have been injured, according to the Health Ministry in Gaza.

The Israeli army admitted to opening fire near the aid site and acknowledged civilian casualties.

“Earlier today, during the movement of the crowd on the regulated routes on the way to the distribution complex, about half a kilometer from the complex, IDF forces identified a number of suspects moving towards them while deviating from the access routes. The forces fired evasive shots, and after they did not move away, additional shots were fired near the individual suspects who were advancing towards the forces,” the Israeli army said in a statement.

“Reports of casualties are known, details of the incident are under investigation,” it added.

Prior to the latest attack, the Gaza Health Ministry reported that 75 Palestinians were killed and more than 400 wounded by Israeli attacks on GHF aid sites since the controversial initiative was launched on 27 May.

The new massacre brings the total number up to at least 102.

On Sunday, Israeli troops opened fire at Palestinians at the GHF sites in Rafah and Netzarim, killing a total of 35 people and injuring scores of others.

The new aid plan has been repeatedly condemned by the UN and other international humanitarian groups for being designed to reinforce further displacement of the Palestinian population in Gaza. The UN has refused to participate.

Most of the distribution centers are located in southern Gaza, with one in the center near the Netzarim Corridor. Palestinians are forced to travel long distances under bombardment and gunfire, before being crammed into extremely tight spaces and subjected to intensive restrictions.

Nowhere near enough aid is entering the strip due to a continued Israeli blockade on Gaza, where the entire population of over two million people is at risk of famine, the UN stated on 30 May.

https://thecradle.co/articles/ghf-denie ... a-aid-site

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Israel kills hundreds of aid seekers in Gaza in the “Witkoff massacre”

Palestinians hold Witkoff accountable for the deadly attack, which they believe was induced by his swift rejection of Hamas’s response to the latest ceasefire proposal.

June 03, 2025 by Aseel Saleh

Image
People awaiting food. Photo: MSF

At least 220 Palestinians were killed or injured on Sunday, June 1, after Israeli Occupation Forces (IOF) opened fire on crowds of starving people at aid distribution centers operated by the US-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) in Gaza’s southern city of Rafah.

The Euro-Med Human Rights Monitor quoted eyewitnesses saying that the gunfire was launched by Israeli quadcopters and tanks while US security forces fired tear gas to disperse people at the site, lowering their chances of escaping unharmed.

The Switzerland-based organization accused Israel of intentionally “placing distribution centers in dangerous areas”, where “limited aid” is being delivered, which in turn ”suggests a deliberate policy to sow chaos and incite conflict among a population that has been starved for three months.”

Meanwhile, injured Palestinians, who miraculously survived the massacre and were transported to Nasser Hospital in the southern city of Khan Younis, told Doctors Without Borders (MSF) that they were surrounded by gunfire from all sides, which was launched from drones, boats, tanks and IOF soldiers on the ground.

MSF emergency coordinator, Claire Manera, condemned the aid distribution mechanism implemented by the GHF, calling it “dehumanizing, dangerous and severely ineffective.” Manera emphasized that “humanitarian aid must be provided only by humanitarian organizations who have the competence and determination to do it safely and effectively.”

For his part, commissioner-general of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the “Near East” (UNRWA), Philippe Lazzarini, commented on the massacre in a post on X Sunday, describing the aid distribution center as a “death trap” and the distribution mechanism in place as a “humiliating system”.

“Gaza: aid distribution has become a death trap. Mass casualties including scores of injured and killed among starving civilians due to gunshots this morning. This is according to reports from international medics on ground,” Lazzarini stated.

“A distribution point by the Israeli- American plan was put far south in Rafah. This humiliating system has forced thousands of hungry and desperate people to walk for tens of miles to an area that’s all but pulverized due to heavy bombardment by the Israeli Army,” he added.

The head of UNRWA further stressed that “aid deliveries and distribution must be at scale and safe,” reiterating that “in Gaza, this can be done only through the United Nations including UNRWA.”

Israel commits its second aid-distribution massacre in less than a week
Sunday’s massacre was not the first to be perpetrated in GHF-run distribution centers in Rafah. Tuesday, May 27 saw the first lethal attack in which the IOF shot dead a number of Palestinians at one of these centers.

The mass killing happened when tens of thousands of desperate Palestinians arrived to receive food and supplies for the first time, following Israel’s three-month total blockade on entry of humanitarian aid into the war-torn enclave.

US-Israeli aid distribution centers in Gaza are reminiscent of “Nazi ghettos and concentration camps”
The US-Israeli brutality was not limited to killing starved Palestinians. It also extended to systematically degrading them.

Appalling footage surfaced online, showing hungry Palestinians cordoned off inside metal cages surrounded by barbed wire, which some international media outlets said are reminiscent of “Nazi ghettos and concentration camps for Jews in Eastern Europe”.

Fingers are pointing at Witkoff after Sunday’s massacre
The US is considered by many to be Israel’s number one partner and sponsor in the ongoing genocidal aggression against the Palestinian people in the Gaza strip, since it started in October 2023.

Senior US officials involved in Gaza ceasefire negotiations – both in the Biden administration and the current Trump administration – have been under fire due to their policies and decisions, which have prioritized the interests of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in perpetuating the heinous war over ending the bloodshed of Palestinian civilians.

Palestinians held US envoy to the “Middle East”, Steve Witkoff, responsible for Sunday’s massacre after he swiftly rejected Hamas’s response to his latest ceasefire proposal Saturday, May 31.

Critics believe that Witkoff’s rejection gave Israel the green light to escalate its military operations in Gaza.

Witkoff’s proposal offered “no guarantees to end the war”: says Hamas
In its response to Witkoff’s proposal, Hamas offered to release 10 living Israeli captives and the bodies of 18 deceased. In exchange, a number of Palestinian prisoners would be agreed upon for release, provided that US President Donald Trump guarantees Israel’s commitment to a 60-day ceasefire and the flow of humanitarian aid to the besieged strip.

It is worth noting that 58 Israeli captives are currently held in Gaza, 34 of whom are deceased, according to Israeli sources. The Palestinian resistance movement has become more aware that keeping as many Israeli individuals as possible in its captivity is the strongest negotiating chip toward guaranteeing that a ceasefire deal will not be breached again, especially after Netanyahu’s government violated the previous truce – with unwavering US support – last March.

Witkoff described Hamas’ response as “totally unacceptable”, saying that the Palestinian resistance movement “should accept the framework proposal” that he put forward “as the basis for proximity talks”.

Witkoff’s proposal stipulated the release of half of the living captives and half of the deceased to seal a 60-day ceasefire deal, upon which “substantive negotiations in good-faith” would be held as part of the proximity talks for reaching a possible “permanent ceasefire”.

Commenting on Witkoff’s rejection, senior Hamas official Basem Naim told Al Jazeera on Saturday that the proposal put forward by the US envoy offered “no guarantees to end the war”.

Naim clarified that Hamas still “responded positively” to the latest proposal relayed to it by Witkoff, although it was different to the one it had agreed upon with him a week earlier.

“One week ago, we agreed with Mr. Witkoff on one proposal, and we said, ‘This is acceptable, we can consider this a negotiating paper,’” the Palestinian official said. “He went to the other party, to the Israelis, to get their response. Instead of having a response to our proposal, he brought us a new proposal, which had nothing to do with what we agreed upon,” he added.

https://peoplesdispatch.org/2025/06/03/ ... -massacre/
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Re: Palestine

Post by blindpig » Wed Jun 04, 2025 2:17 pm

Image
A WIDELY CIRCULATED IMAGE OF STARVING PALESTINIANS IN RAFAH AT AN AID DISTRIBUTION SITE RUN BY THE U.S.-BACKED GAZA HUMANITARIAN FOUNDATION, MAY 27, 2025. (PHOTO: SOCIAL MEDIA)

The ‘chaos’ of aid distribution in Gaza is not a system failure. The system is designed to fail.
Originally published: Mondoweiss on May 30, 2025 by Abdaljawad Omar (more by Mondoweiss) | (Posted Jun 03, 2025)


We are not witnessing a rupture with how things used to be.

What is unfolding today in Gaza, where food aid falls from the sky like ordinance and “humanitarian corridors” double as kill zones, is not the collapse of humanitarianism, but its logical consummation under conditions of settler-colonial necropolitics.

It is tempting to read these scenes–the parachute that failed, the sacks of flour soaked in blood–as tragic malfunctions. They are not.

They are the grammar of a system that has long sutured humanitarian concern to military logistics, relief to surveillance, and aid to domination.

But something has shifted–not in content, but in form.

For decades, Israel maintained an uneasy but instrumental alliance with the architecture of humanitarianism. In the long expanse between the years following the Nakba and the siege and destruction of Gaza, this alliance operated as a double gesture: securing international legitimacy through the performance of restraint, while choreographing violence within the idiom of “security” and “self-defense.” The Red Cross, UNRWA, and a chorus of NGOs served as both witnesses and enablers, simultaneously limiting and legitimizing the occupation’s machinery.

In this war, humanitarianism is no longer simply absorbed and weaponized. It is being bypassed, discarded, and cannibalized.

The Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), Israel’s new model for aid delivery, signals this shift with brutal clarity: aid is no longer mediated through international law or the optics of neutrality, but flows through private American contractors under military command.

The new aid plan is being used by Israel as part of its demographic war in Gaza: by orchestrating aid flows into selected zones, primarily in the south, Israel is working to condense the population into increasingly narrow and governable enclaves. This forced concentration is not a consequence of war–it is the war’s strategic aim.

In other words, aid is a tool for soft transfer, pushing Palestinians into regions that can be more easily monitored, controlled, and eventually severed from any claim to the land. Starvation and desperation are not side effects, but intended effects, forcing displacement through need.

Israel simply cannot do this with the existing humanitarian infrastructure of UNRWA and the WFP. It has tried to do so over 19 months of genocide and fallen short. This is why the removal of international aid organizations signals a shift toward the unilateral management of the Strip under a new apparatus of military-humanitarian control. By sidelining these bodies, Israel makes room for a more compliant infrastructure: private contractors, militarized aid programs, and internally cultivated Palestinian collaborators who can administer local populations without challenging the broader regime of occupation and erasure.

These aid distribution sites, under the guise of relief, are also choreographed spaces of entrapment, where the architecture of chaos, desperation, and humiliation is meticulously staged. People wait for hours in the scorching sun, under drones, under guns, under the gaze of an occupying army that controls what enters, who lives, and who dies. The crowd surges, the fences collapse, shots are fired, and Palestinians are killed.

The Palestinian is made visible only in hunger and at the edge of riot. In these moments, dignity is not just deferred, but is systematically stripped, replaced with the performance of disorder that justifies further killings and further control. The aid site becomes the set-piece where Israel can lure the starving into kill zones and use a loaf of bread as a pretext for a bullet.

The new humanitarianism
This inaugurates a new paradigm in which humanitarianism is no longer mediated through international law or multilateral consensus, but is now militarized, privatized, and securitized. It is disaster capitalism taken to the extreme, eroding liberal humanitarian institutions in favor of militarized neoliberal corporations.

The time is ripe for this because Israel has grown weary of performance. It no longer needs the restraint rituals, with the carefully measured body counts, the proportional language of conflict resolution, and the legal architectures erected after World War II. In their place, we find a new modality of power that openly transgresses, dares the world to respond, and thrives not on legitimacy, but impunity.

What happened in Tal al-Sultan on May 27 offered the world yet another glimpse into this emerging logic. At the launch of the GHF’s first aid distribution center, thousands of Palestinians gathered, driven by the extremity of hunger. As fences broke under the weight of the crowd, Israeli forces responded with what they called “warning shots.” By the end of the day, three Palestinians lay dead, 48 were injured, and seven others were missing. This was not the failure of humanitarian logistics; it was the logic fulfilled. The aid site became the set-piece where Israel can lure the starving into kill zones and use a loaf of bread as a pretext for a bullet.

This is not merely a new war on Gaza. It is a war on the very category of the “human” as it applies to Palestinians, and eventually a remaking that will impact the whole world. Where once humanitarian discourse functioned as the frame through which violence could be rendered legible, disciplined by legalese, and tempered by press releases, humanitarianism itself is being disposed of as a limiting condition.

This reconfiguration also entails a war against memory. International organizations, however limited, often function as record-keepers of hunger, of attacks, of displacement, and of death. With their expulsion comes the erasure of witnesses and the silencing of documentation. The absence of institutional observers allows Israel to proceed with its campaign of annihilation without the burdens of image, number, or name. This is because the presence of the UN and other aid organizations, even if partly complicit, implied that the world was still watching and that aid was still being distributed in a manner not conducive to ethnic cleansing.

Inequality of hunger
Beyond achieving its demographic aims, Israel is also utilizing the GHF as part of its policy of what could effectively be termed “inequality of hunger”: the aid provided by the GHF is woefully insufficient to meet the vast and urgent needs of Gaza’s besieged population, with the UN estimating that a minimum of 500 aid trucks per day are required to sustain basic life, while fewer than 100 are permitted entry. The deliberate reduction of aid so far below the minimum threshold of survival isn’t just arbitrary cruelty; it is meant to create the conditions for social collapse.

It’s already been pointed out that this is the use of manufactured scarcity as a bargaining chip to extract political concessions from the Palestinian resistance. But it should also be stressed that the deprivation is an instrument of social disintegration: by distributing just enough food to kindle desperation, but never enough to sustain dignity, the system manufactures moral collapse. The social fabric fractures, resulting in the slow erosion of solidarity–the final battlefield of any collective struggle.

It is one thing to have a famine, which at least means equality in hunger. It’s quite another to trickle in just enough resources to create an internal struggle that results in the cannibalization of social relations, hitting harder than any massacre.

The criminality of aid
There are, one might say, two criminalities at work in Gaza’s hunger corridors. The first is sanitized, institutional, and entirely rational, what we might call the criminality of logistics perpetrated by the colonizer. Deliberate starvation is achieved through border control, using aid as spectacle, the sealing of exits, and then the airdropping of salvation in neatly packaged boxes. This is not merely a failure of ethics but a success of policy. It is the criminality of biometric scans, of the humanitarian mask concealing the military boot, made possible by both Netanyahu’s cabinet and the likes of Trump Inc., that curious synthesis of gangster capitalism and state violence performing massacres in the name of order.

But this is not all. The organized internal collaborators, the micro-warlords who “tax” the aid and divert it before it reaches the starved, form a local apparatus of distribution grounded in theft-as-policy. This is the internalized supplement to the occupation–the colonized enforcer recruited in the midst of war to serve further social disintegration.

In this setting, the crime is everywhere: in the massacre itself, in the very architecture of aid that creates the need for it. Israel is not the sole criminal; the entire configuration is criminal, including the aid agencies, the paperwork, the silence, the drone overhead, and the collaborator on the ground.

The other “criminality” unfolds when the crowd surges, breaching the fence and reaching for what was always theirs–bread, oil, rice, the right to live. This is not looting, but the repossession of stolen sustenance. It is the planning of those without a plan, the logistics of a community erupting through the fractures of engineered despair. It is the refusal to die standing in line beneath the drones, dignity deferred.

The people aren’t a mob, but a flood–a living force breaching the containment zone of famine, liberating food from its branded prison. What Israel frames as chaos is, in truth, collective clarity.

This second criminality–the crime of survival–is incomprehensible to the humanitarian and liberal gaze. It remains illegible to institutions conditioned only to distinguish the compliant needy from the dangerous deviant. But this collective act of taking is not a cry for help, but a disruption of the very logic that made help necessary. After 600 days of massacres and destruction, the fences fell, sacks were passed between hands, and colonial time stuttered.

This, too, is what unfolded last week–Palestinians in Gaza surged through the tightly scripted scene of domination, disrupting Israel’s illusion of total control even as it outsourced its sovereignty to American private contractors. The scene itself was torn apart twice: first, when most Palestinians in Gaza did not show up, refusing even the choreography itself, and second, when the crowd surged through the fence.

This, then, is the moment we are left with: one in which Israel no longer bothers to veil its actions behind humanitarian fig leaves, but openly scorns the very language that once masked its violence. And the world is being dared–to intervene, yes, but more precisely, to confront the fact that its interventions and discourses were always part of the problem, always hollow and devoid of substance.

One could ask the liberals what remains of this language, not only in Gaza, but in the futures yet to come?

And amid all this, what remains central is that, despite everything, Palestinians still find a way–whether through deliberate planning or spontaneous rupture–to flood the infrastructure of annihilation.

https://mronline.org/2025/06/03/the-cha ... m-failure/

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Jonathan Cook: Israel’s ‘Food Hubs’ Are Death Traps
June 3, 2025

No one should be surprised that Israel is integrating its so-called humanitarian effort into its genocide of Palestinians.

Image
Israeli forces in Rafah in May 2024. (IDF Spokesperson’s Unit/Wikimedia Commons/ CC BY-SA 3.0)

By Jonathan Cook
Jonathan-Cook.net

It is entirely unsurprising that Israel has yet again been caught out in a lie — a lie that the BBC once again spread far and wide on its news services.

Israel claimed that it had not fired at starving Palestinians queueing on Sunday morning to get food from one of its highly militarised “aid distribution hubs” — a system Israel imposed on Gaza in place of a long-established and successful aid network run by the United Nations.

More than 30 Palestinians are known to have been killed and dozens more injured in the weekend incident [in which 75 were killed by some estimates]. [Civilians trying to reach the aid distribution point have now been shot at and killed for three consecutive days with about 130 dead. CNN reports: “The United Nations’ human rights chief, Volker Turk, said in a statement that ‘deadly attacks on distraught civilians trying to access the paltry amounts of food aid in Gaza, are unconscionable… There must be a prompt and impartial investigation into each of these attacks, and those responsible held to account.’”]

Israel blamed Hamas fighters for shooting Palestinian civilians, saying they were trying to stop the crowds from taking food boxes. The Israeli military dished up a video, taken by one of its drones, as supposed proof.

The BBC broadcast that video on its main shows, and then did one of its standard “Israel said, the Palestinians said. Who can really know the truth?” reports of the incident.

The BBC should never have taken Israel’s disinformation seriously – not least because Israeli claims are always shown to be lies when subjected to any serious independent scrutiny. The default position should be that Israel is lying until it can demonstrate convincingly that it is not.

Doctors treating the dead and wounded immediately pointed out that their injuries were consistent with Israeli gunfire. The victims had single shots to the head or chest, in line with targeting by Israeli snipers. Others suffered shrapnel wounds from tank shells. Hamas has no tanks.

Now expert analysis of the video itself — paradoxically confirmed by BBC Verify — shows that the footage was filmed in Khan Younis, far from Rafah, where the Palestinians aid seekers were killed. It is also apparent from the shadows that the video was taken in the evening, not in the morning when the Palestinians in Rafah were shot.

Despite this, the BBC still writes: “The circumstances of this strike are unclear.”

Image
BBC logo, Manchester, Engliand, 2009. (TechnicalFault formerly Coffee Lover, Flickr, CC BY 2.0)

No, it is entirely clear that the Israeli army disseminated lies, and that the BBC lapped up those lies and spread them to its audiences via its main news shows, before tentatively retracting the lies quietly on a live feed on its website.

The reality is that the video doesn’t show Hamas fighters shooting Palestinians to stop them getting aid. Rather it shows a criminal Palestinian gang — of the kind Israel has been cultivating and allying with — looting aid so that it can be sold back to Palestinians on the open market, where prices have been massively inflated by Israel’s blockade on food.

There are no police in Gaza maintaining law and order because Israel kills any Palestinian seen wearing a police uniform.

It was for these very reasons that international aid organisations refused to take part in Israel’s scheme. They understood it was never about distributing humanitarian aid because the U.N. was best placed to do that.

It was not even chiefly about weaponising aid to lure Palestinians into what are effectively Israeli military bases so that soldiers can use biometric data to snatch any Palestinians they want, disappearing them into Israel’s torture camps, as they have been doing.

Rather it is about giving the appearance of providing food — most of it useless because it is dried staples that need cooking, when there is almost no water or fuel available — while continuing to starve the vast majority of Palestinians. And it is about using the aid hubs as another front for killing Palestinians.

In other words, after taking the aid system out of the U.N.’s hands, Israel is successfully enfolding the so-called humanitarian effort” into its genocide.

If that sounds too cynical, mark this. Israel again shot at crowds gathering on Tuesday morning to get aid from one of its “distribution hubs,” killing at least 27 Palestinians and wounding more than 180.

Several witnesses say there was no aid available when they arrived.

There is no way to be too cynical about what Israel is doing. Israel is utterly committed to its genocide — and a genocidal state has no red lines.

https://consortiumnews.com/2025/06/03/j ... ath-traps/

******

The Second-Class Citizenship of Palestinian Israelis
Posted by Internationalist 360° on May 31, 2025
Ilan Pappé, Magdalena Berger

Image

Horrific, genocidal atrocities are being carried out against Palestinians in Gaza right now. But Israeli historian Ilan Pappé explains that Palestinian Israelis also find themselves in an “apartheid state” inside Israel.

Palestinians in Israel have a complex relationship with the state in which they live. They have been citizens of the country for more than sixty years, but not full-fledged citizens, as Israeli historian Ilan Pappé indicates in his book The Forgotten Palestinians. They navigate a precarious position between Jewish Israelis and Palestinians in the occupied territories. But their experiences are rarely the focus of attention.

In an interview with Jacobin, Pappé speaks about this special role. He discusses Palestinian history and discrimination within Israeli territory, which has changed since the first publication of the book in 2011 — and why Palestinians in Israel in particular could play a central role in peace efforts.

Magdalena Berger: ​Between the Mediterranean Sea and the Jordan River, there are essentially three groups of Palestinians: Those in the occupied territories of the West Bank and Gaza, those in East Jerusalem, and those who are citizens of Israel. Can you describe how the situation of Palestinians in Israel differs most significantly from the others, and why they are “forgotten,” as the title of your book argues?

Ilan Pappé: The Palestinians inside of Israel are those Palestinians who were not expelled during the Nakba, the catastrophe of 1948. They have a very different history than other Palestinian groups, because they were part of the Jewish state from the beginning. The other Palestinians were either refugees inside historic Palestine or outside historic Palestine; they came under Egyptian rule in the Gaza Strip or Jordanian rule in the West Bank in 1967. During that very time, between 1948 and 1967, Palestinians in Israel were put under military rule.

Like the West Bank today?

Yes, military rule is now familiar to most people when it refers to the West Bank and the Gaza Strip. It’s the same military rule based on the same British colonialist regulations that gives the army a totally free hand in regulating the life of the occupied population. The army can take people to prison without trial, they can destroy their houses, and, of course, in some cases expel or shoot them. This was the reality for Palestinians inside of Israel until 1966.

While Palestinians in Gaza and the West Bank came under Israeli rule after 1967, the situation for Palestinians inside of Israel got better during this time. They became citizens. I would not say full citizens, but at least they were not subjected to military rule anymore.

But they suffered from more hidden kinds of segregation and discrimination. Much of this discrimination was, however, not yet legalized. Before the 2000s, most Israeli politicians tried, at least in theory, not to push for legislation that discriminated against people because they were Arabs and not Jews.

In the last twenty-five years, the political system of Israel moved significantly to the right. I suppose this significantly impacted Palestinians citizens of Israel.

Yes. In 2000, the Israeli political elite began to legislate against Palestinians in Israel. All kinds of unofficial practices against them suddenly became legal. For instance, Palestinians always had very limited access to land — they could not expand their areas — but now it also became illegal for them to do so. It was also forbidden for them to talk about the Nakba.

All of this culminated in the Nationality Law in 2018, which officially stated that Palestinians can be individual citizens of Israel, but they cannot be part of a national community. And this refers not only to 1948 territory — from the river to the sea, there is only one nation, the law says, and this is the Jewish nation. There is no other nation there.

The discrimination against Palestinians inside of Israel is not as dramatic as in the West Bank, not to mention what’s happening in Gaza. But compared to Jewish citizens, they are second-rate, if not third-rate, citizens. Even before the changes of law in the early 2000s, as I argue in the book, they were living in a semi-apartheid state — some even say a full apartheid state. Palestinians were discriminated against all along because of who they were and not because of what they did.

You describe how little Palestinians and Israelis genuinely interact with one another. At one point, you say that there are too few marriages between the two groups to even study the phenomenon.

Yes, we always joke about that. A sociologist in Haifa said, there is no need for a sample, because he knew all of them. I mean, Zionism is a colonialist movement that colonized Palestine for the last 120 years. But it is one of the few colonial movements that never learned the language of the colonized people and never mingled with them.

Even in apartheid South Africa, there were more relationships between whites and Africans than there [are relationships between Israelis and Palestinians] in Palestine. But that’s the nature of Zionism: it is a Jewish supremacy and exclusivity, and therefore the pressure on mixed couples is huge. Most of them find themselves outside the country eventually.

But how do Israelis and Palestinians engage with each other on a day-to-day basis? What forms of contact are there?

There is very strong segregation, particularly in the education sector. But the universities are a mixed space, the businesses as well. Public transport is not segregated. As one scholar has argued: This is not a petty apartheid. You don’t have separate toilets, benches, or buses. The segregation is much more hidden.

So, yes, there are meeting places. But I’ll give one example to illustrate my point: Israel created several development towns in the north of the country. The idea was that these would be exclusively for Jews and increase their number in the Galilee, because Israel was worried that there were too many Arabs in the area. This was a project called the Judaization of the Galilee.

There was, however, a lack of opportunities in the Palestinian villages around these towns. As a result, those Palestinians who were a bit better off were willing to pay twice or three times the rent in order to move to those new areas. These supposedly pure Jewish towns are now much more mixed than they were before. Sometimes life is simply stronger than state ideology. So there is interaction between the groups all the time. I was born in Haifa, where the interaction is probably even more visible.

The problem is that the political system, the cultural system, the education system — they all try to deliberately destroy this interaction and genuine coexistence. So from above, there is a great effort to make sure that this kind of living together is not nurtured and cannot develop. If you left it to people themselves, I think it would naturally develop. But if it develops, it defeats the whole idea of an exclusive Jewish state. The members of the Israeli political elite don’t want that.

In the West, people often respond to accusations of apartheid in Israel by pointing out that some Palestinian citizens have made quite notable achievements. You’ll find Palestinians working as doctors, civil servants, and even professional athletes. Some have been elected to the Knesset or appointed as Supreme Court judges. But does highlighting these individual success stories really challenge the bigger picture when it comes to claims of apartheid?

That’s like saying because India had a female prime minister for a moment, the situation of women in India is absolutely fine. Of course, such symbolic achievements are important, but they never indicate the reality on the ground.

Most people under the poverty line in Israel are Palestinian citizens. They are constantly discriminated against, by the police, by the criminal system, everywhere. Not to mention the fact that if they express their Palestinian identity individually or collectively, they are in danger of being imprisoned in their own homeland.

Let’s take the health system for instance: Israeli doctors have immigrated in large numbers, and some of these positions were filled by Palestinian citizens. Normally it is very difficult to get into Israeli health facilities because there are quotas in these facilities. During the time when the Communist Party was quite powerful in Israel, Palestinians could complete their medical studies in the Eastern Bloc. Now they are doing it in Italy and Romania.

It is the same issue as in the mixed towns: sometimes reality defeats ideology. But if a Palestinian doctor today dares to show compassion with the children of Gaza, they are threatened with suspension, just because they put a humane post on Facebook.

You mentioned the power of the Communist Party — what explains its earlier strength and popularity, especially among the many Palestinians who were actively involved in the party?

When Israel was established, at least until 1967–68, it wanted to have a good relationship with both the Soviet Union and the United States. It also hoped that Jews from the Soviet Union would eventually immigrate to Israel. This is why it allowed the Communist Party to operate, whereas, for instance, any attempt of Palestinians in Israel to establish a pure national party was barred.

Some Palestinian people might have been attracted to socialist or Marxist ideology, but many of them found it to be the only party where they could express themselves as Palestinians. It was the only party in which Arabs and Jews were equally treated. There were other Palestinians in other parties, but they mainly served as tokens there. They were not treated as equal members. In the Communist Party, Palestinians and Jews were working on equal footing and treated each other with respect and equality. Probably, they had the best model for how life should have been.

But like so many other leftist movements, the party plays only a minor role today. Why is that?

Once Israel ceded its relationship with the Soviet Union — namely, when it was clear that the Soviet Union sided with the Palestinian liberation movement — Israel became less positive toward the Communist Party.

And like everywhere else in the Arab world, the Left did not deliver. It did not deliver the liberation of Palestine; it did not bring social justice, democracy, and rights. So a lot of people went to other ideological places. In Israel, Palestinians were attracted to a purer national identity, with no need to cover it up with communism, and to political Islamic ideologies.

When you look at different political fractions of Palestinians, it is obvious that many of the more militant groups arose in exile. They had particularly strong bases in the refugee camps of Lebanon, Syria, and Jordan. Were there also notable militant organizations among Palestinians citizens of Israel?

No, there weren’t, because of two things: First, in the 1970s, the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) decided that each Palestinian group should fight for the liberation of Palestine according to the circumstances in which it found itself. There was no pressure on the Palestinians in Israel to join the guerilla warfare that other Palestinian groups were engaged with, either in the occupied territories or from the refugee camps. Second, the Palestinian political and intellectual leadership in Israel made the strategic decision not to use guerilla warfare to secure their rights and contribute to the Palestinian cause.

This was a very conscious decision. And there was of course always the fear of a possible Israeli reaction. As we can see in Gaza today, such a reaction would have certainly been genocidal.

Your book was first published in English in 2011, and a lot has changed since. You’ve already mentioned the Nation-State Law, and of course it’s hard to talk about anything related to Israel and Palestine today without the war in Gaza looming in the background. How has the aftermath of October 7 affected the daily lives of Palestinians within Israel?

As I said, already from 2000 onward and especially since the election of the right-wing government in November 2022, the policy of the Israeli government and parliament became very harsh toward Palestinians, through both legislation and through practices on the ground. That was even before October 7. And another thing that had nothing to do with October 7 was the way that Israel allows criminal gangs to operate freely in the Palestinian villages and areas.

These are gangs of young people who are heavily armed — and nobody is trying to disarm them. Neither the police nor the secret service nor the army. They are allowed to operate absolutely freely. They are mostly engaged in fighting each other for space and territory. But as always, a lot of innocent people are being hit. Almost every day, we have a murder, including murders of children. It is very clear that some of them were collaborators with the Israeli secret service before the Oslo Accords, and they were recruited from the occupied territories. The Israeli government feels as if it benefits from what they call “Arabs killing Arabs.” That’s why they don’t care if people in Palestinians villages are terrorized.

October 7 was used as a pretext to remove even the little freedom of expression and protest that Palestinians in Israel used to have. Israel acted as if what Hamas did was something the Palestinians in Israel did. Therefore, they are not allowed to demonstrate any compassion to the Palestinian babies in Gaza. It is considered support for terrorism. People get arrested for such things without trial. This is why many people are afraid to speak out; they fear they might lose their jobs or be arrested. As one of the leaders of the Palestinian community in Israel put it, it is even worse than the days of military rule between 1948 and 1966. It is a very difficult and dangerous moment in the life of this community.

With reference to the Kafr Qasim massacre of 1956, where Israeli border police killed forty-eight Palestinian citizens of Israel for unknowingly violating a curfew, you write that in Israel it always takes “some kind of catastrophe” for anything to change. The situation in Gaza is perhaps the greatest imaginable catastrophe. How will it change the future of Israel and Palestinians in Israel specifically?

We had hoped that, once the initial shock and trauma had passed, those who still regard themselves as liberals in Israel would realize that the only way to change Israel is through the formation of a strong alliance between Palestinian and more progressive Jewish citizens. But that is not happening. October 7 turned those who regarded themselves as liberal Zionists into more extreme right-wing Zionists. So we don’t really have liberal Zionist political forces anymore. That means that the Palestinian community in Israel will be further isolated.

But that is in the short term. In the long run, I think that October 7 was a wake-up call that the way the Jewish state was developed — as a supremacist state, a racist state based on oppression, occupation, and ethnic cleansing — is not working.

Yes, Israel is still powerful and has powerful allies, and the Palestinians are weak and cannot liberate themselves or end their oppression. But they will continue their struggle. And the world is beginning to understand that they are the victims — and not Israel. These processes will persist. We can already see that those Israelis who want a normal, democratic, liberal life don’t find it in Israel. They go to places like Germany or elsewhere. And those left behind don’t seem to be capable of running a state.

I am not sure the United States will always be there to pay for Israel’s expenditures. We can also see that the international community has had enough, at least the civil society. Yes, this has not impacted many governments yet, but it will surely happen. Therefore, I think that, ironically, the Palestinians in Israel are the only people who can offer a bridge from the unacceptable reality of apartheid, genocide, and ethnic cleansing to genuine coexistence — as it existed in Palestine before the arrival of Zionism.

In your book, you say they are the only ones who know Israelis not only as settlers or soldiers.

Yes. And one day, when there will be reconciliation and a different reality between the river and the sea, they are the ones who can create a win-win situation for both sides. Because if not, instead of restitution, we get retribution, and that is terrible to think about. That is why the Palestinians in Israel are such an important community. And instead of understanding that their future really is in the hands of this particular group of Palestinians, the Israelis are limiting and destroying it.

https://libya360.wordpress.com/2025/05/ ... -israelis/

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This Is Israel

All those dead kids on your social media feed are the fruit of a tree whose seed was planted after the second world war. That tree has been bearing more and more fruit, and it will continue to for as long as it remains standing. Because that’s just the kind of tree it is. The…

Caitlin Johnstone
June 4, 2025

This is Israel. This is what the Zionist project looks like. The dead kids. The blown-out hospitals. The desperate, starving civilians. This is it.

There is no alternate version of Israel where these things are not happening. The liberal Zionist vision of a two-state solution and a just and peaceful Israel exists solely in the imaginations of the people who envision it. Nothing like it has ever existed. Everything about the modern state of Israel is unyieldingly hostile to that vision.

You either support the existence of the Israel you see before you, or you support the end of the apartheid Zionist entity. There is no hidden third option. There are no other positions on the menu. To pretend otherwise is to live in a fantasy land.

You either want to burn children alive, or you don’t. You either want to deliberately starve civilians, or you don’t. You either want to bomb hospitals, or you don’t. You either want to deliberately assassinate Palestinian journalists while forbidding foreign journalists entry into Gaza, or you don’t. You either want to deliberately massacre civilians and systematically destroy civilian infrastructure in order to force the removal of Palestinians from a Palestinian territory, or you don’t. And if you don’t, you must oppose the state of Israel.

That’s Israel, the state. Not just Netanyahu. Not just extremist settlers. Not just “far right elements within the Israeli government”. Israel itself. Because everything we are seeing Israel do is the result of everything Israel is as a state.

Everything Israel is doing is the result of everything it has always been. As soon as the west decided to drop a settler-colonialist state on top of a pre-existing civilization wherein the new immigrants would receive preferential treatment over the indigenous inhabitants who were already living there, it became inevitable that Israel would wind up in the condition it’s in today.

Because there was no way to uphold that status quo without mass displacement and nonstop tyranny, violence and abuse. There was no way to set up a tiered society where one tier is placed above the other without indoctrinating the public to accept that apartheid system by systematically dehumanizing the members of the disempowered group.

Set up a status quo of dehumanizing a group of people and manufacturing consent for violence and abuse against them, and you will inevitably wind up with a far right apartheid state which is committing genocide, as surely as dropping a stone off a building will result in a stone falling to the ground.

What we are seeing in Gaza today was baked into the state of Israel ever since its inception.

All those dead kids on your social media feed are the fruit of a tree whose seed was planted after the second world war. That tree has been bearing more and more fruit, and it will continue to for as long as it remains standing. Because that’s just the kind of tree it is. The only kind of tree it ever could have been.

Saying “I support Israel but I don’t support the actions of Netanyahu in Gaza” is like saying “I like this apple tree but only when it sprouts coconuts instead of apples.” That is not the kind of tree it is. The apple tree will only produce apples, and the genocide tree will only produce genocide.

Israel’s supporters avoid confronting obvious truths like these. Support for Israel depends on mass-scale psychological compartmentalization. Everything about it revolves around avoiding unpleasant truths instead of deeply and viscerally reckoning with them.

Averting the eyes from the video footage of Israel’s atrocities in Gaza. Averting the eyes from the contradictions between the values they purport to hold and everything Israel is as a state. Averting the eyes from the mountains upon mountains of evidence staring us all in the face. That’s the only way support for Israel is able to continue.

In order to become a truth-driven species, we need to stop hiding from uncomfortable truths. And one of our favorite hiding places for uncomfortable truths at this point in history is the modern state of Israel, and the western empire’s support for it.

https://caitlinjohnstone.com.au/2025/06 ... is-israel/
"There is great chaos under heaven; the situation is excellent."

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Re: Palestine

Post by blindpig » Thu Jun 05, 2025 1:54 pm

United States Unilaterally Vetoes UN Security Council Resolution Calling for Immediate Ceasefire in Gaza

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United States vetoes UN resolution demanding immediate and unconditional ceasefire in Gaza.Photo:EFE.

June 4, 2025 Hour: 5:45 pm

The United States vetoed a UN Security Council resolution demanding an immediate, unconditional, and permanent ceasefire in Gaza, blocking humanitarian aid access and ignoring urgent calls to end the humanitarian crisis.

On June 4, 2025, the United States exercised its veto power alone to block a United Nations Security Council resolution that called for an immediate, unconditional, and permanent ceasefire in Gaza. The resolution, presented by the ten non-permanent members of the Security Council, also demanded the release of Israeli hostages held by Hamas and the removal of all restrictions on humanitarian aid and essential services in the Gaza Strip.

Despite the resolution’s deliberately softened language,minimizing direct criticism of Israel and explicitly supporting diplomatic efforts led by Qatar, Egypt, and the United States,Washington opposed the text.

U.S. Ambassador Dorothy Shea declared that the U.S. would not support any measure that failed to condemn Hamas and demand its disarmament and withdrawal from Gaza. This veto marks the sixth time since the outbreak of the Gaza conflict in October 2023 that the United States has blocked resolutions critical of Israel.

🎥Watch the vote on Security Council resolution for immediate ceasefire, release of hostages, and ending the Israeli blockade of the Palestinian people in Gaza put forward by the 10 elected members of the Council 🇩🇿🇸🇮🇬🇾🇵🇰🇸🇴🇸🇱🇩🇰🇬🇷🇰🇷🇵🇦
14 votes in favor
Veto (United States)
pic.twitter.com/DuqSqjSqTw

— State of Palestine (@Palestine_UN)


June 4, 2025
The Gaza Strip continues to suffer a catastrophic humanitarian crisis, with blockades severely limiting aid and essential services. Since the end of a two-month truce in March, Israeli military operations have intensified, resulting in thousands of Palestinian casualties.

According to Gaza’s Ministry of Health, over 54,000 Palestinians have died since October 2023, with 45 killed on the day of the veto alone. Humanitarian aid remains scarce, and the UN has criticized the militarization of aid distribution points, where dozens have died or been injured due to gunfire.

Traditional allies of Israel such as France, Germany, and the United Kingdom have begun to shift their stance amid growing international pressure for a ceasefire. Brazil’s government, led by President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, has condemned Israeli attacks on humanitarian aid centers and called for an independent investigation.

Lula has described the Israeli offensive as “genocide” and urged immediate cessation of hostilities, protection of Palestinian civilians, and lifting of all aid restrictions.

This veto by the United States highlights its continued diplomatic support for Israel despite mounting global calls to end the violence and humanitarian suffering in Gaza. International actors emphasize the urgent need for solidarity with the Palestinian people and the defense of their rights under international law.

https://www.telesurenglish.net/united-s ... e-in-gaza/

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The Moral Rot At The Heart Of Civilisation
Nate Bear
Jun 05, 2025

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This civilisation is letting a genocide happen.

Israel and the west are to blame for the genocide but not one country, bar Yemen, has come to the material aid of the Palestinians.

Not one government in the entire world has done anything.

Shoutout to Hezbollah and a few militant groups in Iraq. Well done South Africa for bringing the ICC case against Netanyahu and his fellow Zionazis.

But no government on Earth used its state capacity, used its navy or its air force or its army to do anything to help the Palestinians.

A military mission to stop Israel would have been nice. No-fly zones and the like, with the threat of force. But in the absence of that, many of us would have settled for a humanitarian mission, a country or countries sending a fleet of ships and planes to deliver aid, come what may.

These vehicles could have been unarmed. The country or countries could have made it very clear to Israel this was solely a humanitarian mission, it would have called their bluff and created a stark binary choice: bomb unarmed aid ships of a nation state, effectively a declaration of war, or let them through.

But no, nothing. Looking at a list of the roughly two hundred countries in the world, well over half would have the capacity to send aid via air force or navy assets.

On the ladder of complicity in genocide, the western states supplying Israel with the military equipment and political cover for genocide sit on the top rung, but the countries with the greatest capacity to have done something, to have carried out a humanitarian mission, must sit on the next rung down.

In the end it has just been empty words of condemnation and a few symbolic gestures on trade.

In the end it has come down to a handful of activists on a crowdfunded sailing boat to be the moral conscience of the world and do something not one single country in the world did.

It’s hard to get your head around.

This inaction and apathy in the face of an actual genocide, in response to twenty months of 4k videos of children being shredded, blown up, ripped apart, beheaded, burnt alive and starved, signals a deeper moral rot at the heart of our societies.

A moral rot that cannot be separated from neoliberalism and how money and profit have come to dominate our brains, dominate our political systems and dominate our world.

When it comes to a unifying vision for society, the only thing most of us ever hear from our governments is one word: growth.

Growth is the spiritual centre around which the entirety of our politics is orientated. And it doesn’t mean anything at all! We can’t be richer. We have all the food and technology and money we could possibly need. We have never lived in more abundant times. The richest people are richer than countries. Footballers and tennis players are billionaires. The idea that if we just had another one, five, ten percent of economic growth we could create that extra bit more we need and solve all the problems is actually a comical insult to our intelligence.

Yet this is the myth and the legend that underpins all of modern politics. This is the story that so many people fall for and buy in to. Growth is the secular religion for an areligious age. And as such, it must be worshiped. Anything that creates growth is to be lauded and encouraged, and anything that hampers it is to be rejected. To speak out against growth is a crime against the religion.

Even a genocide must be no obstacle to growth.

Which is why, just a few days after the UK’s defence secretary David Lammy said the country had suspended trade talks with Israel (because even the genocide enablers in the British government couldn’t justify starving children), the UK’s trade envoy to Israel was live tweeting from Tel Aviv about his trade mission to the country.

The moral cesspit of neoliberalism looks at a genocide on the one hand, and a percentage point of growth on the other, and chooses growth every time.

A few weeks ago I revealed that the son of the attorney general for the Conservative Party in the UK, (Lord) David Wolfson, who was a minister in Boris Johnson’s government, is a soldier in the IDF. Sam Wolfson went to Israel to join the IDF in 2022, participated in the genocide, and only returned to London earlier this year. He’s now working at the right-wing neoliberal think tank Policy Exchange, because killing civilians and doing a new holocaust, rather than being an obstacle to a career path, is a valued skill. The more death you create, the more doors you open and the richer and more powerful you can be.

Neoliberalism enthusiastically rewards death-eating immorality.

Just look around!

From Donald Trump to Elon Musk to Tony Blair to Joe Biden to Zuckerberg to Peter Thiel to Jeff Bezos to the bank bosses to the arms company bosses to the fossil fuel CEOs. Boringly the list goes on and on and on and on. Some of quite literally the worst people in the history of the world with the most blood on their hands are the richest people with the most power.

Neoliberal economics has created a moral cesspit of a civilisation in which there’s no financial upside in stopping a genocide.

On the contrary, the financial upside is in genocide.

From the American mercenaries running the sham aid distributions centres in Gaza, to the software being provided by Google, Microsoft and Meta to smooth the genocide, to the AI being provided by Palantir to track the Palestinians, to the missiles being provided by Lockheed Martin to liquify them.

The money is in the killing, not the saving.

The money is in the enabling, not the stopping.

The money is in the trade deals and the good relations.

Morality is all downside.

This is why I cannot stand to look at the faux moral posturing over Ukraine by the west. The truth? The money is in keeping that war going, funding Ukraine, rearming Europe. Latest estimates are that the war has caused 1.4 million casualties. These are absolutely horrifying numbers. Wanting more dead young men isn’t moral. Supporting Ukraine has nothing to do with good or bad, right or wrong. It’s only about blood money, resources and strategic interests.

And this moral cesspit of a civilisation is one in which we all swim, whether we like it or not.

How many times have you said to someone “X should happen because it would be good” or “Y shouldn’t happen because it’s bad” and their sincere response, hollowed of all morality, has been along the lines of: but who would pay for it/there’s no money in it.

Our brains and value systems have been rewired to think about the world only in terms of money and profit.

This is why the foundations of our existence as biological beings - the air, the soil, the water - are being demolished. The money is in death, not in life. Good or bad and right or wrong don’t enter the calculation.

It’s hard to look at this civilisation, a civilisation tearing down the pillars of our own existence, a civilisation that allowed a genocide to happen in such a visible way, and see any redeeming features.

People are worth saving. Beauty is worth saving. The animals and the rivers and the seas and the ecology are worth saving. But from the political to the economic to the legal, institutionally there’s nothing worth saving.

The liberals and the centrists have had their shot at reforming this mess. But the contradictions at the heart of their ideology (capitalists, but good ones!) couldn’t be resolved, and they’ve only ended up perpetuating the horrors of the system.

I’ve said it before but I’ve never felt it more keenly than after watching the west collaborate on genocide and the rest of the world do nothing to stop it: the future will be radically pro-social and anti-capitalist or there won’t be a future at all.

https://www.donotpanic.news/p/the-moral ... vilisation
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Re: Palestine

Post by blindpig » Fri Jun 06, 2025 2:33 pm

Threats of another Israeli war in Lebanon are just noise

Despite media hysteria and political theatrics, Israel lacks the capacity, justification, and public will to launch a new war on Lebanon. When in doubt, always check out signals from the northern front.


Qassem Qassem

JUN 5, 2025

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Photo Credit: The Cradle

Is a new Israeli war on Lebanon imminent? Will the Israeli military launch a ground invasion to seize territory south of the Litani River?

In recent months, anxiety and anticipation have gripped the Lebanese public. This has been stoked by some political analysts aligned with the Lebanese resistance who have publicly speculated about the possibility of a new war.

These fears were exacerbated by reports from Washington, citing leaks that Israeli Minister of Strategic Affairs Ron Dermer informed US officials of Tel Aviv's intent to launch an invasion up to the Litani.

The September surprise: What really shook Lebanon

But do these claims hold weight? Are there credible indicators on the ground pointing to an Israeli war effort? And more critically, does Tel Aviv even possess the capacity to achieve such an incursion?

To understand the roots of current Lebanese anxieties, one must revisit the events of 23 September last year. That day, Tel Aviv launched Operation Arrows of the North against Hezbollah across Lebanon. Within 24 hours, the occupation state's warplanes had bombed nearly 1,600 targets in the Bekaa, Beirut, and southern Lebanon, displacing close to a million people from the south to the capital.

In the lead-up to this operation, several signs of an impending escalation were evident. For starters, Israel refrained from using its munitions stockpiled on the northern front, even as its southern front against Gaza suffered shortages due to Washington's delays in arms shipments.

Meanwhile, the occupation state took extraordinary home-front measures: relocating northern hospitals to underground shelters and tunnels, and conducting large-scale simulations for missile attacks on sensitive infrastructure. The occupation army even ran drills simulating 3,000 rockets falling daily on northern occupied Palestine. Authorities instructed settlers to stock up on bottled water and generators in preparation.

Despite these glaring signals, a prevailing belief persisted in Lebanon that Tel Aviv was deterred and unwilling to escalate. This illusion was shattered within days.

Israeli political factions, both opposition and loyalist, had advocated strikes against the Lebanese resistance for several reasons: First, Hezbollah's attrition of the northern front over the past year had badly impacted Israeli morale. Second, the financial and societal burden of hosting tens of thousands of displaced northern settlers indefinitely had taken its toll. Third, the regular disruption to daily life in major cities like Haifa and Acre, with residents rushing to bomb shelters frequently.

Thus, on 22 September, the Israeli political and security cabinet responded by announcing a strategic shift of military focus to the north.

So what has changed?

But today, the landscape is markedly different. Historically, Tel Aviv initiates ground-level preparations before any major operation against Lebanon. Yet, as of 25 May, Israeli Army Radio reported that the army's Northern Command restored full control of the Lebanon border back to the Galilee Brigade (91), reverting to the pre-7 October 2023 status quo.

The brigade had previously been relegated to the eastern sector, while the 146th Reserve Brigade oversaw the western front to coordinate targeting and intelligence. This shift back to routine operations suggests a return to business as usual.

The recent trauma of the September campaign continues to loom large in the Lebanese psyche, fueling endless speculation. But this war threat rhetoric is largely psychological fallout – not grounded in current military realities.

Calls by opposition leader Yair Lapid to revive Israel's old proxy, the ‘South Lebanon Army,’ and a US ultimatum to disarm Hezbollah or face war, further illustrate the pressure campaign Tel Aviv and Washington are coordinating within Lebanon.

But what would be the rationale behind a new war? And what would Israel hope to achieve?

Again, context is key. Last year, Hezbollah's actions displaced 100,000 settlers from northern occupied Palestine. The coordinated regional fronts deployed by Lebanon, Gaza, Yemen, and Iraq vastly amplified military pressure on Tel Aviv, offering it a pretext to escalate.

The Ansarallah-aligned army in Yemen, part of the Axis of Resistance, has consistently targeted Israeli-linked shipping in the Red Sea and launched long-range missile and drone strikes toward occupied territories, thereby stretching Israeli defenses and complicating its operational priorities. Yemen's resistance campaign has become a central pillar of anti-Israel pressure.

Today, however, the resistance in Lebanon has refrained from initiating hostilities, deferring responses to Israeli violations to the Lebanese state. Without a compelling pretext, Tel Aviv cannot easily justify a war to the international community or to Washington.

Israel also usually adheres to rigid war objectives and exit strategies – lessons learned from its failures in the 2006 July War and articulated in the Winograd Commission's findings. In its most recent war, Tel Aviv's declared objectives were to push Hezbollah's elite Radwan Forces and anti-armor missile units away from the border, degrade the resistance's rocket capabilities, and politically separate the Gaza and Lebanon fronts.

Grandiose goals like “eliminating Hezbollah” were notably absent, as Tel Aviv is acutely aware of the limits of its military strength and the capabilities of its adversaries.

What, then, could Israel possibly hope to achieve now that it could not accomplish over 66 days of war? If the current aggression cannot deliver strategic gains, what would a broader campaign offer?

Moreover, Israeli society is weary. Over 18 months of war have drained morale and sparked growing demands for an end to the fighting and for the return of Israeli captives. The prolonged conflict has triggered a socio-economic crisis, severely impacting reservists and their families.

A reservist, once expected to serve 40 days, now finds himself deployed for 250 to 300 days – causing mass job losses, missed school years, and deep disruption to daily life. This strain has forced the occupation army to seek new recruits from ultra-Orthodox communities, provoking tensions within Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s fragile coalition government.

Even if Tel Aviv overcomes these hurdles and conscripts tens of thousands more – Netanyahu announced the approval to recall 450,000 reservists as of 27 May, exceeding the 360,000 called up after 7 October – questions remain.

Can Israel still fight on two fronts?

Can the occupation military, after 18 months of attritional warfare, truly mobilize and sustain such a force? And where would it prioritize deployment: Gaza, where its prisoners remain in resistance custody, or Lebanon?

Clearly, Tel Aviv's immediate focus is Gaza. As The Cradle recounted in Mind Games: The Resistance Axis's cognitive war on Israel, psychological operations and regional coordination increasingly shape resistance strategy. Any success in liberating captives, whether through negotiation or force, would bolster Netanyahu ahead of elections.

Hundreds killed in thousands of Israeli violations of the ceasefire with Lebanon makes it plain: Will Tel Aviv escalate to war on Lebanon when it can do this kind of targeting under cover of a Lebanese government that enjoys US cover?

Unlikely. Israel has never experienced the current level of operational freedom it has in Lebanon and will continue targeting resistance assets. The old rules of engagement have collapsed. Following the martyrdom of Hezbollah secretary-general Hassan Nasrallah, Tel Aviv faces a new Hezbollah leadership, the dynamics of which it does not fully grasp. It is probing this new configuration through assassination strikes and bombings in Dahiye, testing the resistance's red lines.

To move beyond reactive politics, Lebanon would benefit from creating an independent strategic assessment unit, similar to the internal strategic planning bodies Israel developed in response to its failures during the 1973 October War. Such a body would objectively evaluate military and political data, bypassing public sentiment and media frenzy, thus ensuring Lebanon remains alert without succumbing to psychological warfare.

Beirut must find a balance: stay alert without amplifying Tel Aviv's propaganda, and prepare without overreacting. A US stranglehold on Lebanon also highlights the importance of resisting externally imposed agendas.

https://thecradle.co/articles/threats-o ... just-noise

Israeli officer promoted after ordering fire on surrendering civilians

Israel's ethnic cleansing campaign in Gaza has disproportionately affected civilians, with officials reporting that over two-thirds of those killed are women and children

News Desk

JUN 5, 2025

Image
(Photo credit: JALAA MAREY/AFP via Getty Images)

In a report released by Haaretz on 4 June, an Israeli lieutenant colonel who allegedly gave orders for troops to open fire on Palestinian residents in Gaza who were holding white flags has been promoted by the Israeli army.

According to the newspaper, soldiers who served under the officer's command testified that he had ordered deadly fire on unarmed Palestinian civilians during recent military operations who were visibly waving white flags – a clear sign of surrender.

Once again raising familiar alarms heard throughout Israel’s brutal campaign on Gaza, human rights monitors and legal experts continually stress that such targeting of civilians constitutes a serious breach of international law, often falling on deaf ears.

Since 7 October 2023, Israel’s offensive has left over 175,000 Palestinians dead or injured – most of them women and children – with more than 11,000 still missing under the rubble.

Sources revealed that the Israeli army has loosened operational controls, authorizing strikes on so-called “heavy centers,” including schools, hospitals, and municipal buildings – even when only low-ranking militants are present, knowingly endangering civilians, resulting in disproportionately high civilian casualties.

These changes in engagement rules are described as part of a broader strategy, with the Israeli army continuing to justify the strikes with little to no verifiable evidence.

Israeli airstrikes have repeatedly targeted school buildings being used as civilian shelters, killing over 120 people in recent months.

The Guardian reports that the Israeli army has intentionally marked multiple schools as future targets, including Halawa, Al-Rafaai, Nusiba, and Halima Sadia, all located near Jabaliya.

On 25 May, an Israeli airstrike on the Fahmi al-Jarjawi school killed at least 54 displaced people, including children, while they slept. Classrooms were set ablaze, and severely burned bodies were later recovered.

An AP investigation documents that Israeli soldiers systematically forced Palestinian civilians to act as human shields in both Gaza and the occupied West Bank.
Numerous civilians, including women and the elderly, were reportedly sent into buildings and tunnels ahead of Israeli troops to clear them, under threat of death.

Whistleblower group Breaking the Silence, made up of former Israeli soldiers, provided images and testimonies supporting claims that this was a widespread, sanctioned practice, utterly refuting Israeli claims of prohibition and ethical military practice.

Such practices are further underscored by the recent deadly attacks on civilians at Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) aid sites – zones declared safe despite resulting in massive numbers of casualties.

Since March alone, when Operation Gideon’s Chariot was launched, Israeli attacks have killed between 2,300 and 3,300 Palestinian civilians, according to Gaza’s Health Ministry as well as medical sources cited by WAFA.

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

Netanyahu’s ultra-Orthodox partners move ahead with Knesset dissolution plan

Outrage across the Haredi community has intensified after the announcement of plans to draft 50,000 ultra-Orthodox Israelis into the army

News Desk

JUN 6, 2025

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(Photo credit: Olivier Fitoussi)

Ultra-Orthodox (Haredim) Israeli parties in Benjamin Netanyahu’s coalition said on 6 June that they are moving forward with an effort to dissolve the Knesset over the government’s failure to pass a law exempting members of the Haredi community from military service.

Sources in the Shas and United Torah Judaism (UTJ) told Israeli outlet Flash that there has been some progress in talks with Netanyahu’s Likud party.

“We hope there truly is progress, but we are continuing with the process to dissolve the Knesset. First and foremost, we want to see a draft that is acceptable to us,” the UTJ and Shas sources said.

“In any case, until the draft law passes the committee – we are moving forward with the dissolution process, in accordance with the instructions of the rabbis. We’re tired of promises about progress behind closed doors,” they added.

On Thursday, Israel’s Attorney General Gali Baharav-Miara announced that the army will issue over 50,000 conscription orders to ultra-Orthodox students next month, further fueling outrage across the Haredi community.

The attorney general said the matter of drafting ultra-Orthodox into the army “is not progressing sufficiently, as the army urgently needs new recruits, which requires imposing personal sanctions on draft evaders,” according to Israel’s Broadcasting Corporation (KAN).

Netanyahu's ruling coalition is made up of 68 seats. The ultra-Orthodox parties, UTJ and Shas, which both make up 18 seats, have expressed dissatisfaction over the government's failure to pass a law exempting Haredi students from military service.

As a result, the two parties have been leading an effort to dissolve the Knesset.

The dissolution motion would require four voting stages. If an initial vote passes, later stages could occur on the same day or extend over several months.

If the motion passes all stages, it would lead to early elections – effectively collapsing Netanyahu’s coalition government.

Yair Lapid’s Yesh Atid opposition party has submitted a motion to dissolve the Knesset, with a first vote scheduled for 11 June. “This Knesset is finished. It has nowhere to go,” Lapid said on 4 June. The motion requires a majority of 61 out of 120 Knesset members to pass.

Negotiations between the two main ultra-Orthodox parties and Likud MK Yuli Edelstein are ongoing.

“Some say that he (Netanyahu) is a magician – when he wants, he will find the solution. If he doesn't find the solution – we will go for dissolution and the announcement of elections,” Rabbi Motke Bloi, a senior figure in the Degel HaTorah party, told Israeli radio.

Ultra-Orthodox Israeli Jews of military age have been able to avoid compulsory enlistment into the army for decades by enrolling in yeshivas (religious schools) and obtaining repeated one-year service deferrals until they reach the age of military exemption.

Since the war in Gaza began, a manpower crisis plaguing the army has compelled the government to move forward with drafting the ultra-Orthodox into military service – to the chagrin of the far-right, religious parties in the prime minister’s ruling coalition.

In June 2024, Israel’s High Court ruled that ultra-Orthodox Israeli Jews who are eligible for service must be drafted into the military, deepening rifts within the coalition.

https://thecradle.co/articles/netanyahu ... ution-plan

Gaza Freedom Flotilla to be seized, activists arrested by Israel: Report

Israel had initially considered allowing the boat to dock, but decided against it so as not to create a precedent of breaking the siege against Gaza

News Desk

JUN 5, 2025

Image
(Photo credit: AP)

Tel Aviv has plans to prevent the Gaza Freedom Flotilla from reaching the besieged strip, and may even seize the boat and detain those on board, according to Hebrew media reports.

The Israeli Broadcasting Corporation (KAN) estimated that the boat will arrive at the coast of Gaza in around four days.

Citing security sources, KAN said Israel initially considered allowing the Flotilla to dock, given it did not pose a security threat – but ultimately decided against it so as not to create a precedent and allow for other attempts to break its blockade on Gaza.

Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz is expected to hold a meeting on 5 June to discuss a final decision on how to deal with the ship and its passengers.

The humanitarian vessel is carrying 12 pro-Palestinian activists, including renowned climate activist Greta Thunberg and Game of Thrones star Liam Cunningham, as well as actress Susan Sarandon – who have all been outspoken on Israel’s genocide against Palestinians in Gaza and its brutal blockade of the strip.

According to military sources cited by Walla news, the Israeli army has not yet made a final decision on how to deal with the humanitarian vessel.

The sources added that Israel plans to deploy forces in the area and relay a message warning the activists not to enter.

“The naval commando unit ‘Shayetet 13’ and the missile boat units are preparing for the possibility of carrying out an operation to seize the ship and arrest the participants,” the sources went on to say.

The Madleen civilian boat, boarded by the activists and carrying aid for Gaza, departed from Catania, Sicily, on Sunday.

The small vessel is expected to reach the strip by 8 June, where activists will attempt to breach the Israeli-enforced blockade of the besieged enclave, carrying a meager but “symbolic” amount of humanitarian aid.

According to a video statement made by one of the activists on board, an Israeli drone has been hovering above the vessel.


An Israeli drone bombed a Freedom Flotilla aid vessel that was en route to Gaza early on 2 May, blowing a hole through the ship, causing a fire, and putting it at risk of sinking.

Israeli media outlet Channel 12 reported last year that Israeli forces were carrying out training exercises for a potential interception of humanitarian ships aiming to break the siege of Gaza.

In 2010, Israeli commandos raided a group of Freedom Flotilla ships with helicopters as they were carrying aid and headed towards Gaza to break the siege. The commandos killed nine Turkish civilians and injured 30 others of several nationalities.

https://thecradle.co/articles/gaza-free ... ael-report
"There is great chaos under heaven; the situation is excellent."

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Re: Palestine

Post by blindpig » Sat Jun 07, 2025 1:59 pm

GHF shutters aid sites 'until further notice' amid Israeli massacres, internal shakeup

Famine continues to stalk Palestinians as Israel seeks to dismantle the UN aid distribution system and replace it with the US-based GHF

News Desk

JUN 6, 2025

Image
(Hatem Khaled, Reuters)

The Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), a US and Israeli-backed organization delivering aid to Palestinians outside traditional UN frameworks, announced on 6 June it has shut its distribution centers in Gaza “until further notice” following a series of deadly shootings by the Israeli army of starving Palestinians seeking aid at the foundations' distribution points.

“For the safety of civilians, we advise everyone to avoid the distribution sites,” GHF stated, without specifying a reopening date.

The GHF later reopened two sites and distributed aid on Friday, in the Tel Sultan neighborhood in the southern city of Rafah, before closing them again.

The closures come amid growing criticism and controversy over the foundation's operations in the war-ravaged territory, where famine conditions have intensified due to Israel's blockade of the strip.

Gaza is experiencing one of the worst humanitarian crises in recent history. The UN has declared Gaza “the hungriest place on Earth,” with the entire population – roughly 2.2 million people – at risk of famine. Jens Laerke, spokesperson for the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), emphasized that “100 percent of the population” in Gaza is at risk.

Between Sunday and Tuesday, more than 60 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli forces opening fire at desperate civilians seeking aid at the distribution points, Palestinian authorities reported.

The sites were closed on Wednesday as a result of the killings, but were reopened again for one day on Thursday.

The shutdown also follows internal turmoil within GHF. On 30 May, the Boston Consulting Group (BCG), a leading US management consulting firm hired to manage GHF's operations, terminated its contract with the organization and withdrew its team from Tel Aviv. BCG also placed one of its senior partners on leave pending an internal review.

Adding to the controversy, GHF recently announced a new executive director, Pastor Johnnie Moore, a Christian evangelical leader in the US, with close ties to US President Donald Trump. Moore previously served on the US Commission on International Religious Freedom and is known for his strong pro-Israel views.

Meanwhile, the Israeli military continues to allow just a trickle of aid into Gaza. On Tuesday, the Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories (COGAT) reported that 157 trucks carrying food and flour entered the enclave. While this included supplies for both the UN and GHF, it remains far short of the 50–600 trucks that crossed daily before the war began.

While the UN and European leaders have decried the lack of aid entering Gaza and the famine conditions Israel's blockade is causing, Israeli leaders continue to call for Palestinians to be starved.

Amid discussions surrounding GHF's operations, Israeli National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir publicly stated, “Humanitarian aid should not be brought into Gaza, period.”

https://thecradle.co/articles/ghf-shutt ... al-shakeup

Washington to inject $500M into GHF as backlash grows

Over 118 Palestinian aid seekers have been killed by Israeli troops at Gaza Humanitarian Foundation distribution points

News Desk

JUN 7, 2025

Image
(Photo credit: Hatem Khaled, Reuters)

The US State Department is considering giving $500 million to the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), the controversial aid group Israel is using to replace the UN for distributing aid to the Palestinians it is starving and besieging in Gaza, Reuters reported on 7 June.

Two informed sources and two former US officials told the news agency that funding for the GHF would come from the US Agency for International Development (USAID), which is being merged into the US State Department.

"The plan has met resistance from some US officials concerned with the deadly shootings of Palestinians near aid distribution sites and the competence of the GHF," Reuters wrote, citing two sources.

On Saturday, Israeli forces killed at least eight Palestinians waiting near a GHF aid point in Al-Akhawah, near Rafah, Al-Jazeera reported, bringing the number of people killed at the group's distribution points to 118.

After the aid distribution began earlier this week, the BBC reported "scenes of total chaos" as desperate Palestinians seeking food “trampled over toppled barriers and flinched as sounds of gunshots rang out.” The GHF has been "roundly condemned and boycotted by aid agencies and the UN,' the British news agency added.

The GHF announced it was halting operations indefinitely on Friday due to ongoing difficulties in safely providing aid.

Israel's 11-week blockade of the strip is leading to famine in Gaza, which UN officials recently called the "hungriest place on earth." Israel began allowing some trucks loaded with food to enter the strip on 19 May, but so far, only a trickle of aid has reached Palestinians.

The State Department and GHF did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Reuters stated it has not been able to confirm the current source of funding that has so far allowed the GHF to carry out operations, which rely on private, for-profit US security and logistics companies.

The White House and Israel claim they do not fund the GHF.

One source with knowledge of the matter and one former senior official told Reuters that the plan to allocate $500 million to GHF was initiated by Acting Deputy USAID Administrator Ken Jackson.

The source said that Israel requested sufficient funding to cover GHF's operations for 6 months.

The Israeli government did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

https://thecradle.co/articles/state-dep ... -aid-group

*******

Israel’s Ban on International Journalists in Gaza Sparks UN Outcry Over Media Blackout[

UNRWA condemns Israel’s ban on international journalists entering Gaza as “a ban on reporting the truth.” This unprecedented media blackout fuels misinformation and hides the reality of the devastating conflict. Independent reporting is vital to expose the human cost and ensure global awareness. #Gaza #MediaFreedom[/i]

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Palestinian journalists continue risking their lives to report from Gaza despite Israel’s strict ban on foreign press access, underscoring the urgent need for media freedom amid the ongoing conflict. Photo: @PalPress24

June 7, 2025 Hour: 7:32 am

The United Nations has condemned Israel’s unprecedented restriction barring international journalists from entering Gaza amid ongoing conflict, warning the move fuels misinformation and hides the harsh realities faced by Palestinians trapped under siege.

The Commissioner-General of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) for Palestine Refugees, Philippe Lazzarini, has sharply criticized Israel’s refusal to allow international journalists into the Gaza Strip since the latest escalation of violence. In a post on the social media platform X, Lazzarini described this denial as a “ban on reporting the truth,” unprecedented in any recent conflict worldwide.

Lazzarini emphasized that blocking journalists from Gaza undermines media freedom and transparency, creating a vacuum easily filled by disinformation and political polarization. He warned that such restrictions “obscure humanity,” making it harder for global audiences to grasp the suffering endured by millions of Palestinians amid relentless Israeli military operations.

Since the outbreak of the conflict, Israel has tightly controlled access to Gaza, severely limiting the ability of international reporters to verify conditions on the ground independently. This media blackout comes amid devastating airstrikes and military incursions that have killed thousands and displaced countless families in the besieged enclave.


The UN official called for the immediate lifting of the ban on foreign journalists, stressing the vital role of independent reporting in exposing human rights abuses and holding parties accountable. He also praised the courage of Palestinian journalists who continue to report under extreme risk, often paying a high personal cost to inform the world.

Media freedom advocates warn that this clampdown is part of a broader strategy to control the narrative and suppress coverage of the humanitarian crisis unfolding in Gaza. Without independent verification, the world risks receiving one-sided information, limiting the possibility for international pressure and solidarity.


As the humanitarian situation deteriorates, with critical shortages of food, water, and medical supplies, accurate and open reporting is more important than ever to ensure that the voices of Gaza’s civilians are heard and that their suffering is not ignored.

Israel’s media restrictions reflect a long-standing pattern of controlling narratives around Gaza, deepening the information divide and perpetuating global misunderstanding of the conflict. As the humanitarian crisis worsens, transparent and independent journalism remains crucial for justice and international solidarity.

https://www.telesurenglish.net/israels- ... -blackout/
"There is great chaos under heaven; the situation is excellent."

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