Just International

The USA Is a Banana Republic

By Chris Hedges

El Presidente Donald Trump is the gringo version of brutal and corrupt dictators foisted on Latin American countries by their oligarchs and Yankee imperialists.

10 Nov 2025 – El Presidente Trump is cast in the mold of all tinpot Latin American despots who terrorize their populations, surround themselves with sycophants, goons and crooks, and enrich themselves — Trump and his family have amassed more than $1.8 billion in cash and gifts from leveraging the presidency — while erecting tawdry monuments to themselves.

“Trujillo on Earth, God in Heaven” — Trujillo en la tierra, Dios en el cielo — was posted by state order in churches during the 31-year reign of Rafael Leónidas Trujillo in the Dominican Republic. His supporters, like Trump’s, nominated him for the Nobel Peace Prize. Trump’s con artist pastor, Paula White-Cain, offered an updated version of Trujillo’s self-deification when she warned, “To say no to President Trump would be saying no to God.”

Trump is the gringo version of Anastasio “Tachito” Somoza in Nicaragua or Haiti’s François “Papa Doc” Duvalier, who amended the constitution to have himself anointed “President for Life.” One of the most celebrated images of the Haitian dictator’s long rule shows Jesus Christ with a hand on the shoulder of a seated Papa Doc, with the caption, “I have chosen him.”

ICE thugs are the incubus of Papa Doc’s dreaded 15,000-strong Tonton Macoute, his secret police who indiscriminately detained, beat, tortured, jailed or killed 30,000 to 60,000 of Duvalier’s opponents and which, along with the Presidential Guard, consumed half the state budget.

El Presidente Trump is Venezuela’s Juan Vicente Gómez, who looted the nation to make himself the wealthiest man in the country and disdained public education to — in the words of the scholar Paloma Griffero Pedemonte — “keep the people ignorant and docile.”

El Presidente — in every dictatorship — follows the same playbook. It is a grotesque opera buffa. No encomium is too outrageous. No bribe too small. No violation of civil liberties too extreme. No stupidity too absurd. All dissent, no matter how tepid, is treason.

Executive orders, budget cuts, gerrymandering, the seizure of polling stations and voting machines, the abolition of mail-in balloting, the overseeing of the vote count and the purging of voter rolls ensure fixed election results.

Institutions, from the press to the universities, kneel down before the idiocy of El Presidente. Legislatures are obsequious echo chambers for El Presidente’s whims and self-delusions. It is a world of magical realism, where fantasy replaces reality, mythology replaces history, the immoral is moral, tyranny is democracy and lies are true.

It is not only violence and intimidation that keep El Presidente in power. It is the stupefying inversion of reality, the daily denial of what we perceive and its replacement by disorienting fictions that keep us off balance. This, combined with state-induced fear, turns countries into open-air prisons. Human consciousness is bombarded until it is broken and becomes a well-oiled cog in the vast carceral machine.

The warped psychology of El Presidente Trump is captured by Miguel Ángel Asturias in his novel “El Señor Presidente,” inspired by the dictatorship of Manuel Estrada Cabrera who ruled Guatemala for 22 years; Gabriel García Márquez’s “The Autumn of the Patriarch,” Julia Alvarez’s “In the Time of the Butterflies” and Mario Vargas Llosa’s “The Feast of the Goat” and “Conversation in the Cathedral.” These novels offer better insight into where we are headed than most tomes on U.S. politics.

“Everything is for sale here,” writes Julia Alvarez in her novel, “everything but your freedom.”

Dictators — hermetically sealed in the cloying adulation of court life — swiftly lose touch with reality. Conspiracy theories, quack science, bizarre beliefs and superstitions take the place of evidence and facts. Sociopathic, incapable of empathy or remorse and given to describing the world in vulgarities and childish sentimentality, dictators cannot distinguish between good and evil. They wield power solely for how it makes them feel. If they feel good, it is good. If they feel bad, it is bad. L’état, c’est moi.

“The chief qualification of a mass leader has become unending infallibility,” Hannah Arendt writes in “The Origins of Totalitarianism,” “he can never admit an error. Mass leaders in power have one concern which overrules all utilitarian considerations: to make their predictions come true.”

The dictator of El Salvador in the 1930s, Gen. Maximiliano Hernández Martínez, who passed a series of laws that restricted Asian, Arab, and Black immigration and who ordered the massacre of an estimated 30,000 peasants in the wake of an abortive uprising in January 1932, was convinced sunlight cast through colored bottles cured illnesses. In the midst of a smallpox epidemic, he ordered colored lights to be hung throughout the capital, San Salvador. When his youngest son had appendicitis, he brushed aside doctors to try his colored-lights cure, which resulted in his son’s death. He turned down a donation of rubber sandals for the country’s schoolchildren, announcing: “It is good for children to go barefoot. That way they better receive the beneficial effluvia of the planet, the vibrations of the Earth. Plants and animals do not wear shoes.”

El Presidente Trump is cut from this vein. He does not exercise because he insists the human body resembles a battery with a finite amount of energy. He urged the public — during the COVID-19 crisis — to inject disinfectant into themselves and irradiate with ultraviolet light. He warned pregnant women not to take Tylenol during a press conference where he babbled incoherently, suggesting it causes autism. He dismissed the climate crisis, tweeting, “The concept of global warming was created by and for the Chinese in order to make U.S. manufacturing non-competitive,” only to later say he was joking while claiming that “it’ll change back again.” The noise of wind turbines, he suggested, causes cancer. Former Canadian prime minister Justin Trudeau, he mused, may be the secret son of Fidel Castro.

Dictators wallow in kitsch. Kitsch requires zero intellectual investment. It glorifies the state and the cult leader. It celebrates a fantasy world of virtuous rulers, a happy, adoring population and idealized portraits of the citizens. In the case of Trump, this means white citizens. It glitters and sparkles, like the garish gold trophies and vases lined up on the mantelpiece in the Oval Office that have been matched by equally tasteless gold coasters with Trump’s name on them. It snuffs out culture. The National Symphony Orchestra at the Kennedy Center now opens all its performances with the national anthem. Trump, who appointed himself the new chairman of the center, posted, “NO MORE DRAG SHOWS, OR OTHER ANTI-AMERICAN PROPAGANDA.”

This year’s season at the Kennedy Center, where the name Donald J. Trump has been etched into the marble of the Hall of States, opened with “The Sound of Music.” The Trump-appointed interim president of the Kennedy Center, Richard Grenell, hopes to make the center’s programming more “like Paula Abdul.”

Milan Kundera described kitsch as an aesthetic, “in which shit is denied, and everyone acts as though it does not exist,” adding that it is “a folding screen set up to curtain off death.”

Trujillo raped the wives of his associates, ministers and generals, along with courtesans and young girls. Trump, who was a close friend of pedophile Jeffrey Epstein, has been accused of rape, sexual assault and sexual harassment by at least two dozen women.

Julie Brown, in her book “Perversion of Justice: The Jeffrey Epstein Story,” writes that an anonymous woman, using the pseudonym “Kate Johnson,” filed a civil complaint in federal court in California in 2016, alleging she was raped by Trump and Epstein — when she was 13 — over a four-month period from June to September 1994.

“I loudly pleaded with Defendant Trump to stop,” she said in the lawsuit. “Trump responded to my pleas by violently striking me in the face with his open hand and screaming that he could do whatever he wanted.”

Johnson said she met Trump at one of Epstein’s “underage sex parties” at his New York mansion. She says she was forced to have sex with Trump several times, including once with another girl — 12 years old — whom she labeled “Marie Doe.”

Trump demanded oral sex and afterward “pushed both minors away while angrily berating them for the ‘poor’ quality of their sexual performance,” according to the lawsuit, filed in April 26, 2016, in the U.S. District Court in the Central District of California.

When Epstein learned Trump had taken Johnson’s virginity, he allegedly “attempted to strike her about the head with his closed fists,” furious that he had lost the opportunity.

Trump, she said, did not take part in Epstein’s orgies. He liked to watch while 13-year-old “Kate Johnson” gave him a hand job.

Johnson said Epstein and Trump threatened to harm her and her family if she spoke of their encounters.

The lawsuit was dropped, most probably by way of a lucrative settlement. She has since disappeared.

Dictators are not content with silencing their critics and opponents. They take sadistic delight in humiliating, ridiculing and destroying them.

“For my friends everything, for my enemies the law,” Óscar R. Benavides, the authoritarian president of Peru said, summing up the credo of all dictators. The law is weaponized as an instrument of revenge. Innocence and guilt are irrelevant.

The Justice Department’s indictment of former Trump adviser John Bolton, New York Attorney General Letitia James and former FBI director James Comey, and the subpoenas served to former CIA director John Brennan, former FBI special agent Peter Strzok and former FBI lawyer Lisa Page, send the core message of all dictatorships — collaborate or be persecuted.

This culture of vengeance calcifies civic and political life.

Dictators vainly seek what they cannot achieve: immortality. They flood their countries with images of themselves to ward off death. Trujillo had the capital Santo Domingo, renamed Ciudad Trujillo and the island’s highest mountain — Pico Duarte — renamed Pico Trujillo.

Trump wants the proposed Washington Commanders $3.7 billion stadium to be named after himself. The Treasury Department has released draft designs for a commemorative one dollar coin — featuring Trump’s face on both sides — to celebrate the nation’s 250th anniversary. There are plans to name the Kennedy Center’s opera house after the first lady. The $40 million that Amazon paid for the rights to film a documentary about Melania Trump, will no doubt replicate the fawning coverage given to Elena Ceaușescu — known as “the Mother of the Nation” — on Romanian state television during the reign of her husband, Nicolae Ceaușescu.

Huge, expensive banners with El Presidente Trump’s face adorn the exterior of federal buildings in the capital. This, along with the various Trump Towers throughout the world, is just the beginning. Flood the world with Trump portraits, emblazon his name on buildings and public squares, pay ceaseless homage to his divinity and genius, and death is held at bay.

Mario Vargas Llosa writes in “The Feast of the Goat” how dictatorships turn everyone into accomplices:

The rich too, if they wanted to go on being rich, had to ally themselves with the Chief, sell him part of their businesses or buy part of his, and contribute in this way to his greatness and power. With half-closed eyes, lulled by the gentle sound of the sea, he thought of what a perverse system Trujillo created, one in which all Dominicans sooner or later took part as accomplices, a system which only exiles (not always) and the dead could escape. In this country, in one way or another, everyone had been, was, or would be part of the regime. “The worst thing that can happen to a Dominican is to be intelligent or competent,” he had once heard Agustín Cabral say (“A very intelligent and competent Dominican,” he told himself) and the words had been etched in his mind: “Because sooner or later Trujillo will call upon him to serve the regime, or his person, and when he calls, one is not permitted to say no.” He was proof of this truth. It never occurred to him to put up the slightest resistance to his appointments. As Estrella Sadhalá always said, the Goat had taken from people the sacred attribute given to them by God: their free will.

Chris Hedges is a Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist who was a foreign correspondent for fifteen years for The New York Times, where he served as the Middle East Bureau Chief and Balkan Bureau Chief.

17 November 2025

Source: transcend.org

Let the Sudanese People Walk toward Peace

By Vijay Prashad

Backed by foreign powers, the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) and Rapid Support Forces (RSF) are locked in a bloody war with devastating consequences for the Sudanese people.

13 Nov 2025 – In early November, United Nations (UN) Secretary-General António Guterres addressed the ‘horrifying crisis in Sudan, which is spiralling out of control’. He urged the warring parties to ‘bring an end to this nightmare of violence – now’. There is a path to end the war, but there is simply no political will to enforce it. In May 2025, we wrote about the history of the conflict. In 2019, we explained the uprising that took place that year as well as its aftermath. Now, from Tricontinental: Institute for Social Research, the International Peoples’ Assembly, and Pan Africanism Today, comes red alert no. 21 on the need for peace in Sudan.

What is the reality on the ground in Sudan?
On 15 April 2023, war broke out between the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) – led by the head of the Transitional Military Council, General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan – and the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) – led by Lieutenant General Mohamed ‘Hemedti’ Hamdan Dagalo. Since then, backed by various governments from outside of Sudan, the two sides have fought a terrible war of attrition in which civilians are the main victims. It is impossible to say how many people have died, but clearly the death toll is significant. One estimate found that between April 2023 and June 2024 alone the number of casualties was as high as 150,000, and several crimes against humanity committed by both sides have already been documented by various human rights organisations. At least 14.5 million Sudanese of the population of 51 million have been displaced. The people who live in the belt between El Fasher, North Darfur, and Kadugli, South Kordofan, are struggling from acute hunger and famine. A recent analysis by the UN’s Integrated Food Security Phase Classification found that around 21.2 million Sudanese – 45% of the population – face high levels of acute food insecurity, with 375,000 people across the country facing ‘catastrophic’ levels of hunger (i.e., on the brink of starvation).

Since the war began, hundreds of thousands of internally displaced people sought refuge in El Fasher, then held largely by the SAF. Roughly 260,000 civilians were still there in October 2025 when the RSF broke the resistance, entered the city, and carried out a number of documented massacres. Among those killed were 460 patients and their companions at the Saudi Maternity Hospital. The city’s fall has meant that the RSF is now largely in control of the vast province of Darfur, while the SAF holds much of eastern Sudan – including Port Sudan, the country’s access to the sea and international trade – as well as the capital city of Khartoum.

There is no sign of de-escalation at present.

Why are the SAF and the RSF fighting?
No war of this scale has one simple cause. The political reason is straightforward: this is a counter-revolution against the 2019 popular uprising that succeeded in ousting President Omar al-Bashir, who governed from 1993 and whose last years in power were marked by rising inflation and social crisis.

The left and popular forces behind the 2019 uprising – which included the Sudanese Communist Party, the National Consensus Forces, the Sudanese Professional Association, the Sudan Revolutionary Front, the Women of Sudanese Civic and Political Groups, and many local resistance and neighbourhood committees – forced the military to agree to oversee the transition to a civilian government. With the assistance of the African Union, the Transitional Sovereignty Council was established, composed of five military and six civilian members. Abdalla Hamdok was appointed prime minister and judge Nemat Abdullah Khair chief justice, with al-Burhan and Hemedti on the council as well. The military-civilian government wrecked the economy further by floating the currency and privatising the state, thereby making gold smuggling more lucrative and strengthening the RSF (this government also signed the Abraham Accords, which normalised relations with Israel). The policies of the military-civilian government exacerbated the conditions toward the showdown over power (control over the security state) and wealth (control over the gold trade).

Despite their roles on the council, al-Burhan and Hemedti attempted coups until succeeding in 2021. Having set aside the civilians, the two military leaders went after each other. The SAF officers sought to preserve their command over the state apparatus, which in 2019 absorbed 82% of the state’s budgetary resources (as confirmed by Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok in 2020). They also moved to retain control of its enterprises, running more than 200 companies through entities such as the SAF-controlled Defence Industries System (estimated $2 billion in annual revenue) and capturing a significant share of Sudan’s formal economy across mining, telecommunications, and import-export commodity trade. The RSF – rooted in the Janja’wid (devils on horseback) militia – tried to leverage the autonomous war economy centralised around the Al Junaid Multi-Activities Corporation, which controls major gold-producing areas in Darfur and about half a dozen mining sites, including Jebel Amer. Since 50–80% of Sudan’s overall gold production is smuggled (as of 2022) – mainly to the UAE – rather than officially exported, and since the RSF dominates production in western Sudan’s artisanal mining zones (which account for 80–85% of total production), the RSF captures huge sums from gold revenue every year (estimated at $860 million from Darfur mines alone in 2024).

Beneath these political and material contests lie ecological pressures that compound the crisis. Part of the reason for the long conflict in Darfur has been the desiccation of the Sahel. For decades, erratic rainfall and heatwaves due to the climate catastrophe have expanded the Sahara Desert southward, making water resources a cause of conflict and sparking clashes between nomads and settled farmers. Half of Sudan’s population now lives with acute food insecurity. The failure to create an economic plan for a population wracked by rapid changes in weather patterns – alongside the theft of resources by a small elite – leaves Sudan vulnerable to long-term conflict. This is not just a war between two strong personalities, but a struggle over the transformation of resources and their plunder by outside powers. A ceasefire agreement is once more on the table, but the likelihood that it will be accepted or upheld is very low as long as resources remain the shining prize for the various armed groups.

What are the possibilities of peace in Sudan?
A path toward peace in Sudan would require six elements:

  1. An immediate, monitored ceasefire that includes the creation of humanitarian corridors for the transit of food and medicines. These corridors would be under the leadership of the Resistance Committees, which have the democratic credibility and networks to deliver aid directly to those in need.
  2. An end to the war economy, specifically shutting down the gold and weapons pipelines. This would include imposing strict sanctions on the sale of weapons to and the purchase of gold from the UAE until it severs all relations with the RSF. Export controls at Port Sudan must be implemented as well.
  3. The safe return of political exiles and the start of a process to rebuild political institutions under a civilian government elected or supported by the popular forces – mainly the Resistance Committees. The SAF must be stripped of its political power and economic assets and subjugated to the government. The RSF must be disarmed and demobilised.
  4. The immediate reconstruction of Sudan’s higher judiciary to investigate and prosecute those responsible for atrocities.
  5. The immediate creation of a process of accountability that includes the prosecution of warlords through a properly constituted court in Sudan.
  6. The immediate reconstruction of Sudan’s planning commission and its ministry of finance to shift surplus from export enclaves toward public goods and social protections.

These six points elaborate upon the three pillars of the African Union and the Intergovernmental Authority on Development’s AU-IGAD Joint Roadmap for the Resolution of the Conflict in Sudan (2023). The difficulty with this roadmap – as with similar proposals – is that it is dependent on donors, including actors that are implicated in the violence. For these six points to become a reality, outside powers must be pressured to end their backing of the SAF and the RSF. These include Egypt, the European Union, Qatar, Russia, Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and the United States. Neither this roadmap nor the Jeddah channel – a Saudi-US mediation track launched in 2023 that focuses on short truces and humanitarian access – includes Sudanese civilian groups, least of all the Resistance Committees.

Though Sudan has produced its share of poets who sing of pain and suffering, let us end on a different note. In 1961, the communist poet Taj el-Sir el-Hassan (1935–2013) wrote ‘An Afro-Asian Song’, which begins by commemorating the Kosti massacre at Joudeh in 1956, when 194 striking peasants were suffocated to death while in police custody. But it is to the end of the song that we turn, the voice of the poet ringing above the gunfire:

In the heart of Africa I stand in the vanguard,
and as far as Bandung my sky is spreading.
The olive sapling is my shade and courtyard,
O my comrades:
O vanguard comrades, leading my people to glory,
your candles are soaking my heart in green light.
I’ll sing the closing stanza,
to my beloved land;
to my fellows in Asia;
to the Malaya,
and the vibrant Bandung.

To the people of El Fasher, to those in Khartoum, to my comrades in Port Sudan: walk toward peace.

Vijay Prashad is an Indian historian, editor and journalist. He is a writing fellow and chief correspondent at Globetrotter.

17 November 2025

Source: transcend.org

Winter in Gaza

By Kathy Kelly

10 Nov 2025 – On Saturday, 8 Nov 2025, Dan Perry wrote in The Jerusalem Post about Israel’s projected lifting of the media blockade on Gaza. Perry laments that Israeli censorship has left all reporting of the atrocity in the hands of Palestinians, who refuse to be silent. To date, Israel has assassinated over 240 Palestinian journalists.

Perry writes: “The High Court ruled last week that the government must consider allowing foreign journalists into Gaza but also granted a one-month extension due to the still-unclear situation in the Strip.” He asserts that Israel had and has no motive for excluding foreign journalists save concern for their own protection.

He makes two appeals: first, the duplicitous demand that Israel should use the one-month reprieve to cover up the evidence of atrocities: “Soon, journalists and photographers will enter Gaza… They will find terrible sights. Hence, Israel’s urgent task: to document retrospectively, to finally prepare explanations, to show … that Hamas operated from hospitals, schools, and refugee camps.” In other words, bury the truth with the bodies.

Secondly, that since in this conflict Israel did absolutely nothing that it could have wished to hide, it should learn not to impose absolute media blackouts so likely to arouse suspicion.

I sense a cold, hard winter within the souls of people in league with Dan Perry’s perspective.

Now, a cold, hard winter approaches Gaza. What do Palestinians in Gaza face, as temperatures drop and winter storms arrive?

Turkish news agency “Anadolu Ajansi” reports “Palestinians in the Gaza Strip continue to endure hunger under a new starvation policy engineered by Israel, which allows only non-essential goods to enter the enclave while blocking essential food and medical supplies. …shelves stacked with non-essential consumer goods disguise a suffocating humanitarian crisis deliberately engineered by Israel to starve Palestinians.”

“I haven’t found eggs, chicken, or cheese since food supplies started entering the Gaza Strip,” Aya Abu Qamar, a mother of three from Gaza City, told Anadolu. “All I see are chocolate, snacks, and instant coffee. These aren’t our daily needs,” she added. “We’re looking for something to keep our children alive.”

On November 5th 2025 the Norwegian Refugee Council sounded this alarm about Israeli restrictions cruelly holding back winter supplies. NRC’s director for the region, Angelita Caredda, insists: “More than three weeks into the ceasefire, Gaza should be receiving a surge of shelter materials, but only a fraction of what is needed has entered.”

The report states: ”Millions of shelter and non-food items are stuck in Jordan, Egypt, and Israel awaiting approvals, leaving around 260,000 Palestinian families, equal to nearly 1.5 million people, exposed to worsening conditions. Since the ceasefire took effect on 10 October, Israeli authorities have rejected twenty-three requests from nine aid agencies to bring in urgently needed shelter supplies such as tents, sealing and framing kits, bedding, kitchen sets, and blankets, amounting to nearly 4,000 pallets. Humanitarian organisations warn that the window to scale up winterisation assistance is closing rapidly.”

The report notes how, despite the ceasefire, Israel has continued its mechanized slaughter and its chokehold on aid.

In Israel’s +972 Magazine, Muhammad Shehada reports: “With the so-called ‘Yellow Line,’ Israel has divided the Strip in two: West Gaza, encompassing 42 percent of the enclave, where Hamas remains in control and over 2 million people are crammed in; and East Gaza, encompassing 58 percent of the territory, which has been fully depopulated of civilians and is controlled by the Israeli army and four proxy gangs.” This last, a reference to four IDF-backed militias put forward by Israel as Hamas’ legitimate replacement.

If ever tallied, the number of corpses buried under Gaza’s flattened buildings may raise the death toll of this genocide into six figures.

The UN estimates that the amount of rubble in Gaza could build 13 Giza pyramids.

“The sheer scale of the challenge is staggering,” writes Paul Adams for the BBC: “The UN estimates the cost of damage at £53bn ($70bn). Almost 300,000 houses and apartments have been damaged or destroyed, according to the UN’s satellite centre Unosat…The Gaza Strip is littered with 60 million tonnes of rubble, mixed in with dangerous unexploded bombs and dead bodies.”

No one knows how many corpses are rotting beneath the rubble. These mountains of rubble loom over Israelis working, in advance of global journalism’s return, to create their counternarratives, but also over surviving Gazans who, amidst unrelenting misery, struggle to provide for their surviving loved ones.

Living in close, unhygienic quarters, sleeping without bedding under torn plastic sheeting, and having scarce access to water, thousands of people are in dire need of supplies to help winterize their living space and spare themselves the dread that their children or they themselves could die of hypothermia. The easiest and most obvious solution to their predicament stands enticingly near: the homes held by their genocidal oppressors.

In affluent countries, observers like Dan Perry may tremble for Israel’s reputation, eager to rush in and conceal Israel’s crimes, clothing them in self-righteous justifications. These are of course our crimes as well.

Our own hearts cannot escape the howling winter unless we take, far more seriously, the hell of winter and despair to which we continue to subject Palestinians living in Gaza.

There is no peace in Gaza. May there be no peace for us until we fix that.

Kathy Kelly is a member of the TRANSCEND Network for Peace Development Environment, board president of World BEYOND War, an American peace activist, pacifist and author, one of the founding members of Voices in the Wilderness, and currently a co-coordinator Voices for Creative Nonviolence.

17 November 2025

Source: transcend.org

Prominent Human Rights Scholar Richard Falk Detained at Canadian Border as Security Threat on His 95th Birthday

By Sarah Petz

TRANSCEND Media Service Board Member, Falk says he and his wife, on the way to a conference on Palestine, were held and interrogated for some 4 hours in Toronto on 13 Nov, his 95th birthday.

15 Nov 2025 – A prominent academic and former UN special rapporteur says he was detained by customs agents in Toronto while on his way to speak at a conference on human rights violations against Palestinians.

Richard Falk, a retired Princeton University professor who was a special rapporteur of the Commission on Human Rights on the situation of human rights in the occupied Palestinian territories, was on his way to Ottawa to speak at the Palestine Tribunal on Canadian Responsibility on Friday and Saturday.

Dubbed a “people’s tribunal,” the event was organized as a forum to analyze and document “Canada’s complicity in the genocide and dispossession of Palestinians, including over the last two years in Gaza,” says a news release from its organizers.

But upon arriving at customs at Toronto’s Pearson International Airport on Thursday with his wife, he says border agents took their passports and led them to an interview room.

He said border agents told him they needed to determine whether he and his wife were a national security threat to Canada.

“That never happened to me in my long life,” said Falk. Thursday also happened to be his 95th birthday, he said.

Falk said they were asked a series of questions about his participation in the conference, his involvement in the Israel-Palestine conflict and his position on Israel. After about four hours, Falk said he and wife were eventually released and allowed to enter Canada.

CBSA declines to comment
Asked about the incident, a Canada Border Services Agency spokesperson said they could not comment on specific cases, citing privacy legislation, but went on to say that all travellers entering Canada are subject to “secondary inspection.”

“This is a normal part of the cross-border process and should not be viewed as any indication of wrongdoing,” the spokesperson said.

“There are many reasons why a border services officer may determine that an individual, or the goods they are carrying, require further processing or inspection.”

But based on the questions he was asked, Falk said he suspects he was detained because of his participation in the event. Falk was there to speak about the relevance of international law in the Israel-Gaza conflict.

“It’s disappointing that Canada — after having acknowledged Palestinian statehood — would take such a hostile attitude toward a very forthright conference that really explained to a public, that hasn’t been so well-informed, the nature of the objections to what Israel has been doing,” he said.

“One expects Canada to be a model of free speech and liberal democracy and it’s not as bad as the U.S., but it’s not as good as I would hope.”

WATCH | Concerns over the flow of aid into Gaza:
[https://www.cbc.ca/player/play/video/9.6979242]

Israel reopened the Zikim crossing in northern Gaza to allow more supplies into the territory this week, but aid groups say the aid that has come through isn’t adequate as winter and the rainy season approaches.
Conference organizer outraged
Azeezah Kanji, chair of the Palestine Tribunal on Canadian Responsibility, said the conference’s organizers found out Falk was detained by border officials when they received a panicked phone call from his wife.

Kanji said that prompted them to reach out to different high-ranking officials in an attempt to get Falk and his wife released.

“We can’t reveal the particulars about what was done, but the degree of disturbance about this was extreme and universal across the board,” she said.

“It’s outrageous that this could have happened.”

Sen. Yuen Pau Woo said he was contacted by the tribunal’s organizers about the incident on Thursday evening, which prompted him to contact the minister for public safety’s office.

“I am shocked that two eminent experts on international law would be treated in this way, on Dr. Falk’s 95th birthday no less,” Woo said in an email.

In response to a CBC News request for comment, the Ministry of Public Safety said the CBSA was better suited to respond.

Sarah Petz is a reporter with CBC Toronto. Her career has taken her across three provinces and includes a stint in East Africa.

17 November 2025

Source: transcend.org

Nobel Peace laureate María Corina Machado Offers to Sell $1.7 Trillion of Venezuela’s Assets to US Corporations

By Ben Norton

13 Nov 2025 – María Corina Machado is a far-right Venezuelan coup leader who has been funded by the US government since at least 2003.

The Donald Trump administration is waging war on Venezuela, and if it can succeed in overthrowing the leftist government of President Nicolás Maduro, Machado would help to lead the new pro-US regime in Caracas.

Machado won the 2025 Nobel Peace Prize, despite the fact that she openly supports Trump’s war on her country. She has for years called for a US military intervention to violently topple President Maduro.

If Trump and his powerful Secretary of State and National Security Advisor Marco Rubio can manage to put Machado in power, she has pledged to sell off her country’s assets to US corporations.

Machado proudly told a group of US corporate executives in Miami, Florida that she is planning a “massive privatization program”, offering “a $1.7 trillion opportunity” to exploit Venezuela’s oil, natural gas, infrastructure, gold, and other minerals.

[https://twitter.com/BenjaminNorton/status/1988937942933598578]

The far-right Venezuelan opposition leader made these remarks in a virtual speech at the America Business Forum on 5 November.

Machado spoke before Donald Trump appeared on stage at the same event. She was interviewed by the Republican mayor of Miami, Florida, Francis Suarez, a loyal right-wing ally of Trump and Rubio. (He is also the son of Xavier Suarez, who previously served as Miami’s mayor.)

The following is a partial transcript of Machado’s comments (all emphasis added):

And this is amazing, super exciting for me: We will open Venezuela for foreign investment.

I am talking about a $1.7 trillion opportunity, not only in oil and gas, which is huge, and you know that there are opportunities, because we will open all, upstream, midstream, downstream, to all companies; but also in mining, in gold, in infrastructure, power.

We have, our grid right now has a 17 gigawatt opportunity of energy potential that needs to be rehabbed, certainly for technology and AI.

And tourism, you know, Venezuela has 2800km of pristine Caribbean coastline ready to be developed.

So this is going to be huge. We will bring rule of law. We will open markets. We will have security for foreign investment, and a transparent, massive privatization program that is waiting for you.

This was not the first time that Machado had made this promise.

Machado also spoke virtually at the Fortune Global Forum in Saudi Arabia in October, where she offered a “business opportunity, of more than $1.7 trillion”.

“Venezuela will be the single biggest economic opportunity for decades to come in this region”, vowed the US government-funded Venezuelan coup leader.

Machado presented her ultra-right-wing economic program at an event in June hosted by AS/COA, a corporate lobby group funded by a Who’s Who of large US companies.

US companies “are going to make a lot of money”, promised Venezuelan coup leader María Corina Machado
In an interview with Donald Trump Jr. in February, Machado again promised to sell off her country’s assets to US corporations.

“We are going to privatize all our industry”, she said, stressing that US companies “are going to make a lot of money”.

These were her comments:

Forget about Saudi Arabia; forget about the Saudis. I mean, we have more oil, I mean, infinite potential.

And we’re going to open markets. We’re going to kick [out] the government from the oil sector. We’re going to privatize all our industry.

Venezuela has huge resources: oil, gas, minerals, land, technology. And, as you said before, we have a strategic location, you know, hours from the United States.

So we’re going to do this right. We know what we have to do.

And American companies are in, you know, a super strategic position to invest.

This country, Venezuela, is going to be the brightest opportunity for investment of American companies, of good people that are going to make a lot of money.

[https://twitter.com/BenjaminNorton/status/1978107961986703613]

María Corina Machado boasts that she is being supported by Marco Rubio and other US government officials
Machado has boasted of the fact that she and her coup-plotting movement in Venezuela are receiving support from numerous US government officials, including Marco Rubio, the second-most powerful person in the administration after Trump himself.

In an interview with Bloomberg reporter Mishal Husain in October, Machado revealed, “I have been in contact not only with several officials in the US government, but also in other countries — in Canada, in Latin America, in the Caribbean, and certainly Europe as well”.

Husain asked if Machado has specifically been in touch with Rubio. The Venezuelan coup leader confirmed that she has.

“I have been in touch with [Rubio], of course, and with his team”, Machado divulged. “And I have to say, even further in Congress, both aisles, you know, in both parties, we have really good friends and champions of our cause”.

In her virtual remarks at the America Business Forum on 5 November, Machado also thanked more US government officials for supporting the coup attempt in Venezuela.

This is what she said:

I’m so grateful to the Secretary of State Marco Rubio, that has been, you know, the champion of the cause of freedom and democracy in the Americas.

I want to thank Governor DeSantis.

I want to thank my friend, Senator Rick Scott, that has always trusted us.

And now Senator Ashley Moody.

And of course, I have to say, and I want to make a special mention to our three amigos, our three friends, [Congress members] María Elvira Salazar, Mario Díaz-Balart, and Carlos Giménez, who have been so, so, so close, and always supporting us.

Machado likewise expressed gratitude to the Miami mayor, Francis Suarez, who was interviewing her at the America Business Forum, just two hours before Trump spoke at the same event.

“You have been a great friend, Francis, of our cause. I am so grateful to you”, she said.

The Miami mayor noted that he and Machado had a friendly conversation before the interview.

“We spoke yesterday on the phone, and you invited me to a free Venezuela, and I look forward to that day, where I can go with my wife, who is in the audience, to visit you in the presidential palace, one day”, Suarez said.

This was a clear sign that US government officials hope to put Machado in power in Caracas. They are confident that the longtime US government-funded coup leader would obediently serve US interests in Latin America.

Machado stressed that, if Trump and Rubio can help her overthrow Maduro, she would cut Venezuela’s ties with China, Russia, and Iran, and their next plan would be to work with Washington to topple the leftist governments in Nicaragua and Cuba.

Benjamin Norton is an investigative journalist, analyst, writer and filmmaker.

17 November 2025

Source: transcend.org

Rethinking Peace at a Time of Lucrative Genocides

By Maung Zarni

In the previous TRANSCEND Editorial, Dr Diane Perlman paraphrased the oft-quoted insight into world-changing processes by Antonio Gramsci, the anti-Mussolini labour organizer and intellectual, against the backdrop of the US Empire on its steep decline. She writes, “Antonio Gramsci described an interregnum period as a chaotic phase of upheaval where the old order ‘is dying,’ but ‘the new cannot be born.‘” A “time of monsters” when authoritarians exploit chaos to hold onto power, while emerging forces struggle to consolidate power.”

In a recent public conversation on this great rupture, unfolding “before our eyes”, within the mix of the inter-state system and the global economy, where the United States can no longer dictate the behaviours of other states, friends and foes, John Mearshimer, the renowned North American realist scholar at the University of Chicago, conveyed to his listeners what his Chinese academic colleague said to him: “the problem today is the United States is falling faster than the speed with which China is rising.”

However one looks at it, the United States is the Empire on its last leg, or a tanker sinking in slow motion.

Because the class of American foreign policy makers, whatever their party affiliation, simply don’t possess the kind of humility, foresight or capacity to look inwards, unlike the last crop of the Soviet leadership, namely Mikhail Gorbachev, Washington doubles down by renaming the Department of Defence as the Department of War, raising the war budget to one trillion dollars and openly talking about starting “nuclear testing”.

The Burmese have a saying that the last flame of a candle burns brightest, before its fire extinguishes. The US delusion – that it can keep the rest of the world under its thumb for eternity – is already causing so much pain and suffering, most specifically in Gaza – and increasingly in the Caribbean waters, and very likely in Latin America.

The empire’s last flame is burning in Gaza in the two-fold form of a US-Israel joint genocide and the post-genocide’s “Gaza Peace Proposal”.

Just as Israel was brazen enough to declare its intent to wage its genocidal destruction of the entire society of, and the ecosystem for, 2.3 million Palestinians – its genocide financier and enabler in Washington is no less brazen in its quest for the colonial acquisition of Gaza, spun as the “Gaza Peace Proposal.”

Only in the warped minds of Israeli, North American and British genocidal participants is it alright to see the sites of mass sufferings as a place of “real estate bonanza” or “urban renewal”. When the settlement-born Bezalel Smotrich, Netanyahu’s coalition partner who leads the National Religious Party ‘Religious Zionism’ openly talks about Gaza as “a real estate bonanza”, he simply speaks the quiet part loud for the entire class of war-profiteers, from the Silicon Valley tech billionaires and other US industrialists and real estate developers (including the likes of Jared Kushner and Steve Witkoff), to Tony Blair and his international and Middle Eastern associates.

To our disappointment, a handful of states with global influence such as China and the Russian Federation have proven either unprepared or unable to serve as the counterweight against Washington. Alas, China is not rising fast enough to serve as a relatively more moral actor.

Many of us associated with or supporters of Johan Galtung’s TRANSCEND, operate outside the corridors of state power. To belabour the obvious, none of us is at the table of the states where impactful policies are drawn up, debates are had, proposals and counterproposals are tabled.

As helpless as we naturally feel, in our capacity as cultural and intellectual workers, we do a lot to intervene to stop in the Empire’s genocide, to kill its last flame. Over the last two years, since Israel’s senior most leaders declared the settler colonial state’s intent to perpetrate a textbook genocide following the Hamas’ jail break on 7 October 2023, many TRANSCEND members have joined other fellow world citizens with conscience and compassion in numerous forms of collective political actions, including marches, signing petitions, taking direct actions.

But as peace activists, scholars, theorists, academics, advocates, what have you, we have been forced to think hard about peace, peace processes, the role of mediation, and the idea of conflict transformation itself.

For we are living in the world where there are at least three “hot genocides” being perpetrated by clusters of state and non-state actors on two vast continents – Asia and Africa. They are, needless to say, first, Israel-US genocide in Gaza; second, Myanmar’s ongoing genocidal destruction of the remaining 500,000 Rohingyas, still trapped on their own ancestral land of Arakan or Rakhine, inside Myanmar’s national boundaries albeit the new spearhead is the Arakan Army, the most anti-Muslim and rabidly ethno-Buddhist nationalist militia; and Sudan where the formerly genocide militia known as Janjaweed, repurposed by the European Union as its proxy “border control” under the new name of “Rapid Support Force” (to deter conflict-fleeing Africans from coming to Fortress Europe in search of refuge).

These genocides are being perpetrated under the disguise of “wars”, with perpetrators offering various pretexts for their essentially mass atrocity crimes including unmistakable breaches of the 1948 UN Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, a binding Inter-state Treaty. Each case of these ongoing genocides merits a separate, comprehensive analysis, and proposals to bring a fast and decisive end.

However, it suffices to say that all three cases cry out for a fundamental rethink of peace or mediation as we know it.

As we seek to offer insights into the need to transcend our conflicting interests and values, how do we factor in the unfettered greed of US and Israeli, or Israel-First, billionaire class?

For these men and women of unparalleled wealth do not see Palestinians as humans with the equal right to life, or as humans at all. By the same token, Myanmar’s perpetrators and complicit society don’t view Rohingyas as humans with equal worth.

Rather, these (Adam) Smithian “masters of mankind”, in the case of Zionist billionaires, only see lucrative minerals underground or off the shores of these mass killing fields. Not only do they not see genocide victims as humans worthy of dignity, alive and in death, but the billionaires and trillionaires also don’t care that they will have to build their seafront prime properties over the mass graves, the final un-ceremonial resting places for hundreds of thousands of fellow humans.

Peace thinkers and advocates need to start thinking hard when Gramsci’s “monsters” in the time of collapsing empires are no longer simply Fascists or authoritarians. They are billionaires who stand to profit from the wars of annihilation, be it in Sudan’s vast gold mines, or Rohingya’s fertile agricultural soil, or Gaza with its offshore natural gas, or Palestine’s beautiful seafront in Gaza.

A Buddhist humanist from Burma (Myanmar), Maung Zarni, nominated for the 2024 Nobel Peace Prize, is a member of the TRANSCEND Media Service Editorial Committee, of the TRANSCEND Network for Peace Development Environment, former Visiting Lecturer with Harvard Medical School, specializing in racism and violence in Burma and Sri Lanka, and Non-resident Scholar in Genocide Studies with Documentation Center – Cambodia.

17 November 2025

Source: transcend.org

Evidence of Epstein Ties to Mossad Grow, But Corporate Media Doesn’t Seem to Care

By Drew Favakeh

There has been wall-to-wall US corporate media coverage of the Department of Justice’s Epstein files and the battle over its release. So why has new reporting about hacked materials largely been ignored by US corporate media?

For years, there have been whispers that convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, who had ties to key officials in the US and foreign governments, was involved with Israel’s intelligence agency, Mossad.

However, the Epstein/Mossad ties were often labeled by US corporate media as “unfounded” (New York Times, 8/24/25), dismissed as a “conspiracy theory” (New York Times, 7/16/25), or said to have been “largely manufactured by paranoiacs and attention seekers and credulous believers” (New York Times, 9/9/25). Former Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett has claimed that “Epstein’s conduct, both the criminal and the merely despicable, had nothing whatsoever to do with the Mossad or the State of Israel.”

It’s true that far-right antisemites like Candace Owens and Tucker Carlson have promoted a conspiratorial version of the Epstein/Israel connection as part of their bigoted, attention-seeking narratives. But recent investigations by Drop Site News—the nonprofit investigative outlet founded in July 2024—into a major hack targeting Israel revealed that Epstein did play a significant role in brokering multiple deals for Israeli intelligence. Despite the hack’s significant revelations, US corporate media coverage remains scant.

‘Knack for steering the superpowers’

Since 2024, a hacking group called “Handala” with reported ties to the Iranian government (Committee to Protect Journalists, 7/9/25) has carried out a series of cyberattacks targeting Israeli government officials and facilities (Press TV, 12/1/24; CyberDaily, 6/16/25).Aspects of the Handala hack were published on the website of nonprofit whistleblower Distributed Denial of Secrets (DDoS), including hundreds of thousands of emails from former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak, one of Epstein’s closest connections.

Since the hacked information was released, numerous independent media outlets—including Reason (8/27/25), All-Source Intelligence (9/17/25, 9/29/25, 10/13/25), Grayzone (10/6/25, 10/9/25, 10/13/25), the (b)(7)(D) (10/16/25, 10/21/25) and DeClassified UK (9/1/25, 11/3/25)—have published investigations on its contents. Among the independent media outlets, Drop Site‘s coverage stands out for its in-depth research and broad scope.

Drop Site‘s investigations into the Handala hack have included six major stories since late September, four of which have centered around “Epstein’s work on behalf of Israeli military interests, particularly as it relates to his role in the development of Israel’s cyber warfare industry.”

Drop Site reporters Murtaza Hussain and Ryan Grim (9/28/25) detailed how Epstein wielded his influence to expand Israel’s cyber warfare industry into Mongolia. Drop Site wrote:

Jeffrey Epstein…exploited his network of political and financial elites to help Barak, and ultimately the Israeli government itself, to increase the penetration of Israel’s spy-tech firms into foreign countries.

In their next piece, Drop Site revealed (10/30/25) that Epstein created an Israel/Russia backchannel to attempt to oust Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. Hussain and Grim reported that Epstein also worked with Barak and Russian elites to pressure the Obama administration into approving strikes on Iran, demonstrating his “knack for steering the superpowers toward Israel’s interests by leveraging a social network that intersected the Israeli, American and Russian intelligence communities.”

In the same piece, Hussain and Grim quoted Epstein asking Barak to “wait until they could speak privately before Barak notified intelligence leaders of a deal” with Russian-Israeli oligarch Viktor Vekselberg, and to “not go to number 1 too quickly.” Number 1 has long been a nickname for the head of the Mossad, DropSite noted.

Another article (11/7/25) recounted that Epstein sold surveillance technology to Côte d’Ivoire: “Epstein helped Barak deliver a proposal for mass surveillance of Ivorian phone and internet communications, crafted by former Israeli intelligence officials.”

Most recently, Grim and Hussain (11/11/25) reported that an Israeli spy regularly stayed at Epstein’s Manhattan apartment. The spy, Yoni Koren, “made his intelligence career working in covert operations alongside the Mossad.”

Failing to cover the Handala hack

Hacked information must be handled ethically by journalists—including by verifying the files, considering public interest, concealing identities when necessary, and noting its origins. This is what Drop Site has done. And its reporting has significant public interest, revealing the ways in which Epstein served Israel’s interests.

Yet in a search of ProQuest’s US Newsstream collection for “Handala,” as well as a supplementary Google search, the only US corporate media outlet found to have covered the Handala hack is the New York Post (8/31/25). Its single 700-word story, drawing from Reason (8/27/25) and the Times of London (8/30/25), focused on how Prince Andrew stayed in contact with Epstein for five years longer than previously stated—sidestepping the revelations from Drop Site about Epstein’s ties to Mossad.

Hussain, who had not seen the New York Post story, said US corporate media is “deliberately ignoring” the story:

It’s such a goldmine of stories. They’re not going through it, they don’t want to talk about it. I think it’s very difficult for them to conceive what these emails refer to because they’ve spent so much time talking about it as a conspiracy theory. And now contravening evidence is emerging, or well-substantiated evidence, showing that it’s really not a conspiracy theory.

Indeed, recent mentions of Epstein’s ties to Israeli government officials have continued to dismiss them as conspiracy theories, ignoring the hack and Drop Site‘s work. For instance, an LA Times op-ed (10/10/25) on antisemitism in the GOP listed Tucker Carlson’s suggestion that “Epstein was a Mossad agent” (and accusing Israel of “genocide” in Gaza) as evidence of “appalling behavior,” alongside things like “entertaining Hitler/Nazi apologia” and suggesting that “Jews had something to do with [Charlie] Kirk’s death.”

The New Yorker‘s Jay Caspian Kang (10/10/25) asserted in his weekly column:

On Planet Epstein, everything that happens—the assassination of Charlie Kirk, the war in Gaza, the suppression of speech by the Trump Administration—proves the country is run by blackmail, pedophilia and fealty to Israel.

While it is of course absurd to blame “everything” on Epstein or Israel—and right-wing conspiracy theories that incorporate antisemitism are very real and dangerous—is it really unreasonable to blame “the war in Gaza” on too much “fealty to Israel”? After all, from October 7, 2023 to September 2025, the US sent $21.7 billion in military aid to Israel, according to Brown University’s Costs of War project—more than a quarter of Israel’s total post–October 7 military expenditures. Epstein’s evident connections to Mossad do raise the question of whether there is more to that “fealty” than the $100 million the pro-Israel lobbying group AIPAC spent on both parties during the 2024 election cycle (Common Dreams, 8/28/24).

By using the “conspiracy theory” frame, Kang not only overlooked the recently revealed files from Drop Site, but also failed to convey the full scope of Epstein’s influence, leaving the actions of associates and key government officials unscrutinized.

Other Handala revelations

Other aspects of the Handala hack have also been well-covered by independent media, including reports of billionaires funding an Israeli cyber campaign against anti-apartheid activists (All-Source Intelligence, 9/17/25). Other stories describe Iran striking a secret Israeli military site near a Tel Aviv tower (All-Source Intelligence, 10/13/25; Grayzone, 10/13/25), and Larry Ellison’s son, David Ellison, meeting with a top Israeli general to plan spying on Americans (Grayzone, 10/6/25). The Grayzone (10/9/25) also reported that a former US ambassador secretly worked with a top Israeli diplomat to help Israel access several prestigious UN committees.

In Israeli media, Haaretz (3/9/25) reported that thousands of Israeli gun owners were exposed in an Iranian hack-and-leak operation. The paper (7/9/25) also revealed the leak of a database containing thousands of résumés belonging to Israelis who served in classified and sensitive positions within the Israel Defense Forces and other military and security agencies.

These details, like those about Epstein, have also been met with silence in US corporate media.

There has been wall-to-wall US corporate media coverage of the Department of Justice’s Epstein files and the battle over its release. So why has the hack largely been ignored by US corporate media? One possible reason is the hack’s likely origin. It has been reportedly attributed to Banished Kitten, a cyber unit within Iran’s Ministry of Intelligence (Committee to Protect Journalists, 7/9/25). Hacks purportedly emanating from Iran are rarely covered in US corporate media—and when they are, the origin of the hack, not its content, becomes the focus.

Look no further than media coverage of the 271-page official dossier of then–Republican vice presidential candidate JD Vance, which revealed that the Trump campaign believed Vance “embraced noninterventionism,” among other purported vulnerabilities (Ken Klippenstein, 9/26/24). The US government alleged the Vance dossier was leaked through Iranian hacking (FAIR.org, 9/30/24). While the New York Times, Washington Post and Politico possessed the Vance dossier for weeks, they declined to publish it (Popular Information, 9/9/24).

The contents of the Vance dossier were eventually revealed by independent reporter Ken Klippenstein, as well-documented by FAIR contributor Ari Paul (9/30/24). Paul noted that while Klippenstein’s reporting pushed the story into the legacy media, “most of the reporting about this dossier has been on the intrigue revolving around Iranian hacking rather than the content itself” (Daily Beast, 8/10/24; Politico, 8/10/24; Forbes, 8/11/24).

Today, despite Drop Site‘s thorough and revealing reporting, the Handala hack has been almost completely ignored by US corporate media. Said Drop Site‘s Hussain:

A lot of these [media] organizations, it’s kind of not a secret, they have sympathies or ties to Israel, so it’s not a story which is appealing to them, it’s not politically convenient for these organizations, for the most part.
I think when something’s in the public interest, you report on it, and you’re transparent about where it came from. But in this case, [US corporate] media chose not to.

Drew Favakeh is a freelance journalist based in Chicago. He received his bachelor’s degree in journalism from Butler University.

17 November 2025

Source: countercurrents.org

How Trump Edits Us — and How the BBC Edits Us Both: Growing Up Palestinian in the Editing Room of the West

By Rima Najjar

Author’s Note

The irony is sharp: Trump now complains about being edited by the BBC and placed within a narrative he rejects, yet for years he has shaped how the world sees Palestinians — through speeches, policies, and media interventions that reorder our story, silence our voices, or recast our suffering in politically convenient frames. I wrote this essay to trace the long arc of how the BBC has controlled which Palestinian voices are verified, which suffering is amplified or questioned, which events are reordered, and which narratives are framed or sidelined — and to place Trump’s lawsuit against the corporation in that wider context. This piece is both an analysis of institutional power and a reflection on the strange intersection where the mechanisms of editorial control he decries mirror the long experience of Palestinians under global media.

I. Introduction: Watching Trump Step Into Our Frame

As a Palestinian I experience Trump’s lawsuit against the BBC as a kind of dark comedy. Here is a U.S. president, complaining that the corporation has taken his speech — clipped it, rearranged it, and produced a meaning he insists was never there. The segment aired on Panorama, and the BBC has since admitted to an “error of judgment” in how it edited the footage. Suddenly, the venerable broadcaster is on the defensive about its neutrality. And here are Palestinians, watching this drama unfold with a sense of déjà vu so complete it is almost dizzying.

We have lived with BBC editing — of us, of our history, of our very vocabulary — since long before Trump first tested a microphone.

When I see commentators now asking, “If the BBC misrepresented Trump, what other narratives has it shaped this way?”, I want to answer: come and sit with us. We can tell you how it feels to grow up under a voice that is treated as neutral, objective and civilized, while constantly bending the story of your dispossession into shapes more acceptable to Western power.

ln this essay I trace that history and use Trump’s present outrage as a lens. It is not an argument that Trump and Palestinians are equivalent victims of media power; the comparison would be obscene. He is a president. We are a colonized and displaced people. But the mechanism he suddenly complains about — the clipped quote, the rearranged sequence, the quiet violence of omission — is one we know intimately. To understand why the BBC could do this to Trump, we must revisit the older story of how it has long done it to us.

II. After the Nakba: The BBC as Lifeline and Authority

To understand how the BBC came to occupy such a central role in Palestinian consciousness, we must begin in the decades after the Nakba. In the 1950s, 60s, and 70s, news was not a background hum in Palestinian life. It was a lifeline. After the Nakba of 1948, hundreds of thousands of us scattered into refugee camps and neighboring countries, many still sleeping with the keys to homes they believed, sincerely, they would one day return to. Every bulletin was scanned for signs that the world had come to its senses, that justice was awakening somewhere out there.

Arab state media, however, served not the people but the rulers. Much of it was saturated with bravado and propaganda. Broadcasters promised imminent victories that never came, glorified armies that collapsed in days, and spoke in a triumphant register that felt increasingly disconnected from the humiliations people experienced at checkpoints, in camps, and in exile. News of defeat was massaged into euphemism; news of failure was treated as temporary setback on the road to inevitable glory.

In that environment, the BBC and, to a lesser extent, Voice of America, broadcasting in Arabic, acquired the aura of reliability. Colonial history in the Levant had left deep scars, but it had also ingrained a sense that Western institutions — British schools, British hospitals, British universities, and yes, British media — were somehow more serious, more professional, more “civilized” than anything our own region produced.

Arab rulers, desperate to hold onto the power meted out to them by these same Western powers, tightened their grip on local media, making it easier for people to believe that freedom of information lay abroad.

Growing up in Jordan, I heard the drone of news from radios tuned to the BBC as though part of the air itself, not on the air. It wafted out of shops, taxis, living rooms. The phrases became familiar: “Our correspondent reports,” “according to official sources,” “the situation remains tense.”

The BBC’s Arabic service brought the world into homes that often lacked electricity for anything more sophisticated than a radio. That voice was taken, in many families, as a kind of secular oracle. If the BBC said something happened, then it had happened. If the BBC did not mention something, then perhaps it was not important.

Trust, once given, is powerful. It shapes not just what people know but how they know, and whose version of events they learn to elevate over their own.

III. The First Fissures: 1967 and the Tone of Defeat

The first real fissure in that trust came during the watershed moments when the BBC’s calm, authoritative cadence no longer matched the lived reality unfolding on the ground. For many in the Arab world, that turning point was the 1967 war.

As Israeli forces swept through Sinai, the West Bank, Gaza, and the Golan Heights in six devastating days, Arab regimes were still, for a time, broadcasting fantasies of resistance and counterattacks. The BBC, by contrast, reported Israeli advances with clinical precision — its voice steady, its language stripped of emotion, its updates arriving like dispatches from a distant control room.

It became, in effect, the outlet that told the Arab world it had been defeated, and it did so in a tone that suggested this outcome was both inevitable and, in some ways, rational.

But in addition to reporting the facts of defeat, the BBC introduced a new vocabulary: the language of “buffer zones,” “security needs,” and “disputed territories.” The word “occupation” did not loom large in its early lexicon. Our catastrophe was rendered in neutral, almost technical terms.
Palestinians who experienced the Israeli advance as an extension of the dispossession of 1948 heard instead a story of borders in dispute, of a small nation seeking defensible lines.

For those who had believed in the BBC’s purity of purpose, this was a quietly devastating realization. The BBC was not simply delivering facts; it was reframing them. Its neutrality, it turned out, was neutral only in tone. In structure, it belonged firmly to the world that had divided, partitioned, and claimed authority over our lands.

IV. Internalizing Hierarchies, Defending Dignity

Yet this realization did not immediately sharpen political awareness about media bias; instead, it produced something more insidious — an unconscious absorption of the very hierarchies embedded in the BBC’s tone and framing.

Rather than prompting skepticism, the BBC’s authoritative style subtly reinforced a sense of our own inferiority and of Israeli military supremacy as the inevitable expression of “modernity” and “civilization.” At the time, there were no credible alternatives to Western media — no Al Jazeera, no proliferation of satellite channels, no independent Palestinian networks.

The educated elite — those who had mastered English — devoured the Middle East editions of Time, Newsweek, and The Economist. I remember my father subscribed to them all, reading them with a devotion that bordered on ritual, as though history itself might be postponed by a month’s delay in their delivery.

Those who could not access such magazines relied on the BBC for the facts of events but absorbed its subtext: that Western institutions were objective, rational, advanced — and that we, by implication, were not. It was not just that Israeli tanks and warplanes seemed unstoppable; it was that the BBC narrative treated their supremacy as reasonable, almost natural. Our resistance, in contrast, was presented as tragic but futile, or simply irrational.

This dynamic echoed decades later, when taxi drivers in the West Bank, exasperated by local propaganda, tuned into Israeli Arabic-language news for “reliable information,” even though those broadcasts routinely described Palestinian resistance fighters as mukharribīn — “saboteurs.” The contempt in the word was obvious, yet the habit persisted, a testament to how deeply the authority of the colonizer’s media had been internalized across generations.

What made this period so psychologically complex is that even as Palestinians unconsciously absorbed the hierarchies embedded in Western and Israeli media, an entirely different narrative was being nurtured in the spaces Western journalists rarely saw: the refugee camps.

In these cramped, precarious worlds, informal networks of storytellers, elders, teachers, youth organizers, and political cadres quietly undid the very narratives the BBC and Israeli broadcasts reinforced. The same word that Israeli radio used to demean Palestinian fighters — mukharribīn — was being reclaimed inside the camps with pride as fedayeen, whispered with admiration for those who dared confront the occupation.

Children grew up with two parallel vocabularies: the sterile, technocratic language of “security operations” and “responses to provocation” flowing from the BBC and Israeli broadcasts, and the visceral, lived language of resistance etched into the everyday conversations of camp life.

These informal networks were the first antidote to the subtle self-erasure induced by Western media. They restored moral clarity long before any formal alternative to the BBC existed — planting the seeds of a counter-narrative that would eventually challenge the monopoly the West held over the story of our lives.

V. First Intifada: Two Narratives Collide

The First Intifada in 1987 was the moment when these two narrative worlds — BBC neutrality and camp-forged resistance — collided in full public view.

For the first time, Palestinians were not merely the subjects of news but the producers of it: teenagers with stones, women confronting soldiers, neighborhood committees organizing mass civil disobedience.

This uprising was intensely visual, unfolding in alleys and refugee camps where international correspondents did not always have the final word. Raw footage, sometimes filmed by local cameramen and smuggled out, showed scenes that could not be easily folded into the old clichés of border skirmishes and “tensions.”

Yet even as the uprising’s reality was impossible to ignore, the language the BBC used often muted its political significance. What Palestinians experienced as a mass anti-colonial revolt was framed in London as “unrest,” “rioting,” or “violence” on “both sides,” with the structural realities of occupation backgrounded to the point of abstraction. Soldiers facing children with stones became “clashes.” Military law over an occupied people became “administered territories.” The word “occupation” itself remained strangely shy.

Listening to this coverage from our living rooms or hearing it reported via short-wave, Palestinians realized in collective clarity something we had only sensed subconsciously before: the BBC was not merely flattening our story but translating it into a vocabulary that protected Western sensibilities and preserved Israel’s legitimacy.

The Intifada made it impossible to reconcile the authority of that clipped British accent with the lived truth of children facing rifles. It was a political awakening not only on the streets of Palestine but inside the minds of Palestinians who now understood that Western “neutrality” came with its own ideological commitments — and they were not neutral at all.

VI. Second Intifada: The End of Narrative Monopoly

If the First Intifada cracked the veneer of BBC neutrality, the Second Intifada shattered it.

Beginning in 2000, the uprising unfolded in a media environment transformed by satellite TV, 24-hour news, and the rise of Al Jazeera — and for the first time, Palestinians could see their own reality broadcast live, without passing entirely through Western filters. The images were impossible to soften — children shot at close range, homes demolished, neighborhoods reduced to rubble.

While Arab networks showed these scenes in their full emotional and political weight, the BBC often framed them within the familiar lexicon of “security measures,” “retaliatory strikes,” and “clashes,” as though the structural imbalance between an occupying army and an occupied population were a matter of symmetrical misfortune.

I remember watching the footage of Muhammad al-Durrah, the terrified boy crouching behind his father moments before being shot — broadcast uninterrupted on Arab channels, while the BBC treated it with cautious distance, emphasizing “claims,” “counterclaims,” and Israeli denials.

The disparity between what we saw with our own eyes and what the BBC asked the world to believe was too great to ignore. The Second Intifada made explicit what had long been implicit: Western neutrality was a political stance, shaped by global hierarchies that had once made us trust its voice.

It was not simply that the BBC could not tell our story; it was that it refused to recognize our story as one of colonization, not just “conflict.”
With that, we arrive at the period where the BBC’s distortions can be traced through specific, documented decisions — decisions that, when laid beside the Trump case, reveal a common editorial machinery at work.

VII. Jenin, 2002: Gatekeeping Credibility

The battle of Jenin in April 2002 was the first time many Palestinians — and many across the Arab world — saw the BBC doing something eerily similar to what Trump now accuses it of: shaping the meaning of an event not simply through what it reported, but through what it withheld, framed, doubted, and rearranged.

During Israel’s large-scale invasion of the refugee camp, journalists were barred by the Israeli army for days. As Palestinians fled or phoned relatives, the reports were harrowing: homes bulldozed with people inside, bodies in alleyways, entire families missing. Arab networks broadcast these testimonies immediately — urgent, unvarnished.

The BBC, however, positioned itself not as a witness but as the arbiter of credibility. Palestinian accounts were “unverified,” casualty numbers “inflated,” while Israeli denials were treated as inherently authoritative. Every Palestinian testimony demanded external validation; every Israeli statement arrived pre-validated.

This is the first major parallel with the Trump case: just as Panorama allegedly reorganized Trump’s speech into a sequence that altered its meaning, the BBC’s editorial posture in Jenin reorganized the entire narrative by placing Israeli statements first and Palestinian testimony last, with skepticism disproportionately applied to the latter. The ordering itself produced meaning.

When journalists finally entered the camp after the army withdrew, the devastation was undeniable — streets flattened, homes crushed, the smell of death everywhere. Yet even then, the BBC maintained its tone of “balance”: Palestinians “claimed” atrocities; the Israeli army “stated” it had conducted legitimate operations. The grotesque asymmetry — an army with tanks versus a camp of civilians and lightly armed fighters — was linguistically flattened into a debate between two equally credible “sides.”

For Palestinians, the significance of Jenin lay not only in the destruction but in the BBC’s implicit claim to epistemic authority: only after the BBC saw the rubble with its own eyes could Palestinian suffering be acknowledged as real. Until then, our narratives were treated as hysteria or propaganda.

In Trump’s lawsuit, he says the BBC edited his words so that viewers would see an intent he rejects. In Jenin, the BBC edited Palestinian reality so that viewers would doubt a suffering we had no power to edit back. Different contexts, same mechanism: editorial sequencing determines truth.

VIII. The Balen Report: Internal Evidence, Externally Denied

If Jenin was the moment Palestinians saw the BBC’s bias publicly, the Balen Report was the moment they understood it existed privately — acknowledged inside the corporation yet hidden from view.

In 2004, the BBC commissioned senior journalist Malcolm Balen to review its reporting on the Israel–Palestine conflict. The 20,000-word report examined hundreds of hours of coverage. It was prompted by persistent complaints — including from the Israeli government — of alleged anti-Israel bias. The report was completed. It circulated internally. Then it vanished.

When Palestinians, activists, and media critics requested the report under the Freedom of Information Act, the BBC fought them all the way to the courts. In 2012, the UK Supreme Court upheld the BBC’s right to keep it secret, accepting its claim that the report was held “for the purposes of journalism.”

The significance is profound. The BBC had investigated its own coverage of our dispossession and resistance — then ensured that its findings would never be seen by the people whose story it claimed to tell. Palestinians, whose credibility was constantly scrutinized on air, were denied access to the institution’s own self-scrutiny.

Here the parallel with Trump’s case becomes especially sharp. One outcome of his lawsuit, if it proceeds, may be the forced disclosure of internal emails, editorial notes, and cutting-room decisions. He demands to see the machinery that turned his speech into a sequence he rejects. Palestinians have spent decades wishing for exactly that kind of insight into how our reality has been cut, rearranged, and retold.

Trump claims the BBC misled the public about his intent. Palestinians know the BBC has misled the public about our condition. The difference is that Trump has the power to drag the corporation into court and force the curtain open. We never did.

IX. The 2009 Gaza Aid Appeal: When “Neutrality” Withheld Humanity

During the 2008–09 war on Gaza (Operation Cast Lead), as images emerged of children pulled from rubble and entire neighborhoods destroyed, Britain’s Disasters Emergency Committee (DEC) — a coalition of major humanitarian NGOs — produced an appeal film to raise funds for Gaza’s civilian population. It asked all major broadcasters to air it.
Most agreed. The BBC refused.

Its justification was that broadcasting the appeal could compromise its “impartiality” on a politically contested conflict. The refusal sparked protests outside BBC offices, resignations, and tens of thousands of complaints. Lawyers later represented Gazan families and a British complainant who argued that the decision had denied vital aid to people living amid the ruins.

Here the BBC was not accused of misediting an interview or misquoting a politician. It did something more profound: it blocked a humanitarian plea because recognizing Palestinian suffering in a straightforward way was deemed politically risky. The effect was to render Palestinian child victims invisible precisely when they needed visibility most.

Again, the mechanism mirrors what Trump alleges but at a vastly greater moral scale. Trump complains that the BBC edited too much. In Gaza, the BBC edited too little; it chose not to air at all. In both cases, editorial judgment reshaped reality — once in a television script, once in the flow of humanitarian empathy and money.

The decision implied that Palestinian suffering was politically charged in a way other suffering was not. Appeals for victims of natural disasters or wars elsewhere did not trigger an impartiality crisis. But Gaza did. Neutrality here did not mean standing above politics; it meant acquiescing to a political demand that Palestinians remain, as much as possible, ungrievable.

X. Gaza 2014: “Both Sides” as Moral Laundering

The 2014 war on Gaza (Operation Protective Edge) was one of the most intensely mediated conflicts of the decade. Palestinians themselves filmed much of it, uploading videos of wrecked apartments, bloodied children, and desperate hospital scenes. The asymmetry of death was overwhelming: over 2,000 Palestinians killed, more than 500 children; on the Israeli side, 73 deaths, most of them soldiers.

Yet night after night, the BBC relied on a framing template Palestinians already knew well: the pseudo-neutral language of “both sides.” Israel “responds” to rocket fire; Hamas “continues to launch rockets”; “clashes” erupt; “both sides” blame the other. The structural facts — that one side held overwhelming power and the other lived under blockade — were pushed to the background.

This is not to say the BBC lied. It showed bombed buildings and grieving families. But it slotted them into a familiar narrative: a tragic, symmetrical conflict between two equally culpable parties. The result was that a viewer could almost forget occupation existed at all.

This, too, parallels Trump’s complaint at a structural level. He says the BBC took fragments of his speech and arranged them into a storyline — “Trump incited violence” — that suited its editorial frame. In Gaza, the BBC took fragments of Palestinian death and Israeli justification and arranged them into a storyline — “two sides caught in tragic conflict” — that suited its need for balance.

The difference is that Trump can hold a press conference to tell the world the edit was wrong. The residents of Shuja’iyya and Rafah cannot.

XI. Gaza 2023–24: The Collapse of Trust

The 2023–24 war on Gaza marked the final rupture, the moment when large numbers of people worldwide — not just Palestinians — stopped treating the BBC as a reliable narrator of this conflict.

By then, Palestinians were live-streaming their own destruction. Viewers could watch, in real time, as families huddled in buildings that would be flattened minutes later. They could see entire neighborhoods erased. Against this, BBC coverage often appeared hesitant, hedged, delayed. Casualty figures from Palestinian health authorities were routinely couched in caveats — “not independently verified” — long after UN agencies affirmed their credibility, while Israeli claims were relayed with less visible caution.

Over 100 BBC staff eventually signed a letter accusing their employer of favouring Israel and criticizing its reluctance to use language appropriate to the scale of devastation. Their revolt confirmed what many already sensed: the problem was not a misjudged phrase or headline; it was structural.

By this point, the parallels with Trump’s grievance were unmistakable. He complains of being placed within a narrative frame hostile to his intent. Palestinians have been placed within a narrative frame hostile to our existence as a colonized people. He seeks reputational correction. We seek recognition of a basic truth: that a globally trusted news organization has, for decades, filtered, softened, or doubted our reality in ways that materially shaped global indifference to our dispossession.

XII. Why the BBC Does This — to Trump and to Us

Why has the BBC done this to Trump and to Palestinians? The answer lies not in conspiratorial intent but in institutional logic.

First, brand protection. The BBC survives on its reputation for fairness. Facing Trump, that instinct tilts toward strong narratives that portray him as dangerous. A producer may feel justified in tightening an edit to make the point land — crossing into distortion.

Facing Palestinians, brand protection means avoiding the appearance of being “anti-Israel.” British institutions live under the shadow of accusations of antisemitism; pressure from Israeli officials and lobby groups is intense. The easiest way to avoid those accusations is to ensure Palestinians are never given too much unfiltered narrative space.

Second, dependence on official sources. In U.S. politics, the BBC leans on establishment voices that often view Trump with hostility. In Palestine, the imbalance is extreme: Israel controls access, movement, and the conditions under which foreign journalists can report. Israeli spokespeople are always available; Palestinian journalists are killed, arrested, or discredited. Thus Israeli voices become “authoritative,” Palestinian voices “unverified.”

Third, the BBC inherits a colonial epistemology. Institutions born in empire trust states, armies, diplomats, Western-educated elites — and distrust rebels, colonized peoples, and those who speak from the margins. Trump is framed as a destabilizing populist; Palestinians are framed as emotional or partisan when narrating their own suffering. The underlying logic is the same: trust flows upward.

Fourth, fear of complaint. Complaints from Trump supporters are politically manageable. Complaints from pro-Israel groups can damage the BBC’s institutional standing. Thus the discrepancy: boldness in covering Trump, extreme caution in covering Palestine.

Finally, narrative simplicity. Trump fits a ready-made story: the demagogue. Israel–Palestine is complex but gets flattened into a convenient template: two sides, endless conflict, ancient grievance. Occupation, apartheid, and ethnic cleansing get edited out.

The BBC’s misediting of Trump is, in this sense, the domestic echo of its long misframing of Palestine. But the stakes are not equivalent. Trump faces reputational harm. Palestinians have faced erasure, dispossession, and death under a narrative regime that treats our oppression as debatable and our testimony as secondary.

XIII. Conclusion: The Black Box We Always Wanted Opened

More than anything, this essay is my attempt to reclaim narrative clarity. To say: we saw this before you did. We lived inside the consequences of Western media power long before an American president turned it into a scandal. The irony is sharp: Trump now demands what Palestinians were never granted — the opening of the BBC’s black box, the exposure of its editorial machinery.

He wants to know who cut his words, in what order, under whose instruction, and with what rationale. We would like to know who decided Palestinian deaths required extra verification, who chose to call us “militants” instead of resisters, who buried the Balen Report, who refused the Gaza appeal, who scripted “both sides” even as one side’s bodies piled high.

He seeks vindication for a speech. We seek recognition for a history.
If Trump’s case forces the BBC to disclose internal emails, cutting notes, and editorial chains of command, then for one moment our struggles intersect — not because we share politics, but because the mechanism that harmed us is now harming him. Should those documents emerge, perhaps more people will finally approach the BBC not with automatic trust but with informed scrutiny.

What Trump calls defamation, Palestinians have lived as erasure. If this moment of institutional crisis leads even a few more people to question the BBC’s inherited authority, then perhaps some measure of truth may emerge from a lawsuit never filed with us in mind.

Rima Najjar is a Palestinian whose father’s side of the family comes from the forcibly depopulated village of Lifta on the western outskirts of Jerusalem and whose mother’s side of the family is from Ijzim, south of Haifa.

15 November 2025

Source: countercurrents.org

The Interrogation of Richard Falk: When Speaking Truth Becomes a “National Security Threat”

By Rima Najjar

Author’s Note: I wrote this essay to show what really happened when Richard Falk and Hilal Elver were detained at the Canadian border — and to explore what it reveals about power, accountability, and the fight to speak truth to authority.

Introduction: Two Scholars Detained, A Truth Confronted

Richard Falk has spent the better part of a century inside the world’s most serious rooms: the United Nations, the International Court of Justice, the international legal tribunals where the language of war, occupation, and human rights is hammered into shape.

At 95, he carries his papers in neat folders and moves with the slow care of a man who has spent a lifetime thinking rather than rushing. His partner, Hilal Elver — a distinguished scholar and former UN Special Rapporteur on the Right to Food — is no more threatening than he is.

Yet when they stepped off their flight at Toronto Pearson Airport, on their way to Ottawa to speak about Gaza, they were taken aside, escorted down a narrow hallway, and placed in a brightly lit secondary inspection room.

The border agents told them they had been detained because they posed a “national security threat to Canada.”

Even as the Tribunal they were heading to in Ottawa gathered evidence and testimony, the state sought to preempt its impact at the very border. What followed was an interrogation of Falk and Elver that revealed a troubling conflation of Canada’s national security with ideological alignment to Israel.

The questions came one after another, circling obsessively around the same forbidden center:

“What exactly will you be saying about Israel in Ottawa?”

“Why did your UN reports criticize Israeli military actions?”

“Have you been in contact with Palestinian organizations?”

“What is your position on the war in Gaza?”

“Who invited you to this Tribunal, and why?”

The line of questioning was so singularly focused on defending Israeli policy that it betrayed a fundamental confusion of national interests. The agents wanted nothing about Canada — not a single question about contraband, immigration status, visas, residency, or criminal history.

Everything was about Israel.

Halfway through the four-hour ordeal, the absurdity sharpened into recognition: nothing Falk or Elver had ever written posed any threat to Canada. But everything they had documented about Israeli conduct — settlement expansion, blockade, collective punishment, starvation — posed a threat to Israel’s political security, and therefore, in the logic that now governs Canadian institutions, to Canada itself.

In that moment, the interrogation ceased to be absurd.

It became coherent — chillingly so.

Canada had collapsed the boundary between its own national security and Israel’s political narrative — the border itself enforcing it.

This transformation did not happen overnight. It is the product of a political logic constructed over decades.

How Political Loyalty Becomes a Matter of National Security

First, criticism of Israel has been steadily recast as a security issue, rather than a political disagreement. Organizations such as CIJA, B’nai Brith, and the Friends of Simon Wiesenthal Center — which explicitly identify as Jewish and advocate for the preservation of Israel as an apartheid Jewish state — have spent years briefing Canadian politicians, police, and security agencies with the claim that Palestinian solidarity, criticism of Israeli occupation, or support for boycotts constitutes “extremism” or “potential radicalization.”

These same zionist organizations have shaped Canadian security discourse in ways that conflate Palestinian advocacy with extremism.

Second, Canadian governments have elevated support for Israel from a diplomatic position to a pillar of national identity. Israel is framed as a frontline state in the “war on terror,” a democratic ally in a dangerous world. Once foreign policy is securitized (treated as a national security matter), ordinary political disagreements — like criticizing Israeli policies — are portrayed as destabilizing or threatening to Canada itself, even when they clearly pose no real risk.

Third, Canadian institutions increasingly outsource their concept of “risk” to these advocacy groups. They monitor their cues, amplify their alarms, and follow their frame.

This posture is rooted in a complex blend of geopolitical alignment, domestic political calculations, and a shared settler-colonial history that makes Canada’s political establishment uniquely sensitive to challenges of Israel’s legitimacy.

We have seen this pattern before. The same choreography that silenced a local activist in Vancouver was now being deployed at the national border against a former UN official. The system, it seems, operates the same waywhether the target is a grassroots organizer or an international jurist.

Charlotte Kates: A Domestic Parallel

When Vancouver activist Charlotte Kates praised Palestinian resistance at a rally in 2024, nothing happened immediately. Police did not arrest her, prosecutors did not open a file.

But within hours, B’nai Brith had clipped her speech, declared it a threat, and demanded action. CIJA echoed the alarm. Only then did the Vancouver Police launch a hate-crime investigation, followed by bail conditions barring Kates from attending any rallies at all — a remarkable prior restraint in a country that claims to champion free expression.

The sequence was unmistakable:

  • these Jewish lobby groups declare a threat
  • political pressure mounts
  • security apparatus activates

This is the same choreography that surrounded Falk for over a decade. When he served as UN Special Rapporteur, his reports documenting Israeli violations sparked coordinated denunciations from the same advocacy networks. They repeatedly urged the Canadian government to isolate him, discredit him, or keep him out entirely.

So when Falk arrived in Canada to speak at a Tribunal these groups had already condemned, the border system reacted exactly as it had been trained: it treated him, not as an elderly scholar with a folder of notes, but as an ideological hazard.

The Tribunal: What It Sought, What It Found, Why It Matters

The Ottawa Tribunal on Canadian Responsibility — the event Falk and Elver were traveling to — was a hybrid people’s tribunal, legal inquiry, and moral intervention. Held at the University of Ottawa’s Human Rights Research and Education Centre, it brought together over fifty witnesses: survivors from Gaza, Palestinian legal scholars, Indigenous leaders, international jurists, and Canadian lawyers working on arms exports and sanctions obligations.

The Tribunal stands squarely in the lineage of historic people’s tribunals, translating past lessons into direct scrutiny of Canada’s policies. Its task was explicit: to examine how Canada enables the destruction of Gaza.

Survivors described starvation, displacement, and the annihilation of communities. Experts traced Canadian-made components in Israeli drones and jets. Lawyers detailed Canada’s obligations under the Genocide Convention and its failures to meet them. Indigenous speakers drew parallels between Canada’s own settler-colonial foundations and Israel’s occupation.

Falk articulated the legal framework of third-state responsibility — the duty of one country not to assist in genocide in another. Elver presented evidence of starvation used as a weapon, a clear violation of international humanitarian law.

The Tribunal’s final judgment is still forthcoming. But the record it has produced is already significant: a structured, public, internationally connected archive of Canadian complicity.

And it raises the question that haunts every people’s tribunal:

Do these efforts matter? Or are they symbolic gestures swallowed by the indifference of power?

History answers decisively.

The Legacy of People’s Tribunals

People’s tribunals have long served as moral vanguards ahead of official recognition.

The Russell Tribunal on Vietnam reframed U.S. actions as war crimes — long before mainstream institutions dared to.

The Russell Tribunal on Palestine declared Israeli apartheid in 2011 — ten years before Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International adopted the same framework.

The Tokyo Women’s Tribunal established sexual slavery as a crime against humanity, shaping UN reports and national reparations debates.

The International Monsanto Tribunal influenced the UN’s consideration of ecocide.

The World Tribunal on Iraq created a powerful, lasting historical record that shaped global public opinion.

These tribunals lacked formal authority. But they changed the language, categories, and evidence base through which justice would later be pursued. The Ottawa Tribunal is cut from that lineage.

The Impact of This Tribunal

The Tribunal produced:

  • survivor testimony that cannot be erased,
  • legal analysis that will echo in courtrooms and UN submissions,
  • a public record of Canadian complicity,
  • and an international conversation amplified — ironically — by the state’s attempt to suppress it.

Most Canadians would never have heard of the Tribunal without Falk and Elver’s detention. What the border tried to silence became national news. Their detention provoked a chorus of condemnation that echoed the Tribunal’s own purpose: Canadian Senator Yuen Pau Woo called it “appalling,” Azeezah Kanji called it “outrageous,” and British sociologist Martin Shaw described it as “an extraordinary development in the global repression of the Palestinian cause.” Falk himself identified the core motive: a system designed to “punish those who endeavor to tell the truth.”

The Tribunal cannot stop the bombs over Gaza, but it can stop the silence that makes them possible. It lays the groundwork for future accountability, shifts the moral terrain beneath political actors who rely on public ignorance, and ensures that when the history of Gaza is written, Canada’s role will not be omitted.

But truth does not end with tribunals. What can the average person do in the face of such entrenched power? Not everything — but not nothing. They can refuse the silence that the security-state narrative depends on. They can circulate tribunal testimony, challenge the framing of Palestinian advocacy as extremism, and create spaces — in classrooms, unions, community centers, faith circles, and media — where Canada’s role can no longer hide behind rhetoric. They can support legal efforts pursuing accountability and organizations that monitor the expanding reach of border and security agencies.

They cannot force the state to reveal its operations — but they can make secrecy costly. Falk himself could not prevent his detention, but public outrage ensured the attempt at silencing became a public confession. This is the leverage ordinary people retain: the ability to expose the system’s logic and make complicity visible.

The border could detain Falk, but not his message. It could hold two scholars for hours, but it could not hold back the truth they carried. And it cannot halt the reckoning that emerges when testimony, law, and collective conscience refuse to be dismissed as a “security threat.”

Conclusion: The Real Threat

What happened to Richard Falk and Hilal Elver in that small border room was not a bureaucratic accident. It was a political act. It revealed a system in which dissent about Israel is treated as a security threat, where Palestinian advocacy is pathologized, and where scrutiny of Canada’s own responsibilities is met with hostility.

But the threat they posed was never to Canada.

It was to complacency.

To hypocrisy.

To the comfort of not knowing.

To the political immunity that protects powerful states from accountability.

In the end, the greatest threat to power is not two distinguished scholars. It is the truth they carry — and the courage of those willing to hear it. The border could hold them for hours, but it could not contain the reckoning their testimony will demand — or the truth that ordinary people can no longer ignore.

*

Rima Najjar is a Palestinian whose father’s side of the family comes from the forcibly depopulated village of Lifta on the western outskirts of Jerusalem and whose mother’s side of the family is from Ijzim, south of Haifa.

17 November 2025

Source: globalresearch.ca

MAGA Donald Trump “Comes to the Rescue of Christians” in Nigeria? Fueling Political and Social Divisions in the Number One Oil Economy in Africa

By Ahmed Adel

After classifying Nigeria as a “disgraced country,” US President Donald Trump said on November 1 that American troops will attack the African country if the killing of Christians by Islamic terrorists does not end.

Trump’s threat comes after long lobbying from US Congressman Riley Moore, who alleged on October 31 that there was an “alarming and ongoing persecution of Christians” in the West African country, with 7,000 Christians killed in 2025 alone, an average of 35 a day.

Behind Trump’s apparent Christian altruism, the threat to intervene seeks to defend US interests in West Africa.

It is no coincidence that Venezuela and Nigeria, two countries with very significant oil reserves, are currently prime targets of the Trump administration. In the case of Nigeria, it is the largest oil producer in Africa, and an important energy route for several countries.

Of significance, the Nigerian government has embraced multipolarity. Nigeria is now a member of BRICS

Nigeria is the largest oil and gas producer in Africa and ranks as the sixth largest producer globally.

The country has proven oil reserves estimated between 16 and 37.5 billion barrels, with a production capacity of approximately 2.19 million barrels per day.

In some regions of Nigeria, particularly in the northeast of the country, where approximately 53% of the population is Muslim and 45% Christian, extremist Islamic terrorist groups are carrying out kidnappings and attacks against Christians. Although Nigerian President Bola Tinubo is Muslim and married to a Christian woman, demonstrating that Nigeria is mostly a harmonious society, this is not extended to the northeast region.

It must be questioned why Trump granted facilitated entry to the US for Afrikaners from South Africa, after accusing the South African government of persecution, but did not do the same for the Christians persecuted in Nigeria.

When Trump says that military intervention is necessary in Nigeria to combat terrorism and protect Christians, he is fueling political, social, and cultural traumas in Nigerian society, with the very aim of fracturing the country. Historically, there has been a dispute between the populations of the mostly Islamic north and mostly Christian south for power in Nigeria, and by threatening to intervene, the US could shatter delicate sectarian lines, just as happened in Iraq after Saddam Hussein was toppled.

Nigeria is the most populous country in Africa, with approximately 230 million inhabitants, and its location on the Gulf of Guinea is strategically important for commerce and geopolitics. The African country has become even more relevant to Washington following the withdrawal of American troops from Niger, which borders Nigeria’s north, and the loss of influence in the Sahel region due to revolutionary processes in Mali, Burkina Faso, and Niger.

Furthermore, the threat to intervene in Nigeria comes amid a power struggle with China and Russia for influence in Africa.

As Africa’s most populous nation and its largest economy, Nigeria’s official membership of BRICS was confirmed on January 17, 2025, by the president of Brazil, coinciding with Trump’s Second accession to the presidency of the U.S on January 20, 2025.

In the case of China, the main exporter to Nigeria, major infrastructure investments demonstrate its interest in West Africa. The US encirclement of Nigeria also aims to disrupt energy supplies to China and facilitate those to the US, which receives a large portion of its energy subsidized and sourced from countries with an American presence, such as Iraq.

By targeting Nigeria, the US is also seeking to get back at Russia, which has been setting oil prices in conjunction with Saudi Arabia since 2020. Trump realizes he has to try to put an end to this, and in October, he sanctioned two major Russian oil companies.

If the US threat against Nigeria materializes, the impact on the Nigerian population would be catastrophic and lead to increased poverty, hunger, and conflict between ethnic groups. There has not been a US military intervention that has had positive results for the country and the region.

At the same time, US intervention would further destabilize countries bordering Nigeria and exacerbate malnutrition and famine in West Africa. However, the Nigerian government is pro-Western and implements policies aligned with the World Bank and the IMF. Tinubo also stated that he would gladly accept US assistance in combating extremist Islamic groups in the country, provided that its territorial integrity was respected.

Trump’s intimidation points to an attempt to secure a favorable agreement that would guarantee Nigeria’s continued dependence on imports of liquid and refined petroleum products, such as gasoline, from the US. Another objective of the threat could be a tariff exemption for US oil companies to invest in deepwater exploration in Nigeria, giving them a competitive advantage over their rivals.

From Nigeria’s perspective, given relations with Washington, it does not seem that Tinubu will launch a nationalist outcry and try to oppose the US. A large portion of Nigerian oil is exported to the US and Europe, and oil accounts for 70% to 80% of the country’s budget.

The process of achieving greater independence, therefore, requires time and partnerships with BRICS. But, with the current local elite linked to the US and Europe, there is resistance to alternatives since the existing system must continue to maintain the economic and political power of this minority. Nigeria’s status as a BRICS partner signals an opportunity for such a change and reorganization of the country.

*
Ahmed Adel is a Cairo-based geopolitics and political economy researcher. He is a regular contributor to Global Research.

13 November 2025

Source: globalresearch.ca