Just International

Who Is Ready to Die for Trump’s Gaza Plan? So Far, Nobody

By Medea Benjamin and Nicolas J. S. Davies

On November 17th, 2025, the UN Security Council passed a resolution to endorse President Trump’s plan for Gaza, including a transitional government headed by Trump himself and an International Stabilization Force (ISF) that is expected, among other tasks, to disarm Hamas, a task that Israel has failed to do through two years of genocide and mass destruction.

The ISF will be tasked with securing the borders in a way that confines Palestinians, stabilizing Gaza’s security environment by suppressing resistance, demilitarizing Gaza while leaving the Israeli regime untouched, and training the Palestinian police to control the population. Yes, the force is also mandated to “protect civilians” and assist humanitarian aid. But under U.S. supervision, can anyone honestly expect it to restrain Israel when Israel simply refuses to comply—as we see with the current so-called “ceasefire”?

Hamas and other factions in Gaza have issued a joint statement that unequivocally rejects Trump’s plan and the Security Council resolution, saying it “will turn into a type of imposed guardianship or administration – reproducing a reality that restricts the Palestinian people’s right to self-determination and to managing their own affairs.”

As for the foreign military force, the Hamas statement says, “Assigning the international force with tasks and roles inside the Gaza Strip, including disarming the resistance, strips it of its neutrality, and turns it into a party to the conflict in favor of the occupation.”

The joint statement reserves its strongest condemnation for the Arab rulers who support Trump’s plan, calling their support “a form of deep international partnership in the war of extermination waged by the occupation against our people.”

Trump has claimed that all sides agreed to his peace plan, but Hamas only agreed to the first stage of it, which involved returning the remaining Israeli prisoners in Gaza to Israel under a permanent ceasefire and resumption of humanitarian aid that Israel has still not complied with.

Hamas always said clearly that it has no authority to negotiate over other parts of Trump’s plan, since they involve the future government of all of Palestine and require the input of many different groups in Gaza and the other occupied territories. Hamas said it would only disarm once a Palestinian state is fully established, at which time it will hand over its weapons to the new armed forces of the state of Palestine.

In October, a number of countries told U.S. officials that they would consider sending their troops to participate in the proposed International Stabilization Force in Gaza. They included Egypt, Indonesia, Azerbaijan, Turkey, Malaysia and Pakistan, as well as Australia, Canada and Cyprus.

On the other hand, Jordan, Qatar and Saudi Arabia have all rejected sending troops to join the ISF. Azerbaijan has said it could only send troops once all fighting has ended, and Egypt has flip-flopped on taking part. As it became clear that Trump and his “peace board” might order the ISF to use force to disarm Hamas fighters, the UAE said its forces would not take part either.

In fact, not a single country has so far committed to join the force, while Israel has said it would not allow Turkish forces to enter Gaza, and claims the right to approve or refuse any country’s participation. Israel has also been escalating its ceasefire violations since the Security Council resolution was passed, a sure way to deter countries from joining the ISF.

Hamas and the resistance groups are not alone in rejecting Trump’s plan. Al Jazeera asked people in Gaza City for comments, and they were just as critical. “I completely reject this decision,” said Moamen Abdul-Malek. “Our people … are able to rule ourselves. We don’t need forces from Arab or foreign countries to rule us. We are the people of this country, and we will bear responsibility for it.”

Another man in Gaza City told Al Jazeera that the plan violates the Palestinians’ right to armed resistance. “It would strip the resistance of its weapons,” said Mohammed Hamdan, “despite the fact that resistance is a legitimate right of peoples under occupation.”

And Sanaa Mahmoud Kaheel said she doesn’t trust Trump, who previously threatened to ethnically cleanse Gaza and steal its land to build a U.S.-Israeli beach resort. “Things will be unclear with the international forces, and we do not know what might happen tomorrow or the day after tomorrow with them being in Gaza,” she said. “This could help Trump tighten his grip on Gaza and work towards establishing a ‘riviera’ there, as he himself said before. Nothing is guaranteed.”

The Palestine Institute for Public Diplomacy (PIPD), based in Al-Bireh in the West Bank, rejects the false choice that the United States has presented to the world: “either accept their plan with all its flaws and non-guarantees, or accept going back to a live-streamed genocide.”

Instead, PIPD and the global Palestinian solidarity movement are working to end the Israeli occupation and the impunity that sustains it, and to hold Israel accountable for its illegal occupation and crimes against humanity. On its Global Accountability Map, PIPD charts the progress of “concrete and approved actions by governments, local authorities, civil society, the private sector, courts and academia to hold Israeli colonial entities and interests accountable.”

More and more of the world is supporting the Palestinian struggle and the movement to hold Israel accountable for its decades of illegal occupation and ever-escalating international crimes. While the U.S. uses its veto to corrupt the UN Security Council, people and governments have come together to hold Israel accountable in the UN General Assembly, the International Court of Justice (ICJ) and the International Criminal Court (ICC).

Instead of passively accepting subservience to the Security Council, the General Assembly asked the ICJ to rule on the legality of the Israeli occupation and its legal consequences, and the ICJ ruled in 2024 that the occupation is illegal and must therefore be ended as quickly as possible.

Instead of making further demands on the occupation’s long-suffering victims, as the U.S.-controlled Security Council does in its Trump plan resolution, the ICJ and the General Assembly have flipped the U.S. script to make demands on the perpetrator, Israel, including the demand, in September 2024, that Israel must end the occupation within a year.

The ICJ issued a new ruling on October 22, 2025, that Israel must allow all humanitarian aid into Gaza and allow UNRWA (UN Relief & Works Agency) to reenter Gaza and do its work there without obstruction.

The UN General Assembly can and should respond to Israel’s failure to comply with any of these rulings and resolutions by meeting in an Emergency Special Session to organize a UN-backed arms embargo, trade boycott and other steps to enforce them, until Israel ends its illegal occupation and starts complying with international law and UN resolutions.

More and more countries are cutting trade and military ties with Israel, and 157 countries now recognize Palestine as an independent nation with the same rights as others. People in many countries are rising up to protest Israel’s genocide and occupation, and to boycott Israeli products and companies that are complicit in its crimes.

The Israeli and U.S. governments are feeling the pinch. If the world was passively accepting Israel’s genocide in Gaza, Trump would not have felt compelled to conjure up his fake peace plan. It is a victory for people of conscience everywhere that he felt he had to try to change the narrative. So this is not the time to give up on the real solutions to this crisis: justice and freedom for Palestine, and accountability for Israel.

We shall see in the coming days whether the corrupt governments that hope to profit from the genocide in Gaza will send their own troops to fight the Palestinian Resistance and perpetuate the Israeli occupation. Are they really ready to sacrifice their own young people’s blood to mix with the blood of innocent Palestinians in the rubble of Gaza?

We hope that they will instead make common cause with the people of Gaza and insist that Israel must comply with the demands of the ICJ and the UN General Assembly and immediately end its obscene, decades-long, illegal occupation of Palestine.

Medea Benjamin and Nicolas J. S. Davies are the authors of War In Ukraine: Making Sense of a Senseless Conflict, now in a revised, updated 2nd edition.

21 November 2025

Source: countercurrents.org

Israel Expands the “Yellow Zone” in Gaza by 300 Meters as Families Remain Trapped

By Quds News Network

Gaza (QNN)- Israel expanded the so-called “yellow zone” in eastern Gaza by more than 300 meters on Wednesday. The expansion came quietly and without warning. Israeli tanks entered the area and trapped dozens of families who live in the eastern neighborhoods of Gaza City.

Residents say tanks blocked their exit routes in Al-Shaaf, Al-Nazzaz, and Baghdad streets. The army then pushed the yellow concrete markers deeper into Gaza’s neighborhoods. The move widened the zone that Israel controls under the Trump plan.

The fate of many trapped families remains unknown. Heavy shelling hit the area during and after the expansion. Local sources say the situation grows more dangerous by the hour.

The Government Media Office says Israeli forces feel emboldened. “The silence of the mediators and guarantors encourages Israel to continue these crimes and violations of the ceasefire,” the office said in a statement.

This followed a deadly attack on Gaza City and Khan Younis yesterdayz That attack killed 34 Palestinians, including at least 17 children and women. The victims included a wiped-out family, a father and his three children, and several couples. Dozens more suffered injuries, many in critical condition.

The Government Media Office called the latest incursion a “blatant violation” of the ceasefire. It says Israel has carried out nearly 400 violations since the ceasefire began. These attacks killed more than 300 Palestinians and injured hundreds more.

Officials warn that the ongoing violations worsen the humanitarian crisis. Gaza’s remaining livable areas keep shrinking as Israeli forces expand control zones and carry out new strikes. Meanwhile, the US continues to focus on disarming resistance factions.

The statement sharply criticizes the mediators and guarantors of the ceasefire. It says their silence allows Israel to intensify its actions.

The office demanded stronger action from all parties involved in the agreement. It specifically called on US President Donald Trump to “do his duty” and force Israel to respect the ceasefire and humanitarian protocol.

Officials say the world must stop ignoring Israel’s actions. They warn that the humanitarian fallout will grow unless mediators intervene now.

21 November 2025

Source: countercurrents.org

Power, Not Law, Will Free Palestine: Why Rights Aren’t Enough

By Rima Najjar

The U.S. proposal confirms that Palestinians have been trapped in a system intentionally designed to keep their rights suspended.

Author’s Note
For decades, the Palestinian struggle has been fought in the language of international law and rights. The failure of this approach, exposed by recent U.S. proposals, reveals a hard truth: only a fundamental shift in power can end colonial domination.

Introduction: The Failure of a Rights-Based System

For more than seven decades, the Palestinian struggle has been framed as a quest for rights — rights to self-determination, equality, return, and dignity. Yet every major effort to secure these rights, whether through diplomacy, negotiation, or international adjudication, has failed.

The failure was never due to ambiguity in the rights themselves. It stems from a deeper structural reality: the international system was not built to enforce rights when the violator is protected by a superpower.

The United States’ recent proposal at the UN, which openly substitutes a bespoke “parallel rules-based order” for established international law, is merely the latest and clearest proof. It is so flagrantly inconsistent with existing legal opinions — from the ICJ’s 2004 Advisory Opinion to the 2024 genocide proceedings — that it lays bare a system where law is aspirational, power is operative, and Palestinian rights exist only on paper.

What Palestinians confront today is a system functioning exactly as intended: one that elevates geopolitical interest over legal obligation and protects a century of engineered Israeli exceptionalism.
 — -

A Century of Constructed Exceptionalism

The present crisis cannot be understood without tracing the century-long architecture that made Israel exempt from the rules governing every other colonial formation of the modern era. Unlike most cases of settler colonialism, Zionist settlement in Palestine was not a rogue enterprise. It was internationally sponsored from the beginning.

  • 1917 The Balfour Declaration: A colonial empire pledged a “Jewish national home” in a land where Jews constituted roughly 6% of the population, while explicitly denying political rights to the indigenous Christian and Moslem Arab majority.
  • The Mandate Era: The League of Nations transformed this pledge into binding international policy, embedding an ethnonational project into the legal framework of the Mandate itself.
  • 1948 and its Aftermath: As hundreds of thousands of Palestinians were expelled, Western powers fast-tracked Israel’s admission to the United Nations, while Palestinian refugees — whose dispossession was central to Israel’s creation — were left in political limbo.
  • Post-1967: The United States consolidated this exceptionalism. Through military aid, diplomatic protection, and veto power at the Security Council, Washington created what can only be called a shield of structural impunity, ensuring Israel remained exempt from the constraints applied to every other occupying power.

Israel’s exceptionalism is not the byproduct of conflict. It is the outcome of uninterrupted external sponsorship — colonial, international, and then American — over the course of an entire century. This scaffolding has allowed Israel to operate outside the disciplinary mechanisms the international system applies elsewhere, from sanctions to accountability to basic compliance with humanitarian law.

Why Rights Fail Without Power

International law assumes something that has never existed in the Palestinian case: the ability to impose consequences on a state that violates it. Rights presuppose enforcement; without power behind them and with power against them, they become rhetorical.

Throughout the 20th century, rights-based liberation movements only prevailed when global and regional power shifted against the oppressor. The pattern is unmistakable:

  • Algeria International Isolation Made Occupation Costly
     France’s war in Algeria became a global scandal as reports of torture, mass internment, and scorched-earth tactics circulated widely. The United Nations condemned the occupation repeatedly, and newly independent states across Africa and Asia rallied against France. By the early 1960s, the political and economic cost of holding Algeria exceeded its strategic value.

Algeria’s rights were recognized only once France’s power advantage collapsed under international and internal pressure.

  • Kenya Britain’s Detention Regime Became Unsustainable
     The exposure of Britain’s detention camps — where tens of thousands of Kenyans were subjected to forced labor, starvation, and torture — provoked intense international criticism. Journalists, legal advocates, and international organizations made the abuses impossible to deny. As Britain’s global empire weakened and anti-colonial sentiment surged worldwide, maintaining the detention regime became politically toxic.

Kenyan rights were enforced only when Britain could no longer defend the cost of repression.

  • South Africa Sanctions Crippled the Apartheid State
     Decades of popular resistance inside South Africa converged with a global movement that imposed real material penalties: arms embargoes, cultural and academic boycotts, divestment campaigns, and eventually coordinated state sanctions. The loss of access to financial markets and international legitimacy made apartheid unsustainable.

South Africans won not because apartheid was morally indefensible though it was but because global and economic pressure made it unviable.

In each of these cases, rights became enforceable only when power shifted against the colonial or racial regime. The oppressor changed course not because it was persuaded by legal principles, but because continuing to violate those principles became more costly than compliance.

Israel has never encountered this dynamic. For over half a century, the United States has systematically neutralized every form of potential pressure — diplomatic, legal, economic — ensuring that Israel faces none of the consequences that forced France, Britain, or South Africa to yield.

This is the essence of geopolitical immunity:
 a condition in which a state can violate international law openly because its superpower sponsor guarantees that no meaningful enforcement will follow.

This is why a rights-based approach collapses in the Palestinian case. It relies on a form of leverage that Palestinians do not possess and that the international system refuses to deploy. Under such conditions, rights do not function as rights; they remain perpetually deferred promises, acknowledged in theory and denied in practice.
 — -

The Palestinian Authority’s Lost Gamble

The Palestinian Authority (PA) spent the last decade pursuing one of the most comprehensive rights-based strategies in modern diplomatic history. It sought to transform the asymmetry of power into a battle of legal principles, believing that if it could codify Palestinian rights clearly enough, the international system would eventually enforce them.

It was an extraordinary effort:

  • Accession to UN conventions and treaties, positioning Palestine as a state actor with standing in global institutions.
  • Joining the International Criminal Court (ICC) to pursue accountability for Israeli war crimes and settlement expansion.
  • Requesting ICJ advisory opinions to reaffirm the illegality of occupation and apartheid structures.
  • Producing thousands of pages of legal documentation, mapping violations with meticulous precision.

The PA executed this strategy with rigor and discipline.
But it was a legal strategy operating in a system structurally unwilling to enforce the law when it comes to Israel.

The results speak for themselves:

  • The ICJ declared Israel’s wall illegal in 2004; it still stands, expanded and fortified.
  • The ICC opened investigations into war crimes; not a single Israeli official has been arrested, sanctioned, or restricted in travel.
  • Dozens of UN resolutions affirmed Palestinian rights; none changed conditions on the ground.

The problem was not the PA’s legal work. It was the basic design of the international order: a system where the United States vetoes enforcement, shields Israel from consequences, and converts Palestinian legal gains into symbolic victories with no material effect.

Having exhausted this path, the PA is now moving toward something even more damaging: alignment with U.S. proposals that explicitly undermine the very rights it fought to enshrine.

This shift signals not only exhaustion but a profound misreading of the moment. Instead of exposing the system’s hypocrisy, the PA is validating it — allowing the United States to present its parallel “rules-based order” as a legitimate alternative to international law, even as it guts Palestinian collective rights.
 — -

The Spectacle of Surrender: Aligning with the Oppressor

Having exhausted the rights-based track it spent three decades defending, the PA is now drifting toward something even more damaging: alignment with U.S. proposals that explicitly undermine the very rights it once fought to enshrine.

This turn reflects not strategy but structural exhaustion. With no diplomatic victories to show, shrinking domestic legitimacy, and the collapse of Oslo’s political horizon, the PA is clinging to any process — however hollow — that signals continued relevance.

Yet this move is also the product of deep institutional dependency: U.S. security financing, diplomatic protection, and regional pressure have created a system in which the PA’s very survival is contingent on compliance with Washington’s agenda. In this architecture, refusal becomes almost unthinkable.

The result is a third and even more consequential failure: a profound misreading of the moment. At a time when U.S. double standards are more exposed than ever — legally, morally, and geopolitically — the PA is validating them, allowing Washington to present its parallel “rules-based order” as a legitimate alternative to international law even as it guts Palestinian collective rights. Far from challenging the system’s hypocrisy, the PA is now helping to stabilize it.

Worse, the PA’s acquiescence has triggered a familiar regional cascade. Arab governments, long seeking a pretext to deepen security and economic ties with Israel, now point to the PA’s position as political cover. What follows is a choreography the Arab world has witnessed repeatedly: Arab normalization at Palestinian expense.

This pattern is not new. It is woven into the political history of the region.

  • Egypt at Camp David (1978):
    Egypt — militarily the strongest Arab state — secured the return of Sinai but shattered Arab diplomatic unity. By removing Egypt from the military balance, Camp David allowed Israel to act with greater impunity in Lebanon, the West Bank, and Gaza.

Result: Palestine was sidelined so Egypt could recover territory and consolidate its alliance with Washington.

  • Jordan at Wadi Araba (1994):
     Jordan formalized a peace that already existed de facto, gaining economic aid and security coordination. But in the treaty, Amman recognized Israeli water allocations and border arrangements while leaving the Palestinian question unresolved.

Result: Jordan’s normalization strengthened its state interests while Palestinian issues were deferred.

  • The Arab Peace Initiative (2002):
     A sweeping collective offer of normalization in exchange for full Israeli withdrawal. But the API was non-binding and lacked enforcement mechanisms, reducing it to a diplomatic gesture. Israel rejected it without consequence and continued expanding settlements.

Result: Arab leverage was surrendered rhetorically with no cost imposed on Israel.

  • The Abraham Accords (2020):
     The UAE, Bahrain, Morocco, and Sudan normalized relations with Israel absent any progress on Palestinian rights. It was the first time Arab states openly abandoned the principle that peace depended on ending occupation.

Result: Israel realized it could acquire regional legitimacy while deepening apartheid.

The same structure underlies each case: authoritarian regimes trading the Palestinian cause for state interests, U.S. favor, and internal regime security — while Israel accumulates legitimacy without conceding anything.

Today’s alignment with the new U.S. proposal is simply the latest iteration. The difference is that it occurs during a moment of immense Palestinian suffering and unprecedented global mobilization. Instead of harnessing this shift in international consciousness, the PA and its Arab allies are reinforcing a system designed to contain, not resolve, the Palestinian question.

What emerges is a political theater of surrender — a tableau in which the actors with the least democratic legitimacy endorse the plan most damaging to Palestinian national aspirations.
 — -

The U.S. Vision: Permanent Subjugation, Not Sovereignty

For Palestinians, the content of the U.S. proposal is devastatingly clear. It does not offer sovereignty, equality, or decolonization. It does not even gesture toward ending occupation. Instead, it creates the blueprint for a permanent political suspension — a system that resembles civilian administration on the surface but functions as an extension of military rule.

The design has familiar components:

  • Foreign oversight with Israeli veto power:
    Any Palestinian governing body would be conditional, monitored, and subject to Israeli approval. Sovereignty becomes an administrative privilege, not a right.
  • An endless “transition period”:
    A permanent waiting room where Palestinians are told they must prove their readiness for freedoms already guaranteed under international law.
  • Deepened securitization of Palestinian identity:
     Political expression is recast as extremism; collective memory is treated as a security threat; the national cause is reframed as a “governance problem.”

Under this arrangement, even the most basic acts of identity become suspect.
 Waving a flag is treated as provocation.
 Memorializing the Nakba is labeled incitement.
 Demands for equality are framed as existential threats to “stability.”

The logic is unmistakable: to redefine Palestinian political life as a pathology — something to be managed, reformed, corrected — rather than as a legitimate struggle for freedom.

This bureaucratic vocabulary of “capacity-building,” “reform,” and “security coordination” functions as a substitute for justice. It trains Palestinians to administer their own subordination while presenting the arrangement to the world as technocratic reform.

And it is not new. What the Trump proposal formalizes is merely the latest iteration of a logic built into Oslo itself — a framework premised on the deferral of Palestinian rights. Oslo postponed all core questions of sovereignty — Jerusalem, refugees, borders, settlements — for an initial five-year “interim period,” a period that was then extended, reinterpreted, and ultimately transformed into a permanent political holding cell.
 What Trump is doing is not original; it is the completion and hardening of a structure designed, from the beginning, to prevent final resolution.

The U.S. vision does not resolve the conflict.
It institutionalizes non-sovereignty, keeping Palestinians politically suspended precisely because their true representatives — those rooted in popular struggle — remain structurally excluded from the diplomatic arena.

Because those resisting Israeli domination have no recognized international channel through which to articulate Palestinian national demands, their exclusion is misread as consent.
 -

A Decolonial Horizon: Equality as a Historical Imperative

At this stage of the conflict, it is misleading to speak of “Palestinian demands.” There is no unified national body capable of articulating them, and those who represent the living core of resistance — popular committees, youth networks, prisoners’ movements, diaspora organizations — are excluded from diplomacy by design.

Yet the absence of a formal representative does not mean the absence of a political horizon. The direction of history is legible even when its agents are fragmented: the unavoidable movement toward a single, decolonized political order in the space between the river and the sea.

As Hegel argued, contradiction is the engine of historical transformation — conflict and incompatible claims do not stall progress; they drive it. The reality in Palestine/Israel is doing just that: propelling all actors, willingly or not, toward a single conclusion.

Two states are no longer viable — not politically, not demographically, not territorially, not morally.
The structure on the ground has already become a single polity; the only question is whether this polity will remain an apartheid state or transform into a secular democratic one.

This is the logical trajectory of a situation in which:

  • the land is irreversibly integrated,
  • populations are interdependent,
  • sovereignty has been hollowed out by occupation,
  • and the global legitimacy of ethnonational rule is collapsing.

Historical precedents follow the same arc: once a territory is unified by force — Algeria, South Africa, Zimbabwe/Rhodesia, Namibia — the eventual outcome is either permanent domination or the emergence of a shared political framework grounded in equality.

Palestine/Israel is no exception.
The apartheid model cannot stabilize itself without escalating repression indefinitely. The partition model cannot be resurrected without reversing 700,000 settlers and decades of annexation. The autonomous bantustan model offered by the U.S. cannot produce legitimacy or lasting order.

That leaves only one configuration that meets both the moral requirements of justice and the material conditions already in place: a single, democratic state with equal citizenship for all its people.

This vision is not an ideological blueprint.
It is the endpoint toward which the contradictions of the present system push all parties — even those resisting it.

It is a historical imperative shaped not by programmatic demands but by the internal logic of the conflict itself.
 — -

Conclusion: From Arguing Rights to Building Power

If the last century has shown anything, it is that arguments — even correct ones — do not liberate the oppressed. Rights do not enforce themselves, and law does not constrain those shielded by superior force. A rights-based approach failed not because Palestinians lacked legal clarity, but because the international system withheld the only thing that ever makes rights real: power.

Every anti-colonial movement that succeeded did so by shifting the balance of forces — through mass mobilization, international realignment, economic pressure, and the erosion of the oppressor’s capacity to maintain domination. In each case, law followed power, not the reverse.

The same dynamic governs Palestine today.
Palestinians already possess important sources of latent power:
 a mass civil society, global solidarity unprecedented in scope, demographic centrality within the land, and a moral legitimacy reinforced — not weakened — by decades of systematic denial. What they lack is not rights or resolve, but a unified political structure capable of converting moral force into political agency.

This absence has allowed the world to treat Palestinian rights as optional and Palestinian demands as quietist or nonexistent. Meanwhile, the deeper logic of history continues to unfold. Just as Hegel argued that contradiction forces political evolution, the contradictions of the present — one land, two legal systems; sovereignty without territory; negotiations without negotiators — propel the conflict toward its only rational endpoint: a single political community based on equality.

This is not a blueprint, nor a factional platform.
It is the conclusion toward which the material and moral conditions of the conflict push all actors, regardless of intention. The question is not whether Palestinians “demand” this trajectory — formal institutions are too contained for such demands — but whether the world will continue upholding a system designed to make Palestinian rights permanently unenforceable.

That choice lies not only with states but with peoples.
And Palestinians, despite dispossession, siege, fragmentation, and abandonment, have never ceased to constitute themselves as a political people — never ceased to resist, to organize, to remember, and to imagine freedom.

To expect them to abandon that now is not only unrealistic.
 It is ahistorical.

Power not law will bring that horizon into being.

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.

18 November 2025

Source: countercurrents.org

UN Approves US Plan, Paves Way for American Control Over Gaza and Delays Palestinian Statehood

By Quds News Network

New York (QNN)- The UN Security Council approved a US-sponsored resolution on Gaza, with 13 votes in favor. Russia and China abstained.

The resolution advances the second phase of President Donald Trump’s Gaza plan. It calls for a multinational force and outlines a path toward Palestinian statehood, but provides no timeline or guarantees.

Palestinian factions had warned against the plan. In a Sunday statement, they said the resolution threatens Palestinian national authority. The draft, they added, “shifts Gaza’s administration and reconstruction to an international body with broad powers, stripping Palestinians of their right to manage their own affairs.”

Israeli media reported that the multinational force would operate alongside Israel and Egypt. The plan also envisions a Palestinian police force in Gaza, trained and tested to secure borders.

Factions emphasized that all humanitarian efforts must be led by Palestinian institutions under UN supervision. They warned that aid could become a political tool, used to pressure Palestinians and reshape Gaza under foreign control. The plan sidesteps UNRWA’s role in Gaza reconstruction.

The draft also calls for an international fund, managed by donor countries, to rebuild Gaza. It does not mention a role for UNRWA, which Palestinian factions say must remain as an international witness to refugee rights.

Factions strongly rejected any clauses related to disarming Gaza or limiting Palestinian resistance. They insisted that weapons issues remain a national matter linked to ending occupation, establishing a Palestinian state, and achieving self-determination.

Analysts say the plan effectively legitimizes US oversight. The International Stability Force and the proposed Peace Council will operate under US authority. The Security Council will only receive biannual reports. The draft ties Israel’s withdrawal from Gaza to security stability, keeping the Israeli army as a regional security actor.

The resolution poses serious risks:

  • Gaza could remain under international oversight for years.
  • Palestinian resistance could be disarmed.
  • The Palestinian Authority could return under external conditions.
  • Palestinian statehood could be delayed indefinitely.

Eight Arab and Islamic states publicly supported the resolution, calling it a step toward Palestinian self-determination.

The resolution comes after two years of Israeli genocide that killed over 69,000 Palestinians, injured more than 170,000, and destroyed 90% of Gaza’s civilian infrastructure.

“The resolution imposes an international guardianship mechanism on the Gaza Strip, which our people and their factions reject,” Hamas said in its statement, issued after the adoption of the resolution.

Hamas said that assigning an international force to disarm groups fighting Israeli occupation in Gaza “strips it of its neutrality, and turns it into a party to the conflict in favour of the occupation”.

It said that any international force “must be deployed only at the borders to separate forces, monitor the ceasefire, and must be fully under UN supervision”, adding that such a force should operate “exclusively in coordination with official Palestinian institutions”.

It rejected the notion of the international force playing a role in disarming groups in Gaza, saying that “resisting the occupation by all means is a legitimate right guaranteed by international laws and conventions”.

The statement called on the international community and the Security Council to instead adopt resolutions that achieve justice for Gaza ”through the actual cessation of the brutal genocidal war on Gaza, reconstruction, ending the occupation, and enabling our people to self-determination and establish their independent state with Jerusalem as its capital”.

Craig Mokhiber, a former senior UN human rights official, has described today’s vote as a “day of shame for the United Nations”.

“Not a single member of the Council had the courage, principle, or respect for international law to vote against this US-Israel colonial outrage,” Mokhiber said in a post on X.

Mokhiber, who was the former director of the New York Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights and left his post in 2023 in protest over the UN’s failure to prevent Israel’s genocide in Gaza, added, ““This proposal has been rejected by Palestinian civil society and factions, and defenders of human rights and international law everywhere,” noting the “struggle for Palestinian freedom will continue”.

Russia and China abstained from the vote, expressing concern over Palestinian participation and the lack of a clear role for the UN in the future of Gaza.

Human rights group Al-Haq also warned that the resolution undermines Palestinians’ right to self-determination and that it authorises the US to establish itself as an occupying power.

18 November 2025

Source: countercurrents.org

Colombia’s Petro – From Liberation at Home to Solidarity with Gaza

By Ranjan Solomon

“When conscience challenges empire, punishment is inevitable. Petro’s defiance is not rebellion – it is moral clarity.”

Colombia’s President Gustavo Petro has become one of the most principled moral voices of our time. His defiance of U.S. hegemony, his insistence on justice for Gaza, and his transformation of Colombia from a battlefield to a peace project have placed him in a league of leaders who speak truth to power at immense personal and political cost.

Petro is not merely a politician; he is a visionary who dares to redefine statecraft around human dignity. In an age when most leaders shrink from confronting global injustice, Petro has chosen the harder path — one rooted in ethics, memory, and solidarity.

Liberation at Home

Before the world came to know him as a defender of Gaza, Petro had already earned his place in history by redefining Colombia’s national priorities. A former guerrilla turned democrat, he understood from experience that peace cannot be built by bullets. His government’s Total Peace policy seeks to end decades of internal conflict through dialogue, social investment, and land reform — shifting the logic of power from repression to reconciliation.

Where previous governments allowed U.S.-imposed anti-drug militarisation to devastate rural livelihoods, Petro took a revolutionary step: replacing the “war on drugs” with community-led crop substitution and rural rehabilitation. His model treats farmers not as criminals but as citizens deserving of justice.

The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) acknowledged that under Petro, Colombia has achieved significant reductions in coca cultivation and violence linked to trafficking. His anti-drug policy reclaims sovereignty from U.S. control and restores dignity to peasants long trapped in poverty and criminalisation.

Petro’s Colombia is turning away from dependency — not only on drugs, but on foreign dictates. His domestic reforms, from education and labour rights to ecological sustainability, are built around one conviction: a nation liberated from fear must also liberate others.

Solidarity with Gaza

When the bombs began falling on Gaza, Petro did not speak as a politician calculating risk; he spoke as a human being responding to atrocity. His words — sharp, moral, and uncompromising — shattered the silence of global diplomacy.

“The world cannot remain silent while a genocide unfolds before its eyes,” he declared. “If we must choose between relations with genocide and relations with humanity, we choose humanity.”

True to that conviction, Colombia under Petro became the first major Latin American country to sever diplomatic ties with Israel in May 2024. He denounced the massacre in Gaza as a crime against humanity, invoking the world’s duty to stand with the oppressed.

Petro’s solidarity with Palestine is no political gesture. It springs from his lifelong commitment to liberation — the belief that no nation can be free while others are enslaved. His empathy for Gaza mirrors Colombia’s own journey from violence to peace. Both stories speak of occupied lives yearning for justice, both reveal the brutality of power and the persistence of hope.

U.S. Retaliation and the Sanctioning of Conscience

Such moral courage comes at a price. In September 2025, the United States revoked Petro’s visa after he joined a pro-Palestinian demonstration in New York, accusing him of making “reckless and incendiary” remarks. A month later, Washington imposed sanctions on Petro, his family, and members of his government, citing alleged failures in anti-drug efforts — a charge that rings hollow against the backdrop of his evident success.

It is difficult to ignore the pattern: whenever a Global South leader stands up for Palestine or challenges U.S. orthodoxy, punishment follows. From Cuba to Venezuela, from Bolivia to Colombia, Washington continues to weaponize finance and diplomacy against independent states.

Petro’s “crime” was not incitement, but integrity. He defied empire in defence of humanity. His punishment reveals more about U.S. insecurity than about Colombia’s policies.

The same nation that once dictated Colombia’s drug war now seeks to silence the man who redefined it – and who dared to call Gaza what it is: genocide.

The Meaning of Petro

Petro represents the moral reawakening of the Global South. His politics link the struggles of the poor in Latin America with the dispossessed in Palestine, Africa, and Asia. He reminds us that liberation is indivisible: social justice at home must be tied to solidarity abroad.

Civil society organisations across continents have recognised this courage. Many have nominated him for international honours, including the Right Livelihood Award — the “Alternative Nobel” — and supported his Nobel Peace Prize candidacy. They see in him a rare kind of leadership: intellectual, humble, and guided by conscience.

In Petro, Latin America’s historic call for dignity finds a contemporary voice. He stands in the lineage of Bolívar and Allende, of Fidel and Chávez, but speaks in the language of the 21st century — ecological, inclusive, and humane.

At a time when Western democracies have surrendered moral authority to militarism, Petro’s defiance restores the idea that politics can still serve truth. His vision offers a counterweight to cynicism: a reminder that states can be instruments of compassion rather than cruelty.

Conclusion

Gustavo Petro has shown that leadership is not measured by the applause of the powerful, but by fidelity to the powerless. His decision to stand with Gaza, despite the consequences, is an act of global conscience.

If the United States punishes him, history will absolve him. Petro is not merely defending Palestine; he is defending the idea of a humane world order — one that places human life above empire.

As Colombia heals its own wounds, Petro extends that healing to others, proving that liberation begins at home but never ends there.

“If we must choose between relations with genocide and relations with humanity, we choose humanity.”

(President Gustavo Petro, May 2024)

References

  1. Reuters: “US revokes Colombian President Petro’s visa after Gaza remarks,” September 2025.
  2. Al Jazeera: “Colombia cuts diplomatic ties with Israel over Gaza war,” May 2024.
  3. El País: “Petro hosts Hague Group summit on Gaza legal response,” July 2025.
  4. Euronews: “Washington calls Petro’s Gaza remarks ‘reckless,’” September 2025.
  5. UNODC: “Coca cultivation trends in Colombia show first major decline in years,” 2025.
  6. AP News: “US sanctions on Colombia’s president escalate feud,” October 2025.

Ranjan Solomon is a political commentator with a special interest in the Question of Palestine

20 November 2025

Source: countercurrents.org

Trump’s Ploy at the UN Is U.S. Imperialism Masquerading as a Peace Process

By Jeffrey D. Sachs and Sybil Fares

13 Nov 2025 – The Trump administration is pushing an Israeli-crafted resolution at the UN Security Council (UNSC) this week aimed at eliminating the possibility of a State of Palestine. The resolution does three things. It establishes US political control over Gaza. It separates Gaza from the rest of Palestine. And it allows the US, and therefore Israel, to determine the timeline for Israel’s supposed withdrawal from Gaza–which would mean: never.

This is imperialism masquerading as a peace process. In and of itself it’s no surprise. Israel runs US foreign policy in the Middle East. What is a surprise is that the US and Israel might just get away with this travesty unless the world speaks up with urgency and indignation.

The draft UNSC resolution would establish a US-UK-dominated Board of Peace, chaired by none other than Donald Trump himself, and endowed with sweeping powers over Gaza’s governance, borders, reconstruction, and security. This resolution would sideline the State of Palestine and condition any transfer of authority to the Palestinians on the indulgence of the Board of Peace.

This would be an overt return to the British Mandate of 100 years ago, with the only change being that the US would hold the mandate rather than Britain. If it weren’t so utterly tragic, it would be laughable. As Marx said, history repeats itself, first as tragedy, then as farce. Yes, the proposal is farce, yet Israel’s genocide is not. It is tragedy of the first order.

Incredibly, according to the draft resolution, the Board of Peace would be granted sovereign powers in Gaza. Palestinian sovereignty is left to the discretion of the Board, which alone would decide when Palestinians are “ready” to govern themselves – perhaps in another 100 years? Even military security is subordinated to the Board, and the envisioned forces would answer not to the UN Security Council or to the Palestinian people, but to the Board’s “strategic guidance.”

The US-Israel resolution is being put forward precisely because the rest of the world—other than Israel and the US—has woken up to two facts. First, Israel is committing genocide, a reality witnessed every day in Gaza and the West Bank, where innocent Palestinians are murdered to the satisfaction of the Israel Defense Forces and the illegal Israeli settlers in the West Bank. Second, Palestine is a state, albeit one whose sovereignty remains obstructed by the US, which uses its veto in the UNSC to block Palestine’s permanent UN membership. At the UN this past July and then again in September, the UN General Assembly voted overwhelmingly for Palestine’s statehood, a fact that put the Israel-US Zionist lobby into overdrive, resulting in the current draft resolution.

For Israel to accomplish its goal of Greater Israel, the US is pursuing a classic divide-and-conquer strategy, squeezing Arab and Islamic states with threats and inducements. When other countries resist the US-Israel demands, they are cut off from critical technologies, lose access to World Bank and IMF financing, and suffer Israeli bombing, even in countries with US military bases present. The US offers no real protection; rather, it orchestrates a protection racket, extracting concessions from countries wherever US leverage exists. This extortion will continue until the global community stands up to such tactics and insists upon genuine Palestinian sovereignty and US and Israeli adherence to international law.

Palestine remains the endless victim of US and Israeli maneuvers. The results are not just devastating for Palestine, which has suffered an outright genocide, but for the Arab world and beyond. Israel and the US are currently at war, overtly or covertly, across the Horn of Africa (Libya, Sudan, Somalia), the Eastern Mediterranean (Lebanon, Syria), the Gulf region (Yemen), and Western Asia (Iraq, Iran).

If the UN Security Council is to provide true security in accordance with the UN Charter, it must not yield to US pressures and instead act decisively in line with international law. A resolution truly for peace should include four vital points. First, it should welcome the State of Palestine as a sovereign UN member state, with the US lifting its veto. Second, it should safeguard the territorial integrity of the State of Palestine and Israel, according to the 1967 borders. Third, it should establish a UNSC-mandated protection force drawn up from Muslim-majority states. Fourth, it should include the defunding and disarmament of all belligerent non-state entities, and it should ensure the mutual security of Israel and Palestine.

The two-state solution is about true peace—not about the politicide and genocide of Palestine, or the continued attacks by militants on Israel. It’s time for both Palestinians and Israelis to be safe, and for the US and Israel to give up the cruel delusion of permanently ruling over the Palestinian people.

Jeffrey D. Sachs, Professor of Sustainable Development and Professor of Health Policy and Management at Columbia University, is Director of Columbia’s Center for Sustainable Development and the UN Sustainable Development Solutions Network.

 Sybil Fares is a specialist and advisor in Middle East policy and sustainable development at SDSN.

17 November 2025

Source: transcend.org

PCHR Documents Testimonies of Systematic Rape and Sexual Torture in Israeli Detention against Released Palestinian Detainees

By Palestinian Centre for Human Rights

10 Nov 2025 – The Palestinian Centre for Human Rights (PCHR) documents one of the most heinous crimes that can be committed against human beings and their dignity in the modern era. In recent weeks, PCHR staff collected new testimonies from a number of Palestinian detainees from the Gaza Strip who were recently released from Israeli prisons and detention camps. These accounts reveal an organized and systematic practice of sexual torture, including rape, forced stripping, forced filming, sexual assault using objects and dogs, in addition to deliberate psychological humiliation aimed at crushing human dignity and erasing individual identity entirely. PCHR affirms that the testimonies do not reflect isolated incidents but constitute a systematic policy practiced in the context of the ongoing crime of genocide against more than two million Palestinians in the Gaza Strip, including thousands of detainees held in prisons and military camps closed to international monitoring bodies, including the International Committee of the Red Cross.

Testimonies documented by PCHR’s lawyers and field researchers contain harrowing testimonies relating to cases of rape perpetrated by Israeli Occupation Forces (IOF) against Palestinian civilians, including women, who were arrested from different areas across the Gaza Strip over the past two years. These testimonies indicate that arrests were carried out without any legal justification other than the victims being residents of the Gaza Strip, as part of a policy of collective punishment designed to humiliate Palestinians and inflict maximum psychological and physical harm on them. These practices are part and parcel of the ongoing crime of genocide against the Palestinian people in the Strip.

Among these cases is N.A., a 42-year-old Palestinian woman and mother who was arrested while passing through an Israeli checkpoint set up in northern Gaza in November 2024. In her statement to PCHR staff, N.A. recounted multiple forms of torture and sexual violence, including being raped four times by Israeli soldiers, repeatedly subjected to obscene insults, stripped and filmed naked, electrocuted, and beaten across her body. She told PCHR’s lawyer:

“At dawn I heard the soldiers shouting, saying that morning prayers were forbidden, and I think it was the fourth day after my arrest from Gaza. The soldiers moved me to a place I didn’t know because my eyes were blindfolded, and they ordered me to take off my clothes. I did so. They put me on a metal table, pressed my chest and head against it, cuffed my hands to the end of the bed, and pulled my legs apart forcefully. I felt a penis penetrating my anus and a man raping me. I started screaming, and they beat me on my back and head while I was blindfolded. I felt the man who was raping me ejaculate inside my anus. I kept screaming and being beaten, and I could hear a camera—so I believe they were filming me. The rape lasted about 10 minutes. After that, they left me for an hour in the same position, with my hands cuffed to the bed with metal handcuffs, my face on the bed, my feet on the floor, and I was completely naked.

Again, after an hour, I was raped fully in the same position, with penetration into my vagina, and I was beaten while I screamed. There were several soldiers; I heard them laughing and the camera clicking as it took pictures. This rape was very quick and there was no ejaculation. During the rape they beat me with their hands on my head and back.

I cannot describe what I felt; I wished for death every moment. After they raped me, I was left alone in the same room, hands still cuffed to the bed and without clothes for many hours. I could hear the soldiers outside speaking Hebrew and laughing. Later, I was raped again vaginally. I screamed, but they beat me whenever I tried to resist. After more than an hour, I’m not sure about the time, a masked soldier entered, removed my blindfold, lifted his face covering; he had white skin and was tall. He asked if I spoke English; I said no. He said he was Russian and ordered me to masturbate his penis. I refused, and he hit me in the face after raping me.

That day I was raped twice. I was left naked the whole day in the room where I spent three days. On the first day I was raped twice; on the second day I was raped twice; on the third day I remained without clothes while they looked at me through the door slit and filmed me. One soldier said they would post my photos on social media. While I was in the room, my period started; then they told me to put on clothes and transferred me to another room.”

In another incident, A.A., a 35-year-old Palestinian man and father, was arrested while at Al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza City in March 2024. He told PCHR’s field researcher about the brutal torture he endured during 19 months of detention, including forced stripping, obscene insults, threats of rape against him and his family, culminating in his rape by a trained dog inside the Sde Teiman military camp. He stated:

“I was moved to a section I didn’t know inside Sde Teiman. During the first weeks there, amid repeated suppression operations, I was taken with a group of detainees in a degrading manner to a place far from the cameras—a passage between sections. We were stripped completely. Soldiers brought dogs that climbed on us and urinated on me. Then one of the dogs raped me—the dog did it deliberately, knowing exactly what it was doing, and inserted its penis into my anus, while the soldiers kept beating and torturing us and spraying pepper spray in our faces. The dog’s assault lasted about three minutes; the overall suppression lasted about three hours. Because of the severe beating, all of us sustained injuries across our bodies. I suffered a severe psychological breakdown and deep humiliation; I lost control because I could never have imagined experiencing such a thing. Afterward, a doctor stitched a wound in my head caused by the torture—seven stitches without anesthesia. I also suffered bruises, fractures in my limbs, and a rib fracture.”

T.Q., a 41-year-old Palestinian man and father, was arrested while displaced at Kamal Adwan Hospital in December 2023. He was subjected to sexual torture during 22 months in Israeli detention, including obscene insults, threats to bring his wife to the detention site to rape her, and rape with a wooden object. In his testimony to a PCHR researcher about the rape incident, he said:

“One of the soldiers raped me by violently inserting a wooden stick into my anus. After about a minute he removed it and then inserted it again more forcefully while I screamed loudly. After another minute he removed it and forced me to open my mouth and put the stick in my mouth to lick it. From sheer anguish I lost consciousness for minutes, until a female officer came and forced them to stop beating me. She untied my hands, gave me a white overall to wear, and brought me a cup of water which I drank. I felt blood flowing from my anus and asked to go to the bathroom. She gave me tissues and I went to a plastic toilet there. They removed the blindfold; when I wiped my anus there was blood. After I finished and the bleeding stopped, I put the white overall back on. As soon as I came out, they blindfolded me again and tied my hands behind my back with plastic ties. I was then moved to a room where I was held with several detainees for about eight hours, during which soldiers periodically returned to beat and insult us brutally.”

PCHR also documented the testimony of M.A., 18 years old, who was re-arrested this year near a humanitarian aid distribution point run by the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation in the Gaza Strip, after having previously been arrested and released. He told PCHR’s field researcher that he was sexually assaulted when soldiers raped him with a bottle forcibly inserted into his anus, a practice repeated against him and other Palestinian detainees. He said:

“The soldiers ordered me and six other detainees to kneel, and they raped us by inserting a bottle into the anus, pushing it in and pulling it out. It happened to me four times, with about ten in-and-out motions each time. I screamed, and so did the others with me. Of the four times, twice it was just me, and twice it was with others—once with six people and once with twelve people. I saw what they were doing to the others while they did it to me, and I realized it was a bottle. There was also a dog behind us, as if the dog was raping us. They violated our dignity and destroyed our spirits and our hope for life. I had wanted to continue my education; now I am lost after what happened to me.”

PCHR notes that in May 2025 it issued a detailed report, based on the testimonies of 100 released detainees, on the brutal methods of torture, degrading treatment, and inhumane detention conditions faced by detainees inside Israeli prisons and detention camps. The report concluded that the treatment inflicted by IOF, intelligence services, and Israel Prison Service employees not only meets the elements of torture under international law, but also rises to the level of genocide, specifically the following genocidal acts: (1) causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group; and (2) deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part.

In light of these grave crimes against Palestinian detainees, PCHR calls on the international community, including States Parties to the UN Convention against Torture and the UN Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, the UN Secretary-General, the UN Special Procedures, and all relevant human rights and humanitarian institutions, to take immediate action to end the systematic policy of torture and enforced disappearance against Palestinian detainees. PCHR urges concrete measures to pressure Israel to release all Palestinians arbitrarily detained, to disclose the fate and whereabouts of all forcibly disappeared persons, and to allow the International Committee of the Red Cross immediate and unrestricted access to all detention facilities.

PCHR further warns that thousands of Palestinian detainees face the risk of certain death, as on 3 November 2025 the Knesset’s National Security Committee approved a draft law allowing the application of the death penalty against Palestinian prisoners. According to PCHR’s documentation, Israel has extracted numerous coerced confessions from prisoners as a result of the brutal torture and threats they endured, meaning the death penalty could be applied to all remaining detainees in prisons and camps, and resulting in mass in mass executions in flagrant violation of international humanitarian law and human rights law.

PCHR also calls on the international community, the Palestinian Authority, the competent authorities in the Gaza Strip, and all international and local institutions to provide immediate protection and comprehensive psychological and medical care for survivors and victims of torture, and to ensure the confidentiality of their identities and their safety.

PCHR affirms its commitment to continue documenting these crimes, collecting evidence and testimonies, and submitting them to UN mechanisms, the International Criminal Court, and other accountability bodies, in pursuit of justice for victims, accountability for perpetrators, and an end to impunity.

The Palestinian Centre for Human Rights (PCHR) is an independent Palestinian organization based in Gaza City. The Centre enjoys Consultative Status with the ECOSOC of the United Nations.

17 November 2025

Source: transcend.org

Israeli Soldiers Speak Out on Killings of Gaza Civilians

By Julian Borger

IDF soldiers tell documentary of opening fire unprovoked, and arbitrary designations of who was an enemy.

5 Nov 2025 – Israeli soldiers have described a free-for-all in Gaza and a breakdown in norms and legal constraints, with civilians killed at the whim of individual officers, according to testimony in a TV documentary.

“If you want to shoot without restraint, you can,” Daniel, the commander of an Israel Defense Forces (IDF) tank unit, says in Breaking Ranks: Inside Israel’s War, due to be broadcast in the UK on ITV on Monday evening.

Some of the IDF soldiers who talked to the programme requested anonymity while others spoke on the record. All pointed to the evaporation of the official code of conduct concerning civilians.

The soldiers who agreed to talk confirmed the IDF’s routine use of human shields, contradicting official denials, and gave details of Israeli troops opening fire unprovoked on civilians racing to reach food handouts at the militarised distribution points set up by the US- and Israeli-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF).

“In basic training for the army, we all chanted ‘means, intent and ability’,” Capt Yotam Vilk, an armoured corps officer, says in reference to the official IDF training guidelines stipulating that a soldier can fire only if the target has the means, shows intent and has the ability to cause harm.

“There’s no such thing as ‘means, intent and ability’ in Gaza,” Vilk says. “No soldier ever mentions ‘means, intent, and ability’. It’s just: a suspicion of walking where it’s not allowed. A man aged between 20 and 40.”

Another soldier, identified in the programme only as Eli, says: “Life and death isn’t determined by procedures or opening fire regulations. It’s the conscience of the commander on the ground that decides.”

In those circumstances, the designation of who is an enemy or terrorist becomes arbitrary, Eli says in the documentary. “If they’re walking too fast, they’re suspicious. If they’re walking too slow, they’re suspicious. They’re plotting something. If three men are walking and one of them lags behind, it’s a two-to-one infantry formation – it’s a military formation,” he says.

Eli describes an incident in which a senior officer ordered a tank to demolish a building in an area designated as safe for civilians. “A man was standing on the roof, hanging laundry, and the officer decided that he was a spotter. He’s not a spotter. He’s hanging his laundry. You can see that he’s hanging laundry,” he says.

“Now, it’s not as if this man had binoculars or weapons. The closest military force was 600-700 metres away. So unless he had eagle eyes, how could he possibly be a spotter? And the tank fired a shell. The building half collapsed. And the result was many dead and wounded.”

Palestinians carry supplies from a Gaza Humanitarian Foundation site in the central Gaza Strip. Photograph: Reuters

Guardian analysis in August of the IDF’s intelligence data showed that by the reckoning of Israeli military officials, 83% of those killed in Gaza were civilians, a historic high for modern conflicts, though the IDF disputed the analysis. More than 69,000 Palestinians have been killed since the war started and more continue to die despite a ceasefire that began a month ago.

In a written statement, the IDF said: “The IDF remains committed to the rule of law and continues to operate in accordance with its legal and ethical obligations, despite the unprecedented operational complexity posed by Hamas’s systematic embedding within civilian infrastructure and its use of civilian sites for military purposes.”

Some of the soldiers interviewed in the Breaking Ranks programme said they were influenced by the language of Israeli politicians and religious leaders suggesting that after the Hamas attack of 7 October 2023, in which about 1,200 Israelis and foreign nationals were killed, every Palestinian was a legitimate target.

A UN commission concluded in September that Israel had committed genocide in Gaza. On the question of intent, it pointed to incitement from Israeli leaders such as the president, Isaac Herzog, who shortly after the 7 October attack said: “It is an entire nation out there that is responsible. It is not true, this rhetoric about civilians not aware, not involved, it’s absolutely not true.”

Daniel, the tank unit commander, says in the documentary that the rhetoric declaring there was no such thing as an innocent in Gaza seeped down into army ranks. “You hear that all the time, so you start to believe it,” he says.

A spokesperson for Herzog said the Israeli president had been an outspoken voice for humanitarian causes and the protection of innocents.

The programme also provides evidence that such views have been propagated by some rabbis in the ranks. “One time, the brigade rabbi sat down next to me and spent half an hour explaining why we must be just like they were on October 7. That we must take revenge on all of them, including civilians. That we shouldn’t discriminate, and that this is the only way,” says Maj Neta Caspin.

Rabbi Avraham Zarbiv, an extremist Jewish cleric who served more than 500 days in Gaza, says in the programme: “Everything there is one big terrorist infrastructure.”

Zarbiv has not only given religious legitimacy to the mass demolition of Palestinian neighbourhoods but drove military bulldozers himself and claims credit for pioneering a tactic that had been adopted by the IDF as a whole, pointing to the mass purchase of armoured bulldozers.

“The IDF invests hundreds of thousands of shekels to destroy the Gaza Strip. We changed the conduct of an entire army,” Zarbiv says in the programme.

The soldiers giving their accounts in Breaking Ranks also confirm consistent reports throughout the two-year conflict of the use of Palestinian civilians as human shields, a practice informally known as the “mosquito protocol”.

“You send the human shield underground. As he walks down the tunnel, he maps it all for you. He has an iPhone in his vest and as he walks it sends back GPS information,” says Daniel, the tank commander, says in the documentary. “The commanders saw how it works. And the practice spread like wildfire. After about a week, every company was operating its own mosquito.”

The IDF said in a statement that “the IDF prohibits the use of civilians as human shields or coercing them in any way to participate in military operations. These orders have been routinely emphasized to forces throughout the war.”

“Allegations of misconduct are thoroughly examined, and when identifying details are provided, the matter is investigated in depth,” the IDF said. “In several cases, investigations have been opened by the Military Police Criminal Investigation Division (MPCID) following suspicions involving Palestinians in military missions. These investigations remain ongoing.”

The makers of Breaking Ranks spoke to a contractor identified only as Sam who worked at food distribution sites run by the GHF, who says he witnessed the IDF killing unarmed civilians.

He describes an incident at one distribution site where two young men were running in the general rush to get aid. “You could just see two soldiers run after them. They drop on to their knees and they just take two shots, and you could just see … two heads snap backwards and just drop,” Sam says. He recounts another incident in which an IDF tank in the vicinity of one of the distribution sites destroys “a normal car … just four normal people sat inside it”.

According to UN figures, at least 944 Palestinian civilians were killed while seeking aid in the vicinity of GHF aid sites. GHF and the IDF have denied targeting civilians seeking food at aid distribution sites, and the IDF has denied the allegations of systematic war crimes, insisting it operates in accordance with international law and takes measures to minimise civilian harm in its operations against Hamas. Internal investigations of incidents involving the killing of civilians have led to virtually no disciplinary or legal accountability.

Breaking Ranks shows the mental strain on at least some of the soldiers in Gaza.

“I feel like they’ve destroyed all my pride in being an Israeli – in being an IDF officer,” Daniel says in the programme. “All that’s left is shame.”

Julian Borger is the Guardian‘s senior international correspondent based in London.

17 November 2025

Source: transcend.org

How Many Times Has Israel Violated the Gaza Ceasefire? Here Are the Numbers

By Al Jazeera

11 Nov 2025 – One month into the declaration of a ceasefire in the Gaza Strip, Israel has violated the agreement with near-daily attacks, killing hundreds of people.

Israel violated the ceasefire agreement at least 282 times from October 10 to November 10, through the continuation of attacks by air, artillery and direct shootings, the Government Media Office in Gaza reports.

The office said Israel shot at civilians 88 times, raided residential areas beyond the “yellow line” 12 times, bombed Gaza 124 times, and demolished people’s properties on 52 occasions. It added that Israel also detained 23 Palestinians from Gaza over the past month.

Israel has also continued to block vital humanitarian aid and destroy homes and infrastructure across the Strip.

Al Jazeera tracks the ceasefire violations to date.

What are the terms of the ceasefire?
On September 29, the United States unveiled a 20-point proposal, without any Palestinian input, to end Israel’s war on Gaza, release the remaining captives held in the enclave, allow the full entry of humanitarian aid into the besieged territory and outline a three-phase withdrawal of Israeli forces.

Some of the main conditions of the first phase, which is ongoing, include:

  • An end to hostilities in Gaza by Israel and Hamas
  • Lifting the blockade of all aid into Gaza by Israel and stopping its interference in aid distribution
  • Release of all captives held in Gaza – alive or dead – by Hamas
  • Release of some 2,000 Palestinian prisoners and disappeared people from Israeli jails
  • Withdrawal of Israeli forces to the “yellow line”

Following mediation by partners including Egypt, Qatar, and Turkiye, representatives from some 30 countries gathered on October 13 for a ceremony to sign the Gaza ceasefire agreement, led by US President Donald Trump.

However, Israel and Hamas were notably absent, raising doubts about the summit’s ability to achieve tangible progress towards ending the war and resolving the core issues of Israeli occupation and the 18-year-long siege of Gaza.

Israel has pledged not to allow a Palestinian state, and the US has continued its large-scale arms transfers and diplomatic backing to Israel throughout its genocidal war on Gaza, while offering only vague statements about Gaza’s future.

Israel attacks Gaza nearly every day
According to an analysis by Al Jazeera, Israel has attacked Gaza on 25 out of the past 31 days of the ceasefire, meaning there were only six days during which no violent attacks, deaths or injuries were reported.

Despite continuing attacks, the US insists that the “ceasefire” is still holding.

Israel still killing Palestinians
Since the ceasefire took effect at noon on October 10, Israel has killed at least 242 Palestinians and injured 622, according to the latest figures from the Palestinian Ministry of Health.

On October 19 and 29 – two of the deadliest days since the latest ceasefire – Israel killed a total of 154 people.

On October 19, accusing Hamas of violating the ceasefire after two Israeli soldiers were killed in Rafah, Israeli forces killed 45 people in a massive wave of air raids across the Gaza Strip.

Hamas’s armed wing, the Qassam Brigades, pointed out that Israel controls the Rafah area and it had no contact with any Palestinian fighters there.

[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B9t2Cx2SN3U]

On October 29, Israel killed 109 people, including 52 children, after an exchange of gunfire in Rafah that killed one Israeli soldier.

Israel also said a body transferred from Gaza by Hamas via the Red Cross did not belong to one of the captives due to be released under the ceasefire.

“The Israelis hit back, and they should hit back,” Trump told reporters, calling Israel’s attacks “retribution” for the soldier’s death.

17 November 2025

Source: transcend.org

“Regime Change” in Venezuela Is Euphemism for U.S.-inflicted Carnage and Chaos

By Medea Benjamin and Nicolas J. S. Davies

11 Nov 2025 – For decades, Washington has sold the world a deadly lie: that “regime change” brings freedom, that U.S. bombs and blockades can somehow deliver democracy. But every country that has lived through this euphemism knows the truth—it instead brings death, dismemberment, and despair. Now that the same playbook is being dusted off for Venezuela, the parallels with Iraq and other U.S. interventions are an ominous warning of what could follow.

As a U.S. armada gathers off Venezuela, a U.S. special operations aviation unit aboard one of the warships has been flying helicopter patrols along the coast. This is the 160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment (SOAR) — the “Nightstalkers” — the same unit that, in U.S.-occupied Iraq, worked with the Wolf Brigade, the most feared Interior Ministry death squad.

Western media portray the 160th SOAR as an elite helicopter force for covert missions. But in 2005 an officer in the regiment blogged about joint operations with the Wolf Brigade as they swept Baghdad detaining civilians. On November 10, 2005, he described a “battalion-sized joint operation” in southern Baghdad and boasted, “As we passed vehicle after vehicle full of blindfolded detainees, my face stretched into a long wolfish smile.”

Many people seized by the Wolf Brigade and other U.S.-trained Special Police Commandos were never seen again; others turned up in mass graves or morgues, often far from where they’d been taken. Bodies of people detained in Baghdad were found in mass graves near Badra, 70 miles away — but that was well within the combat range of the Nightstalkers’ MH-47 Chinook helicopters.

This was how the Bush–Cheney administration responded to Iraqi resistance to an illegal invasion: catastrophic assaults on Fallujah and Najaf, followed by the training and unleashing of death squads to terrorize civilians and ethnically cleanse Baghdad. The UN reported over 34,000 civilians killed in 2006 alone, and epidemiological studies estimate roughly a million Iraqis died overall.

Iraq has never fully recovered—and the U.S. never reaped the spoils it sought. The exiles Washington installed to rule Iraq stole at least $150 billion from its oil revenues, but the Iraqi parliament rejected U.S.-backed efforts to grant shares of the oil industry to Western companies. Today, Iraq’s largest trading partners are China, India, the UAE, and Turkey—not the United States.

The neocon dream of “regime change” has a long, bloody history, its methods ranging from coups to full-scale invasions. But “regime change” is a euphemism: the word “change” implies improvement. A more honest term would be “government removal”—or simply the destruction of a country or society.

A coup usually involves less immediate violence than a full-scale invasion, but they pose the same question: who or what replaces the ousted government? Time after time, U.S.-backed coups and invasions have installed rulers who enrich themselves through embezzlement, corruption, or drug trafficking—while making life worse for ordinary people.

These so-called “military solutions” rarely resolve problems, real or imaginary, as their proponents promise. They more often leave countries plagued by decades of division, instability, and suffering.

Kosovo was carved out of Serbia by an illegal US-led war in 1999, but it is still not recognized by many nations and remains one of the poorest countries in Europe. The main U.S. ally in the war, Hashim Thaçi, now sits in a cell at the Hague, charged with horrific crimes committed under cover of NATO’s bombing.

In Afghanistan, after 20 years of bloody war and occupation, the United States was eventually defeated by the Taliban—the very force it had invaded the country to remove.

In Haiti, the CIA and U.S. Marines toppled the popular democratic government of Jean-Bertrand Aristide in 2004, plunging the country into an ongoing crisis of corruption, gang rule, and despair that continues to this day.

In 2006, the U.S. militarily supported an Ethiopian invasion of Somalia to install a new government—an intervention that gave rise to Al Shabab, an Islamic resistance group that still controls large swaths of the country. U.S. AFRICOM has conducted 89 airstrikes in Al Shabab-held territory in 2025 alone.

In Honduras, the military removed its president, Mel Zelaya, in a coup in 2009, and the U.S. supported an election to replace him. The U.S.-backed president Juan Orlando Hernandez turned Honduras into a narco-state, fueling mass emigration—until Xiomara Castro, Zelaya’s wife, was elected to lead a new progressive government in 2021.

Libya, a country with vast oil wealth, has never recovered from the U.S. and allied invasion in 2011, which led to years of militia rule, the return of slave markets, the destabilizing of neighboring countries and a 45% reduction in oil exports.

Also in 2011, the U.S. and its allies escalated a protest movement in Syria into an armed rebellion and civil war. That spawned ISIS, which in turn led to the U.S.-led massacres that destroyed Mosul in Iraq and Raqqa in Syria in 2017. Turkish-backed, Al Qaeda-linked rebels finally seized the capital in 2024 and formed a transitional government, but Israel, Turkey, and the U.S. still militarily occupy other parts of the country.

The U.S.-backed overthrow of Ukraine’s elected government in 2014 brought in a pro-Western leadership that only half the population recognized as a legitimate government. That drove Crimea and Donbas to secede and put Ukraine on a collision course with Russia, setting the stage for the Russian invasion in 2022 and the wider, still-escalating conflict between NATO and Russia.

In 2015, when the Ansar Allah (Houthi) movement assumed power in Yemen after the resignation of a U.S.-backed transitional government, the U.S. joined a Saudi-led air war and blockade that caused a humanitarian crisis and killed hundreds of thousands of Yemenis—yet did not defeat the Houthis.

That brings us to Venezuela. Ever since Hugo Chavez was elected in 1998, the U.S. has been trying to overthrow the government. There was the failed 2002 coup; crippling unilateral economic sanctions; the farcical recognition of Juan Guaido as a wannabe president; and the 2020 “Bay of Piglets” mercenary fiasco.

But even if “regime change” in Venezuela were achievable, it would still be illegal under the UN Charter. U.S. presidents are not emperors, and leaders of other sovereign nations do not serve “at the emperor’s pleasure” as if Latin America were still a continent of colonial outposts.

In Venezuela today, Trump’s opening shots—attacks on small civilian boats in the Caribbean—have been condemned as flagrantly illegal, even by U.S. senators who routinely support America’s illegal wars.

Yet Trump still claims to be “ending the era of endless wars.” His most loyal supporters insist he means it—and that he was sabotaged in his first term by the “deep state.” This time, he has surrounded himself with loyalists and sacked National Security Council staffers he identified as neocons or warhawks, but he has still not ended America’s wars.

Alongside Trump’s piracy in the Caribbean, he is a full partner in Israel’s genocide in Gaza and the bombing of Iran. He has maintained the global empire of U.S. military bases and deployments, and supercharged the U.S. war machine with a trillion dollar war chest—draining desperately needed resources out of a looted domestic economy.

Trump’s appointment of Marco Rubio as Secretary of State and National Security Advisor was an incendiary choice for Latin America, given Rubio’s open hostility to Cuba and Venezuela.

Brazilian President Lula made that clear when he met Trump in Malaysia at the ASEAN conference, saying: “There will be no advances in negotiations with the United States if Marco Rubio is part of the team. He opposes our allies in Venezuela, Cuba, and Argentina.” At Lula’s insistence, Rubio was excluded from talks over U.S. investments in Brazil’s rare earth metals industry, the world’s second largest after China’s.

Cuba-bashing may have served Rubio well in domestic politics, but as Secretary of State it renders him incapable of responsibly managing U.S. relations with the rest of the world. Trump will have to decide whether to pursue constructive engagement with Latin America or let Rubio corner him into new conflicts with our neighbors. Rubio’s threats of sanctions against countries that welcome Cuban doctors are already alienating governments across the globe.

Trump’s manufactured crisis with Venezuela exposes the deep contradictions at the heart of his foreign policy: his disastrous choice of advisers; his conflicting ambitions to be both a war leader and a peacemaker; his worship of the military; and his surrender to the same war machine that ensnares every American president.

If there is one lesson from the long history of U.S. interventions, it’s that “regime change” doesn’t bring democracy or stability. As the United States threatens Venezuela with the same arrogance that has wrecked so many other countries, this is the moment to end this cycle of imperial U.S. violence once and for all.

Medea Benjamin and Nicolas J. S. Davies are the authors of War in Ukraine: Making Sense of a Senseless Conflict, available from OR Books in November 2022.

17 November 2025

Source: transcend.org