Just International

2025: Amid the Darkness, Glimmers of Light

By Richard Falk

Rarely has the crystal ball used to divine the near future seemed so clouded by uncertainties. The year 2024 was dominated by disappointments, disturbing surprises, and continuing devastation in Ukraine and Gaza. It was also a year that underscored the inability of the UN to stop the most transparent genocide ever in Gaza, a senseless war in Ukraine, and mass slaughter in Sudan.

Is 2024 a turning point?

There were a variety of multilateral efforts in 2024 to escape from US international dominance after the Cold War. This dominance had fueled a global politics of resentment and a search for an alternative world order that is law-governed and not subject to the geopolitical maneuvers of the five winners of World War II. These powers were granted unrestricted veto rights in the UN Security Council under the UN Charter, which has long paralyzed efforts to ensure compliance with international law. This produces a deep contradiction in the way the world is organized, allowing the most powerful and dangerous countries, all five being nuclear-armed states, to be legally free of any obligation to respect international law.

The question in many thoughtful minds is whether these developments in the prior year will continue in the year ahead. One near certain development is the rightward turn of internal politics in the West, given a dramatic twist by the prospects of radical change associated with the second coming of Donald Trump as US president. Trump has already appointed highly controversial political figures to his Cabinet, with the expectation of implementing an ultra-right domestic agenda. However, what is his approach to foreign policy? As well, the leading governments of Europe, including Germany, France, and Italy, all exhibit signs of leaning further toward authoritarianism.

Crisis areas in the world

There are some hopeful signs. Trump seems likely to push for a negotiated peace in Ukraine and bring to a close US President Joe Biden’s “geopolitical war,” involving fighting Moscow by supplying and funding Kyiv with ever more provocative weaponry while turning his back on diplomacy and urging NATO to join in the fight with Rusi to the last Ukrainian. Such a posture raised risks of a confrontation with Russia that could also result in catastrophic nuclear warfare. Trump wants to cut spending on distant and expensive foreign adventures with no genuine American security interest and stand before the world as a peacemaker. Ukraine was a war that never should have been, as a diplomatic compromise between Russia and Ukraine was from its inception in the interest of Ukraine and world peace, as well as being attainable by responsible statecraft.

In contrast to Ukraine, the context of Israel/Palestine is far bleaker. There is every indication that Trump intends to outdo Biden by being an even more unconditional ally of Israel, fully supportive of the Netanyahu-led project entailing the establishment of Greater Israel. This is a plan to erase the Palestinian challenge through the annexation of the West Bank, parts of Gaza, and to support Israel in extending its “buffer zones” in Syria and Lebanon. The plan also includes intensified efforts to destroy Iran’s nuclear program and promote regime change in Tehran by force. The rightward turn of major governments in the West is likely to repress civil society opposition to the continuation of Israeli genocide and expansionism.

Militarism versus symbolic victories: The calculus of legitimacy wars

The efforts by countries in the Global South to have recourse to the International Court of Justice (ICJ) and International Criminal Court (ICC) are a notable expression on the part of non-Western states to invoke international law to serve the causes of peace with justice. And the ICJ has responded in an encouraging professional manner, ruling in favor of provisional measures in response to South Africa’s submission and issuing a separate opinion invalidating Israel’s continuing occupation of Gaza, the West Bank, and East Jerusalem in an authoritative near-unanimous exposition of applicable international law. Of course, it is expected that Israel will defy these developments, as it has consistently done in the face of adverse rulings by international tribunals. Nevertheless, such rulings sympathetic with Palestinian grievances are symbolically important, delegitimizing Israel and mobilizing civil society activism that gives rise to global solidarity initiatives of a Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions (BDS) variety.

The fate of the arrest warrants issued by the ICC, ordering the arrest and transfer to The Hague for prosecution of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and former Defense Minister Yoav Gallant after a long delay is highly uncertain. Israel has mounted a legal challenge, and its government has made clear that the arrest warrants for the Israeli leaders are antisemitic outrages, and any implementation would be denounced and disrupted no matter what the ICC might decide. As with the ICJ genocide and occupation cases, the mere issuance of arrest warrants by the ICC was a significant symbolic Palestinian victory in the Legitimacy War, which may yet surprise the world in 2025 or shortly thereafter, by its overall impact on the viability of the Israeli state as now operative. It should be appreciated that the anti-colonial wars of the past 50 years were won by the weaker side militarily that managed to prevail on the symbolic battlefields of the Legitimacy War, which gives decisive weight to law, morality, and perseverance of a repressed people. The establishment of the civil society Gaza Tribunal in November of 2024 is a further legitimizing development in the Palestinian struggle for basic rights that seeks to activate global solidarity initiatives that shifted the balance in the global movement against South African apartheid, and before that of the global anti-war movement that nullified US military superiority in the Vietnam War.

The rise of multipolarity in 2025?

At the same time, global society is experiencing a surge of multilateral initiatives. Strengthening the impulse to create autonomous multipolar networks of the sort modeled by the BRICS, and especially to mount challenges to dollarization of trade and finance, which, to the extent successful, will produce a backlash in the form of high tariffs and the economic menace of a trade war, aggravated by an increase in the tendency to replace workers with digitally sophisticated substitutes for human labor to promote profitability and efficiency.

Above all, 2025 will witness growing tensions between the unified governance of global security by continued US hegemony and a resurgent challenge mounted by the Global South in the ongoing Legitimacy War with the West.

Richard Falk is an international law and international relations scholar who taught at Princeton University for forty years.

26 December 2024

Source: countercurrents.org

How Arab Leaders Betrayed the Masses?

By Dr. Mahboob A. Khawaja

Western Leaders Watch the Israeli Massacres as Spectators

President Biden and Secretary Blinken knew and witnessed  the ferocious and tragic abnormality of Israeli planned killing of civilians and genocide in Gaza but their interest and policies were aligned to unthinking of evilmongering in Palestine. Continued occupation, forcible displacement and daily killings of civilians are the strategic goals, the Israeli extremist political leadership encouraged by the US hired supporters envisage plans of ‘greater Israel’ inclusive of Jordan, Saudi Arabia and parts of Egypt. The neo-colonial installed puppets – the former tribal agents – now self-made  kings, princes and presidents follow the European and American dictum for their survival. They are immune to logic and advice from Muslim scholarly experts in global affairs. The US and few West European leaders neglecting their own history masked their warmongering not knowing the consequences of their own viciousness against humanity. When life and human survival faces critical challenges, the thinking people and global institutions should respond with a collective will to stop the civilian massacres and genocide. Not so, in-waiting are the Arab-Muslim leaders to see if anything would happen out of nowhere to stop the Israeli carnage of planned killing and destruction of Gaza and the rest of Palestine. Please see:

“America-Israel War on Gaza a Prelude to Conquest of the Arab World.” https://www.uncommonthought.com/mtblog/archives/2024/01/05/america-israels-war-on-gaza-a-prelude-to-conquest-of-the-arab-world.php

The UNO failed miserably its Charter obligations, for millions of people with nowhere to go, nowhere to find a place of safety and life protection. Everyday is a killing day- bombardments of innocent civilians, places of worship, hospitals, UNRWA’s school shelters, Israeli freely use weapons of mass destruction conveniently made available by the US Government. The war scenario emboldens Netanyahu‘s political absolutism – an egoistic leader with a controversial profile will do utmost to regain unbridled ambition either by manipulation, violence or new conflicts. The current paradigm links directly to PM Netanyahu  affiliated with extreme Jewish Ultra Nationalists to deny the Palestinian people their rights of existence as an independent State and to dismantle the Al-Aqsa Mosque. Please see: “Al-Aqsa Mosque Waiting for the Arab Leaders” https://www.uncommonthought.com/mtblog/archives/2023/04/14/al-aqsa-mosque-waiting-for-the-arab-leaders.php

The Arab-Muslim Leaders Friends of Israel and America

The US media reports of the Saudi and Emirati leaders having financial investments in Israeli technology and manufacturing industries. Ironically, they lack a sense of time and history and how they could be punished by God for their treachery and dishonesty to the interest of Arab masses. There are no Arab leaders having moral and political integrity to represent the masses and no Arab armies to defend Islam. Simply put, they are puppets and hired agents of the Western imperialism. Netanyahu needed a powerful political and intellectual challenge to rethink his egoistic belligerency against Arabs but it was nowhere to be found. Israel bulldozed and occupied Egyptian Rafah crossing to Gaza but President Sissi took no action in defense. The Saudi, the UAE and others stooges kept silent profile while massacres of innocent killing embolden Israel to put finishing end to Gaza. Several thousand Israeli citizens regularly protest against the Netanyhau Government in Tel Aviv’s military defense complex calling for an immediate ceasefire and return of the 100 hostages and peace talks. Are the historic Israelities (progeny of Jacob) and the followers of Moses versus the Zionists, the same?

Israel and the US Need War, Not Peace as the End Game

“Fear God” and ‘do not violate the covenants of peace and trust on earth’, the Divine reminders echoed by Abraham, Moses, Jesus and Mohammad – Prophets of God to humanity for peace and global brotherhood. (The Quran:33:72):

We did indeed offer the Trust to the Heavens and the Earth And the mountains but they refused to undertake it, being afraid thereof. But man undertook it, he was indeed unjust and foolish.

Those bombing and causing catastrophic events to destroy planet Earth and mankind and all of its treasures and enrichments are not normal human beings but sadistic people and leaders. The followers of Moses – the generations of Israelite are reminded by God (The Quran 2: 84-85 ): And remember, We took a Covenant from the Children of Israel (progeny of Jacob), Worship none but God; ….shed no blood amongst you, Nor displace people from  homes: and Ye solemnly ratified, And to this ye can bear witness…. It was not lawful for you to banish another party, then it is only a part of the Book that ye believe in…. And on the Day of Judgment they shall be consigned to the most grievous penalty,For God is not unmindful what ye do.

The Israeli leaders and the US Biden administration are on the same page to conquer and control the oil exporting Arab states. More than worst is yet to come when President-elect Donald Trump will take office on January 20th. Was the animosity built-in to the Israeli extreme political psyche and ideology to expel Palestinains from their homeland? Are the Israeli leaders driven by the lust of American weapons and economic power to commit genocide? Those doing so are not conscious of their own end game. PM Netanyahu and his extremist regime would try to put an end to the freedom of Palestine. Gaza is the experimental lab for that end game.We, the People of knowledge speak logically about the Nature of Things affecting our lives, morals and our hopes for a sustainable future. Are you willing to explore the Nature of Things? There is something you as intelligent human beings do not understand about God, the sanctity of human life, the working of the universe in which we live, the earth as a trust and its systematic understanding which could change your inner thoughts, values and rational thinking. The stern warning from the Divine Revelations is clear (The Quran: 35:44)Do they not travel through the earth and see what was the End of those before them. Though they were superior to them in strength? Nor is God to be frustrated by anything whatever; in the heavens or on earth: For He is All Knowing – All Powerful.

If time and history are a reference point, we humankind stand at a critical juncture of our own complicity to have allowed ignorance, hatred, fear, failure and animosity to destroy our life, culture and existence. God created you as human beings – the most intelligent creation on this planet with moral and intellectual capacity, obligations and accountability. Regardless of the phony claim of ethnic superiority, If you defy the Laws of God, you will be held accountable like other aggressors in the past. You cannot pretend to think and behave like animals. Animals live and do not reflect on the imperatives of life, human rights, freedom and justice whereas, we, the human beings cannot act like animals as we are supposed to be intelligent and responsible species on this Earth. At the edge of reason, the notion of evil leads to realization of evil and tyranny of war must be stopped by all means and those responsible for the genocide and crimes against humanity must be held accountable to restore the manifestation of equal human rights, freedom, peace and security for all.

Dr. Mahboob A. Khawaja specializes in international affairs-global security, peace and conflict resolution and has spent several academic years across the Russian-Ukrainian and Central Asian regions knowing the people, diverse cultures of thinking and political governance and a keen interest in Islamic-Western comparative cultures and civilizations, and author of several publications including: One Humanity and the Remaking of Global Peace, Security and Conflict Resolution, and a forthcoming book: Global Humanity and the Remaking of Peace, Security and Conflict Resolution beyond the Lens of Human Consciousness.

26 December 2024

Source: countercurrents.org

At Least 3 Palestinian Babies Freeze to Death in Gaza Amid Israeli Blockade

By Brett Wilkins

At least three Palestinian infants have frozen to death in Gaza in recent days amid winter temperatures and inadequate shelter due to Israel’s 446-day U.S.-backed assault and blockade of the besieged coastal enclave, according to medical officials there.

Gaza Health Ministry Director Dr. Muneer Alboursh said that Sila Mahmoud Al-Faseeh, a 3-week-old baby girl, died Sunday “from the extreme cold” in a tent where her forcibly displaced family is sheltering on a beach in al-Mawasi, an Israeli-designated “safe zone” for displaced Palestinians.

Sila’s father, Mahmoud al-Faseeh, told The Associated Press that he wrapped the infant in a blanket and tried to keep her warm as the temperatures fell to 48°F (9°C)—below the fatal threshold for hypothermia—on a windy night in their unsealed tent on cold ground.

“It was very cold overnight and as adults we couldn’t even take it,” al-Faseeh explained. “We couldn’t stay warm.”

Al-Faseeh said that when he woke up, he found his daughter unresponsive and stiff, her body “like wood.”

Warning: Video contains images of death.

[https://twitter.com/Dr_Muneer1/status/1871853524574736766]

Sila was rushed to a field hospital where doctors unsuccessfully tried to revive her. Ahmed al-Farra, director of the children’s ward at Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis, confirmed to the AP that the girl died of hypothermia and said that two other babies, ages 3 days and 1 month, were also brought to the hospital within the past 48 hours after freezing to death.

Gazan officials and international humanitarian agencies say that at least 18,000 children are among the more than 45,361 Palestinians killed in Gaza since Israel began bombing, invading, and besieging the coastal strip after the October 7, 2023 Hamas-led attack. More than 2 million Palestinians in Gaza have also been wounded, forcibly displaced, starved, or sickened.

Israel’s conduct in the war is the subject of an ongoing International Court of Justice genocide case led by South Africa. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Yoav Gallant, his former defense minister, are fugitives from the International Criminal Court, which in November issued arrest warrants for the pair and for Hamas leader Mohammed Diab Ibrahim Al-Masri for alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity.

[https://twitter.com/arjunsethi81/status/1871965510851842342]

Most of the verified Palestinian deaths in Gaza during the first 10 months of the war were children aged 5-9, according to the United Nations Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights.

“For over 14 months, children have been at the sharp edge of this nightmare,” United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) communications specialist Rosalia Bollen said last week. “In Gaza the reality for over a million children is fear, utter deprivation, and unimaginable suffering.”

“The war on children in Gaza stands as a stark reminder of our collective responsibility,” Bollen added. “A generation of children is enduring the brutal violation of their rights and the destruction of their futures.”

UNICEF has called Gaza “the most dangerous place in the world to be a child.”

In June, U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres added Israel to his so-called “List of Shame” of countries that kill and injure children during wars and other armed conflicts.

On Tuesday, Philippe Lazzarini, who heads the U.N. agency for Palestinian refugees, said that “in Gaza, one child gets killed every hour.”

“These are not numbers,” he stressed. “These are lives cut short.”

Brett Wilkins is a staff writer for Common Dreams.

26 December 2024

Source: countercurrents.org

Five journalists killed in Israeli strike near al-Awda Hospital in Central Gaza

By Countercurrents Collective

Five journalists have been killed in an Israeli strike in the vicinity of a hospital in central Gaza. The journalists from the Al-Quds Today channel were covering events near al-Awda Hospital, located in the Nuseirat refugee camp, when their broadcasting van was hit by an Israeli air strike.

[https://twitter.com/QudsNen/status/1872080602771738762]

Footage from the scene circulating on social media shows a vehicle engulfed in flames.

[https://twitter.com/QudsNen/status/1872199667179761815]

[https://twitter.com/QudsNen/status/1872078942364205455]

[https://twitter.com/QudsNen/status/1872084861437264127]

A screenshot taken from a video of the white-coloured van shows the word “press” in large red lettering across the back of the vehicle.

The deceased journalists have been named as Fadi Hassouna, Ibrahim al-Sheikh Ali, Mohammed al-Ladah, Faisal Abu al-Qumsan and Ayman al-Jadi.

Al Jazeera’s Anas al-Sharif said that Ayman al-Jadi had been waiting for his wife in front of the hospital while she was in labour to give birth to their first child.

[https://twitter.com/QudsNen/status/1872198996103667896]

[https://twitter.com/AnasAlSharif0/status/1872070605799035002]

Civil defence teams retrieved the bodies of the victims and extinguished a fire at the scene, the Quds News Network said.

Israel’s military said it had carried out a “targeted” attack against a vehicle carrying members of Islamic Jihad and that it would continue to take action against “terrorist organizations” in Gaza.

“Prior to the attack, many steps were taken to reduce the chance of harming civilians, including the use of precision weapons, aerial observations, and additional intelligence information,” the military said in a post on X.

According to Gaza health authorities 201 Palestinian journalists have been killed in Israeli attacks since the start of the ongoing genocide in Gaza.

The most recent attack occurred earlier this morning when five journalists were killed in an Israeli strike on their vehicle in the central Nuseirat refugee camp. One of them was awaiting the birth of his child.

Israel’s genocidal war on Gaza has been considered the deadliest for journalists and media workers in the world in 30 years, according to media freedom organisations.

The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) earlier this month condemned Israel’s killing of four Palestinian journalists in the space of a week, calling on the international community to hold the country accountable for its attacks against the media.

At least 141 journalists have been killed in Israel’s war in Gaza since October 7, 2023, according to the CPJ.

26 December 2024

Source: countercurrents.org

Justice NOW!

By Ranjan Solomon

There is so much conflict around the world accompanied by brutal killings and destruction. Often these conflicts are simplistically dismissed as religious rivalries, competing ethnic claims, caste-based oppression and racism, Some of these conflicts make the headlines; others are frozen wars/conflicts in which those who die, and what is destroyed is a mere statistic. At the root of war and conflict is the uneven competition for resources where the powerful manage to steal land, rich minerals and precious resources below the land – as in the case of African countries and indigenous lands everywhere in the so-called Global South. Those who would acquire riches that do not belong to them are the butchers of war. Colonial and imperial powers are filled with greed and do not ever stop craving for more.

The world is in need of Movements for Justice which will defy the war mongers and thieves. There is a narrative in the Bible where Jesus put together a whip out of strips of leather and chased them out of the Temple, stampeding the sheep and cattle, upending the tables of the loan sharks, spilling coins left and right. He told the dove merchants “Get your things out of here!  A common interpretation is that Jesus was reacting to the practice of money changers routinely cheating the people. Marvin L. Krier Mich, a renowned proponent of social justice in both the Catholic Church and civil society, avers that a good deal of money was stored at the temple, where it could be loaned by the wealthy to the poor who often fell deep into debt for profits. Jesus did not preach a sermon and counsel these bigots. Instead, he used the whip to scare them away.

This is not to advocate or propose violence. But to remind the oppressor’s that their ways are wrong and they must transform their lives from one of greed and oppression.

Gaza is clearly not about Hamas and its fight back after 18 years of being forced to live in a concentration camp. October 7th was the day they chose to resist which was the legal right to do against an occupying power who ruled lethally and illegally over their lives. By comparison to Israel, Hamas’ victims are a mere drop in the ocean.

Piers Morgan persists in all his interviews with the question: Did not Israel have the right to fight back? The answer is an emphatic NO. Israel must end the occupation and pay reparations for their wild animal-like treatment of Palestinians. They must return all the land and other resources to those they stole it from. This is the only possible peaceful solution.

The time for that is NOW.

Ranjan Solomon is a political commentator

25 December 2024

Source: countercurrents.org

A Global Minimum Wage Would Reduce Poverty and Corporate Power

By Lawrence S. Wittner

In today’s world of widespread poverty and unprecedented wealth, how about raising the wages of the most poorly-paid workers?

This October, the World Bank reported that “8.5 percent of the global population―almost 700 million people―live today on less than $2.15 per day,” while “44 percent of the global population―around 3.5 billion people―live today on less than $6.85 per day.”  Meanwhile, “global poverty reduction has slowed to a near standstill.”

In early 2024, the charity group Oxfam International noted that, since 2020, “148 top corporations made $1.8 trillion in profit, 52 percent up on 3-year average, and dished out huge payouts to rich shareholders.”  During this same period, the world’s five wealthiest men “more than doubled their fortunes from $405 billion to $869 billion,” an increase of $14 million per hour.  As corporate elites gathered in Davos for a chat about the world economy, ten corporations alone were worth $10.2 trillion, more than the GDPs of all the countries in Africa and Latin America combined.

The world’s vast economic inequality “is no accident,” concluded a top Oxfam official.  “The billionaire class is ensuring corporations deliver more wealth to them at the expense of everyone else.”

Although inequalities in income and wealth have existed throughout much of human history, they have been softened somewhat by a variety of factors, including labor unions and―in modern times―minimum wage laws.  Designed to provide workers with a basic standard of living, these laws create a floor below which wages are not allowed to sink.  In 1894, New Zealand became the first nation to enact a minimum wage law, and―pressured by the labor movement and public opinion―other countries (including the United States in 1938) followed its lead.  Today, more than 90 percent of the world’s nations have some kind of minimum wage law in effect.

These minimum wage laws have had very positive effects upon the lives of workers.  Most notably, they lifted large numbers of wage earners out of poverty.  In addition, they undermined the business practice of slashing wages (and thus reducing production costs) to increase profit margins or to cut prices and grab a larger share of the market.

Even so, the growth of multinational corporations provided businesses with opportunities to slip past these national laws and dramatically reduce their labor costs by moving production of goods and services to low-wage nations.  This corporate offshoring of jobs and infrastructure gathered steam in the mid-20th century.  Initially, multinational corporations focused on outsourcing low-skilled or unskilled manufacturing jobs, which had a negative impact on employment and wages in advanced industrial nations.  In the 21st century, however, the outsourcing of skilled jobs, particularly in financial management and IT operations, rose dramatically.  After all, from the standpoint of enhancing corporate profits, it made good sense to replace an American IT worker with an Indian IT worker at 13 percent the cost.  The result was an accelerating race to the bottom.

In the United States, this export of formerly good-paying jobs to low-wage, impoverished countries―combined with “free trade” agreements, a corporate and government assault on unions, and conservative obstruction of any raise in the pathetically low federal minimum wage ($7.25 per hour)―produced a disaster.  The share of private sector goods-producing jobs at high wages shrank, since the 1960s, from 42 to 17 percent.  Increasingly, U.S. jobs were located in the low-paid service sector.  Not surprisingly, by 2023 an estimated 43 million Americans lived in poverty, while another 49 million lived just above the official poverty line.  Little wonder that, in this nation and many others caught up in corporate globalization, there was an alarming rise of rightwing demagogues playing on economic grievances, popular hatreds, and fears.

If, therefore, wages in underdeveloped nations and in advanced industrial nations are not keeping pace with the vast accumulation of capital by the world’s wealthiest people and their corporations, one way to counter this situation is to move beyond the disintegrating patchwork of wage floor efforts by individual nations and develop a global minimum wage.

Such a wage could take a variety of forms.  The most egalitarian involves a minimum wage level that would be the same in all nations.  Unfortunately, though, given the vast variation among countries in wealth and current wages, this does not seem practical.  In Luxembourg, for example, the average yearly per capita purchasing power is 316 times that of South Sudan.  But other options are more viable, including basing the minimum wage on a percentage of the national median wage or on a more complex measurement accounting for the cost of living and national living standards.

Over the past decade and more, prominent economists and other specialists have made the case for a global minimum wage, as have a variety of organizations.  For an appropriate entity to establish it, they have usually pointed to the International Labour Organization, a UN agency that has long worked to set international labor standards.

The advantages of a global minimum wage are clear.

It would lift billions of people out of poverty, thus enabling them to lead far better lives.

It would reduce the corporate incentive for offshoring by limiting the ability of multinational corporations to obtain cheap labor abroad.

By keeping jobs in the home country, it would aid unions in wealthy nations to retain their memberships and provide protection against “corporate blackmail”―the management demand that unions either accept contract concessions or get ready for the shift of corporate jobs and production overseas.

By raising wages in impoverished countries, it would reduce the poverty-driven mass migration from these nations and, thereby, deprive rightwing demagogues in wealthier countries of one of their most potent issues.

Of course, higher labor costs at home and abroad would reduce corporate profits and limit the growth of billionaires’ wealth and power.  But wouldn’t these also be positive developments?

Lawrence S. Wittner (https://www.lawrenceswittner.com/ ) is Professor of History Emeritus at SUNY/Albany and the author of Confronting the Bomb (Stanford University Press).

25 December 2024

Source: countercurrents.org

The West Bank’s Men of the CIA – Why is the PA Killing Palestinians in Jenin?

By Dr. Ramzy Baroud

Following a ten-day siege, the Palestinian Authority began, on December 14, a violent raid on the Jenin refugee camp in the northern West Bank.

The PA security forces used similar tactics as used by the Israeli occupation forces in their routine attacks on the area.

The camp, which is a mere half a square kilometer in size, hosts an ever-growing population of 24 thousand refugees, mostly the descendants of Palestinians ethnically cleansed by Zionist militias during the great catastrophe, or Nakba, of 1948.

The raid began with a tight siege, followed by an attack from multiple directions that resulted in the killing of an unarmed youth, Rebhi al-Shalabi, 19, then a 13-year-old child, Muhammad al-Amer.

The PA forces also killed Yazid Ja’ayseh, the commander of the Jenin Brigades, who had evaded Israeli assassination attempts for his leadership role in unifying all Palestinian Resistance fighters under the umbrella of a single group.

Expectedly, Israel is largely pleased with the PA’s action against the Palestinian Resistance, though it expects more. “The Palestinian Authority has been acting resolutely against the Hamas and Islamic Jihad fighters over the past several weeks, army and Shin Bet sources said, but the Israeli officials expressed the hope that their effectiveness could be enhanced,” Haaretz reported.

Indeed, Israel had attempted to subdue Jenin 80 times in the last year alone, killing more than 220 people, Al Jazeera reported, citing Palestinian Ministry of Health sources.

By attacking Jenin, the PA is helping the Israeli army in more than one way: it is killing and detaining anti-Israeli occupation Resistance fighters, consuming the energy and resources of the Resistance, allowing Israel to spare thousands of soldiers so that they may carry on with the genocide in Gaza, and more.

For many, especially supporters of Palestine around the world, the PA’s action is confusing, to say the least. Those surprised by the anti-Resistance policies of Mahmoud Abbas and his Authority, however, are driven by the erroneous assumption that the PA is a legitimate representative of the Palestinian people, and that it behaves in ways consistent with the collective aspirations of all Palestinians.

Nothing could be further from the truth. For many years, the PA has ceased playing any role that deviates from the interests of a small clique of pro-US and pro-Israeli wealthy elite who have enriched themselves, while millions of Palestinians continue to suffer an Israeli genocide in Gaza, and a violent system of apartheid and military occupation in the West Bank and East Jerusalem.

The most telling and recent example is that, a short distance away from Jenin, illegal and violent Israeli Jewish settlers have burned the Bir Al-Walidin Mosque in the town of Murda, near Salfit – less than 70 kilometers from Jenin. Neither in this case, nor in any of the hundreds of settlers’ pogroms carried out against Palestinians in the West Bank in the last year – or before – did the PA security carry out any action to confront the armed Jewish militias, nor, of course, the occupation army.

But how did the PA turn from a supposed national project – at least in theory – to another branch of the Israeli occupation?

It could be argued that the PA was structured since its establishment in 1994 as a body whose existence catered to benefit the Israeli occupation. There is much evidence that substantiates this claim, including the arrests, torture and killing of dissenting Palestinians soon after the creation of the PA.

The CIA became directly involved in supporting the PA from the very start, expanding its role as early as 1996 following a series of Palestinian retaliatory attacks on Israeli targets in major cities. It was then that CIA director George Tenet became an important player in shaping the policies of the PA security forces, preparing it for massive crackdowns on Palestinian Resistance groups.

This involvement was a direct condition for US financial support under the Bill Clinton Administration – the kind of support that sowed the seeds of the Fatah-Hamas conflict, which reached its zenith in the summer of 2007.

The involvement of the US – and other armed forces of US client regimes in the region – became even more apparent under the leadership of US Lt. Gen. Keith Dayton, who helped train, prepare and equip the Palestinian Authority Security Forces (NSF), producing several battalions of young recruits (between 20 and 22 years old) to fight fellow Palestinians in the name of restoring law and order.

That supposed restoration of the law began in earnest as early as 2005 and continues until this day. Interestingly, this is the same language that the PA is currently using to justify its war on the Jenin refugee camp.

A spokesman for the PA security forces, Anwar Rajab recently told Al Jazeera that the objective of the raid on Jenin is to “pursue criminals” and lawbreakers, and to “prevent the camp from becoming a battleground like Gaza.”

Equating Resistance fighters with criminals and linking that supposed criminality to the Gaza Resistance is the typical PA discourse on resistance, a discourse that took the US and Israel years to craft and perfect – making the PA arguably the greatest achievement of Israel and the US in recent decades.

This behavior and language can be traced to a famous statement by General Dayton himself, who in a 2009 speech celebrated the US’s greatest creation in Palestine:

“And what we have created – and I say this in humility – what we have created are new men … upon the return of these new men of Palestine, they have shown motivation, discipline and professionalism, and they have made such a difference.”

Indeed, the ‘new men of Palestine’ are making all the difference required by the US and Israel: they are fighting the very Palestinian Resistance that is defending Jenin against the Israeli onslaught, Nablus against the pogroms of armed settlers and Gaza against genocide.

None of these ‘new men’ – whose numbers are counted in the tens of thousands – have lifted a finger to help their brethren as they continue to starve to death in the Gaza Strip, tortured and raped en masse, burned alive in Jabaliya and Khan Yunis, and yet continue to fight and die in their thousands – alone.

To say that the PA has betrayed Palestinians, however, is an inaccurate statement. The PA was never set up, financed and armed by the US and Israel as a force of liberation, but as an obstacle to Palestinian freedom. We are witnessing the final proof of this claim. It is taking place in Jenin now; in fact, throughout the West Bank.

Of course, the PA will not be able to crush the Palestinian Resistance, which the supposedly mighty Israeli army has failed to subdue over the course of years. But the question remains: how long will the PA be allowed to serve the role of the enforcers of the Israeli occupation and the protector of settlers, while still promoting itself as the guardian of Palestinian rights, freedom and statehood?

Dr. Ramzy Baroud is a journalist, author and the Editor of The Palestine Chronicle.

25 December 2024

Source: countercurrents.org

Somber Christmas in Palestine Amid Israel’s Gaza Genocide

By Quds News Network

Occupied Palestine (Quds News Network)- Hundreds gathered at the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem on Tuesday to mark Christmas in a somber atmosphere. For the second year in a row, the celebrations reflected the grief caused by Israel’s ongoing genocide in Gaza. No decorations adorned the church or its surroundings, and the absence of tourists and pilgrims underscored the sadness.

In Manger Square, where Christians believe Jesus was born, a scout group broke the morning silence. One scout held a banner reading, “We want life, not death” and “Peace for Gaza.”

A large Christmas tree, usually lit in the square, remained dark. Local authorities chose to avoid major festivities again this year. However, prayers and Midnight Mass, led by Latin Patriarch Pierbattista Pizzaballa, continued as planned, with a strictly religious focus instead of the joyful celebrations of the past.

Christmas Prayers Amid Genocide

Despite the gloom, Palestinian Christians, numbering about 185,000 in the 1948-occupied territories and 47,000 in Jerusalem, the West Bank, and Gaza, turned to prayer for solace. Israeli authorities banned Christmas ceremonies in Gaza churches, but Pope Francis successfully pressured them to allow Patriarch Pizzaballa to enter Gaza and lead Midnight Mass at the Holy Family Church.

[https://twitter.com/LPJerusalem/status/1871139613311648012]

Prayers filled the church as worshipers mourned the ongoing genocide in Gaza, now in its 15th month. The Christmas celebrations were limited to church services.

After the Mass, Pope Francis spoke to Gaza’s Christians via Skype, offering his blessings and Christmas wishes.

Honoring the Fallen

While in Gaza, Patriarch Pizzaballa visited the graves of Nahida Anton and her daughter Samar, who were killed by an Israeli sniper on December 16, 2023. Their graves, located at the Holy Family Catholic Church, became a poignant reminder of the suffering endured by Gaza’s Christians as Israel continues to target them.

[https://twitter.com/QudsNen/status/1871639472414298349]

[https://twitter.com/QudsNen/status/1871683932426494190]

25 December 2024

Source: countercurrents.org

Syria: Transitional justice and strengthening the rule of law must be prioritised to ensure civil peace

By Euro-Med Human Rights Monitor

Geneva – Achieving civil peace and ensuring sustainable security in Syria after the fall of President Bashar al-Assad’s regime requires adopting a transitional justice approach, strengthening the rule of law, and organising free and fair elections that lead to the formation of a legitimate government. These steps are essential for recovery and for preventing chaos or acts of revenge, particularly in light of the governance vacuum and fragility resulting from years of war and internal conflicts, alongside the widespread impunity.

Syria is at a critical juncture that demands collective efforts to ensure the rule of law, enhance security, and deliver justice for victims who have endured decades of systematic repression and severe human rights violations. These measures represent the cornerstone for building a sustainable future for the country, grounded in justice, accountability, and respect for fundamental rights and freedoms.

Recent developments in Syria have seen some villages and towns experience violations and practices targeting residents and their properties. These transgressions prompted dignitaries from cities and rural areas along the coast to issue an appeal to the new leadership on 17 December, calling for an immediate end to such actions, which risk inciting sectarian tensions and threatening civil peace.

Respect for human rights and the protection of civilians across Syria are imperative. Any violations or abuses, whether individual or systematic and regardless of the perpetrator, constitute breaches of international laws that remain applicable at all times and under all circumstances. Such actions fuel tensions and undermine stability.

A comprehensive review of Syria’s laws, particularly the Penal Code and the Code of Criminal Procedure, is essential, with amendments needed to align them with international human rights standards. Judicial and security system reforms are also necessary, alongside measures to enhance citizens’ rights by lifting restrictions on association, freedom of opinion and expression, and ensuring the right to peaceful assembly in accordance with international standards.

Transitional justice must be established in Syria, with the transitional government bearing responsibility for promoting stability and preventing chaos. This requires urgent measures to strengthen internal security, protect civilians, and safeguard public and private properties until free and fair elections are conducted nationwide. These elections are critical to paving the way for the formation of an elected government tasked with completing the transitional justice process by implementing accountability mechanisms and addressing the consequences of past violations.

Coordination between the transitional government and the elected government is crucial to ensuring justice and protecting victims’ rights, thereby building a stable and fair future for Syria.

The transitional government holds the responsibility of laying the initial groundwork for justice by strengthening the rule of law and stability. Subsequently, the elected government plays a vital role in completing this process over the long term by enhancing accountability for past violations, regardless of the perpetrator, protecting victims’ rights, rebuilding judicial and security institutions, and developing effective mechanisms for national reconciliation, all while adhering to international human rights standards.

Euro-Med Human Rights Monitor calls for strengthening the independence of judicial bodies to prosecute those responsible for crimes and violations committed in past years. It stresses the importance of preventing impunity and avoiding the recurrence of such violations in the future. Efforts must focus on building a democratic state based on equality, respect for human rights, and fundamental freedoms, particularly the right to justice and fair trial.

Euro-Med Monitor further urges the establishment of a national transitional justice committee to document violations, provide psychological and social support to victims, and foster social reconciliation. It emphasises the need for this committee to include broad representation from all segments of Syrian society to ensure comprehensive justice, create a healing environment for all parties involved, and promote national unity.

Achieving transitional justice in Syria is both a legal and moral imperative to ensure the peaceful transfer of power to a legitimate, elected government and to rebuild trust between the state and all segments of society. All national and international parties must provide the necessary support to achieve these goals and build a better future for all Syrians.

Euro-Med Human Rights Monitor is a Geneva-based independent organization with regional offices across the MENA region and Europe

23 December 2024

Source: countercurrents.org

Why Are 14 Million Children Hungry in the World’s Richest Country with the Biggest Economic Advantages

By Bharat Dogra

There are nearly 14 million children in the USA who suffer from food insecurity and hunger, or about one in five. During the peak of the COVID crisis this had come close to about 18 million (see The Conversation discussion by four experts titled ‘18 million US children are at risk of hunger’, January 21, 2021).

This is part of a wider and serious problem of hunger and food insecurity in all age-groups.

According to the US Department of Agriculture’s report ‘Household Food Security in the USA in 2022’, in 2022 17 million US households ( or 12.8% of the total number of households) were food insecure or suffered from hunger to a lesser or greater extent. This number had increased from 10.2% in 2021. Within this number of 17 million households, 6.8 million had very low food security, or suffered even more from hunger. This number of households suffering from very high food insecurity also went up from 3.8% to 5.1% from 2021 to 2022, when seen as a percentage of total households.

The number of households where children suffered from food insecurity is recorded at lower levels as the number of households with children is only 39% of total households in the USA, and also because elders generally try to protect children from hunger. Nevertheless it is disturbing to learn from this official report that the number of households with child food insecurity and hunger was 2.3 million in 2021 and went up very rapidly to 3.3 million in 2022, a 44% increase in just one year. Similarly households with high child food insecurity (which includes children skipping meals or altogether going without food for a day) increased from 274,000 in 2021 to 381,000 in 2022 in just one year, a 40% rise in just one year.

In addition there are hungry children (age-group up to 18) living outside households who face high food insecurity, including those who are homeless.

Food insecurity and hunger among certain sections of population like blacks and Latinos are significantly higher than the national average.

Hence a question arises that a country which has very high GNP and the topmost number of billionaires, which has very high natural resource base, which was favored by history to emerge at the top, which has extraordinary power to create currency and trade systems to suit its interests, is unable to feed its people properly and has very high rates of hunger and food insecurity among its people and most glaringly among its children.

What is more, while the country could make available hundreds of billions of dollars for the most destructive wars and proxy wars, it could not make available tens of billions of dollars which could have ensured that (almost) no one was hungry in the USA, as per the estimates given by various groups fighting hunger in USA.

In fact the available data shows that while the USA was getting deeply involved in such proxy conflicts which have been extremely costly in terms of loss of life, the number of those affected by hunger and food insecurity in the USA was rising at a very high rate.

In many parts of USA the expected decrease in hunger following the end of COVID crisis did not take place as some of the special programs to keep away hunger and other deprivation during the COVID days were rolled back too hurriedly.

In fact recently the Food Research and Action Center issued a warning that as about 12 states in the USA are poised to move away from a combined 1.4 billion dollar spending on food and nutrition (EBT) program, this can lead to an increase in food insecurity for about 10 million children during the summer next year (2025).

All this draws attention to how far removed capitalism, particularly in its more aggressive forms, is from meeting the most priority needs of its own people, let alone being sensitive to the needs and safety of the people of other countries.

Bharat Dogra is Honorary Convener, Campaign to Save Earth Now.

23 December 2024

Source: countercurrents.org