Just International

U.S. and Western Allies Support the Genocide. Israel’s Role in U.S.-NATO War Against Iran

By Michel Chossudovsky

[Part II of this article will be published in late October 2024]

1. Introduction: International Law.

Western Governments’ “Complicity in Genocide”

A genocide is being conducted by the Netanyahu proxy government against the people of Palestine.

By supporting Israel, Western governments are “complicit” in the conduct of genocide under Articles III and IV of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide.

Article III (e) Complicity in genocide.

Article IV. Persons committing genocide or any of the other acts enumerated in article III shall be punished [Article III(e)], whether they are constitutionally responsible rulers, public officials or private individuals.”  *emphasis added)

2. VIDEO: Michel Chossudovsky

It is important that the peace movement take cognizance of the fact that their own heads of State and heads of government, namely Biden, Starmer, Trudeau, Macron, Scholz, et. al. (see them smiling) are from a legal standpoint “complicit” (Genocide Convention),  inasmuch as they are supportive of Israel’s atrocities committed against the People of Palestine.

“La classe politique criminalisée”.

It’s the “criminalization of politics”.

Persons committing genocide or any of the other acts enumerated in article III shall be punished [article III e], whether they are constitutionally responsible rulers, public officials or private individuals.

THEY ARE CRIMINALS UNDER INTERNATIONAL LAW

THEY ARE LIABLE: “PREVENTION AND PUNISHMENT”

QUESTION THEIR LEGITIMACY

This is a powerful instrument for the anti-war movement.

Confront your “responsible rulers” and “public officials”, not to mention the Big Money and financial institutions who are behind the war.

There is another dimension, The Law of Armed Conflict (LOAC).

Since World War II,  all  U.S.-led wars have  deliberately targeted civilians, which is a crime against humanity under The Law of Armed Conflict (LOAC), which consists in:

“….respect for and protection of the civilian population and civilian objects, the Parties to the conflict shall at all times distinguish between the civilian population and combatants and between civilian objects and military objectives and accordingly shall direct their operations only against military objectives.” [Additional Protocol 1, Article 48]

Remember Fallujah, Iraq 2006

3. Partners in Crime

While the IDF is responsible for the conduct of the atrocities, the U.S. War Machine is a partner in crime. The conduct of the genocide has been planned for several years in consultation with the Pentagon and NATO.

Israel’s Secret Intelligence Memorandum

An official “secret” memorandum authored by Israel’s  Ministry of Intelligence “is recommending the forcible and permanent transfer of the Gaza Strip’s 2.2 million Palestinian residents to Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula”, namely to a refugee camp in Egyptian territory. There are indications of Israel-Egypt negotiations  as well as consultations with the U.S.

The 10-page document, dated Oct. 13, 2023, bears the logo of the Intelligence Ministry. …

It recommends a full population transfer as its preferred course of action. …

The document, whose authenticity was confirmed by the ministry, has been translated into English in full here on +972.

Click here to access complete document (10 pages)

The Ministry of Intelligence recommends Option C: “Wiping Palestine off the Map”.

For more details and analysis, see my earlier article entitled

When The Lie Becomes the Truth: “Israel Is the Victim of Palestinian Aggression”. According to the ICC, “There Is No Genocide”. May 25, 2024

4. The genocide against Palestine is part of a broader war.

Israel is a de facto member of NATO and an ally of the U.S.

It is not Israel which is waging a war against Iran. The Pentagon calls the shots on behalf of US-NATO-Israel.

Israel has become an instrument of the Pentagon.

Netanyahu is a proxy. Israel does not act without the consent of US-NATO.

What Is Washington’s Unspoken Intent? Let Your Allies Do the Dirty Work for You? 

Flash back to 2005: At the outset of Bush’s second term, Vice President Dick Cheney dropped a bombshell, hinting that Israel would, so to speak, be doing the dirty work for us (paraphrase) without US military involvement and without us putting pressure on them “to do it”.

According to Cheney: (2005)

“The Israelis might well decide to act first, and let the rest of the world worry about cleaning up the diplomatic mess afterwards,” 

Israel would not be able to act unilaterally against Iran, without a green light from the Pentagon which controls key components of Israel’s air defense system.

America’s NATO allies, most of which are members of the European Union, are also “doing the dirty work” for the Pentagon. This is abundantly clear in their actions in support of the Kiev regime.

5. US Central Command’s (USCENTCOM) Strategy of “Dual Containment”

In practice, a war on Iran were it to occur, would be a joint US-NATO-Israeli endeavor, coordinated by US Strategic Command (STRATCOM) with America’s allies playing a key (subordinate) role.” (Quoted from my 2018 article)

The “War on Iran” has been on the drawing board of the Pentagon since the mid-1990s under US Central Command’s (USCENTCOM) “‘Strategy of Dual Containment’ directed against the Rogue States of Iraq and Iran” formulated during the Clinton administration.

“First Iraq, then Iran”: The stockpiling and deployment of advanced weapons systems directed against Iran started in the immediate wake of the 2003 bombing and invasion of Iraq.

From the outset, these war plans were led by the US, in liaison with NATO and Israel. The objective of the war on Iran was carefully outlined by US Central Command in liaison with US Strategic Command:

“The broad national security interests and objectives expressed in the President’s National Security Strategy (NSS) and the Chairman’s National Military Strategy (NMS) form the foundation of the United States Central Command’s theater strategy. The NSS directs implementation of a strategy of dual containment of the rogue states of Iraq and Iran as long as those states pose a threat to U.S. interests, to other states in the region, and to their own citizens.

Dual containment is designed to maintain the balance of power in the region without depending on either Iraq or Iran. USCENTCOM’s theater strategy is interest-based and threat-focused. The purpose of U.S. engagement, as espoused in the NSS, is to protect the United States’ vital interest in the region – uninterrupted, secure U.S./Allied access to Gulf oil.” (USCENTCOM, 1995, emphasis added)

USCENTCOM’s statement confirms the criminal nature of Washington’s military agenda:

“dual containment of the rogue states”,

“protect the US’s vital interests in the region”

“Secure US / Allied access to Gulf Oil”, through military intervention

rather than bona fide “trade” with partner countries.

6. “United States’ Vital Interest in the Region – Uninterrupted, Secure U.S./Allied Access to Gulf Oil”

i. Iran: Third Largest Reserves of Oil Worldwide

Iran is not only second in terms of its gas reserves after Russia, it ranks third worldwide in relation to its oil reserves (12% of worldwide oil reserves) versus a meagre 4% for the U.S.

THAT IS WHY THEY WANT TO INVADE IRAN (USCENTCOM, 1995)

ii. Iran Reserves of Natural Gas

Iran ranks second after Russia. Russia, Iran and Qatar possess  54.1 percent of the world’s reserves of natural gas.

Russia, 24.3%,

Iran, 17.3%,

Qatar, 12.5 % (in partnership with Iran)

versus  5.3 % for the US.

iii. Taking Control of the Palestine, Lebanon, Syria, Maritime Gas Corridor

Extending from the Egyptian border, Gaza and the Levant coastline, the unspoken objective is to take control and confiscate the maritime gas reserves.

GAS Reserves. “It’s America’s Promised Land,”(which ironically are portrayed as a threat to the environment, i.e. CO2 and the fake global warming narrative).

Part II —which provides a timeline and history of US wars against Iran— will be published on my Substack in late October 2024.

Michel Chossudovsky is an award-winning author, Professor of Economics (emeritus) at the University of Ottawa, Founder and Director of the Centre for Research on Globalization (CRG), Montreal, Editor of Global Research.

28 October 2024

Source: michelchossudovsky.substack.com

‘The Entire Population of North Gaza Is at Risk of Dying’: UN Relief Official

By Olivia Rosane

Israel could kill everyone left in Northern Gaza if its assault on the enclave continues, a United Nations relief official warned on Saturday.

U.N. Acting Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Coordinator Joyce Msuya also called for an end to the Israeli attack.

“What Israeli forces are doing in besieged North Gaza cannot be allowed to continue,” Msuya said.

In particular, Msuya emphasized Israel’s targeting of hospitals and shelters and interference with relief work.

“Hospitals have been hit, and health workers have been detained. Shelters have been emptied and burned down. First responders have been prevented from saving people from under the rubble. Families have been separated, and men and boys are being taken away by the truckload,” she said.

Msuya estimated that Israel’s actions in the north had killed hundreds and displaced tens of thousands. According toAl Jazeera, an Israeli siege on the north that began earlier in October has killed around 640.

“The entire population of North Gaza is at risk of dying,” Msuya said. “Such blatant disregard for basic humanity and for the laws of war must stop.”

The U.N. official’s remarks came as Israeli troops withdrew from a deadly attack on Kamal Adwan Hospital in Beit Lahia, which Al Jazeera correspondent Tareq Abu Azzoum said “is considered a medical lifeline for the two-thirds of Palestinians in northern Gaza.”

[https://twitter.com/QudsNen/status/1850191254006407261]

The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) had surrounded the hospital for days before entering and opening fire on Thursday and Friday, the Gaza Health Ministry and the hospital’s director toldCNN.

“Instead of receiving aid, we are receiving tanks,” hospital director Dr. Hussam Abu Safiya said in a video.

Medics told Al Jazeera that the IDF had detained 44 members of the hospital team, later releasing 14 of them. The director of field hospitals in Gaza, Marwan Al-Hams, said that soldiers had also destroyed medications as they left, “preventing us from saving the wounded.”

[https://twitter.com/QudsNen/status/1850205360654569827]

“It is a catastrophic situation as patients and the wounded are left on the floor without any medical attention,” hospital spokesperson Hisham Sakani told Al Jazeera. “We are facing grave dangers, and here I am once again sending an SOS to the whole world. We pray to God almighty our plight comes to an end and Israeli massacres [are] ceased.”

“The entire population north of Gaza Strip are now without any medical service after all the hospitals have been destroyed and forced out of operation,” Sahani continued.

Msuya’s statement also came a day after U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Türk called Friday’s attacks on northern Gaza the “darkest moment” of the war.

“The Israeli Government’s policies and practices in northern Gaza risk emptying the area of all Palestinians,” Türk said. “We are facing what could amount to atrocity crimes, including potentially extending to crimes against humanity.”

Msuya and Türk’s statements reflect the opinion of human rights experts that Israel is committing genocide in Gaza. The International Court of Justice is still considering the genocide case brought by South Africa against Israel. To date, the Israeli assault has killed at least 42,924 people and wounded 100,833, but the true numbers could be much higher.

Emergency medical doctor Mads Gilbert, who has volunteered in both Gaza and Lebanon, criticized Western governments for allowing the raid on Kamal Adwan, as well as Israel’s systematic attacks on healthcare workers and facilities in Gaza.

“We need an additional factor to understand why this has been allowed to go on, and that is actually that the Palestinian people are defined as under-humans,” Gilbert told Al Jazeera. “We would never have allowed this to happen, for example, in Ukraine. Almost 250,000 people in the northern part of Gaza have now no healthcare, and that in itself is part of the genocide.”

The Institute for Middle East Understanding called on both the international community and the U.S. government to respond to Israel’s violations of international law.

“The Biden-Harris administration must stop the flow of U.S. weapons to Israel which constitutes a necessary step to halting Israel’s ongoing war crimes,” IMEU wrote on social media Saturday. “It’s time for an arms embargo now.”

Olivia Rosane is a staff writer for Common Dreams.

27 October 2024

Source: countercurrents.org

Israel Kills The Journalists. Western Media Kills The Truth Of Genocide in Gaza

By Jonathan Cook

Israel knew that, if it could stop foreign correspondents from reporting directly from Gaza, those journalists would end up covering events in ways far more to its liking.

They would hedge every report of a new Israeli atrocity – if they covered them at all – with a “Hamas claims” or “Gaza family members allege”. Everything would be presented in terms of conflicting narratives rather than witnessed facts. Audiences would feel uncertain, hesitant, detached.

Israel could shroud its slaughter in a fog of confusion and disputation. The natural revulsion evoked by a genocide would be tempered and attenuated.

For a year, the global networks’ most experienced war reporters have stayed put in their hotels in Israel, watching Gaza from afar. Their human-interest stories, always at the heart of war reporting, have focused on the far more limited suffering of Israelis than the vast catastrophe unfolding for Palestinians.

That is why western audiences have been forced to relive a single day of horror for Israel, on 7 October 2023, as intensely as they have a year of daily horrors in Gaza – in what the World Court has judged to be a “plausible” genocide by Israel.

That is why the media have immersed their audiences in the agonies of the families of some 250 Israelis – civilians taken hostage and soldiers taken captive – as much as they have the agonies of 2.3 million Palestinians bombed and starved to death week after week, month after month.

That is why audiences have been subjected to gaslighting narratives that frame Gaza’s destruction as a “humanitarian crisis” rather than the canvas on which Israel is erasing all the known rules of war.

While foreign correspondents sit obediently in their hotel rooms, Palestinian journalists have been picked off one by one – in one of the greatest massacres of journalists in history.

Israel is now repeating that process in Lebanon. On Thursday night, it struck a residence in south Lebanon where three journalists were staying. All were killed.

In an indication of how deliberate and cynical Israel’s actions are, it put its military’s crosshairs on six Al Jazeera reporters this week, smearing them as “terrorists” working for Hamas and Islamic Jihad.

They are reportedly the last surviving Palestinian journalists in northern Gaza, which Israel has sealed off while it carries out the so-called “General’s Plan”.

Israel wants no one reporting its final push to exterminate northern Gaza by starving out the 400,000 Palestinians still there and executing anyone who remains as a “terrorist”.

These six join a long list of professionals defamed by Israel in the interests of advancing its genocide – from doctors and aid workers to UN peacekeepers.

Sympathy for Israel

Perhaps the nadir of Israel’s domestication of foreign journalists was reached this week in a report by CNN. Back in February whistleblowing staff there revealed that the network’s executives have been actively obscuring Israeli atrocities to portray Israel in a more sympathetic light.

In a story whose framing should have been unthinkable – but sadly was all too predictable – CNN reported on the psychological trauma some Israeli soldiers are suffering from time spent in Gaza, in some cases leading to suicide.

Committing a genocide can be bad for your mental health, it seems. Or as CNN explained, its interviews “provide a window into the psychological burden that the war is casting on Israeli society”.

In its lengthy piece, titled “He got out of Gaza, but Gaza did not get out of him”, the atrocities the soldiers admit committing are little more than the backdrop, as CNN finds yet another angle on Israeli suffering. Israeli soldiers are the real victims – even as they perpetrate a genocide on the Palestinian people.

One bulldozer driver, Guy Zaken, told CNN he could not sleep and had become vegetarian because of the “very, very difficult things” he had seen and had to do in Gaza.

What things? Zaken had earlier told a hearing of the Israeli parliament that his unit’s job was to drive over many hundreds of Palestinians, some of them alive.

CNN reported: “Zaken says he can no longer eat meat, as it reminds him of the gruesome scenes he witnessed from his bulldozer in Gaza.”

Doubtless some Nazi concentration camp guards committed suicide in the 1940s after witnessing the horrors there – because they were responsible for them. Only in some weird parallel news universe would their “psychological burden” be the story.

After a huge online backlash, CNN amended an editor’s note at the start of the article that originally read: “This story includes details about suicide that some readers may find upsetting.”

Readers, it was assumed, would find the suicide of Israeli soldiers upsetting, but apparently not the revelation that those soldiers were routinely driving over Palestinians so that, as Zaken explained, “everything squirts out”.

Banned from Gaza

Finally, a year into Israel’s genocidal war, now rapidly spreading into Lebanon, some voices are being raised very belatedly to demand the entry of foreign journalists into Gaza.

This week – in a move presumably designed, as November’s elections loom, to ingratiate themselves with voters angry at the party’s complicity in genocide – dozens of Democratic members of the US Congress wrote to President Joe Biden asking him to pressure Israel to give journalists “unimpeded access” to the enclave.

Don’t hold your breath.

Western media have done very little themselves to protest their exclusion from Gaza over the past year – for a number of reasons.

Given the utterly indiscriminate nature of Israel’s bombardment, major outlets have not wanted their journalists getting hit by a 2,000lb bomb for being in the wrong place.

That may in part be out of concern for their welfare. But there are likely to be more cynical concerns.

Having foreign journalists in Gaza blown up or executed by snipers would drag media organisations into direct confrontation with Israel and its well-oiled lobby machine.

The response would be entirely predictable, insinuating that the journalists died because they were colluding with “the terrorists” or that they were being used as “human shields” – the excuse Israel has rolled out time and again to justify its targeting of doctors in Gaza and UN peacekeepers in Lebanon.

But there’s a bigger problem. The establishment media have not wanted to be in a position where their journalists are so close to the “action” that they are in danger of providing a clearer picture of Israel’s war crimes and its genocide.

The media’s current distance from the crime scene offers them plausible deniability as they both-sides every Israeli atrocity.

In previous conflicts, western reporters have served as witnesses, assisting in the prosecution of foreign leaders for war crimes. That happened in the wars that attended the break-up of Yugoslavia, and will doubtless happen once again if Russian President Valdimir Putin is ever delivered to The Hague.

But those journalistic testimonies were harnessed to put the West’s enemies behind bars, not its closest ally.

The media do not want their reporters to become chief witnesses for the prosecution in the future trials of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his defence minister, Yoav Gallant, at the International Criminal Court (ICC). Karim Khan, the ICC’s prosecutor, is seeking arrest warrants for them both.

After all, any such testimony from journalists would not stop at Israel’s door. They would implicate western capitals too, and put establishment media organisations on a collision course with their own governments.

The western media does not see its job as holding power to account when the West is the one committing the crimes.

Censoring Palestinians

Journalist whistleblowers have gradually been coming forward to explain how establishment news organisations – including the BBC and the supposedly liberal Guardian – are sidelining Palestinian voices and minimising the genocide.

An investigation by Novara Media recently revealed mounting unhappiness in parts of the Guardian newsroom at its double standards on Israel and Palestine.

Its editors recently censored a commentary by preeminent Palestinian author Susan Abulhawa after she insisted on being allowed to refer to the slaughter in Gaza as “the holocaust of our times”.

During Jeremy Corbyn’s tenure as leader of the Labour Party, senior Guardian columnists such as Jonathan Freedland made much of the insistence that Jews, and Jews alone, had the right to define and name their own oppression.

That right, however, does not appear to extend to Palestinians.

As staff who spoke to Novara noted, the Guardian’s Sunday sister paper, the Observer, had no problem opening its pages to British Jewish writer Howard Jacobson to smear as a “blood libel” any reporting of the provable fact that Israel has killed many, many thousands of Palestinian children in Gaza.

One veteran journalist there said: “Is the Guardian more worried about the reaction to what is said about Israel than Palestine? Absolutely.”

Another staff member admitted it would be inconceivable for the paper to be seen censoring a Jewish writer. But censoring a Palestinian one is fine, it seems.

Other journalists report being under “suffocating control” from senior editors, and say this pressure exists “only if you’re publishing something critical of Israel”.

According to staff there, the word “genocide” is all but banned in the paper except in coverage of the International Court of Justice (ICJ), whose judges ruled nine months ago that a “plausible” case had been made that Israel was committing genocide.

Things have got far worse since.

Whistleblowing journalists

Similarly, “Sara”, a whistleblower who recently resigned from the BBC newsroom and spoke of her experiences to Al Jazeera’s Listening Post, said Palestinians and their supporters were routinely kept off air or subjected to humiliating and insensitive lines of questioning.

Some producers have reportedly grown increasingly reluctant to bring on air vulnerable Palestinians, some of whom have lost family members in Gaza, because of concerns about the effect on their mental health from the aggressive interrogations they were being subjected to from anchors.

According to Sara, BBC vetting of potential guests overwhelmingly targets Palestinians, as well as those sympathetic to their cause and human rights organisations. Background checks are rarely done on Israeli or Jewish guests.

She added that a search showing that a guest had used the word “Zionism” – Israel’s state ideology – in a social media post could be enough to get them disqualified from a programme.

Even officials from one of the biggest rights group in the world, the New York-based Human Rights Watch, became persona non grata at the BBC for their criticisms of Israel, even though the corporation had previously relied on their reports in covering Ukraine and other global conflicts.

Israeli guests, by contrast, “were given free rein to say whatever they wanted with very little pushback”, including lies about Hamas burning or beheading babies and committing mass rape.

An email cited by Al Jazeera from more than 20 BBC journalists sent last February to Tim Davie, the BBC’s director general, warned that the corporation’s coverage risked “aiding and abetting genocide through story suppression”.

Upside-down values

These biases have been only too evident in the BBC’s coverage, first of Gaza and now, as media interest wanes in the genocide, of Lebanon.

Headlines – the mood music of journalism, and the only part of a story many of the audience read – have been uniformly dire.

For example, Netanyahu’s threats of a Gaza-style genocide against the Lebanese people earlier this month if they did not overthrow their leaders were soft-soaped by the BBC headline: “Netanyahu’s appeal to Lebanese people falls on deaf ears in Beirut.”

Reasonable readers would have wrongly inferred both that Netanyahu was trying to do the Lebanese people a favour (by preparing to murder them), and that they were being ungrateful in not taking up his offer.

It has been the same story everywhere in the establishment media. In another extraordinary, revealing moment, Kay Burley of Sky News announced this month the deaths of four Israeli soldiers from a Hezbollah drone strike on a military base inside Israel.

With a solemnity usually reserved for the passing of a member of the British royal family, she slowly named the four soldiers, with a photo of each shown on screen. She stressed twice that all four were only 19 years old.

Sky News seemed not to understand that these were not British soldiers, and that there was no reason for a British audience to be especially disturbed by their deaths. Soldiers are killed in wars all the time – it is an occupational hazard.

And further, if Israel considered them old enough to fight in Gaza and Lebanon, then they were old enough to die too without their age being treated as particularly noteworthy.

But more significantly still, Israel’s Golani Brigade to which these soldiers belonged has been centrally involved in the slaughter of Palestinians over the past year. Its troops have been responsible for many of the tens of thousands of children killed and maimed in Gaza.

Each of the four soldiers was far, far less deserving of Burley’s sympathy and concern than the thousands of children who have been slaughtered at the hands of their brigade. Those children are almost never named and their pictures are rarely shown, not least because their injuries are usually too horrifying to be seen.

It was yet more evidence of the upside-down world the establishment media has been trying to normalise for its audiences.

It is why statistics from the United States, where the coverage of Gaza and Lebanon may be even more unhinged, show faith in the media is at rock bottom. Fewer than one in three respondents – 31 percent – said they still had a “great deal or fair amount of trust in mass media”.

Crushing dissent

Israel is the one dictating the coverage of its genocide. First by murdering the Palestinian journalists reporting it on the ground, and then by making sure house-trained foreign correspondents stay well clear of the slaughter, out of harm’s way in Tel Aviv and Jerusalem.

And as ever, Israel has been able to rely on the complicity of its western patrons in crushing dissent at home.

Last week, a British investigative journalist, Asa Winstanley, an outspoken critic of Israel and its lobbyists in the UK, had his home in London raided at dawn by counter-terrorism police.

Though the police have not arrested or charged him – at least not yet – they confiscated his electronic devices. He was warned that he is being investigated for “encouragement of terrorism” in his social media posts.

Police told MEE that his devices had been seized as part of an investigation into suspected terrorism offences of “support for a proscribed organisation” and “dissemination of terrorist documents”.

The police can act only because of Britain’s draconian, anti-free speech Terrorism Act.

Section 12, for example, makes the expression of an opinion that could be interpreted as sympathetic to armed Palestinian resistance to Israel’s illegal occupation – a right enshrined in international law but sweepingly dismissed as “terrorism” in the West – itself a terrorism offence.

Those journalists who haven’t been house-trained in the establishment media, as well as solidarity activists, must now chart a treacherous path across intentionally ill-defined legal terrain when talking about Israel’s genocide in Gaza.

Winstanley is not the first journalist to be accused of falling foul of the Terrorism Act. In recent weeks, Richard Medhurst, a freelance journalist, was arrested at Heathrow airport on his return from a trip abroad. Another journalist-activist, Sarah Wilkinson, was briefly arrested after her home was ransacked by police. Their electronic devices were seized too.

Meanwhile, Richard Barnard, co-founder of Palestine Action, which seeks to disrupt the UK’s supply of weapons to Israel’s genocide, has been charged over speeches he has made in support of Palestinians.

It now appears that all these actions are part of a specific police campaign targeting journalists and Palestinian solidarity activists: “Operation Incessantness”.

The message this clumsy title is presumably supposed to convey is that the British state is coming after anyone who speaks out too loudly against the British government’s continuing arming and complicity in Israel’s genocide.

Notably, the establishment media have failed to cover this latest assault on journalism and the role of a free press – supposedly the very things they are there to protect.

The raid on Winstanley’s home and the arrests are intended to intimidate others, including independent journalists, into silence for fear of the consequences of speaking up.

This has nothing to do with terrorism. Rather, it is terrorism by the British state.

Once again the world is being turned upside down.

Echoes from history

The West is waging a campaign of psychological warfare on its populations: it is gaslighting and disorientating them, classing genocide as “self-defence” and opposition to it a form of “terrorism”.

This is an expansion of the persecution suffered by Julian Assange, the Wikileaks founder who spent years locked up in London’s Belmarsh high-security prison.

His unprecedented journalism – revealing the darkest secrets of western states – was redefined as espionage. His “offence” was revealing that Britain and the US had committed systematic war crimes in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Now, on the back of that precedent, the British state is coming after journalists simply for embarrassing it.

Last week, I attended a meeting in Bristol against the genocide in Gaza at which the main speaker was physically absent after the British state failed to issue him an entry visa.

The missing guest – he had to join us by Zoom – was Mandla Mandela, the grandson of Nelson Mandela, who was locked up for decades as a terrorist before becoming the first leader of post-apartheid South Africa and a feted, international statesman.

Mandla Mandela was until recently a member of the South African parliament. A Home Office spokesperson told MEE that the UK only issued visas “to those who we want to welcome to our country”.

Media reports suggest Britain was determined to exclude Mandela because, like his grandfather, he views the Palestinian struggle against Israeli apartheid as intimately linked to the earlier struggle against South Africa’s apartheid.

The echoes from history are apparently entirely lost on officials: the UK is once again associating the Mandela family with terrorism. Before it was to protect South Africa’s apartheid regime. Now it is to protect Israel’s even worse apartheid and genocidal regime.

The world is indeed turned on its head. And the West’s supposedly “free media” is playing a critical role in trying to make our upside-down world seem normal.

That can only be achieved by failing to report the Gaza genocide as a genocide. Instead, western journalists are serving as little more than stenographers. Their job: to take dictation from Israel.

Jonathan Cook is a British writer and journalist based in Nazareth, Israel.

27 October 2024

Source: countercurrents.org

Why Did Hezbollah’s Hassan Nasrallah Support US/NATO War on Libya?

By Thomas C. Mountain

Friday post lunchtime, March 2011, and I turned on my television in time to catch Hezbollah’s Hassan Nasrallah’s Friday speech on PressTV carried live from Lebanon. With an english translation provided by PressTV I was astounded to hear Nasrallah call for the entire world to support…what turned out to be the US/NATO war on Libya?

Thats right, no slip of the tongue, Hassan Nasrallah made it crystal clear that he want to see the end of the Libyan government of Muammar Gaddafi and that the whole world should support this goal.

The next day, Saturday, PressTV repeated Nasrallah’s speech and we heard it all again. It wasn’t a mis-translation because comrades who were fluent in Arabic heard it and verified the accuracy of the PressTV translation.

Unfortunately, I haven’t been able to find any record of this on PressTV’s website, maybe understandable since it took place over 13 years ago?

Still, why is this fact, that Hezbollah’s top leader supported what quickly became the US/NATO war against Libya almost completely unknown amongst international activists? And if they do know about it, as any well informed activist following the news at the time should have, why have they kept silent about this fact?

I have been repeatedly called a liar, slandered viciously and threatened for pointing this fact out.

So why did Hassan Nasrallah support this western crime against the Libyan people where over 100,000, maybe upwards of 250,000 Libyans were slaughtered by western bombs and missiles, the same bombs and missiles slaughtering Palestinians and Lebanese today?

Nasrallah hated Gaddafi because one of his main mentors disappeared while visiting Libya some years before. A prominent religious leader in the Shi’ite community in Lebanon disappears without a trace and Gaddafi claimed to know nothing about it?

There are many scenarios of how and why this happened including he fell out with Gaddafi while in Libya to Gaddafi being betrayed by his intelligence service (something entirely credible based on events since this took place) or that the CIA cooked up this crime to stir up inter-Arab conflict and at the same time take out a leader of a growing movement in Lebanon, Hezbollah, that was starting to be a threat to the US attack dog in west Asia, Israel.

Whatever the reason, Nasrallah’s mentor went missing while a guest of Gaddafi who had vouchsafed his security and Gaddafi had no answer to why or how this happened.

So, understandably, Nasrallah had good reason to be angry about Gaddafi. But to support a western war against Libya by the very same powers that supported his enemy, Israel, that had committed so many crimes against the Lebanese, and Palestinian people?

We were living in Eritrea in 2011 when we saw Nasrallah’s bombshell speech and it was a hot topic of discussion amongst our circle of friends. We all wondered why Nasrallah would do this when those who were about to destroy Libya, and enable the brutal murder of Gaddafi, were sure to come after him and his movement someday?

And sure enough, what so many international commentator’s called “the iconic leader” Hassan Nasrallah met the same fate as Gaddafi at the hands of both their enemies, in this case the western backed colonial, settler, racist apartheid regime in Israel.

I describe myself as an educator and historian and what I have just described is an accurate history of a crime, the western destruction of Libya in 2011, and the support by Hassan Nasrallah for this crime.

I have to ask, if any leader anywhere supports the western attack dog Israels genocide against the Palestinian, and now Lebanese people, would we be praising this person?

So maybe knowing the real history of this people may have to start asking hard questions? Like I answer to my many critics when I raise this question, “don’t shoot the messenger”, instead try and grasp a better understanding of the very complex crisis developing in west Asia today based on the real history of the region.

Thomas C. Mountain is a educator and historian with over 40 years background in matters African and west Asian.

26 October 2024

Source: countercurrents.org

Crippling UNRWA: The Knesset’s Collective Punishment of Palestinians

By Dr. Binoy Kampmark

The man has a cheek.  Having lectured Iranians and Lebanese about what (and who) is good for them in terms of rulers and rule (we already know what he thinks of the Palestinians), Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has been keeping busy on further depriving access and assistance to those in Gaza and the West Bank.  This comes in draft legislation that would prevent the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) from pursuing its valuable functions in the Occupied Palestinian Territory.

The campaign against UNRWA by the Israeli state has been relentless and pathological.  Even before last year’s October 7 attacks by Hamas, much was made of the fact that the body seemed intent on keeping the horrors of the 1948 displacements current.  Victimhood, complained the amnesiac enforcers of the Israeli state, was being encouraged by treating the descendants of displaced Palestinians as refugees.  Nasty memories were being kept alive.

Since then, Israel has been further libelling and blackening the organisation as a terrorist front best abolished. (Labels are effortlessly swapped – “Hamas supporter”; “activist”; “terrorist”.)  Initially came that infamous dossier pointing the finger at 12 individuals said to be Hamas participants in the October 7 attacks.  With swiftness, the UN commenced internal investigations.  Some individuals were sacked on suspicion of being linked to the attacks. Unfortunately, some US$450 million worth of donor funding from sixteen countries was suspended.

UNRWA Commissioner-General Philippe Lazzarini was always at pains to explain that he had “never been informed” nor received evidence substantiating Israel’s accusations.  It was also all the more curious given that staff lists for the agency were provided to both Israeli and Palestinian authorities in advance.  At no point had he ever “received the slightest concern about the staff that we have been employing.”

In April, Lazzarini told the UN Security Council that “an insidious campaign to end UNRWA’s operations is under way, with serious implications for peace and security”.  Repeatedly, requests by the agency to deliver aid to northern Gaza had been refused, staff barred from coordinating meetings between humanitarian actors and Israel, and UNRWA premises and staff targeted.

Israel’s campaign to dissuade donor states from restoring funding proved a mixed one.  Even the United Kingdom, long sympathetic to Israel’s accusations, announced in July that funding would be restored.  In the view of UK Foreign Secretary David Lammy, UNRWA had taken steps to ensure that it was meeting “the highest standards of neutrality.”

In August, the findings of a review of the allegations by former French foreign minister Catherine Colonna, instigated at the request of the UN Secretary-General António Guterres, were released. It confirmed UNRWA’s role as “irreplaceable and indispensable” in the absence of a political solution between Israel and the Palestinians, a “pivotal” body that provided “life-saving humanitarian aid and essential social services, particularly in health and education, to Palestinian refugees in Gaza, Jordan, Lebanon, Syria and the West Bank.”

In identifying eight areas for immediate improvement on the subject of neutrality (for instance, engaging donors, neutrality of staff, installations, education and staff unions), it was noted that “Israel has yet to provide supporting evidence” that the agency’s employees had been “members of terrorist organizations.”

On October 24, UNRWA confirmed that one of its staffers killed by an Israeli strike in Gaza, Muhammad Abu Attawi, had been in the agency’s employ since July 2022 while serving as a Nukhba commander in Hamas’s Bureij Battalion.  Attawi is alleged to have participated in the killing and kidnapping of Israelis from a roadside bomb shelter near Kibbutz Re’im in October last year.  His name had featured in a July letter from Israel to the agency listing 100 names allegedly connected with terrorist groups.  But no action was taken against Attawi as the Israelis failed to supply UNRWA with evidence.  Lazzarini’s letter urging, in the words of Juliette Touma, the agency’s director of communications, “to cooperate … by providing more information so he could take action” did not receive “any response”.

Having been foiled on various fronts in its quest to terminate UNRWA’s viable existence, Israeli lawmakers are now taking the legislative route to entrench the collective punishment of the Palestinian people.  Two bills are in train in the Knesset. The first, sponsored by such figures as Yisrael Beytenu MK Yulia Malinovsky and Likud lawmaker Dan Illouz, would bar state authorities from having contact with UNRWA.  The second, sponsored by Likud MK Boaz Bismuth, would critically prevent the agency from operating in Israeli territory through revoking a 1967 exchange of notes justifying such activities.

Even proclaimed moderates – the term is relative – such as former defence minister Benny Gantz support the measures, accusing the UN body of making “itself an inseparable component of Hamas’s mechanism – and now is the time to detach ourselves entirely from it”.  It did not improve the lot of refugees, but merely perpetuated “their victimisation.”  Evidently for Gantz, Israel had no central role in creating Palestinian victims in the first place.

By barring cooperation between any Israeli authorities and UNRWA, work in Gaza and the West Bank would become effectively impossible, largely because Jerusalem would no longer issue entrance permits to the territories or permit any coordination with the Israeli Defense Forces.

UN Secretary-General Guterres was aghast at the two bills.  “It would effectively end coordination to protect UN convoys, offices and shelters serving hundreds of thousands of people.”  Ambassadors from 123 UN member states have echoed the same views, while the Biden administration has, impotently, warned that the proposed “restrictions would devastate the humanitarian response in Gaza at this critical moment” while also denying educational and social services to Palestinians in the West Bank and Jerusalem.

In their October 23 statement, the Nordic countries also expressed concern that UNRWA’s mandate “to carry out […] direct relief and works programmes” for millions of Palestinian refugees as determined by UN General Assembly Resolution 302 (IV) would be jettisoned.  “In the midst of an ongoing catastrophic humanitarian situation in Gaza, a halt to any of the organisation’s activities would have devastating consequences for the hundreds of thousands of civilians served by UNRWA.”

The statement goes on to make a warning.  To impair the refugee agency would create a vacuum that “may well destabilise the situation in [Gaza, and the West Bank, including east Jerusalem], in Israel and in the region as a whole, and may fundamentally jeopardize the prospects of a two-state solution.”

These are concerns that hardly matter before the rationale of murderous collective punishment, one used against a people seen more as mute serfs and submissive animals than sovereign beings entitled to rights and protections.  Israel’s efforts to malign and cripple UNRWA remains a vital part of that agenda.  In that organisation exists a repository of deep and troubling memories the forces of oppression long to erase.

Dr. Binoy Kampmark was a Commonwealth Scholar at Selwyn College, Cambridge.

26 October 2024

Source: countercurrents.org

Israel Attacks Iran

By Brett Wilkins

Israel—which is already waging war on Gaza and Lebanon—said its military struck targets in and near Iran’s capital Tehran early Saturday, while explosions believed to be Israeli attacks were also reported in Syria and Iraq.

Numerous explosions were reported in and near the Iranian capital, including at the Imam Khomeini International Airport, as well as in eastern parts of the city and the Sadeghiyeh neighborhood of western Tehran. Israeli targets reportedly included the headquarters of the elite Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC).

“In response to months of continuous attacks from the regime in Iran against the state of Israel—right now the Israel Defense Forces is conducting precise strikes on military targets in Iran,” IDF spokesperson Rear Adm. Daniel Hagari said in a video posted on social media.

[https://twitter.com/tparsi/status/1849955069942194436]

“The regime in Iran and its proxies in the region have been relentlessly attacking Israel since October 7th—on seven fronts—including direct attacks from Iranian soil,” Hagari added. “Like every other sovereign country in the world, the state of Israel has the right and the duty to respond. Our defensive and offensive capabilities are fully mobilized. We will do whatever [is] necessary to defend the state of Israel and the people of Israel.”

Iran said it launched the October 1 missile attack in retaliation for Israel’s targeted killing of longtime Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah, the longtime leader of Hezbollah and an IRGC commander who was with him; as well as for the July assassination of Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh in Tehran.

If the Syrian and Iraqi explosions are confirmed as Israeli strikes, it would mean that Israel is simultaneously attacking at least five nations—Palestine, Lebanon, Iran, Syria, and Iraq. In Palestine, the IDF is waging a yearlong war which has killed or wounded more than 153,000 people. Israel’s bombardment and ground invasion of Lebanon have killed or wounded thousands of people and displaced more than 1.2 million others.

U.S. officials told media outlets that the Biden administration was informed of Saturday’s attacks.

Meanwhile, peace groups in the U.S. warned of the risk of escalation.

“The U.S. should stay out of the conflict between Israel and Iran,” Massachusetts Peace Action executive director Brian Garvey said in a statement. “Israel is bombing Iran, Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, Yemen—picking a fight with almost every one of its neighbors—while escalating its genocide in Gaza.”

“The U.S. should not provide assistance for Israel’s escalations, which would contravene President [Joe] Biden’s stated goal of preventing a wider regional conflict,” he continued. “Israeli Prime Minister [Benjamin] Netanyahu has long sought to embroil the U.S. in war with Iran, and his efforts to do so now are likely timed to influence the U.S. election.”

“The United States should avoid that trap, stop sending weapons into the region, and support urgent talks for ceasefires in Gaza, Lebanon, and between Israel and Iran,” Garvey added.

Brett Wilkins is a staff writer for Common Dreams.

26 October 2024

Source: countercurrents.org

The West’s Support For Israel’s Genocide Is Destroying The World As We Know It

By Jonathan Cook

The horrifying images from Gaza last week of fire consuming a Palestinian teenager confined to his hospital bed with an intravenous drip may come to define Israel’s genocide, as completely as earlier images of human depravity have defined the world.

Naked, skin-and-bone corpses thrown into mass graves in the death camps of the Nazi Holocaust. Radioactive fields of rubble, interrupted only by charred, skeletal trees, after the atomic levelling of Hiroshima by the United States. A naked Vietnamese girl, her burned skin peeling off, fleeing in terror from a napalm attack.

The flames that burned alive 19-year-old Shaaban al-Dalou, along with his mother and two others, in a tent on the grounds of al-Aqsa Hospital in Deir al-Balah were almost certainly unleashed by US- or German-supplied missiles, fired by Israeli pilots.

Dalou was in the tent recovering from an Israeli air strike a week earlier on Deir al-Balah that had killed 26 people. He was already malnourished and immunocompromised from many months of an Israeli blockade, which has denied the entry of food and aid into Gaza.

Dalou’s two sisters, father and younger brother all sustained severe burns from the fire caused by the strike. His 10-year-old brother succumbed to his wounds days later. The victims in Deir al-Balah were charred into oblivion – and with them the “rules-based international order” the West helped establish to prevent a repeat of the horrors of the Second World War.

The year-long genocide in Gaza is entirely a western co-production. The US and Europe send the weapons, provide the diplomatic cover, orchestrate support from their pliant state- and billionaire-owned media, and stifle all domestic dissent.

The modern era of international humanitarian law that the West proclaimed, as well as the institutions the West championed to uphold it, are going up in flames.

The parties unravelling – week after week, month after month – the rules that kept in check the dangers of a third world war are not the so-called “terrorists”. It’s not Hamas, Hezbollah, al-Qaeda or the Islamic State. It’s not even IranRussia or China.

It is the West. It is Washington and its allies. They are the arsonists.

Nowhere safe

Anyone trying to give a true sense of the scale of destruction Israel has unleashed so quickly, or the indiscriminate nature of its bombing, has to grasp for decades-old comparisons, mostly from Vietnam, Korea or the Second World War.

However much western politicians and media have denounced and sanctioned Moscow, and armed Ukraine against Russia’s invasion, the crimes there pale in comparison to Israel’s war on Gaza – and now on Lebanon.

The carnage being unleashed in the Middle East is from another, much darker era. The humanitarian catastrophe Israel has engineered in Gaza has no precedent in the modern era.

Israel’s genocide is not just pitiless, like so many other wars. It has been brazen, celebratory even, in its orgy of destruction. The bombs strike the very “safe zones” Israel declares. They hit hospitals, schools serving as shelters for displaced families, bakeries, mosques and churches.

There is nothing secret about Israel’s long starvation of Gaza’s “human animals”: 2.3 million people, or however many of them are still alive after the enclave lost the capacity to count its dead months ago.

Israel is now doing to Gaza precisely what it threatened to do long before it was able to exploit the pretext of 7 October. It is pummelling the enclave to send it “back to the Stone Age”.

It is not Hamas that is being eliminated in Gaza. It is the fundamentals of humanitarian law: the principle of “distinction” between combatants and non-combatants, and the principle of “proportionality” in weighing military advantage against the endangerment of civilians.

All of this is happening out in the open, concealed only by the refusal of western politicians and media to admit what everyone else can see.

Israel is not “remaking the Middle East”. It is destroying the world as we have known it for generations.

What Israel has made clear, supported by western capitals, is that there is no safe place, not even for those recovering in a hospital bed from Israel’s earlier atrocities. There are no “non-combatants”, no civilians. There are no rules. Everyone is a target.

And now that includes not just the peoples of Gaza, the occupied West Bank and Lebanon, but the very body supposed to serve as the guardian of the humanitarian codes of law created after the Second World War and the Holocaust: the United Nations.

Attacking peacekeepers

Israel’s repeated attacks on UN peacekeepers in southern Lebanon – and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s “order” that they leave their posts or face the consequences – are being normalised by western capitals as surely as Israel’s earlier, systematic attacks on Gaza’s hospitals were.

On Wednesday, an Israeli tank fired on a watchtower near the Lebanese village of Kafer Kela, damaging it and its cameras.

A week earlier, two peacekeepers -belonging to the Unifil force in Lebanon– were wounded after an Israeli tank fired at an observation tower at Unifil’s coastal headquarters in Naquora.

In another incident last Sunday, two Israeli tanks broke down the gates of a Unifil post in Ramyah. Shortly afterwards, Israeli forces fired smoke canisters that provoked skin irritations and gastrointestinal reactions in 15 peacekeepers.

Netanyahu has sought to justify these and other attacks with a familiar canard. He has claimed that UN peacekeepers are serving as a “human shield to Hezbollah terrorists”, just as his administration earlier justified the systematic erasure of Gaza’s hospitals and its wider infrastructure on the grounds that Hamas had built “command and control centres” under them.

In a clue as to how such strategies might be viewed by some in Washington, Matthew Brodsky, a former White House adviser, recently called for Israel to drop napalm on Irish peacekeepers in southern Lebanon.

Operating in the shadows

There are clear reasons – both immediate and more long-term – why Israel is targeting Unifil. The peacekeepers are there to observe and record violations of the laws of war between Israel and armed Lebanese groups, such as Hezbollah.

One of Israel’s early tasks in Gaza was to keep out foreign journalists and assassinate local Palestinian journalists to hamper the reporting of its war crimes in the enclave.

In Lebanon, Israel faces a bigger problem. The UN – a body whose humanitarian remit is to bring pressure on state parties to abide by international law – has not just eyes on the ground. It has experienced soldiers in fortified positions to observe proceedings on the battlefield Israel has made of southern Lebanon.

Its peacekeeping force is drawn from 50 countries, making all of them direct witnesses to Israel’s crimes against humanity. Unifil reports are sent to the UN secretary general, Antonio Guterres, and a network of UN human rights bodies.

That’s why the force needs the very watchtowers Israel is intent on destroying.

Israel wants to be able to operate in the shadows, off the radar, as it has done in Gaza, when it carries out its programme of war crimes in southern Lebanon. On Wednesday, for example, Israel dynamited the village of Mhaibib.

Having already forced residents in dozens of villages in southern Lebanon to flee their homes, Israel likely wants to now deluge these areas with cluster munitions, effectively small land mines, as it has done previously. This could make it impossible for hundreds of thousands of Lebanese people to return home.

Unifil’s presence in the south would make that crime much harder to achieve.

‘Mowing the lawn’

There is a wider goal, too. Netanyahu has suggested not only that Unifil is in the way of its military operations, but that peacekeepers are colluding with Hezbollah fighters – just as earlier, Israel claimed Gaza’s doctors had to be killed or dragged off to torture camps because they were sheltering Hamas fighters in their hospitals.

This week Israel set about bolstering its preposterous allegation with supposed “confessions” from captured Hezbollah fighters that they had bribed Unifil to let them use its posts and surveillance cameras.

But all Israel is proving is that its horrifying torture regime can get prisoners – whether Hezbollah and Hamas fighters or doctors abducted off the streets of Gaza – to say whatever Israel needs saying to justify its crimes.

Israel’s one-size-fits-all story is so egregiously self-serving, it doesn’t even begin to pass the smell test – unless you are a western politician or media “professional”.

Israel’s latest physical assault on the UN has not come out of nowhere. For decades, Tel Aviv has been crafting a narrative of the UN as a hotbed of antisemitism. That is because the international legal order places at the top of its hierarchy of crimes those that Israel pursues most vigorously.

International law opposes any state that enforces apartheid, as Israel has done for decades in its rule over Palestinians; or any state that engages in ethnic cleansing, as Israel has been doing to the Palestinian people for more than three-quarters of a century; or any state that carries out genocide, as Israel is doing right now in Gaza.

All these crimes are defined in international law, and Israel now commits every one of them.

Before 7 October, Israel had tempered its actions somewhat, if only to avoid embarrassing its patron, the US.

Instead, Israel worked to gradually reinterpret and undermine the rules of occupation and war, particularly through its siege and repeated attacks on Gaza over the past 15 years. It intermittently “mowed the lawn”, killing many hundreds of civilians, while putting the wider population “on a diet” for 17 years, tightly restricting their caloric intake.

But Israel understood the current erasure of Gaza could never be accommodated by international law, even with the looser interpretations it had been championing.

Something had to give. And Israel was determined that would not be its programme of genocide.

‘House of darkness’

Israel’s long-running campaign against the UN has dramatically stepped up a gear over the past year.

That is why Israel has declared Guterres “persona non grata” and banned him from entering the country. Israel’s foreign minister has accused Guterres of backing “terrorists, rapists, and murderers”, and called him “a stain on the history of the UN”.

It is why Netanyahu has described the UN General Assembly as a “house of darkness” and a “swamp of antisemitic bile”.

It is why the outgoing Israeli ambassador to the UN responded to the General Assembly’s vote to back Palestine as a member by publicly shredding the UN Charter.

It is why Israeli officials have repeatedly smeared the International Court of Justice (ICJ), the UN’s top court staffed by expert judges in international law, as antisemitic, supposedly seeking “the persecution of the Jewish people”. The ICJ’s crime is to have ruled that a “plausible” case had been made that Israel is committing genocide in Gaza.

It is why Netanyahu has denounced Karim Khan, the lead prosecutor of the International Criminal Court, as one of the “great antisemites in modern times”. Khan has been seeking arrest warrants against Netanyahu and his defence minister, Yoav Gallant, for war crimes and crimes against humanity.

One of the pro-Israel groups in Britain, UK Lawyers for Israel, is trying to get Khan disbarred, supposedly for “professional misconduct”.

Zero evidence

Meanwhile, the last meaningful UN presence in Gaza, the UN’s refugee agency known as Unrwa, responsible for providing the population with essentials like food, is under relentless attack.

Without a shred of evidence, Israel persuaded western powers to freeze critical funding to the humanitarian body. Slowly, most European states have restored their funding, but the US continues to choke it with sanctions.

The Israeli parliament is in the midst of designating Unrwa a “terrorist organisation”, while the Israeli military bombs the agency’s warehouses, school-shelters and refugee camps, and kills its staff in unprecedented numbers.

Israel must wipe out Unrwa’s role in protecting the civilian population of Gaza, if it is to wipe out Gaza itself.

Exactly 50 years ago, the UN General Assembly withdrew its recognition of South Africa and refused to reinstate it for the next two decades. The assembly cited Pretoria’s apartheid rule and its illegal military occupation of Namibia.

It could do the same to Israel, an even bigger villain. But apparently it dares not. The West is even more committed to the rogue state of Israel than it once was to the rogue state of apartheid South Africa.

The UN has good reason to fear that Israel’s US-backed rampage through Gaza, the occupied West Bank, Lebanon, and then on to Iran, will end at its door.

The Generals’ Plan

It is only because Israel knows it has left the international order in tatters, and that Washington is fully on board, that it dares to carry out its genocide in Gaza to the bitter end.

Barely mentioned in the western establishment media has been Israel’s so-called “Generals’ Plan”: turning an area Israel has declared as “northern Gaza” into an official, industrial-scale extermination camp.

The plan, published last month by a group of influential military reservists, involves giving some 400,000 Palestinians in northern Gaza a week to flee southwards. Anyone left will be starved to death or executed as a “Hamas terrorist”. Frustrated by Israel’s failure to defeat Hamas, these senior officers want to erase any last traces of protections for civilians.

In practice, Israel has been carrying out this plan incrementally almost from the start of its assault. Last October, it demanded Gaza’s population in the north flee to supposedly “safe zones” in the south, which it then bombed.

Aluf Benn, editor of Haaretz, explained at the time that Israel’s strategy was the expulsion of “the population of Gaza to the southern Gaza Strip and the destruction of [Gaza City]” – the main built-up area in the enclave.

Since then, Israel has built a fortified military zone, called the Netzarim Corridor, to isolate Gaza’s north.

The question left unanswered is what happens to southern Gaza after the north has been ethnically cleansed. All the evidence so far suggests that anything done to northern Gaza will arrive soon enough in the south.

If Israel thinks it can destroy Hamas in Gaza’s north only through a policy of extermination, what will stop it from claiming a need to carry out exactly the same policy in Gaza’s south later on?

The real goal, clearly visible, is to expel Palestinians from their entire historic homeland through terror and starvation, in what Israeli politicians deceitfully term a programme of “voluntary emigration”.

‘Starve or surrender’

This week, Israeli reservists told Haaretz that the Generals’ Plan was indeed in effect, as the Israeli military exploits the shift of global attention away from Gaza towards Israel’s attacks on Lebanon and a potential war with Iran.

One said: “It doesn’t conform to any standard of international law. People sat and wrote a systematic order with charts and an operational concept, at the end of which you shoot whoever isn’t willing to leave.”

Netanyahu’s Likud Party is reportedly getting ready for a post-genocide Gaza, issuing invitations to an event this week entitled “Preparing to Settle Gaza”. Several government ministers were expected to attend.

The mastermind behind the Generals’ Plan is Giora Eiland, a reservist general and politically “centrist” figure in Israel familiar to anyone who has studied the evolution of Israeli military doctrine over the past two decades.

It was Eiland who pushed hardest early in Israel’s war on Gaza to block all aid and starve the civilian population, supposedly to encourage them to rise up against Hamas. He has also been keen to let epidemics rage through the enclave.

His thinking is entirely unrelated to the 7 October attack on Israel by Hamas. Back in 2014, during one of Israel’s earlier rounds of bloodletting, Eiland proposed a “starve or surrender” policy towards Gaza’s population by cutting off all food and water.

Earlier still, in 2008, Eiland responded to Israel’s failure to defeat Hezbollah in the 2006 Israel-Lebanon war by promoting a plan even more demented than those of his colleagues. He proposed making the Lebanese state, its army and the civilian population the primary targets for Israel’s wrath, not Hezbollah.

His worldview appears to now be shaping Israel’s approach north of its border, just as it has in Gaza.

Time of monsters

Trying to keep in the shadows – while occasionally venturing into the light to throw up its hands in frustration, as it sends more weapons and aid to Israel – is Washington.

Make no mistake: none of this would be happening were the US really opposed to the war. Tiny Israel has neither the economy, nor the arsenal, to sustain a war against the Palestinian people, Lebanon and Iran.

The detonation of weaponry across the region equivalent to many atomic bombs is possible because of the Biden administration’s deep pockets and limitless indulgence.

We are entering a period not only of industrialised slaughter carried out in the name of a supposed western civilisation, but also of an earth-shaking geopolitical crisis.

In 1929, in the dark, chaotic period between the First and Second World Wars, the Italian Marxist philosopher Antonio Gramsci famously wrote: “The old world is dying, and the new world struggles to be born: now is the time of monsters.”

The old world is dying once again. It thinks it is in charge of the birth of the new; the remaking of the Middle East. But it is wrong. It is not fighting monsters. It is the monster.

And the new stands no chance of being born until these monsters are slain.

Jonathan Cook is a British writer and journalist based in Nazareth, Israel.

25 October 2024

Source: countercurrents.org

Over 150 casualties in latest Israeli massacre in Jabalia refugee camp in Northern Gaza

By Andre Damon

The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) killed or wounded 150 civilians, including women and children, in an airstrike on the Jabalia refugee camp in northern Gaza on Thursday.

This massacre is part of a systematic campaign, now 20 days old, to displace hundreds of thousands of Palestinians who remain in northern Gaza through mass killing, starvation and the total destruction of social services and infrastructure.

The latest massacre, implemented as part of the so-called “General’s Plan” of mass extermination in Gaza, took place as US Secretary of State Antony Blinken continued his tour through the Middle East after meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

During his visit to Israel this week, Blinken discussed the state of the genocide with Netanyahu, then issued a blanket statement reiterating the United States’ support for Israel’s war throughout the Middle East.

Describing Thursday’s airstrike, Gaza’s civil defense wrote in a statement that “a horrific massacre is currently happening in Al-Hawaja Street area, Block 7 in Jabalia, with reports of more than 150 martyrs, injured and there is no one to intervene to save them.”

It continued, “Citizens are sending distress calls, pleading for help in transporting the wounded. So far, citizens are facing great difficulty in transporting the martyrs and the injured due to the Israeli occupation’s disruption of Civil Defense and medical services in northern Gaza Strip.”

Journalist Anas Al-Sharif wrote in a post on X, “The Civil Defense in Gaza has announced a horrific massacre in the Al-Hawaja area, in the heart of Jabalia refugee camp, with 150 people killed and injured. There is no presence of civil defense teams, no journalists, no coverage—nothing but death and destruction.

“The dead have been reduced to body parts, and the wounded are left to die without ambulances or hospitals. No one hears them, no one sees them.”

[https://twitter.com/AnasAlSharif0/status/1849529963654811674]

The official death toll of the Gaza genocide stands at 42,847, with over 100,544 wounded. The real death toll is likely to be far higher, with The Lancet estimating it at 186,000 or more in July.

The Wafa news agency reported that “the occupation army continues to blow up and burn homes and residential blocks in Jabalia camp … to force civilians to flee south. Despite the bombing and war of extermination committed by the occupation in Jabalia and Beit Lahia, many citizens refuse to leave their homes, while the occupation army continues to besiege the displaced, patients, and medical staff in the hospitals of the north.”

The report continued, “Dozens of slain people and wounded are in the streets of the Beit Lahia project and Jabalia camp as the occupation army prevents transferring to the hospitals, which it besieges, and targets the displaced, patients, and medical staff when entering or leaving them.”

Wafa also reported that Israeli forces besieged the Kamal Adwan Hospital in the town of Beit Lahia, northern Gaza, firing directly upon the facility. The hospital houses children in need of urgent care.

Dr. Hussam Abu Safia, director of the besieged hospital, described the conditions at the hospital to Al Jazeera. “There is a very large number of wounded people, and we lose at least one person every hour because of the lack of medical supplies and medical staff. Our ambulances can’t transfer wounded people. Those who can arrive by themselves at the hospital receive care. But those who don’t just die in the streets.”

The hospital’s director added, “What the occupation forces are committing is deliberate murder.”

On Thursday, an Israeli airstrike on the Shuhadaa al-Nuseirat school in the central part of Gaza killed at least 17 people. A witness, Umm Muhammad, told Al Jazeera, “I hugged my little girl. I couldn’t see anything through the thick plume of smoke. I ran and screamed for my sister and found her alive downstairs,” Umm Muhammad said. “But there were children torn to pieces.”

In a statement Thursday, Mahmoud Basal, spokesman for Gaza’s Civil Defense forces, said that Israel forces have deliberately “targeted” rescuers, with “several members injured and others left bleeding on the streets with no one able to rescue them.”

Basal said the “the only civil defense vehicle in the northern Gaza Strip governorate” was “targeted by the Israeli army” in the city of Beit Lahia. He continued, “We are unable to provide humanitarian services to citizens in the northern governorate of the Gaza Strip due to threats from Israeli occupation forces, who have threatened to kill and bomb our teams if they remain inside Jabalia camp.”

In a statement issued Thursday, the anti-genocide, US-based Jewish Voice for Peace compared the implementation of Israel’s mass extermination plan in northern Gaza to the Nazi Holocaust. The group wrote, “Many of us have parents, grandparents, and great-grandparents who survived or perished in Nazi death marches, and we have all grown up in the shadow of the Nazi Holocaust. The state of Israel is currently perpetrating a Holocaust, the deliberate mass slaughter of Palestinian people, with weapons provided by the United States.”

The images of ongoing massacres in Gaza “are a terrifying echo of all-too-familiar images of European ghettos and Nazi concentration camps in the 2nd World War,” the group added.

At least 19 people were killed throughout Lebanon due to continual bombardment by Israeli forces, with over a dozen air raids occurring throughout the day on Thursday. The death toll in Lebanon since October 8 has risen to 2,593. The strikes included attacks on towns, including Khadr, Kafr Tabnit, Jwaya, and Qalaouiyeh in southern Lebanon and the Bekaa Valley.

The official death toll of the Gaza genocide stands at 42,847, with over 100,544 wounded. The real death toll is likely to be far higher, with The Lancet estimating it at 186,000 or more in July.

The Wafa news agency reported that “the occupation army continues to blow up and burn homes and residential blocks in Jabalia camp … to force civilians to flee south. Despite the bombing and war of extermination committed by the occupation in Jabalia and Beit Lahia, many citizens refuse to leave their homes, while the occupation army continues to besiege the displaced, patients, and medical staff in the hospitals of the north.”

The report continued, “Dozens of slain people and wounded are in the streets of the Beit Lahia project and Jabalia camp as the occupation army prevents transferring to the hospitals, which it besieges, and targets the displaced, patients, and medical staff when entering or leaving them.”

Wafa also reported that Israeli forces besieged the Kamal Adwan Hospital in the town of Beit Lahia, northern Gaza, firing directly upon the facility. The hospital houses children in need of urgent care.

Dr. Hussam Abu Safia, director of the besieged hospital, described the conditions at the hospital to Al Jazeera. “There is a very large number of wounded people, and we lose at least one person every hour because of the lack of medical supplies and medical staff. Our ambulances can’t transfer wounded people. Those who can arrive by themselves at the hospital receive care. But those who don’t just die in the streets.”

The hospital’s director added, “What the occupation forces are committing is deliberate murder.”

On Thursday, an Israeli airstrike on the Shuhadaa al-Nuseirat school in the central part of Gaza killed at least 17 people. A witness, Umm Muhammad, told Al Jazeera, “I hugged my little girl. I couldn’t see anything through the thick plume of smoke. I ran and screamed for my sister and found her alive downstairs,” Umm Muhammad said. “But there were children torn to pieces.”

In a statement Thursday, Mahmoud Basal, spokesman for Gaza’s Civil Defense forces, said that Israel forces have deliberately “targeted” rescuers, with “several members injured and others left bleeding on the streets with no one able to rescue them.”

Basal said the “the only civil defense vehicle in the northern Gaza Strip governorate” was “targeted by the Israeli army” in the city of Beit Lahia. He continued, “We are unable to provide humanitarian services to citizens in the northern governorate of the Gaza Strip due to threats from Israeli occupation forces, who have threatened to kill and bomb our teams if they remain inside Jabalia camp.”

In a statement issued Thursday, the anti-genocide, US-based Jewish Voice for Peace compared the implementation of Israel’s mass extermination plan in northern Gaza to the Nazi Holocaust. The group wrote, “Many of us have parents, grandparents, and great-grandparents who survived or perished in Nazi death marches, and we have all grown up in the shadow of the Nazi Holocaust. The state of Israel is currently perpetrating a Holocaust, the deliberate mass slaughter of Palestinian people, with weapons provided by the United States.”

The images of ongoing massacres in Gaza “are a terrifying echo of all-too-familiar images of European ghettos and Nazi concentration camps in the 2nd World War,” the group added.

At least 19 people were killed throughout Lebanon due to continual bombardment by Israeli forces, with over a dozen air raids occurring throughout the day on Thursday. The death toll in Lebanon since October 8 has risen to 2,593. The strikes included attacks on towns, including Khadr, Kafr Tabnit, Jwaya, and Qalaouiyeh in southern Lebanon and the Bekaa Valley.

Israel’s massacres in Lebanon on Thursday followed the bombardment on Wednesday of the city of Tyre, which wounded at least 16 people. The city is one of the oldest continuously inhabited population centers in the world, and its historic Roman ruins are a UNESCO heritage site.

Meanwhile, Israel issued new evacuation orders in the southern suburbs of Beirut, Lebanon, declaring, “You are located near facilities and sites belonging to Hezbollah, which the Israeli [military] will be targeting in the near future.”

25 October 2024

Source: countercurrents.org

The Global War on Children

By Nick Turse

“War is not healthy for children and other living things,” reads a poster titled “Primer” created by the late artist Lorraine Schneider for an art show at New York’s Pratt Institute in 1965. Printed in childlike lowercase letters, the words interspersed between the leaves of a simply rendered sunflower, it was an early response to America’s war in Vietnam. “She just wanted to make something that nobody could argue with,” recalled Schneider’s youngest daughter, Elisa Kleven, in an article published earlier this year. Six decades later, Schneider’s hypothesis has consistently been borne out.

According to Save the Children, about 468 million children — about one of every six young people on this planet — live in areas affected by armed conflict. Verified attacks on children have tripled since 2010. Last year, global conflicts killed three times as many children as in 2022. “Killings and injuries of civilians have become a daily occurrence,” U.N. human rights chief Volker Türk commented in June when he announced the 2023 figures. “Children shot at. Hospitals bombed. Heavy artillery launched on entire communities.”

It took four decades for the United Nations Security Council to catch up to Schneider. In 2005, that global body identified — and condemned — six grave violations against children in times of war: killing or maiming; recruitment into or use by armed forces and armed groups; attacks on schools or hospitals; rape or other grave acts of sexual violence; abduction; and the denial of humanitarian access to them. Naming and shaming, however, has its limits. Between 2005 and 2023, more than 347,000 grave violations against youngsters were verified across more than 30 conflict zones in Africa, Asia, the Middle East, and Latin America, according to UNICEF, the U.N. agency for children. The actual number is undoubtedly far higher.

From the extreme damage explosive weapons do to tiny bodies to the lasting effects of acute deprivation on developing brains, children are particularly vulnerable in times of conflict. And once subjected to war, they carry its scars, physical and mental, for a lifetime. A recent study by Italian researchers emphasized what Schneider intuitively knew — that “war inflicts severe violations on the fundamental human rights of children.” The complex trauma of war, they found, “poses a grave threat to the emotional and cognitive development of children, increasing the risk of physical and mental illnesses, disabilities, social problems, and intergenerational consequences.”

Despite such knowledge, the world continues to fail children in times of conflict. The United States was, for instance, one of the members of the U.N. Security Council that condemned those six grave wartime violations against children. Yet the Biden administration has greenlit tens of billions of dollars in weapons sales to Israel, while U.S. munitions have repeatedly been used in attacks on schools, that have become shelters, predominantly for women and children, in the Gaza Strip. “Make no mistake, the United States is fully, fully, fully supportive of Israel,” President Joe Biden said recently, even though his administration acknowledged the likelihood that Israel had used American weaponry in Gaza in violation of international law.

And Gaza is just one conflict zone where, at this very moment, children are suffering mightily. Let TomDispatch offer you a hellscape tour of this planet, a few stops in a world of war to glimpse just what today’s conflicts are doing to the children trapped by them.

Gaza

The Gaza Strip is the most dangerous place on Earth to be a child, according to UNICEF. Israel has killed around 17,000 children there since the current Gaza War began in October 2023, according to local authorities. And almost as horrific, about 26,000 kids have reportedly lost one or both parents. At least 19,000 of them are now orphans or are otherwise without a caregiver. One million children in Gaza have also been displaced from their homes since October 2023.

In addition, Israel is committing “scholasticide,” the deliberate and systematic destruction of the Palestinian education system in Gaza, according to a recent report by the Al Mezan Center for Human Rights, a Palestinian advocacy group. More than 659,000 children there have been out of school since the beginning of the war. The conflict in Gaza will set children’s education back by years and risks creating a generation of permanently traumatized Palestinians, according to a new study by the University of Cambridge, the Centre for Lebanese Studies, and the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestinian Refugees in the Near East.

Even before the current war, an estimated 800,000 children in Gaza — about 75% of the kids there — were in need of mental health and psychosocial support. Now, UNICEF estimates that more than one million of them — in effect, every kid in the Gaza Strip — needs such services. In short, you can no longer be a healthy child there.

Lebanon

Over four days in late September, as Israel ramped up its war in Lebanon, about 140,000 children in that Mediterranean nation were displaced. Many arrived at shelters showing signs of deep distress, according to Save the Children staff. “Children are telling us that it feels like danger is everywhere, and they can never be safe. Every loud sound makes them jump now,” said Jennifer Moorehead, Save the Children’s country director in Lebanon. “Many children’s lives, rights and futures have already been turned upside down and now their capacity to cope with this escalating crisis has been eroded.”

All schools in that country have been closed, adversely affecting every one of its 1.5 million children. More than 890 children have also been injured in Israeli strikes over the last year, the vast majority — more than 690 — since August 20th, according to the Lebanese Ministry of Public Health. Given that Israel has recently extended attacks from the south of the country to the Lebanese capital, Beirut, they will undoubtedly be joined by all too many others.

Sudan

Children have suffered mightily since heavy fighting erupted in Khartoum, Sudan’s capital, in April 2023 between the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces. More than 18,000 people have reportedly been killed and close to 10 million have been forced to flee their homes since the civil war there began. Almost half of the displaced Sudanese are — yes! — children, more than 4.6 million of them, making the conflict there the largest child displacement crisis in the world.

More than 16 million Sudanese children are also facing severe food shortages. In the small town of Tawila in that country’s North Darfur state, at least 10 children die of hunger every day, according to a report last month in the Guardian. The population of the town has ballooned as tens of thousands fled El Fasher, North Darfur’s besieged capital. “We anticipate that the exact number of children dying of hunger is much higher,” Aisha Hussien Yagoub, the head of the health authority for the local government in Tawila told the Guardian. “Many of those displaced from El Fasher are living far from our clinic and are unable to reach it.”

More than 10 million Sudanese children, or 50% of that country’s kids, have been within about three miles of the frontlines of the conflict at some point over the past year. According to Save the Children, this marks the highest rate of exposure in the world. In addition, last year, there was a five-fold increase in grave violations of Sudanese children’s rights compared to 2022.

Syria

More than 30,200 children have been killed since the Syrian Civil War began in 2011, according to the Syrian Network for Human Rights. Another 5,200 children were forcibly disappeared or are under arrest.

However little noticed, Syria remains the world’s largest refugee crisis. More than 14 million Syrians have been forced from their homes. More than 7.2 million of them are now estimated to be internally displaced in a country where nine in 10 people exist below the poverty line. An entire generation of children has lived under the constant threat of violence and emotional trauma since 2011. It’s been the only life they’ve ever known.

“Services have already collapsed after 14 years of conflict,” Rasha Muhrez, Save the Children’s Response Director in Syria, said last month. “The humanitarian crisis in Syria is at a record level.” More than two-thirds of the population of Syria, including about 7.5 million children, require humanitarian assistance. Nearly half of the 5.5 million school-aged children — 2.4 million between the ages of five and 17 — remain out of school, according to UNICEF. About 7,000 schools have been destroyed or damaged.

Recently, Human Rights Watch sounded the alarm about the recruitment of children, “apparently for eventual transfer to armed groups,” by a youth organization affiliated with the Kurdish-led Autonomous Administration for North and East Syria and the U.S.-backed Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces, its military wing.

Ukraine

Child casualties in Ukraine jumped nearly 40% in the first half of this year, bringing the total number of children killed or injured in nearly 900 days of war there to about 2,200, according to Save the Children. “This year, violence has escalated with a new intensity, with missiles, drones, and bombs causing an alarming rise in children being injured or killed in daylight blasts,” said Stephane Moissaing, Deputy Country Director for Save the Children in Ukraine. “The suffering for families will not stop as long as explosive weapons are sweeping through populated towns and villages across Ukraine.”

There are already 2.9 million Ukrainian children in need of assistance — and the situation is poised to grow worse in the months ahead. Repeated Russian attacks on the country’s infrastructure could result in power outages of up to 18 hours a day this winter, leaving many of Ukraine’s children freezing and without access to critical services. “The lack of power and all its knock-on effects this winter could have a devastating impact not only on children’s physical health but on their mental well-being and education,” said Munir Mammadzade, UNICEF representative to Ukraine. “Children’s lives are consumed by thoughts of survival, not childhood.”

Ukraine also estimates that Russian authorities have forcibly removed almost 20,000 children from occupied territories there since the February 2022 invasion. Financial Times investigation found that Ukrainian children who were abducted and taken to Russia early in the war were put up for adoption on a Russian government-linked website. One of them was shown with a false Russian identity. Another was listed using a Russian version of their Ukrainian name. There was no mention of the children’s Ukrainian backgrounds.

West and Central Africa

Conflicts have been raging in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) for decades. World Vision has called the long-running violence there “one of the worst child protection crises in the world.” A 2023 U.N. report on children and armed conflict documented 3,377 grave violations against children in the DRC. Of these, 46% involved the recruitment of children — some as young as five — by armed groups.

Violence and intercommunity tensions in the DRC have forced 1,457 schools to close this year alone, affecting more than 500,000 children. And sadly, that country is no anomaly. In May, the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, or OCHA, reported that more than 5,700 schools in Burkina Faso had been closed due to insecurity, depriving more than 800,000 children of their educations. And by mid-2024, conflicts had shuttered more than 14,300 schools in 24 African countries, according to the Norwegian Refugee Council. That marks an increase of 1,100 closures compared to 2023. The 2024 closures were clustered in West and Central Africa, mainly in Burkina Faso, the DRC, Cameroon, Chad, Nigeria, and Niger. They have affected an estimated 2.8 million children.

“Education is under siege in West and Central Africa. The deliberate targeting of schools and the systemic denial of education because of conflict is nothing short of a catastrophe. Every day that a child is kept out of school is a day stolen from their future and from the future of their communities,” said Hassane Hamadou, the Norwegian Refugee Council’s Regional Director for West and Central Africa. “We urgently call on all parties to conflict to cease attacks on and occupation of schools and ensure that education is protected and prioritized.”

Feet of Clay

It’s been six decades since Lorraine Schneider unveiled her poster and her common-sense wisdom to the world. She’s been proven right at every turn, in every conflict across the entire planet. Everywhere that children (not to mention other living things) have been exposed to war, they have suffered. Children have been killed and maimed. They have been physically, psychologically, and educationally stunted, as well as emotionally wounded. They have been harmed, assaulted, and deprived. Their bodies have been torn apart. Their minds – the literal architecture of their brains – have been warped by war.

In the conflict zones mentioned above and so many others — from Myanmar to Yemen — the world is failing its children. What they have lost can never be “found” again. Survivors can go on, but there is no going back.

Schneider’s mother, Eva Art, was a self-taught sculptor who escaped pogroms in Ukraine by joining relatives in the United States as a child. She lost touch with her family during World War II, according to her daughter Kleven, and later discovered that her relatives had been killed, their entire shtetl (or small Jewish town) wiped out. To cope with her grief, Art made clay figurines of the dead of her hometown: a boy and his dog, an elderly woman knitting, a mother cradling a baby. And today, the better part of 100 years after the young Art was forced from her home by violence, children continue to suffer in the very same ways — and continue to turn to clay for solace.

Israa Al-Qahwaji, a mental health and psychosocial support coordinator for Save the Children in Gaza, shared the story of a young boy who survived an airstrike that resulted in the amputation of one of his hands, while also killing his father and destroying his home. In shock and emotionally withdrawn, the boy was unable to talk about the trauma. However, various therapeutic techniques allowed him to begin to open up, according to Al-Qahwaji. The child began to talk about games he could no longer play and how losing his hand had changed his relationship with his friends. In one therapy session, he was asked to mold something out of clay to represent a wish. With his remaining hand, he carefully shaped a house. After finishing the exercise, he turned to the counselor with a question that left Al-Qahwaji emotionally overwhelmed. “Now,” the boy asked, “will you bring my dad and give me my hand back?”

Nick Turse is the managing editor of TomDispatch and a fellow at the Type Media Center.

23 October 2024

Source: countercurrents.org

Israel uses massacres, bombings of shelters and hospitals as part of its systematic strategy to evacuate northern Gaza

By Euro-Med Human Rights Monitor

Palestinian Territory – Israel is systematically and extensively working to drive out the Palestinian population and forcibly displace them from their residential areas in the northern Gaza Strip, using massacres, mass killings, bombings of hospitals and shelters, and the destruction of basic necessities of life. Euro-Med Monitor notes that the basic necessities of life across the Strip, particularly in the north, have already been deteriorating for 12 months.

The Israeli army’s on-the-ground massacres show that the plan to rid the land of its people and eradicate the Palestinian presence is moving forward at an unprecedented pace. Locals who are unable or unwilling to leave their homes are viewed as “terrorists” and are subject to direct targeting and killing.

Along with the Jabalia camp in the northern Gaza Strip, where Israeli aircraft dropped leaflets on Tuesday morning, October 22, urging residents of Beit Lahia, including those in shelters and hospitals, to forcibly evacuate and head towards the Indonesian Hospital in Jabalia, where the occupation forces set up a checkpoint before forcing the residents to leave northern Gaza, as happened over the past two days with thousands of people in the shelters surrounding the Indonesian Hospital, the Israeli occupation army also increased the scope and intensity of its military operations to include the Beit Lahia project.

The Israeli army ordered the evacuation of the Kamal Adwan Hospital in the Beit Lahia project, which houses the greatest number of victims of the Israeli aggression, after the medical staff refused to evacuate it during the initial days of the previous aggression. Israel’s latest forced displacement order includes the hospital.

The hospital’s operations are severely hampered by a shortage of medical supplies and blood units, ongoing shelling in the area, and the exhaustion of medical personnel from treating hundreds of dying and injured people over the course of 18 days.

The majority of the shelter centres in the Jabalia and Jabalia camps have been bombed by Israeli forces, who also targeted the displaced people while they were responding to the displacement orders and evacuation plans. This targeting was repeated yesterday (Monday 21 October), when the Al-Fawqa schools were targeted, resulting in the killing of 17 Palestinians and the injury of numerous others.

The Israeli occupation army tightened the noose around the Beit Lahia project after many Jabalia residents who were unwilling to leave the area sought refuge there. The occupation army enforced a siege on the Beit Lahia project with fire and demanded that its residents and the displaced people sheltering there leave.

The Israeli occupation army is also systematically destroying water stations, bakeries, streets, and agricultural lands—some of which were replanted to accommodate the population’s needs after the entry of any vegetables was prohibited in recent months—in the northern Gaza Strip.

In Beit Lahia’s Al-Shimaa neighbourhood, the Israeli occupation army killed three farmers, including agricultural engineer Youssef Saqr Abu Rabie. Months ago, Abu Rabie started an agricultural project in the northern Gaza Strip to combat the Israeli-imposed famine.

Over the course of the last 18 days, the Israeli army has destroyed and burned hundreds of homes in northern Gaza, particularly in the Jabalia camp. Nearly 700 people have been killed and over a thousand have been injured, and many more are still trapped under the debris of their homes and in shelters that have been targeted. Because of the Israeli siege and the imposition of a travel ban, it is impossible to recover these victims and evacuate them to safety.

Given that the Israeli army is carrying out systematic and widespread mass and individual killings; a deliberate starvation campaign; mass forced displacements; and the complete destruction of what remains of the most basic necessities of life, the United Nations must declare the northern Gaza Strip a disaster area that requires immediate interventions. It should also compel Israel to stop the genocide and protect civilians in the north and across the entire Gaza Strip. Euro-Med Monitor emphasises that the international community, including the UN, is complicit in the most heinous of crimes—genocide—because the vast majority of its members have not moved to actually put a stop to what is happening.

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

23 October 2024

Source: countercurrents.org