Just International

Bodies Pile Up In North Gaza Streets

By Countercurrents Collective

A dire environmental disaster looms over Gaza, as the streets of the northern Strip become graveyards for countless Palestinians killed in relentless Israeli airstrikes, warned Mohammed Abu Afash, Director of the Medical Relief Organization in Gaza.

Unretrieved bodies, abandoned amid the chaos, now rot in the open. The haunting scene is worsened by stray animals feeding on the corpses, creating an ominous health crisis that threatens to engulf the besieged region.

Israeli snipers are firing upon aid workers who try to retrieve the bodies.

The humanitarian crisis deepens as hospitals, already battered by bombings, are left without surgeons to tend to the wounded. Medical staff face crippling shortages of supplies, with access to northern Gaza blocked and healthcare workers themselves targeted by Israeli forces.

Abu Afash’s grim message paints a picture not just of suffering but of an unfolding catastrophe with devastating human and environmental consequences.

“People are Hungry, Cold and Traumatised” in Northern Gaza: UN Official

UNICEF communications specialist Rosalia Bollen described the situation in northern Gaza after nearly two months of an Israeli siege as “most dire”.

“Across northern Gaza, including Gaza City, the situation is very difficult for hospitals that lack medical supplies and medicines and doctors, but also for the people who are still there,” she said.

After driving around the area with colleagues last week, Bollen said she saw some market activity in improvised stalls but said very few had any food.

“The little that is available is canned food. The people are hungry, cold and traumatised. A risk of famine alert was issued last month but there haven’t been any supplies entering most northern parts of Gaza, so the situation will further deteriorate for the families there,” she said.

“The children I meet with are all hungry.”

17 December 2024

Source: countercurrents.org

WHO Chief Calls Conditions at Gaza’s Kamal Adwan Hospital “Appalling,” Urges “This Hell to Stop”

By Quds News Network

Gaza (Quds News Network)- World Health Organization Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus called the conditions at Kamal Adwan Hospital in northern Gaza “appalling,” as the area has been under relentless Israeli assaults and a military siege for more than 70 days.

He said Israeli occupation authorities have arbitrarily denied four missions to the facility in the past week, including the re-deployment of an international medical team that had evacuated from the hospital on December 6 due to the Israeli attacks.

“Recent attacks have further damaged the oxygen supply, generators, and broken windows and doors of the patients’ rooms,” Tedros wrote on X.

“The conditions in the hospital are simply appalling. We urge for the protection of health care and for this hell to stop! Ceasefire!”

[https://twitter.com/DrTedros/status/1868728190048649727]

Since October 5, when Israel launched a new offensive on northern Gaza, believed to be part of the so-called Generals’ Plan, Kamal Adwan hospital has been under siege, with no humanitarian aid – medical supplies, water, or life-sustaining resources – available to people there because of the ongoing deliberate prevention by the Israeli military.

The vicinity of Kamal Adwan Hospital has become a notorious site, with ongoing, repeated attacks by Israeli tank shells, quadcopters and drone missiles.

Last night, Israeli forces destroyed the facility’s power generators and snipers fired at staff in the intensive care unit.

There are more than 64 patients still in the besieged facility, according to Dr. Hussam Abu Safiya, the director of the hospital, including patients in intensive care who require oxygen and water.

“Since yesterday until now, we have barely slept due to the continuous and deliberate Israeli shelling of the hospital,” Abu Safiya said on Tuesday.

“The third floor was targeted. We were in the operating rooms performing surgery on one of the injured when we came under attack. As a result of the shelling, we received five additional injuries, including one patient whose left foot we had to amputate.”

“The third floor was set on fire, and the water tank was destroyed. The Intensive Care Unit was also targeted while patients were inside. There were terrifying sounds in the hospital yard, and we saw a military vehicle approaching the hospital. Barrels were placed, and three of them exploded, causing panic and terror in the hospital. The doors and windows were destroyed, and the shelling has continued without stopping until now.”

“Drones are continuously dropping bombs on the hospital. Anyone moving inside the hospital risks injury or death.”

“There is currently no electricity, water, or oxygen at all. We are working to repair part of the infrastructure that was targeted, but it is clear that the whole world either does not see or does not want to see what is happening. It seems they are waiting to see the bodies under the rubble of Kamal Adwan Hospital, and that is the harsh truth.”

17 December 2024

Source: countercurrents.org

Syria’s Assad Has Fallen – Just As The Pentagon Planned 23 Years Ago

By Jonathan Cook

The long-harboured aspirations of the US, Turkey and Israel to topple the Syrian government, mainly through their rebranded al-Qaeda allies, succeeded at lightning speed.

Damascus fell days after Hay’at Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) forces under Abu Mohammad al-Jolani surprised observers by breaking out of their small north-western enclave in Syria and seizing the country’s second city, Aleppo.

Bashar al-Assad’s government and his army, it turned out, were paper tigers. Or they were, once their chief allies – Russia, Iran and Hezbollah in Lebanon – had been forced onto the back foot. Preoccupied with troubles closer to home, they could no longer offer the military support Assad depended on.

Israel’s rampage across Lebanon and its military intimidation of Iran – as well as Nato’s increasing efforts to pin Russia down in Ukraine – unfroze the main battle lines in Syria, arrived at several years ago between Assad’s army, al-Qaeda’s franchise in Syria and Kurdish forces in the north-east.

Backed by Turkey, a member of Nato – and more covertly by the CIA and MI6 – HTS and the so-called Syrian National Army (SNA) were able to drive south unhindered.

HTS is proscribed as a terrorist group by both the US and Britain. The CIA has placed a $10m bounty on Jolani’s head.

Strangely, amid the excitement, the BBC and the rest of the western media forgot to mention HTS’s status as a proscribed organisation – as they do in kneejerk fashion every time the Palestinian resistance group Hamas is referred to.

Notably, the very western politicians and media now celebrating the “liberation” of Syria by HTS are the same ones insisting that the eradication of the “terrorists” of Hamas in Gaza is so important it justifies the bombing and starvation of the enclave’s two million-plus Palestinian population.

There are difficult questions that any rational observer ought to be pondering right now.

How are we to believe that the same ideological groups who are head-chopping, women-abusing, minority-oppressing terrorists when they operate in US-occupied Iraq, are now “moderate”, “diversity-friendly rebels” when they operate next door in Syria?

How are opponents of western complicity in Israel’s “plausible” genocide in Gaza, as the World Court describes it, supposed to feel about the West helping to shatter the “axis of resistance”, which stood alone in offering material support to try to stop it?

Is HTS pursuing a nationalist agenda that is truly about liberating Syrians from western imperialism, or is western imperialism – wielding both the stick of an Israeli attack dog and the carrot of the rich Gulf lapdogs – once again in the driving seat in Syria?

How much of what we see is the reality of the situation and how much perception management?

Iran in cross-hairs

There are plenty of clues to help us answer these questions if we go looking for them.

Wesley Clark, a former US Army general, recalled a moment weeks after the 9/11 attacks on the Twin Towers in 2001 when he visited the Pentagon.

He was shown a classified document that set out how the US was going to “take out seven countries in five years, starting with Iraq, then Syria, Lebanon, Libya, Somalia, Sudan and finishing off with Iran”.

https://youtube.com/watch?v=FNt7s_Wed_4%3Fsi%3D_WPRk-4iGoKPVL8j
None of these states had any obvious connection to the events of 9/11. The one that did have such a connection – Saudi Arabia – was not on the list and has remained one of the United States’ most favoured client states.

The order of targets prioritised by Washington had to be modified – and the timeline was way off – but the realisation of that 2001 blueprint is closer than ever.

The invasion of Iraq in 2003 by the US and UK, on false pretences, led to the removal of dictator Saddam Hussein and the collapse of the Iraqi state. The country was plunged into a devastating sectarian war from which it is still struggling to recover.

Nato meddling in Libya, again on false pretences, led to the removal of dictator Muammar Gaddafi and the collapse of the Libyan state in 2011. It has been a failed state run by warlords ever since.

Sudan and Somalia – the latter subject to a US-backed Ethiopian invasion in 2007 – are both basket cases, riven by all-consuming, horrifying civil wars that the US helped to stoke rather than resolve.

The destruction of these various states created the space for new ultra-violent, intolerant Islamist groups such as al-Qaeda and the Islamic State (IS) group to flourish.

Turkey’s open backing of the rebels in Syria – plus more concealed support from the CIA and MI6 – led to the removal of Syrian dictator Assad at the weekend and the collapse of what was left of the Syrian state. It is hard to imagine a unified authority emerging there.

Meanwhile, the terms of surrender foisted on Beirut to end Israel’s savage bombing of Lebanon do not look designed to hold. The already fragile sectarian arrangements barely glueing the Lebanese state together are almost certain to come unstuck in the coming months.

Iran, the last target on the Pentagon’s list, is now fully in the cross-hairs. Deprived of allies in Syria, and now largely cut off from its Hezbollah allies in Lebanon, Tehran is as vulnerable as it has ever been.

Bigger picture

None of this is accidental.

Were western publics not so deeply influenced by years of disinformation from their politicians and media, they might by now be starting to see a bigger picture gradually coming into focus.

One in which the fates of Syria, Lebanon, Palestine and Iran hang in the balance together. One in which the western powers, led from Washington, are once again meddling, in violation of international law, to destroy the territorial integrity of each of them. One in which Israel and the West’s geostrategic interests are paramount, not the freedoms or welfare of the region’s people.

Dictators are bad. Killing civilians is bad. But these truisms, selectively prioritised by our feckless media class, have been weaponised to obscure the wider picture.

When westerners see “enemy” governments fall, as Assad’s has just done, or civil wars break out in far-off lands, they are led to assume that these are the geopolitical equivalent of a natural event.

The unexamined premise is that the world is ultimately heading, in fits and starts, towards a liberal democratic order. That is why HTS is repackaging itself, ably assisted by the western media, as newly pragmatic and moderate.

“Moderate”, presumably, in the sense that Saudi Arabia is considered “moderate” in western coverage.

When the West intervenes, so this narrative goes, it is simply to assist the laggards on their path to a final utopia: something akin to the United States, but without Donald Trump, gun crime, opioid and mental health crises, and nearly half of working-age adults deprived of proper healthcare.

Such changes of power, westerners are encouraged to believe, only ever rise from the bottom up, signalling a dictator’s illegitimacy, or maybe the incremental trajectory of political systems from backwardness to greater enlightenment.

Sadly, world events – especially in circumstances where there is only one military superpower, the US, with some 750 bases around the globe – rarely follow such a straightforward path.

Access to oil

The 2001 Pentagon memo shown to Clark was, in fact, a reworking of a military blueprint for the Middle East that had been circulating in Washington for even longer – and had nothing to do with responding to 9/11 or terrorism.

It was all about securing Israel’s place as a forward base for US interests in the oil-rich region.

The champions of this idea were an increasingly influential group called the neoconservatives – or neocons for short.

By 1996, they had formalised their plan for “remaking” the Middle East into a document called A Clean Break. It proposed that Israel should tear up the Oslo Accords and any moves towards peacemaking with the Palestinians – the title’s “clean break” – and instead go on the offensive against its regional foes, with US backing.

What did that mean? Israel had to be helped to begin “weakening, containing, and even rolling back Syria”, observed the authors, and then “removing Saddam Hussein from power in Iraq”. The next stage would be to “wean the south Lebanese Shia away from Hizballah, Iran and Syria”.

Four years before A Clean Break, the neocons explained that the primary aim of US foreign policy in the Middle East was to “preserve US and western access to the region’s oil”. A close second was easing Israel’s path to ridding itself of the so-called “Palestinian problem”.

Later, in a document published in 2000 titled Rebuilding America’s Defenses, they clarified that the US must ensure it retained “forward-based forces” in the Middle East to maintain military dominance there “given the longstanding American interests in the region”. Those interests primarily being, of course, oil.

The ultimate concern, the paper explained, was stopping China from developing closer ties to key oil states such as Iran.

The authors of these documents would soon be holding key positions in the George W Bush administration that took office in January 2001.

Ensconced in the Pentagon and State Department, they were only too ready to exploit 9/11 as the pretext to fast-track their pre-existing agenda, as Clark understood from the Pentagon memo.

Bloody nose

Syria was viewed by the neocons and Israel as the lynchpin, the supply line, between Iran and Hezbollah, Tehran’s critically important military ally in Lebanon. Severing that link was a priority.

It was chiefly Hezbollah’s well-fortified and concealed positions in south Lebanon, as well as its large stockpile of rockets delivered by Iran, that kept Israel in check militarily.

Israel received an unexpected, bloody nose when it tried to reoccupy south Lebanon in 2006. It was forced to beat a hasty retreat within weeks. Israel also had to abandon plans to expand that same war into Syria – a failure that infuriated Washington’s neocons at the time.

Hezbollah’s rocket arsenal was also a brake on Israel’s ambitions to ethnically cleanse – or worse – the Palestinians from their lands in Gaza, the West Bank and East Jerusalem, as current events have demonstrated.

Ultimately, Israel realised there was no way to complete its genocide of Gaza without neutralising Hezbollah and Syria, and containing Iran.

So how involved in practice was Washington in Assad’s fall?

There are plenty of clues marking the way.

After Israel’s 2006 failure, the US looked for a new route to reach the same destination. Operation Timber Sycamore was born in secret shortly after the Arab Spring erupted in 2011.

This covert military operation was designed to work in conjunction with an increasingly draconian sanctions regime to throttle the Syrian economy.

The CIA, supported by Britain’s MI6, began working in secret to topple Assad. Saudi Arabia was intimately involved too, presumably because of its deep ties to extreme jihadist groups across the region, including al-Qaeda and Islamic State, that would soon become central to the regime-change operation.

Jake Sullivan, now Joe Biden’s national security adviser, was clear about who was going to help. In an email in late 2012, as Timber Sycamore was being put together, he wrote to then Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to avoid any confusion about Washington’s allies: “AQ [al-Qaeda] are on our side in Syria.”

An email sent to Clinton earlier, in spring 2012, had laid out the emerging thinking in the State Department.

“US diplomats and Pentagon can start strengthening the opposition. It will take time,” the email asserted. “The payoff will be substantial.

“Iran would be strategically isolated, unable to exert its influence in the Middle East… Hezbollah in Lebanon would be cut off from its Iranian sponsors since Syria would no longer be a transit point for Iranian training, assistance and missiles.”

The chief beneficiary was clear too: “America can and should help them [Syrian rebels] – and by doing so help Israel.”

Building the rebels

According to US officials, the CIA had trained and equipped nearly 10,000 fighters by summer 2015, at an annual cost of $100,000 per rebel.

Riyadh supplied yet more money and weapons, drawing in Islamist fighters and mercenaries from the wider region. Jordan hosted the training bases. The CIA and the Saudis jointly supplied the rebels with the intelligence needed to guide their operations in Syria.

Israel, which had long been lobbying Washington for such a covert programme against the Syrian government, took a leading role, too. It supplied weapons, and dropped thousands of bombs on Syrian infrastructure to keep Assad under pressure.

It supplied its own intelligence to the rebels and offered medical facilities to treat wounded fighters.

In 2012, Ehud Barak, then Israeli defence minister, explained Israel’s thinking to CNN: “The toppling down of Assad will be a major blow to the radical axis, major blow to Iran… and it will weaken dramatically both Hezbollah in Lebanon and Hamas and Islamic Jihad in Gaza.”

After the CIA operation finally came to light in 2016, Washington formally shut it down.

But the effectiveness of Operation Timber Sycamore had already been severely hampered by the Russian military entering Syria in late 2015, at Assad’s invitation.

Eventually the battle fronts hardened into stalemate.

‘We love Israel’

Now, years later, the battle lines have suddenly come undone. As Washington envisioned 23 years ago, Assad is the latest Middle Eastern dictator not to Israel’s liking to be overthrown.

HTS is eager to reassure Washington that it poses no threat to Israel – or its continuing genocide in Gaza.

Interviews on Israeli TV showed rebel commanders praising Israel’s air strikes on Syria, citing them as among the factors in helping the rapid advances made by HTS.

Channel 12 interviewed an unnamed commander who also noted Israel’s ceasefire with Hezbollah had been critical to the timing of the HTS attack on Aleppo.

“We looked at the [ceasefire] agreement with Hezbollah and understood that this is the time to liberate our lands,” he said, adding: “We will not let Hezbollah fight in our areas and we will not let the Iranians take root there.”

In a separate interview with Israel’s Kan TV, a fighter said: “We love Israel and we were never its enemies.”

Both the US and Britain, caught by surprise by the speed of the rebels’ success, are scurrying to remove the $10m CIA bounty off Jolani’s head and take HTS off their terror lists.

Israel lost no time overrunning – and effectively annexing – swaths of Syrian territory to add to the areas of the Golan it seized in violation of international law in 1967. Contrast the West’s muted response to this Israeli invasion of Syria with the West’s outrage at Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022.

At the same time Israel launched hundreds of air strikes across Syria, bombing the country’s military infrastructure to ensure the next government – if such a government ever emerges – will have no means to defend itself. Israel wants Syria as impotent and vulnerable as Palestine, where it is committing a genocide.

According to Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Israel is “changing the face of the Middle East.”

The giant chessboard

Rather than viewing the world in simplistic terms as a battle between good and evil – one in which the evil ones suddenly become good guys, if the BBC says so – analysts of international affairs have traditionally used a different framework.

They understand world affairs as taking place on a global, geostrategic chessboard, in which the great powers of the day try to checkmate their rivals, or avoid being checkmated.

Surprises happen, as they do in chess, when a player doesn’t foresee, or can’t evade, the next move of its opponent.

Syria, very obviously, is not a great power. It is a pawn. But a critically useful one, nonetheless. As critically useful as Ukraine. The battlefields may look separate, but they are, of course, on the same chessboard.

And the players – the US, Russia and China, and to a lesser extent Iran, Israel and Turkey – must each use these pawns wisely to advance their strategic goals.

Ordinary people have agency. But the job of great powers is to limit, tame, and recruit that agency to advance their own interests and damage the interests of rivals.

Israel is the big winner of this round. Syria emerges broken from its long years of a proxy civil war and western sanctions. Either it will collapse into further sectarian discord, consuming all its energies – Israel can readily meddle to inflame such tensions – or its new government will seek rehabilitation from the West. A peace accord with Israel would doubtless be the entry requirement.

With Syria removed from the “axis of resistance”, Hezbollah in Lebanon has been severed from Iran, leaving both Israel’s surviving, main regional foes isolated and weaker. And in the process, Israel has opened the way to completing its genocide of the Palestinian people undisturbed.

Turkey’s interests in Syria do not conflict with Israel’s or Washington’s. It wants to return to Syria the millions of refugees it currently hosts and to eliminate any base for Kurdish factions in Syria to ally with, and assist, its own Kurdish resistance groups.

Avoiding checkmate

The losing side will now have to rethink their strategy.

Stripped of its Syrian ally, Russia is now more exposed on the chessboard. Unless it can win over the new government in Damascus, it risks losing its strategically important Mediterrranean naval port at Tartus, on the Syrian coast.

Washington will be aggressively arm-twisting whoever leads Syria to force Russia out.

It was the threatened loss of its other warm-water naval port, on the Black Sea, at Sebastapol in Crimea – after Washington’s meddling to help overthrow Ukraine’s Moscow-friendly government in 2014 – that led to Russia annexing the peninsula.

It was Washington’s tearing up of missile treaties and the threat of Ukraine being recruited into Nato’s fold so that the West’s nuclear arsenal could be placed on Moscow’s doorstep that led to Russia’s invasion in 2022.

The events of the last few days in Syria underscore how much the western narrative about Russia’s actions being entirely “unprovoked” is self-serving rather than explanatory.

Nato is working behind the scenes to move its pieces. And so is Russia to avoid a checkmate.

In this “game”, there are no good guys. There are only power plays. And the US has far more pieces on the board: 750 military bases encircling the globe to impose by force a policy of “full-spectrum dominance”.

Russia’s new advanced missile systems, the hoped-for deterrence of its nuclear arsenal, its alliances of convenience with others threatened by the undeclared US empire – chiefly China and Iran – are its remaining strengths.

Iran, now isolated from allies in Syria and Hezbollah in Lebanon, will have to think what other resources it can bring to the game. The voices calling for it to forego religious scruples and develop a nuclear weapon, to neutralise Israel’s existing arsenal, will grow much louder.

And, finally, China is only too aware that, in seeking to weaken and isolate Russia and Iran, the US is ultimately gunning for it. There can be no “full-spectrum global dominance” until China is cornered – until Washington can declare, “checkmate”.

Jonathan Cook is a British independent journalist, who has covered issues of Palestine and Israel for much of his over 20-year career.

13 December 2024

Source: countercurrents.org

The Roads to Damascus

By Tariq Ali

None but a few corrupt cronies will be shedding tears at the tyrant’s departure. But there should be no doubt that what we are witnessing in Syria today is a huge defeat, a mini 1967 for the Arab world. As I write, Israeli land forces have entered this battered country. There is not yet a definitive settlement, but a few things are clear. Assad is a refugee in Moscow. His Baathist apparatus did a deal with the Eastern NATO leader, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan (whose brutalities in Idlib are legion), and offered up the country on a platter. The rebels have agreed that Assad’s Prime Minister, Mohammed Ghazi al-Jalali, should continue to oversee the state for the time being. Will this be a form of Assadism without Assad, even if the country is about to pivot geopolitically away from Russia and what remains of the ‘Resistance Axis’?

Like Iraq and Libya, where the US has a lock on the oil, Syria will now become a shared American–Turkish colony. US imperial policy, globally, is to break up countries that cannot be swallowed whole and remove all meaningful sovereignty in order to assert economic and political hegemony. This may have started ‘accidentally’ in the former Yugoslavia but it has since become a pattern. EU satellites use similar methods to ensure that smaller nations (Georgia, Romania) are kept under control. Democracy and human rights have little to do with any of this. It’s a global gamble.

In 2003, after Baghdad fell to the US, the exultant Israeli Ambassador in Washington congratulated George W. Bush and advised him not to stop now, but to move on to Damascus and Tehran. Yet the US victory had an unintended but predictable side-effect: Iraq became a rump Shia state, enormously strengthening Iran’s position in the region. The debacle there, and subsequently in Libya, meant that Damascus had to wait for more than a decade before receiving proper imperial attention. Meanwhile, Iranian and Russian support for Assad upped the stakes of routine regime change.

Now, Assad’s ousting has created a different type of vacuum – likely to be filled by NATO’s Turkey and the US via the ‘ex-al-Qaida’ Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (the rebranding of its leader Abu Mohammad al-Jolani as a freedom fighter after his stint in a US prison in Iraq is par for the course), as well as Israel. The latter’s contribution was enormous, having disabled Hezbollah and wrecked Beirut with yet another round of massive bombing raids. In the wake of this victory, it is difficult to imagine that Iran will be left alone. Though the ultimate aim for both the US and Israel is regime change there, degrading and disarming the country is the first priority. This wider plan for reshaping the region helps to explain the unstinting support given by Washington and its European proxies to the continuing Israeli genocide in Palestine. After more than a year of slaughter, the Kantian principle that state actions must be such that they can become a universally respected law looks like a sick joke.

Who will replace Assad? Before his flight, some reports suggested that if the dictator made a 180-degree turn – breaking with Iran and Russia and restoring good relations with the US and Israel, as he and his father had done before – then the Americans might be inclined to keep him on. Now it is too late, but the state apparatus that abandoned him has declared its readiness to collaborate with whomever. Will Erdoğan do the same? The Sultan of Donkeys will surely want his own people, nurtured in Idlib since they were child soldiers, in charge and under Ankara’s control. If he succeeds in imposing a Turkish puppet regime, it will be another version of what happened in Libya. But he is unlikely to have it all his own way. Erdoğan is strong on demagogy but weak on actions, and the US and Israel might veto a cleansed al-Qaida government for their own reasons, despite having used the jihadis to fight Assad. Regardless, it is unlikely that the replacement regime will abolish the Mukhābarāt (secret police), illegalize torture or offer accountable government.

Prior to the Six Day War, one of the central components of Arab nationalism and unity was the Baath Party that ruled Syria and had a strong base in Iraq; the other, more powerful one was Nasser’s government in Egypt. Syrian Baathism during the pre-Assad period was relatively enlightened and radical. When I met Prime Minister Yusuf Zuayyin in Damascus in 1967, he explained that the only way forward was to outflank conservative nationalism by making Syria ‘the Cuba of the Middle East’. Yet Israel’s assault that year led to the speedy destruction of the Egyptian and Syrian armies, which paved the way for the death of Nasserite Arab nationalism. Zuayyin was toppled and Hafez-al Assad was propelled to power with tacit US support – much like Saddam Hussein in Iraq, whom the CIA supplied with a list of the top cadres of the Iraqi Communist Party. The Baathist radicals in both countries were discarded, and the party’s founder Michel Aflaq resigned in disgust when he saw where it was headed.

These new Baathist dictatorships were supported by certain sections of the population, however, as long as they provided a basic safety net. Iraq under Saddam and Syria under the Assad père et fils were brutal but social dictatorships. Assad Senior hailed from the middle-strata of the peasantry, and passed several progressive reforms to ensure that his class was kept happy, reducing the tax burden and abolishing usury. In 1970, a vast majority of Syrian villages had only natural light; peasants woke up and went to sleep with the sun. A couple decades later, the construction of the Euphrates dam enabled the electrification of 95% of them, with energy heavily subsidized by the state.

It was these policies, rather than repression alone, which guaranteed the stability of the regime. Most of the population turned a blind eye to the torture and imprisonment of citizens in the cities. Assad and his coterie firmly believed that man was little more than an economic creature, and that if needs of this type could be satisfied, then only a small minority would rebel (‘one or two hundred at the most’, Assad remarked, ‘were the types for whom Mezzeh prison was originally intended’). The eventual uprising against the younger Assad in 2011 was triggered by his turn to neoliberalism and the exclusion of the peasantry. When it calcified into a bitter civil war, one option would have been a compromise settlement and power-sharing deal – but the apparatchiks who are currently negotiating with Erdoğan advised against any such arrangement.

During one of my visits to Damascus, the Palestinian intellectual Faisal Darraj confided that the Mukhābarāt agent who gave him permission to leave the country for conferences abroad always laid down a condition: ‘Bring back the latest Baudrillard and Virilio.’ Always nice to have educated torturers, as the great Arab novelist Abdelrahman Munif – a Saudi by birth and leading intellectual of the Baath Party – might have said. Munif’s 1975 novel Sharq al-Mutawassit (East of the Mediterranean) is a devastating account of political torture and imprisonment, which the Egyptian literary critic Sabry Hafez described as a book of ‘exceptional power and ambition, aspiring to write the ultimate political prison in all its variations’. When I spoke with Munif in the nineties he said, with a sad look on his face, that these were the themes that dominated Arabic literature and poetry: a tragic commentary on the state of the Arab nation. Today, this shows little sign of changing. Even if the rebels have freed some of Assad’s prisoners, they will soon replace them with their own.

The US and most of the EU have spent the past year successfully sustaining and defending a genocide in Gaza. All US client states in the region remain intact, while three non-clients – Iraq, Libya and Syria – have been beheaded. The fall of the latter removes a crucial supply line linking a number of anti-Zionist factions. Geostrategically, it is a triumph for Washington and Israel. This must be recognized, but despair is worthless. How an effective resistance will reconstitute itself depends on the coming clash between Israel and a besieged Iran, which is engaged in direct underground talks with the US and certain members of Trump’s entourage, while also speeding up the development of its nuclear plans. The situation is fraught with danger.

Tariq Ali is a Writer, journalist and film-maker Tariq Ali was born in Lahore in 1943. He owned his own independent television production company, Bandung, which produced programmes for Channel 4 in the UK during the 1980s.

13 December 2024

Source: countercurrents.org

Erasing Culture: Israel Can’t Win Despite Destroying a Gaza Beacon

By Palestine Information Center

It is unthinkable for “culture” to be destroyed by wars, yet in Gaza it is. Culture, its monuments and symbols have long become  military targets crushed in a sadistic and criminal context where the aggressor targets the human and civilizational components of the subjugated party. This is what the Israeli occupation wants from its war on the Gaza Strip, brutal images committed for more than 14 months.

[https://twitter.com/TRTArabi/status/1867117599219150983]

The Rashad Shawa Cultural Center (RSCC) is evidence of the Israeli “scorched-earth” policy on the Gaza Strip. The center was transformed from a cultural symbol receiving hundreds of people daily as part of its intellectual, cultural, and artistic activities, exhibitions, and communicating with the world in seminars addressing all local and global issues, into a destroyed, desolate place now for displaced people who seek shelter from the Israeli Nazi Holocaust the occupation is waging across the Strip.

Following 7 October, 2023, the Israeli aggression began targeting all cities and regions of the Strip, especially the northern governorates, and spreading death everywhere with the residents of Gaza finding themselves forced to move from one place to another, seeking nothing more than escape from the Israeli cauldrons of death.

Video: مركز رشاد الشوا الثقافي – حرب غزة 2023

Weeks passed after the start of that aggression while  temporary truces only lasted for a few days, allowing the people of the Al-Rimal neighborhood in Gaza City to return to their wrecked homes, only to be shocked by the the gutted Center that had become a thing of the past, after the Israeli army and occupation bombed it.

The residents had long been accustomed to seeing this great cultural edifice. Inside were chants, competitions, and humming of readers in the library that held more than 100,000 books in the sciences, knowledge, and arts, and a source of pride for the residents of Gaza becoming a destination for visitors from all over the world; a beaconed intellectual window that expresses Palestinian civilization with its diverse spectrums and openness to the world, in addition to what it represented of dear memories, now turned upside down by the brutality of the occupation into a pile of dirt.

The Gaza Municipality condemned the Israeli destruction of the Center, as part of its barbaric aggression on the Gaza Strip, killing thousands of civilians, destroying the city’s main landmarks, and erasing the cultural memory of the Palestinian people according to the Palestine Information Center.

The municipality called on UNESCO to intervene and condemn the occupation’s crimes against cultural centers, libraries, and historical and archaeological landmarks of the city.

[https://twitter.com/PalinfoAr/status/1860992689396691301]

The RSCC was the first of its kind to be built in Palestine, and named after Rashad Shawa, who served as the  mayor of Gaza between 1972 and 1975, and built this center to become a Palestinian cultural beacon.

The architectural and engineering plans for establishing and designing the center began in 1978 and it first opened its doors in 1985 and its printing press began the following year  with the center slowly expanding its activities reaching a peak in the 1990s and especially after 1994 when the Palestinian Authority took its seat there.

The RSCC center had a distinctive design that give it a modernistic outlook spread over two floors with a spiral stairway and an impressive triangular roof. In 1992, it was nominated for the Aga Khan Award for Creativity in Architecture. Before its destruction, those in charge took care of it and restored it periodically to preserve its distinctive architectural appearance.

The building witnessed important events in the history of the Palestinian cause, including: Hosting sessions of the National and Legislative Councils, and visits by heads of state, including former US President Bill Clinton in 1998 met by the late Palestinian President Yasser Arafat, and many world figures.

Cultural isolation

Before its destruction, the center worked to end the cultural and civilizational isolation the Palestinians suffered from as a result of the Israeli occupation, and its attempt to erase the Palestinian identity and steal its heritage.

Even before its destruction, the center faced global isolation because of the continued Israeli siege that was imposed on Gaza since 2007 and the worsening economic situation that was created and which was reflected in the social and cultural aspects of life in the Strip.

[https://twitter.com/act4pal4/status/1745063737143513250]

As with all aspects of life in Gaza, nothing has remained the same, the buildings no longer stand, the patterned landmarks destroyed, families scattered while institutions reduced to brick and mortar if not plotted out.

Culture usually plays its role in awareness and enlightenment but here and over the past months, it has become a witness to the tragedies of massacres, separation of family and friends, and the endless journeys of people forced to move with the center reduced to housing refugees who place plastic bags on its walls to protect themselves, and light fires to try and keep warm from the harsh winter.

In its ongoing aggression on the Gaza Strip, the Israeli occupation targeted the cultural and scientific centers of Gaza, its universities, and all outlets expressing the identity, civilization and heritage of the Palestinian people to obliterate their cultural landmarks so that the barbarism of occupation is entrenched in their public memory and the identity of the right of the owners to the land and holy places erased.

Israel Will Not Succeed

The RSCC was not the only architectural and cultural victim of the Israeli aggression as the destruction machine flattened universities and other cultural centers, including Al-Saqa Palace in Gaza City’s Shuja’iyya built at the end of the Ottoman period during the reign of Sultan Muhammad IV.

In November 2023, Abaher Al-Saqa, professor in the Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences at Birzeit University, wrote: “Beit Al-Saqa, or as people call it, Qasr Al-Saqa, was built by my late grandfather’s cousin, Ahmad Al-Saqa, one of the city’s major merchants. Its walls are studded with sandstone and the ceilings are Roman marble. It is 350 years old and was designated by the family to be turned into a cultural center after it was restored by the Islamic University. It was bombed as part of the brutal colonial bombing. The colonial authorities are exterminating the city’s urban and architectural history, in parallel with the genocide.”

Riwaq, the Palestinian Center for Popular Architecture, based in the West Bank city of Al-Bireh (which participated in the restoration of Beit Al-Saqa with the Iwan Center of the Islamic University of Gaza), noted in a recent post the house was completely bombed on 9 November, according to Aser Al-Saqa, a member of the family that owns the historic building in Shuja’iyya.

[https://twitter.com/akh1e/status/1723240168650383512]

This article from the Palestine Information Center was edited by Dr Marwan Asmar for the www.crossfirearabia.com website

16 December 2024

Source: countercurrents.org

“Massacre of Journalists”: Four Palestinian Journalists Killed in Israeli Attacks in Gaza in Just Five Days

By Quds News Network

Gaza (Quds News Network)- Four Palestinian journalists were killed in separate Israeli attacks within five days amid the ongoing assault in Gaza, with media freedom organizations accusing Israel of committing “war crimes” against journalists there.

Eman Al-Shanti

Israeli airstrikes killed Al-Shanti, her husband and three children on December 11. The attack targeted an apartment in Al-Malash Tower in Sheikh Radwan, northwest Gaza City.

Hours earlier, Al-Shanti wrote on Facebook: “It is unbelievable that we are still alive? May God have mercy on the martyrs.”

Eman Al-Shanti, 38, was a broadcaster at Voice of Al-Aqsa Radio. She was known for her program Asl Al-Qissa (The Root of the Story), which aired on social media platforms.

Mohammed Baalousha

Baalousha was killed when a bomb was dropped from an Israeli quadcopter on Ahmed Yassin Street in the Sheikh Radwan neighborhood on December 14.

Baalousha, who worked for Al Mashhad television, had been shot by an Israeli sniper in January 2024. Despite his injury and the absence of medical care, he continued to report and cover the Israeli assaults.

Mohammed Al-Qrinawi

Al-Qrinawi was killed along with his wife, Maram, and their three children: Jaber, Sidra, and Ayat. Israeli warplanes targeted their home in the Al-Bureij refugee camp on December 14. He is a journalist at Sanad News Agency.

Ahmed Al-Louh

An Israeli airstrike killed Al Jazeera photojournalist Ahmed Al-Louh in Al-Nuseirat refugee camp in central Gaza on December 15.

[https://twitter.com/QudsNen/status/1868540289264324976]

[https://twitter.com/QudsNen/status/1868590819118395452]

[https://twitter.com/QudsNen/status/1868583604386930954]

The attack targeted a Civil Defense site near the camp’s marketplace, according to Al-Awda Hospital. Medical staff confirmed that the body of Al-Louh arrived at the hospital after the strike.

“Massacre” of Journalists in Gaza

Two separate reports from media freedom organisations that analysed the deaths of reporters worldwide this year found Israel carried out a “massacre” of journalists in Gaza.

An annual report published by Reporters Without Borders (RSF) on Thursday found the Israeli army killed 18 journalists – two in Lebanon and 16 in Gaza – as they were working this year.

The toll, equivalent to around a third of the total worldwide of 54, was described by RSF as “an unprecedented massacre”.

“Palestine is the most dangerous country for journalists, recording a higher death toll than any other country over the past five years,” the organisation said in its report, which covers data up to December 1.

In total, “more than 145” journalists have been killed by the Israeli army in Gaza since the start of the war there in October 2023, with 35 of them working at the time of their deaths, the report found.

RSF has filed four complaints with the International Criminal Court (ICC) for “war crimes committed against journalists by the Israeli army”.

In a separate report published on Tuesday, the International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) said that 104 journalists were killed worldwide in 2024, with more than half of them in Gaza.

The IFJ and RSF figures vary because they use different methodologies to calculate the tolls. RSF only records journalist deaths in its report if they have been “proven to be directly related to their professional activity”.

The IFJ also condemned Israel’s military. “The war in Gaza and Lebanon once again highlights the massacre suffered by Palestinian (55), Lebanese (6) and Syrian (1) media professionals, representing 60 percent of all journalists killed in 2024,” it said.

IFJ Secretary General Anthony Bellanger described 2024 as “one of the worst years” for media professionals. He condemned the “massacre taking place in Palestine before the eyes of the entire world.”

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

Critics accuse Israel – which banned foreign reporters from entering Gaza – of targeting journalists in the Palestinian territory to obscure the truth about its war crimes there.

[https://twitter.com/QudsNen/status/1868621755541328238]

“Deliberately targeting journalists is a war crime under international law. This attack must be independently investigated and the perpetrators must be held to account,” Programme Director at Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ), Carlos Martinez de la, said.

According to Gaza’s Government Media Office, 195 Palestinian journalists have been killed in Israeli attacks since the start of the offensive.

16 December 2024

Source: countercurrents.org

Pregnant Women in Gaza Endure Extreme Lack of Essentials Amid Israel’s Genocide: UN

By Quds News Network

Gaza (Quds News Network)- Pregnant women in Gaza are enduring dire conditions as the humanitarian crisis intensifies, with escalating shortages of essential supplies and the onset of harsh winter weather.

According to a recent report from the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), around 50,000 pregnant women in Gaza are particularly vulnerable amid the ongoing Israeli assault, with critical shortages of food, water, shelter, and sanitation.

The report highlights the deteriorating living conditions in the enclave, where heavy rains, rising sea tides, and freezing temperatures are exacerbating already severe shortages of basic necessities.

Water and sanitation systems are collapsing, and sewage is accumulating in the streets, worsening hygiene and increasing the spread of infectious diseases. As a result, women and girls in Gaza are increasingly suffering from reproductive and urinary tract infections, largely due to a lack of sanitary products and poor hygiene conditions.

The UNFPA reports that 72 percent of women are unable to access menstrual hygiene supplies, further contributing to the already unbearable situation.

The agency also warns of rapidly escalating food insecurity and malnutrition, with around 345,000 people across Gaza facing famine-like conditions. Among those suffering, 38,000 adolescent girls and 8,000 pregnant women are particularly at risk.

The assault has led to a rise in maternal deaths, miscarriages, preterm births, and low-birth-weight infants, as the healthcare system in Gaza teeters on the brink of collapse due to the relentless bombardment by Israeli forces.

The UNFPA report reveals that 84 percent of healthcare facilities in Gaza have been destroyed, leaving only 17 out of 36 hospitals partially operational.

In northern Gaza, where Israel imposed a siege starting on October 5, the Kamal Adwan Hospital—the last major medical facility providing maternal and newborn care—has been besieged by the Israeli army. This has left pregnant women struggling to access critical medical services, and many newborns have died due to a lack of incubators, electricity, and essential medical supplies.

Jawaher, a displaced woman who fled northern Gaza, shared her painful experience with the UNFPA: “I was not ready for childbirth. We are very tired,” she said, recounting how she was in labor for two days while searching for shelter before finally reaching al-Sahaba Hospital to give birth.

The situation has made safe pregnancies and deliveries almost impossible.

The continuous Israeli airstrikes have destroyed much of Gaza’s infrastructure, including medical facilities, making it increasingly difficult for women to receive the care they need during pregnancy and childbirth.

The humanitarian crisis has also displaced thousands of families, including Adla, who fled the northern region of Jabalia. “We have no mattress, no food, no clothes—nothing,” she told the agency. “We fled the airstrikes as we were.”

Since the start of Israel’s assault on Gaza on October 7, 2023, over 44,800 people have been killed, and more than 106,000 wounded, with women and children making up the majority of the casualties. According to the UN, around 70 percent of those who have died are women and children.

16 December 2024

Source: countercurrents.org

Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions

Part of the Stop Gaza Genocide toolkit

Modeled after anti-apartheid organizing in South Africa, boycott, divestment, and sanctions (BDS) has proven to be an effective economic pressure strategy for human rights.

In 2005, 170 Palestinian civil society organizations issued a historic, rights-based call for BDS to the international community, targeting Israel and institutions complicit in its oppression against the Palestinian people. USCPR endorsed the Palestinian call for BDS shortly after it was issued in 2005.

Amid the ongoing genocide which began in October 2023, BDS tactics have remained a critical stepping stone in the long-haul fight for justice and liberation. USCPR’s north star remains our #StopArmingIsrael demand—including sanctions to end U.S. military funding to Israel once and for all. Boycott and divestment efforts targeting companies complicit or directly fueling Israel’s violence help build toward that goal.

Divestment campaigns are happening at college campuses, local city councils, churches, and beyond, and have already won hundreds of victories in the U.S. alone. USCPR Youth Fellows have led many divestment campaigns, playing a role in victories such as ending Pitzer College’s apartheid Israel study abroad program. Here’s a list of BDS victories nationwide.

See the BDS graphic below for a list of complicit companies to boycott and divest from, including Chevron, Elbit Systems, Intel, HP, McDonald’s, and more. Also make sure to boycott Coca-Cola.

To go into more depth, you can also review AFSC’s list of companies profiting from the Gaza genocide and full divestment list.

Boycott this holiday season

Disrupt the death machine. Refuse to buy from companies that profit off genocide, like HP, Ahava, SodaStream, Coca-Cola, McDonald’s, and Chevron gas stations, especially during this holiday spending season. Raise awareness by flyeringstickering, or protesting during high traffic times outside of shopping malls, gas stations, and locations where products are sold. See this Mask Off Maersk flyer from Palestinian Youth Movement as an example.

Think creatively about how you spend (and don’t spend) during this season. Instead of shopping at big box stores, consider how you can support small businesses, create your own gifts, or reuse and recycle items. You can also forego gift giving in favor of donating toward mutual aid efforts for Palestinian people living through genocide in Gaza.

BDS Spotlight: Boycott Chevron

The BDS National Committee has issued a call to boycott and divest from the fossil fuel giant Chevron, including boycotting and picketing the thousands of Chevron, Texaco, and Caltex gas stations worldwide. Chevron extracts gas from the Eastern Mediterranean Sea, generating billions of dollars for apartheid Israel, depriving Palestinians of their right to their own natural resources, and fueling genocide and environmental devastation.

Find ways you can take action the weekend of January 31 — February 2 in the Chevron BDS campaign gas station toolkit, from approaching gas station owners to holding a march or car caravan in your community. You can also print flyerssigns, and stickers, or order Boycott Chevron stickers.

Pledge to boycott Chevron now.

Community Divestment webinar series

Learn how to organize your own divestment campaign in through USCPR’s #StopArmingIsrael Community Divestment webinar series. Watch all three webinars below:

Run a city divestment campaign

USCPR’s City Council Organizing Toolkit, which helped spur 200+ local ceasefire resolutions, has now been updated to focus on divestment campaigns. Divestment is a key strategy because it’s tangible: It moves dollars away from weapons companies and complicit corporations that fuel genocide, making the war machine increasingly less profitable. Use this guide to organize for a divestment resolution at your local city council. Demand that your city withdraws investments from corporations complicit in genocide and apartheid.

Find city divestment campaign resources in this toolkit.

Research the Genocide Gentry and other local connections

The Genocide Gentry are members of the ruling class who hold prestigious positions at cultural and educational institutions despite their connections to the war machine amidst an ongoing genocide. What cultural and educational institutions in your community have ties to weapons companies? Research local connections to target in your organizing. You can use this research to build out or support a divestment campaign. Check out the new Genocide Gentry map from Adalah Justice Project, LittleSis, and ACRE.

You can also look into which weapons manufacturers and other genocide profiteers are doing business in your neighborhood. See this Mapping Genocide Suppliers Project made by a decentralized collective.

Do your research with this divestment tool

Palestinian rights supporters have been asking how they can scan their own investments or the portfolios of their universities, municipalities, unions, churches, businesses, and other institutions to check if they’re invested in companies profiting from Israel’s brutal military occupation and genocide against the Palestinan people. This information can be a crucial first step in launching a divestment campaign in response to the Palestinian call for Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions (BDS).

Use this divestment tool at investigate.afsc.org, and see this divestment list.

BDS Spotlight: Mask Off Maersk

Maersk is one of the world’s largest shipping and logistics companies, directly responsible for transporting weapons for genocide. Palestinian Youth Movement has launched the Mask Off Maersk campaign to pressure Maersk to cut ties with Israel and end its complicity. As PYM writes on the Mask Off Maersk site, “Without Maersk, Israel would not have the weapons to commit its genocide of Palestinians in Gaza.” Disrupt the weapons pipeline and genocide machine by targeting war profiteers like Maersk. You can organize your own phone blockade to jam the lines, or flyer and poster during high traffic times and areas.

Take action with the Mask Off Maersk campaign now.

Sanction Israel Now

The “S” in BDS stands for sanctions: a form of economic pressure placed on a nation, in this case specifically to end complicity in Israel’s ongoing genocide against the Palestinian people. Countries have a legal obligation under international law to immediately sanction and stop arming Israel, as the International Court of Justice has advised. In September 2024, the UN General Assembly overwhelmingly voted for imposing sanctions on Israel.

Stop arming Israel now. The U.S. is the biggest funder, weapons supplier, and enabler of the Israeli military. An immediate arms embargo is necessary to cut off the endless supply of U.S. weapons and military funding, which Israel is using to mass murder Palestinian families.

Demand an arms embargo now.

Raise awareness about BDS

Print out BDS stickers to spread around your neighborhood. Find designs here from @GentleSuns, and find Boycott Chevron stickers here. These also look great on flyers for wheatpasting or signs for BDS protests. Learn more about wheatpasting in this printable zine from @GentleSuns.

19 December 2024

Source: uscpr.org

How the US and Israel Destroyed Syria and Called it Peace

By Jeffrey D. Sachs

In the famous lines of Tacitus, Roman historian, “To ravage, to slaughter, to usurp under false titles, they call empire; and where they make a desert, they call it peace.”

In our age, it is Israel and the U.S. that make a desert and call it peace.

The story is simple. In stark violation of international law, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his ministers claim the right to rule over seven million Palestinian Arabs. When Israel’s occupation of Palestinian lands leads to militant resistance, Israel labels the resistance “terrorism” and calls on the U.S. to overthrow the Middle East governments that back the “terrorists.” The U.S., under the sway of the Israel Lobby, goes to war on Israel’s behalf.

The fall of Syria this week is the culmination of the Israel-U.S. campaign against Syria that goes back to 1996 with Netanyahu’s arrival to office as Prime Minister. The Israel-U.S. war on Syria escalated in 2011 and 2012, when Barack Obama covertly tasked the CIA with the overthrow of the Syrian Government in Operation Timber Sycamore. That effort finally came to “fruition” this week, after more than 300,000 deaths in the Syrian war since 2011.

Syria’s fall came swiftly because of more than a decade of crushing economic sanctions, the burdens of war, the U.S. seizure of Syria’s oil, Russia’s priorities regarding the conflict in Ukraine, and most immediately, Israel’s attacks on Hezbollah, which was the key military backstop to the Syrian Government. No doubt Assad often misplayed his own hand and faced severe internal discontent, but his regime was targeted for collapse for decades by the U.S. and Israel.

Since 2011, the Israel-U.S. perpetual war on Syria, including bombing, jihadists, economic sanctions, U.S. seizure of Syria’s oil fields, and more, has sunk the Syrian people into misery.

Before the U.S.-Israel campaign to overthrow Assad began in earnest in 2011, Syria was a functioning, growing middle-income country. In January 2009, the IMF Executive Board had this to say:

Executive Directors welcomed Syria’s strong macroeconomic performance in recent years, as manifested in the rapid non-oil GDP growth, comfortable level of foreign reserves, and low and declining government debt. This performance reflected both robust regional demand and the authorities’ reform efforts to shift toward a more market- based economy.

Since 2011, the Israel-U.S. perpetual war on Syria, including bombing, jihadists, economic sanctions, U.S. seizure of Syria’s oil fields, and more, has sunk the Syrian people into misery.

In the immediate two days following the collapse of the government, Israel conducted about 480 strikes across Syria, and completely destroyed the Syrian fleet in Latakia. Pursuing his expansionist agenda, Prime Minister Netanyahu illegally claimed control over the demilitarized buffer zone in the Golan Heights and declared that the Golan Heights will be a part of the State of Israel “for eternity.”

Netanyahu’s ambition to transform the region through war, which dates back almost three decades, is playing out in front of our eyes. In a press conference on December 9th, the Israeli prime minister boasted of an “absolute victory,” justifying the on-going genocide in Gaza and escalating violence throughout the region:

I ask you, just think, if we had acceded to those who told us time and again: ‘”The war must be stopped”– we would not have entered Rafah, we would not have seized the Philadelphia Corridor, we would not have eliminated Sinwar, we would not have surprised our enemies in Lebanon and the entire world in a daring operation-stratagem, we would not have eliminated Nasrallah, we would not have destroyed Hezbollah’s underground network, and we would not have exposed Iran’s weakness. The operations that we have carried out since the beginning of the war are dismantling the axis brick by brick.

The long history of Israel’s campaign to overthrow the Syrian Government is not widely understood, yet the documentary record is clear. Israel’s war on Syria began with U.S. and Israeli neoconservatives in 1996, who fashioned a “Clean Break” strategy for the Middle East for Netanyahu as he came to office. The core of the “clean break” strategy called for the Israel (and the US) to reject “land for peace,” the idea that Israel would withdraw from the occupied Palestinian lands in return for peace. Instead, Israel would retain the occupied Palestinian lands, rule over the Palestinian people in an Apartheid state, step-by-step ethnically cleanse the state, and enforce so-called “peace for peace” by overthrowing neighboring governments that resisted Israel’s land claims.

The long history of Israel’s campaign to overthrow the Syrian Government is not widely understood, yet the documentary record is clear.

The Clean Break strategy asserts, “Our claim to the land—to which we have clung for hope for 2000 years—is legitimate and noble,” and goes on to state, “Syria challenges Israel on Lebanese soil. An effective approach, and one with which American can sympathize, would be if Israel seized the strategic initiative along its northern borders by engaging Hizballah, Syria, and Iran, as the principal agents of aggression in Lebanon…”

In his 1996 book Fighting Terrorism, Netanyahu set out the new strategy. Israel would not fight the terrorists; it would fight the states that support the terrorists. More accurately, it would get the US to do Israel’s fighting for it. As he elaborated in 2001:

The first and most crucial thing to understand is this: There is no international terrorism without the support of sovereign states.… Take away all this state support, and the entire scaffolding of international terrorism will collapse into dust.

Netanyahu’s strategy was integrated into U.S. foreign policy. Taking out Syria was always a key part of the plan. This was confirmed to General Wesley Clark after 9/11. He was told, during a visit at the Pentagon, that “we’re going to attack and destroy the governments in seven countries in five years—we’re going to start with Iraq, and then we’re going to move to Syria, Lebanon, Libya, Somalia, Sudan and Iran.” Iraq would be first, then Syria, and the rest. (Netanyahu’s campaign for the Iraq War is spelled out in detail in Dennis Fritz’s new book, Deadly Betrayal. The role of the Israel Lobby is spelled out in Ilan Pappé’s new book, Lobbying for Zionism on Both Sides of the Atlantic). The insurgency that hit U.S. troops in Iraq set back the five-year timeline, but did not change the basic strategy.

The U.S. has by now led or sponsored wars against Iraq (invasion in 2003), Lebanon (U.S. funding and arming Israel), Libya (NATO bombing in 2011), Syria (CIA operation during 2010’s), Sudan (supporting rebels to break Sudan apart in 2011), and Somalia (backing Ethiopia’s invasion in 2006). A prospective U.S. war with Iran, ardently sought by Israel, is still pending.

Strange as it might seem, the CIA has repeatedly backed Islamist Jihadists to fight these wars, and jihadists have just toppled the Syrian regime. The CIA, after all, helped to create al-Qaeda in the first place by training, arming, and financing the Mujahideen in Afghanistan from the late 1970s onward. Yes, Osama bin Laden later turned on the U.S., but his movement was a U.S. creation all the same. Ironically, as Seymour Hersh confirms, it was Assad’s intelligence that “tipped off the U.S. to an impending Al Qaeda bombing attack on the headquarters of the U.S. Navy’s Fifth Fleet.”

Operation Timber Sycamore was a billion-dollar CIA covert program launched by Obama to overthrow Bashar al-Assad. The CIA funded, trained, and provided intelligence to radical and extreme Islamist groups. The CIA effort also involved a “rat line” to run weapons from Libya (attacked by NATO in 2011) to the jihadists in Syria. In 2014, Seymour Hersh described the operation in his piece “The Red Line and the Rat Line”:

“A highly classified annex to the report, not made public, described a secret agreement reached in early 2012 between the Obama and Erdoğan administrations. It pertained to the rat line. By the terms of the agreement, funding came from Turkey, as well as Saudi Arabia and Qatar; the CIA, with the support of MI6, was responsible for getting arms from Gaddafi’s arsenals into Syria.”

Soon after the launch of Timber Sycamore, in March 2013, at a joint conference by President Obama and Prime Minister Netanyahu at the White House, Obama said: “With respect to Syria, the United States continues to work with allies and friends and the Syrian opposition to hasten the end of Assad’s rule.”

To the U.S.-Israeli Zionist mentality, a call for negotiation by an adversary is taken as a sign of weakness of the adversary. Those who call for negotiations on the other side typically end up dead—murdered by Israel or U.S. assets. We’ve seen this play out recently in Lebanon. The Lebanese Foreign Minister confirmed that Hassan Nasrallah, Former Secretary-General of Hezbollah had agreed to a ceasefire with Israel days before his assassination. Hezbollah’s willingness to accept a peace agreement according to the Arab-Islamic world’s wishes of a two-state solution is long-standing. Similarly, instead of negotiating to end the war in Gaza, Israel assassinated Hamas’ political chief, Ismail Haniyeh, in Tehran.

To the U.S.-Israeli Zionist mentality, a call for negotiation by an adversary is taken as a sign of weakness of the adversary.

Similarly in Syria, instead of allowing for a political solution to emerge, the U.S. opposed the peace process multiple times. In 2012, the UN had negotiated a peace agreement in Syria that was blocked by the Americans, who demanded that Assad must go on the first day of the peace agreement. The U.S. wanted regime change, not peace. In September 2024, Netanyahu addressed the General Assembly with a map of the Middle East divided between “Blessing” and “Curse,” with Lebanon, Syria, Iraq, and Iran as part of Netanyahu’s curse. The real curse is Israel’s path of mayhem and war, which has now engulfed Lebanon and Syria, with Netayahu’s fervent hope to draw the U.S. into war with Iran as well.

The U.S. and Israel are high-fiving that they have successfully wrecked yet another adversary of Israel and defender of the Palestinian cause, with Netanyahu claiming “credit for starting the historic process.” Most likely Syria will now succumb to continued war among the many armed protagonists, as has happened in the previous U.S.-Israeli regime-change operations.

In short, American interference, at the behest of Netanyahu’s Israel, has left the Middle East in ruins, with over a million dead and open wars raging in Libya, Sudan, Somalia, Lebanon, Syria, and Palestine, and with Iran on the brink of a nuclear arsenal, being pushed against its own inclinations to this eventuality.

All this is in the service of a profoundly unjust cause: to deny Palestinians their political rights in the service of Zionist extremism based on the 7th century BCE Book of Joshua. Remarkably, according to that text—one relied on by Israel’s own religious zealots—the Israelites were not even the original inhabitants of the land. Rather, according the text, God instructs Joshua and his warriors to commit multiple genocides to conquer the land.

Against this backdrop, the Arab-Islamic nations and indeed almost all of the world have repeatedly united in the call for a two-state solution and peace between Israel and Palestine.

Instead of the two-state solution, Israel and the U.S. have made a desert and called it peace.

Jeffrey D. Sachs is a University Professor and Director of the Center for Sustainable Development at Columbia University, where he directed The Earth Institute from 2002 until 2016.

12 December 2024

Source: commondreams.org

Together we are ending this genocide! BDS impacts in the second half of 2024

By Palestinian BDS National Committee (BNC)

As painful and devastating as the ongoing massacres are, the failure of Israel’s live-streamed genocide to force Palestinians to surrender, compounded with its fast growing worldwide isolation, is a sign that its 76-year-old regime of settler-colonialism and apartheid is shaking, and we are closer to liberation. With miraculous steadfastness and determination, the Palestinian people continue to fight for justice, liberation, and our inalienable rights.

The impact of the BDS movement in fighting state, corporate and institutional complicity with apartheid Israel has grown immensely in these times of carnage. Below is just a brief sample of over 100 BDS impacts in the second half of 2024. With our collective agency, your solidarity, our intersectional coalitions, we CAN and shall rise again. We must end this. Let’s end this!

1. BDS pressure to affect policy change – including by mainstreaming the analysis of Israel’s regime of settler-colonialism, apartheid and military occupation and the obligation to impose sanctions on it – has begun to show real impact:

In July 2024, over 30 UN human rights experts called on states to respect the ICJ ruling that Israel’s occupation is illegal by imposing sanctions and a military embargo on Israel.

In September, the UN General Assembly overwhelmingly voted for imposing sanctions on Israel for the first time in 42 years.

In November, 52 states called for a military embargo on Israel, an initiative later adopted by the joint summit of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) and the League of Arab States.

Also in November, the Organization of Islamic Cooperation, South Africa, Belize, among others, called for the reconstitution of the UN Special Committee Against Apartheid which has been a demand of the BDS movement since 2020.

In November, the African Commission on Human and People’s Rights responded to BDS calls and adopted the first resolution on Palestine in 24 years calling on African states to  end complicity and ensure accountability.

2. In September, the Chairman of the Israeli Export Institute stated: “BDS and boycotts have changed Israel’s global trade landscape.” He added, “Economic boycotts and BDS organizations present major challenges, and in some countries, we are forced to operate under the radar.” Israel’s projected annual GDP growth rate for 2024 is 0%, according to leading credit rating agency S&P.

3. In response to Palestinian calls for the cessation of all energy transfers to Israel, the Colombian government in August issued a decree prohibiting the export of coal to Israel. Colombia was the largest exporter of coal to Israel.

4. The United Church of Canada, the second largest denomination across Canada, in November adopted BDS strategies in November, “rejecting Israel’s apartheid system.”

5. Complicit corporations are feeling the BDS heat more than ever, canceling or suspending projects that aid and benefit from apartheid Israel:

Chevron, a priority target of the BDS movement, halted a $429 million expansion of an Israeli-claimed fossil gas field amid Israel’s ongoing genocide in Gaza and its brutal bombings in Lebanon, Syria and beyond.

Global sales of McDonald’s, a prime BDS target, “fell by 1.5% between July and September, the biggest decline in four years, more than twice the size forecast by analysts. It followed a 1% drop in the April to June period.” “McDonald’s has faced boycotts and protests over its perceived pro-Israeli stance and alleged financial ties to the country.”

Carrefour closed all branches in Jordan due to BDS pressure. Carrefour’s partner in most of the Arab World, the Majid Al Futtaim Group, reacted to BDS Jordan’s boycott pressure by ending all business with the French retailer in Jordan.

Following relentless BDS campaigns worldwide, the German company PUMA was forced to end its complicity with Israel’s apartheid regime and in its #GazaGenocide.

6. USS, the UK’s biggest private pension fund, divested over $100 million of Israeli assets, including Israel Bonds, following sustained pressure from its members and the academic union, UCU.

7. The academic boycott has continued to grow at an inspiring rate:

The American Association of University Professors reversed its long-held position against academic boycotts.

The National Tertiary Education Union, representing 27K university workers in Australia, voted to support the boycott of complicit Israeli universities.

Dozens of universities, academic associations and faculty unions took measures to end complicity in Israel’s Gaza genocide and underlying apartheid regime.

The American Sociological Association agreed to divest from weapons manufacturers following a proposal by Sociologists for Palestine.

The International Olympiad in Informatics voted by more than 67% not to recognize future Israeli delegations. The Italian Society for Middle East Studies voted by 96% to adopt the academic boycott.

8. Over 1,000 writers and publishing figures, including Sally Rooney, Rachel Kushner and Arundhati Roy, called in October for boycotting Israel’s complicit cultural institutions and pledged not to work with any publishers, festivals or publications “complicit in violating Palestinian rights.” A few weeks later, 5,000 more writers joined this cultural boycott initiative.

9. In August, the BDS movement discovered the MV Kathrin is traveling from Vietnam with 8 containers of explosives destined for use by Israel in its genocide against Palestinians. This #BlockTheBoat campaign, part of our global military embargo campaign, mobilized international solidarity groups from Malaysia to Slovenia and ensured significant delays for the shipment as for over two months the Kathrin was unable to dock anywhere. From Namibia and Angola to Montenegro and Malta, states refused to be complicit. The Kathrin eventually had to abandon the Portuguese flag. The inspiring efforts of UN Special Rapporteur on the occupied Palestinian territories Francesca Albanese played an important role. This was just the beginning of a campaign that continues to target the maritime military and energy transfers to genocidal Israel.

11 December 2024

Source: bdsmovement.net