Just International

In 60 Days of Gaza Ceasefire, Israel Violated Truce About 738 Times: GGMO

By Quds News Network

Gaza (QNN)- Israel has violated the Gaza ceasefire at least 738 times in 60 days, killing hundreds of Palestinians since the truce came into effect on 10 October, according to the Gaza Government Media Office on Tuesday.

Attack and Killings

The Office said about 386 civilians have been killed and 980 others injured in the violations, with children, women and the elderly accounting for the majority of the victims.

The Office condemned “in the strongest terms the continued serious and systematic violations of the ceasefire agreement by the Israeli occupation authorities,” adding “these violations constitute a flagrant breach of international humanitarian law and the humanitarian protocol attached to the agreement.”

The Office added that Israel shot at civilians 205 times, raided residential areas beyond the “yellow line” 37 times, bombed and shelled Gaza 358 times, and demolished people’s properties on 138 occasions. It added that Israel has also abducted 38 Palestinians from Gaza during the 50 days.

The Palestinian Health Ministry said over 70,100 Palestinians have been killed since the start of the genocide in Ocotber 2023.

Aid Entry

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

“The humanitarian situation in Gaza is deteriorating at an unprecedented rate, and the Israeli aggression has destroyed infrastructure and essential services,” Ismail al-Thawabta, director of the office, added.

The Office noted that Israel has failed to meet even the minimum agreed-upon levels of aid: only 13,511 trucks entered the Gaza Strip over the 60 days of ceasefire, out of the 36,000 that were supposed to enter. This amounts to an average of just 226 trucks per day, compared to the 600 scheduled daily. 

“This serious shortfall has prolonged the shortages of food, medicine, water, and fuel, further deepening the catastrophic humanitarian crisis in Gaza.”

Over the same period, only 315 fuel trucks entered Gaza out of the 3,000 that were supposed to be delivered, an average of just 5 trucks per day compared to the 50 stipulated in the agreement. 

“This means the occupation met only 10% of the agreed fuel quantities, leaving hospitals, bakeries, and water and sanitation facilities nearly at a standstill, and intensifying the daily suffering of civilians.”

9 December 2025

Source: countercurrents.org

Venezuela and the Long Shadow of the U.S. Empire in Latin America

By Eric Ross

In recent months, the Trump administration has escalated a decades-long campaign against the Venezuelan government and people. The renewed, intensifying threats of regime change, justified through false or inflated claims that Nicolás Maduro, its president, is directing narco-terrorism against the United States, serve as a convenient pretext for deeper and more direct intervention.

A recent wave of extrajudicial killings at sea, the directing of the CIA to launch covert ops inside Venezuela, the surge of U.S. troops into the Caribbean, the reopening of a long-shuttered naval base in Puerto Rico, and the deployment of the aircraft carrier the U.S.S. Gerald Ford in the region represent striking but not surprising developments. These are little more than the latest expression of an ideological project through which Washington has long sought to shape the hemisphere in ways that would entrench U.S. power further and protect the profits of Western multinationals.

That formal project dates back to at least the 1823 Monroe Doctrine, when the U.S. unilaterally claimed Latin America as its exclusive sphere of influence. Its revival today is unmistakable and distinctly dangerous. As Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth declared, echoing the language of that two-century-old policy, “The Western Hemisphere is America’s neighborhood, and we will protect it.”

The results of that doctrine have long been clear: immense profits for the few and violence, political upheaval, social dislocation, and economic devastation for the many. While Washington’s imperial desires in the hemisphere have long been met by movements challenging U.S. dominance, these have repeatedly been forced back into the subordinate position assigned them in a global capitalist order designed to benefit their not so “good neighbor.”

It’s no accident that, by the mid-1970s, Latin America had been transformed into a hemisphere dominated by U.S.-backed right-wing authoritarian regimes. Entire regions like the Southern Cone became laboratories for repression, as Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Paraguay, and Uruguay formed a coordinated bloc of military juntas. With direct support from Washington, those regimes oversaw what came to be known as Operation Condor, establishing a transnational network of state terror. Its consequences were catastrophic: 50,000 killed, tens of thousands “disappeared,” and hundreds of thousands tortured and imprisoned for the so-called crime of harboring real or perceived leftist sympathies.

During that earlier period, Venezuela had been largely spared the brutal excesses of direct U.S. interventionism in the region (due in part to the repressive rule of successive U.S.-supported strongmen Juan Vicente Gómez and Marcos Pérez Jiménez). That changed in 1998, when Hugo Chávez, Maduro’s far more popular predecessor, became president and pursued policies of popular sovereignty and resource nationalism aimed at ensuring the nation’s vast oil reserves (the largest in the world) served Venezuelans rather than being siphoned off to enrich foreign corporations. From then on, Venezuela became the latest target of Washington’s efforts to undermine, discipline, and ultimately neutralize “troublesome” progressive governments across Latin America.

To fully understand Washington’s current warpath in the region, it’s necessary to revisit earlier episodes in which the U.S. intervened, violently and anti-democratically, to shape the political destinies of countries in the hemisphere. Three cases are especially instructive: Cuba, Guatemala, and Chile. Together, they illuminate the long arc of U.S. imperialism in Latin America and clarify the dangers of the present confrontation.

The Rise of Plattismo in Cuba

Cuba had long been a crown jewel in Washington’s imperial imagination. By 1823, American political elites were already casting the island as essential to the future of the United States. President John Quincy Adams, for instance, described Cuba, then a Spanish colony, as “indispensable” to the country’s “political and commercial interests.” He noted ominously that, should the island be “forcibly disjointed from its own unnatural connection with Spain and incapable of self-support,” it could “gravitate only towards the North American Union.” Thomas Jefferson similarly maintained that the possession of Cuba was “exactly what is wanting to round out our power as a nation.” In that spirit, during the 1840s and 1850s, Presidents Polk and Pierce sought to purchase Cuba from Spain, overtures that were repeatedly rejected.

Those efforts unfolded during a period of rapid U.S. territorial expansionism, marking a time when Washington regarded continental conquest as both a “providential destiny” and a political and economic imperative. When ostensibly legal mechanisms like land purchases could be invoked, they were embraced. When military force offered a more expedient path to territorial acquisition, as with the war of aggression that stripped Mexico of half its territory and delivered what became the American Southwest to U.S. control in 1848, it was undertaken with little hesitation.

The opportunity to pursue longstanding ambitions in Cuba and inaugurate the U.S. as an overseas empire arrived with the Spanish-American War of 1898. In that conflict, Washington intervened in anti-colonial uprisings from Puerto Rico to the Philippines, not to champion genuine liberation but to ensure that any subsequent “independence” would be subordinated to U.S. strategic and economic interests. What emerged was a political order deliberately engineered to keep Cuba firmly tethered to the priorities and power of the United States.

That would be codified in the 1901 Platt Amendment, which effectively nullified Washington’s earlier assurances of Cuban sovereignty and granted Washington the right to establish military bases (including Guantánamo), substantial control over the Cuban treasury, and the ability to intervene whenever the U.S. deemed it necessary to safeguard its arbitrarily defined notion of what constituted “Cuban independence” or to defend “life, property, and individual liberty.”

In practice, Cuba emerged from the war as a dependent protectorate, not a sovereign nation. That model was soon codified for the entire hemisphere with the Roosevelt Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine issued in 1904, which granted the United States a self-appointed mandate to police the region to maintain “order.”

In Cuba, that arrangement would serve Washington’s interests for decades. By 1959, on the eve of the Cuban Revolution, U.S. corporations controlled 90% of the island’s trade, 90% of its public services, 75% of its arable land, and 40% of its sugar industry. Meanwhile, the vast majority of Cubans remained landless, disenfranchised, and mired in poverty.

By breeding staggering inequality, Washington’s imperialism rendered Cuba ripe for revolution. In 1959, following years in exile, Fidel Castro returned to the island to overwhelmingly popular support, having launched an armed struggle after attempting to run in the 1952 elections that the Washington-backed Cuban leader Fulgencio Batista cancelled. Rather than confront the policies that had produced the revolution, U.S. officials moved to make an example of Castro, waging an obsessive campaign to undermine his revolutionary government and punish the population whose support had made his ascent possible.

Washington pursued everything from ill-fated invasions to assassinations, plots that, in October 1962, brought the world to the brink of a nuclear holocaust. It also imposed a punishing economic blockade designed to choke the island’s economy, render socialism a stillbirth, and deter other nations from challenging U.S. hegemony. Those efforts foreclosed the possibility of constructive engagement, which Castro had initially signaled he was open to, pushing Cuba decisively into the Soviet orbit, and creating the very outcome Washington claimed it had sought to avoid.

The Fall of Guatemala

Castro did not return to Cuba alone. He arrived alongside the Argentinian Ernesto “Che” Guevara, who would become a key ideologue of the revolution, bringing with him a commitment to constructing a global, anti-imperialist movement. The two first met in 1955 in Mexico City, where Castro was organizing in exile and Guevara had resettled after working as a doctor in Guatemala, a country he had entered to support the democratic spring of President Jacobo Árbenz.

The democratic experiment in Guatemala was abruptly and violently extinguished in 1954, when a U.S.-backed coup toppled Árbenz. From that experience, Guevara carried with him an indelible lesson about the reach of U.S. power and Washington’s willingness to deploy force in defense of corporate interests, along with the profoundly antidemocratic and destabilizing consequences of U.S. intervention across the hemisphere.

That coup in Guatemala was carried out in service to that country’s real center of authority, the Boston-based United Fruit Company. Founded in 1899, United Fruit consolidated its foothold there through a series of preferential corporate arrangements, as successive strongmen ceded vast tracts of land and critical infrastructure to the company in exchange for personal enrichment. In the process, Guatemala was transformed into the archetypal “banana republic.”

United Fruit came to dominate Guatemala’s agricultural and industrial sectors, transforming itself into one of the most profitable corporations in the world. It secured extraordinary returns through its monopoly power, wage suppression, and the criminalization of labor organizing. Its influence extended into the highest levels of Washington. Secretary of State John Foster Dulles had represented United Fruit as a senior partner at the law firm Sullivan and Cromwell, and his brother, CIA director Allen Dulles, had previously served on that company’s board.

Árbenz regarded United Fruit not just as a threat to Guatemala’s sovereignty but also as an engine of injustice. In a country where 2% of the landholders controlled 72% of all arable land (more than half controlled by United Fruit), much of it left deliberately fallow, he sought to challenge a system that denied millions of peasants access to the land on which their survival depended. His land reform program applied only to uncultivated land. The government proposed purchasing idle tracts at their declared tax value (based on the company’s own assessments). Yet because United Fruit had systematically undervalued its vast land holdings to evade taxes, the company refused.

Árbenz’s policies, driven by the fact that he was a nationalist (not a communist), were committed to dismantling Guatemala’s imperial dependency. His objective was to transform, as he put it, “Guatemala from a country bound by a predominantly feudal economy into a modern capitalist state, and to make this transformation in a way that will raise the standard of living of the great mass of our people to the highest level.” Yet, in the ideologically charged climate of the early Cold War years, such New Deal-style reforms were recast by Washington as incontrovertible proof that a “Soviet beachhead” was taking root in Central America.

By 1954, U.S. officials insisted that they had “no choice” but to intervene to prevent the country from “falling” to communism. The subsequent coup relied on an orchestrated propaganda campaign, the financing of a mercenary army, and the aerial bombardment of Guatemala City. The combined pressure of all of that coerced Árbenz into resigning. In his final address, he condemned the attacks “as an act of vengeance by the United Fruit Company” and stepped down in the hope, quickly dashed, that his departure might preserve his reforms.

Power would soon be transferred to the military regime of Carlos Castillo Armas, while U.S. President Dwight D. Eisenhower triumphantly proclaimed that “the people of Guatemala, in a magnificent effort, have liberated themselves from the shackles of international Communist direction.” In reality, United Fruit had expanded its influence, while the country descended into decades of state terror. The civil war that followed claimed more than 200,000 lives, including a genocidal campaign against the indigenous Ixil Maya people, carried out with direct U.S. support.

The Crushing of Chilean Socialism

If Guatemala exposed Washington’s readiness to destroy a modest social democracy in the name of communism and in defense of corporate power, Chile demonstrated the full, violent maturation of unrepentant Cold War interventionism. When the socialist physician Salvador Allende won the presidency in 1970 in a democratic election, Washington immediately went on the warpath, launching a covert, sustained campaign to strangle his government before it could succeed.

Allende sought to expand social welfare and democratize the economy. His program called for the nationalization of strategic industries, the expansion of healthcare and education, the strengthening of organized labor, and the dismantling of entrenched monopolistic landholdings. Those initiatives drew support from a broad, multiparty alliance rooted in Chile’s peasants as well as its working and middle classes. Above all, Allende’s agenda aimed to reclaim the nation’s mineral wealth from foreign capital, especially the U.S.-based copper giant Anaconda, whose staggering profits bore few meaningful returns for the Chilean population.

President Richard Nixon and National Security Advisor Henry Kissinger found that intolerable and quickly came to regard Allende not just as a symbolic but a real threat to U.S. power in the region. After all, a successful socialist state achieved through the ballot box risked demonstrating that another political and economic path was indeed possible.

What followed was a coordinated campaign of economic, social, and political destabilization. The CIA funneled millions to Chile’s opposition parties, business associations, and media outlets. It financed strikes and disruptions designed to create and weaponize scarcity, to (in Nixon’s words) “make the economy scream” and erode confidence in Allende’s Popular Unity government. U.S. officials also cultivated ties with reactionary factions in the Chilean military, encouraging coup plots and ultimately directly supporting the overthrow of Allende on September 11, 1973.

What emerged was one of the bloodiest dictatorships in the hemisphere in the twentieth century. General Augusto Pinochet’s regime would carry out widespread torture, disappearances, and extrajudicial killings, while U.S.-trained economists imposed radical neoliberal policies (similar to the failed ones now being implemented by Javier Milei in Argentina with the help of a Donald Trump bailout) that dismantled social protections and opened Chile’s economy to foreign capital.

Hands Off Venezuela

In every instance where the United States intervened in Latin America, leaving tens of thousands dead and entire societies destabilized, it was never really communism that Washington feared. What alarmed policymakers and the corporate interests they served was the prospect that nations in the hemisphere might escape the economic architecture of U.S. dominance.

When Hugo Chávez completed the nationalization of Venezuela’s oil sector in 2007, he followed a long and perilous trajectory established by regional leaders who dared to confront U.S. power. In doing so, they committed what Washington considered the “cardinal sin” of asserting sovereign control over national resources within a hemisphere it had long treated as its strategic preserve. These leaders demonstrated, however briefly, that it was possible to stand up to the United States, but that such defiance would ultimately be met with overwhelming force.

Independent powers in this hemisphere going their own way were the threat that Washington and Wall Street could never tolerate. It’s the same reason the United States is once again maneuvering toward open conflict in Venezuela. To proceed down such a path will, of course, mean reenacting some of the most catastrophic chapters of U.S. foreign policy. The lesson of such imperial adventurism in Latin America is unmistakable. When Washington interferes in other nations, the outcome is never stability or democracy but their absolute negation.

Eric Ross is an organizer, educator, and PhD candidate in the history department at the University of Massachusetts Amherst.

8 December 2025

Source: countercurrents.org

Rubble Without Remorse: The Slow-Burning Incitement of Trump’s Gaza Ceasefire

By Rima Najjar 

ACT I — The Arab Viewer’s Loop

As an Arab viewer, I don’t turn on the TV or open the news website anymore expecting updates that resemble “normal” war coverage. The loop has changed since Trump’s ceasefire, which has turned out to be “cease” for us and “continue to fire” for Israel.

Each broadcast drips with reports of daily Israeli violations both in Gaza and Southern Lebanon: airstrikes, drone incursions, and ground advances that kill and maim without reprisal, turning what was once a narrative of resistance into a one-sided chronicle of endurance and impotence.

Before the ceasefire, the loop had a bitter symmetry — Israeli aggression met with Hezbollah rockets arcing over the border or Hamas ambushes in the tunnels, offering us a fleeting sense of agency amid the horror, a reminder that the oppressed could still strike back. The well-known Hezbollah military motif used in video communiqués, so comforting to hear, continues to be reorchestrated and played by professional and semi-professional Lebanese bands and circulated on TikTok and Instagram — but not as widely as before, hollowed out without the milita component.

The military retaliation segments in news reports that sustained us are absent, replaced by useless calls for international intervention that never materializes, leaving Arab viewers — across divides of nationality, sect, or politics — to stew in a shared, potent brew of bitterness and rage. For once, the screen offers no factional solace, only a unifying testament to impunity.

ACT II — The Dresden Paradigm

In conducting the war against Gaza, Trump and Netanyahu have used overwhelming force deployed historically primarily to crush civilian morale, render urban life unviable, and shatter the social substrate that sustains political resistance. This logic directly targets the strategic calculus of groups like Hamas and Hezbollah, which is rooted in the resilience and support of their social base. The strategy assumes that once that base — the society itself — has been flattened enough, its capacity for endurance breaks, and with it, the foundation of the resistance. Only then can it be “stabilized” through promises of aid, reconstruction funds, or reintegration into a U.S.- and Israel-dominated regional order.

The visual parallel between Dresden’s 1945 moonscape and Gaza’s today is immediate — pulverized masonry, erased streets — but history reveals sharper divergences in logic and legacy.

In the annals of modern warfare, the Allied bombing of Dresden in February 1945 stands as a stark emblem of strategic excess, where overwhelming force was deployed not out of strict military necessity but to shatter civilian morale and hasten unconditional surrender — a tactic echoed chillingly in the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki later that year, which similarly prioritized psychological devastation over targeted military objectives to compel Japan’s capitulation.

The firebombing campaign reduced much of the historic German city to rubble, killing tens of thousands of civilians and destroying irreplaceable cultural heritage, even as the Nazi regime teetered on the brink of collapse. This operation, part of the broader total war doctrine, was later critiqued — even by some Allied leaders and historians — as disproportionate, a moral overreach that blurred the lines between combatants and non-combatants.

Fast-forward to the contemporary Middle East, and a similar pattern of excess emerges in the Israeli campaigns against Gaza and Lebanon, culminating in Trump’s ceasefire plan. While the historical, technological, and scalar differences between the Allied campaigns of 1945 and contemporary warfare are profound, the functional parallel in strategic logic remains. Trump’s plan appears to be modeled on the Dresden paradigm as a blueprint for leveraging devastation to impose a new regional order.

ACT III — Testimony from the Ground

From the outset of the assault on Gaza in 2023, Israel’s approach embodied total war: relentless airstrikes, ground incursions, and blockade tactics that inflicted widespread civilian suffering, ostensibly to dismantle Hamas but effectively crushing collective morale through famine, displacement, and infrastructure collapse. Trump’s plan, brokered with U.S. sanction and UN endorsement, transitions from this phase of destruction to a fragile ceasefire, hostage releases, and promises of reconstruction — contingent on Palestinian acquiescence to a U.S.- and Israel-dominated framework.

At its core, Trump’s ceasefire initiative hinges on the “defeat” of Gaza and Lebanon not through conventional military victories but via sanctioned civilian devastation, mirroring how Dresden’s ruins symbolized the Allies’ unyielding dominance over a prostrated Germany. In Gaza, the U.S.-backed offensive led to over 70,000 deaths since October 2023, with 360+ post-ceasefire according to Gaza Health Ministry, with entire neighborhoods leveled and essential services obliterated, creating a humanitarian catastrophe that forced Hamas to the negotiating table in October 2025.

The plan’s Phase 1 secured a tentative ceasefire and hostage exchanges, but Phase 2 — envisioning a “Board of Peace” for governance, Hamas disarmament, and international oversight — dangles reconstruction aid as a carrot, while implicitly threatening renewed escalation if terms are rejected.

This reinsertion into a new international order, dominated by U.S. and Israeli interests, echoes the post-WWII Marshall Plan, where rebuilding was tied to alignment with Western spheres of influence. Similarly, in Lebanon, the pressure on Hezbollah intensifies: Trump’s administration, through diplomatic channels, demands the group “trade arms for peace,” disarming in exchange for stability, or face total war and prolonged Israeli occupation of southern territories — a stability that the half-century collapse of “land for peace” since 1967 has already shown to be a cruel mirage, repeatedly offered and repeatedly revoked the moment the weaker side lays down its weapons.

Recent U.S. messages, including warnings about Iranian funding via Turkey, underscore this ultimatum, positioning Hezbollah’s arsenal as the linchpin for broader regional realignment. The fragility of these arrangements is evident in ongoing violations — over 600 reported ceasefire breaches in Gaza alone by December 2025 — highlighting how the initial excess of force sets the stage for coerced compliance rather than mutual resolution.

Yet this precarity is a pattern of false starts and engineered breakdowns, as seen in the plan’s turbulent rollout earlier this year. In July 2025, amid mounting international pressure over Gaza’s famine and stalled aid, Netanyahu and Trump abruptly ditched indirect ceasefire talks in Qatar, withdrawing delegations just hours after Hamas’s response.

Trump declared Hamas leaders would be “hunted down” and that “it’s got to the point where you have to finish the job,” while Netanyahu hardened on troop withdrawals and permanent war-end guarantees, blaming Palestinian “militants who did not want a deal.”

This abandonment — coming after Trump’s envoy Steve Witkoff had narrowed gaps to one issue just weeks prior — exposed the plan’s hollowness: a U.S.-Israeli axis more attuned to far-right demands in Tel Aviv (like Itamar Ben-Gvir’s calls for “total annihilation” and Jewish settlements) than to humanitarian or justice imperatives. By October, talks limped back under UN endorsement, securing Phase 1’s tentative truce, but the July rupture lingers as a stark reminder of evolving precarity — where “ceasefire” means pause for regrouping, not peace, and each ditch deepens the Arab viewer’s brew of rage and numbness.

Netanyahu’s upcoming visit to Washington, slated for December 28–31, 2025, amplifies this Dresden-inspired threat, serving as a platform to solidify the plan’s enforcement. Meeting with President Trump at the White House or Mar-a-Lago, Netanyahu is expected to discuss not only Gaza’s Phase 2 implementation but also Syrian buffer zones and Iranian containment, framing the talks as a high-stakes negotiation where refusal invites further devastation. This visit, Netanyahu’s fifth with Trump since the latter’s 2025 inauguration, underscores the U.S.-Israeli axis’s dominance, with Trump personally championing the plan as a “huge success” despite criticisms from mediators like Turkey’s Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan, who warn of collapse without substantial intervention.

Here, the analogy to Dresden deepens: just as the Allies’ overwhelming force in 1945 paved the way for a remade Europe under their aegis, the Gaza and Lebanon campaigns use civilian ruin as leverage, with reconstruction promised only upon integration into a U.S.-Israeli-led order that prioritizes security guarantees for Israel over Palestinian or Lebanese sovereignty.

Yet, the decisive divergence lies in perception and legacy. The rubble in Dresden was understood as too much, even by those who caused it — Winston Churchill famously questioned the bombing’s necessity, and it fueled postwar debates on the ethics of area bombing, cementing Dresden as a symbol of why civilian cities should not be erased in pursuit of victory.

The rubble in Hiroshima and Nagasaki was understood as too much, even by those who caused it — President Truman expressed profound horror at the civilian devastation, ordering a halt to further nuclear strikes on August 10, 1945, because the thought of wiping out another 100,000 people — including “all those kids” — was too horrible, and describing the decision as “the most terrible of all destructive forces for the wholesale slaughter of human beings,” which reinforced these events as emblems of the moral boundaries of warfare. In contrast, the rubble in Gaza is defended as not enough — or as endlessly necessary — by Israeli officials and U.S. supporters, who frame the devastation as essential to “root out terror” and prevent future threats, justifying ongoing operations despite the ceasefire.

This difference is decisive: it transforms excess from a regrettable aberration into a repeatable strategy. Dresden and the atomic bombings endure in history as cautions against the erasure of civilian populations, moral boundaries crossed at great cost. Gaza, however, risks becoming something far more dangerous: proof that such cities can be erased repeatedly, openly, and without consequence. The consequential question thus becomes: What does it mean for global norms when a tactic once universally regretted as a moral boundary is re-cast as a defended necessity and repeatable policy? It normalizes total war as a tool for regional hegemony, systematically eroding the post-WWII restraints it once helped to establish.

If Trump’s plan succeeds on these terms, it will not herald peace but a perilous precedent, where devastation is the price of submission and reconstruction the reward for capitulation. It will also fail to achieve the psychological crushing of the Arab population in the Dresden sense of utter defeat. Instead, it renders that population psychologically inflamed, distraught to the point of existential fury — scrolling or switching off in silent protest against a world that normalizes this asymmetry. This is what they are witnessing:

In southern Lebanon, the Lebanese Army has documented 5,198 violations by end of November 2025, including 657 airstrikes. The BBC has documented more than 10,000 air and ground violations total — actions that are splitting Lebanese leadership and Hezbollah on how to respond without inviting total war.

Al Jazeera’s recent analysis reports that Israel has attacked Gaza on 44 out of the past 55 days of the supposed truce, meaning only 11 days passed without bombardment. This statistic underscores the ceasefire as little more than a mechanism to prevent Palestinian pushback while the devastation is “managed” into submission.

Numbers numb. The names and the faces do not.

A Gaza father who goes by @abumazen74 on TikTok posted a 38-second clip that has been viewed 4.7 million times in four days: he wakes his three young daughters at 3:12 a.m. because an Israeli drone is hovering directly above their tent in al-Mawasi. The camera shakes as he whispers “habibi, it’s okay, it’s just the zanana,” using the childish word for drone the way parents once said “thunder.” One little girl asks, sleep-bleared, “Baba, is the ceasefire sleeping too?” He has no answer; he just films the red targeting laser dancing on the tent wall for seventeen endless seconds until the buzzing finally moves on. The caption is one line: “This is what ‘ceasefire’ sounds like in Gaza tonight.”

Two days later in the south of Lebanon, a woman from Blida (@fatima_kh_00) stitched that same Gaza video from inside her own kitchen. She pans across the table where her elderly mother is folding tiny squares of bread because the power is out again after an Israeli strike on the nearby transformer. Her mother keeps folding, mechanically, even after the windows rattle from a second explosion. Fatima’s voice-over is flat, almost bored with grief: “They told us the war stopped. My mother still makes only enough bread for one day. She says, ‘Why waste flour if tomorrow the house is gone?’ This is the ceasefire they celebrate in Washington.”

Quotes from the ground amplify this distress. In a visceral X post, Lebanese journalist Marwa Osman described a recent drone strike in Ain al-Samahiyya that killed civilian Kamel Karanbash in front of his parents. “Do you understand what it does to a family? … This is psychological warfare on every mother, every father, every child in South Lebanon,” she lamented, vowing, “We will scream their names to a world that refuses to listen.” Similarly, AJ+ producer Mohammad Alsaafin captured a sentiment widely echoed in Arab circles: “The ceasefires in Gaza and Lebanon simply mean that Palestinians and Lebanese aren’t allowed to fight back as Israel bombs, shoots and kills people there every day.” Even Lebanon’s President Joseph Aoun decried the violations as “a complete crime and a heinous political crime,” noting that “since the entry into force of the ceasefire, Israel has not spared any effort to show its rejection of any negotiated settlement.” In Gaza, mediators like Qatar’s prime minister warn that the process is at a “critical moment” and “remains incomplete until Israel withdraws,” with violations tallying around 600 in the last seven weeks. Al Jazeera frames it starkly: “Israel’s genocidal war on Gaza continues unabated.”

ACT IV — The World That Shrugs At Ruins

For the Arab viewer, this barrage of unavenged atrocities isn’t defeat — it’s a slow-burning incitement that demands rage as the only recourse, lest silence become complicity.

The danger, therefore, is not merely the devastation of cities. It is that the world once looked at Dresden’s moonscape and swore, with remorse, “This must never happen again.” Now it looks at Gaza’s moonscape — identical in its desolation, different only in its moral reception — and shrugs: “This must happen again, and again, until the resistance is broken.” That shrug is the real graveyard of the post-1945 order.

Rima Najjar is a Palestinian whose father’s side of the family comes from the forcibly depopulated village of Lifta on the western outskirts of Jerusalem and whose mother’s side of the family is from Ijzim, south of Haifa. She is an activist, researcher and retired professor of English literature, Al-Quds University, occupied West Bank.

8 December 2025

Source: countercurrents.org

Israel Accused of Stealing Palestinian Body Parts

By Ida Audeh

LESS THAN TWO MONTHS into the Gaza genocide, Euro-Med Human Rights Monitor was asking that an “independent international investigative committee” be established to investigate Israel for possible organ theft from Palestinian corpses. Israeli soldiers were raiding mass graves at Al-Shifa Medical Complex, the Indonesian Hospital and other sites, which struck people as alarming; some bodies were returned and upon investigation by medical professionals, were found to be missing parts.

Because we live in lawless times, we should remind ourselves that there was a time when such acts were considered so heinous that their prohibition was stated in the Fourth Geneva Convention. As the International Committee of the Red Cross’ Customary International Humanitarian Law states: “Each party to the conflict must take all possible measures to prevent the dead from being despoiled. Mutilation of dead bodies is prohibited.” Israel has ratified the treaty but brazenly claims that it doesn’t apply to Gaza.

In the October 2025 prisoner exchange between Israel and the Palestinian resistance (which included an exchange of the dead held by both sides), one Palestinian corpse was returned without a head; others were returned with amputated limbs and other mutilations. In early November, on Al Jazeera Arabic, Palestinian-British plastic surgeon Ghassan Abu-Sitta described the condition of Palestinian corpses that had been returned to Gaza. Some corpses were missing vital organs—including hearts, lungs, kidneys and corneas. “Chest cavities were opened using a medical bone saw, organs were extracted without damage, and skin bore burn marks consistent with preservation chemicals,” Dr. Abu-Sitta said. In other words, bodies were dismembered by medical professionals who understood the requirements of organ transplantation.

The charge that Israel helps itself to Palestinian body parts is not new. But in light of the mountain of evidence that Israel has killed and tortured Palestinian bodies to satisfy the sadistic pleasure of its soldiers, one must consider another possible motive of the Jewish state’s military: the violation of Palestinian bodies for profit. As it turns out, organ trafficking is a lucrative trade that Israel knows a lot about.

AN OBSESSION WITH PALESTINIAN BODIES

Israel is the only country in the world that holds on to the bodies of people it kills. During the first intifada, Israel often seized the bodies of Palestinians it shot dead and then set terms for their release: families had to agree to conduct the burials quickly and at night, attended by only a few family members. People suspected that the reason was not just to avoid funerals that could become political rallies (although that was likely a consideration), but also to deprive the families of the opportunity to examine the corpses too closely.

In the 1990s, Israel was in fact removing organs of Jewish Israelis as well as Palestinians for reuse without seeking permission from families. [Washington Report published an article on this in April 1990.] NBC News reported in 2009 that Jehuda Hiss, an Israeli doctor who worked at Israel’s Abu Kabir forensic institute, told a U.S. interviewer in 2000, “We started to harvest corneas… Whatever was done was highly informal. No permission was asked from the family.” (To conceal the practice from families, the staff glued the eyelids shut; if they had reason to believe the family might want a last look, they refrained from removing the corneas.) In fact, as Israel’s Channel 2 reported, they went well beyond corneas and helped themselves to skin, heart valves and bones of Jews and Arabs. (Israel’s population is not inclined to donate organs and yet the country has the largest skin bank in the world.)

While it is tempting to conclude that the state acted as an equal opportunity plunderer, there is an all-important distinction to remember: the state was unlikely to have been the killer of Jewish Israelis who became unwitting organ donors, whereas it most certainly was the killer of the majority of Palestinians who ended up in Abu Kabir for autopsy and whose organs were then plucked without consequence.

The performance of autopsies on dead Palestinians at the Abu Kabir facility is itself a red flag. As British journalist Jonathan Cook noted in an Electronic Intifada article published in 2009, why perform autopsies if you don’t plan to investigate the circumstances of their murder (at the hands of the Israeli army)?

Abu Kabir is at the center of an illegal Israeli organ trafficking trade. You don’t have to be a conspiracy theorist to see dots to connect here.

British investigative journalist Kit Klarenberg revisited this sordid history in an article reporting on the recent arrest of Israeli-Ukrainian organ trafficker Boris Wolfman. Klarenberg observes in his Nov. 17 Substack page Global Delinquents that Dr. Hiss was never punished for his actions, which suggests that they were state sanctioned. Klarenberg cited the 2014 book Over Their Dead Bodies written by former Institute employee Meira Weiss, who described Israeli policy during the first intifada as one in which staff had a free hand “to seize whatever they wished from bodies in their care. Horrifyingly, Institute apparatchiks nostalgically referred to these years as the ‘good days.’”

HACKING AWAY AT PALESTINIAN BODIES

Israel claims the harvesting ended in 2000. But there is no reason to believe that Israel decided to respect the integrity of Palestinian corpses beginning in 2001. A 2009 article published on the website If Americans Knew described how Palestinian corpses have been used for instructional purposes:

In 2005 an Israeli soldier described a military doctor who gave “medics lessons in anatomy” using the bodies of Palestinians killed by Israeli forces. Haaretz reports: “The soldier said that the Palestinian’s body had been riddled with bullets and that some of his internal organs had spilled out. The doctor pronounced the man dead and then ‘took out a knife and began to cut off parts of the body,’ the soldier said.

“He explained the various parts to us—the membrane that covers the lungs, the layers of the skin, the liver, stuff like that,” the soldier continued. “I didn’t say anything because I was still new in the army. Two of the medics moved away, and one of them threw up. It was all done very brutally. It was simply contempt for the body.”

A LUCRATIVE REVENUE STREAM

There is every reason to believe that Palestinian organs may be used in international organ trafficking. Klarenberg describes Israel as “the world’s center of illegal organ harvesting and trafficking” and adds that “the Gaza genocide may have greatly facilitated this perverse commerce.”

In 2015, the European Parliament published a report about the illicit trade of human organs, describing it as global and “to a large extent driven by Israeli doctors.” The report described Israelis as major customers as well as leaders of the gangs that procure the body parts. Klarenberg observes that Israel is experiencing economic challenges as a result of costly wars (against the Palestinians, Hezbollah and Iran), brain drain, the sharp drop in both tourism and investor confidence, and diplomatic isolation. He writes:

“Grotesquely, organ trafficking might represent one of Tel Aviv’s few dependable profit sources at this stage. With thousands of Palestinians both dead and alive in its custody, Israel certainly has ample resources to fuel the trade. Mainstream blackout on Wolfman’s long-overdue arrest may indicate the entity’s overseas puppetmasters are relaxed about the prospect.”

The network of players spans continents and is unlikely to be affected by one arrest:

“[Wolfman] was but one player in a world-spanning nexus of Israeli traffickers. In the manner of a hydra, Wolfman’s removal will simply lead to others taking his place. After all, the returns are high, and risks mysteriously low.”

The appalling desecration of Palestinian bodies is likely to continue as long as global powers tolerate Israel’s behavior, no matter how vile. And to date, every Western proposal for a post-genocide arrangement for Gaza seems designed to ensure that Israel never runs out of Palestinian bodies to mine.

Ida Audeh is senior editor of the Washington Report on Middle East Affairs magazine.

8 December 2025

Source: countercurrents.org

Israel’s Army Chief Declares “Yellow Line” as New Gaza Border, Triggering Alarming Annexation Warnings

By Quds News Network

Gaza (QNN)- Israel’s top military commander announced Sunday that the so-called yellow line in Gaza will serve as a “new border” between the occupation state and the Gaza Strip. The statement signals clear Israeli intentions to annex 53% of the territory and prevent reconstruction in areas destroyed during the recent genocide, denying hundreds of thousands of Palestinian families their right to go back to their homes.

Chief of Staff Eyal Zamir made the declaration while storming Beit Hanoun and Jabalia with senior commanders from Southern Command, Division 252, and the Carmeli Brigade.

Zamir said Israel will not allow “Hamas to rebuild and maintains control over wide sections” of the Strip. He described the yellow line as a front-line defense and attack zone for Israeli settlements.

Zamir added that the army prepares for a “surprise war scenario” as part of its next multi-year plan.

The statement sparked concern among Palestinians. Mustafa Barghouthi, a Palestinian MP, called the yellow line a sign of “dangerous Israeli intentions.” He said it reflects a plan to annex parts of Gaza and block reconstruction, effectively consolidating long-term Israeli control over the Strip.

The announcement comes in odds with Trump’s ceasefire plan. In the second phase of the plan, Israel should withdraw its forces entirely from the strip.  Israel has already violated Trump’s ceasefire hundreds of times. The latest violations in Gaza killed six civilians, including a 3-year-old girl.

8 December 2025

Source: countercurrents.org

The Earth Is Unhappy with the Capitalist Climate Catastrophe

By Vijay Prashad

During the closing plenaries of the 30th Conference of the Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (COP30) in Belém do Pará in the Brazilian Amazon, United Nations Climate Change Executive Secretary Simon Stiell gave a rousing speech.

Stiell, from Grenada, came to his post after a long career in the corporate sector and then as his country’s environment and climate resilience minister under the pro-corporate New National Party. In his speech he said that “denial, division, and geopolitics [have] dealt international cooperation some heavy blows this year.”

He nevertheless insisted that “climate cooperation is alive and kicking, keeping humanity in the fight for a liveable planet with a firm resolve to keep 1.5°C within reach.”

When I heard Stiell’s speech I thought he was talking about another planet.

In May, the World Meteorological Organisation released a report warning that there is an 86 percent chance that global mean near-surface temperature will exceed 1.5°C above the pre-industrial (1850–1900) average – the threshold set in the Paris Agreement in 2015 – in at least one year between 2025 and 2029; it also warned of a 70 percent chance that the five-year mean for 2025–2029 will exceed 1.5°C above that average.

In late October, just weeks before COP30, the American Institute of Biological Sciences published The 2025 State of the Climate Report: A Planet on the Brink, which found that “the year 2024 set a new mean global surface temperature record, signalling an escalation of climate upheaval” and that “22 of 34 planetary vital signs are at record levels.”

To be fair to Stiell, he did not imply that one should be complacent. “I’m not saying we’re winning the climate fight,” he said. “But we are undeniably still in it, and we are fighting back.”

On that, we agree.

That same month the United Nations Environmental Programme (UNEP) published an alarming report titled Adaptation Gap Report 2025: Running on Empty.

It paints a picture not merely of insufficient climate finance from the Global North but of systematic abandonment of the Global South; it describes a world “gearing up for climate resilience – without the money to get there.”

The issue of money is key. Promises to fund the climate transition first came at COP3 (Kyoto, 1997) through the Clean Development Mechanism, then at COP7 (Marrakech, 2001) through the Least Developed Countries Fund and the Special Climate Change Fund.

But the breakthrough moment came at COP15 (Copenhagen, 2009), when the wealthy countries of the North pledged to mobilise $100 billion per year in climate finance for developing countries by 2020.

Even the Copenhagen promises were hollow: there was no treaty obligation on the wealthier nations to meet this $100 billion goal, no enforcement mechanism to force those who made promises to follow up on their pledges, and most of the money that was pledged came as loans and not grants.

The $100 billion per year pledge from Copenhagen was reaffirmed at COP21 (Paris, 2015) and extended to 2025. At COP26 (Glasgow, 2021) the wealthier nations admitted that they had not met their goals and recommitted themselves to the $100 billion per year target. UNEP’s report provides a severe account of the missed pledges and false statements. Three points are essential to grasp:

Developing countries will require between $310 billion and $365 billion per year by 2035 for climate adaptation alone (setting aside mitigation as well as loss and damage). If inflation is taken at 3 percent per year, then real adaptation needs will reach between $440 billion and $520 billion annually by 2035.
In 2023 adaptation finance flows from developed to developing countries were just $26 billion, less than in 2022, and 58 percent of the money came through debt instruments and not through grants – a kind of green structural adjustment. The countries that are least responsible for the climate catastrophe are the ones that are driven to borrow in order to cope with the impact of the looming disasters.
By a simple calculation, needs are 12-to-14 times larger than current flows, producing an adaptation finance gap of $284 billion to $339 billion per year.
One of the great tragedies of the entire debate around the climate catastrophe is that 172 countries – mostly the poorer nations – have already developed national adaptation plans, policies and strategies.

But as UNEP’s report points out, one fifth of these plans are outdated due to weak institutional frameworks, limited technical capacity, lack of access to climate data and funding that is both unpredictable and delayed. For the poorer nations, the obstacle is less political apathy than resource constraints.

Even when they try to prepare for the worst, they cannot secure the resources needed to do the work properly. This chronic underfunding reduces the whole process to a hollow ritual: documents are produced for compliance.

As climate debt is put on the table, claims are made that green finance will attract private capital. But this, too, is a myth. UNEP’s report shows that private sector investment in adaptation is less than $5 billion, and that even in the best-case scenario private capital will not raise more than $50 billion a year for adaptation (far less than what is needed).

In practice, private financiers only enter adaptation projects when public funds are used to guarantee or subsidise their returns – so-called innovative finance or blended finance mechanisms designed to “de-risk” private investment.

So, in the end, the cost is borne by the treasuries of the poorer nations, whose governments effectively underwrite the money they borrow to fund adaptation projects that private investors consider too risky without such guarantees.

As we argued in dossier No. 93 (October 2025), The Environmental Crisis Is a Capitalist Crisis, this model of green finance entrenches rather than resolves the climate debt owed to the Global South.

This year, members of the institute went to Belém for COP30. They took part in the People’s Summit Towards COP30 — held from Nov. 12 to 16, to confront the official conference — where they shared the findings of dossier no. 93.

After the summit — which brought together over 25,000 participants and more than 1,200 organisations — Tricontinental’s Nuestra América office asked Bárbara Loureiro of Brazil’s Landless Workers’ Movement (MST) to write a newsletter on COP30.

In her letter she wrote that the “invisible general” of the proceedings was the Brazilian agribusiness industry, which sought to greenwash its practices, expand its access to public funds, and shift the debate from mitigation to rebranding.

Watching the proceedings inside the hall of the official COP nevertheless raises a simple question: is it worth being part of the process or should we just let the COP regime die? There are three key reasons why it is important to continue to engage with the COP process:

  • COP provides a global stage where the Global South can demand reparations, loss and damage finance, and adaptation support. It is at COP that the argument can be made against climate debt finance and against voluntary targets. COP is not a site of salvation, but it can still be a site of struggle.
  • COP allows the Global South to maintain the principle of “common but differentiated responsibilities” established in the Rio Declaration at the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development (1992).
  • COP forces the wealthy states to negotiate in the open rather than retreat to backrooms, where climate governance would be taken fully into the hands of private capital and the informality of the rich. The fight over the meaning of climate finance (either as debt or as reparations) can remain in the open.

After COP30 I asked Asad Rehman of Friends of the Earth why he thought it was worth fighting in the streets outside the halls of the COP. 

For Asad the first battle is to convince the climate movement to accept that the fight is not about fossil fuel use alone but about a crisis in our economies and societies, which must be transformed. At the same time, he told me, “There is actually some hope.”

This is because the climate movement is saying that the problem is not a lack of finance but a lack of political will. The finance is available (as the U.N. Conference on Trade and Development argues in a new report, All Roads Lead to Reform: A Financial System Fit to Mobilise $1.3 Trillion for Climate Finance).

While COP30 was taking place there was a meeting in Nairobi, Kenya, of the United Nations Framework Convention on International Tax Cooperation, where the richest countries blocked progress on a fair corporate tax that would make polluters pay for the environmental damage they cause.

If implemented, such a tax could raise $500 billion per year, a good start toward climate reparations. Yet just as the Global North insists that there is no money for climate finance, NATO countries agree to increase military spending to 5 percent of GDP — even as there is clear evidence that militarism is a major driver of greenhouse gas emissions.

“To see the climate movement arguing for debt cancellation, for wealth taxes, and for reforming the trade rules is a positive move,” Asad said. “Now, the climate movement is beginning to understand that this is an economic question. This is a paradigm shift.”

In her letter for the Nuestra América office the MST’s Loureiro described COP30 as a mirror with two sides:

“on one side, the celebration of the so-called ‘market solutions’ and financial decarbonisation; on the other… the growing strength of the popular movement, which made Belém a territory for denunciation, internationalist solidarity, and the construction of real alternatives’.

In her conclusion she calls on us to understand the climate catastrophe as a site of class struggle, one that can only be overcome beyond capitalism:

“There is no real way out of the climate crisis without a rupture with the capitalist model, and there is no possible rupture without popular organisation, without collective struggle, and without confronting the structures that profit from devastation.”

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

7 December 2025

Source: countercurrents.org

Administering Gaza: American Control, International Abdication, Palestinian Refusal

By Rima Najjar

For the first time in the history of the U.S.–Israel relationship, Washington has moved beyond arming, funding, and diplomatically shielding Israeli violence and has instead inserted its own military personnel, intelligence systems, and command structures into Israel’s war machine. It is doing so through a two-center mechanism that places U.S. military coordination on the ground while projecting civilian oversight through an international hub.

This essay traces the transformation across three dimensions: the strategic expansion of U.S. control over Israel’s battlefield decisions, the reduction of Arab and international agency to decorative multilateralism, and the recasting of Gaza from a site of national liberation into a permanently administered humanitarian problem. And yet, even within this daunting architecture of military, diplomatic, and bureaucratic force, Palestinians still retain points of leverage — narrow but real spaces in which to act, disrupt, and reassert political agency. Diagnosis alone is insufficient. The final section sets out concrete counter-moves — legal, diplomatic, institutional, and political — that Palestinians and their allies can deploy to expose the fragility of a trusteeship built without consent.

I. The Ceasefire Oversight Farce

For seventy-five years, the U.S.–Israel military relationship rested on distance: Washington armed, funded, and shielded; Israel acted. That distance has now collapsed. Roughly 200 U.S. personnel operate around the clock inside Israel, and on paper their mandate includes monitoring the ceasefire — watching Israeli conduct in real time. But this presence has neither curbed nor penalized Israeli violations. The shift from enablement to “oversight” is cosmetic; the structure of impunity remains intact.

The Civil–Military Coordination Center (CMCC), a CENTCOM-led hub located in a secure facility inside Israel, is the core of this new arrangement. Equipped with independent drone feeds, satellite imagery, and signals intelligence, it is the first disclosed American military institution built inside Israel with an explicit mandate to track ceasefire compliance and humanitarian access. U.S. reconnaissance flights now generate the primary operational picture around Khan Younis; American officers, not Israeli liaisons, feed coordination data into the battlefield. Every aid convoy, corridor, and “pause” is routed through a U.S.-run room. What is presented as monitoring is, in practice, immersion.

This immersion in Israeli operations is the essence of tutelage. As Palestinian analyst Rami al-Shaqra notes, since October 2023 “the administrative decision over what happens in the occupied Palestinian territories has become American par excellence.” Even the Trump-aligned admission that they are “more careful about Israel’s interests than the Israeli government itself” exposes the logic plainly: Washington sees itself as the responsible adult in the room, supervising a client it refuses to restrain.

Yet this tutelage is performed without the only form of leverage that could alter Israeli behavior — conditioning military aid. Instead of pressure, Washington has chosen proximity. The result is a hybrid in which Israel retains formal sovereignty and the final trigger, but the tempo and political sustainability of its violence are increasingly shaped by American officers watching their screens in Tel Aviv and Tampa.

Nowhere is this clearer than in the management of the ceasefire. Since the nominal 10 October 2025 ceasefire, Israeli forces have repeatedly violated it through drone strikes, raids, and targeted assassinations, killing more than 360 Palestinians, including 70 children. Rather than treating each breach as a violation demanding enforcement, the CMCC folds it into the system as a logistical disturbance to be managed. When an Israeli drone strike kills civilians — as in the 29 November 2025 attack in Beni Suhaila that killed two children gathering firewood — the incident is reclassified as an “operational irregularity.” Aid convoys are rescheduled, corridors rerouted, and diplomatic messaging recalibrated to insist the ceasefire “remains broadly intact.”

For Palestinians, each violation is another layer of deprivation normalized as coordination. For Israel, each violation is politically costless, its consequences absorbed by an American-run system that manages fallout rather than restraining the trigger. Oversight is now the mechanism through which Israeli impunity is reproduced — until the watched begin to watch the watchers, and the managed refuse to be managed.

II. The Multilateral Façade: Forty Nations with No Authority

The International Gaza Coordination and Monitoring Center (ICMC), housed across the border in Egypt near Rafah and al-Arish, is presented as the civilian face of Phase Two of Trump’s ceasefire plan. It is a forty-nation “hub” meant to project multilateral legitimacy. In principle, multilateralism implies cooperation under shared rules and institutions, distributing authority through collective decision-making. In practice here, it has been hollowed out: diplomats from Europe, North America, and a handful of Arab capitals sit in air-conditioned rooms, issuing press releases about humanitarian corridors and security-sector reform, while real authority over borders, airspace, and the use of force remains exclusively Israeli.

On paper, the mandate looks sweeping — supervise aid entry, monitor corridors, liaise with an interim administration, facilitate disarmament. Yet each task assumes conditions that do not exist: low violence, fixed lines of control, a legitimate Palestinian governing partner, and Israeli willingness to accept binding limits. None are present. Israel’s violence never ended in Gaza or the West Bank. Aid trucks cleared by the hub still rot for days at Rafah under shifting Israeli “dual-use” criteria — a moving standard that allows Israel to recast civilian goods and spaces as military threats whenever convenient. Maritime corridors from Cyprus deliver symbolic quantities while land routes — the only ones that matter — remain choked.

Arab states have been deliberately relegated to logistical subcontractors. As one Egyptian diplomat admitted, “We control Rafah, we train police, but we are not consulted on who governs Gaza.” Qatar and the UAE provide funds and mediation but refuse troop deployments; a Qatari official told Reuters, “Our role is financial and political, not military.” Saudi Arabia has withheld engagement until there is a time-bound path to statehood… The region that will live with the consequences has thus been reduced to observer status inside its own crisis.

Egypt’s position exposes the imbalance most clearly. Cairo is operationally indispensable — co-sponsor of negotiations, host of Sinai infrastructure, controller of Rafah, anchor of Gaza’s logistics, and trainer (with Jordan) of Palestinian police units. This gives Egypt leverage, which Egyptian analysts openly acknowledge, yet Cairo remains wary of troop commitments that would entangle it in enforcing an externally designed order and absorbing its political costs. Egypt enables the system; it does not design it.
Qatar’s role is narrower: financier and mediator, not enforcer. Officials in Doha stress that funding has never been the obstacle — access has — and warn against treating Gaza as a technical management problem severed from a political horizon.

Saudi Arabia and the Gulf states close the circle. Draft U.S. proposals to authorize a stabilization force and Board of Peace have drawn sustained concern over vague sovereignty language and sweeping authority vested in an externally controlled body. The UAE has declined participation without a UN-backed legal mandate, while Saudi Arabia ties any engagement to explicit, time-bound commitments to Palestinian statehood. Gulf capitals are willing to finance reconstruction and provide diplomatic backing, but they withhold troops and enforcement roles by design.

European and non-Arab states mirror this pattern. EU officials have admitted that the CMCC lacks Palestinian representation, stressing that “there’s no Gazans there, there’s no Palestinians” in the monitoring process. The UK, Japan, Canada, and others have signed joint statements demanding Israel comply with humanitarian law and allow sufficient aid, but none have offered troops or binding enforcement. Their role is limited to funding, diplomatic pressure, and symbolic presence inside the forty-nation hub.

Despite their reservations… the forty states said nothing when Trump announced that “phase two is going to happen pretty soon.” No objections. No conditions. No delay. They know there is no ceasefire, no fixed lines, no Palestinian partner, no enforcement. They move anyway.

What ties the CMCC and the ICMC together is a shared political purpose: to convert Palestine from a question of rights and self-determination into a technical problem of governance, security, and humanitarian management. The priority is to confine Palestinian political agency, not to enable it. This is the political essence of the trusteeship: a sequence — stabilization → interim administration → disarmament → reconstruction — in which every phase defers the next, ensuring Palestinian political agency remains perpetually “not yet ready.”

The Board of Peace, the technocratic committees, the vetted police units — all exist to administer Palestinians, not to represent them. If the CMCC is Washington’s war room, the ICMC is its civilian façade — a stage on which international actors perform coordination without authority.

III. Institutional Incoherence in Practice

Institutional incoherence is visible the moment the system begins to operate. Each component — military, diplomatic, humanitarian — moves according to a different logic, producing a structure that generates activity without alignment, authority, or a shared understanding of what the system is meant to achieve.

  1. The military track: expansion without strategy
    By late November 2025, the CMCC had grown into a warehouse-sized operations floor, its massive real-time map and daily agenda fed by U.S. drone, satellite, and signals-intelligence streams. Reporters visiting on 20–24 November 2025 described a center that had already expanded to include “nearly 50 countries and organizations,” even as Israeli strikes continued. The military logic is straightforward: expand surveillance, expand coordination, expand presence. It treats volatility as a technical problem to be monitored, not a political crisis to be resolved.
  2. The diplomatic track: performance without leverage
    Diplomatically, the system performs consensus it cannot produce. CENTCOM’s 17 October 2025 framing of the CMCC as a hub for “stabilization efforts” presumes conditions — ceasefire enforcement, fixed lines, a Palestinian counterpart — that do not exist. Diplomats continue to speak the language of progress while the military track grows in ways that contradict the very idea of a negotiated settlement. The diplomatic logic is theatrical: maintain the appearance of multilateral agreement while avoiding the confrontations required to build it.
  3. The humanitarian track: improvisation under shifting rules
    Humanitarian actors operate under a different logic entirely — one shaped by collapsing institutions and constantly shifting access rules. On 28 November 2025, the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation abruptly shut down, deepening the access crisis just as the CMCC assumed control of aid movement. Aid groups described a “severe access gap” as every convoy became dependent on Israeli clearance and rules that changed by the hour. The humanitarian logic is reactive and improvisational, shaped by constraints it cannot influence.
  4. The outcome: a system that cannot cohere
    These logics do not converge. The military track expands control; the diplomatic track performs consensus; the humanitarian track struggles to function. Mandates contradict one another, responsibilities overlap, and every actor assumes another is enforcing what no one is enforcing. The system produces motion without direction — an apparatus that manages symptoms it cannot resolve and performs order it cannot impose.

IV. Counter-Moves: How to Break the Trusteeship (Risks & Mitigations)

Refusal remains the most powerful weapon Palestinians have ever had. Now is the time to wield it without compromise and without pause.

  1. Legal asphyxiation at the ICC and ICJ
    The strongest lever remains international law, but wielding it invites retaliation. Israel and the United States have already threatened sanctions against ICC personnel and cooperating states, and any new ICJ case on the trusteeship itself would be portrayed as “lawfare” to justify escalation. Mitigation: file through a coalition of 30–40 states so that sanctions become politically and economically impossible. Pre-publish the entire evidentiary package — CMCC drone logs, post-ceasefire victim testimonies, U.S.-approved targeting data — so that any retaliation is immediately seen as obstruction of justice. Quietly secure Chinese and Russian commitments not to veto a future Chapter VII resolution.

Who/How/When: Palestine’s legal team (Ammar Hijazi + Raji Sourani) + South Africa (Minister Ronald Lamola) + Malaysia (PM Anwar’s envoy) coordinate the text in a closed Pretoria meeting January 2026; 35-state joint ICJ request is tabled at UNGA February 2026; Al-Haq/B’Tselem deliver sealed ICC dossiers to Prosecutor Khan simultaneously.

  1. Coordinated Arab diplomatic rupture
    An ultimatum from Egypt, Jordan, and Saudi Arabia would force Washington to choose between its Arab order and its Israel policy, but the immediate price could be brutal: withheld U.S. arms to Egypt, secondary sanctions, or threats to Camp David funding. Mitigation: the three capitals must move together and publicly. One country alone gets crushed; three acting in concert are untouchable. Frame the rupture as defence of Arab national security against “Iranian chaos.” Riyadh and Doha have already discussed a six-month financial backstop.

Who/How/When: Sisi’s national-security adviser, King Abdullah II, and MBS meet secretly in Sharm el-Sheikh or NEOM January 2026; joint 90-day ultimatum letter is hand-delivered to the White House 1 February 2026; $15 bn Arab Solidarity Fund activates automatically if U.S. retaliates.

  1. Total Palestinian institutional refusal
    Blanket non-cooperation risks Israel punishing the entire population by cutting electricity, fuel, salaries, and aid. Mitigation: pre-stockpile three months of essentials, publish collaborators’ names instantly, and activate parallel popular committees from day one.

Who/How/When: Unified National Leadership for Popular Resistance (Hamas + Fatah + IJ + PFLP + unions) issues signed public pledge in Gaza City (livestreamed) 20 December 2025; collaborator lists go live on Telegram same day; popular committees already operating in camps declare themselves sole legitimate authority 1 January 2026; Egyptian/Jordanian Red Crescent warehouses open buffers the moment Israel tightens siege.

  1. BDS 2.0 against U.S. contractors
    Targeting Anduril, Palantir, Constellis, etc. will trigger lawsuits and anti-BDS laws. Mitigation: start in Europe and Global South, use shareholder resolutions, pair every campaign with geolocated killing footage.

Who/How/When: BDS National Committee + IfNotNow/JVP + ECCO launch public database cmcc-profiteers.org on 1 February 2026; first divestment demands hit Norway’s $1.7 tn fund and Dutch ABP pension fund 15 February 2026; footage-verification unit run by 7amleh publishes weekly evidence packets.

  1. Narrative disruption — the “Gaza Live” platform
    Real-time footage risks bans and “Pallywood” smears. Mitigation: decentralized infrastructure, triple-verification protocol, pre-funded legal defense.

Who/How/When: 7amleh + Syrian Archive tech team + Al Jazeera innovation lab launch the 24/7 platform 1 January 2026 on Mastodon/IPFS + 200 Starlink terminals already inside Gaza; triple-verified clips are pushed by 200 trusted creators who survived 2023–25; London/Dublin legal fund (already seeded by Qatar) activates day one.

  1. Exploiting the European fracture
    Suspension of the EU–Israel Association Agreement will hit German-Dutch vetoes. Mitigation: start with unilateral national bans by recognizing states, then force Brussels to follow.

Who/How/When: Spanish PM Sánchez, Irish Taoiseach Harris, Norwegian FM Eide, Belgian and Slovenian counterparts hold joint Madrid press conference 10 March 2026 announcing immediate national bans on settlement goods and CMCC-linked companies; joint letter invoking Article 2 is sent to von der Leyen same day.

  1. Poisoning the reconstruction funding pipeline
    Gulf donors could cave under U.S. pressure. Mitigation: lock the money in a Palestinian-vetoed escrow and hold donors publicly to their 2025 pledges.

Who/How/When: Qatar’s Deputy PM Mohammed bin Abdulrahman and Saudi Finance Minister al-Jadaan issue joint written declaration (already drafted November 2025) on 1 February 2026 freezing every dollar; Palestinian-controlled escrow account at Qatar National Bank or Credit Suisse Zürich is activated same week with public disbursement conditions (e.g., Netzarim corridor evacuation).

  1. Convening a Third Palestinian National Council in exile
    A democratic PNC including Hamas and IJ will be branded “terrorist.” Mitigation: host in a protected state, invite UN observers, base program on unassailable 1988/2006 documents.

Who/How/When: PLO Executive + Hamas political bureau + diaspora networks choose Algeria or South Africa as venue by 15 January 2026; secure online + in-person voting opens 1 March 2026 across refugee camps and diaspora; 1,000-delegate congress convenes and is livestreamed June 2026; first resolution dissolves all trusteeship bodies and reaffirms PLO sole representation.

Taken together, these eight lines of pressure share one strategic logic: make the occupation’s sophisticated new management structure politically radioactive, diplomatically unsustainable, and financially ruinous.

Trusteeship survives by appearing inevitable. Counter-moves work by turning the trusteeship from ‘inevitable’ into ‘unbearable.’

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

7 December 2025

Source: countercurrents.org

Frozen Aid, Gaza Shivers, and Trump’s Deal Melts Away

By Wim Laven

Ceasefire? Peace in the Middle East? Ask a Gazan about it (well, not one of the 360 or more that the IDF has killed during the “ceasefire”). Ask the UN, which said 10 days ago that Israel is blocking most of the desperately needed aid (food, shelter, medical) to simply keep people alive as winter descends.

According to a February 2025 assessment in Gaza, about 92% of housing units in Gaza were unfit for use, either completely destroyed or severely damaged, and almost two million people in need of essential household items and emergency shelter. Nine additional months of bombardment and displacement has intensified and deepened the crisis.

In late 2024 only about 23% of winter-shelter needs had been met, and a million displaced Palestinians were at grave risk during cold, wet weather. Humanitarian doctors warn: “Babies are at higher risk of dying from severe cold as they generate less heat than adults. Hunger compounds the risks.”

Cold winter nights mean the trickle of aid is insufficient for the needs. Gaza’s winters are not extreme by global standards—but winter is lethal when relief tents are flooded, blankets are in short supply, and there is no gas for heat.

The “ceasefire” to the two-year war did not put an end to the humanitarian crisis. Opaque processes that, according to the UN agency for Palestinian refugees, breach international law continue to severely restrict aid flows into Gaza. Detailing that enough food, tents and other essentials to fill the equivalent of up to 6,000 trucks is ready for delivery but:

“As winter approaches and famine continues to grip the population, it is critical that all this aid is allowed into Gaza without delay. Our supplies would be able to provide food … for the entire population for about three months. And that is sitting outside [in Jordan and Egypt], not able to come in. And that is the case for the other UN agencies because the restrictions and the constraints are still there.”

International humanitarian law explicitly prohibits starvation and exposure as methods of warfare. The guise of restraint and false claims of peace ring hollow when infants and children die of hypothermia in the tent camps they have called home for three years. Nighttime lows in Gaza during December often fall into the 40s, with heavy rains and flooding compounding the danger. These conditions can quickly kill malnourished children.

The loosely worded agreement, rushed to headlines by Trump, provided ambiguity and wiggle room that allows continued inhumanity or fails to enforce or implement a credible humanitarian response. Trump’s 20-point deal called for and promised “full aid” but clearly the meager amount reaching the devastated territory is grossly insufficient. A good deal would have included essential features of enforcement, timelines, and penalties to ensure real humanitarian commitments.

Human survival changes in different environments. Starvation can kill in 30 days, dehydration in three days, and hypothermia (in damp, cold, windy conditions) in just an hour or two when people do not have adequate shelter.

Camps of battered tents and soaked mattresses are testament to the blocked and delayed shipments of aid. Every child who freezes to death is an indictment—another life that could have been valued and protected in a real ceasefire and peace process.

The deal melts away without unrestricted humanitarian access and shelter materials. Trump did not negotiate roofs over their heads, dry ground under their feet, or warmth through the night. Winter is the most predictable party in this war, an aid to all those who wish for the extermination of Gazans.

Instead of taking bows and victory laps, it is time to renew humanitarian reality. The cold does not negotiate and is exposing Trump’s theatrics. It is too late for a mere conversation about housing; the need demands it. I assure you, those in the cold do not consider it a peace deal at all.

A ceasefire without shelter is not peace, it is killing by different means, and Trump’s deal leaves millions exposed. Until children can sleep under roofs instead of tarps and tents, the war has not ended, no matter what the headlines claim. Trump’s ceasefire looks more like abandonment.

Wim Laven teaches courses in political science and conflict resolution.

7 December 2025

Source: countercurrents.org

Go Tell It on the Mountain:  Genocide is Wrong

By Kathy Kelly

Israel and its partners continue waging genocide against Palestinian people. Those who, so far, have survived the hideous attacks since October 7, 2023, now face ongoing jeopardy. Hemmed in by yet another military border, over two million Palestinians in “East Gaza” live amid rubble, unexploded ordnance, decaying corpses, starvation conditions, and the uncertainties of inhabiting makeshift homes without sewage, sanitation, clean water, or protection against harsh winter weather. A saddening certainty was hammered home on November 17, 2025, when not a single country stood up for them at the United Nations. The Security Council resolved to accept President Trump’s plan for Gaza’s future, a proposal which makes no effort to hold Israel and the U.S. accountable, in the near term, for war crimes and relentless ethnic cleansing.

Anticipating what some call the “Gazafication” of the West Bank, human rights groups are calling on the Israeli military to cease their attacks on Palestinian neighborhoods and refugee camps. Most recently, the Israeli Defense Forces raided homes in the governorate of Tubas after expelling more than twenty families from the besieged Al Far’a refugee camp.

Throughout the world, nations continue trading with Israel, perpetuating a status quo that flaunts international law. While the U.S. sanctions International Criminal Court judges for ruling against Israeli settlers who illegally occupy Palestinian land in the West Bank, the settlers have intensified their brutality, descending on Bedouin communities, villagers grazing their flocks, and Palestinians aiming to harvest olive tree crops.

Using jeeps, bulldozers, ATVs, rifles, and other equipment supplied by the Israeli government and military, settlers beat civilians with clubs, torch vehicles, steal livestock, and demolish homes.

This violence is not a fringe phenomenon. It is deliberate, escalatory. Shunning all international condemnation, it is ethnic cleansing aimed at involuntary population transfer and, unless disrupted, mass atrocities. The Israeli military throws up its hands at settler violence, but many of the settlers are Israeli military who commit vigilante actions, return to their homes, don Israeli military uniforms, and go back to the very places they have attacked to arrest the victims, blaming them for causing the unrest or for unrelated alleged violations of Israeli law. Fear of imprisonment and torture adds another layer of violence to entrap Palestinians refusing to leave their land.

Those Israeli outposts and settlements already constructed occupy vast stretches of land, akin to suburbs in the United States. They monopolize the best land and the readiest supplies of water for drinking or farming. They connect with segregated highways, designated for use only by Israelis. Settlers and their government leaders fully intend to expand further, accomplishing “Greater Israel.”

Amid the grotesque injustices in Israel, a Palestinian youngster can be sentenced to three years in prison for picking up a rock, while an Israeli youngster in trouble with his school or community or both can be sentenced to a settler outpost where extremist leaders will urge him to attack defenseless villagers, all in the name of racial supremacy and fulfillment of divine command. Israel gives itself a little quiet from youth delinquency by shipping troubled youth wholesale off to the West Bank. There, they can turn their rage upon Palestinians and international observers.

In 1999, Ariel Sharon, as Israel’s Minister of Foreign Affairs, avowed Israel would seize all the hilltops in Palestine. Named for Ariel Sharon’s infamous call to turn strategic heights i not “facts on the ground,” the “Hilltop Youth” are bent on creating new facts: demolished homes, seized lands, ground turned black from fire or red from blood.

Why is there no accountability for settler terrorism? The UN office of the High Commission for Human Rights calls the settler attacks abhorrent. “Permanently displacing the Palestinian population within occupied territory amounts to unlawful transfer, which is a war crime,” says a November 14, 2025, press briefing from the UNHCR. “The transfer by Israel of parts of its own civilian population into the territory it occupies also amounts to a war crime.”

Yet, the Hilltop Youth can point to Israeli right-wing leaders in the highest echelons of government who urge continued assaults against non-Jews, regarding them as sub-human.

“The ruling order in Palestine doesn’t see settler terror as a crime,” writes an independent journalist, Andrey X, who has spent three years with unarmed civilian protectors in the West Bank. “Settler terror is an essential part of the state project,” he adds, regarding the Hilltop Youth as Israel’s frontline soldiers. In encouraging these young militants, some of whom are underage, the Israeli leadership is condoning what could be deemed the use of child soldiers.

Activists with various unarmed civilian protection groups witness and record local offenses, at great personal risk. One activist who, for security reasons, cannot be named, is trained to look assailants in the eye while deescalating (or attempting to deescalate) confrontations, in part to keep tabs on which personalities have newly arrived to repress Palestinian neighbors.

During Israel’s most recent Rosh Hashanah celebration, near an outpost about a kilometer up the mountain, Jonas was assailed by an angered youth apparently visiting for the holiday. Gingerly backing away up a rocky incline as the young lad hurled stones at him, Jonas remembers keeping eye contact and gently remonstrating with him. “You know,” he said, “You don’t have to do this … Did anyone ever teach you to attack old men?” One expertly hurled rock (“he could have been a good shortstop,” Jonas told me later) hit so close to the bone that Jonas had to be hospitalized for a hematoma.

Nevertheless, Jonas is quite privileged compared to Palestinians who wouldn’t have access to similar health care or a passport that enables departure.

Jonas says one person in local Palestinian communities usually serves as a point of contact, on a WhatsApp line, for the entire village. In the event of an Israeli incursion, people contact him and when he contacts the international observers, they quickly send a team. Any of the villagers’ watch dogs will most likely have already been shot. At least six days a week, young settlers will drive their goats and sheep down the hill from the outpost into the villagers’ yards and try, behind the shelter of guns, to drive the sheep and goats into the villagers’ living quarters. While kids are getting ready for school and households rise, going about their regular life, the settlers drive their sheep and goats directly into the houses, sometimes entering also into the sheep and goat pens of the villagers. Then, settlers claim all the livestock as their own, stealing the villagers’ livelihoods, as they herd the animals out of the village and back to their settlement. An international team may help prevent the pernicious process.

Unarmed westerners accompanying villagers risk deportation if they make an official complaint. Israelis on other teams can make complaints, but with zero observable effect. Even the Israeli Defense Force (IDF), were they inclined to, would have little impact on the settlers: one of Jonas’s friends heard of a settler who claimed, “I have automatic weapons in my house, and they’re for the IDF if they try to move me out.”

Lest we forget, the Israeli government has basically told the world that it has nuclear weapons inside their Negev desert facilities, and they could use these annihilatory weapons against anyone that tries to stop Israel from establishing an ever-increasing apartheid state.

The current Trump-ordained quiet, so far from being a peace, appears doomed. Since October 10, Israel has violated the terms of the agreement more than 500 times.

In Gaza there is no peace: the brief quiet, punctuated as ever by Israeli gunfire and aerial attacks, is the quiet of a mass grave that cannot begin to be unearthed until Israel allows the land-moving equipment in.

Jonas, who has spent decades as an international activist in conflict and war zones, says he has never before seen the systemic cruelty perpetrated by Israelis in the West Bank and Gaza.

But, the violence may come home to the UN General Assembly members choosing quiet observation. And, if we take the new dispensation as reason to fall silent, we may end up being silent for a long, long time.

A version of this article first appeared on The Progressive Magazine website.

UN Info-Graphic : West Bank, Violence, Destruction and Displacement [https://docs.google.com/document/d/1785qhm0ppP-4FDTHVN1sa2X21A7MoS9LmLSyr5lkw2A/edit?usp=sharing]

Kathy Kelly, (Kathy.vcnv@gmail.com), is board president of World BEYOND War. Her activism has frequently taken her to war zones and prisons.

7 December 2025

Source: countercurrents.org

The Key To Understanding Gaza Today

By JONATHAN COOK

Anyone wondering why the British state and media, despite the latter’s pretension to serve as a watchdog on power, continue to cheerlead Israel’s genocidal slaughter of civilians in Gaza will find the answers in a new film.

It recounts not the current period of history, but a story from nearly 90 years ago.

Palestine 36, directed by the remarkable Palestinian film-maker Annemarie Jacir, illuminates more about the events unfolding for the past two years in Gaza than anything you will read in a British newspaper or watch on the BBC—if, that is, you can find anything at all about Gaza in the news since Donald Trump rebranded the killing and dispossession of Palestinians as a “ceasefire.”

And Palestine 36 does so, unusually for a Palestinian film, with a budget worthy of a Hollywood blockbuster and with a cast that includes names recognisable to western audiences, from Jeremy Irons to Liam Cunningham.

This is a major episode of British colonial history told not through British eyes but, for once, through the eyes of its victims.

The “36” of the title refers to 1936, when Palestinians rose up against British colonial tyranny—more usually, and deceitfully, referred to as a “British Mandate” issued by the League of Nations.

The problem for Palestinians was not just the systematic violence of those three decades of tyranny. It was that Britain’s role as a supposed caretaker of Palestine—an “arbiter of peace” between native Palestinians and mostly Jewish immigrants—served as cover for a much more sinister project.

It was British officials who ushered Jews out of Europe—where they were unwanted by racist governments, including Britain’s—to implant them in Palestine. There, they were actively nurtured as the foot soldiers of a coming “Jewish state” that was supposed to be dependent on Britain and assist in strengthening its imperial, regional agenda.

In effect, an overstretched British empire hoped over time to outsource its colonial role to a “Jewish” fortress state.

Anti-colonial struggle

One of Britain’s top priorities was crushing an Arab nationalism sweeping an area of the Middle East known as the Levant in response to British and French colonial rule.

Arab nationalism was a secular, unifying political ideology that sought to overcome the arbitrary borders imposed by the colonial powers, and strengthen Arab identity in opposition to foreign occupation. It was profoundly anti-colonial, which is why Britain and France were so deeply hostile to it.

The Palestinians were critically important to Arab nationalism because their homeland served as a geographical bridgehead between the powerhouses of Arab nationalism in Lebanon and Syria to the north, and Egypt to the south.

For the British, the impulse for liberation in Palestine had to be snuffed out at all costs. However, the increasing brutality of British despotism simply fed an insurgency that by 1936 solidified into what westerners term a three-year “Arab Revolt” and Palestinians call their very “First Intifada”, or uprising.

Later, there would be years-long, large-scale Palestinian uprisings—this time against Israel’s even more repressive brand of settler colonialism—that erupted in 1987 and again in 2000.

The 1936-39 Revolt grew so large that at its height, according to Palestinian historian Rashid Khalidi, Britain briefly had more British soldiers stationed in tiny Palestine than in the whole of India.

This is the story recounted by Palestine 36—one that British schoolchildren are never taught, and one that the British media never offer as context for today’s crimes in historic Palestine.

Which is why Britons watching the film are likely not only to be shocked by the extent and nature of Britain’s colonial violence but to see in those savage events a premonition of what is now unfolding in Gaza.

War crimes training

There are small sections of the Palestinian solidarity movement quick to condemn Israel’s brutality towards Palestinians as something exceptional, as something peculiar to Israel and its rationalising ideology of Zionism.

Jacir’s film is a potent reminder of how foolish this approach is.

Israel’s current colonial violence is simply a more sophisticated, more hi-tech version of the techniques employed by British colonialism nearly a century ago. The Israeli military learnt from the British—quite literally.

One of the main characters in Palestine 36 is the British officer Orde Wingate, who carried out night raids on Palestinian villages to terrify their inhabitants. Wingate organised punishment squads, comprised of British soldiers and recently arrived Jewish militia members, to conduct these raids.

The training he offered to the Jewish militias in British military colonial strategy and hybrid warfare would later serve as the Israeli military’s playbook.

The death of Wingate in 1944 in a plane crash in Burma was lamented by David Ben Gurion, Israel’s founding father. He commented that, had Wingate survived, he might have served as Israel’s first military chief of staff.

The film shows Wingate committing routine war crimes: using a Palestinian child as a human shield; rounding up women and children to put them in an open-air, barbed-wire camp, depriving them of water in the midday heat; burning Palestinian crops; blowing up a bus of Palestinian men he had arbitrarily detained.

Meanwhile, British colonial police officer Charles Tegart imported into Palestine militarised forts of a type he had earlier devised and constructed across India to put down the uprisings there.

These forts would become the blueprint for Israel’s series of steel and concrete walls and checkpoints that have fragmented historic Palestine, and caged much of the Palestinian population into prisons—including the largest, Gaza.

Watching Palestine 36, it is hard not be reminded—as we see Palestinians ritually humiliated, abused and killed by the British, supposedly to instil obedience—why each Palestinian generation has grown more radicalised and more desperate.

Britain’s vicious, colonial repression of the three-year uprising of 1936 led ultimately to Hamas’ violent one-day jail-break on 7 October 2023 and Israel’s genocidal, colonial rampage in response.

Israel’s genocide will no more pacify this generation of Palestinians than Wingate’s crushing of the Arab Revolt did to an earlier generation. It will simply deepen the wounds—and a collective will to resist.

Ideological zealotry

Importantly, the film also grapples with—if more obliquely—Britain’s contribution to an ideological zealotry usually attributed to Israel.

Wingate’s fervent subjugation of the Palestinian people and his view of them as little more than animals, as well as his passionate attachment to the Jewish people, were rooted in the ideology of Zionism.

All too often overlooked is the fact that Zionism long predates its modern-day incarnation as Jewish nationalism.

Wingate followed in a long tradition of influential European Christian Zionists, who believed that Biblical prophecy would be advanced by “restoring” the Jewish people to their ancient homeland. Only then, in a supposed “end times,” would the stage be set for Christ to return and establish his kingdom on earth.

Lord Balfour—he of the 1917 Balfour Declaration that promised a “national home” for the Jewish people in Palestine—was another prominent British Christian Zionist.

The Palestinian people—many of whom, genetic studies suggest, are descended from the ancient Canaanites living in the region thousands of years ago, and who subsequently converted to Christianity and Islam—were viewed by Christian Zionists like Wingate as little more than an obstacle to the realisation of divine prophecy.

If they would not obey God’s will by clearing themselves out of their own homeland to make way for the Jewish people, then they would have to be forced to do so.

The Zionism of Israelis, as poll after poll shows, has led them in a similar, racist direction to Wingate: large numbers support ethnic cleansing and the genocide of Palestinians.

Social media posts by Israeli soldiers openly revel in their depraved treatment of Gaza’s people.

“Not fully human”

Which brings us back to the present day.

Film reviews in the British press of Palestine 36 have been, at best, lukewarm. Even the supposedly liberal Guardian damns it as “heartfelt”—as if mollifying a child over a second-rate school essay.

That should not surprise us. The British establishment—just like the US one that took on the mantle of global policeman from Britain after the Second World War—still treats Arab nationalism as a threat.

It still views Israel as a vital colonial outpost. It still regards Palestine as a testing ground for techniques of surveillance and counter-insurgency. It still views the Palestinians as not fully human.

Which is why British Prime Minister Keir Starmer—sounding like a modern version of Wingate, reinvented as a politician—was unabashed in defending Israel’s decision to deprive the people of Gaza, including its one million children, of food, water and power. That is, to starve them in violation of the fundamentals of international law.

It is why Starmer and the British establishment keep shipping arms to Israel and supplying it with the intelligence it has been using to target civilians. It is why Starmer welcomed to Downing Street Israel’s President, Isaac Herzog, who rationalised the genocide by stating there were no “uninvolved” civilians in Gaza.

It is why the British army is still training Israeli military officers in the UK, just as Wingate did with their predecessors. And it is why British officers still head to Israel to learn from its genocidal military.

It is why Britain still offers Israel diplomatic protection, and why it has threatened the International Criminal Court for seeking to hold Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to account for committing crimes against humanity in Gaza.

And it is why Starmer and his government have changed the definition of terrorism to criminalise Britons who express opposition to the genocide in Gaza.

The truth is we cannot look to our government, schools or our media to educate us about British colonial history, whether in Palestine or in any of the other places around the globe Britain has tyrannised.

Instead, we must start listening to the victims of our violence, if we are ever to understand not just the past, but the present too.

8 December 2025

Source: savageminds.substack.com