Friday, February 23, 2024

TO SUM IT UP .....

 

Nothing goes only one way in life, it's always and invariably a back and fourth way, an action and its reaction, thus the Palestinian cause and the effects of the Israeli actions and reactions.

So when we ask the Palestinian side to reframe and recreate a new leadership to govern their affairs within their enclaves, and vis-a-vis the world and more so Israel.  Before we ask them for moderation and civic behavior and adherence to all international norms of human respect, and abandoning their resistance to occupation, apartheid, barbaric brutality, colonialism in its ugliest forms, and finally genocide. We ought to ask the other side for some civic behavior, some moderation, some actual measures to block apartheid and the ugly racist superiority of hundreds of thousands of settlers on the ground, as well as the Israeli armed forces, the Israeli police, and the entire Israeli political regime. 

Does it not make sense that to eliminate Hamas from the Palestinian psych and minds, we need to counterpart it all with eliminating the Netanyahu/Ben Gvir/Smotrich/ Gallant/Gants type of government, ruling and injecting systematic hate and desperation and ugly racism and superiority among the entire Israeli population.

Sadly, the same exact situation and scenario is taking place on all fronts neighboring Israel, I'm thinking now of what is taking place and the escalation on the Lebanese borders between Hezbollah and the Israeli army and the civilian population stuck in between.

Shouldn't we when eliminating one evil side, ensure the elimination of the other evil side. Assuming of course that equalizing the conqueror with the conquered, the oppressor with the oppressed, the jailer with the jailed is a legitimate action, as they are both equally responsible for a certain situation, a very ugly situation indeed.

Concluding it all with a short article by Jeffrey Sachs criticizing Biden's foreign policies, mostly in regard of the Israeli ongoing genocide. It's entitled; "why Joe Biden is a foreign failure".

Yet Israel is led by violent zealots who make the messianic claim that God has given Israel all the land of today's Palestine, including the West bank, Gaza, and East Jerusalem. These zealots therefore insist on political domination over the millions of Palestinians in their midst, or their annihilation or expulsion. 

Netanyahu and his colleagues don't even hide their genocidal intentions, though most foreign observers don't fully understand the Biblical references that the Israeli leaders invoke to justify their ongoing mass slaughter of the Palestinian people. 

Israel now faces highly credible charges of genocide in the international court of justice in a case brought by South Africa. The documentary record presented by S.A. and others is as clear as it is chilling. Israeli politics is not the politics of pragmatism and certainly not the politics of peace. It is the politics of Judaic biblical apocalypse.  To quote Jeffrey D. Sachs.... 

As always, my many thanks to all my good readers.                

Tuesday, February 13, 2024

Things That Should But Can't Be Said

 


 Washington Watch
February 12, 2024

Dr. James J. Zogby ©

President

Arab American Institute

 

Four months into Israel’s genocidal assault on Gaza, one might have thought that American policymakers and commentators would have learned some lessons. Instead, their discussions about the conflict appear to remain trapped in the same tiresome and, at times, delusional framing that existed before the current fighting began. As a result, they frustratingly tie themselves in knots struggling to explain what’s happening and what’s to be done in the future. They refuse to step outside the constraints imposed by conventional wisdom and dare not venture beyond the accepted terms of what is defined as correct political discourse. Conditioned, in this manner, there are things that should be said that they will not say. 

 

For example, despite the ruling of the International Court of Justice that Israel’s behaviors establish a plausible case for genocide, that word is verboten. When presented with the numbers of those killed, those facing starvation, and clear evidence of mass destruction of Gaza’s infrastructure, policymakers and commentators shift the discussion to the crimes committed by Hamas on October 7th or blame the civilian deaths on Hamas’ use of “human shields.” 

 

They also seek to absolve the US from any responsibility for the deaths insisting that the President and his administration continue to urge the Israelis to take measures to avoid civilian casualties. They then ignore the fact that Israel pays no attention to our “urging” while they continue to resupply Israel’s deadly munitions and block international efforts at a ceasefire. 

 

Equally frustrating is the US insistence that it stands behind efforts to provide humanitarian assistance to the desperate Palestinian population in Gaza, while at the same time refusing to hold Israel responsible for the fact that its cumbersome, duplicative inspection regime and continued bombing in the south of Gaza impedes delivery of supplies to those in need. Additionally, the recent US decision to withhold funds for UNWRA—the only agency with the capacity to deliver aid—makes a mockery of our commitment to providing humanitarian assistance. As obvious as these linkages may be, they may not be said. 

 

In acceptable US discourse Israel is never blamed. It’s all Hamas’ fault and the US is doing everything it can to alleviate suffering. As for the decision to cut off UNWRA thereby punishing the entire Palestinian population for the alleged crimes of about 12 of the agencies thousands of staff, it is not allowed to refer to this as collective punishment. 

 

After ignoring the reality that daily Israeli raids into West Bank Palestinian cities and towns have resulted in the murders of over 400 Palestinians and that 500 settler attacks on Palestinians in their homes, cars or fields have resulted in the deaths of eight and the destruction of thousands of olive trees, the US decided to take action by sanctioning four settlers. This was heralded by the pundits as “unprecedented” and “dramatic,” but scoffed at by the settlers as a hollow gesture—which, in fact, it was. But that cannot be said. 

 

What is not discussed are the root problems with the Israeli occupation (a term that Democrats have never allowed in the party’s platform), the ever-expanding settlement enterprise, the apartheid (another word that is not allowed) system that creates impunity for both settlers and the Israeli military. This self-censorship of terms that can be used is infuriating.  

 

Equally troubling are discussions about the “day after” that is gaining momentum in the US media and policy circles. In the first place, this topic is insensitive at best, racist at worst. What is the “day after” for 2.2 million in Gaza? Are they supposed to forget the tens of thousands who’ve died? Their homes and entire neighborhoods that have been reduced to rubble? Where will they live? And what of the trauma to the hundreds of thousands of children who’ve been physically and psychologically maimed by this war? And what of the tens of thousands who are expected to die in the coming months from disease or starvation? 

 

These questions aren’t asked by pundits or policymakers. They’re not part of the accepted discourse. 

 

While official Washington has not yet presented its own plan, they have provided hints of their thinking in speeches and in discussions with journalists. From these we can discern an outline of ideas, that amount to “much ado about nothing.” 

 

It appears that the cornerstone of “the day after” construct is nothing more than “a pathway to an eventual Palestinian state”—reminiscent of the famous ancient Greek philosophers Heraclitus-Parmenides’ debate about the endless “half-the-way to half-the-way to half-the-way” to the never reachable goal. In this fantasy “pathway,” the burden is placed on the Palestinians to create a credible, viable, democratic, functioning state that will pose no threat to Israel. The problem, of course, is that Palestinians must do this while the occupation continues with no restraints on the occupiers’ control over land, resources, borders, and economy. This is no different that the bizarre plan proposed by then President Bush in 2002. The lesson that should have been learned then, but was not, is that as long as the Palestinians are not free to grow their economy and protect their land and people from the acquisitiveness and repression of the Israelis, no such credible state can come into being. The proposal, if it can be called that, is a mirage designed by the US to place the burden on the weakest party, while absolving the Israelis and ourselves from responsibility. 

 

When blame is directed at Israel, it is focused solely on Benjamin Netanyahu and his extremist partners, whom the pundits say are the major obstacle to moving forward. This fails to pass muster because any close examination of the Israeli electorate and their views would note that while Netanyahu and company are extreme, there is no conceivable coalition that can replace them that would be willing to end the occupation and withdraw from territories and settlements to allow for a viable independent Palestinian state to come into being. A recent Israeli poll showed that a majority of Israelis would reject the creation of a Palestinian state even if that were accompanied by recognition by Saudi Arabia and security guarantees.  

 

When confronted with the fact that any future Israeli government would either be unwilling or afraid to withdraw from the occupied lands because of negative public reaction, the pundits fall silent out of their concern for Israeli public opinion. This underlies the racism that causes the entire fantasy to evaporate. I say racism, because in the American mind, the opinions and fears of Israeli public opinion are always placed above those of those of Palestinians. But, of course, this cannot be said. 

 

And so Israel’s genocidal assault continues as does the detached-from-reality US political discussion. Change will not occur until we can free ourselves from the shackles of acceptable discourse that has led us into this dead end.

A very good analysis of the present situation in Palestine, honestly we do not have any plan to stop it nor to create a dignified balance between the two people sharing the same land, no idea of how to live in peace, with dignity and freedom, just perpetuate apartheid, colonialism, and barbarity. All my thanks to all. 

Sunday, February 11, 2024

IT'S TIME TO FREE IMRAN KHAN AND RESTORE REAL DEMOCRACY IN PAKISTAN......

 

As the Pakistani interior situation is rapidly developing, and lately with a general election where no one knows for sure the degree of manipulation and terror it produces, and Imran Khan still in prison on very doubtful allegations, I found it appropriate to shed some lights on the U.S. involvement back then and now in the outcome of the Pakistani political policies.  

Imran Khan on The Zero Hour, February 2023

When I interviewed Imran Khan in February 2023 he was facing multiple criminal charges after being deposed as Prime Minister of Pakistan. He had also recently survived an assassination attempt. Khan was blunt about his interpretation of events. “My government was removed through a conspiracy,” he told me.

Since then, information has come to light which seems to add credibility to his claim of a conspiracy, orchestrated by the US, which led to his removal.  There is now considerable evidence that the United States orchestrated his removal for tactical reasons and later rewarded his usurpers for doing it.

Meanwhile, Khan has been the target of an endless campaign of judicial “prosecutions” by the US-installed government.   Many of these legal efforts have already been declared null and void in court, but this has not stopped the government from adding new ones.

Khan is now imprisoned after several arrests, some carried out extrajudicially, and after being convicted in a trial that the nation’s Supreme Court has ruled was conducted illegally.

Khan remains the most popular politician in his country, a nuclear power and the fifth most populous nation on Earth.

New information suggests that Khan was punished for defying a US demand to support Ukraine against Russia’s invasion. The reputational harm to the US is made even worse by the fact that Mr. Khan’s illegal trial concerned the release of information about US interference in Pakistan’s democracy – an accusation denied by both Khan and the journalists involved.

Here are four reasons the United States should reverse itself, call for Mr. Khan’s release, and support his ability to run for office.

1. Democratic Principles

The United States claims to be a leading voice for world democracy. Whatever one may think of that claim, democracy requires an open, fair and democratic political process. The actions against Mr. Khan limit the choices available to voters, undermining US claims to leadership in this area. That puts the US in the ironic position of appearing to subvert one democracy in its self-described quest to defend another.

Khan remains the most popular leader in Pakistan, while the government that is persecuting him is very unpopular.

2. Rule of Law

Khan’s detention and trials are a clear abuse of the judicial system for political purposes.

3. Political Stability

Cheating the Pakistani voters out of open and fair elections will lead to further chaos and instability in this populous and nuclear-armed country. It could also lead to more instability in the region. (Pakistan shares borders with Iran, China, and India.)

4. US Strategic Interests

American intervention in Pakistan’s affairs was widely resented even before these latest revelations. The current US-backed government is highly unpopular, while Khan retains wide support. The US role in Khan’s removal has intensified anti-American feeling.

More Background

An August 2023 article by Ryan Grim and Murtaza Hussain in The Intercept contained information from a secret US State Department “cypher” (something like a cable) which indicated that the Biden Administration pressured Pakistani officials to remove Khan from power. Their motive? Khan refused to take sides in the Russia-Ukraine conflict. He wasn’t soft-spoken about it.

“Are we your slaves?” he asked rhetorically. “What do you think of us? That we are your slaves and that we will do whatever you ask of us? ... We are not part of any alliance.”

That speech was given on March 2, 2022. On March 7, two State Department officials met with Pakistan’s ambassador to the United States. The cypher indicates that one of them, Assistant Secretary of State for the Bureau of South and Central Asian Affairs Donald Lu, said “people here and in Europe are quite concerned about why Pakistan is taking such an aggressively neutral position (on Ukraine), if such a position is even possible. It does not seem such a neutral stand to us.”  (“Aggressively neutral” is an interesting phrase.)

The document also reports that Lu said this:

“Let us wait for a few days to see whether the political situation changes, which would mean that we would not have a big disagreement about this issue and the dent would go away very quickly. Otherwise, we will have to confront this issue head on and decide how to manage it.”

And this:

“I think if the no-confidence vote against the Prime Minister succeeds, all will be forgiven in Washington because the Russia visit is being looked at as a decision by the Prime Minister. Otherwise, I think it will be tough going ahead.”

Nice little country you’ve got here. It’d be a shame if something happened to it …

As The Intercept notes, “The day after the meeting, on March 8, Khan’s opponents in Parliament moved forward with a key procedural step toward the no-confidence vote.” Pakistan scholar Arif Rafiq told The Intercept,

“What you have here is the Biden administration sending a message to the people that they saw as Pakistan’s real rulers, signaling to them that things will be better if he is removed from power.”

Rafiq also said:

 “While the Biden administration has said that human rights will be at the forefront of their foreign policy, they are now looking away as Pakistan moves toward becoming a full-fledged military dictatorship.”

Absolute Zero: A Newsletter from Richard (RJ) Eskow is a reader-supported publication. This entire episode happened in an amazing quiet and far from the mainstream media, just to prove again and again how manipulative the political system can be....

As always, my profound thanks to all my good readers. 

Saturday, February 3, 2024

South Africa tried its best, but Israel won in the end. A sort of A win.....


By Andalusian Horseman in VisionaryeTalks

To those who think this is a step in the right direction. It’s not. This exposed that the ICJ is a hollow institution, without any action to enforce.

The ICJ basically said that we acknowledge the genocide that Israel is carrying out, but we don’t ask for a ceasefire. We simply “ask” Israel to stop what’s it is doing within and report back in a month of the findings.

That’s the whole ICJ for you and on top that Hamas has to release the hostages it has taken, but Israel will not release their 10,000 Palestinian hostages illegally incarcerated within their jails.

Do you honestly think, even for one second, that Israel will listen to what the ICJ is saying? It’s not even listening to Biden and he’s alright with a genocide.

You’re basically telling Israel to oversee and stop Israel committing genocide. You’re telling the perpetrator that I know you’re committing a genocide and I want you to stop it within a month and if you don’t then we don’t know what we’ll do. How can you expect a perpetrator to stop on its own when there’s nothing for it to loose if it does. It’s a sham.

If the ICJ had ordered a ceasefire, if they had ordered a third party to oversee the cessation of Israel’s genocide, then maybe the institution could’ve retained some sort of credibility, but instead that it’s emphasized that it doesn’t have any of that.

Israel has already said that it’s not going to agree or adhere to any of what the ICJ says, so in all honesty what was the point of announcing this decision. This was simply a condemnation of genocide. It was nothing more than that.

This ruling has set a precedent and a very bad one, that the last line of legal defense in the world holds no meaning. The law of the jungle supersedes all man made laws and Israel has seen to that. It doesn’t even realize that it sets a bad precedent for them as well.

History will remember this decision and it will remember what South Africa has done for Palestine, it will look kindly to South Africa, but to The Hague and the ICJ? Those two institutions have lost their credibility forever. This was the test of credibility for the institution, and it had failed it.

So what’s going to happen now?

Well Israel will carry out the genocide in full force just to spite the ICJ. Hamas will have to release the prisoners, because before the decision came they told that they would abide by the ruling of the ICJ. Once the hostages are returned, then Israel double down on air strikes in Gaza.

Hamas will have lost its leverage, and to some extent the internal situation of Israel will have been settled with the hostages returned. However, I do expect the resistance to ramp up their attacks on Israel, one of which is hitting Haifa port as they have announced.

Israel has also secured a deal of getting weapons from the US and this is for the war against Lebanon. The deal is rather large, worth billions of dollars, which means its preparation will be in full swing.

But there is good news, and it’s only a little:

Israel has been indicted as committing genocide, as if that wasn’t visible. It has now been accepted legally. Any country which helps Israel will come under condemnation and it will be legal for abetting Israel to commit the genocide.

Which means the US, UK and any other country which is going to provide aid, will be complicit in this genocide. It is a win, for the people. Because whenever Israel kills a Palestinian, it commits a violation of the ICJ. Although it doesn’t really care and it doesn’t affect them. It presents a strong case for those who are against the genocide.

This gives justification to the Houthis, who are attacking ships to stop the genocide or the axis of resistance. It gives them the legal basis to launch their attacks on Israel and if someone does take them to court, then they can argue they were doing it in the interests of the Palestinians.

Though there will be no active measures taken by the court to stop the genocide or even  impose a ceasefire, this little win is sufficient for some people.

I guess we will have to see how this all plays out.

Thanks for reading. I respectfully copied this good article from the publication "Medium Daily Digest", the author is relatively new to me, but he represents a brilliant way of thinking and reasoning, at least within this horrible conflict/genocide taking place in front of the entire world,  again my many thanks to all for following.