Why do They Hate the US? Duh!

Condi really has no idea at all. Gaza is trivialised, reduced to a kindergarten slave state, its democratically elected government defined as a coup. The clinical ignorance of this woman is appalling.

Surely she can’t be this thick – do the Israelis feed their US accomplices something that blinds them from reality?

Israel and the US have concluded a unilateral cease fire which is meaningless without agreement from Hamas, no matter how much they might like to think they have marginalised them.

Basically this ‘cease fire’ means that Israel can swoop down from its Mordor like country and bomb, assassinate and the rest of its tricks at its leisure. Same old scenario as before the carnage – low intensity terrorism.

There can be only ONE Pharaoh. And when were Pharaohs ever dragged up to answer for their misdeeds at a war crimes trial?

RECOMMENDED READING:

John J. Mearsheimer “Another War, Another Defeat” in The American Conservative – excellent, succinct historical analysis:

The actual purpose [of Operation Cast Lead] is connected to Israel’s long-term vision of how it intends to live with millions of Palestinians in its midst. It is part of a broader strategic goal: the creation of a “Greater Israel.” Specifically, Israel’s leaders remain determined to control all of what used to be known as Mandate Palestine, which includes Gaza and the West Bank. The Palestinians would have limited autonomy in a handful of disconnected and economically crippled enclaves, one of which is Gaza. Israel would control the borders around them, movement between them, the air above and the water below them.

The key to achieving this is to inflict massive pain on the Palestinians so that they come to accept the fact that they are a defeated people and that Israel will be largely responsible for controlling their future. This strategy, which was first articulated by Ze’ev Jabotinsky in the 1920s and has heavily influenced Israeli policy since 1948, is commonly referred to as the “Iron Wall.”

What has been happening in Gaza is fully consistent with this strategy.

Even before Hamas came to power, the Israelis intended to create an open-air prison for the Palestinians in Gaza and inflict great pain on them until they complied with Israel’s wishes. Dov Weisglass, Ariel Sharon’s closest adviser at the time, candidly stated that the disengagement from Gaza was aimed at halting the peace process, not encouraging it. He described the disengagement as “formaldehyde that’s necessary so that there will not be a political process with the Palestinians.” Moreover, he emphasized that the withdrawal “places the Palestinians under tremendous pressure. It forces them into a corner where they hate to be.”

Arnon Soffer, a prominent Israeli demographer who also advised Sharon, elaborated on what that pressure would look like. “When 2.5 million people live in a closed-off Gaza, it’s going to be a human catastrophe. Those people will become even bigger animals than they are today, with the aid of an insane fundamentalist Islam. The pressure at the border will be awful. It’s going to be a terrible war. So, if we want to remain alive, we will have to kill and kill and kill. All day, every day.”

In January 2006, five months after the Israelis pulled their settlers out of Gaza, Hamas won a decisive victory over Fatah in the Palestinian legislative elections. This meant trouble for Israel’s strategy because Hamas was democratically elected, well organized, not corrupt like Fatah, and unwilling to accept Israel’s existence. Israel responded by ratcheting up economic pressure on the Palestinians, but it did not work. In fact, the situation took another turn for the worse in March 2007, when Fatah and Hamas came together to form a national unity government. Hamas’s stature and political power were growing, and Israel’s divide-and-conquer strategy was unraveling.

To make matters worse, the national unity government began pushing for a long-term ceasefire. The Palestinians would end all missile attacks on Israel if the Israelis would stop arresting and assassinating Palestinians and end their economic stranglehold, opening the border crossings into Gaza.

Israel rejected that offer and with American backing set out to foment a civil war between Fatah and Hamas that would wreck the national unity government and put Fatah in charge. The plan backfired when Hamas drove Fatah out of Gaza, leaving Hamas in charge there and the more pliant Fatah in control of the West Bank. Israel then tightened the screws on the blockade around Gaza, causing even greater hardship and suffering among the Palestinians living there.

Maximilian Forte “Obama as Intermission for Gaza: Mass Murder Hits the Pause Button” in Open Anthropology

The unilateral Israeli truce is merely a temporary respite, much like reloading a weapon also offers a momentary respite. It is, more than anything listed above, a break, breather, intermission, interval, letup, lull, pause, rest, stay, or suspension.

The reasoning behind it is utterly cynical: Israel claims it has achieved its objectives — then go home; there are too many wars of occupation already by imperialists claiming to have reached their objectives, but who nonetheless “linger.” Others interpret this as a pause to allow Americans and their intended world audience to party for the arrival of this plastic messiah called Barack Obama. As we have already seen on numerous occasions, nothing and nobody can take the attention away from Obama, during Obama’s time to celebrate himself, during a party for Obama, when Obama is supposed to be the object of fixation.

Under these circumstances, and with more insults added to already grievous injuries, the last thing Hamas can or should do, is stop fighting back.

From John Ging, UNRWA head in Gaza

Israel-OPT: “Today is a better day than yesterday,”

Source: United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs – Integrated Regional Information Networks (IRIN)

Date: 18 Jan 2009

GAZA CITY/RAMALLAH, 18 January 2009 (IRIN) – The UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) is the lead UN agency working for Palestinian refugees. Its compound and schools, sheltering displaced Gazans, have come under Israeli attack during Israel’s Operation Cast Lead, which began on 27 December with aerial bombardments and was combined with a ground assault beginning on 3 January.

Israel declared a unilateral ceasefire on 18 January. John Ging, head of UNRWA operations in Gaza, spoke with IRIN by phone from Gaza City on 17 and 18 January.

IRIN: Is UNRWA able to deliver assistance to Gaza residents under the current conditions? What type of assistance is being delivered and to how many recipients?

JG: The warehouse and all its contents were destroyed [in the 15 January Israeli attack on the UNRWA compound], and we could not deliver that day.

Gaza is now cut in two, so we are supporting the northern area and Gaza City from the [UNRWA] compound. The following day [16 January] we resupplied the compound from our warehouses in the south. We are continuing with our operations. Trucks are moving, but not safely.

There are 50,000 people are in our temporary shelters in our schools – they have to be fed every day. Some 80 percent of the [Gaza] population is food dependent on us.

IRIN: Did UNRWA trucks only move during the daily three-hour lull to deliver humanitarian assistance?

JG: We would not be able to support our operation effectively if we were limited to three hours. People were working around the clock in our installations to provide assistance.

The three-hour lull was for the people to feel safer to come out to get the assistance.

Bringing in goods from Kerem Shalom [border crossing] is a day’s effort, at least 16 hours, then the supplies have to be unloaded and the goods prepared for distribution.

Today [17 January] 50 trucks entered via Kerem Shalom, but we need hundreds of trucks. The needs are growing exponentially and the pipeline for humanitarian supplies is very narrow. Even those, such as Palestinian Authority employees, who were not dependent [on UNRWA assistance], have become dependent. There is nothing on the market and there is no cash.

Aid – emergency supplies, food and medical – is coming in through Rafah.

Food distribution is operating at almost full capacity – it is interrupted in certain places day to day when the place becomes the scene of fighting. We do all we can on a daily basis that is within the margins of safety for our staff to keep the operations running.

Seven of 10 food distribution centres are fully operational and 16 out of 20 health centres are fully operational.

UNRWA health staff are volunteering in the Ministry of Health hospitals and on ambulances teams – it’s all hands on deck here!

IRIN: If the border crossings are not opened consistently to bring in goods, will this increase demands on UNRWA?

JG: We cannot contemplate that the crossings will remain closed; there must be a better future. The ordinary people here during this siege have paid the price of this conflict and this operation. For them, their singular priority is access to restore dignity to their existence.

The closures have driven thousands into aid dependency against their will – that has to end. A solution that prioritises the needs of the ordinary people must be found.

IRIN: You have headed UNRWA’s operations in Gaza since January 2006, before Hamas won elections to govern the enclave. Will Israel’s military operation bring peace and stability to the region?

JG: No – it is counter-productive to that objective. The scale of death and destruction is most definitely counter-productive. Throughout this conflict so many experts and global leaders have highlighted there is no military solution to this conflict – an effective political solution is needed.

Now there are additional problems: so many people have been killed and [there has been widespread] destruction of infrastructure. There is no finance ministry or foreign affairs ministry. The American School, the presidential compound and the presidential residences have been destroyed – in addition to the massive destruction of housing. It will be very costly to restore Gaza. This money should have been invested in development not reconstruction.

IRIN: What do you say about Israel’s unilateral ceasefire?

JG: Today [18 January] is a better day than yesterday and we hope there will continue to be positive developments every day until we can restore a dignified existence for the people in Gaza.

es/ar/ed

No safe place in Gaza

UNRWA said that two children who had taken refuge in its school in Bet Lahiya, north of Jabaliya in the Gaza Strip, were killed by Israeli shells on 17 January.

“There is no safe place in Gaza. We carry on distributing food wherever we can in coordination with the IDF [Israeli Defense Forces],” UNRWA spokesperson Chris Gunness told IRIN on 17 January, hours after the attack on the school. On 15 January a UNRWA warehouse in Gaza City burned down completely after a direct hit from the Israeli army.

The Israel defence ministry said its army retaliated after militants opened fire from there.

A warehouse belonging to the Palestinian Red Crescent Society was also shelled by the Israelis on 15 January and was reduced to ashes, according to a 17 January update on Gaza by the ICRC. The ICRC said that “very substantial stocks of relief goods were destroyed” in the fire.

UNRWA distributes food to some 750,000 Palestinian refugees in Gaza. Since Operation Cast Lead began, an estimated 50,000 Gaza residents have taken up refuge in UNRWA schools and compounds.

Gunness has said that all those who have taken up refuge in the schools will be given food regardless of whether they are on UNRWA list or not.

Bombing hospitals & schools – what is in Israeli politicians minds?

While the world’s attention turns toward the Obama inauguration, despite or because of severe censure at the UN Israel continues to punish collectively the hapless citizens and humanitarian workers in Gaza.

Three hospitals are bombed now – such flagrant violations of the Geneva Convention were not, as far as I know even committed by Stalin.

The medical director of al-Quds hospital has not wept since he helped evacuate several hundred people from the blazing Palestinian Red Crescent (PRC) compound on Thursday night, but he says: “My heart is crying.”

He says he is standing next to the smouldering remains of a pharmacy filled with bandages, medicines and other medical supplies, describing the chaos as intensive care patients and premature babies were wheeled onto the street.

The compound was hit twice during heavy fighting between Israeli forces and Hamas militants in the Tel al-Hawa district in the west of Gaza City.

Patients were seen struggling to get out of their hospital beds

In the first incident, in the morning, the administrative building next to the hospital was hit and burst into flames. Patients were evacuated “in panic” to the ground floor, the PRC said.

At about 2200 (2000 GMT), a second building housing offices and a lecture theatre was hit. Fire spread to the roof of the hospital itself, the PRC said.

Staff from the hospital say they do not know exactly what hit the building, but the UN has said Israeli tank shells struck three hospitals, including al-Quds, in Thursday’s fighting.

A UN compound and a building housing journalists were also hit.

5 schools which have been acting as shelters for thousands of people have been targeted now.

John Ging, UNRWA operations chief in the Gaza Strip told a news conference held at a school his organization runs in northern Gaza Strip that the world “should consider the international law and Geneva Fourth Convention.”

The school, located in the northern Gaza Strip town of Beit Lahia, was shelled by Israeli army tanks earlier on Saturday, killing two children and wounded 14 others, including a woman in critical conditions.

Israel has targeted five UNRWA schools during the military offensive on the Gaza Strip, killing more than 60 civilians, who took refuge to 36 schools run by UNRWA allover the Gaza Strip after they fled their homes.

“Is the killing of civilians, mainly children (who took refuge) into these schools a crime of war or not?” asked Ging as he was speaking to reporters, adding “Civilians, mainly women and children who are paying the price of this war.”

He added “today two children were killed in this school, and their mother’s limps were cutoff. 14 civilians suffered from awful wounds, the world has to move and protect the Palestinians in the Gaza Strip.”

Hundreds of houses were bombarded or shelled by the Israeli army air and ground forces, where 36 thousand Palestinians became homeless after their houses were either destroyed or they fled it due to the Israeli army incursions.

“There is no safe place in Gaza, even my house. Everyone is a subject to the shelling. Those people who are sheltering into these schools are normal people who asked protection and took refuge to these schools.”

He added as he was referring to the Israeli shells “these shells are killing civilians and those who fired these shells should be taken to courts and must be sued by the law.”

Israeli hasbara in The Australian points to why these civilian facilities are targeted. Whilst confabulating phantom resistance in the civilian targets, Israel’s demented terroristic aim is revealed.

Israel was making sure the organisation understood that Hamas had been soundly defeated.

This is Stage Three of Operation Cast Lead, where the Israeli political oligarchy think that they can terrorise and crush their uppity Gazan slaves so completely they will not think of rebelling again. Thus does the fascist mindset miss the mark when assessing the reactions of its victims. Analysis of liberation and resistance movements everywhere shows us that regimes which attempt to defeat populations through terror, as the Israelis are doing by gratuitously targeting civilian infrastructure and homes will inevitably backfire and harden resistance further.

Thus are the avaricious Israeli politicians blinded by the phallic power of their military might – and their vile, inhuman tactics will rebound on them. providing yet another career opportunity to demonise whoever maybe the next leaders and population of an even more radicalised Gaza.

Stop the War on Gaza Protests in Australia

Stop the War on Gaza Sydney Protest

Speakers at the major Sydney protest against Israel’s war against the people of Gaza will include:

  • John Pilger, renowned author and documentary film maker
  • Antony Loewenstein, author of My Israel Question
  • Greens MP Sylvia Hale
  • Dr Ghassan Achi
  • Hamdi Alqudsi, Palestinian activist
  • Rihab Charida, Palestinian activist
Women in Black stop the war on Gaza Canberra

CANBERRA PROTEST FEBRUARY 3

Women in Black

We welcome you to stand with us, regularly or occasionally,
for an hour or even 10 minutes, any Friday, 1-2pm in Petrie Plaza.

We will also be at Parliament House (Melbourne Ave entry) for the start of Parliament on 3rd Feb 7.30-8.30am

RECENT PROTESTS

Hundreds of protesters picked Julia Gillard’s office at Werribee in Melbourne’s south-west on Friday.

One of the speakers at the rally, Mohamad Tabiaat, told AAP that Hamas militants were only fighting against Israel’s blockade that prevented essential goods getting to Gaza residents.

“Israel are being hit by small missiles that are a response to the blockade that is killing the people slowly as they are without medicine, water, electricity and other essentials to life,” he said.

“They should absolutely live in peace.

“We live in and are proud to be Australian, but Australia is supposed to be a fair country and are silent to what’s happening.

“We are here representing that silent voice.”

Foreign Minister Stephen Smith says the bombing of the UN headquarters in Gaza highlights the urgent need for an immediate ceasefire between Hamas and Israel.

Israel and Hamas are trying to negotiate a ceasefire in Egypt to the conflict, that has cost more than 1,000 mostly Palestinian lives.

The UN agency for Palestinian refugees suspended operations inside Gaza after its compound was hit by Israeli shells.

Mr Smith said any damage, whether deliberate or not, to a UN facility was both disturbing and regrettable.

“I think more generally it makes the point that whether it’s a UN building which is damaged, whether it is civilians who are injured or killed and whether those civilians are in Gaza or Israel, it underlines the point yet again that what we require here is an immediate ceasefire, an immediate implementation of this UN Security Council resolution…” he told reporters on Friday.

“We continue to urge all the parties to bring this resolution into practical effect.”

Israel Prime Minister Ehud Olmert had apologised for the damage to the UN compound, which was appropriate, Mr Smith said.

The Australian Greens say Prime Minister Kevin Rudd should call in the Israeli ambassador to express Australia’s horror at the bombing of the UN compound in Gaza.

Greens leader Bob Brown said the attack should cause the federal government to rethink its stance on the conflict.

“It is time the prime minister took decisive diplomatic action,” Senator Brown said in a statement.

“He should start by calling in the Israeli ambassador to express the Australian people’s horror at what is happening in Gaza.”

Senator Brown said Israeli human rights organisations, the UN and the Foreign Press Association had all expressed outrage at the ongoing conflict, which has resulted in more than 1,000 Palestinian deaths.

“Yet there has been no condemnation of the Israeli military’s actions by the Rudd government,” he said.

“Australia needs to be part of global diplomatic efforts to get the Israeli government to stop this sickening violence.”

5000 Years of History in the Middle East

This is an excellent animation which illustrates the fallacy of Zionist claims to Israel’s current terrortory.

There’s a new book out challenging the fallacious Zionist narrative of Israel.

What if the Palestinian Arabs who have lived for decades under the heel of the modern Israeli state are in fact descended from the very same “children of Israel” described in the Old Testament?

And what if most modern Israelis aren’t descended from the ancient Israelites at all, but are actually a mix of Europeans, North Africans and others who didn’t “return” to the scrap of land we now call Israel and establish a new state following the attempt to exterminate them during World War II, but came in and forcefully displaced people whose ancestors had lived there for millennia?

What if the entire tale of the Jewish Diaspora — the story recounted at Passover tables by Jews around the world every year detailing the ancient Jews’ exile from Judea, the years spent wandering through the desert, their escape from the Pharaoh’s clutches — is all wrong?

That’s the explosive thesis of When and How Was the Jewish People Invented?, a book by Tel Aviv University scholar Shlomo Zand (or Sand) that sent shockwaves across Israeli society when it was published last year. After 19 weeks on the Israeli best-seller list, the book is being translated into a dozen languages and will be published in the United States this year by Verso.

….

Zand’s central argument is that the Romans didn’t expel whole nations from their territories. Zand estimates that perhaps 10,000 ancient Judeans were vanquished during the Roman wars, and the remaining inhabitants of ancient Judea remained, converting to Islam and assimilating with their conquerors when Arabs subjugated the area. They became the progenitors of today’s Palestinian Arabs, many of whom now live as refugees who were exiled from their homeland during the 20th century.

This narrative has huge significance in terms of Israel’s national identity. If Judaism is a religion, rather than “a people” descended from a dispersed nation, then it brings into question the central justification for the state of Israel remaining a “Jewish state.”

And that brings us to Zand’s second assertion. He argues that the story of the Jewish nation — the transformation of the Jewish people from a group with a shared cultural identity and religious faith into a vanquished “people” — was a relatively recent invention, hatched in the 19th century by Zionist scholars and advanced by the Israeli academic establishment. It was, argues Zand, an intellectual conspiracy of sorts. Segev says, “It’s all fiction and myth that served as an excuse for the establishment of the State of Israel.”

The book has very important ramifications for the development of a future one state solution.

But the idea of a single, binational state has more recently been marginalized — dismissed as an attempt to destroy Israel literally and physically, rather than as an ethnic and religious-based political entity with a population of second-class Arab citizens and the legacy of responsibility for world’s longest-standing refugee population.

A logical conclusion of Zand’s work exposing Israel’s founding mythology may be the restoration of the idea of a one-state solution to a legitimate place in the debate over this contentious region. After all, while it muddies the waters in one sense — raising ancient, biblical questions about just who the “children of Israel” really are — in another sense, it hints at the commonalities that exist between Israeli Jews and Palestinian Arabs. Both groups lay claim to the same crust of earth, both have faced historic repression and displacement and both hold dear the idea that they should have a “right of return.”

And if both groups in fact share common biblical ties, then it begs the question of why the entirety of what was Palestine under the British mandate should remain a refuge for people of one religion instead of being a country in which Jews and Arabs are guaranteed equal protection — equal protection under the laws of a state whose legitimacy would never again be open to question.

An Eyeful of Gaza

Much of the world has watched the awesome Gaza fireworks display – some with dismay, anguish and empathy for dispossessed, historically scape-goated, marginalised indigenes, others cheering – the gungho conservopundits and western armchair generals congratulating Israelis on their kill score, “glass ’em all”, these genocidalists cheer, it’s “islamofascism” that is the enemy and Israel is doing our dirty work for us, helping “God” sort ’em out. Keeping the natives in their place, the White Man’s Burden.

None of these latter sociopaths I’ve encountered seem to know or care Palestinians aren’t homogeneously Muslim, that a significant proportion are Christian, and even if they do know 56% of the Gazan population are children, as far as they are concerned, they are *all* ‘terrorist’ to be consigned for extermination, this killing season or the next.

There is news of a truce, is this half time or full time? has the regional hegemon achieved its ‘goals’ or is this, as in Lebanon last, a pause for breath before the blooding of Israel’s hungry young continues with a finale of chest-beating and cluster bombs?

From afar, I wait, wondering if, despite their great games, world leaders can unite truly for once to enforce intelligent just solutions, not abandon the courageous, suffering Palestinian people by ignoring their human rights, eroding the protections of international law for us all along with our chances for a more peaceful planet.

A conversation I had several days ago with a wonderful Palestinian writer caught in the Gaza people trap woven by Israel’s apartheid ‘entitled’ expansionism captured the macabre, unbearable Israeli machina ex deux as no other. I cannot reread this without crying out at the skies.

On Twitter, eyes blurred from days of divining hasbara and truth I asked

why can’t israel just declare 67 borders or 1 big state right now & stop all this idiocy – it’s a perfect opportunity fr real reconciliation 10:00 AM Jan 8th from TweetDeck

From Rafah, that little stripe at the bottom of Gaza, Palestine that everyone forgets, Rafahkid replied:

Israel can’t survive without the resources on Palestinian land. This is why there is no peace. If Palestine was allowed Israel would choke. 11:54 PM Jan 7th from twhirl

#Gaza truth. Israel has to destroy Palestine if it is to survive. The world has chosen Israel. Excuse us while we die without surrender. 11:56 PM Jan 7th from twhirl

Palestine will accept Israel. Israel can never accept Palestine. If we gave up ROR and had ’67 borders then Israel would cease to be viable. 11:55 PM Jan 7th from twhirl

Binational state? Not a chance because Israel has to be Jewish. Two states? Not a chance because Palestine has the resources. So, we die. 11:57 PM Jan 7th from twhirl

wouldn’t mind if people acknowledged these truths but instead they pretend it’s the fault of Palestinian people…and call Hamas terrorists. 12:05 AM Jan 8th from twhirl

Hello Israel. We actually want peace but your masters are lying to u. Please visit #Gaza yourselves (now is not a good time) and you will see 12:06 AM Jan 8th from twhirl