#israel #palestine #lebanon : #war / #armssales / #ngo / #hrw
„The head of Human Rights Watch (HRW) said on Nov 8 that states supplying weapons to Israel as it pursues conflicts in Gaza and Lebanon, despite evidence of violations of international law, are empowering belligerents elsewhere.
Ms Tirana Hassan, HRW’s executive director, said that countries like the United States, Germany and Britain could influence Israel’s actions and should do so by ending arms sales.“
Current phase of the conflict a year old and little sign of an end
October 2024
There has been an exchange of letters in the Salisbury Journal concerning the conflict in the Middle East. Two letters have focused on the issue of Britain continuing to supply arms to Israel. Although a limited embargo is in place, we still for example supply components for the F35. These aircraft are being used to deadly effect in both Gaza and Lebanon. Over 42,000 are dead in Gaza and more than 2,000 in Lebanon.
The word ‘genocide’ has been used to describe Israel’s action in Gaza and South Africa has launched an action in the International Criminal Court. The allegations make grim reading. There are huge numbers of forced evacuations. A significant part of the population is being forcibly moved. The death toll, particularly among women and children, is rising. Medical aid is failing to reach the population. Tens of thousands are living in make-shift accommodation (the link provides a more detailed picture). In the past day or two, evidence has been put forward to the effect that the starvation of those remaining in north Gaza might be an act of deliberate policy. This is said to be the ‘Generals’ Plan’.
Are these actions genocidal? The problem for the ICJ will be the question of intent. Is the destruction however terrible, a justifiable answer to the atrocious actions of Hamas most particularly on October 7th last year? Is Israel justified in going after the terrorist organisations who continually lob salvos of rockets into their territory? Or is it way over the top and disproportionate? One of the problems the Israelis have made for themselves is not allowing foreign journalists or observers into the area. Last month, the offices of al Jazeera were closed down and done so aggressively. Israel justifies the destruction of buildings, including schools and hospitals. It claims these buildings are used by Hamas to fire rockets into Israel and to prepare for terrorist activities. It claims that the deaths are because Hamas are using the population as ‘human shields’. Very little evidence is provided to justify these claims. One might expect that a year into this conflict, we would see evidence of these alleged activities, evidence that outside observers could verify. Entire buildings have been demolished with massive 2000 pound ‘dumb’ bombs because it is alleged Hamas operatives are present within them.
One of the writers to the Salisbury Journal asserts that the Hamas Covenant of 1988 calls for the obliteration of Israel. A subsequent charter in 2017 distinguishes between Jews and Zionists confining its more violent actions towards the latter. He failed to mention the statement by the Israeli Minister Amichae Eliyahu suggesting a nuclear bomb be dropped on Gaza. Bezalel Smotrich suggested recently that it would be ‘justified and moral’ to starve the population of Gaza. Both have been disavowed. Israeli minister Ben Gvir has said that his right to move around the West bank is superior to freedom of movement for Palestinians. The point being that aggressive and bloodthirsty statements have been made by both parties.
It is largely forgotten that Netanyahu supported Hamas for a period of several years as a means to weaken the PLO. And this is close to the heart of the problem: the desire for a Palestinian state and Israel’s refusal to countenance this. The desire for a greater Israel and the violent actions by the Israelis (misleadingly called settlers) on the West bank are a key element in the conflict. Another misunderstanding is to claim that the violent actions of October 7th were the start of the current hostilities. The roots go back to 1948 nakba at least and elements can be traced back to the Balfour Agreement and further back still. October 7th is but the latest manifestation of long term hatreds.
What makes the conflict hard to unpick is that in effect there are two wars going on. Firstly, that between Israel and Palestine and the former’s resolute stance not to allow a two state solution. Secondly, Iran’s role. This has history going back to the Shah. They have supported Hezbollah, Hamas and the Houthis in Yemen as proxies to attack Israel. But the seat of their aggression is again the Palestinian state and a belief that Israel has usurped Arab lands.
A key feature is the imbalance of power. Israel, with a largely unquestioning US support, is the regional superpower. It can project its power over the region. It can do this both militarily and with superior intelligence. This intelligence was seen with the spate of assassinations of Hezbollah leaders in Lebanon recently. None of the other states can match this. The US is sending manpower and more equipment this week. This makes it unwilling to compromise its position simply because it doesn’t need to. The world is waiting for Israel to respond to the rocket attacks from Iran of a few weeks ago. Israel has the capacity to inflict real damage on Iran’s military infrastructure. Iran by contrast, cannot do this. Despite the huge number of missiles hurled at Israel, the damage was minimal.
One major shift is the international attitude towards Israel. The world was shocked by the horrific attack on October 7th. The ensuing destruction of huge chunks of Gaza and the appalling death toll and squalor has seen sympathy for Israel drain away. Western media reporting was largely pro Israel arising partly from a fear of being labelled ‘antiSemitic’ for any criticisms. It has become more balanced and robust as time has gone by. Occasionally, commentators have mentioned the apartheid policy in the West bank. Amnesty, Human Rights Watch and B’Tselem have all published detailed reports on this and Israel has accused them of being anti-Israel. Reporting is hampered by a lack of access to the conflict zones. Claims and counter claims cannot be independently checked.
Conclusions
Should the UK stop sending arms to Israel? From the purely practical point of view, doing so will make little difference. We are a small supplier anyway and so ceasing supplies will not stop or help resolve the conflict. The political position is rather different. The UK is a member of the Security Council and still an influential force around the world. Other countries like Spain, Canada, Belgium, the Netherlands and Italy have stopped their supplies. The moral case is rather more compelling. Are we content to see the destruction of a vast swathe of both Gaza and increasingly Lebanon? Are we content to see thousands of children die or receive terrible wounds. Can we stand by and accept the use of starvation as a weapon of war? The answer should be ‘no’. If genocide is pronounced, the UK will be obliged to stop all weapons sales.
The imbalance of power is a major factor in the continuation of this conflict and we are contributing to this. We also help Israel with overflights from Cyprus. Wars have to end sometime. Few have mentioned the economic cost of this conflict bearing mind Israel’s population is around 9.5 million 75% of whom are Jews. How long can they sustain this even allowing for massive US aid?
Yesterday’s killing of Yahya Sinwar (17 October), the leader of Hamas, has led the Americans and others to hope that this is some kind of ‘moment of justice’. They hope this is the opportunity for negotiations to begin. It is unlikely. Netanyahu is holding on in the hope that Donald Trump will win the election. Since the US is powerless to rein in Israel and Hamas and the other terrorist groups ignore them, the possibility of an outside force successfully engineering some kind of peace seems remote. Frequent efforts by Qatar came to nought.
An end
Wars end because exhaustion sets in. Another reason is the parties see no hope of gaining victory. Thirdly, the loss of treasure becomes too great to bear and a kind of armed truce takes place. The public may become tired and the initial euphoria turns to boredom or frustration. Unfortunately, in the case of this conflict, these factors which researchers* have identified in other conflicts, may not apply. As argued above, outside forces most particularly the USA, are the drivers here enabling Israel to continue for a long period. In many respects this is a proxy war both by USA and Iran. Israel’s losses are minimal and containable. But the greatest factor is the abiding hatred that seems to exist between the parties.
Being surrounded by enemies, some of whom are committed to its destruction, has a powerful effect on Israel. Nevertheless, it had agreed peace treaties with several countries such as Jordan and Egypt. The Abraham accords were also a positive step. It can be done. Trump’s ending of rapprochement with Iran was a backward step.
This stage of the conflict will come to some kind of an end, or should we say pause. The answer to the arms question is clear. Britain should suspend deliveries and use its diplomatic power to push for a two state solution. It would give Israel the security it needs and it would weaken the power and influence of the terrorist groups.
https://salisburyai.com/2024/10/19/the-middle-east-conflict/
Good news kids; the guys in charge are working hard on giving those of you who weren't old enough to experience the daily insanity phase of the War on Terror your very own MENA forever war with unclear objectives and no solutions on offer.
https://www.commondreams.org/news/us-troops-to-israel
"Journalist Séamus Malekafzali argued the U.S. deployment of troops and the THAAD system shows that "the Israelis are clearly planning something for Iran that is going to cause a retaliation they know their own systems are unable to take."
"U.S. troops being deployed to Israel in this matter is seismic," Malekafzali added. "The U.S. military is now inextricably involved in this war, directly, without any illusions of barriers. Netanyahu is as close as he has ever been to his ultimate wish: making the U.S. fight Iran on Israel's behalf."
Up until this point, I've largely shied away from the idea that we were looking at the opening phases of a region-wide MENA war that could metastasize into a full blown global conflict primarily because while the US is happily funding a genocide, it hasn't (openly) committed American troops to the conflict and no matter how aggressively Netanyahu has been lobbying the Biden administration to start a war with Iran on Israel's behalf, the IDF simply isn't capable of fighting that war on its own even with American weapons. This, right here, changes that calculus in a way that does not feel like an accident. By committing US personnel to Israeli defense at the exact same time Israel is gearing up to attack Iran (in retaliation or otherwise) we've now crossed a threshold where a US-led forever war in the Middle East is a very real possibility. I can't predict the future, but assuming we live long enough to write history books about this era of global meltdown, rising fascism, climate crisis, and resource wars, there is a very good chance you could be reading about this as the moment the die for World War III was cast. This is an absolutely bonkers idea and I emphatically reject the proposition that Biden is being led on a leash by Netanyahu and doesn't know what he's doing here; the Pentagon is fully aware of what happens if US troops get killed in an Iranian strike in the middle of a conflict Israel is dead set on prosecuting. It seems after forty plus years of manufacturing consent, our leaders and warpigs are finally ready to touch off the war with Iran they've wanted every single day since the revolution in 1979. And that's terrible news for Americans, and the world at large.
Protest in Paris against inaction on Gaza genocide
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rYqfSe_j8pE&t=1s
Thousands of people gathered in Paris to protest the lack of action from French and European leaders against Israel during more than a year of genocide in Gaza. The demonstrators condemn France’s continued arms shipments to Israel.
#usa #israel #palestine : #war / #gaza / #usgoverment / #armssales / #protest
„Key Senate Democrats have been pushing the Biden administration to end the Israel-Hamas war and lessen the humanitarian crisis, particularly in Gaza, where people's homes, hospitals, schools and entire Palestinian families are being wiped out.“
I generally loathe when people say flippant shit like "your tax dollars at work" because it reinforces the idea that government and monetary policy works like your savings account, and that's not true at all. Despite this however, there is simply no denying that the U.S. government is giving Israel money to buy American-made weapons, and those weapons are in turn being used to conduct war crimes and an ongoing genocide against Palestinian people in Gaza. To demonstrate that this is not at all hyperbole, check out this recent report reprinted by Truthout that examines twenty separate incidents where weapons supplied by the United States were used in the commission of likely war crimes by the Israeli military operating in Gaza since October 7th:
Israel Used US Arms to Commit at Least 20 Likely War Crimes Since October 7
"In order for an attack to be listed below, there must be sufficient evidence that it violated international law. In all of the following cases, it’s at least more likely than not that the attack was a violation. Many of them almost certainly were in breach of international law. This is a very high threshold — as former State Department lawyer Brian Finucane wrote in Foreign Affairs, “The law of war permits vast death and destruction. This is true even under restrictive interpretations of the law.”
Furthermore, in order for an attack to be listed, there must be concrete forensic evidence that a U.S.-supplied weapon was likely used to commit the probable violation of international law. Only the types of weapons the U.S. has reportedly delivered to Israel since October 7 are considered. This report draws from forensic investigations that have been conducted by reputable international organizations, civil society groups, media outlets, and independent analysts.
The following 20 incidents represent a small fraction of potential war crimes committed with U.S.-provided weapons."
In addition to the list of these twenty (likely) war crimes committed using U.S. weapons, the article also spends a little time discussing how the Biden Administration has typically worked to hide evidence of its arms shipments to Israel (a tactic apparently borrowed from Trump's similar method of hiding arms shipments to Saudi Arabia as it committed atrocities in Yemen,) and why how difficult Israel makes it to find evidence of its genocidal actions in Gaza means this list of twenty war crimes is unquestionably only a tiny fraction of the violations and atrocities being committed in Gaza, by Israel, with US-supplied weapons. This is by no means an easy read, but it is an extremely grim and eye-opening look at precisely what America is enabling Israel to do here.
"Fun" fact: So far, in #Germany, people only got fired for speaking up about #Gaza but not a single official has (publicly) resigned over the #genocide.
German arms sales to the #IDF have had a much higher (monetary) value than the #UK's. There might be a connection here, though we believe that it's mainly ideological and structural. #Staatsräson (= failed #democracy)
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cyvpm1049d9o
#MarkSmith #Resignation #ArmsSales #UnitedKingdom #WarCrimes #Palestine @palestine
Exporters seeking #ArmsSales licences are reportedly receiving messages from the Department for Business and Trade saying that applications are suspended pending the review.
#Whitehall sources insisted this did not represent a change in policy and might be administrative procedures.
#UK reportedly suspends arms export licence applications for #Israel ‘pending review’
https://www.theguardian.com/world/article/2024/aug/06/uk-arms-export-licence-applications-israel-review
The British state continues selling arms to the Zionist state:
"Senior Jewish Labour stakeholders took part in “frank and engaging” discussions with government ministers ahead of the decision to delay any move on suspending arms sales to Israel, Jewish News understands." https://www.jewishnews.co.uk/decision-to-delay-israel-arms-sale-ban-followed-talks-with-jewish-labour-stakeholders/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uEaKkKrNYu8
#Palestinian-British MP #LaylaMoran makes moving speech on #Gaza in parliament, #JeremyCorbyn mentions stopping #armssales to #ApartheifdIsrael
that time when Reagan cut off arms to Israel…
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/05/10/us/politics/biden-reagan-israel.html
Reagan was livid. He was shown pictures of dead children including a small baby with an arm blown off. He ordered aides to get Israel on the phone and then dressed Israeli PM Begin down sharply, 'It is a holocaust‘.