GAZA, OF COURSE—It’s been over four months since
Israel launched its military operation in Gaza in response to the 7 October attacks
by Hamas militias on Israeli military encampments and settler kibbutzim bordering
the Palestinian enclave. Approximately 1200 Israelis were killed and around 230
taken prisoner. Thus far, Israel’s retaliatory actions during its “Operation
Iron Swords” have killed nearly 30,000 Gazans and wounded or injured nearly
70,000. Currently, nearly 80% of Gaza’s 2.3 million inhabitants are displaced,
with over one million forced to flee into southern Gaza, making a humanitarian
catastrophe there all but inevitable. Israel’s Prime Minister Netanyahu vows he
will send his IDF (Israel Defense Forces) into the overcrowded city of Rafah,
which borders Egypt, if the hostages were not released by 10 March, the start of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.
It is difficult not to see Israel’s actions over the
last four months as anything other than ethnic cleansing, even rising to the level of
what many believe is a genocide. Bombing and launching ground attacks into
densely populated Rafah is sure to increase the death toll by multiples. Where
do the Gazans go? They can’t return to their homes in the north—over half the
buildings in the Palestinian enclave have been turned to rubble. During Israeli’s bombing
campaign it’s estimated that between 144,000 and 175,000 buildings in the Gaza Strip have been destroyed,
including hospitals, clinics, residential neighbourhoods, schools, the university, mosques,
churches, businesses, civic buildings, key infrastructure, even farmland.
Their
homes are gone. Israel has succeeded in making half of Gaza inhabitable and is
apparently hell bent on making the remaining part equally unlivable. The Israeli goal is clear: to permanently remove
Palestinians from their homeland once and for all, and to create such a
humanitarian crisis in southern Gaza that Egypt will be forced to relent and
take in the bulk of Palestinians crammed against its border. There is some
evidence to suggest that Egypt is preparing for
such an eventuality. They have been constructing a walled enclosure near the border, presumably to corral and detain the fleeing
Gazan population. There are over two million Palestinians. If Israel
accomplishes its goal of ethnic cleansing Gaza, the Egyptian refugee camp will
be one of the largest in the world, and once removed, they will never be allowed to return.
RECALL that, following the
International Court of Justice’s (ICJ) preliminary finding on 26 January that
Israel may be committing the war crime of genocide, the country was given one
month to present to the court how (or whether) it is complying
with six court injunctions also issued at that
time. That deadline comes soon.
IT MAY NOT come soon enough
because yesterday the United States, for the third time since the bombardment
of Gaza began in October last year, has vetoed in the United Nations Security
Council (SC) an Algerian motion demanding an immediate ceasefire. The American
rationale for its unconscionable stance was that an immediate ceasefire would
jeopardize sensitive hostage exchange negotiations being conducted with Hamas.
The vote in the SC was fifteen to two with the U.S. casting its veto and poodle
Britain abstaining. (There are five permanent members of the Security Council along with 10
temporary member nations. The permanent members [U.S., Britain, France Russia,
and China each has a veto. Temporary members do not. Ed.]
There are reports that Israel has
increased its military presence along Lebanon’s border with fears the IDF may
launch a major operation against Hezbollah militias possibly sparking a wider,
regional conflict. As for Gaza, the Israeli military appears poised to launch
its invasion of Rafah, the only city of any size remaining in the enclave, now swollen
by nearly one million refugees from the south. There is a growing humanitarian
crisis in Gaza with critical shortages of food and potable water. There are still around 300,000 Palestinians still in northern Gaza, who are in dire straits. Disease is a
growing threat, along with starvation. Yet the United States, with its toady
entourage of vassal Western states (Canada, proud cheerleader for American
imperialism, is shamefully included) have suspended funding for UNRWA (United Nations Relief and Works Agency) because
Israel claims that 12 members out of agency’s the 12,000-strong membership were
implicated in the 7 October attacks. Proof of their guilt has not been made
public, and it should be noted the accusation came a day after the
International Court of Justice’s 26 January interim ruling, with some commentators suggesting the revelation
was meant to distract attention away from the ICJ’s interim ruling. The accused UNRWA
staff were dismissed, and the agency is investigating. BUT, taking funding
from the major relief organization in Gaza responsible for ensuring the
enclave’s food and medical supplies is completely unacceptable and, in
my opinion, enabling a war crime, when the whole Palestinian population is made
to suffer because of these yet-to-be-proved allegations. Even if some
members of the relief agency were involved with the Hamas militants on 7
October, does that mean people are meant to starve or die from wont of needed
medication if UNRWA cannot do its job? The world is watching what may someday
be recorded in history books as a twenty-first century genocide and what, at the very least, is ethnic cleansing. Shame on
us. [Incidentally, Brazil has recalled its ambassador to Israel, after a diplomatic row sparked by President Lula's comments likening the war against Hamas militants in Gaza to the Nazi genocide during WWII. Ed.]*
JULIAN ASSANGE—Wednesday was the final day of in
Assange’s appeal case against extradition to the United States on “espionage”
charges. If the two High Court judges rule against Julian, he could be
sent to the U.S. in a matter of days to stand trial and if he is found guilty
could be sentenced to 175 years in prison. We will know shortly when the judges
make their ruling. His ‘guilt’ was publishing (he was acting in his role as publisher
of WikiLeaks), in 2010, the Afghan War logs
and the horrific Iraqi “Collateral Damage” video the American government
says was harmful to the security of the United States. More to the point, the
Wikileaks document dump of leaked government files revealed lies, malfeasance
and war crimes on the part of the American government its military. It was a deeply
embarrassing exposé that garnered for the courageous publisher the eternal
enmity of the American “deep state”. Assange is
an Australian citizen. Therefore, how can he be charged with espionage by
the United States, a country he’d only visited on two previous occasions? He could even be
charged with treason (which comes with the potential death penalty) if
the United States decides to add further charges once he is on U.S. soil. Julian
has been confined for over ten years—first, in 2012, when he sought asylum in
the Ecuadorian embassy in London until 2019 when he was forcibly removed and
sent to Belmarsh maximum security prison where he has been confined ever since.
His health is poor; his mental state fragile. He may not survive extradition
to the United States. He is married with two children he has not seen as a free
man. His is a personal tale of endurance against incredible odds. If Assange is
extradited and forced to stand trial in the United States, it will be another
blow for him, perhaps a fatal one. It will also be a blow, perhaps fatal as well, for press freedoms world-wide.
If the U.S. is successful in committing
Assange to prison for doing his job as a publisher, by publishing information patently beneficial for the public to know—if they get away
with murder—killing in America the First Amendment
rights of a free press and perhaps Julian himself, soon other countries will mimic
the Americans with harsher laws on whistleblowers and the journalists who publish their secrets. Then where will we be?
UKRAINE ON THE BRAIN—There has been a recent shakeup
at the top of the Ukraine military with General Zaluzhny being replaced by Colonel-General
Olevsandr Syrinskyi after a day or two of drama in which Zaluzhny appeared to
defy President Zelensky, refusing to step down. It was a definite uh-oh
moment for Mr. Z, I’m sure. But the new commander of Ukraine’s armed forces,
Syrinskyi (aka “Butcher”, a moniker he was given by his troops who view him as
someone who sends his men into meat grinders a bit too readily), took the job just in time to
accept responsibility for the Ukrainian retreat from the heavily fortified city
of Avdeevka. Incidentally, there are reports that units of the Neo-Nazi Azov Battalion
refused to engage with the Russians in the final battle there. It may have been
a ploy by Zelensky and Syrinskyi to remove elements in the military, like the
Azovs, that pose a threat to the president and his new commander by sending
them on a one-way trip to the battle zone. Former military chief Zaluzhny was
generally regarded positively by the soldiers under his command, including hard
right elements.
IN THE PHOTO, President Zelensky looks even more shrimp-like than usual standing beside General Zaluzhny. The fired Ukrainian military chief, for his part, looks like he could pop the president's head like a cork if he ever got him in a
headlock. Either that or practice his defenestration skills on the hapless Zelensky.
By the way, Zaluzhny looks waaay too happy in the photo. It’s like he’s
already measuring curtains for the presidential suite and picking out office
furniture. Point is, Zaluzhny may be a player in future Ukrainian politics as a possible successor to Zelensky. In
any case, it may be time for the presidential family to take that ski holiday in
Switzerland they've been planning. Just sayin’.
Avdeevka was the fortress city from
which Ukrainian troops shelled the Donbass city of Donetsk for years. The
question now is whether Russia will advance west to the Dnieper River and
beyond. Dmitry Medvedev, former Russian president and
current deputy head of Russia’s National Security Council, and a potential
successor to President Putin, stated recently on social media that Odessa and
Kiev have “Russian roots” and may be slated for conquest as Russian forces roll up a weakened and demoralized Ukrainian army. The longer the conflict
continues, the greater the risk for Ukraine becoming a dysfunctional, land-locked, agrarian rump
state.
THE EU, after much dicking around,
has locked itself into a multi-year, multi-billion-dollar arrangement with
Ukraine to support its civilian and military structure. Also, there is a potential
fifty-to-sixty-billion-dollar Ukraine aid package currently stalled in the U.S.
House of Representatives, possibly fueling further bloodshed and loss of life. F-16s
fighter jets are being prepped and Ukrainian pilots trained in NATO countries
to fly them. These planes can carry nuclear gravity bombs. Question: Where will
these planes take off from? From inside Ukraine? From a NATO country? Dimitry Medvedev writes that such a move is a dangerous escalation
which could have catastrophic consequences. We would do well to listen, and to
demand that our governments stop funding Ukraine’s futile war efforts before
it’s too late. 1
Canadian PM Trudeau is in Kiev this weekend to attend a ceremony marking the start of the third year in the Russia-Ukraine conflict. He also inked a "security assistance" deal with Kiev to the tune of three-billion loonies. Pouring money down the rat-hole of Ukraine might make the PM puff out his chest with pride but it merely prolongs the inevitable and dooms more young Ukrainians to the deaths. Stop joining circle jerks, Mr. Trudeau, and demand peace negotiations instead!
FARMER PROTESTS
CONTINUE—In the
past few months there have been farmer protests in many European countries. The
reasons vary from country to country, but green policies promoted by the EU parliament
in Brussels have drawn the ire of farmer groups and unions. With upcoming EU elections
this year and national elections in several countries, politicians are wary of
a “greenlash” (“green backlash”) from the continent’s farming sectors. For example,
the controversial pesticides reduction initiative formulated by Brussels has
been put on hold because of the backlash from farmer organizations who argue
their crops will be damaged and harvests made smaller. As mentioned in an earlier post, the green initiative in the Netherlands to cut
nitrogen emissions by increasing taxes on fertilizer use and animal husbandry
operations, led to the creation of a pro-farmers’ party in the country’s
senate.
“While exact grievances vary by
country, Europe’s farmers broadly say they are being pounded by a storm of
converging pressures: a surge in production costs and drop in global food prices; cheap agricultural
imports that have flooded their markets, namely from Ukraine; and now also a mix of national and
European Union agricultural regulations targeting the farmers’ subsidies and
use of pesticide and fertilizer.” (Foreign Policy)
BERLIN, JANUARY 2024 |
DUMFUK 101—This pic is a spit of land, part of the Kinmen islands, which is visible from the port city of Xiamen in eastern China, on the Chinese side of the Taiwan Strait. It is also a place where American troops have been conducting military "exercises". The Kinmens are less than 10km from mainland China and were the setting for battles between the communist forces of Mao Zedong and the nationalist army of Chaing Kai-shek in 1949 Chinese Civil War. Both sides claim the tiny island group. It is the height of hubris to constantly 'poke the bear' and assume nothing will happen. But the decrepit leadership and disreputable foreign policy bureaucracy in Washington may get their wish—a war with China—but it may be one they weren't expecting.
What a clown show!
Cheers, Jake.______________________________________
* On the 21 February at the ICJ, hearings began on another motion, this one filed in 2022, which seeks clarification on the legality of Israel’s occupation of Gaza and the West Bank since the 1967 war. This could have huge significance for international law if the ICJ in the months and perhaps years to come, rules that Israel is illegally occupying Palestinian lands, which would entail an adjustment of Israel’s borders back to pre-1967 borders. Of course, this would be a non-starter for Israel. It would never voluntarily withdraw from occupied Palestinian lands. But, in the eyes of the world, Israel would be seen as a breaker of international law and a pariah state.
This comes with consequences.
“The U.N. General Assembly passed a resolution in December 2022 with 87 states voting to seek the ICJ's non-binding opinion on the legality of Israel's occupation since 1967. Some 26 members—including Israel and the U.S.—voted against the resolution while 53 abstained.”
The wheels of justice grind ever-slowly.
1. Canada, the ever-ready toady,
plans to send the Czech Republic some thirty-million
dollars to help it locate and ship “up to” 800,000 artillery shells to
Ukraine that are scattered around Europe’s armories. Hope they find them soon.
Russia produces up to two-million shells per year and has been doing so for
some time.