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jueves, 17 de octubre de 2024

War on Gaza: Israel is ‘erasing northern Gaza’, aid groups warn

Dozens of NGOs accuse the Israeli army of forcibly displacing, starving and exterminating 400,000 Palestinians under the guise of ‘evacuation orders’

By Sondos Asem

Published date: 16 October 2024

https://www.middleeasteye.net/news/israel-erasing-northern-gaza-aid-groups-warn

Dozens of aid groups have warned that “northern Gaza is being wiped off the map” by Israeli forces amid an ongoing campaign to ethnically cleanse the area of its Palestinian population.

Israel has ordered the remaining 400,000 Palestinians in the north to leave and imposed a renewed siege on civilians until they comply. 

On 6 October, Israel launched a major offensive on northern Gaza and ordered residents to flee south.

Israeli officers and analysts have suggested that the military is implementing a controversial plan, known as "the Generals' Plan", to ethnically cleanse northern Gaza or otherwise starve and kill those who remain behind.

This is despite Israel's claims that Hamas has already been defeated in the north.

Since the start of the operation, Israeli troops have killed at least 350 Palestinians, including 65 in the past 24 hours, according to the Palestinian health ministry.

A statement signed by 38 aid groups accuses the Israeli army of carrying out forced displacement under the guise of “evacuation” orders.

Organisations, including ActionAid, Action For Humanity, Oxfam, Medical Aid for Palestinians (Map), , Islamic Relief, Christian Aid and other British and international charities, warned against actions that exacerbate Israel's occupation of Palestinian territories.

The aid groups said Israel has largely ignored several legally binding orders from the International Court of Justice (ICJ) to halt or prevent actions against Palestinians that may amount to genocide.

These actions include “killing members of the group, causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group, deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part and imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group”. 

“There is no evidence that Israel has adhered to these orders, and the killing of Palestinians has only intensified,” the statement read, adding: “Civilians are being starved and bombed in their homes and their tents."

In July, the ICJ confirmed the illegality of Israel's occupation and annexation of Palestinian lands following the 1967 conflict.

“Any attempt to alter the territorial integrity of Gaza constitutes a blatant violation of international law,” they added.

The World Food Programme (WFP) announced last week that food security in northern Gaza is at risk, as no food aid has entered the area since 1 October.

Three hospitals, already overwhelmed by the conflict, are affected by ongoing military operations in the north.

On Wednesday, doctors at the Kamal Adwan, al-Awda and Indonesian hospitals announced their refusal to leave patients.

Mohammed Salha, acting director of al-Awda Hospital in northern Gaza, said: “The Israeli military has contacted us more than once to evacuate the hospital.

"The departments are full of wounded people and we are discharging even the wounded who have minor or moderate injuries because we do not have beds for them.

"I [told the Israeli military] clearly that we would not evacuate the hospital unless there are ambulances that can preserve the lives of the wounded people we have and reach another hospital that provides better service to the wounded.” 

Starvation as a weapon of war

Meanwhile, the London-based International Centre of Justice for Palestinians (ICJP) said on Monday that Israel’s operation in northern Gaza may amount to the war crime of using starvation as a weapon of war.

As the International Criminal Court (ICC) considers issuing arrest warrants for Israel’s prime minister and defence minister, the ICJP said that Israel's actions could constitute a breach of Article 6 of the Rome Statute.

The ICJP explained that the section stipulates: "Deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part’ constitutes genocide.

"Article 7(1)(b) on the crime against humanity of extermination prohibits ‘inflicting conditions of life calculated to bring about the destruction of part of a population’, including ‘the deprivation of access to food and medicine’.

"This is a total siege against Palestinian civilians. It is collective punishment on a coordinated scale that can only be described as systematic extermination and genocide of the Palestinian people,” the ICJP added.

On Wednesday, the Palestinian health ministry reported that Israeli forces have killed at least 42,409 Palestinians since 7 October 2023.

Over 60 percent of the victims are women and children, according to the official death toll, which has been recognised by the UN and international aid groups as credible. 

More than 99,153 have been wounded during the same period and at least 10,000 remain missing, likely buried under rubble.

"It is crucial for nations and institutions such as the ICC and the ICJ to take decisive action to halt this escalating brutality," Zaki Sarraf, a legal officer for the ICJP, told Middle East Eye.

"Israel’s vicious genocidal military action must be stopped, and empty rhetoric and unfulfilled promises regarding red lines and international law won't do anything to stop it." 

miércoles, 16 de octubre de 2024

Biden and Netanyahu’s endless war for US-Israeli supremacy

With escalating violence, the US and Israel impose a "new Middle East."

Aaron Maté

Oct 13, 2024

https://www.aaronmate.net/p/biden-and-netanyahus-endless-war

How Benjamin Netanyahu would respond to Hamas’ October 7th, 2023 armed operation against Israel was previewed more than two decades earlier, on another day of geopolitical infamy.

Asked on September 11th, 2001 how the attacks of that day would impact US-Israel relations, Netanyahu responded: “It’s very good.” He quickly corrected himself: “Well, not very good, but it will generate immediate sympathy.” 9/11, he explained, would “strengthen the bond between our two peoples, because we’ve experienced terror over so many decades, but the United States has now experienced a massive hemorrhaging of terror.” Years later, Netanyahu informed an Israeli audience that his prediction had borne out. “We are benefiting from one thing, and that is the attack on the Twin Towers and Pentagon, and the American struggle in Iraq,” he said.

Netanyahu understood that a one-day terror attack on the world’s top superpower would create the political space for an endless “war on terror” targeting every countervailing force to US-Israeli hegemony. His post-9/11 vision was confirmed when Gen. Wesley Clark disclosed that Donald Rumsfeld’s Pentagon had devised a list of seven Muslim states marked for regime change, beginning with Iraq and ending in Iran. “They wanted us to destabilize the Middle East, turn it upside down, make it under our control,” Clark said of the “war on terror’s” neoconservative architects.

For Netanyahu, the Oct. 7th maelstrom created an equally opportune moment. The Biden administration offered its unconditional support for an Israeli plan to turn Gaza from an occupied, besieged concentration camp into a decimated, rubble-strewn death camp. Meanwhile, as my colleague Max Blumenthal has newly demonstrated in the documentary “Atrocity Inc.”, Western establishment media lined up to parrot Israeli atrocity propaganda to manufacture consent for mass murder – all while covering up that the Israeli military enacted the “Hannibal Directive” on Oct. 7th and killed an unknown number of its own citizens to prevent them from being taken hostage.

As Avi Dichter, an Israeli cabinet member and former Shin Bet director, announced last November, Israel’s top goal in Gaza was to cause “Gaza Nakba 2023”, referencing the ethnic cleansing of hundreds of thousands of Palestinians during the period around Israel’s founding in May 1948. “That’s how it will end.”

Dichter was specifically referring to northern Gaza, where today, nearly one year later, Israel has ordered hundreds of thousands of people to flee, imposed a starvation siege by cutting off food, and is carrying out massacres against those who remain. According to Haaretz, senior Israeli defense officials believe that Israel is laying the groundwork for “the gradual annexation of large parts of the Gaza Strip.” In northern Gaza, that means putting “into effect the so-called surrender or starve plan of Maj. Gen. (ret.) Giora Eiland,” in which anyone “choosing to remain” is deemed to be a “legitimate military target” who “will face hunger” if they manage to survive Israeli fire.

Having left Gaza in ruins as part of the designed Nakba, the Israeli government and its US sponsor have expanded the aggression to their top regional deterrents, Hezbollah and Iran.  Repeating their playbook in Gaza, the White House has offered empty words about the need for a ceasefire in Lebanon all while facilitating an Israeli assault on civilian infrastructure.

As Israel ramped up its assault on Lebanon last month, US and Israeli officials informed Politico that senior White House aides had “privately told Israel that the U.S. would support its decision to ramp up military pressure against Hezbollah,”  — notwithstanding the fact that the administration was “publicly” urging Israel “to curtail its strikes.” After one year of mass murder, the Israelis certainly understand that the White House’s public calls for restraint can be duly ignored.

Two key US officials, the Israeli army veteran Amos Hochstein and veteran bureaucrat Brett McGurk, are said to be privately “describing Israel’s Lebanon operations as a history-defining moment — one that will reshape the Middle East for the better for years to come.” This includes in Lebanon, where the White House “is pushing to use Israel’s offensive against Hezbollah as an opening to end” Hezbollah’s “long-running dominance by electing a new Lebanese president,” the Wall Street Journal reports. According to the Journal, Hochstein has told Arab officials that “the weakening of Hezbollah by Israeli attacks should be viewed as an opportunity to potentially break a political impasse.”

In other words, the White House and Israel are using wanton violence as an “opportunity” to “weaken” a political movement that resists US-Israeli hegemony, thereby subverting millions of Lebanese voters who have inconveniently voted for Hezbollah and its allies in multiple parliamentary elections – even giving them a majority as recently as 2022.

In seizing this “moment,” McGurk and Hochstein are continuing along the path outlined by McGurk’s former colleague during the George W. Bush administration, Condoleezza Rice, who infamously described Israel’s 2006 assault on Lebanon – when it also terrorized civilians in a failed effort to wipe out Hezbollah – as “the birth pangs of a new Middle East.”

Determined to bring that “new Middle East” to life, the Biden administration has cast aside inconvenient warnings from two key regional states, Egypt and Qatar, who “view the American plan as unrealistic and even dangerous,” as it could “heighten the risk of internecine fighting” in a Lebanese society long ravaged by civil war, the Journal adds. As Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu made clear last week, the threat of dangerous violence is a welcome tactic. “You have an opportunity to save Lebanon before it falls into the abyss of a long war that will lead to destruction and suffering like we see in Gaza,” Netanyahu threatened the people of Lebanon, sounding identical to a Mafia don. “It doesn’t have to be that way.”

Not everyone is on board with this new phase of the post-9/11 project. According to Politico, the Biden-approved Israeli aggression in Lebanon has drawn “opposition from people inside the Pentagon, State Department and intelligence community who believed Israel’s move against” Hezbollah “could drag American forces into yet another Middle East conflict.”

Yet as their Bush administration predecessors made clear with two disastrous invasions, those ultimately deciding US policy in the Middle East today have no such qualms. In recent weeks, Biden has ordered the Pentagon to deploy “a bristling array of weaponry to the region” along with a “few thousand” more troops, resulting in a US military posture that has “essentially doubled its air power,” the New York Times reports. In a new sign that it is partnering with Israel’s planned strikes on Iran, the White House has ordered the deployment of an advanced US antimissile system to Israel along with about 100 American troops to operate it.

While the Pentagon insists that these forces are purely defensive, a former senior Biden official acknowledged their real purpose. “Right now, there’s enough posture in the region that if the Iranians step in, we can and would support Israel’s defense,” Dana Stroul, who stepped down last year as the Pentagon’s top official for Middle East policy, told the Times. “If you’re Israel and you’re a military planner, you want to do all that while things are in the region, not after it leaves.”

According to the Times, one current US official “said it was easier for Israel to go on offense when it knows that ‘Big Brother’ is nearby.” Or as Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin has reportedly described it, Israel is “playing with house money.” What Austin means, the Washington Post explains, is that Israel is “taking big shots at its adversaries, knowing that the United States, as Israel’s chief ally, would throw its military and diplomatic weight behind it.”

With endless “house money” from “Big Brother,” Israel sabotaged a recent opening for a Lebanon ceasefire. According to Lebanon’s foreign minister, Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah agreed to a 21-day fighting pause last month. But because Nasrallah refused to abandon his insistence on a permanent ceasefire in Gaza, Israel decided that he had to go. “What we found after over 11 months is that Nasrallah is persistent in tying himself — and the hijacked Lebanese state that he took over — to whatever’s going on in Gaza,” an Israeli official told NBC News. “...He declined messages to stop connecting himself to Gaza. ... This led us to understand that he cannot be part of the game anymore.”

In the new Middle East, those who disrupt the US-Israeli monopoly on violence simply cannot be part of the “game.”

Israel’s murder of Nasrallah, along with an unknown number of civilians in residential buildings above him, came right after the US and France publicly called for a ceasefire in Lebanon – and claimed that they had obtained Israel’s support. Yet as in Gaza, the Israeli leadership knows that Biden-endorsed ceasefires can be duly ignored. A senior Israeli official then dismissed the confusion as “an honest misunderstanding” between Israel and the US. Translated into the language of the new Middle East, this means that Israel and the US have a quiet understanding that Biden has no qualms with Netanyahu’s routine dishonesty and aggression, so long as it can advance joint US-Israeli supremacy.

martes, 15 de octubre de 2024

Report: Israel Plans to Strike Iran Before US Presidential Election

Officials told The Washington Post that Netanyahu told Biden he plans to target military sites inside Iran

by Dave DeCamp October 14, 2024

https://news.antiwar.com/2024/10/14/report-israel-plans-to-strike-iran-before-us-presidential-election/#gsc.tab=0

Israel is planning to launch its expected attack on Iran before the US presidential elections are held on November 5, The Washington Post reported on Monday.

An unnamed official told the Post that waiting any longer could be perceived as weakness and that the planned strike “will be one in a series of responses” to the Iranian ballistic missile barrage that was fired at Israel on October 1, which came in response to a series of Israeli escalations.

A source close to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told the Post that while Israel was coordinating with the US to some extent on its plans to attack Iran, it wouldn’t wait for a green light from the US. “The person who will decide on the Israeli response to Iran will be [Netanyahu],” the official said.

The report said that when Netanyahu spoke with President Biden last week, he said that Israel planned to hit military infrastructure inside Iran, not oil or nuclear facilities. The conversation was a factor in Biden’s decision to deploy a Terminal High-Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) missile battery to Israel.

The Pentagon announced Sunday that it was deploying the THAAD and about 100 troops to operate it “to support the defense of Israel.” Iran has vowed that it would respond to any Israeli attack on its territory, and the US deployment makes US troops a potential target of Iranian missiles.

The Post report noted how the Biden administration has been fully supportive of Israel’s invasion of Lebanon and its dramatic escalation of airstrikes against the country. A former Israeli official said the US was “giving Israel and the Netanyahu government a bear hug, but for Hezbollah.”

“It is sending THAAD and promising all kinds of weapons that we need to finish off Hezbollah, saying that we can deal with Iran later,” the former official added.

US military and diplomatic support for Israel over the past year has fueled the genocidal slaughter in Gaza and emboldened Israeli escalations across the Middle East and has now brought the US and Iran to the brink of war. Brown University’s Costs of War project recently released a report that supporting Israel has cost the US $22.76 Billion in just one year.

lunes, 14 de octubre de 2024

 Israeli Tanks Smash into UN Peacekeeper Base in Southern Lebanon

Netanyahu demands UN withdraw all peacekeepers from the ‘danger zone’

by Jason Ditz October 13, 2024

https://news.antiwar.com/2024/10/13/israeli-tanks-smash-into-un-peacekeeper-base-in-southern-lebanon/#gsc.tab=0

As the Israeli invasion of Lebanon escalates, it has been reported that on Sunday morning Israeli tanks smashed their way into a UN peacekeeper base in southern Lebanon near Ramia. Exactly why they decided to force their way into a UNIFIL base, which is of course a violation of UN Security Council resolution 1701, is not at all clear.

Reports from the ground are that the two Merkava tanks forced their way in while the UNIFIL personnel were in shelters. They demanded that the base shut off all lights. They remained inside the compound for around 45 minutes, and left after the UN filed a protest through liaisons.

That wasn’t the end of it, either, as two hours after the Israeli tanks left, they fired an unidentified smoke munition just north of the UN position. The UNIFIL personnel were wearing gas masks, but 15 of them were still reported to have sustained skin irritation or gastrointestinal symptoms when the smoke reach their base. They are receiving medical treatment.

This is in addition to around five UN peacekeepers who have been reported injured over the last week since the Israeli invasion of the area. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu claimed that they are “doing everything in our power” to prevent UN injuries, but added this to demands that the UN immediately withdraw all their peacekeepers from the “danger zone.”

The UNIFIL was established in 1978, and was meant to tamp down violence in southern Lebanon. They peacekeepers’ mandate was changed several times to adjust to Israeli invasions of the area, and its mandate was substantially increased to try to restore Lebanese sovereignty to southern Lebanon after the 2006 Israeli invasion.

Lebanese PM Najib Mikati has issued a statement today condemning Israeli attacks on the UNIFIL forces, saying it represents a new chapter in Israel not complying with international 

domingo, 13 de octubre de 2024

THE MEXICAN GOVERNMENT MAKING AN INTERNATIONAL RIDICULE OF ITSELF

In just two weeks of President Claudia Sheinbaum's government, Mexico has already become a laughingstock in the concert of nations.

Not only has the issue of insecurity gone around the world, because on the day of President Claudia Sheinbaum's inauguration (October 1), a group of soldiers from the Mexican Army fired on a transport of undocumented immigrants in the state of Chiapas, killing six of them.

But, five days later (October 6), the mayor of the capital of the state of Guerrero (located on the southern coast of the Mexican Pacific), Chilpancingo, Alejandro Arcos, a member of the opposition coalition PAN-PRI-PRD, was kidnapped, murdered and decapitated (they left his head on top of a car, and his body in the passenger seat), by a criminal group. It should be noted that the former municipal president of the Morena party (the ruling party in Mexico), Norma Otilia Hernández Martínez, had had meetings with the leaders of a criminal group, since in July 2023, videos with audio were released in which the municipal president was having breakfast with the leaders of this group, so one of the hypotheses of the brutal murder of the new mayor (only three days before, the general secretary of the municipality had been murdered), is that he was not willing to continue his complicity with said criminal group.

The horrendous images of the mayor's head on the car have gone around the world, and with-it Mexico continues to be considered the country with the most powerful criminal organizations on the planet.

Such shamelessness of a criminal group can only be explained by the weakness and complicity of the municipal, state and federal authorities in the face of organized crime.

In Culiacán, the capital of the state of Sinaloa (northern coast of the Mexican Pacific), since the surrender of the main leader of the Sinaloa cartel Ismael "el Mayo" Zambada to the United States authorities, a war has broken out between the members of the cartel who support him and the sons of "el Chapo" Guzmán, for control of the cartel, which has already caused more than 150 people to be killed, dozens more to disappear and the disruption of the normal activities of that city.

Another source of ridicule for Claudia Sheinbaum's government is her insistence that the King of Spain apologize to the indigenous peoples of Mexico for the massacres and abuses that the Spanish committed against them during the conquest and colonial periods.

The first to demand such an apology was then-President López Obrador in 2019, through a letter he sent to King Felipe VI, which was never answered.

According to Sheinbaum, this "discourtesy" motivated the president not to invite the Spanish king to her inauguration, which caused the Spanish government not to send any representative to the ceremony.

On October 11, Sheinbaum reiterated her demand that the king apologize on Hispanic Day, which is commemorated on October 12 in Spain (coinciding with the date of Columbus' arrival in America).

Of course, the Spanish government has not apologized for events that happened 500 years ago (the conquest) and 200 years ago (the end of the Spanish Empire's rule over what is now Mexico), since neither Mexico nor Spain existed as such on those dates; and because publicly accepting such acts of abuse could generate economic demands from the native peoples, not only from Mexico, but also from the South and West of the United States and from Central America, which were then part of the Viceroyalty of New Spain.

And one more fact that makes the Sheinbaum government and the Morena party, which has majorities in both chambers of Congress and in the governorships, look completely ridiculous, is the beginning of the unclean, confusing and very expensive process of direct election through popular vote of judges, magistrates and ministers of the Supreme Court, which is unprecedented in the international arena, and which means that judges, magistrates and ministers who have 20, 30 and even 40 years of judicial career now have to stand for election (half of the positions will be elected in 2025 and the other half in 2027), in order to remain in office.

If it continues like this, Claudia Sheinbaum's government will become a constant source of shame and laughter around the world, with all that this means for the daily lives of Mexicans, who demand that their leaders get to work to solve the serious problems that plague the country.

President Claudia Sheinbaum also announced a few days ago that she is about to finish writing a book about her victory in this year's elections, which seems incredible, since instead of writing a book, she should be getting to work.

sábado, 12 de octubre de 2024

War on Gaza: Israel wants to finish the job Washington started after 9/11

Jonathan Cook

11 October 2024

https://www.middleeasteye.net/opinion/gaza-israel-war-wants-finish-job-washington-started-after-911

Nearly a decade ago, a leading Israeli human rights activist divulged to me a private conversation he’d had a short time earlier with one of Europe’s ambassadors to Israel. He had clearly been shaken by the exchange.

The ambassador’s country was then widely seen as one of the most sympathetic in the West to the Palestinian people. The Israeli activist had expressed concerns about Europe’s inaction in the face of relentless Israeli attacks on Palestinian rights and systematic violations of international law. 

At the time, Israel was enforcing a lengthy siege on Gaza that had deprived more than two million people there of the essentials of life, and it had repeatedly bombed urban areas, killing hundreds of civilians. 

In the occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem, Israel had intensified its expansion of illegal Jewish settlements, leading to a surge in violence from settler militias and the Israeli army. Palestinians were being killed and driven off their land.

The activist asked the ambassador a simple question: What would Israel need to do for his government to act against it? Where was the red line?

The ambassador paused as he thought hard. And then, with a shrug of the shoulders, he responded: there was nothing Israel could do. There was no red line.

A decade ago, that comment might have been interpreted as evasive. A year into Israel’s erasure of Gaza, it sounds utterly prophetic.

There is no red line. And more importantly, there never has been. That conversation took place many years before 7 October 2023, when Hamas broke out of Gaza and killed more than 1,000 Israelis. 

That date is not quite the turning point, the rupture, that it is universally presented as. 

Hamas’s brief jail-break from Gaza certainly triggered an explosive desire for revenge among Israelis, who had grown used to being able to subjugate and dispossess the Palestinian people cost-free.

But more importantly, it offered a pretext for Israel’s leaders to erase Gaza - to carry out a plan they had long harboured. And similarly, it offered western states the pretext they needed to stand with Israel and excuse its savagery as Israel’s “right to defend itself”.

Horror show

Call the events unfolding over the past 12 months in Gaza what you will: self-defence, mass slaughter, or a “plausible genocide”, as the world’s highest court has termed it. What can’t be debated is that it has been a horror show.

In the first two months alone, Israel destroyed more of Gaza proportionally than the Allies managed in Germany during the entire Second World War. It carried out more air strikes on Gaza than the US and UK did against the Islamic State group over a period of three years in Iraq

The official figures are that Israel has so far killed more than 42,000 Palestinians in Gaza - more than half of them women and children - through relentless and indiscriminate bombing of the tiny, overcrowded enclave. 

According to human rights groups, more children were killed by Israel in the first four months of its bombing campaign in Gaza than were killed in four years of all other global conflicts combined. 

Oxfam reported last week that in the past two decades, no conflict anywhere else in the world has come close to killing so many children over a 12-month period. 

But the true death toll is far higher. Gaza, bombed into 42 million tonnes of rubble, lost the ability to count its dead and wounded many months ago. 

Last week, a group of nearly 100 American doctors and nurses who have volunteered in Gaza’s healthcare system as Israel has systematically eviscerated it wrote an open letter to US President Joe Biden. They estimated that the death toll was nearly three times higher than the official figure. 

They added: “With only marginal exceptions, everyone in Gaza is sick, injured, or both. This includes every national aid worker, every international volunteer, and probably every Israeli hostage: every man, woman, and child.”

Medieval-style blockade

Back in July, a letter published in the Lancet medical journal put the figure still higher. Using standard modelling techniques, drawing on data from previous wars in which densely populated urban areas were destroyed, a team of experts concluded that Gaza’s death toll would reach much closer to 200,000, based on conservative parameters. 

That would amount to nearly 10 percent of Gaza’s population killed outright by Israeli bombs, disappeared under rubble, dead from medical conditions that could not be treated, or dying from mass malnutrition after a year of an Israeli medieval-style blockade of food, water and fuel.

Israel appears certain that there are no red lines, and as a result, things have only gotten worse since the Lancet letter.

In September, deliveries of food and aid into Gaza sank to their lowest level in seven months, according to figures from the United Nations and Israel. 

In other words, Israel’s stranglehold on aid to Gaza’s starving population has actually intensified since May, when Karim Khan, the British chief prosecutor of the International Criminal Court (ICC), requested arrest warrants for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defence Minister Yoav Gallant for crimes against humanity. 

One of the main charges was that the pair were using starvation as a weapon of war. 

Israeli leaders are so confident that the US and Europe are watching their backs that, according to a Reuters report last week, Israel’s military authorities have in recent days been blocking UN-chartered aid convoys from entering Gaza. 

Netanyahu clearly isn’t worried about being dragged to the dock of a war crimes tribunal at The Hague any time soon.

One-sided anniversary

If western politicians have no red lines when it comes to Israel, much the same can be said of the West’s establishment media. 

They barely report on conditions in Gaza anymore, apart from the occasional headline figure of deaths from Israel’s latest bombardment of a school shelter, refugee camp or mosque. 

Media outlets marked the anniversary of 7 October this week but, predictably, most did so from an exclusively Israeli perspective - as the day when 1,150 Israelis and foreigners were killed during Hamas’s attack, and a mix of some 250 captured soldiers and civilian hostages were taken into the enclave.

The BBC, for example, has been heavily promoting its documentary We Will Dance Againrecounting the experiences of Israelis who attended the Nova rave close to Gaza, which turned into a killing field. 

Similarly, Britain’s Channel 4 aired a documentary titled One Day in October, billed as “an intimate and shocking account of the Kibbutz Be’eri atrocity”. Some 100 kibbutz inhabitants were killed that day and 30 hostages seized. 

Notably, more than a dozen of those residents in Be’eri might have been killed not by Hamas, but by the Israeli army, after an Israeli tank was ordered to fire into one of the homes where Hamas was holed up with them. 

Israeli army commanders on 7 October invoked the highly controversial Hannibal directive, authorising soldiers to kill their comrades to stop them from being taken captive. On that day, Israel appears to have applied the directive to civilians too. One of the people who died after the Israeli tank fire in Be’eri was a 12-year-old girl, Liel Hetzroni. 

Western media outlets have so far almost completely avoided drawing attention to the role Israel’s Hannibal directive played that day.

This week, in a sign of how one-sided the media’s portrayal has become, the Guardian hurriedly removed from its website a review criticising the Ch4 film for failing to provide any context for the Hamas attack on October 7 - decades of military oppression and siege conditions on Gaza.

The review provoked a predictable storm of protest from leading Zionist journalists. 

No consequences

7 October was not only the day Hamas launched its surprise attack on Israel; it was also the day Israel began its slaughter of Palestinians in revenge. 

The day marks the start of what the International Court of Justice (ICJ) has concluded amounts to a “plausible genocide” - one that Israel has barred foreign correspondents from covering in person. Instead, the slaughter has been live-streamed for 12 months variously by the population under attack, and by the Israeli soldiers committing war crimes in plain view.

In a sign of how odiously anti-Palestinian western media coverage has become over the past year, the supposedly liberal Observer newspaper - the Sunday sister paper of the Guardian - chose to give space last weekend to British Jewish writer Howard Jacobson to equate the reporting of the thousands of young children killed and buried alive in Gaza with a medieval, antisemitic “blood libel”. 

The paper even chose to illustrate the column with a photo of a blood-smeared doll - presumably suggesting that the massive death toll reported by every human rights organisation was false. 

The only major broadcaster to try to honour the civilian victims in Gaza and the experiences of those who have survived - just barely - since last October was not a western outlet. It was the Qatari channel Al Jazeera. 

Its documentaryInvestigating War Crimes in Gaza, uses footage shot by Israeli soldiers and posted to social media as they carried out horrifying atrocities against the civilian population.

The soldiers’ delight in broadcasting their war crimes - and the licence they received from Israel’s military authorities to do so - underscores the confidence in Israel that there will never be any consequences.

Unlike the western media, Al Jazeera humanises the Palestinian victims of Israeli atrocities, giving them a voice and a backstory that the western media has largely reserved for the Israeli victims of 7 October.

Courts dragging their feet

Similarly, there appear to be no meaningful red lines, at least so far, for the world’s two highest courts in responding to Israel’s destruction of Gaza.

The ICJ agreed to put Israel on trial for genocide back in January, after hearing the case made by lawyers representing South Africa, and Israel’s response. 

One might have assumed, given that genocide is the ultimate international crime, that the court would have fast-tracked a definitive ruling. After all, the people of Gaza do not have time on their side. But a year into the slaughter and imposed starvation, there is only silence.

The same court has in the meantime ruled belatedly that Israel’s 57-year military occupation of the Palestinian territories is illegal, that Palestinians have a right to resist, and that Israel must withdraw immediately from Gaza, the West Bank and East Jerusalem. 

Western politicians and media have ignored the significance of that ruling, for obvious reasons. It provides the historical context for Hamas’s breakout from Gaza after its illegal siege by Israel for 17 years. Hamas is proscribed as a terrorist group in the UK and other countries.

The problem for the ICJ is twofold. It is under enormous pressure from the US global superpower not to declare a genocide in Gaza by Washington’s favourite client state. Such a verdict would tear off the veil, exposing western powers as fully complicit in that supreme crime. 

Secondly, the court has no enforcement mechanisms outside the UN Security Council, where Washington enjoys a veto that it routinely wields to protect Israel. 

On much the same grounds, the ICC is also dragging its feet. Khan says he has enough evidence to issue arrest warrants against Netanyahu and Gallant for crimes against humanity. European states are obligated to enforce any arrest warrants, so unlike an ICJ ruling, this one could be carried out. 

But for months, the judges of the ICC have delayed approving the warrants, despite the urgency, apparently because they, too, are fearful of incurring Washington’s wrath. 

Both courts can be in no doubt that taking on Washington in these circumstances is a suicide mission.

On the one hand, Israel has shown that it will not abide by any of the legal red lines once insisted upon by the West to avoid a repeat of the horrors of the Second World War. And western powers have demonstrated that not only do they have no intention of restraining Israel, but they will also assist in its violations. 

On the other hand, by hesitating month after month, the two international courts discredit the very rules of war they are there to uphold. They have returned the world to an era of jungle law, but now in a nuclear age.

International law is being shredded in the maw of a US-imposed, self-serving “international order”.

On the warpath

It is that utter lack of accountability from the centres of power - from western politicians, western media and world courts - that has paved Israel’s way to escalate its bloodletting to now encompass the occupied West Bank, LebanonYemen and Syria.

Israel’s theatre of war is rapidly expanding to fully embrace Iran, too. The world is braced for an imminent Israeli attack. 

There is already an undeclared regional war, and the risk grows daily of this expanding into a world war - and with that, all the inherent risks of a nuclear confrontation. But why? 

For Israel’s apologists - a group that includes the entire western establishment, it seems - the narrative is a simple one, though rarely articulated clearly because its racist premises are so hard to miss.

To make Israelis feel safe again, Israel needs to reassert its military deterrence by crushing Hamas and its supporters in Gaza. To do so, Israel must also take on those in the wider region who refuse to submit to Israel’s - and by extension the West’s - civilisational superiority. 

The mantra of Israel and its apologists is “de-escalation through escalation”. In blunter language, the policy is an updated colonial one of “beat the savages into submission”. 

Israel’s critics - now mostly silenced as “antisemites” - argue that Israelis can never be made safe simply through military aggression rather than diplomatic solutions. Violence begets more violence. Indeed, Israel’s decades of structural violence against the entire Palestinian people led us to this point.

And they note, Israel hasn’t just ignored diplomatic options; it is actively tearing down any chance of them bearing fruit. It assassinated Hamas political chief Ismail Haniyeh, a relatively moderate figure, as he was leading negotiations towards a long-anticipated ceasefire in Gaza. 

And it now seems likely that Israel chose to kill Hassan Nasrallah, Hezbollah’s leader, shortly after he had agreed, along with the Lebanese government, to a 21-day ceasefire while the international community worked on a peace deal

'Clash of civilisations'

But this only gets halfway to understanding the problem.

True, Israel now appears determined to finish once and for all the job it began in 1948 of eradicating the Palestinian people - the native population its western-backed, settler-colonial project was predicated on removing. 

Israel has repeatedly failed to ethnically cleanse historic Palestine, while the fallback position - decades of apartheid rule - could never be more than a holding measure, as South Africa’s experience proved.

Now, armed with 7 October as the pretext, Israel has rolled out a genocidal programme instead; first in Gaza, and, if it gets away with it, soon in the occupied West Bank.

But Israel has long had a much grander ambition - one that it is getting a second bite of the cherry to achieve. 

More than 20 years ago, a group of extreme ideologues known as the neoconservatives seized the foreign policy initiative during the presidency of George W Bush. They have since become a permanent foreign policy elite in Washington, whichever administration is in power. 

What is distinctive about the neoconservatives is the centrality of Israel to their worldview. They regard Israel’s unapologetic Jewish supremacism and militarism as a model for the West - one in which it returns to an unashamed white supremacism and militarism in a revived spirit of colonialism. 

Like Israel, the neoconservatives see the world in terms of a never-ending clash of civilisations against the so-called Muslim world. In this context, international law becomes an obstacle to the West’s victory, rather than a guarantee of global order.

In addition, the neoconservatives view Israel as the battering ram to keep the US in charge of international affairs in the world’s main oil spigot, the Middle East. Israel lies at the heart of Washington’s policy of full-spectrum global dominance.

The neoconservatives have long been sold on Israel’s strategy for achieving such dominance in the Middle East: by Balkanising it. The aim has been to demand utter subservience to Israel, with any source of dissent not only punished, but the social structures that support it crushed into ruins.

In Gaza, that method has been on full show. In destroying government buildings, universities, mosques, churches, libraries, schools, hospitals and even bakeries, Israel has sought to reduce the Palestinian population to the barest of human existence. National identity, and the desire to resist, are luxuries no one can afford. Survival is all.

Israel is beginning to roll out the same scheme for the occupied West Bank, Lebanon and Iran.

Destabilising the Middle East

None of this is new. Just as Israel is currently grasping the pretext of 7 October to justify its rampage, the neoconservatives earlier seized on al-Qaeda’s destruction of New York’s Twin Towers on 9/11 as their opportunity to “remake the Middle East”. 

In 2007, former Nato commander Wesley Clark recounted a meeting at the Pentagon shortly after the US invasion of Afghanistan. An officer told him: “We are going to attack and destroy the governments in seven countries in five years. We’re going to start with Iraq, and then we’re going to move to Syria, Lebanon, Libya, Somalia, Sudan and Iran.” 

Clark added of the neoconservatives: “They wanted us to destabilise the Middle East, turn it upside down, make it under our control.”

As I documented in my 2008 book Israel and the Clash of Civilisations, Israel was supposed to carry out a central chunk of Washington’s post-Iraq plan, starting with its war on Lebanon in 2006. Israel’s attack there was supposed to drag in Syria and Iran, giving the US a pretext to expand the war.

This was what the US secretary of state of the time, Condoleezza Rice, meant when she spoke of the “birth pangs of a new Middle East”. 

The plan went awry largely because Israel got bogged down in phase one, in Lebanon. It blitzed cities like Beirut with US-supplied bombs, but its soldiers struggled against Hezbollah in a ground invasion of southern Lebanon.

The West subsequently found other ways to deal with Syria and Libya. 

To the bitter end

Now we are back where we started, nearly 20 years later. Israel, Hezbollah and Iran have all been preparing for this second round. 

The western-Israeli goal, as before, is to destroy Lebanon and Iran, just as Gaza has been destroyed. The aim is to smash the infrastructure of Lebanon and Iran, their governing institutions, and their social structures. It is to plunge the Lebanese and Iranian people into a primaeval state, where they can cohere only into simple, tribal units and fight among themselves for the bare essentials.

There is no evidence that this goal is any more realisable today than it was two decades ago. 

Even Israel’s top military spokesperson, Daniel Hagari, has had to admit: “Anyone who thinks we can eliminate Hamas is wrong.” 

The Israeli army is once again floundering in southern Lebanon against Hezbollah’s guerrilla fighters. And Iran’s very limited, sampler ballistic-missile attack on Israeli military sites last week showed that its arsenal can get past Israel’s US-supplied defence systems and hit its targets. 

But Israel has made clear that for it, and for the US military titan behind it, there is no going back. 

Last week, US State Department spokesperson Matthew Miller said the quiet part out loud: “We’ve never wanted to see a diplomatic resolution with Hamas.” 

According to "conservative" calculations from Brown University’s Costs of War project, the US has already spent more than $22.7bn on military assistance to Israel over the past year -equivalent to more than $10,000 for every Palestinian man, woman and child living in Gaza. Washington’s pockets appear to be bottomless. 

For Israel and the US, there are no red lines. The same holds true in European capitals. They all appear ready to continue this to the bitter end.