Genocide is a bad investment.
https://www.jewishvoiceforpeace.org/2024/02/22/genocide-is-a-bad-investment/
One of the largest pension funds in the world has
divested entirely from Israel Bonds.
In November, the Norwegian Pension Fund announced that
it had withdrawn all of its nearly half a billion dollars worth of investments
in Israel Bonds, citing “uncertainty in the market.” It
pulled what remained of its investments at the start of the Israeli
government’s genocidal war in Gaza.
Israel’s economy is in
trouble. That tells us we need to double down on demands to divest from Israel
Bonds.
Israel Bonds are money lent
directly to Israel’s treasury. Since their establishment in 1951, the sale of
Israel Bonds has funneled billions of dollars into almost every sector of the
Israeli economy.
Like any material support for
the Israeli government, Israel Bonds cannot be disentangled from nearly a
century of ethnic cleansing and slaughter. The sale of Israel Bonds has and
continues to fund the maintenance of a brutal system of apartheid over millions
of Palestinians throughout historic Palestine, and the genocide being carried
out against 2.3 million Palestinians in Gaza.
That’s why the Boycott,
Divestment, and Sanctions (BDS) movement is targeting divestment from Israel
Bonds as part of a larger strategy to build economic and political pressure as
a meaningful contribution to the Palestinian struggle to dismantle Israel’s
apartheid regime.
In doing so, the BDS movement
has created a new vocabulary of effective international solidarity, empowering
people around the world to direct more focused pressure to end the complicity
of governments, corporations, institutions, and individuals in financing
Israeli apartheid.
Israel’s economy is in
trouble.
In the last quarter of 2023,
Israel’s GDP plummeted nearly 20 percent. Consumer spending was
down by a third, imports and exports shrunk, and government spending
skyrocketed 88 percent. Earlier this month, rating agency Moody’s downgraded
Israel’s credit rating for the first time in the country’s history, saying its
economic outlook was “negative.”
Israel’s far-right government
is again managing an economic crisis, largely of its own making, by changing
the subject.
Shortly after Moody’s issued
its new rating, Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich lambasted the financial ratings agency for their
so-called “lack of confidence in the righteousness of [Israel’s] path in the
face of its enemies.” Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, meanwhile, has claimed
that the rating will return to normal “once we win the war.”
It’s true that Israel’s
genocidal war on Gaza has put tremendous strain on Israel’s economy. But that
only tells part of the story.
What does this mean?
The Norwegian Pension Fund’s
decision to entirely divest from Israel Bonds undoubtedly had an impact on
Israel’s credit rating, regardless of whether it did so for any other reason
than it was a poor investment.
Five months of war have shaken
Israel’s economy, and investors are uneasy. This represents a critical opening
for the movement for Palestinian liberation to push even harder for divestment
from Israel Bonds.
U.S. state and local
treasuries alone have invested $1.6 billion in Israel Bonds; Florida leads
them with over $100 million in investments to date. That’s not including the
countless universities, unions, corporations, and individuals across the U.S.
who have also invested in Israel bonds.
Ending U.S. complicity in the
Israeli government’s crimes must include getting these institutions to divest
from Israel Bonds. And as we approach five months since the start of the
genocide in Gaza, cutting off the flow of all U.S. dollars to Israel’s war
chest has never felt more urgent.
Horror beyond comprehension.
In north Gaza, famine has set
in. Parked aid trucks stretch on for miles in Egypt, unable to enter the
besieged enclave. Palestinians resort to grinding animal fodder and bird feed
to make bread, but soon, they’ll run out of that, too. In Gaza City, the
Israeli military shoots at crowds of starving people gathering to receive what
little aid is still available, sending them fleeing for their lives.
This is not a tragic byproduct
of war. It is part and parcel of the Israeli government’s strategy of total
annihilation, a policy designed to kill as many Palestinians as possible and to
ethnically cleanse their traumatized loved ones who survive them.
In Khan Younis, we’ve watched
the Israeli military’s nightmarish siege on Nasser Hospital play out in real
time.
A video recorded inside the
hospital shows a Palestinian man dressed in PPE, his hands
bound with zip ties and eyes wide with terror. The man has been taken hostage
by Israeli forces and sent into the hospital to evacuate the thousands of
people sheltering inside.
His mother, who has also taken
refuge inside the hospital, begs her son not to leave. As soon as he does,
Israeli forces shoot him dead. He is one of over a dozen Palestinians who were
shot and killed outside Nasser Hospital in a matter of days — an indisputable
war crime.
Two hundred patients remain
inside without electricity and with dwindling food and medical supplies. At
least eight people have died due to lack of oxygen.
“We can see from the hospital
a lot of bodies, dead bodies of Palestinian refugees who tried to go outside
the hospital or trying to get shelter in the refugee camps outside the hospital
got shot in the street and left in the street.”
– Khaled Al Serr, a doctor at Nasser Hospital
In Rafah, Gaza’s southernmost
city, the Israeli military is preparing to launch a ground invasion. The 1.5
million Palestinians who now live in Rafah, pushed as far southward as they can
go by the Israeli military’s relentless bombardment, are now staring down the
barrel of mass slaughter and yet another wave of mass forced displacement, with
nowhere left to flee. Across the border in Egypt, construction is underway for
what appears to be a camp intended to house displaced Palestinians.
Palestinians fear, rightfully,
that they will never be allowed to return to their homes in Gaza. Seventy-six
years ago, hundreds of thousands of Palestinians were driven from their homes
by Zionist militias to make way for the founding of the state of Israel,
referred to by Arabs as the Nakba, or catastrophe.
The majority of the people who
live in Gaza are refugees: Palestinians who were forced to flee their homes
during the Nakba, and their descendants. Today, as a second Nakba looms,
securing an immediate ceasefire, lifting the siege, and ending all U.S. support
for the Israeli government is more important than ever.
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