Archive for Palestine

A Look at the UnHolyCost of “Holocaust”

I recently sent around an article with the title “UnHolyCost”.   I love puns, so I was really quite pleased with my term.  I thought it was pretty clever.  But, other’s didn’t see it that way, and I soon received a rejection notice, saying that the title of the article makes me sound like a ‘Holocaust Denier’.    The note went on to say that if I changed the title, my article would be considered.  Well, I don’t take these things personally.   It is no secret I have  trouble being consistently politically correct.

In this light, I have changed the title and resubmitted, as requested.  I’m not a  ‘Holocaust Denier’.  I just want to live in the present.  When I wrote the title, I was angry.   The piece was probably improved by removing a secondary and incomplete thread.  That particular title wasn’t necessary to it’s meaning.  The details of the story sounded like some HOLOCAUST  stories I have heard, but  it wasn’t necessary to mention it.  The story stands alone.

However, Read the rest of this entry »

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Gaza 1956, Gaza 2003, Gaza Reduced to Rubble

President Obama has finally convinced the Palestinians and Israelis to participate in bilateral talks that might lead to the much glorified 2 State Solution to the unrest in that region.  I don’t know what what these discussions can hope to achieve, given that settlement building in full swing in East Jerusalem and the West Bank, and Gazans living in a pile of rubble that is under siege for at least the 2nd year.  And, I don’t know what substance the talks can have, given that the Palestinian participants are unelected collaborators, and Hamas, the only government in Palestine that actually was elected and actually  governs in a region of Palestine, is specifically not invited.  But, somebody is going to talk about something, and the details of their stillborn initiative will be dutifully reported to us as ‘progress’, or at least ‘news’ for some time in the future.

I have just finished reading Joe Sacco’s book, “Footnotes in Gaza“.   Sacco was in Gaza researching this book before and during the initial invasion of Iraq in 2003, and at the time that Rachel Corrie was run over by an IDF Bulldozer as she attempted to stop it from destroying someone’s home.    His topic, however, was a massacre of between 50 and 100+ men in Rafah, depending on whose numbers you like, that occurred on November 12, 1956.    The research for the book involved finding and interviewing older people who actually participated in, or witnessed the event.

As Joe and his Palestinian helpers investigate this tragedy from the past, they inhabit a world of continuous threat and violence.   Read the rest of this entry »

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Gilad Atzmon

I saw a performance by Gilad Atzmon a few days ago, and he really has something interesting to say.   A disaffected, anti-Zionist, ex-Israeli, he speaks not only for Palestinian rights, but for a reasonable assumption that no one is ‘chosen’ and all people should have equal rights.  As an ex-Israeli citizen, he critiques Israeli policy and Zionist culture in a way that is quite shocking by standards in the  US,  not that he doesn’t get some serious heat for his stance.

Gilad is a popular Saxophone player and Jazz Artist in the UK, and his music is most enjoyable.   You can sample his work on Amazon and iTunes.     He’s also written a couple of novels that I can’t say much about because I haven’t read them.  However, he has a great website, which I highly recommend.  It is linked in on the sidebar.

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Israel: I is for Impunity . . .

Our priceless friend and ally, Israel, has just assaulted a flotilla of supplies with 800 civilian activists aboard and several tons of building materials, food, toys and various necessities.   There was live coverage online from the lead ship, broadcast through a Turkish news station.    Live TV coverage of a war crime, this is today’s media.  This is our world.   Even so, as time will show, Israel managed to come up with a conflicting story and a video of their own to prove it, only a few hours later.  They are ingenious and persistent.

There were around 600 people on the lead ship where the most serious confrontation took place, all unarmed civilians.   Al Jazeera and the Turkish station have video of a stairway crowded with people with people in life jackets.  You can hear a loudspeaker in the background directing people to go to their rooms and wait.   The reporter from Al Jazeera says that at least two are dead and there are an unknown number of injured.  Speedboats race alongside and around the ship.  Helicopters hover overhead.  He says that he is going to join them, and the scene ends, but the Turkish coverage continues. Floodlights are flashing over the deck as uniformed soldiers board the ship from the air and the sea.     Read the rest of this entry »

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The Mossad Meets their Match

I really feel uncomfortable sometimes, that I have to keep coming back with another Israel story that invites ridicule.   Friend or Enemy, I keep trying to take them seriously, but they make it really difficult.   They are keeping the world in turmoil through childish temper tantrums, elaborate (and illegal) acts of murder and sabotage, repeated violations of the sovereignty of other countries, friend and foe, and wild (can I say paranoid) stories of sabotage being played out against them, that make so little sense and have such obviously contrived evidence that it is difficult to imagine anyone telling the story with a straight face.   Do they believe their own stories?  Some of the people do, I imagine.  But the people who make the decisions, what are they thinking?  And the excuses after the fact.  This time it’s come down to a ‘Policy of Ambiguity’.

This time, they have actually been caught by the Dubai police, who are not only diligent and conscientious, but possessed of the best, the most pervasive surveillance equipment money can buy.   Read the rest of this entry »

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To Shoot an Elephant

Ted Wilcox, a fellow activist in Rochester, sent me an email from a friend, in the UK I think, with some references to materials on Palestine.  Of them film, To Shoot an Elephant, is extremely powerful.  The original link took me to a version of the film without subtitles, but the one linked to here has subtitles available in several languages, including English.  The film, recorded on site during the first couple of weeks of Cast Lead, is a little long and has some seriously disturbing scenes.     However, those of us who feel compelled to stand and witness the disaster the Western imperialist powers and Israel are visiting on the rest of the world in the name of civilization and anti-terrorism should watch it.

There is a sequence in the film, introduced as ‘The Hamdan Family’.   Something seemed familiar, but I didn’t get it Read the rest of this entry »

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News from the Dark Side

I could have written more.  I should have written sooner.  But, here’s something now.

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Pakistan
The Pakistani army has balked at attacking yet another province.   Apparently, they don’t really want to wipe out the man who connects them with the Taliban.  With more than 2 million internal refugees created so far by doing America’s bidding, perhaps they are getting tired of destroying their own country.  The Kerry Luger bribe might not be enough to cover it.  The US has told the Pakistani Army, either clean up (attack) Quetta or we’ll send in the drones.  The message hasn’t been well received.   Apparently,  American Diplomats in Pakistan are being harassed, and there is resentment and even hostility towards their US benefactors in the Pakistani military. *

Meanwhile, Pakistani President Zardari has suggested that the membership in the Shanghai Cooperation Organization could help with their counter-terrorism campaign.**  Pakistani Prime Minister Gilani has also requested membership in the SCO for Pakistan and reached out to them with a vision of  “shared peace”.  ***  He is working hard to solidify alliances and trade agreements with the neighboring ‘Stans’ who comprise the core membership in the SCO along with Russia and China.   I don’t think they can join while there is a perception that America controls their military actions.   Even so, while the US operates with lump sums (big ones), the Chinese and Russians are doing an increasing amount of business on the ground in Pakistan.

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Afghanistan
President Obama has announced an expanded commitment to the ‘war’ in Afghanistan, committing 30K more troops in addition to the 20K troops he OK’d earlier this year.  The Generals say that we need even more troops.  And the Generals concede that there are only 100 Al Qaeda operatives on the Afghanistan/Pakistan border.  So what gives?  If this is the best ‘Jobs Program’ Obama can come up with, we have a serious problem.

Meanwhile, the Taliban have reached out to the SCO for support as well.  They promised not to mess with their neighbors.  They just want their country back. ****   Kyrgyzstan, an Afghan neighbor and full member of the SCO,  is looking into trading some of it’s national debt for assisting in Afghanistan. *****   I’d say China is teaching it’s children well.

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Yemen
The Yemeni government is fighting a civil war on two different fronts.  The Yemeni Government blames the Iranians and accuses them of arming the ‘insurgents’, but there is no confirmation for their accusation, and it’s an easy out for them to blame the Iranians for any failures they have.******   The Saudi’s have joined in the war on the Northern front, enthusiastically bombing Yemeni towns. *******  Now, the US has now engaged in Yemen.   It is rumored that a couple of recent strikes on Al Qaeda were perpetrated by Americans.   The Yemeni government insists that they are responsible, and you might say that’s true, whether their men our ours physically launched the missiles.  Certainly that’s how the Yemeni people feel.  And they aren’t very happy about it either.

A significant Al Qaeda operative was the target of one of the strikes, but he escaped though while ‘terrorists’ were apprehended and killed.   The other strike killed at least 30  civilians including women and children, causing significant upset in the population.   Could you call the murder of 10 civilians with Hellfire missiles ‘terrorism’?  What ever happened to police actions.  Now, it’s all armies.

The Yemeni-American preacher who had been in contact with the soldier who recently killed 13 people on a killing spree at fort Hood was rumored to have been at both sites.     Since he has repeatedly denied any connection with Al Qaeda (unusual for Al Qaeda suspects not in custody), it seems unlikely he would be hanging out with their leadership.    It seems he might have been the target of the second strike, which killed the women and children, and which may have be conducted by Americans.

If they wanted him for conspiracy or as an accomplice to the crime, one would think they could just ask the Yemeni government to pick him up and extradite him. . . . .  perhaps secretly, as in rendition, if there’s a public relations problem.   I’m not advocating the latter.  In fact, I’m not sure this guy would be convicted if given a fair trial.   But it would certainly be better than killing 30 innocent people with Hellfire missiles.

By the way, when did our war on Yemen begin?  Was it the reference in Obama’s Afghanistan speech?   Kind of like Bush’s references to the Axis of Evil?  Obama doesn’t even need to use hyperbolic language.  He just mentions a country, and that’s enough.   Of course, the Saudi’s were already there, softening things up.

I just watched Joe Lieberman on Democracy Now! (yes, it’s Monday) say that if we don’t act preemptively, Yemen will be tomorrow’s war.”  I’d say it’s a done deal.   Guess that answers the question as to whether we were on the scene in those recent strikes.   +

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Iran
The voices for change in Iran will not be silenced by brutality.  Ayatollah Montazeri, the rightful heir to Khomeini died this week.   He would have preferred a more muted role for the Welayat Faqih and for the clergy in the Islamic Republic.   I suppose it’s a waste of time to consider the ‘path not taken’ at this point.   Montazeri has been supporting the dissidents who have been in the streets repeatedly since the June election which the opposition claimed was fraudulent.  With his death so close to Ashura, renewed protests are assured.

Ashura falls on today, December 27th.   This is the day of atonement for the martyrdom of Imam Hussein, the Prophet’s grandson.   This is the most important Shi’ite holiday, when many people are in the streets.   Not surprisingly, there have been clashes between protesters and the police.   According to Al Jazeera, 5 protesters have died, including Mir Hossein Mousavi’s nephew, who is rumored to have been shot.  The Iranian police say that some of these people died in a car accident, and only one was killed by a bullet,but they don’t know how this happened, because the police weren’t using bullets.++   I don’t think that’s going to fly at this point.   On Democracy Now! this morning, Hadi Ghaemi said Mousavi’s murder was reportedly an assassination.  He was shot point blank.The chief of Police in Tehran said that 300 demonstrators were arrested Sunday.

In the US, Sanctions have once again been passed by Congress.  They are unilateral as China and Russia are critical of the use of sanctions to limit Iran’s nuclear program, and will not support them in the Security Council.  The US can enforce them by penalizing other countries that trade with Iran, not Russia and China, of course.  No, we can only penalize our friends.

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Palestine
Egypt is blocking the Viva Palestina Convoy, an International initiative to bring material assistance and moral support to Gaza from entering.  Of course, Israel isn’t a possible alternative point of entry.  Their vindictive and racist agenda is not open to question or debate.   Israel has allowed little in the way of building materials into Gaza since they bombed it to rubble a year ago.  There is little water and minimal food for survival.   Few are allowed out for medical care and medical supplies are inadequate within.   There is no fuel for cooking and heating.  Now Israel is building an underground wall to block the tunnels in Rafah that provide the inhabitants of Gaza with what little they have.  Then what?

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Israel
The deal to free Gilad Shalit from Hamas is slowly progressing.   The deal would have Israel trade 1000 prisoners for Shalit.   A significant portion of the Israeli public is not just in favor of the trade, but insistent on it.    They say there are a few Palestinian prisoners with ‘Israeli blood on their hands’ who are being disputed.   100 or 150 of the prisoner’s will be released only on the condition that they are barred from Palestine.   Last I heard, Marwan Barghouti is among those likely to be released, though his brother Abdullah is one of the handful who are likely to be rejected.   +++

Marwan is the interesting brother, though.  He’s a Fatah hero who ran for President of Palestine from prison in 2006.   Surely he will be on good terms with Hamas if they can free him along with 1000 others from Israeli prisons.  Seems like he might be just what the Dr. has ordered for Palestine.  A man who with good connections to both Fatah and Hamas, a man who is popular with the people, a revolutionary hero with political ambitions.   Perhaps the Israeli apartheid is finding it’s Nelson Mandela.

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Lebanon
Ha’aretz says US President Obama has suggested to the new Lebanese government that they should ‘crack down’ on Hezbollah ‘arms smuggling’.    It seems that he missed the point that the new government has integrated the Opposition, of which Hezbollah is a significant member, and passed a law to legitimize Hezbollah as a  necessary part of their defense infrastructure.   In that case, I’m not sure you can call it smuggling.  In the same article, they say refer, once again, to the pirate arms shipment from Iran that it supposedly confiscated last month. ++++     [see next post]

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The Kurds

There’s more violence in Kirkuk and Mosul.   I’ve been reading about the runup to the Iraq war, and the Kurds were in it up to their eyeballs.  Who can blame them, after the horrific abuse they have suffered from Sadam.  However, from an objective standpoint, it seems like the US could have supported them without destroying the rest of Iraq.  Even now, the contention over Kirkuk is complicated, but there is a paragraph in the constitution that says exactly how to handle it.  But, the Iraqi government isn’t willing to implement it.   The International Crisis Group says it could spark a civil war in Iraq to do so.

What could this awful ruling be?   Article 140 says that they will take a census in Kirkuk and have a referendum there to decide whether or not it is part of Kurdistan.  Since  Kurdistan is part of Iraq and, for now, no one is disputing that, it seems like a fair solution.  Maybe the loser will be upset, but as in any democratic action, the winner will have a measure of truth on their side.   On the other hand, not following through has Kurds once again talking about independence.

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The United States
Looks like ‘Conservative Democrats’ are urging Obama to shelve Climate Change and work on a much needed Jobs Bill instead.  I bet they can’t pat their heads and rub their bellies at the same time either.

  • *              New York Times
  • **            Pakistani Associate Press
  • ***          The Nation
  • ****        Pakistani Defense Forum, Global Military News, Xinhua
  • *****      Central Asia News, Ferghana, RU
  • ******    Glenn Greenwald interview with Gregory Johnson
  • *******  Al Arabia News
  • +               Democracy Now!  Headlines.
  • ++            Al Jazeera
  • +++         IBA, Jerusalem; Ha’aretz
  • ++++      Ha’aretz

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Gaza in 1950

I came across this old video on the web.  It’s quite amazing.  Although it never mentions the cause of the people’s disinheritance, it is closer to the truth than most recent depictions of the time.  It assumes an impending solution to their problems that has yet to materialize.

Sands of Sorrow

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Pinochio Lands in the Chipper

Mahmoud Abbas says he won’t run for president of the PA.    It looks like, after years of abuse, the US and Israel have finally broken their Palestinian Puppet.    Abbas was forbidden by his masters to negotiate fairly with Hamas, and forced to reject any kind of Unity Government.    He didn’t talk about “the right of return”.   He didn’t defend the peaceful protesters on the West Bank or the devastated population of Gaza.  So, would it really make a difference.  If he ran in a ‘free and fair election’, would he even win?  But, that’s no longer a problem as, following the final humiliation  of being forced to publicly turn his back on a fair arbiter ready to defend the rights of his people, he has decided not to run.  He no longer has any viable options.

The US Puppet-Masters focus on what a good ‘Partner’ he has been, and a hope that he’ll change his mind.   Read the rest of this entry »

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Waltz with Bashir

I just saw  “Waltz with Bashir”.   The film has been promoted as a deeply affecting portrayal of the effect of war on the soldiers.  Many people who see it would agree, I think, with that analysis.   People I know found the film beautiful, and very moving.  But, after watching Mosaic and Al Jazeera’s coverage of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, Israel’s attack on Lebanon in the summer of 2006 and, most recently, the Israeli assault on Gaza last winter,  I found the film didn’t really engage my emotions with it’s surreal imagery,  contextualized through reminiscences and intellectual conversations.  You can watch the film and feel sadness, whereas, when you see the reality, you feel sick.   

“Waltz with Bashir” focuses on  the young Israeli soldiers who participated in the Lebanese occupation, and were in Beirut at the time of the massacre of Palestinians at Sabra and Shatilla refugee camps.   Read the rest of this entry »

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