Over 200 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli
forces over the past ten days. Israel’s
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has vowed to continue ‘Operation Protective
Edge’. The UN’s top human rights
official, Navi Pillay says that the Israeli action ‘may violate international
laws prohibiting the targeting of civilians’; key word ‘may’. When over half the dead are civilians, when
residential areas are deliberately targeted, when Israel itself asks some
100,000 civilians to leave the area implying (rather late in the day) that
Netanyahu knows who was going to die and who did die, Pillay’s ‘may’ is funny
(if it weren’t scandalous).
Now Netanyahu is a ‘hawk’ who will not be called
that by the Western media that is so liberal in the use of that word and/or
equivalents in describing those who are not friends with Washington. So when he
says ‘no international pressure will
prevent us from acting with all power,’ we know he means it. We also know that he can count on Washington
to back him to the hilt.
All this is about
‘retaliation’; Israel ‘returning fire’.
If we go to the first stone thrown then we have to go back to the many
wrongs done to Palestine from the creation of Isreal. Let’s leave that aside. What’s happening is but a re-enactment of
Arab-Jew antagonisms. We’ve seen this play many times before. The only difference is that the dead are new.
Naturally so, because those who played part and fell victim are not resurrectable.
If we want to shrink
‘relevant time’ to the first act of aggression and from there to the last sigh
of the last person to die, Arab or Jew’, we can conclude that this is a
tragedy. No prizes for that. Outside of non-partisan condemnation, lamentation
of the body blows on humanity and such, commenting is warranted on how all this
is being read the world over. Let’s
start with the USA.
Phillip Gordon, the
White House Mideast Chief has asked, ‘How can Israel have peace if it’s
unwilling to delineate a border, end the occupation?’ There’s a lot more he can
say, including comment on Washington’s long complicity in Israel’s considerable
track record of perpetrating crimes against humanity, but this is better than
nothing because the ‘something’ that does come from other parts of Washington
is appalling.
US State Department
spokesperson Jen Psaki says ‘No country should be expected to stand by while
rocket attacks from a terrorist organization are launching into their country
and impacting innocent civilian lives’. The
US military is the biggest terrorist outfit around and Psaki’s logic, if
applied to Afghanistan (where in the midst of the tragedy unfolding in Gaza
more civilians were killed in US attacks than were by Hamas in the ‘trigger’
that provoked Israel’s current onslaught on Palestinian civilians) would force
Psaki to call for a counter-attack on her own country. More important here is the fact that there’s
no condemnation of Israel’s action. It
is then a green light and amounts to saying ‘do what you like by any means
necessary’. In other words Psaki is
essentially eating Washington’s words about human rights, democracy, peace and
justice to the point that ought to cause severe indigestion.
British Prime Minister
David Cameron, Washington’s assured echo, naturally echoed. A statement from
his office declared that he ‘strongly condemned the appalling attacks being
carried out by Hamas against Israeli civilians’ and stressed ‘Israel’s right to
defend itself from them’. Defense, in
Cameron’s book, includes indiscriminate fire, bombing and killing civilians,
and dismissal of all that as necessary (not even unfortunate) collateral.
The best comes from UN
Secretary General Ban Ki-moon: ‘Rocket attacks from Gaza are
unacceptable’. He urges Israel to
exercise maximum restraint (Netanyahu obviously doesn’t hear Ki-moon and
Ki-moon for his part doesn’t seem to worry too much on this count either). This, however, is priceless: ‘I condemn the
rising number of civilian lives lost in Gaza’.
One can lament the losses of course; condemnation has to be reserved for
a deliberate act, not an outcome. He
does not condemn Israel. He urges
restraint. Tells.
Arab League
General-Secretary Nabil al Arabi wants the UN Security Council to ‘adopt
measures to stop Israeli aggression against the Gaza Strip’. Talk about barking
up the wrong tree. The US will veto anything that goes against what Israel
wants to do and Washington has signaled as much in its missives on the
issue.
The Arab League does not see Arab
aggression and thereby forfeits the right to whine. Statements from countries like Iran,
likewise, sound hollow because they focus on the Israel side of the aggression
equation.
Egypt, now more of
Washington’s pawn than when under Hosni Mubarak, has to be wishy-washy and
was. The country’s foreign minister said
‘Egypt condemns these hostilities, which led to the killing and injury of tens
of Palestinians,’ and called on Israeli to stop ‘all collective
punishment.’ No condemnation of Israel,
note.
Eamon Gilmore, Foreign
Minister of Ireland has an interesting take: ‘I condemn unreservedly the
indiscriminate firing of rockets into Israel which pose such a grave threat to
the population. I equally condemn the mounting civilian casualties, including
reportedly women and children, resulting from Israeli air strikes against
Gaza.’ Again we see the strange
condemnation of outcome and not action, Ban Ki-moon like).’ Ireland, with its 50-50 blame-apportionment
does slightly better than Washington, which applauds the Israeli position.
Germany conveniently
wants to start with the firing of rockets into Israel, ignoring that country’s
endless aggression on the people of Palestine.
Germany believes that a military confrontation must be averted. Perhaps the news has not gone through to
Berlin. Rather late in the day to
‘avert’, what?
Scotland is the voice
of reason here. Scotland calls on both
sides to ‘de-escalate’ and offers help to civilians. Scotland puts Cameron and
Barack Obama to shame, thereby.
Nicolas Maduro
President of Venezuela condemns Israel, inserting the term ‘disproportionate
military response’ that others have missed.
However, Madura’s reference to the legality of Israel and the ‘heroism’
of Palestinians clearly shows that grief is politically frames, just like
lamentation and salutation of one or the other parties are ‘contexted’ by the
political prerogatives of the USA, UK, Egypt and Russia, for instance.
Russia’s Vladimir Putin
appears to be concurring with Washington on this issue. Putin is certainly nothing like Washington’s
pup Cameron. The motive here could be a
general antipathy to people of the Islamic faith, after all Putin is as
invested in ‘our ways’ as France with its anti-burqa laws is.
And so we have it. World leaders really don’t care about
victims. They don’t really lose any
sleep over catastrophe or impending tragedy.
They are mouthing tired quotes from political scripts so old that it is
dead boring to listen to them. They might
as well come up with a guidebook for the world on a wide range of topics including
possible scenarios so that we won’t have to listen to them or look for their
respective ‘takes’ on places like ‘Gaza’.
Hypocrisy is not the
preserve of world leaders, political commentators and prominent media outfits,
though. Right here in Sri Lanka we’ve
seen ardent howlers at intolerance and violence, going silent on Israel, the ‘silent’
being mostly dollar-dependent NGO types. Others applauding Israel or else
blaming Hamas include ardent BBS supporters and Islamophobes. A facebook ‘status update’ speaks to this
issue.
‘It's a WTF moment for me when I see people who
never saw "both sides of the story" a couple of weeks ago during the
incident at Aluthgama, now suddenly want us to look at "both side of the
story" when Jews bomb Palestine cities killing innocent people including
children who have nothing to do with the shit!! How come "both sides"
that did not exist then, suddenly appear when you want to cover-up the
atrocities of the god’s children!! WTF indeed. Bloody Hypocrites.’
Interestingly, those
who refused to see a non-Muslim side of ‘Aluthgama’ are refusing to say a word
about the Hamas side of the aggression equation.
So there we have
it. This world might as well be called
‘Hypocrisy Unlimited’. The more people
talk, the more they shed their disguises and reveal their true selves. That’s one positive that comes from
tragedies. Small consolation
though.
4 comments:
so far zero casualities on the israeli side and we are to believe that over 1000 bombs going off in crowded concentration camp thats gaza has produced only 200 victims.
a better comparison will gbe Mike Tyson( israel) punching a little girl (Palestinians) and then Tyson crying when she spits on him..
so far zero casualities on the israeli side and we are to believe that over 1000 bombs going off in crowded concentration camp thats gaza has produced only 200 victims.
a better comparison will gbe Mike Tyson( israel) punching a little girl (Palestinians) and then Tyson crying when she spits on him..
I am pretty sure that with the mindset of Israeli leaders, had the tables been turned in Nazi Germany, the consequent holocaust would have seen the genocide comprise of far more than 6 million Germans. The US’s unconditional support of Israel is mind boggling. There must be some truth in the former Congresswoman Cynthia McKinnon’s claim that all politicians, of both parties receive massive donations filtered through the influential Israeli Lobby only after they pledge support for Israel no matter what. McKInnon had apparently refused which probably explains why she is now a ‘former’ Congresswoman.
Israel forces are 'careful'...yeah right!!!!
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