âIâve never seen anything like it,â says Josh Paul, former director of congressional and public affairs for the State Departmentâs Bureau of Political-Military Affairs. Paul recently resigned in protest against the administrationâs plans to rush weapons to Israel. ââA proposal in a legislative request to Congress to waive Congressional notification entirely for FMF-funded Foreign Military Sales or Direct Commercial Contracts is unprecedented in my experience. ⊠Frankly, [itâs] an insult to Congressional oversight prerogatives.â
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âItâs also redundant with existing laws,â Paul says. The White House can unilaterally approve foreign military sales in ââemergencyâ situations but must notify Congress and provide a ââdetailed justification.â The Israel waiver does not require any communication with Congress.
âSo this doesnât actually reduce the time, it just reduces the oversight,â Paul says. ââIt removes that mechanism for Congress to actually understand what is being transferred at the time it is being transferred.â Paul adds that the language came from the White House and received ââpushbackâ within the executive branch.
Palestine
White House Requests âUnprecedentedâ Loophole That Would Obscure Arms Sales to Israel
in In These TimesThis is a moment of great moral clarity
Britain's two main political parties each made an example this week of an MP brave enough to break ranks and call for an end to the mass slaughter of Palestinians in Gaza.
The ruling Conservative party sacked Paul Bristow MP from his government post after he wrote to Prime Minister Rishi Sunak: "A permanent ceasefire would save lives and allow for a continued column of humanitarian aid [to] reach the people who need it the most."
Labour withdrew the whip from Andy McDonald MP, effectively kicking him out of the parliamentary party. McDonald had said at a rally against the killing in Gaza: "We wonât rest until we have justice, until all people, Israelis and Palestinians, between the river and the sea can live in peaceful liberty.â
This should be a moment of great moral clarity for all of us.
Israelâs Final Solution for the Palestinians
Netanyahu, who first became prime minister in 1996, has spent his political career nurturing Jewish extremists, including Avigdor Lieberman, Gideon Saâar, Naftali Bennett, and Ayelet Shaked. His father, Benzion â who worked as an assistant to the Zionist pioneer Vladimir Jabotinsky, who Benito Mussolini referred to as âa good fascistâ â was a leader in the Herut Party that called on the Jewish state to seize all the land of historic Palestine. Many of those who formed the Herut Party carried out terrorist attacks during the 1948 war that established the state of Israel. Albert Einstein, Hannah Arendt, Sidney Hook and other Jewish intellectuals, described the Herut Party in a statement published in The New York Times as a âpolitical party closely akin in its organization, methods, political philosophy and social appeal to Nazi and Fascist parties.â
There has always been a strain of Jewish fascist within the Zionist project. Now it has taken control of the Israeli state.
âThe left is no longer capable of overcoming the toxic ultra-nationalism that has evolved here,â Zeev Sternhell, a Holocaust survivor and Israelâs foremost authority on fascism, warned in 2018, âthe kind whose European strain almost wiped out a majority of the Jewish people.â Sternhell added, â[W]e see not just a growing Israeli fascism but racism akin to Nazism in its early stages.â
âWeâre on the right side of historyâ: Celticâs growing feud over Palestine
in Al JazeeraGlasgow, Scotland â The atmosphere at Celtic Park on European nights needs few added extras, the electricity in the air on such occasions is enough to light up the Glasgow skyline several times over.
But as 60,000 Celtic fans flocked to the famous arena last Wednesday evening for the Champions League tie against Atletico Madrid, it was not just anticipation for the game powering the pre-match energy.
As kickoff neared, the stadium transformed into a sea of Palestinian flags, every stand awash with the colours of Palestine in a show of solidarity with those in Gaza under Israeli assault.
A few days before, when Celtic fans displayed Palestinian flags at a domestic away fixture, television networks were accused of purposefully avoiding the display. They had no such option this time. The display was beamed around the world, and quickly shared millions of times on social media.
What the BBC fails to tell you about October 7
The evidence â from Israeli meda reports and eyewitnesses, as well as a host of visual clues from the crime scene itself â tell a far more complex story than the one presented nightly on the BBC.
Did the Israeli military fire into the Hamas-controlled civilian homes in the same fashion as it had fired into its own military bases, and with the same disregard for the safety of Israelis inside? Was the goal in each case to prevent at all costs Hamas taking hostages whose release would require a very high price from Israel?
Kibbutz Beâeri has been a favoured destination for BBC reporters keen to illustrate Hamasâ barbarity. It is where Lucy Williamson headed again this week. And yet none of her reporting highlighted comments made to the Israeli Haaretz newspaper by Tuval Escapa, the kibbutzâs security coordinator. He said Israeli military commanders had ordered the âshelling [of] houses on their occupants in order to eliminate the terrorists along with the hostagesâ.
That echoed the testimony of Yasmin Porat, who sought shelter in Beâeri from the nearby Nova music festival. She told Israeli Radio that once Israeli special forces arrived: âThey eliminated everyone, including the hostages because there was very, very heavy crossfire.â
Adobe is selling fake AI images of the war in Israel-Gaza
in CrikeyAmid the flurry of misinformation and misleading online content about the Israel-Hamas war thatâs circulating on social media, these images, too, are being used without disclosure of whether they are real or not.
A handful of small online news outlets, blogs and newsletters have featured âConflict between Israel and Palestine generative AIâ without marking it as the product of generative AI. Itâs not clear whether these publications are aware it is a fake image.
What gives Israel the right to annihilate Gaza?
in openDemocracyAs researchers both specialising on Palestine, we've taken a keen interest in what they've been saying. And on the side of Israel's apologists, weâve seen two main narratives at work.
Both are deeply flawed. The first ignores all context to portray Israel as the undeniable victim of a brutish neighbour. The second draws selectively on context to portray Hamas and Israel as more or less equal adversaries tragically unable to come to an accord. This narrative, designed to appeal to moderates and confound pro-Palestinian messaging, argues that everyone has blood on their hands in this endless cycle of violence â meaning no easy condemnation of Israel is possible.
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When the capacity of one side to exert violence over the other is so overwhelmingly disproportionate, surely even to the most moderate of moderates, something rings discordant here.
Zionist Keir Starmer At Odds With His Own Party
in CounterPunchStarmer, like Biden, insists that âIsrael has the right to defend itselfâ. On the specific matter of international law, this is not a legal right. Israel, an aggressor because of its two-decade-long siege/blockade of Gaza, cannot claim âself-defenseâ to justify its violence against armed resistance to this illegal siege/blockade. When a Nazi claimed that Germany attacked Russia in âself-defenseâ during WW2, a judge at the Nuremberg Tribunal said:
âOne of the most amazing phenomena of this case which does not lack in startling features is the manner in which the aggressive war conducted by Germany against Russia has been treated by the defense as if it were the other way around. âŠIf it is assumed that some of the resistance units in Russia or members of the population did commit acts that were in themselves unlawful under the rules of war, it would still have to be shown that these acts were not in legitimate defense against wrongs perpetrated upon them by the invader. Under International Law, as in Domestic Law, there can be no reprisal against reprisal. The assassin who is being repulsed by his intended victim may not slay him and then, in turn, plead self-defenseâ. (Trial of Otto Ohlendorf and others, Military Tribunal II-A, April 8, 1948)
Rashid Khalidi: âWe Are Seeing a Horrifying Attempt to Shut Down Speech Around Palestineâ
in JacobinItâs very hard to see a strategy that leads to political change, if you accept a settler-colonial paradigm, in the metropole or in the colony â and more importantly in the metropole. If you look at the wars of independence in Ireland, Algeria, and Vietnam, or the struggle against apartheid in South Africa, what was happening on the battlefield was part of a larger political strategy that also included the metropole.
For example, it meant convincing popular opinion in Britain and the US that Irish independence was a worthy and achievable aim â or at least in the case of England, that it was a war not worth fighting. The Irish Republican Army won, I think, in Manchester, Birmingham, London, New York, and Boston as much as it won in Cork. They were on the back foot in military terms by the middle of 1921. But the British decided that they couldnât sustain the war any longer.
It was the same with Algeria, Vietnam, and South Africa. Without the battle of Algiers or the Tet Offensive or the struggle in the townships, those liberation movements would not have won. But without the demonstrations in the US, you wouldnât have had the US government deciding that it couldnât win the war in Vietnam.
Labour losing voters over Gaza matters â whether it hurts electorally or not
in The GuardianOne senior Labour party member described the resignation of Labour councillors in response to the partyâs position on Gaza as âshaking off the fleasâ. This approach has broadly characterised Labourâs approach to the dissenting views it has attributed en masse to a cranky left, but it seems increasingly risky when a high-octane political event galvanises people across a demographic profile that is too large to be so easily dismissed. Sulekha, another voter lost to Labour in the past two weeks, tells me of an atmosphere in her local area in Hackney where people are identifying with the Palestine issue through âdifferent intersectionsâ as it draws in âgreens, feminists and a broader liberal coalitionâ. Meanwhile, polling reveals a political establishment dramatically at odds with the country as a whole, in which 76% are in support of a ceasefire. Thatâs a lot of fleas.
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There are signs that Labour, practised now in the art of figuring out who it can shake off without hurting its re-election chances, is beginning to catch on. In addition to Starmerâs attempt to reverse his position, there have been meetings with Labour MPs and council leaders. But it wonât be enough. Winning over those that have checked out is about more than Gaza. Itâs about addressing the growing impression of Labour as a party increasingly out of touch with, and contemptuous of, its grassroots, both in policy offering and tone.